Simon Johnson (deacon)
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Deacon Simon Johnson (1794 – 1875) was a political and religious leader in Gay Head, Massachusetts throughout the mid-nineteenth century. He also managed the
Massachusetts Humane Society Captain Joshua James, volunteer The Humane Society of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, better known as the Massachusetts Humane Society was founded in 1786 by a group of Boston citizens who were concerned about the needless deaths resulting ...
Gay Head Lifesaving Station, where he recruited volunteer rescue mission volunteers from a pool of either fishermen or whalers.


Petitions to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts

Johnson signed onto many petitions to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts alongside other Proprietors of Gayhead . He is the known author of one such petition concerning premature and unauthorized cranberry harvesting. The petition, signed by Johnson and 77 others Proprietors, asks the commonwealth to enact Penal Laws that would punish anyone who harvests the cranberry bogs without the tribe's permission.


Social status

Due to his high social stature, Deacon Simon was mentioned by multiple writers who visited Aquinnah. In
Harper's Magazine ''Harper's Magazine'' is a monthly magazine of literature, politics, culture, finance, and the arts. Launched in New York City in June 1850, it is the oldest continuously published monthly magazine in the U.S. (''Scientific American'' is older, b ...
, David Hunter Strother, writing under his pen name "Porte Crayon," describes Simon Johnson as holding "authority by a mixed tenure- uniting the character of the Indian chief with that of the New England Deacon." Additionally, the Gazetter of Massachusetts mentioned Johnson and Zaccheus Howwoswee, listing them as "highly esteemed citizens."


Lifesaving Station

Johnson also was the manager of the Gayhead-based "Massachusetts Humane Society" Lifesaving Station.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Johnson, Simon Native American history of Massachusetts People from Dukes County, Massachusetts People from Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts 1794 births 1875 deaths Wampanoag people People from Aquinnah, Massachusetts 19th-century Native American politicians Native American people from Massachusetts