William Phips has been appointed by the…
April 1690 CE
William Phips has been appointed by the General Court commander of an expedition against the French in Canada, which sails in April of 1690.
Born at Woolwich, Maine, near the mouth of the Kennebec River, the twenty-sixth child in his family, Phips was a poor shepherd until he was eighteen, and then a ship carpenter's apprentice in Maine for four years.
He worked at his trade in Boston, Massachusetts for a year where he learned to read and write.
With his wife's property he established a shipyard on the Sheepscot river in Maine, but soon abandoned it because of clashes with the natives, in which the settlement had been burned to ground after everyone escaped in a ship that had been built.
With a commission from the British Crown in 1684-1686, he searched vainly for a wrecked Spanish treasure ship of which he had heard while on a voyage to the Bahamas; he found this vessel in 1687, and from it recovered three hundred thousand pounds.
Of this amount much went to the Duke of Albemarle, who had fitted out the second expedition.
Phips received sixteen thousand pounds as his share, was knighted by James II, and was appointed sheriff of New England under Sir Edmund Andros.
Poorly educated and ignorant of law, Phips could accomplish little, and returned to England.
He returned to Massachusetts in 1689 to find a revolutionary government in control, and at once entered into the life of the colony, joining Cotton Mather's North Church in Boston,.