In 1622, the
Council for New England granted all the land between the
Merrimack River and
Kennebec River to Captain
John Mason (former governor of Newfoundland) and Sir
Ferdinando Gorges. Mason sent a group of colonists who arrived at
Odiorne's Point in Rye (near
Portsmouth) by a group of fishermen from England, under David Thompson in 1623, three years after the
Pilgrims landed at
Plymouth. Early historians believed the first native-born New Hampshirite, John Thompson, was born there. Thompson was followed a few years later by Edward and William Hilton. They led an expedition to the vicinity of Dover, which they called Northam. The first permanent European settlement was at Hilton's Point (present-day
Dover), in 1623. This became known as the Upper Plantation. In 1629, Mason and Gorges ended their partnership, and split their land at the
Piscataqua River. Mason took the western half and named it New Hampshire, after the English
county of
Hampshire, one of the first Saxon
shires. Hampshire was itself named after the port of
Southampton, which was known previously as simply "Hampton". Gorges called the eastern half
New Somersetshire, but it was also known as Maine. It would eventually become the core of the modern state of
Maine, and the Piscataqua remains the southern portion of the boundary between Maine and New Hampshire. (Where in the river the boundary was to be drawn exactly, and thus which islands were included, was the subject of two U.S. Supreme Court cases in 1977 and 2001; see
Piscataqua River border dispute.) The Odiorne's Point settlement was abandoned in favor of
Strawbery Banke (founded 1630) which became modern Portsmouth. This was known as the Lower Plantation. By 1631, the Upper Plantation comprised modern-day Dover,
Durham and
Stratham. The Upper and Lower Plantations had
separate governors from 1630 to 1641. Captain
Thomas Wiggin served as the first governor of the Upper Plantation. Mason died in 1635 without ever seeing the colony he founded. Settlers from Pannaway, moving to the Portsmouth region later and combining with an expedition of the new Laconia Company (formed 1629) under Captain Neal, called their new settlement
Strawbery Banke. In 1638,
Exeter was founded by
John Wheelwright. Mason's colony was unprofitable and it was abandoned by his heirs. Settlers were divided as to whether they should remain independent or be governed by Massachusetts, Territory west of the
Merrimack River was highly disputed. Issuers of the Massachusetts and New Hampshire charters had incorrectly believed the river to flow primarily from west to east. In the 1730s New Hampshire political interest led by Lieutenant Governor
John Wentworth were able to raise the profile of these issues to colonial officials and the crown in London, even while Governor and Massachusetts native
Jonathan Belcher preferentially granted land to Massachusetts interests in the disputed area. In 1741, King
George II ruled that
the border with southern Massachusetts (Maine was then also part of Massachusetts) was approximately what it is today, and also separated the governorships of the two provinces.
Benning Wentworth in 1741 became the first non-Massachusetts governor since
Edward Cranfield succeeded John Cutt in the 1680s. Wentworth promptly complicated New Hampshire's territorial claims by interpreting the provincial charter to include territory west of the
Connecticut River and began issuing land grants in this territory, which was also claimed by the
Province of New York. The so-called
New Hampshire Grants area became a subject of contention from the 1740s until the 1790s when it was admitted to the United States as the state of
Vermont.
Slavery in New Hampshire As in the other Thirteen Colonies and elsewhere in the colonial Americas, racially conditioned slavery was a firmly established institution in New Hampshire. The
New Hampshire Assembly in 1714 passed "An Act To Prevent Disorders In The Night": Following the Revolution, a powerfully-written
petition of 1779 sent by 20 slaves in Portsmouth—members of what historian
Ira Berlin identified as the of enslaved people in his pivotal work
Many Thousands Gone—unsuccessfully requested freedom for the enslaved. The New Hampshire legislature would not officially eliminate slavery in the state until 1857, long after the death of many of the signatories. The
1840 United States census was the last to enumerate any slaves in the households of the state. ==Revolution: 1774–1815==