Thomas Hooker was an important figure in the history of
colonial America, and not just in Hartford, Connecticut, the city with which he
is most closely connected. It is therefore surprising that a school building in
a village close to where I live should bear a plaque that declares that the “Reputed
Father of American Democracy” was once a pupil there.
Market Bosworth, in Leicestershire, gave its name to the
battle in which King Richard III lost his life in 1485, but it was also the
seat of the Dixie Family. The Grammar School was founded in 1601 under the will
of Sir Wolstan Dixie, and is still running to this day.
Thomas Hooker as a Puritan Clergyman
Thomas Hooker was born in 1586 at Markfield, some ten miles
from Market Bosworth. He was the son of
a farmer and would have been one of the first pupils of the new Dixie school,
from where he proceeded to Cambridge, taking a BA degree in 1608. He was
granted a fellowship, endowed by the Dixie family, and remained at Emmanuel
College until 1618.
Emmanuel was a distinctly Puritan college, and Thomas Hooker
became a clergyman with a very Puritan outlook, meaning that he believed more
in personal spiritual growth than adherence to Church dogma.
Hooker became rector of St George’s, Esher, Surrey. In 1621
he married Susannah Garbrand and they soon had two daughters, both of whom were
eventually to become the wives of clergymen in America.
As a puritan, Thomas Hooker objected to the marriage of
Prince Charles (later to become King Charles I) to a Catholic Spanish princess,
and this marked him out as a potential troublemaker. This reputation grew when
he moved to Chelmsford in Essex and he preached many sermons in favour of the
nonconformist cause, emphasising individual salvation and castigating the established
Church for its oppression and its laxity in spiritual matters. His sermons
appealed to a wide swathe of the population, being direct and lively and free
of classical allusions. A number of them were published.
He opened a school in Essex, where his family grew further
with two more children being born who survived to adulthood. However, his
puritan, anti-establishment views were becoming known in high places, and he
eventually fell foul of the conformist Bishop of London, William Laud. In 1630
he was summoned to the Bishop’s court but chose to go into hiding, and then
exile, rather than fight a case that he knew he could not win.
Thomas Hooker’s Escape to America
In June 1631 Thomas Hooker escaped to the Netherlands,
returning only in 1633 to collect his family and take ship for Boston, which
they reached on 4th September.
Hooker became the pastor of a church at Newtown (which is
now Cambridge, MA), where he found a number of former friends from Essex who
had preceded him to the colony. He stayed at Newtown until May 1636, when the
decision was made to move further south and west, mainly because of the need to
find better grazing land.
The place chosen for the new settlement was known by the
natives as Suckiaug, on the banks of the Connecticut River, but was renamed
Hartford after the English town of Hertford.
Can Thomas Hooker’s Reputation be Justified?
Thomas Hooker’s reputation as the “Father of American
Democracy” comes from his activity during the formation of a colonial
confederation of Connecticut towns in 1638. He preached a sermon in which he
reminded the citizens that the authority of the leaders of the people depended
on the consent of the people to be governed by those leaders. He merely
extended to civil society the principle that pertained to church governance within
the nonconformist tradition.
The resulting document became known as the “Fundamental
Orders” (adopted in January 1639), which set out the conditions under which the
Connecticut colony would be run as an entity distinct from that of
Massachusetts Bay. It was what might be termed a “proto-Constitution”, in that
it contained elements that were to be repeated in later constitutions, and
eventually found their way into the Constitution of the United States.
In particular, the Fundamental Orders established the
principle of magistrates being elected by secret ballot. It stressed the rights
of the individual and set limits on the power of government. The Connecticut
colony differed from Massachusetts in that non-members of the church were
eligible to stand for office, thus enshrining the principle of the separation
of church and state.
The claim that this was the world’s first written
constitution was accepted for many years, although modern historians dispute
this. It has however led to Connecticut becoming known as the “Constitution
State”. Thomas Hooker’s role in this development would seem to have been
elevated beyond its rightful place, and to call him the “Father of American
Democracy” is somewhat exaggerated. All he did, in reality, was to point out
how an Independent church managed its affairs, with the implication that a
civic community could do the same.
Thomas Hooker’s role was not in government but in the
church. He continued to lead his church in Hartford for the rest of his life,
which ended on 7th July 1647. The link between the wall of a school in a
Leicestershire market town and the American Constitution is a fascinating one,
although the word “reputed” on Thomas Hooker’s blue plaque should not be
ignored.
© John Welford
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