Governor William Dummer
Governor William Dummer
of Massachusetts
William Dummer (1677 - 1761)
served as Governor of Massachusetts from 1722 to 1728, and again for a
few months in 1730. He married Catherine Dudley, a daughter of Governor
Joseph Dudley but they didn't have any children.
When he died he left his mansion
and 300 acre farm at Byfield to endow "a free grammar school" in Byfield
parish, in the town of Newbury. This was the earliest academy in
New England, and was opened on February 27, 1763, with twenty-eight pupils.
Until the early 21st century, it was known as "Governor Dummer Academy"
at which time it was decided to change the name; probably because students
were weary of being referred to as "Dummer (dumber) Students", "Dummer
Graduates" and so on.
The initial suggestion for a
new name was "The G.D.A.", but this would almost certainly have become
known as "The God Damned Academy". The name was eventually changed to "The
Governor's Academy". Please be sure to visit the official website of The
Governor's Academy.
The following account is from
Edwin Elbridge Salisbury, Family Memorials, New Haven, Connecticut, 1885,
pages 258 - 260, 272 - 275. For the complete account including footnotes,
please see the original.
Gov. William Dummer — the acting
Provincial Governor of Massachusetts for more than six years — was
a brother of Jeremy Dummer, his senior by about four years. He was born
in New England in 1677; “but he had been much out of the country, and had
held office abroad, when, in 1716, after the death of Queen Anne, Col.
Shute was appointed Governor, in place of Joseph Dudley, and Dummer, son-in-law
of Dudley, received the appointment of Lieutenant Governor. The struggle
between the rising spirit of independence in the colony and the repressive
acts of the English ministry, which had been long going on, was not ended
by the accession of a new Sovereign and the return of the Whigs to power.
At last, when “all hope of a good understanding between” the Governor “and
the local authorities seemed to be at an end,” in 1722, Shute retired to
England, and Dummer occupied the gubernatorial chair until the accession
of Burnet in 1728, and again for a few months after Burnet’s death, before
the arrival of Beicher. Although, during his administration, the same disagreements
between the royal government and the colonists still continued, the history
of those times shows that Gov. Dummer’s endeavor was to harmonize, by being
faithful to his fellow-provincials as well as true to his allegiance to
the Crown; and conciliation had been, also, the rule of his brother’s agency
for the province in England. Says Eliot: “he was not the favourite of the
popular party . . . but was highly respected by all parties, when their
prejudices did not operate. He maintained a most respectable character
for virtues and talents, especially during his administration as the chief
magistrate. Douglass always styles it ‘the wise administration of Mr. Dummer.’
He was a man of such correct judgment and steady habits, such a firm and
temperate conduct, when he supposed himself right, that the vessel of state
was secure, though exposed to the dangers of a tempestuous sea;” and a
later writer has said: “William Dummer was one of the most experienced
and practical statesmen in the period of provincial history,” and, again,
“the office of commander-in-chief of the Province devolved on Lieutenant-Governor
Dummer, which he sustained with no less fidelity to the King than to the
Province; the interest and rights of which he bent the whole force of his
powerful mind to maintain, avoiding unprofitable controversies.” The latest
historiographer of the colonial times of Massachusetts, Dr. George E. Ellis,
has said of him:
“Had there been any practicable reconciliation into a harmony of working
in the relations between Massachusetts and the royal authority claimed
over her, it might have seemed that William Dummer, acting as Governor
for nearly six years, was peculiarly suited to serve as mediator, umpire
and arbiter. A native of the province, with strong family ties and friendships
binding him here, he had lived much abroad, and had become enlarged and
generous in his views. He was not a strong partisan, nor did he lack a
generous patriotism.” . . .
His cotemporary and pastor Rev.
Dr. Mather Byles, in preaching his funeral sermon, used this language:
“Scarce any one ever passed through this life with a more unspotted
character, or performed its various duties with more universal esteem.
In the gayest scenes of youth he was preserved from the destructive paths
of vice; and in maturer age was a shining example of the most amiable virtues.
. . . The wise, incorrupt and successful administration of Mr. Dummer will
always he remembered with honor, and considered as a pattern worthy of
the imitation of all future Governors. Uninfluenced by party prejudices,
superior to all mercenary attachments, he discovered no passion, in his
public character, but love to his country and fidelity to his Royal Master.
Having filled the Chair with dignity and usefulness for several years,
when a successor was appointed, he retired to enjoy the unenvied satisfactions
of a private life, with the approbation of a good conscience and the applause
of his country.”
He married Catharine daughter
of Gov. Joseph Dudley — a sister of Rebecca who married Samuel the eldest
son of Chief Justice Sewall — April 20, 1714; and died Oct. 10, 1761, in
his eighty-fourth year, leaving no children. He was a patron of learning
in his life-time; and left by his Will 」50. for the purchase of books
for Harvard College Library, which is commemorated by the inscription of
his name, together with others, on one of the library-alcoves.
But his greatest educational bounty was the gift, by
Will, of his mansion-house and farm of 300 acres at Byfield,
“for the endowment of a free grammar-school and the erection of a school
house thereon; and the opening of the Academy in 1763 placed it chronologically
at the head of all similar foundations, in Massachusetts at least. The
time was opportune, for the graduates were prepared for the impending struggle
with the mother-country, as well as for the conduct of the State and Nation
when once independence was achieved. Master Samuel Moody [grandson of Rev.
Samuel Moody of York, Me.], a famous teacher, gave the Academy a great
reputation at the start, and maintained it till 1790. Among his pupils
were future cabinet-officers, congressmen, governors and judges. . . .”
[
画像:Original School House]
One of the men of distinction
here educated was Samuel Phillips, the originator of the similar academy
at Andover, Mass., after which the later institution bearing the honored
name of Phillips, at Exeter, N. H., was modelled; so that Dummer Academy
may be regarded as in a certain sense the parent of both these others,
though not incorporated till 1782, later than Phillips Academy of Andover.
Gov. Dummer’s name is also perpetuated in Dummerstown, Vt., named for him,
where he was the oldest proprietor, owning a. tract of land of 48,000 acres,
which included the town. Fort Dummer in Vernon, the first settlement made
in Vermont, in 1724, was also named after him.
Gov. Dummer is the
representative of the family whose use of the arms confirmed by the Earl
Marshal of England to those of them who applied, in 1711, for a recognition
of their right. The act of Herald’s College in 1711, by its very terms,
was not an original grant of a coat of arms, but simply a recognition and
confirmation of the prescriptive right and title which the applicants had
to a certain coat from their ancestors; in which Gov. Dummer shared equally
with the applicants. Although he did not join in the application,
Gov. Dummer used the arms represented to the right. Again, the Herald’s
College, by allowing to certain persons, in 1721, the use of Dummer arms
only recognized and confirmed a right in which all descendants of the Dummer
heiress who had carried her arms, by marriage, into another family, shared
alike, although only two members of this family applied to have the right
confirmed. The arms are described as: "Azure, three fleurs de lis
Or, on a chief of the second a demi-lion of the first."
[
画像:Arms used by Gov. Wm. Dummer]
The following passage is from
Appleton's Cyclop訶ia of American Biography, New
York, 1894, V. II pg. 254
DUMMER, William, lieutenant – governor of Massachusetts,
b. in Boston in 1677; d. there, 10 Oct, 1761. When Samuel Shute was appointed
governor of the colony in 1716, Dummer was commissioned lieutenant – governor,
and after Shute left, 1 Jan., 1723, he acted as governor and commander
– in – chief till the arrival of Gov. Burnet in 1728. He conducted the
war with the Indians with skill, and was respected for his ability and
zealous regard for the public good. After the death of Gov. Burnet he was
commander – in – chief again till the arrival of Belcher. After 1730
he lived in retirement. When he died he left his valuable farm and the
mansion – house, which is still standing, to endow Dummer academy in Byfield
parish, in the town of Newbury, the earliest academy in New England, which
was opened on 27 Feb., 1763, with twenty – eight pupils. — His brother,
Jeremiah,
scholar, b. in Boston, Mass., about 1680; d. in Plaistow, England, 19 May,
1739, was graduated at Harvard in 1699, where he was noted for brilliancy.
He studied theology, and afterward spent several years at the University
of Utrecht, where he obtained his doctor’s degree. Soon after his return
to America he was sent to England in 1710 as agent of Massachusetts, and
remained in London in that capacity till 1721. He was a benefactor of Yale
college, to which he presented 800 volumes. He was intimate with Bolingbroke,
and adopted some of his views. He published theological and philosophical
disquisitions in Latin while at Utrecht, and a “Defence of the New England
Charters” (London, 1728; reprinted, 1765), in which he argued that the
New England colonists held their charters by compact, in consideration
for redeeming the wilderness and annexing it to the British dominions,
and that their land – titles were not derived from the crown, which only
possessed political rights over the country, but were based on purchases
from the natives and on occupation and their own courage and enterprise.
The proposal of the Board of trade to unite the colonies under a single
viceroy and one assembly would produce, in his opinion, the result that
it was chiefly intended to avert, that of encouraging the colonies to throw
off their allegiance and constitute themselves a free state.