Pages

Thursday, May 17, 2012

John Winthrop the Younger and the Golden Rings


John Winthrop the Younger - Public Domain from the CT State Library
Thomas Jefferson, the third President of the United States is credited with finding the first gold on his estates in Virginiain 1797, but the first gold in the Colonies was discovered in Connecticutby John Winthrop the Younger, Connecticut’s first governor in the mid-1600s.  John had a great interest in metallurgy and was one of the driving spirits behind the Saugus Iron Worksin Saugus, Massachusetts.  During this period he tried to interest the settlers of Massachusetts in the mineral wealth of the colony.

In 1635 after he returned from Englandhe went to the Connecticut Colony as governor of Connecticutfor one year under the Saye and Sele Patent where he sent out a party to build a fort at Saybrookat the mouth of the Connecticut River.  After a year he returned to Massachusettswhere he studied science for a time.  He then returned to Connecticut when he received title to lands in 1645 to lands in south-eastern Connecticutwhere he founded in 1646 New London.

In 1662 he obtained in Englandthe charter from the Crown that united the two colonies of Connecticutand New Haven.  At the time he was also the governor of Connecticutand in 1675 one of the commissioners of the United Colonies of New England. 

Winthrop was also a member of the Royal Society in Londonto which he submitted two papers, “Some Natural Curiosities of New England” and “Description, Culture and Use of Maize.”  It was in the first that he recounted his trip to Great Mountain in Cobalt, Connecticut with his man-servant where for a period of three weeks they mined gold then cast the proceeds of their mining trip into gold rings.

It is quite possible that J.R.R. Tolkienheard about the gold rings Winthropcast and incorporated the tale into his Trilogy “The Lord of the Rings.”  Tolkien was also a member of the Royal Society, and had access to their archives.

In 1984 Anthony Philpottsa geology professor from the University of Connecticut and his class discovered gold at the cobalt mine in Cobalt that assayed at 6 ounces per ton in roughly the same area as where Winthrophad worked almost three hundred years ago.  The gold was found in a quartziteformation that extends from Great Mountain, Connecticutnorthwards to western New Hampshire.  

According to the president of Yale Stiles, “Winthrop came back to New London with plenty of gold.”