Thomas Mayhew was born in
Tisbury, in the county of
Wiltshire in England. He married Anna (also called Hanna and Abigail) Parkhurst, born about 1600, in
Hampshire, England, daughter of Matthew Parkhurst. In 1621 they had a son, Thomas, the Younger, baptised in Hanna's home town of
Southampton. Two years later they had another child, Robert Mayhew, baptized in Tisbury. The family left England in 1631/2 during the
Great Migration of Puritans that brought 20,000 settlers to
Massachusetts in thirteen years. Through the agency of
Matthew Cradock of
London, Mayhew had been appointed to manage properties in
Medford, Massachusetts, and to engage in trade and shipbuilding. In or about 1633, Mayhew's wife Anna died, and about 1634 he returned to England for a business meeting with Cradock. While in England, he married Jane Gallion (1602–1666), and brought her back to New England with him. Their daughter Hannah was born in 1635, and three more daughters, Mary (1639), Martha (1642), and Bethiah, followed. Martha is the 7th great grandmother to the world-famous singer and songwriter
Taylor Swift. In 1641, Thomas secured
Martha's Vineyard,
Nantucket, the
Elizabeth Islands, and other islands as a
proprietary colony from
Sir Ferdinando Gorges and the
Earl of Stirling. This enabled him to transfer his business operations there. With the help of his son Thomas, a settlement was established and farming and whaling enterprises were begun. The Mayhews had great success in regard to Indian policy. Because of the fair treatment of the Indians there, the colony was protected from the bloodshed that occurred elsewhere, in
King Philip's War. In 1646, the General Court of Massachusetts directed the religious leaders of the colony to select two among them to serve as missionaries to the natives. So great was the interest aroused by this venture that a society was formed in England also to support the missionaries. Unfortunately a massive conflict broke out, called King Philip's War (1675–76), which resulted in many deaths of both the settlers and the natives. However, three prominent names appear. They are:
John Eliot (known as the Apostle to the Indians); Thomas Mayhew (who was already ministering to the natives); and, three generations later,
Eleazar Wheelock, who established "Doctor Wheelock's Academy for the promotion of Christianity and civility among the savage Indians of this continent" (now known as
Dartmouth College). In 1657, the younger Thomas Mayhew was drowned when a ship he was travelling in was lost at sea on a voyage to England. Mayhew's three grandsons
Matthew Mayhew (born 1648), Thomas (born 1650), John (born 1652), and other members of his family assisted him in running his business and government. Transcription of Watertown marker: "HERE BY THE ANCIENT FORD THE LANDING AND THE WEIR WAS THE HOMESTALL OF THOMAS MAYHEW: A LEADER IN WATERTOWN AFFAIRS FROM 1635 TO 1645. AFTERWARDS WITH HIS SON, THE REV. THOMAS MAYHEW, HE LABORED AMONG THE INDIANS AT MARTHA'S VINEYARD." ==Colonizing Dukes County==