Historic Pelham

Presenting the rich history of Pelham, NY in Westchester County: current historical research, descriptions of how to research Pelham history online and genealogy discussions of Pelham families.

Monday, October 07, 2019

Pelham Founder Thomas Pell Served as a 17th Century Physician in the Colony of New Haven and in Fairfield


Thomas Pell of Fairfield in the Colony of Connecticut acquired from local Wiechquaeskeck Native Americans the lands that became the Manor of Pelham on June 27, 1654 (old-style Julian calendar).  During the Pequot War, Pell was present on board a troop transport ship when Captains John Mason and John Underhill led Connecticut colonists and their Narragansett and Mohegan allies in a raid that led to what is known as the Mystic Massacre.  The force attacked and laid waste to a Pequot stockade on May 26, 1637.  Records of the massacre indicate Pell was present as a "chirugeon" (i.e., surgeon) to attend to those injured or wounded in the battle.  

Lest one believe that Pell made his living as a physician, it should be noted that he was more of a 17th century educated jack-of-all-trades and hustler.  Records reflect him working in New Haven and in the Colony of Connecticut as:  (1) a physician; (2) an attorney; (3) a real estate speculator; and (4) a trader who sailed up and down the east coast between Connecticut and Virginia.  Though Pell remained a resident of Fairfield until the end of his life and never removed from Fairfield to the Manor of Pelham, he clearly was a wealthy man at the time of his death as indicated by an inventory of that portion of his estate (likely only a small part of the estate) that was held in the Colony of New York at the time of his death.  See Fri., Jun. 24, 2016:  Archival Record of the Last Will and Testament and Estate Inventory of Pelham Founder Thomas Pell.

In 1934 the Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine published an article by Herbert Thoms, M.D., F.A.C.S. entitled "The Beginnings of Medical Practice in New Haven Colony."  In it, the author details some of the early medical practice of Pelham founder Thomas Pell and includes some interesting biographical details about Thomas Pell's life.  Today's Historic Pelham article transcribes the text of Dr. Thoms's article, followed by a citation and link to its source.  



Portion of Engraving Depicting the Attack on the Pequot Fort
at Mystic in May 1637. Source: Underhill, John, "The Figure
of the Indian's Fort or Palizado," Illustration in Newes from America;
or, A New and Experimental Discoverie of New England (London:
1638). NOTE: Click to Enlarge Image.



"Thomas Pell" by Thom Lafferty from an Original by
an Unknown Artist Who Imagined Pell as He Would
Look. There Are No Known Images of Thomas Pell.
NOTE: Click on Image to Enlarge.

*          *          *          *          *

"THE BEGINNINGS OF MEDICAL PRACTICE IN NEW HAVEN COLONY
-----
HERBERT THOMS, M.D., F.A.C.S.
NEW HAVEN, CONN.
-----

From the standpoint of present day medical knowledge the story of medicine in the early colonial period is not an attractive one.  The ridiculous treatment and the absurd remedies accorded the sick in that day are valueless now.  Nevertheless, the meagre [sic] accounts that tell us of the medical life of that period are inspiring.  One reads of the endeavors and contentions of these earnest medical pioneers with an admiration that is akin to reverence.  The incessant physical struggles that their environment demanded and their firm spiritual contention for righteous living, produced in them a fortitude of body and mind that we their descendants may properly revere.

It is my purpose to speak of the beginnings of medical practice in New Haven Colony, to discuss our first physicians and to review the medical life of their time.  Of necessity I shall limit my inquiry to a period from the establishment of the Colony in 1639 to the beginning of the next century.

When we consider the changes in medical practice in our own time, changes brought about not only by newer and more effectual methods of treatment, but changes brought about by such things as the telephone, the automobile, and the development of the modern hospital, it is difficult for us to form an accurate picture of medical life even half a century ago.  Scientific discovery and invention are making such tremendous changes in our entire life today, that the wonders of yesterday become commonplace, and each new complexity further obscures our vision of those who have gone before.

How extremely difficult it is for us to think of the tiny settlement of Quinnipiac with its one hundred and thirty families and how hard to picture the seventeenth century physician making his daily rounds.

The settlement of New Haven from its inception was a compact, thriving community.  It comprised among its inhabitants people who were wealthy and educated.  Although Bacon in Atwater's History says that 'New Haven Colony managed to be born and pass some years of its life without the help of any doctor of its own" I think it is reasonable to believe that Mr. Thomas Pell acted in this capacity almost from the first.  Bolton in his History of Westchester County says that Pell was a resident in Fairfield in 1635 and in New Haven in 1642.  The first reference to his medical life [sic] appears December 3rd, 1645, in conection with a gunshot wound.  Because of 'the great damage Stephen Madcalfe had susteyned in the losse of his eye, with the losse of his time & the great chardge of the cure, Mr. Pell affirming it was worth 10 L' the court 'ordered Francis Linley to pay to Stephen Medcalfe 20L damadges.'

Pell, who was born and educated an English gentleman, would have been immediately attracted to the new Colony, which numbered among its people so many men of his own intellectual sphere.

His father, the Rev. John Pell, of Southwyke in Sussex, died in 1616, leaving two sons, the Rev. John Pell, D.D., rector of Fobbing in Essex, afterward ambassador to the Swiss Cantons, and Thomas Pell described as 'gentleman to the bedchamber' to King Charles I and first Lord and proprietor of the manor of Pelham.  He was born about 1608 and although his exact arrival in America is unknown, he was one of New England's first settlers.  His name is associated with Roger Ludlow of the Rev. John Warhams Company at Dorchester, Mass., in June, 1630.  In 1636 he acted as Sugeon to the Saybrook Fort and in the next year accompanied Captain Underhill to the Pequot war.

He came to New Haven shortly after its settlement and on the tenth of March, 1646, we find him recorded as an occupant of the first seat on the cross benches at the end of the Meeting House with Mr. Tutle and Bro. Fowler.  In 1646-47 he married the widow of Francis Brewster (Lucy) of New Haven and this act, together with his service in the risky Pequot war, assures, us, says Dr. Francis Bacon, that his intrepidity is undoubted.

Both Thomas Pell and his wife appear somewhat prominently in the Records, the latter in a trial for slander which occupies some eighteen pages of the transactions and the former because of his persistent refusal to pay a debt of 200 L which his wife contracted before their marriage.  That he was a man of enterprise is unquestioned and he not only practised medicine but we find that he engaged in various commercial pursuits.  In 1647 he traded to the Delaware and Virginia.  As there were no professional lawyers in the colony Mr. Pell not infrequently acted in this capacity for others.  Pell was a man of independence and spirit and at least one in the Colony was not particularly awed by the Court proceedings.

In September (5) we find Mr. Pell warned by the Court:

'and appeared; he was told it was for two reasons, first to take the oath of fidellitie, 2ndly to paye in ye fine of 10L laid upon him ye last court of magistrate.  He said for ye oath, he had taken it in England and should not do it heare; he was told no more is required of him then others doe, yett if he had any grounds against it he might propound them, or elc [sic] if he would considr [sic] of it, for his fine of 10 L he was asked if he had taken any order to paye it, he said no.  Mr. Goodyear said he hoped he would.  Mr. Pell said he knew not.  He was asked ye reason, he said he should be silent for he had given offenc [sic] heretofore with speaking, but ye court desired an answer, whether he would paye or no, but his answer was that he desired to be silent.'

If Thomas Pell was as skillful a physician as he appears to have been a lawyer, the health of New Haven Colony was in safe hands.  In 1654 he removed to Westchester County, New York, [sic; he never moved to Westchester] and became proprietor of Lands now known as Pelham Manor.  He died in 1669 of what was called Hasty Consumption and was buried at Fairfield.  His estate shows him to have been a man of considerable wealth.  Bolton says the inventory shows the 'household array of a wealthy merchant and gentleman of that period.'  From the perusal of this and other information we have reason to believe that during this latter part of his life he did not practice medicine to any extent.  The only books listed in the inventory are 'Culpeper's dispensatory wh 3 other small books' and '2 of Craddock's works in quarto.'  In his will he bequeathed all his 'lands and houses in any part of New England and in yre territory of ye Duke of York' to his nephew, John Pell, living in Old England, the only son of his brother, John Pell, Doctor of Divinity. . . ."

Source:  Thoms, Herbert, THE BEGINNINGS OF MEDICAL PRACTICE IN NEW HAVEN COLONY, Yale J. Biol. Med., 1934 Jan, Vol. 6, No. 3, pp. 307-21.


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Thursday, September 21, 2017

Pelham Founder Thomas Pell Served in the Pequot War in the early 17th Century



It is well established that Pelham founder Thomas Pell was among those who settled Fort Saybrook in the Colony of Saybrook (now part of Connecticut) in the 1630s.  It is also well established that Pell served as the "Chirugeon" (surgeon -- i.e., physician of the day) who traveled with Captain John Underhill and his militia when they sailed away from Fort Saybrook and attacked a fortified Native American settlement near Mystic on May 26, 1637 during the so-called Pequot War. 

It seems clear that Pell refused to leave the ship when it arrived ferrying militia members on the way to the massacre. Indeed, at least one leader of the attack complained bitterly that Pell refused to accompany the soldiers, led by Captain John Underhill, after they disembarked from the vessel and began their overland march to the fortified settlement where they massacred an unknown number of men, women and children. There is evidence to suggest that Pell acted not from some principled disagreement with the nature of the venture that led to a terrible massacre of the Native Americans but, rather, out of fear that the venture was ill-fated and would lead to the deaths of those who planned to attack the Native American village.

Today's Historic Pelham article quotes a brief reference in Mason's History of the Pequot War and, more particularly, an excerpt of a description of the May 26, 1637 expedition against a fortified Pequot settlement at Mystic:

"They were taken in their own snare, and we through mercy escaped.  And thus in little more than one hour's space, was their impregnable fort with themselves destroyed, to the number of six or seven hundred, as some of themselves confessed.  There were only seven taken captive, and about seven escaped.  Of the English there were two slain outright, and about twenty wounded; some fainted by reason of the sharpness of the weather, it being a cool morning, and the want of such comforts and necessaries as [Page xiii / Page xiv] are needed in such a case; especially our Chirurgeon * [see text of footnote "*" below] was much wanting, whom we left with our barks in Narragansett Bay, who had orders to remain until the night before our intended assault. . . . 

[Text of footnote "*" follows.]  * Dr. Thomas Pell, a gentleman of good family from London, was sent from the fort at Saybrook, as surgeon of the expedition.  He afterward settled at New Haven, from whence he removed to Fairfield, and afterwards to Westchester, N. Y. [sic], where he purchased of the natives a large tract of land, which was given the name of Pelham. -- Styles' History of Windsor, p. 38.  [New paragraph] Mrs. Martha J. Lamb's Hist. of New York I. 171, 257, 381.  Bolton's Hist. of Westchester.  Dr. Pell's will was probated at Fairfield, and some reliable documents in regard to his nephew John Pell of London, are on file there."

Source:  Schenck, Elizabeth Hubbell, The History of Fairfield - Fairfield County, Connecticut From the Settlement of the Town in 1639 to 1818 By Mrs. Elizabeth Hubbell Schenck, Vol. I, pp. xiii-xiv (NY, NY:  Published by the Author, 1889)(citing "Mason's Hist. Pequot War," a short-form reference to citation appearing elsewhere in the volume as "Mason's Hist., Pequot War., Mass. Hist. Coll., Vol. 8, S. 2, 146-151").

Though at least one other account complains bitterly that Pell refused to accompany the expedition to the fortified village, this brief reference contains a vague and ambiguous reference.  It states that the expedition especially needed "our Chirugeon . . . whom we left with our barks in Narragansett Bay, who had orders to remain until the night before our intended assault. . . . ."

At first blush, it would seem that the reference to "orders to remain until the night before our intended assault" would apply to the barks that transported the troops to the shores near the fortification at Mystic.  Is it possible, however, that the reference "orders to remain" was intended to relate to "our Chirugeon," Thomas Pell?  While that is at least a remote possibility, historians long have suggested the contrary, choosing to support the story that Pelham founder Thomas Pell did not believe the expedition would succeed and, thus, remained aboard a bark to avoid the risk of death.



Portion of Engraving Depicting the Attack on the Pequot Fort
at Mystic in May 1637. Source: Underhill, John, "The Figure
of the Indian's Fort or Palizado," Illustration in Newes from America;
or, A New and Experimental Discoverie of New England (London:
1638). NOTE: Click to Enlarge Image.



"Thomas Pell" by Thom Lafferty from an Original by
an Unknown Artist Who Imagined Pell as He Would
Look. There Are No Known Images of Thomas Pell.
NOTE: Click on Image to Enlarge.

*          *          *          *          *

I have written about Pelham founder Thomas Pell and various aspects of his life on countless occasions.  For links to more than sixty articles and one book dealing with the topics, see the following.

Fri., Jan. 16, 2015:  Possible Service of Pelham Founder, Thomas Pell, with English Forces in the Siege and Capture of Bois-le-Duc in the Netherlands in 1629.  


Thu., Jan. 15, 2015:  The Man For Whom The Town of Pelham Is Named.


Thu., Oct. 30, 2014:  Did Thomas Pell Act on Pangs of Remorse After Witchcraft Persecution Involving His Family?

Mon., Mar. 31, 2014:  Inventory of the Estate of Pelham Founder Thomas Pell Taken Shortly After He Died in Late September, 1669.

Wed., Oct. 7, 2009:  1656 Native American Deed for Fairfield, Connecticut Lands Signed by Thomas Pell as a Witness.

Fri., Apr. 24, 2009:  Dutch Authorities Remove the Settlers At West Chester in March, 1656.

Tue., Apr. 07, 2009:  1666 Record Containing "Observations" on the Patent Granted to Thomas Pell.

Thu., Dec. 20, 2007:  Two 17th Century Fairfield Probate Records Referring to Thomas Pell.  
Tue., Dec. 18, 2007:  1648 Commercial Record Involving Claim Against Thomas Pell for Three Hundred Pounds.

Mon., Dec. 17, 2007:  1649 Record Whereby Thomas Pell Appointed Agent to Recover Bond Due From Pewterer Ambrose Adlam of the City of Bristoll.

Fri., Dec. 14, 2007:  Additional 17th Century Shipping and Commercial Records Mentioning Thomas Pell.  

Tue., Nov. 27, 2007:  Thomas Pell Was Elected a Freeman of Connecticut on October 9, 1662, the Day the Crown's Connecticut Charter Was Read to the Public.

Wed., Oct. 24, 2007:  July 3, 1666 Letter on Behalf of the Governor of the Province of New York To Thomas Pell.

Tue., Oct. 23, 2007:  1664 Petition of Inhabitants of Westchester to Commissioners for the Affairs of New England Mentioning 1654 Purchase by Thomas Pell.

Mon., Oct. 22, 2007:  Dutch Authorities Demand That Thomas Pell Halt His 'Intrusion' at Westchester in 1656.

Fri., Oct. 19, 2007:  Thomas Pell Was Feared Drowned or Lost at Sea in 1656.  

Thu., Oct. 18, 2007:  April 19, 1655 Dutch Protest Against Thomas Pell's Efforts To Settle Englishmen on Lands the Dutch Called VreedLandt.

Wed., Oct. 17, 2007:  1669 Map of Lands in Dispute Between Thomas Pell and John Richbell.

Tue., Oct. 16, 2007:  Information About Thomas Pell's Treaty Oak Published in 1912.

Wed., Oct. 10, 2007:  Thomas Pell Accompanies Delegation of Dutch from New Haven to Hartford in October, 1663.

Tue., Aug. 14, 2007:  Biographical Data About Thomas Pell, His brother, John, and His Nephew, John Pell of the Manor of Pelham.  

Tue., Jul. 24, 2007:  Article About the Pell Treaty Oak Published in 1909

Mon., Jul. 23, 2007:  1906 Article in The Sun Regarding Fire that Destroyed the Pell Treaty Oak.

Wed., May 2, 2007:  Information About Thomas Pell's Treaty Oak Published in 1922

Mon., Apr. 2, 2007:  More Evidence That Thomas Pell Paid 500 Pounds Sterling for the Lands that Became the Manor of Pelham.

Wed., Mar. 07, 2007:  Published Abstract of 1669 Will of Thomas Pell, Followed by Entire Text of Will of Thomas Pell.

Wed., Feb. 07, 2007:  Information About Thomas Pell in the Catalogue of the Names of the First Puritan Settlers of the Colony of Connecticut Published in 1846.

Fri., Feb. 02, 2007:  1670 Letter from John Winthrop, Jr. to William Lord Brereton, Describing the Arrival of John Pell in America to Receive Thomas Pell's Estate.

Thu., Jan. 11, 2007:  More 17th Century Commercial Records Involving Thomas Pell and Edmund Leach.

Wed., Jan. 10, 2007:  17th Century Commercial Records Involving Thomas Pell and Edmund Leach.

Tue., Jan. 9, 2007:  1648 Notarial Record by Boston Merchant Providing Power of Attorney to Collect Debt From Thomas Pell of New Haven.

Mon., Jan. 8, 2007:  Dutch Authorities Decide To Station a Ship With Men Off Today's City Island on February 9, 1654 To Keep Watch on the Activities of the English.

Fri., Dec. 22, 2006:  Brief Biographies of Thomas Pell, First Lord of the Manor of Pelham, and His Nephew, John, Published in 1912.

Tue., Dec. 12, 2006:  Did Thomas Pell Avoid Taxes by Maintaining a Medical Practice?

Fri., Dec. 08, 2006:  An Interesting Power of Attorney Executed in Favor of Thomas Pell on October 29, 1651 Plus Other Records.

Thu., Dec. 07, 2006:  Additional Authorities Supporting Assertions that Thomas Pell Conducted Trade by Ship Along the East Coast.

Wed., Dec. 06, 2006:  When Did Thomas Pell Arrive in America?

Wed., Nov. 22, 2006:  Young Thomas Pell Unjustly Accused of "Extortion or Sinfull Unrightousness".

Mon., Nov. 06, 2006:  The Source of Confusion Over the Date Thomas Pell Acquired the Lands That Became the Manor of Pelham.

Tue., Oct. 24, 2006:  Thomas Pell's and John Pell's Land Dispute with John Richbell in the Late 1660s and Early 1670s.

Mon., Oct. 23, 2006:  More Early Evidence That Thomas Pell Had a House Later Used by His Nephew, John Pell, on Rodman's Neck

Fri., Oct. 06, 2006:  Additional Evidence That Thomas Pell Acquired His Lands At the Behest of English Authorities.

Thu. Oct. 5, 2006: Additional Evidence That Thomas Pell Paid 500 Pounds Sterling for the Lands That Became the Manor of Pelham.

Wed., Oct. 04, 2006:  Did Thomas Pell, First Lord of the Manor of Pelham, Act as an Attorney?

Fri., Aug. 25, 2006:  Thomas Pell, First Lord of the Manor of Pelham, Traded Tobacco Along the East Coast by Barque.

Mon., July 24, 2006:  A Statute Enacted in 1666 Seems to Have Prompted Thomas Pell To Seek a Royal Grant Confirming His June 27, 1654 Land Acquisition.

Fri., July 7, 2006:  The Involvement of Thomas Pell's Family in the Witchcraft Persecution of Goody Knapp.

Mon., July 3, 2006:  Where Is Thomas Pell's Handwritten Copy of the Treaty Signed With Local Native Americans on June 27, 1654?

Wed., Jun. 28, 2006:  A Biography of Mathematician John Pell, Brother of Thomas Pell (First Lord of the Manor of Pelham).

Tue., Jun. 27, 2006:  Land Owned by Thomas Pell and His Wife in New Haven, Connecticut in the Mid-17th Century.  

Thu., Apr. 13, 2006:  Rumors in 1657 That Thomas Pell Manipulated Local Native Americans To Protect His Land Acquisition From Incursions by the Dutch.

Fri., Mar. 03, 2006:  1666 Letter from Thomas Pell to John Winthrop, Jr. Regarding Pell's 1654 Purchase of the Lands That Became Pelham.

Thu., Feb. 16, 2006:  Evidence of the Use of Thomas Pell's Insignia To Seal a Letter from Lion Gardiner in 1636.  

Fri., Jul. 29, 2005:  Has Another Piece of the Treaty Oak Surfaced?

Bell, Blake A., Thomas Pell and the Legend of the Pell Treaty Oak (Lincoln, NE: iUniverse, Inc., 2004). 

Bell, Blake A., How Much Did Thomas Pell Pay for the Manor of Pelham?, The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XV, Issue 43, Nov. 3, 2006, p. 10, col. 1.

Bell, Blake A., Thomas Pell's Feud With the New Haven Courts, The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 14, Apr. 2, 2004, p. 10, col. 2.

Bell, Blake A., Thomas Pell: The Historical Context, The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 12, Mar. 19, 2004, p. 10, col. 1.

Bell, Blake A., Pelham History: The Involvement of Thomas Pell's Family in the Witchcraft Persecution of Goody Knapp, The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 4, Jan. 23, 2004, p. 11, col. 1 through p. 12, col. 2.

Bell, Blake A., Pelham History: Why Did Thomas Pell Buy the Lands That Became Pelham?, The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 2, Jan. 9, 2004, p. 11, col. 1 through p. 12, col. 3.

Bell, Blake A., Thomas Pell's Treaty Oak, The Westchester Historian, Vol. 28, Issue 3, pp. 73-81 (The Westchester County Historical Society, Summer 2002). 

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Wednesday, February 07, 2007

Information About Thomas Pell in the Catalogue of the Names of the First Puritan Settlers of the Colony of Connecticut Published in 1846

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In 1846, R. R. Hinman released a multivolume work entitled "A Catalogue of the Names of the First Puritan Settlers of the Colony of Connecticut; with the Time of Their Arrival in the Colony, and Their Standing in Society, Together with Their Place of Residence as Far as Can be Discovered by the Records". The book contained a very brief reference to Thomas Pell, often discribed as the "First Lord of the Manor of Pelham". The reference is quoted in its entirety immediately below, followed by a citation to the source.

"Pell, Thomas, New London county, was made free, 1662. It was ordered, that those who wished to be freemen should present themselves in person, with a certificate under the hands of a majority of the townsmen where they resided, that they were persons of civil, peaceable and honest conversation and the age of 21 years, and had £20 estate, exclusive of the poll, in the list. With such certificate and the approbation of the General Court, they could be made free. A Doctor Pell, supposed to be Thomas or his father, who resided at the fort as physician under Lieut. Gardner, went with Major Mason as surgeon for the little army to meet the Pequotts in the battle in 1637 -- but proved himself cowardly by remaining on board the vessel, instead of going up to the battle to the relief of the wounded. Probably the same Thomas Pell who came to Massachusetts in the Hopewell."

Source: Hinman, Royal Ralph, A Catalogue of the Names of the First Puritan Settlers of the Colony of Connecticut; with the Time of Their Arrival in the Colony, and Their Standing in Society, Together with Their Place of Residence as Far as Can be Discovered by the Records, Vol. I, p. 62 (Hartford, CT: E. Gleason 1846).

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