Tristram Coffin (1608-1681)

Governor, Chief Magistrate & Co-Proprietor of Nantucket Island, Massachusetts

He was born at Brixton near Plymouth in Devon, England, and he spelt his name 'Coffyn'. He was a member of the minor gentry who owned property in Devon and Dorset and was a Parish Constable. He was not a Puritan, but in 1645 during the English Civil War he emigrated to Massachusetts with his family including his mother and two unmarried sisters. Settling first at Salisbury he was appointed a Justice of the Peace but moved soon afterwards to Haverhill where he is credited for being the first person to plough land there and the owner of a tavern, "Coffin's Ordinary". In 1658, he formed a company to purchase Nantucket. Moving there in 1659, he lived near Capsum in a house that he named "Northam". A few years later he and his sons also bought the Island of Tuckernuck where he built a corn mill. The fairness and kindness that he showed towards the Indians has often seen him compared to William Penn. In 1667, he was appointed Chief Magistrate of Nantucket and he held the office of Governor until 1680. He and his wife, Dionis, had ten children of whom seven (listed) lived to adulthood.

Parents

Peter Coffyn

Husbandman, of the Parish of Brixton, near Plymouth, Devon

1580-1628

Joanna (Kember) Coffyn

Mrs Joanna (Kember) Coffyn

1584-1661

Spouse

Dionis (Stevens) Coffin

Mrs Dionis (Stevens) Coffin

1609-1681

Children

Peter Coffin

of Nantucket; Chief Justice of New Hampshire & Member of the Governor's Council

1630-1715

Tristram Coffin

Deacon & Merchant Tailor of Newbury, Essex Co., Massachusetts

1632-1704

Elizabeth (Coffin) Greenleaf

Mrs Elizabeth (Coffin) Greenleaf

1634-1678

James Coffin

Judge & Chief Magistrate of Nantucket Island, Massachusetts

1639-1720

Mary (Coffin) Starbuck

"The Great Mary" of Nantucket, Mrs Mary (Coffin) Starbuck

1645-1717

John Coffin

Blacksmith, of Edgartown, Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts

1647-1711

Stephen Coffin

of Nantucket, Massachusetts

1652-1734