Born in Africa c. 1620, Dorcas is believed to have arrived in
Boston, Massachusetts from the
Providence Island colony in 1638 aboard the slave ship
Desire. After the English victory in the brutal
Pequot War, the ship was chartered to Bermuda to trade 17
Pequot prisoners of war for "some cotton, tobacco, and negroes, etc.". Records show that in 1641, Dorcas was living in
Dorchester, Massachusetts in servitude to
Israel Stoughton, a prominent colonial leader and businessman. The same year, she joined the
First Parish Church of Dorchester after presenting a public testimony to the congregation. In 1644, Israel Stoughton died without denoting Dorcas' status in his will. It is believed that Dorcas continued to live with his widow, Elizabeth Stoughton, as a member of her household for some time after Israel's death. In 1653, congregationalists of Dorchester's First Church, including Rev.
Richard Mather and Elder Henry Withington, sought to purchase Dorcas' freedom through community fundraising. In 1677, Dorcas formally transferred her membership from the Dorchester Church to the
First Church in Boston, where she became an African American congregationalist. ==See also==