Edward Cranfield (fl. 1680–1696) was an English colonial administrator.

Cranfield was governor of the Province of New Hampshire from 1682 to 1685, in an administration that was marked by hostility between Cranfield and the colonists.

Cranfield left New Hampshire in 1685 for Barbados, where he was appointed commissioner of customs, where he introduced a 4.5% tax on sugar exports, and sat on the council in the 1690s. He died c.1700 and is buried in Bath Cathedral.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ [Appendix to Jeremy Belknapp's History of New Hampshire]
Government offices
Preceded byas President of the Province of New Hampshire Governor of the Province of New Hampshire
1682–85
Succeeded by