Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. William Pynchon (1590-1662) was an English colonist and fur trader who founded Springfield, Massachusetts. He also wrote a controversial book on atonement, advocated for peace with Native Americans, and was a colonial treasurer and patentee.

  2. Nov 11, 2015 · William Pynchon was a prominent colonial leader and a founder of Springfield, Massachusetts. He wrote a book that challenged the Puritan orthodoxy and was burned by the Boston authorities in 1650.

  3. William Pynchon is known today as the founder of the city of Springfield. He made his fortune as a fur trader, then acquired extensive landholdings in the Connecticut River Valley. Pynchon established commercial relations with the indigenous people of the area, and oversaw the transformation of Springfield from a small colonial outpost to a ...

  4. Dec 10, 2015 · In many ways, William Pynchon is the forgotten founding father of colonial New England. Though largely unheralded today, there is no refuting he had his hands all over the enterprise from its very inception. Born around 1590, Pynchon came from an old and prestigious family.

  5. May 21, 2018 · William Pynchon [1], c.15901662, American colonist and theologian, b. England. An original patentee and assistant in the Massachusetts Bay Company [2], he migrated to America in 1630, where he helped found Roxbury and served as treasurer of the colony (1632–34).

  6. William Pynchon, one of the original founders of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, arrived with John Winthrop in 1630. Rather than staying by the coast, however, Pynchon moved inland. He bought land in what was called Agawam from the American Indians and named it Springfield after his home in England.

  7. William Pynchon was an English colonist and fur trader in North America best known as the founder of Springfield, Massachusetts. He was also a colonial treasurer, original patentee of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, and the iconoclastic author of the New World's first banned book.