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Massachusetts Colony Research Blueprint

Original Thirteen Colonies

Massachusetts Colony Research Blueprint

Strong digital launch candidate: charters, Massachusetts Archives Collection, Adams materials, Prince Hall's 1777 petition, Wampanoag context, and Plimoth Patuxet material culture.

New Englandlaunch-digital-originalsLaunch priority 1

Safety and claim boundary

This page is a source-acquisition and review blueprint. It does not turn colonial records, petitions, maps, museum interpretation, oral tradition, or repository targets into certification of identity, ancestry, descent, tribe, nationality, DNA conclusions, legal status, community membership, Muur/Moor claims, spiritual interpretation, ownership, or family continuity.

Private knowledge may guide caution, but public claims require public, reviewable evidence and clear source status.

Source readiness

launch-digital-originals: Public-facing launch candidate with digitized originals or strong official digital records.

Research modules

Founding law

1629 and 1691 charters; governor, Council, General Court, treasury, and petition records.

Maps and land

Massachusetts Archives and local court/probate follow-up for land and governance layers.

Indigenous perspective

Pair colonial records with Wampanoag official history and museum interpretation.

Black records and testimony

Center Prince Hall's 1777 antislavery petition as Black political thought, not a sidebar.

Religion and print

Use sermons, petitions, and Adams-era print/correspondence cautiously.

Migration, Loyalism, and movement

Use elite correspondence and post-1760s political records as comparison, not sole story.

Archaeology and material culture

Use Plimoth Patuxet collections and archaeology as text-bias correction.

Signature source targets

Each card is intentionally labeled as a source target unless the route later verifies URL, rights, and item-level citation details.

Massachusetts Archives Collection

Repository or steward: verify in Source Review before citation.

Why it matters: helps compare law, land, testimony, print, movement, or material culture against the colony blueprint.

source targetverify URLrights check

Suggested next step: add to a source table, verify access, request scan or permission when needed, and route sensitive wording to Source Review.

Adams Papers / Adams Family Papers

Repository or steward: verify in Source Review before citation.

Why it matters: helps compare law, land, testimony, print, movement, or material culture against the colony blueprint.

source targetverify URLrights check

Suggested next step: add to a source table, verify access, request scan or permission when needed, and route sensitive wording to Source Review.

Prince Hall and the 1777 petition by 'a great number of Negroes'

Repository or steward: verify in Source Review before citation.

Why it matters: helps compare law, land, testimony, print, movement, or material culture against the colony blueprint.

source targetverify URLrights check

Suggested next step: add to a source table, verify access, request scan or permission when needed, and route sensitive wording to Source Review.

Wampanoag official history

Repository or steward: verify in Source Review before citation.

Why it matters: helps compare law, land, testimony, print, movement, or material culture against the colony blueprint.

source targetverify URLrights check

Suggested next step: add to a source table, verify access, request scan or permission when needed, and route sensitive wording to Source Review.

Plimoth Patuxet Museums archaeology and collections

Repository or steward: verify in Source Review before citation.

Why it matters: helps compare law, land, testimony, print, movement, or material culture against the colony blueprint.

source targetverify URLrights check

Suggested next step: add to a source table, verify access, request scan or permission when needed, and route sensitive wording to Source Review.

Source readiness and acquisition notes

Start with founding law, then move into lived records. Do not let a charter, grant, deed, petition, sermon, travel account, or museum label stand alone when the claim concerns people, identity, legal status, land, or community memory.

Founding law targets

  • 1629 Massachusetts Bay Charter
  • 1691 Massachusetts Charter

Required public-use checks

  • Confirm repository or steward.
  • Record item title, date, creator, collection, rights, and access path.
  • Separate quotation from interpretation.
  • Use Safe Sharing when a record touches living people, private family knowledge, genetic information, or sensitive identity claims.

Related FOBA review paths

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