The Dexters moved to New England, where they joined Roger Williams at
Providence. There, Gregory Dexter was granted a slender five-acre plot of land that extended from present-day North Main Street to Hope Street, along Olney Street. Following his relocation to Providence, Gregory Dexter provided consultation services to some of the earliest printers who emerged in the American colonies. He aided Matthew Daye in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, and subsequently assisted
Samuel Green after he acquired Daye's printing shop in 1648. Dexter made annual visits to support Green and requested only a copy of the almanac in exchange for his services. Subsequently, Dexter turned his focus towards religion and became a pastor at the
First Baptist Church in Providence, where he remained from 1654 until his passing in 1700. He took over from
Thomas Olney, who resigned from his position in 1652 due to a disagreement regarding the "
laying on of hands." Dexter worked alongside co-pastor
William Wickenden until 1669, when he became the head minister. The demand for
limestone was high due to its applications in
leather tanning,
candle-making, and as a component of
plaster and
mortar. In August 1669, Roger Williams sent a letter to
John Winthrop Jr., the governor of
Connecticut, endorsing Dexter's enterprise: Sir, I have encouraged Mr. Dexter to send you a limestone, and to salute you with this enclosed. He is an intelligent man, a master printer of London and conscionable (though a Baptist), therefore maligned and traduced by
William Harris (a doleful generalist). Sir, if there be any occasion of yourself (or others) to use any of this stone, Mr. Dexter hath a lusty team and lusty sons, and very willing heart (being a sanguine, cheerful man), to do yourself or any (at your word especially) service upon very honest and cheap considerations. In 1676, during King Philip's War, the Dexters took refuge in
Long Island. During the attack Dexter's Providence home was burned down. Dexter died in 1700 and was buried in Providence on his home lot near the present day intersection of Benefit and North Main Streets. His wife Abigail died in 1706. == Family ==