Monday, June 18, 2012

Atlantic Peoples: John Billington and His Family


The Human Tradition in the Atlantic World 1500-1850, by Karen Racine and Beatrice G. Mamigonian, introduces the reader to fifteen separate individuals that embodied the nature of the Atlantic World. In order to fully understand the many theories that abounds about cultural integration and metamorphosis one must study the individuals that land among these situations. One of the more intriguing personas that are provided is that of John Billington and his family[1]. Billington and his family are prime examples of how the Atlantic drew in the common man with promises of wealth and prosperity. Although not every man was successful in his endeavor, with which Billington experienced firsthand, not every man molded the society with which he lived either.
  Billington was not an African, Indian, or other minority, he was a white man from desperate parts in England. Billington and his family were, in essence, indentured servants, not to an individual, but “the Company”[2]. Because opportunities were extremely lacking and overcrowding was pushing the economic divide further and further apart, he took the only possible path he believed would provide a way for himself and his family to finally move vertically within the world: the New World.
The Billington family embodies the idea of Ethnogenesis described by James Sidbury and Jorge Canizares-Esguerra in Mapping Ethnogenesis in the Early Modern Atlantic[3]. Ethnogenesis forms when individuals “reembed[sic] themselves into communities, creating new identities”[4]. This notion is not overly examined like that of creolization with Africans and Indians, but native Europeans also experienced similar cultural shock and transformations.
The Billington family left a mark on the Plymouth Plantation; whether it was good or bad is up to interpretation. They were stripped of everything they knew and thrust into a wild country surrounded by a group of people, the Separatists who haled from Holland and had an opposite belief system, signed a labor contract that would last for seven years and were considered to be the lowliest of people within the group[5].  Surrounded by everything unknown, Billington fought to preserve his identity and that of his family as well, mainly by retaining their loyalty to the Church of England. This loyalty did not sit well with the dominating religious Separatist conviction, and thus the Billington’s were treated less then equal. The Seperatist tried to break the Billington family into conforming more to their liking by excluding Billington from any position of influence and giving the family the “smallest per capita allotment in the entire colony”[6]. In essence, the family was being persecuted by those fleeing from persecution. They were bullied but did not give into the religious stance that surrounded them. They may have lived among the Separatist people, socialized and followed the laws to an extent, but they held on to their beliefs.
The Billington family situation is an example of intra-European ethnogenesis[7], which developed when separate European nationals came together within the same community. The Billington’s had to bend within reason to the demands of the larger population and adapt accordingly, however unwillingly, in order to survive. Although hardship followed them, they stayed the course, and “despite many setbacks and complaints”[8] , they never stopped pursuing opportunity.  The Billington family left a mark within the Plymouth community that was sour but may be looked upon today as a push for true freedom.




[1] Racine,Karen. “Chapter 2: John Billington and His Family (c. 1582-1630), Doomed “Knave” of Plymouth Plantation”. The Human Tradition in the Atlantic World, 1500–1850. Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc., 2010.  Pg. 13-26. <http://lib.myilibrary.com?ID=292261> (accessed June 14, 2012).
[2] Racine, 15.
[3] Sidbury, James, and Jorge Canizares-Esguerra. "Mapping Ethnogenesis in the Early Modern Atlantic." The William and Mary Quarterly, Vol 68, No 2. Pg 181-208. JSTOR. Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, Apr. 2011. Web. 14 June 2012. <http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5309/willmaryquar.68.2.0181>.
[4] Sidbury, 185.
[5] Racine, 16.
[6] Racine, 20.
[7] Sidbury, 203.
[8] Racine 20.

1 comment:

  1. Your post was very interesting and informing. I especially liked how you chose a European who moved to the New World as the topic for your essay on Atlantic people. Your quote that John Billington and his family, "“reembed themselves into communities, creating new identities” was interesting because Billington and his family in one way retained their distinct identity as loyalists to the Church of England in the New World, but were still able to adapt to their situation of living near Separatists (Sidbury, 185). As you noted, even though the Europeans moved to the New World to start a new life, they still retained much of their cultural baggage - such as former identity and prejudices. Though I enjoyed your topic, I believe you could have elaborated more on the connection of John Billington and his family to Sidbury's concept - nice job.

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