Thomas Gardner's origins are not clearly known. He may have been born in 1592 to Thomas and Elizabeth Gardner. His mother may have been the sister of Minister
John White, who help found and fund the
Dorchester Company that became the colony of Massachusetts Bay. According to Goff, Gardner may have been chosen through family ties to head the 1623 Cape Ann Colony, which was a "fishing station and saltworks" whose goal was to ship seafood to England. Gardner had two wives; Margaret (c. 1589 – 1659) and Demaris UNK (c. 1597 – 28 November 1674), widow of UNK Shattuck. He had six sons with Margaret; Thomas, George, John, Samuel, Joseph, and Richard, and three daughters; Sarah, Seeth, and Miriam. In 1623, Gardner landed at Cape Ann with Margaret and the three sons, who had been born in England. A fourth son was born in 1624. He and the widow Shattuck had no children together. Gardner died on 29 December 1674 and is buried in Salem, Essex, Massachusetts.
Degrees of separation Through his second wife Damaris, Thomas' influence could be expanded through the
shrinking world argument. Damaris was the widow of (unknown first name) Shattuck. Their son Samuel was an active
Quaker. Thomas' stepchildren's descendants include, for example,
Nathaniel Gorham (1738–1796),
John Marshall Harlan (1833–1911),
Thomas Stearns Eliot (1888–1965), and
Sandra Day O'Connor (1930–2023). == Burial ==