Born: 18 October
1595, son of Edward and Magdalene (Oliver) Winslow.
Baptized: 20 October 1595, St. Peters, Droitwich, Worcester,
England. |
Mayflower
Families: Edward Winslow and John Billington for Five Generations.
This book fully traces the first five complete generations of
both Mayflower passengers Edward Winslow and John Billington.
It is the most thoroughly researched, documented and accurate genealogy
available for these families. Published by the General Society of
Mayflower Descendants.
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Biographical Information

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Portrait of Edward Winslow, 1651
Reproduced from 1905 Massachusetts Historical Society
edition of Bradford's Of Plymouth
Plantation |
Edward Winslow was born in Droitwich, Worcester in 1595. He was
traveling in the Low Countries, and
subsequently became acquainted with the Pilgrims' church in Leiden.
He was married in Leiden in 1618 to Elizabeth Barker, and was called a
printer of London at the time. It is quite possible he was
assisting William Brewster and Thomas Brewer in their publishing of
religious books that were illegal in England. Edward Winslow and wife
Elizabeth came on the Mayflower to Plymouth in 1620.
Elizabeth died the first winter, and Edward remarried to the widowed
Mrs. Susanna White, on 12 May 1621--the first marriage in the Plymouth
Colony. Winslow quickly became one of the more prominent men in the
colony. He was on many of the early explorations of Cape Cod, and
led a number of expeditions to meet and trade with the Indians. He
wrote several first-hand accounts of these early years, including
portions of A Relation or Journal of the Proceedings of the
Plantation Settled at Plymouth (London, 1622) and the entirety of
Good News from New England (London, 1624). Edward Winslow became
involved in defending the Plymouth and later Massachusetts Bay Colonies
from their opponents and adversaries in England, and made several trips
back and forth between England and Massachusetts, including trips in
1623/4, 1630, and 1635; on one occasion he was arrested and thrown into
the Fleet Prison in London by his adversaries, on grounds that he had
performed marriage ceremonies without being ordained (the Pilgrims
viewed marriage as an event to be handled by the civil magistrates, not
by the Church). Winslow returned to England shortly after the
English Civil War, and published a couple of pamphlets in defense of the
New England colonies, including Hypocrisy Unmasked (1646) and
New England's Salamander Discovered (1647). He also wrote the
introduction to the Glorious Progress of the Gospel Amongst the
Indians in New England (1649).
In Plymouth, he held a number of political offices, as was routinely
elected an assistant to Governor William Bradford; Winslow himself was
elected governor of Plymouth on three occasions: 1632/3, 1635/6, and
1644. After Winslow returned to England, he was on several
Parliamentary committees; he died in 1655 at sea between Hispaniola and
Jamaica, while serving as a commissioner for Oliver Cromwell on a
military expedition to retake the island of Hispaniola.
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