Joseph Jenckes | |
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19th Governor of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations | |
In office 1727–1732 |
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Preceded by | Samuel Cranston |
Succeeded by | William Wanton |
17th and 19th Deputy Governor of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations | |
In office 1715–1721 |
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Governor | Samuel Cranston |
Preceded by | Henry Tew |
Succeeded by | John Wanton |
In office 1722–1727 |
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Governor | Samuel Cranston |
Preceded by | John Wanton |
Succeeded by | Jonathan Nichols |
Personal details | |
Born | 1656 |
Died | 15 June 1740 Providence, Rhode Island |
Spouse(s) | (1) Martha Brown (2) Alice (Smith) Dexter |
Occupation | Deputy, Speaker of House of Deputies, Major for the Mainland, Deputy Governor, Governor |
Joseph Jenckes (1656 – 15 June 1740) was a deputy governor and governor of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.
Jenckes was the son of Joseph and Esther (Ballard) Jenckes who lived in Lynn, Massachusetts before coming to Rhode Island. His father, the son of an earlier Joseph Jenckes, operated a sawmill in Warwick, but shortly thereafter settled in Providence. The subject Joseph Jenckes became a freeman in Providence in 1681, and ten years later began an extensive career of civil service to the colony. For 12 years from 1691 to 1708 he was a Deputy from Providence, and for four of those years he was the Speaker of the House of Deputies. From 1707 to 1712 he was assigned as Major for the towns of Providence and Warwick, and was also the Assistant from Providence during those years. In 1715 he was elected as the deputy governor of the colony, and held this position every year but one until 1727 when he was elected as governor, which position he held for five consecutive one-year terms.
One of the major issues concerning Rhode Island during Jenckes' terms of leadership was the boundary-line controversy with the neighboring Colony of Connecticut, and between his two terms as Deputy Governor Jenckes was in England with Richard Partridge to obtain royal intervention in this dispute. Connecticut refused to observe the boundary between the two colonies that had been established by commissioners from both colonies who met at Stonington, Connecticut in 1703. The Rhode Island colony was also having boundary line issues with Massachusetts, and Jenckes and his partner were able to get satisfaction from the crown, so that the Rhode Island colony "may not hereafter be molested, as they have hitherto been to their very great prejudice." Several years later, in 1726, Jenckes was one of four commissioners from Rhode Island who met with Connecticut commissioners to settle the line of partition between the two colonies. The following year he wrote a letter on behalf of the General Assembly to King George II thanking him for his protection of Rhode Island's "charter privileges".