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Albums: Teague Crehore Family
"March 14, 1683. Jonathan Badcock refused to sign the
petition to the king.
Here were the first rising beams of the dawn of liberty.
Thus early, twenty years after the corporate existence
of the town, a score of your sires gave distinct testimony
of the spirit that was in them. Two days before,
Rev. Mr. Thacher, the leader in temporal as well as
spiritual things, had received the customary address of
submission and loyalty to His Royal Majesty, to be
subscribed by all males sixteen years old and upwards.
The fourteenth was training-day in Milton, a public
holiday, when the whole town came together. Mr. Thacher
was there and read to the town the address to His Majesty,
with the following result:
Divers signed it, some would not, as J. Daniels, J. Fenno,
Teague Crehore, Stephen Crane, Jonathan Badcock,
John Jordan, David Mimes, Edward Vose, and others,
so I made a speech to them, then took leave.
Mr. Thacher was a strict, uncompromising royalist. A few
of his flock, who ordinarily heard the Shepherd's voice,
restive under the restraints of royalty, and moved by
stirrings for self-direction and control, refused to
follow, even a century before the yoke was thrown off."
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