Foreword

THIS is the second of two volumes of Pynchon Papers to be published by the Colonial Society of Massachusetts. The first, The Letters of John Pynchon, 1654–1700, issued in 1982, contains 164 letters from John Pynchon, the leading figure in Western Massachusetts in the last half of the seventeenth century. This volume contains selections from his account books that reveal a great deal of fresh information on the way he conducted his business affairs, information that we believe is unique in the early history of internal trade in the Bay Colony.

This volume, Number 61 of the Society’s publications, contains about sixty per cent of the material in the seven account books of John Pynchon, together with some selections at the end from the account book of John Pynchon, Jr. Some years ago, while she was Director of the Connecticut Valley Historical Museum, Juliette Tomlinson, who, with Carl Bridenbaugh, has edited this volume, had made selections from the account books, arranged under topical headings, that she hoped might eventually be published. In this enterprise she received valuable assistance from Dr. Ruth McIntyre, who also wrote a scholarly introduction to the selections dealing with the fur trade. The only part of this project that ever saw the light of day was a typescript of Volume III of the account books, which was microfilmed and copies of which exist in a number of repositories throughout the country.

Juliette Tomlinson’s selections and her grouping of them under topical headings were, by necessity, arbitrary. Another scholar might have chosen different selections and used different headings. Yet I am confident that Miss Tomlinson’s work has resulted in a volume that contains all the important material from the account books. What has been omitted is, for the most part, simply repetitions of the type of accounts already represented in the volume. I am personally convinced that the present selections, arranged topically, will give all but the most dedicated specialists in the history of Western Massachusetts in the last half of the seventeenth century a better understanding of the important material that these account books contain than if we had published all seven in their entirety.

There are sure to be some readers who will wonder why, while we were about it, we did not publish all seven account books in their entirety. We would feel more uncomfortable about this charge, were it not for the fact that there are two microfilm editions of the account books available for scholars who wish to examine all the material. The first microfilm edition was prepared by the Connecticut Valley Historical Museum in the 1950’s and consists of two reels as follows:

REEL I

  • Volume I, 1651–1655—pp. 1–335
  • Volume II, 1657–1666—pp. 1–378 (20 unnumbered pages of index at the start)
  • Volume III, 1664–1667—pp. 1–323
  • Volume IV, 1666–1697—pp. 1–226

REEL II

  • Volume V, Part I, 1672–1693—pp. 1–344
  • Volume V, Part II, 1672–1693—pp. 345–555
  • Volume VI, 1683–1694—pp. 1–276
  • The Account Book of John Pynchon, Jr., 1669–1674 150 pages numbered at the bottom of the page
  • Waste Book for Hampshire—pp. 1–156
  • Hampshire Records of Births, Marriages, and Deaths, 1638–1696—267 pages, many of them blank

The other microfilm edition was made by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in the 1960’s and consists of three reels, as follows:

REEL I (# 185404)

  • Volume I, 1651–1655—pp. 1–335
  • Volume II, 1657–1666—pp. 1–378 (20 unnumbered pages of index at the start)
  • Volume III, 1664–1667—pp. 1–324

REEL II (# 185405)

  • Volume V, Part I, 1672–1693—pp. 1–344 (41 unnumbered pages of index at the start)
  • Volume V, Part II, 1672–1693—pp. 345–555

REEL III (# 185406)

  • Volume VI, 1683–1694—pp. 1–275 (24 unnumbered pages of index at the start)

Readers will observe that the two microfilm editions are not identical. Thus if one wishes to get all the Pynchon material available on microfilm he or she will have to buy both sets. The first set can be purchased from the Connecticut Valley Historical Museum, 194 State Street, Springfield, Massachusetts 01103. The price at this time of writing is $70.00 for the two reels. The second set can be purchased from the Finance Department, Genealogical Library, 50 East North Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 or the Branch Genealogical Library, 150 Brown Street, Weston, Massachusetts 02193. At this writing the price for the three reels is $37.50. The two sets that have been used in the preparation of this volume for publication will, in the future, be on deposit at the Massachusetts Historical Society.

The Society has been very fortunate to have as editors of this volume Carl Bridenbaugh and Juliette Tomlinson. The former is an Honorary Member of the Society and Professor of History Emeritus at Brown University. One of the leading authorities on the colonial period, the author of more than twenty books in this field—Cities in the Wilderness and Cities in Revolt are perhaps the best known—Mr. Bridenbaugh brings to this task the mind of a true scholar, a lifetime of experience in historical study, and a genuine enthusiasm for his subject. Juliette Tomlinson, the other editor of this volume and a member of the Colonial Society, also has impressive credentials. For many years the Director of the Connecticut Valley Historical Museum in Springfield, Miss Tomlinson was responsible for all the transcriptions and arrangement of the material from the account books in this volume. A glance at the frontispiece, which reproduces in facsimile a sample page from the Pynchon account books, will show what any transcriber of this material had to face. Yet when I checked out her transcriptions against the microfilms of the originals, I found only a very few minor errors, while in a number of cases where I thought she had gone astray, it turned out that she was right in the first place. What with proofreading, checking passages against the originals in Springfield, and finally making the name index as a labor of love, Juliette Tomlinson’s contribution to this volume has been substantial.

The general approbation which greeted the first volume of Pynchon Papers leads us to believe that this second volume will be equally well received. Taken together, the two should make a signal contribution to an understanding of the history of Western Massachusetts in the last half of the seventeenth century.

FREDERICK S. ALLIS, JR.

Editor of Publications

87 Mount Vernon Street

Boston, Massachusetts

June 1985