According to church records, Thomas Wynne was the fourth of five sons of Thomas Wynne, Sr.; Thomas Wynne lost his father at the age of 11.[3] While attracted to the study of medicine early on, heavy taxes levied on his family originally made the acquisition of proper learning materials difficult. His trade was that of cooper. He was later able to make the acquaintance of an established surgeon by the name of Richard Moore, and soon he was able to apprentice until he was deemed worthy of licensing. He was licensed in Shropshire by Drs. Hollins, Needham and Moore.[4] Wynne in turn, after the death of Dr. Richard Moore, apprenticed Moore's son Mordecai.[5]
Immigration to Pennsylvania
Born into the Anglican Church, he in 1655 married Quaker Martha Buttall (1627–1670) and found himself profoundly converted. Henceforth a devout Quaker and author of several pamphlets on Quaker doctrine, Wynne faced persecution and even six years' imprisonment in England in the 1680s. After Martha died, he married a woman twice widowed, Mrs. Elizabeth Rowden Maude (b. 1637; d. after 1691),[6] on July 20, 1676, and she accompanied him as he joined Penn on his trip to America, leaving on August 30 and landing on October 27, 1682.[7]
Career
Wynne was notable for erecting the first brick house in the colony of Philadelphia, on his "Liberty Lot" at Front and Chestnut streets (known as Wynne Street until renamed by Penn in 1684). He built a home at 52nd Street and Woodbine Avenue in 1690 named "Wynnestay" (a reference to the famous Wynnstay estate in Wales owned by Sir John Wynn, 1st Baronet, a collateral cousin[1]), and several surrounding communities in the greater Philadelphia Area now bear his name. He returned to England with Penn in 1684. He served as speaker for the first two Pennsylvania Assemblies of the Province in Philadelphia in 1687 and 1688 and acted as Justice of Sussex county, now a county in Delaware, from 1687 to 1691.[8][9] He was appointed a justice of the peace in January 1690 and held the position of justice of the provincial court from September 1690 until his death.
Death
His time in America lasted only nine years. His death is noted by the meeting of Radnor Friends Meetinghouse then at Duckett's Farm which in 1950 was located at the West Philadelphia train station not far from his home at Wynnestay.[10] Thomas Wynne's burial is noted in the Philadelphia Meeting records at Ducketts Farm Burial Ground.[11]
^Thomas Allen Glenn, Welsh Founders of Pennsylvania, 1970 reprint, 1911 original.
^William Mac Lean Jr., 1901, The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, p. 104.
^Charles Browning, Welsh Settlement of Pennsylvania, 1912.
^Dallett, Francis James. "Mrs. Thomas Wynne of Philadelphia and Her Family: Corrections to the Pedigrees of Wynne and Maude." In Sheppard, Walter Lee, Jr., comp., Passengers and Ships Prior to 1684. Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1970.