John Eliot ( – 21 May 1690) was a Puritan missionary to Native Americans who some called "the apostle to the Indians", and the founder of Roxbury Latin School in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1645. In 1660 he completed the enormous task of translating the Eliot Indian Bible into the Massachusett language, producing more than two thousand completed copies.

Early life and education

thumb|Cuckoos Farm, [[Little Baddow, Eliot's home around 1629]]

Eliot was born in Widford, Hertfordshire, England, and lived at Nazeing as a boy. He attended Jesus College, Cambridge. After college, he became assistant to Thomas Hooker at a private school in Little Baddow, Essex. After Hooker was forced to flee to the Netherlands, Eliot emigrated to Boston, Massachusetts, arranging passage as chaplain on the ship Lyon and arriving on 3 November 1631. Eliot became minister and "teaching elder" at the First Church in Roxbury.

In 1645, Eliot founded the Roxbury Latin School. He and fellow ministers Thomas Weld (also of Roxbury), Thomas Mayhew of Martha's Vineyard, and Richard Mather of Dorchester are credited with editing the Bay Psalm Book, the first book published in the British North American colonies (1640). From 1649 to 1674, Samuel Danforth assisted Eliot in his Roxbury ministry. He was the teacher at The First Church in Roxbury for sixty years and was their sole pastor for forty years.

For the first forty years in Roxbury, Eliot preached in the 20-foot by 30-foot meetinghouse with thatched roof and plastered walls that stood on Meetinghouse Hill. Eliot founded the Roxbury Grammar School and worked hard to keep it prosperous and relevant.

Use of the Massachusett language

thumb|upright=1.3|John Eliot among the Indians

The chief barrier to preaching to the Native Americans was language. To help him with this task, Eliot relied on a young Native American and made the servant of an Englishman named Richard Collicott. John Eliot said, "he was the first that I made use of to teach me words, and to be my interpreter."

The first time Eliot attempted to preach to the Massachusett (led by sachem Cutshamekin) in 1646 at Dorchester Mills, he failed, saying that they "gave no heed unto it, but were weary and despised what I said."

Missionary career

thumb|right|[[Mamusse Wunneetupanatamwe Up-Biblum God (1663) or the Eliot Indian Bible, the first Bible printed in British North America]]

Eliot's ministry largely focused on the conversion of Massachusett and other Algonquian peoples. Accordingly, Eliot translated the Bible into the Massachusett language and published it in 1663 as Mamusse Wunneetupanatamwe Up-Biblum God. It was the first complete Bible printed in the Western hemisphere; Samuel Green and Marmaduke Johnson printed 1,000 copies on the first printing press in British American colonies. Indigenous people including the Nipmuc leader James Printer (Wowaus) engaged in the creation of this Bible.

In 1666, Eliot published "The Indian Grammar Begun", again concerning the Massachusetts language. As a missionary, Eliot strove to consolidate the Algonquians in planned towns, thereby encouraging them to recreate a Christian society. At one point, there were 14 towns of so-called "Praying Indians", the best documented being at Natick, Massachusetts. Other praying Indian towns included: Littleton (Nashoba), Lowell (Wamesit, initially incorporated as part of Chelmsford), Grafton (Hassanamessit), Marlborough (Okommakamesit), a portion of Hopkinton that is now in the Town of Ashland (Makunkokoag), Canton (Punkapoag), and Mendon-Uxbridge (Wacentug). The "Praying Towns" were recorded by seventeenth-century settlers including Daniel Gookin.

In 1662, Eliot witnessed the signing of the deed for Mendon with Nipmuck people for "Squinshepauk Plantation". Eliot was involved in the legal case, The Town of Dedham v. The Indians of Natick, which concerned a boundary dispute. Besides answering Dedham's complaint point by point, Eliot argued that the colony's purpose was to benefit the Algonquian people.

Eliot also wrote The Christian Commonwealth: or, The Civil Policy Of The Rising Kingdom of Jesus Christ, considered the first book on politics written by an American, as well as the first book to be banned by a North American governmental unit. Written in the late 1640s, and published in England in 1659, it proposed a new model of civil government based on the system Eliot instituted among the converted Indians, which was based in turn on the government Moses instituted among the Israelites in the wilderness (Exodus 18).

Eliot asserted that "Christ is the only right Heir of the Crown of England," and called for an elected theocracy in England and throughout the world. The accession to the throne of Charles II of England made the book an embarrassment to the Massachusetts colony. In 1661 the General Court forced Eliot to issue a public retraction and apology, banned the book and ordered all copies destroyed.

In 1709, a special edition of the Massachusett Bible was co-authored by Experience Mayhew and Thomas Prince, with the Massachusett text in one column and the English text in the opposite column. The 1709 Massachusett Bible is also referred to as the Massachusett Psalter. This edition is based on the Geneva Bible, like the Eliot Indian Bible.

Family

175px|thumb|left|Coat of Arms of John Eliot

John Eliot married Hanna Mumford in September 1632, the first entry in the "Marages of the Inhabitants of Roxbury" record. They had six children: five sons and one daughter. Their daughter Hannah Eliot married Habbakuk Glover. Their son, John Eliot Jr., was the first pastor of the First Church of Christ in Newton, Another son, Joseph Eliot, became a pastor in Guilford, Connecticut, and later fathered Jared Eliot, a noted agricultural writer and pastor. John Eliot's sister, Mary Eliot, married Edward Payson, founder of the Payson family in America, and great-great-grandfather of the Rev. Edward Payson. He was also an ancestor of Lewis E. Stanton, a United States attorney for the District of Connecticut. He is related to the Bacon family.

Death

Eliot died in 1690, aged 85, his last words being "welcome joy!" His descendants became one branch of a Boston Brahmin family. The historic cemetery in Roxbury, Massachusetts, was named Eliot Burying Ground.

Legacy

Natick remembers Reverend Eliot with a monument on the grounds of the Bacon Free Library. The John Eliot Elementary School in Needham, Massachusetts, founded in 1956, is named after him. Puritan "remembrancer" Cotton Mather called his missionary career the epitome of the ideals of New England Puritanism. William Carey considered Eliot alongside the Apostle Paul and David Brainerd (1718–1747) as "canonized heroes" and "enkindlers" in his An Enquiry Into the Obligation of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathen (1792).

In 1689, he donated of land to support the Eliot School in what was then Roxbury's Jamaica Plain district and now is a historic Boston neighborhood. Two other Puritans had donated land on which to build the school in 1676, but boarding students especially required support. Eliot's donation required the school (renamed in his honor) to accept both Black and Native American students without prejudice, which was very unusual at the time. The school continues near its original location today, but now offers classes for all ages.

thumb|City Seal of [[Newton, Massachusetts, depicting John Eliot]]

The city seal of Newton, Massachusetts depicts Eliot preaching to an Indigenous audience. Present-day Newton is the site of Eliot’s first sermons to the Natives in Waban’s wigwam among what would be later called the Nonantum Indian community, starting on October 28, 1646. A nineteenth-century monument commemorates the event on Eliot Memorial Road, Newton.

thumb|John Eliot Memorial, Nonantum, Newton

The town of Eliot, Maine, which was in Massachusetts during its incorporation, was named after John Eliot.

Eliot appears in the alternate history 1632 Series, in the novel 1637: The Coast of Chaos. In the novel, his wife is killed shortly after the birth of their first child by French soldiers invading the Thirteen Colonies. A group of time travelers bring a book about the world they come from that allows Eliot to read about how much of his works were undone by his fellow colonists; he then sets out to alter his missionary efforts in a manner that will prevent Native American converts from being vulnerable to the treachery they faced in the old timeline.

Works

  • trans., The Book of Genesis, 1655.
  • trans., The Psalter, 1658.
  • The Christian Commonwealth: or The Civil Policy Of The Rising Kingdom of Jesus Christ, 1659 Librivox audio
  • A Christian Covenanting Confession, 1660.
  • trans., Wusku Wuttestamentum Nullordumun Jesus Christ (New Testament), 1661.
  • trans., Mamvsse Wunneetupanatamwe Up-Biblum God (The Holy Bible containing the Old Testament and the New), 1663, rev. ed. 1685.
  • The Indian Grammar Begun, 1666.
  • The Logic Primer, 1672.
  • The Harmony of the Gospels in the holy History of the Humiliation and Sufferings of Jesus Christ, from his Incarnation to his Death and Burial, 1678.
  • Nehtuhpeh peisses ut mayut, A Primer on the Language of the Algonquian Indians, 1684.

Eliot Tracts

  • New Englands First Fruits; in respect, First of the Conversion of some, Conviction of divers, Preparation of sundry of the Indians, 1643
  • The Day-Breaking, if not the Sun-Rising of the Gospel with the Indians in New-England, 1647
  • The Clear Sun-shine of the Gospel breaking forth upon the Indians in New-England, 1648
  • The Glorious Progress of the Gospel, amongst the Indians in New England, 1649
  • The Light appearing more and more towards the perfect Day, 1651
  • Strength out of Weaknesse; or a Glorious Manifestation of the further Progresse of the Gospel among the Indians in New-England, 1652
  • Tears of Repentance: Or, A further Narrative of the Progress of the Gospel Amongst the Indians in New-England, 1653
  • A Late and Further Manifestation of the Progress of the Gospel amongst the Indians in New-England, 1655
  • A further Accompt of the Progresse of the Gospel amongst the Indians in New-England and of the means used effectually to advance the same, 1659
  • A further Account of the progress of the Gospel Amongst the Indians In New England, 1660
  • Brief Narrative of the Progress of the Gospel amongst the Indians in New England, in the Year, 1670, 1671

See also

  • John Eliot Square District

References

Bibliography

  • Carpenter, John. "New England Puritans: The Grandparents of Modern Protestant Missions." Fides et Historia 30, no. 4, (October 2002).
  • Cesarini, J. Patrick. "John Eliot's 'A Brief History of the Mashepog Indians,' 1666." The William and Mary Quarterly 65, no. 1 (2008): 101–134.
  • Cogley, Richard. John Eliot’s Mission to the Indians before King Philip’s War. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999.
  • Dippold, Steffi. "The Wampanoag Word: John Eliot’s Indian Grammar, the Vernacular Rebellion, and the Elegancies of Native Speech." Early American Literature 48, no. 3 (2013): 543–75.
  • Francis, John Eliot, the Apostle to the Indians, in "Library of American Biography," volume 5 (Boston, 1836).
  • Winsor, Memorial History of Boston, volume 1 (Boston, 1880–81).
  • Walker, Ten New England Leaders (New York, 1901).
  • The Eliot Tracts: with letters from John Eliot to Thomas Thorowgood and Richard Baxter (London, 2003).
  • "Massachusetts Town Vitals Collection 1620-1988" record for Habbacuke Glover.

Further reading

  • (Covers Eliot's involvement in producing the Indian Bible in great detail)
  • Cambridge University - John Eliot Biography
  • Cambridge University - John Eliot Exhibition
  • Eliot School
  • The New Testament of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ / Wusku Wuttestamentum Nul-Lordumun Jesus Christ Nuppoquohwussuaeneumun (Cambridge: 1661) digitized by the John Carter Brown Library
  • Manitowompae pomantamoonk sampwshanau Christianoh uttoh woh an pomantog wnssikkitteahonat God (Cambridge: 1665) digitized by the John Carter Brown Library
  • The Indian grammar begun (Cambridge: 1666) digitized by the John Carter Brown Library