Gorton was living in
London when he filed suit in a chancery case in February 1634/5. His reasons for leaving England and sailing to America were given in his many writings. One biographer summarized these: "He yearned for a country where he could be free to worship God according to what the Bible taught him, as God enabled him to understand it." Another biographer noted that "Gorton was one of the noble spirits who esteemed liberty more than life, and, counting no sacrifice too great for the maintenance of principal, could not dwell at ease in a land where the inalienable rights of humanity were not acknowledged or were mocked at." Gorton himself wrote, "I left my native country to enjoy liberty of conscience in respect to faith toward God and for no other end." In March 1637, he arrived in
Boston from London with his wife and several children at the height of the
Antinomian Controversy. He sensed the growing hostility towards those with unorthodox theological views, such as
Anne Hutchinson, and his stay there was short. He soon went to
Plymouth Colony where he rented part of a house, becoming active in the community by volunteering during the
Pequot War, as did his older brother Thomas. He soon had differences of opinion on religion with his landlord, and he was summoned to court in December 1638 based on the landlord's complaints. In court, Gorton "carried himself so mutinously and seditiously" towards both magistrates and ministers that he was sentenced to find sureties for his good behavior during the remainder of his tenure in Plymouth, and given 14 days to be gone from the colony. He left Plymouth shortly, but his wife and children were allowed to remain there while he proceeded to
Portsmouth on
Rhode Island (now called Aquidneck Island), arriving in late December 1638. Here he became a resident, and on the last day of April 1639
he and 28 others signed a compact calling themselves subjects of
King Charles and forming a "civil body politick." Things were no better for Gorton in Portsmouth than they had been in Plymouth. In 1640, his servant maid assaulted a woman whose cow had trespassed on his land, and this servant was ordered to court. Gorton refused to allow her to appear and went in her place. With his hostile attitude towards the judges, he was indicted on 14 counts, some of which were calling the magistrates "Just Asses" and calling a freeman in open court "saucy boy and Jack-an-Apes." Governor
Coddington said, "All you that own the King take away Gorton and carry him to prison," to which Gorton replied, "All you that own the King take away Coddington and carry him to prison." Since he had previously been imprisoned, he was sentenced to be whipped, and soon left Portsmouth for
Providence Plantations. Trouble continued to follow Gorton to Providence, where his democratic ideas concerning church and state led to a division of sentiment in this town. On 8 March 1641,
Roger Williams wrote to
Massachusetts magistrate
John Winthrop, "Master Gorton having abused high and low at Aquidneck, is now bewitching and bemadding poor Providence, both with his unclean and his foul censures of all the ministers of this country (for which myself in Christ's name have withstood him) and also denying all visible and external ordinances in depth of
Familism." Gorton used his talent and energy to consolidate many discontented settlers into a destructive party in the otherwise peaceful settlement established by Williams. This group became known as the
Gortonists or
Gortonites. Gorton was never received as an inhabitant in Providence because of his disorderly course. At this point, he moved once again to an area called Pawtuxet along the
Pawtuxet River, about five miles south of the settlement at Providence (later the dividing line between the Rhode Island towns of
Cranston and
Warwick). == Pawtuxet and Warwick ==