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WILLIAM BREWSTER (c. 1566–1644)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 514 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM BREWSTER (c. 1566–1644)  ,
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American colonist, one of the leaders of the " Pilgrims," was born at Scrooby, in Nottinghamshire, England, about 1566 . After studying for a short time at Cambridge, he was from 1584 to 1587 in the service of William Davison ( ? 1541-1608), who in 1585 went to the Low Countries to negotiate an
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alliance with the states-general and in 1586 became assistant to Walsingham, Queen Elizabeth's secretary of state . Upon the disgrace of Davison, Brewster removed to Scrooby, where from 1590 until September 1607 he held the position of "
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Post," or postmaster responsible for the relays of horses on the post road, having previously, for a short time, assisted his
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father in that office . About 1602 his neighbours began to assemble for worship at his home, the Scrooby
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manor house, and in 1606 he joined them in organizing the Separatist church of Scrooby . After an unsuccessful attempt in 1607 (for which he was imprisoned for a short time), he, with other Separatists, removed to Holland in 1608 to obtain greater freedom of worship . At
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Leiden in 1609 he was chosen ruling elder of the Congregation . In Holland he supported himself first by teaching
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English and afterwards in 1616–1619, as the partner of one Thomas Brewer, by secretly printing, for sale in England, books proscribed by the English government, thus, says Bradford, having " imploymente inough." In 1619 their types were seized and Brewer was arrested by the authorities of the university of Leiden, acting on the instance of the
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British ambassador,
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Sir Dudley Carleton . Brewster, however, escaped, and in the same
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year, with Robert Cushman (c . 1580-1625), obtained in
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London, on behalf of his associates, a
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land patent from the Virginia
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Company . In 1620 he emigrated to
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America on the "
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Mayflower," and was one of the founders of the Plymouth Colony . Here besides continuing until his
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death to act as ruling elder, he was also—regularly until the arrival of the first pastor, Ralph Smith (d .

1661), in 1629 and irregularly afterward—a " teacher,"

preaching " both powerfully and profitably to ye
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great contentment of ye hearers and their comfortable edification." By many he is regarded as pre-eminently the leader of the " Pilgrims." He died, probably on the loth of
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April 1644 . See Ashbel Steele's Chief of the Pilgrims; or the
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Life and Time of William Brewster (
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Philadelphia, 1857) ; and a sketch in William Bradford's
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History of the Plimouth Plantation (new ed., Boston, 1898) .

End of Article: WILLIAM BREWSTER (c. 1566–1644)
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Additional information and Comments

William Brewster was my Grandfather many gengerations ago, maybe 14 back. I would like to know more about him.
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