William Coddington

William Coddington
1st Judge (governor) of Portsmouth
In office
1638–1639
Preceded byposition established
Succeeded byWilliam Hutchinson
Judge (governor) of Newport
In office
1639–1640
Preceded byposition established
Succeeded byHimself as governor of Newport and Portsmouth
Governor of Newport and Portsmouth
In office
1640–1647
Preceded byWilliam Hutchinson as Judge of Portsmouth
Himself as Judge of Newport
Succeeded byJohn Coggeshall as President of Rhode Island
1st Governor of Newport and Portsmouth (under Coddington Commission)
In office
1651–1653
Preceded byNicholas Easton as President of Rhode Island
Succeeded byJohn Sanford
5th and 8th Governor of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
In office
1674–1676
Preceded byNicholas Easton
Succeeded byWalter Clarke
In office
1678–1678
Preceded byBenedict Arnold
Succeeded byJohn Cranston
7th Deputy Governor of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
In office
1673–1674
GovernorNicholas Easton
Preceded byJohn Cranston
Succeeded byJohn Easton
Personal details
Bornc. 1601
Marston, Lincolnshire, England
Died1 November 1678
Newport, Rhode Island
Resting placeCoddington Cemetery, Newport, Rhode Island
Spouses
  • Mary _______
  • Mary Moseley
  • Anne Brinley
OccupationMerchant, treasurer, selectman, assistant, president, commissioner, deputy governor, governor
Signature
Coat of Arms of William Coddington

William Coddington (c. 1601 – 1 November 1678) was an early magistrate of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and later of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. He served as the judge of Portsmouth and Newport in that colony, governor of Portsmouth and Newport, deputy governor of the four-town colony, and then governor of the entire colony. Coddington was born and raised in Lincolnshire, England. He accompanied the Winthrop Fleet on its voyage to New England in 1630, becoming an early leader in Boston. There he built the first brick house and became heavily involved in the local government as an assistant magistrate, treasurer, and deputy.

Coddington was a member of the Boston church under the Reverend John Cotton, and was caught up in the events of the Antinomian Controversy from 1636 to 1638. The Reverend John Wheelwright and Anne Hutchinson were banished from the Massachusetts colony, and many of their supporters were also compelled to leave. Coddington was not asked to depart, but he felt that the outcome of the controversy was unjust and decided to join many of his fellow parishioners in exile. He was the lead signer of a compact to form a Christian-based government away from Massachusetts. He was encouraged by Roger Williams to settle on the Narragansett Bay. He and other supporters of Hutchinson bought Aquidneck Island from the Narragansetts. They settled there, establishing the town of Pocasset which was later named Portsmouth. Coddington was named the first "judge" of the colony, a Biblical term for governor. A division in the leadership of the town occurred within a year, and he left with several others to establish the town of Newport at the south end of the island.

In a short time, the towns of Portsmouth and Newport united, and Coddington was made the governor of the island towns from 1640 to 1647. During this period, Roger Williams had gone to England to obtain a patent to unite the four Narragansett towns of Providence, Warwick, Portsmouth, and Newport. This was done without the consent of the island towns and they resisted joining the mainland towns until 1647. Coddington was elected president of the united colony in 1648, but he would not accept the position, and complaints against him prompted the presidency to go to Jeremy Clarke. Coddington was very unhappy with Williams' patent; he returned to England, where he was eventually able to obtain a commission separating the island from the mainland towns, and making him governor of the island for an indefinite period. He was initially welcomed as governor, but complaints from both the mainland towns and members of the island towns prompted Roger Williams, John Clarke, and William Dyer to go to England to have Coddington's commission revoked. They were successful, and Dyer returned with the news in 1653. However, disagreements kept the four towns from re-uniting until the following year.

With the revocation of his commission, Coddington withdrew from public life, focusing on his mercantile interests, and becoming a member of the Religious Society of Friends. After nearly two decades away from politics, he was elected deputy governor in 1673, then governor the following year, serving two one-year terms. The relative calm of this period was shattered during his second year as governor of the colony when King Philip's War erupted in June 1675. It became the most catastrophic event in Rhode Island's colonial history. He was not re-elected in 1676, but he was elected to a final term as governor of the colony in 1678 following the death of Governor Benedict Arnold. He died a few months into this term, and was buried in the Coddington Cemetery on Farewell Street in Newport.