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The Ship Bevis was named after a romantic hero -
Sir Bevis of Hampton (c. 1324) is a Middle English romance. It contains many themes common to that genre: a hero whose exploits take him from callow youth to hard-won maturity, ending with a serene and almost sanctified death.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bevis_of_Hampton
Supporting Bevis are a resourceful, appealing heroine and faithful servants set against dynastic intrigue, and a parade of interesting villains, both foreign and domestic. The plot has a geographical sweep which moves back and forth from England to the Near East and through most of western Europe, replete with battles against dragons, giants and other mythical creatures. Forced marriages, episodes of domestic violence, a myriad of disguises and mistaken identities, harsh imprisonments with dramatic escapes, harrowing rescues, and violent urban warfare fill out the protagonist's experiences. Last but not least, he has a horse of such valor that the horse's death at the end of the poem is at least as tragic as that of the heroine, and almost as tragic as that of Bevis himself. Not surprisingly though, this much variety makes the poem a difficult one to characterize with any degree of certainty, and several other factors make it a poem which is perhaps easier to enjoy than to evaluate accurately.
Bevis is the son of Guy, the count of Hampton (Southampton), and Guy's young wife, who is a daughter of the King of Scotland. Discontented with her marriage, Bevis's mother asks a former suitor, Doon or Devoun, emperor of Almaine (Germany), to send an army to murder Guy in a forest. The plot succeeds and the countess marries Doon. Threatened with future vengeance by her ten-year-old son, she determines to do away with him also, but Bevis is saved from death by a faithful tutor.
Bevis is the son of Guy, the count of Hampton (Southampton), and Guy's young wife, who is a daughter of the King of Scotland. Discontented with her marriage, Bevis's mother asks a former suitor, Doon or Devoun, emperor of Almaine (Germany), to send an army to murder Guy in a forest. The plot succeeds and the countess marries Doon. Threatened with future vengeance by her ten-year-old son, she determines to do away with him also, but Bevis is saved from death by a faithful tutor.
The Bevis, also known as the Bevis of Hampton was a ship that brought “Emigrants” from England to New England in 1638 at a time when thousands of Puritans left England seeking freedom of religious practice. The ship master was named Robert Batten. One voyage carried 61 settlers from Southampton, England, leaving on 16 May 1638, to “Newengland”. The ship’s destinations included: Newbury, Weymouth, Wells, Maine, Newport, Salisbury, and Charlestown.
Bevis (ship) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bevis_(ship)
The Bevis, also known as the Bevis of Hampton, was a merchant sailing ship that brought "Emigrants"[1] from England to New England in 1638,[1] this at a time when thousands of Puritans left England seeking freedom of religious practice.[2]
Contents
1 Details
2 Passengers
3 Notable passengers and comments on them
4 See also
5 References
Details
The Ship Master was named Robert Batten.[1] One voyage in May of 1638 carried 61 settlers from Southampton, England, leaving before 12 May 1638 in which they were “some Dayes gone to sea”,[2] to "Newengland", all one word.[1] The ship's passenger destinations included: Newbury, Weymouth, Wells, Maine, Newport, Salisbury, and Charlestown.[3]
No verified details of this merchant ship, its age or fate is known other than "Beuis(t) of Hampton of CL. Tonnes". This translates to “Bevis of Hampton, 150 tons.” The (t) was actually a footnote reference symbol in the form of a Latin cross (✝ ). The “burthen” or weight bearing capacity of cargo of the Bevis was 150 tons. This does not mean the ship weighed only 150 tons because it more likely weighed three times (450 gross weight) or more of its cargo capacity.[4]
Many of the three masted merchant ships traveling across the Atlantic Ocean about this same time period were in the 450 to 650 ton range.[5]
The cargo or “goods” were certified (not loaded) on 12 May 1638. Yet the ship had been “some Dayes gone to sea” by 2 May 1638.[4] The shippers of the goods were Richard Dumer & Co. Henry Byles & Co.[6]
The exact date of departure is often not known since departures often coincided with the daylight outgoing or “ebb” tide. This being anywhere from a few hours to more than a day after clearance was given to leave port. Some have cited 16 May 1638 and 12 May 1638) as the departure date, but without proof. Again, they had been “some Dayes gone to sea” by 2 May 1638.
“They landed probably at Boston (the point of all but a handful of Bay Colony arrivals) in June or July 1638 (the average ocean crossing took five to eight weeks).”[7]
She completed the voyage to the Americas because her passengers arrived and took up residence there. Her fate thereafter is unknown.
Passengers
SOUTHAMPTON.--- The list of the names of Passeng. Intended to shipe themsleues,
In the Beuis(t) of Hampton of CL. Tonnes, Robert Batten Mr for Newengland,
And thus by vertue of the Lord Treasurers warrant of the second of May
w'th was after the restrayat and they some Dayes gone to sea
Before the Kinges Mat'es Proelamacon Came boto South'uon.
(Copied from passenger image.)
The 61 documented Bevis passengers enumerated or attested to on 2 May 1638 were mostly Puritans, leaving England for the New World driven by the quest for religious freedom at a time when England was moving toward ardent Catholicism.[2] Scholar David B. Gracy, II, notes that some in the hierarchy of the King of England noticed the Bevis was almost entirely composed of Puritans and agents of the Kingdom sought to prevent the ship from setting sail in May 1638, but alas failed to prevent the sailing.[8][9][10]
The passenger list portion of the archive papers regarding the Bevis from May 1638.
A listing of passengers from the passenger image include;[11]
Ffrey John of Basing, Whelwrite , wife and 3 children
Austin Richard of Bishopstocke 40, Taylor , his wife and 2 children
*Knight Robert 37, Carpenter Servant to R. Austin
Batt Christopher of Sarcum, 37, Tanner
Batt Anna 32, Chirstopher's wife
Batt Dorothis Batt 20, Chirstopher's sister
Batt children, 5 under 10 years
Good Thomas 24, Batt Servant
Blackston Eliza 22, Batt Servant
Pond Rebecca,18, Batt Servant
Carpenter William of Horwell /Wherwell 62, carpenter
Carpenter William Jr. of Horwell 33, carpenter
Carpenter Abigael 32
Carpenter children, 4 10 or under
Banshott Tho 14, Carpenter servant
Littlefield Annis 38
Littlefield children, 6
*Knight John, carpenter and Littlefield servant
Durdal Hough, Littlefield servant
Byley Henery of Saru 26, tanner
Byley Mary 22
Reeves Tho, Byley servant
Byley John 20, Byley servant
Dumr Richard of New England 40 (aka Richard Dummer - Dumr is the abbreviation of Dummer, the r is written in superscript in the image.)
Dumr Alice 35
Dumr Tho 19
Dumr Joane 19
Dumr Jane 10
Dumr Steephen, husbandman
Dumr Dorothie 6
Dumr Richard 4
Dumr Tho 2
Hutchinson John 30, carpenter, servant
Alcocke Francis 26, servant
Mott Adam 19, Taylor, servant
Wackefeild Will. 22, servant
Parker Nathaunel 20, servant of London Backer
Poore Samuel 18, servant
Poore Da'yell 14, servant
Poore Alce 20, servant
Bayley Richard 15, servant
Wackefeild Anna 20, Servant
The nomb'r of passeng'rs aboue mentioned are Sixtie and one Soules.
Tho: Wurfres Coll. And Sear' Hen: Champante Cust's. D. Dingley Compt'r
[Endorsement.]----Southotn, 1628. The sert. And list of the Passeng'rs names gone for New England in the Bevis of Hampton, in May 1638.
(Copied from passenger image.)[12]
Notable passengers and comments on them
Richard Austin, whose descendants of the same surname name would include Moses Austin, Stephen F. Austin, and Emily Austin Perry who collectively are credited with settling the State of Texas.
William Carpenter from Shalbourne whose Rehoboth Carpenter family descendants included many politicians, generals, admirals and an astronaut. [13]
Richard Dummer, who had previously emigrated in 1632 as an organizer of and investor in the failed Plough Company (Lygonia Providence).[14] Dummer had returned to Hampshire, England, about 1637 and, as a Bevis passenger, was bringing relatives back to New England with him. The following excerpt is from Eugene Cole Zubrinsky's online sketch of "William2 Carpenter of Rehoboth" which indicates an indirect connection between Dummer and the Carpenters:
"The Bevis passenger list describes William2 and his father as “of Horwell,” that is, Whorwell (now Wherwell), in Horwell Hundred, Hampshire, about 15 miles south-south-east of Shalbourne. Wherwell, which had a tradition of religious dissent—at least two of its vicars, Stephen Bachiler (1587–1605)[15] and his probable brother-in-law John Bate (1605–1633), were nonconformists—lies on a straight line from Shalbourne to the Bevis’s port of departure, at Southampton. (Another Bevis passenger in 1638 was Richard Dummer, who, with kinsman Bachiler, had been a partner in the Plough Company, which had recruited dissenters for migration to New England in 1631 and 1632.) It is clear from the chronology of Carpenter records at Shalbourne that the family was at Wherwell for a few months at most. It is indeed possible that they paused there only long enough to obtain from sympathetic authorities the certificates of conformity (one for each man) that customs officials would require for the Carpenters to leave England and from which the residence recorded for them on the passenger list was probably copied (TAG 70:193–94, 195n14; NEHGR 14:336; Old Hampshire Maps; see also “Focus on the Planter,” GMN 15, no. 4)."[16]
See also
See the link: www.packrat-pro.com/ships/bevis.htm for the Bevis Passenger list on line.
References
Bevis 1638
Gracy, David B., Moses Austin: his life (Trinity University Press, 1987), pp. 5-6. ISBN 0-911536-84-1
"The Planters of the Commonwealth in Massachusetts" by Charles E. Banks
The Passenger List of The Bevis (1638) Archived January 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
Elizabethean Merchant Ships and Ship Building by Dr. Ian Friel, FSA. Dated 29 September 2009, Museum of London, courtesy of Gresham College.
Public Records Office: Classes CO1/9/112 and E190/824/9 as referenced in "The Complete Book of Emigrants, 1607-1660" by Peter Coldham
WILLIAM1 CARPENTER OF NEWTOWN, SHALBOURNE, WILTSHIRE (BEVIS, 1638) by Eugene Cole Zubrinsky, FASG who also cites: NEHGR 14:336 = The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, vol. 1 (1847) through present.
"Crossing the Atlantic in 1638: Passengers aboard the Ship Bevis," The Second Boat, 1 (May 1980), 13
Savage, James. A Genealogical Dictionary of The First Settlers of New England Before 1692, Showing Three Generations of Those Who Came Before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register - with two supplements in four volumes, Baltimore, Md., Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., originally published 1860-1862, Boston, Mass., reprinted with "Genealogical Notes and Errata" excerpted from The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol. XXVII, No. 2, April, 1873, pp. 135-139. Corrected electronic version copyright Robert Kraft, July 1994
Dexter, O. P. A Genealogical Cross Index of the Four Volumes of the Genealogical Dictionary of James Savage, originally published 1884, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. Baltimore, Md., 1965, 1969, 1977, 1981, 1986, 1990. Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number 65-18541, International Standard Book Number: 0-8063-0309-3, Set Number: 0-8063-0795.
Bevis Passenger List by Ann Stevens from packrat-pro.com.
What is considered the best translation of the Bevis passenger list is by Samuel Gardner Drake and published in "The New England Historical and Genealogical Register", 14:336–37. A copy of page 336 is here and page 337 is here.
Zubrinsky, Eugene Cole, FASG. "The Family of William Carpenter of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, With the English Origin of the Rehoboth Carpenters," The American Genealogist, Vol. 70 (October 1995), pp. 193-204. This work establishes the English origin of William Carpenter (Gen. 1) of Rehoboth (c1605-1658[/9]); identifies his wife, Abigail Briant; and revises their children's birth order.
Charles E. Banks, Colonel Alexander Rigby: Proprietor of the Plough Patent and President of the Province of Lygonia (1885). (Privately printed; Collections Maine Historical Society) James Phinney Baxter, George Cleeve of Casco Bay 1630-1667 (The Gorges Society, 1885)
The son of Stephen Bachiler (23 June 1561 - 28 October 1656)
Zubrinsky, Eugene Cole, FASG. "Carpenter Sketches" specifically Sketch 2 of 12 located at: carpentercousins.com/Wm2_Rehoboth.pdf - reference date October 22, 2018, citation codes within the quote are fully explained at the end of the sketch given.
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www.packrat-pro.com/ships/bevis.htm
The Bevis left Southampton May 1638 for New England with her master Robert Batten.
The following Lists of New England Emigrants are from Her Majesty's State Paper Office
SOUTHAMPTON.--- The list of the names of Passeng. Intended to shipe themsleues, In the Beuist of Hampton of CL. Tonnes, Robert Batten Mr for Newengland, And thsu by vertue of the Lord Treasurers warrant of the second of May w'th was after the restrayat and they some Dayes gone to sea Before the Kinges Mat'es Proelamacon Came boto South'uon. No. of Persons.
Alphabetical order:
Alcocke Francis 26, servant
Austin Richard of Bishopstocke 40, Taylor , his wife and 2 children (From Bishop's Stoke, Hampshire, bound for Charlestown, MA. Ref: Pope. 36 pg 60.)
Banshott Tho 14, Carpenter servant
Batt Christopher of Sarcum, 37, Tanner
Batt Anna 32, Chirstopher's wife
Batt Dorothis Batt 20, Chirstopher's sister
Batt children, 5 under 10 years
Bayley Richard 15, servant
Blackston Eliza 22, Batt Servant
Byley Henery of Saru 26, tanner
Byley Mary 22
Byley John 20, Byley servant
Carpenter William of Horwell /Wherwell 62, carpenter (From Wherwell, Hampshire, bound for Weymouth and Rehoboth, MA. Ref: Pope. 36 pg 64)
Carpenter William Jr. of Horwell 33, carpenter
Carpenter Abigael 32
Carpenter children, 4 10 or under
Dum Richard of New England 40 (Dummer, Richard, listed as aboard the Whale. 36 pg 60)
Dum Alice 35
Dum Tho 19 (Dummer, Thomas, from North Stoneham, Hampshire, bound for Newbury. Ref: Pope. 36 pg 62)
Dum Joane 19
Dum Jane 10
Dum Steephen, husbandman (Dummer, Stephen from Bishop's Stoke, Hampshire, bound for Mewbury. Ref: Pope. 36 pg 60)
Dum Dorothie 6
Dum Richard 4
Dum Tho 2
Durdal Hough, Littlefield servant
Ffrey John of Basing, Whelwrite , wife and 3 children (From Basingstroke, Hampsjire, bound for Newbury. Ref: NEGR 8/226. 36 pg 60.)
Good Thomas 24, Batt Servant
Hutchinson John 30, carpenter, servant
Knight John, carpenter and Littlefield servant
Knight Robert 37, Carpenter Servant to R. Austin
Littlefield Annis 38
Littlefield children, 6
Moll Adam 19, Taylor, servant
Parker Nathaunel 20, servant of London Backer
Pond Rebecca,18, Batt Servant
Poore Samuel 18, servant
Poore Da'yell 14, servant
Poore Alce 20, servant see Alice Poore
Reemes Tho, Byley servant (Reeves, Thomas, from Salisbury, Wiltshire, boudn for Roxbury. Ref: Hotten. 36 pg 180)
Wackefeild Anna 20, Servant Wackefeild Will. 22, servant
Listing order:
Ffrey John of Basing, Whelwrite , wife and 3 children
Austin Richard of Bishopstocke 40, Taylor , his wife and 2 children
Knight Robert 37, Carpenter Servant to R. Austin
Batt Christopher of Sarcum, 37, Tanner
Batt Anna 32, Chirstopher's wife
Batt Dorothis Batt 20, Chirstopher's sister
Batt children, 5 under 10 years
Good Thomas 24, Batt Servant
Blackston Eliza 22, Batt Servant
Pond Rebecca,18, Batt Servant
Carpenter William of Horwell /Wherwell 62, carpenter
Carpenter William Jr. of Horwell 33, carpenter
Carpenter Abigael 32
Carpenter children, 4 10 or under
Banshott Tho 14, Carpenter servant
Littlefield Annis 38
Littlefield children, 6
Knight John, carpenter and Littlefield servant
Durdal Hough, Littlefield servant
Byley Henery of Saru 26, tanner
Byley Mary 22
Reemes Tho, Byley servant
Byley John 20, Byley servant
Dum Richard of New England 40
Dum Alice 35
Dum Tho 19
Dum Joane 19
Dum Jane 10
Dum Steephen, husbandman
Dum Dorothie 6
Dum Richard 4
Dum Tho 2
Huthcinson John 30, carpenter, servant
Alcocke Francis 26, servant
Moll Adam 19, Taylor, servant
Wackefeild Will. 22, servant
Parker Nathaunel 20, servant of London Backer
Poore Samuel 18, servant
Poore Da'yell 14, servant
Poore Alce 20, servant
Bayley Richard 15, servant
Wackefeild Anna 20, Servant
The nomb'r of passeng'rs aboue mentioned are Sixtie and one Soules.
Tho: Wurfres Coll. And Sear' Hen: Champante Cust's. D. Dingley Compt'r
[Endorsement.]----Southotn, 1628. The sert. And list of the Passeng'rs names gone for New England in the Bevis of Hampton, in May 1638.
Bevis sources:
olivetreegenealogy.com/ships/bevis1638.shtml
www.calaisalumni.org/Maine/ships.htm#Bevis
If you choose to use this information or copy this page,
please have the courtesy to include an acknowledgment that the work,
research and compilation was done by Anne Stevens from packrat-pro.com
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