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Gov John Cranston was born 16 February 1625 in Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland to James Cranston (1588-1634) and Elizabeth Johnston (1594-) and died 12 March 1680 Newport, Newport County, Rhode Island of unspecified causes. He married Mary Clarke (1641-1711) 3 June 1658 .

Biography


John Cranston (1625–1680) was a colonial physician, military leader, legislator, deputy governor and governor of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations during the 17th century.

Cranston was sent to New England as a boy; he was put under the care of Jeremiah Clarke, who became an early president of the colony, and he eventually married Clarke's daughter, Mary.

Elected a drummer in the militia of Portsmouth while a teenager, Cranston had several military positions of authority throughout his life, and during King Philip's War he commanded the colony's militia. He also became the colony's first licensed physician and surgeon.

Later in life Cranston was elected to a variety of offices, including attorney general, deputy, assistant and commissioner. In 1672 he was elected for the first time to the office of deputy governor, for a year, and then in 1676 during King Philip's War was elected again to that office. In 1678, following the deaths of two colonial governors in rapid succession, Cranston was elected to the office of governor, which position he held for nearly two years until his own death in March 1680.

Rhode Island Governor

Cranston had been deputy governor under his brother-in-law, Walter Clarke (1639-1714) for the year beginning in May 1676, but the following year the "War Party" was put in power with Benedict Arnold elected as governor. In May 1678 Arnold was once again elected as governor of the colony, and Cranston again elected as deputy governor. In a few weeks, however, Arnold was dead, and William Coddington was elected as governor, with Cranston continuing as his deputy. The tax law was modified at this time, requiring the governor to give legal notice to every town before levying a tax.[9] The population of the colony was deemed to be about 1000 to 1200 freemen able to bear arms.[9] At the beginning of November 1678, Coddington had also died in office. On 4 November Conanicut Island was incorporated as a township and called Jamestown in honor of the Duke of York, who soon became king (as James II & VII.)[10]

During a special session of the General Assembly held from 8 to 15 November, Cranston was elected governor of the colony, with James Barker (1617-1702) elected as his deputy. The Charter and other papers were obtained from Mrs. Coddington and put into the custody of the new governor.[12] Many of the agenda items during his administration dealt with financial issues, and several finance or taxation laws were passed or repealed.[13] One of the very first acts was to pass the first tax levy since the recent war.[12] A rate of 300 pounds was assessed, broken down by town as follows: Newport, 136; Portsmouth, 68; New Shoreham (Block Island), 29; Jamestown, 29; Providence, 10; Warwick, 8; Kingston, 16 (reduced to 8); Greenwich, 2; and Westerly, 2.[12] Never, in the history of the colony, had there been such a disproportionate share in taxation, and the numbers clearly show the relative degree to which the various towns had suffered as a result of the war.[12]

In 1679 the Crown confirmed the jurisdiction of Rhode Island over the Narragansett country, within which were the recent settlements of Westerly, Kings Town, and Greenwich.[14] A letter of thankful acknowledgment was sent to King Charles II, but also with a request that the area around Mount Hope be added to the colony.[14] However, disputes with the Connecticut Colony had not ended, and in his final official act, Cranston sent a letter to the King dated 6 January 1679/80, concerning disputed lands in the Narragansett county still claimed by Connecticut/

Family Background

Born in Scotland or England, John Cranston was the son of Rev. James Cranston, the rector of St. Mary Overie Church in Southwark, London, later known as St. Saviour's Church, and now called Southwark Cathedral.[1] Reverend Cranston was also one of the chaplains of King Charles I. The details of how Cranston came to New England were provided by his son, Governor Samuel Cranston, who wrote in a 26 December 1724 letter to his cousin Elizabeth Cranston in Edinburgh, Scotland, "My father being a sprightly youth of a roving fancy, my Grandfather Recommended him to the care and tuition of one Capt. Jeremiah Clarke, Merchant and Cittysen of London, with whome he came into this country and Setled on this Island."[3] Jeremy Clarke came to New England in 1637 and in 1638 became an inhabitant of Aquidneck Island, later called Rhode Island. Rev. James Cranston was the son of John Cranston of Bold, or Bool, Peebles County, Scotland, and the family descends from one Andrew de Cranston who died before 1338.

Marriage and Family

Cranston's wife, Mary Clarke (1641-1711), was the daughter of former Rhode Island President Jeremy Clarke and his wife Frances, and sister of Rhode Island Governor Walter Clarke.[17] The Clarkes are descendants of King Edward I of England, and therefore all of Cranston's descendants are royally descended through the Clarkes, if not through the Cranstons as well.[11] Together, John and Mary Cranston had ten children, the oldest of whom, Samuel Cranston (1659-1727), became the longest-serving governor in the history of both the colony and the state of Rhode Island[6]

Following Cranston's death, his widow married the widower Captain John Stanton, son of Robert and Avis Stanton of Newport, with whom she had one more child.


Children


Offspring of Gov John Cranston and Mary Clarke (1641-1711)
Name Birth Death Joined with
Samuel Cranston (1659-1727) 16 March 1659 Newport, Newport County, Rhode Island 26 April 1727 Newport, Newport County, Rhode Island Mary Hart (1663-1710)
Judith Parrott (1669-1737)
Caleb Cranston (1662-1737)
Mary Cranston (1665-1666)
Lydia Cranston (1667-1729)
Benjamin Cranston (1668-1713)
William Cranston (1672-1776)
John Cranston (1675-1751)
Peleg Cranston (1688-1708)



Siblings

Residences

Footnotes (including sources)

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