Johnson was the main
shareholder of the
Massachusetts Bay Company and one of the twelve
signatories to the
Cambridge Agreement on 29 August 1629. In 1630 he sailed with the
Winthrop Fleet to America, arriving at
Salem on 12 June. He was then one of the four
founding patrons of the
First Church at
Charlestown on 30 July 1630 and provided the land for
King's Chapel Burying Ground.
William Blaxton, a contemporary at Emmanuel College, invited Johnson to
Shawmut (now
Boston), a move for which Blaxton offered to provide the finance. At a
Charlestown meeting shortly before he died, Johnson renamed the
settlement, previously known as Shawmut or Trimountain (on account of three contiguous hills which appear in a range when viewed from Charlestown), after
Boston, Lincolnshire in England where he lived with his wife before emigrating and his friend,
John Cotton, was
vicar of
St Botolph's Church, Boston. He died at Charlestown on 30 September 1630, the richest man in the
Massachusetts Bay Colony. The
Eagle, a ship in the Winthrop Fleet, was renamed
Arbella after his wife,
Arbella Johnson, who predeceased him at Salem by one month. ==See also==