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Alexander Whitaker

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Alexander Whitaker (1585 – 1616) was a Christian theologian who settled in North America in Virginia Colony in 1611 and established two churches near the Jamestown colony. Known as "The Apostle of Virginia" by contemporaries, he was the son of William Whitaker (1548-1595), noted Protestant scholar and Master of St. John's College, Cambridge.

Born in Holme, Cambridgeshire, Whitaker was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge and became a clergyman in the North of England.[1] Travelling to Virginia in 1611, he was a popular religious leader with both settlers and natives, for he was responsible for the baptism and conversion of Pocahontas. His relative tolerance of the Native American population that English colonists encountered can be found in his sermons, some of which were sent back to England to help win support for the new colonies in North America. The most famous of these sermons is Good Newes from Virginia (1613), in which he describes the native population as "servants of sinne and slaves of the divill," but also recognizes them as "sons of Adam," who are "a very understanding generation, quicke of apprehension, suddaine in their despatches, subtile in their dealings, exquisite in their inventions, and industrious in their labour."

It was a marked difference from the other reports such as those by Cotton Mather which described the native population as little more than beasts, deserving of extermination.

Whitaker drowned in 1616.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Whitaker, Alexander in Venn, J. & J. A., Alumni Cantabrigienses, Cambridge University Press, 10 vols, 1922–1958.

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