Background
John Williams was born on December 10, 1664 in Roxbury, Massachussets, the fifth child and second son of Deacon Samuel and Theoda (Park) Williams and a grandson of Robert Williams who was admitted freeman of Roxbury in 1638.
( When a party of French and Indians attacked Deerfield, ...)
When a party of French and Indians attacked Deerfield, Mass., in 1704, 49 people were killed, including Reverend Williams's wife and two of their children. Williams's life was spared but he was taken captive. This is the story of the massacre and William's eventual release in his own words.
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John Williams was born on December 10, 1664 in Roxbury, Massachussets, the fifth child and second son of Deacon Samuel and Theoda (Park) Williams and a grandson of Robert Williams who was admitted freeman of Roxbury in 1638.
John was prepared in the Roxbury Latin School and graduated B. A. from Harvard College in 1683.
For two years he taught school in Dorchester. He prophesied as a candidate in the frontier settlement of Deerfield and when some time later a church was gathered there, he was formally ordained its first pastor, October 17, 1688.
Almost from the beginning of Williams' ministry, Deerfield was in peril of French and Indian attack. Like many of his colleagues, Williams believed the border wars to be occasioned by God's dissatisfaction with his spiritually apathetic people; nevertheless, he met danger courageously and exhorted his people to stand their ground. When Queen Anne's War began, he urged Governor Dudley to strengthen the Deerfield fortifications, but the warning was too late.
Before daybreak, Feburary 29, 1703/04, a party of French and Indians sacked the town, killed many inhabitants, including Williams' two youngest children, and carried the rest into captivity. Williams' wife, weakened by recent childbirth and unable to withstand the hardships, was murdered by the savages. Williams was well treated, although he was separated from his children and suffered exposure, hunger, and grief.
The captives were detained at Fort Chambly, where the Indians, seconded by Jesuit priests, spared no effort to convert them to the Catholic faith. Williams counteracted their exertions among his fellows so effectively that the priests sent him to Chateauviche, where he remained more than two years. Finally, Governor Dudley effected his release and Williams returned to Boston, November 21, 1706.
During the following winter he preached in churches of Boston and vicinity and prepared, with Cotton Mather's help, The Redeemed Captive Returning to Zion (1707).
Despite continued Indian depredations and more lucrative offers, he returned to his post in January 1707, where "his Presence conduced much to the rebuilding of the Place". He served as chaplain in the expedition of 1711 against Port Royal and, with John Stoddard, as commissioner to Canada (1713 - 14) for the return of English prisoners; he regularly attended the yearly meetings of clergymen in Boston and in 1728 preached the convention sermon.
He died at Deerfield.
( This work has been selected by scholars as being cultur...)
( When a party of French and Indians attacked Deerfield, ...)
(This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. T...)
Deploring the religious indifference of his age, he strove to restore the pristine spiritual enthusiasm of Massachusetts with sermons devoted to the principle "That it's a high Privilege to be descended from godly Ancestors; and 'tis the important Duty of such to exalt the God of their Fathers".
On July 21, 1687 he had married Eunice, daughter of the Rev. Eleazar Mather of Northampton and granddaughter of Richard Mather. On September 16, 1707, he married Abigail (Allen) Bissell of Windsor, Connecticut. He had eleven children: five children of the second marriage, and six children of the first one.