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Peter Muhlenberg

John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg (October 1, 1746 – October 1, 1807) was an American clergyman and military officer who served during the American Revolutionary War. A member of Pennsylvania's prominent Muhlenberg family political dynasty, he became a respected figure in the newly independent United States as a Lutheran minister and member of the United States House of Representatives and United States Senate.[1]

Peter Muhlenberg
United States Senator
from Pennsylvania
In office
March 4, 1801 – June 30, 1801
Preceded byWilliam Bingham
Succeeded byGeorge Logan
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Pennsylvania's 4th district
In office
March 4, 1799 – March 4, 1801
Preceded byJohn Chapman
Succeeded byIsaac Van Horne
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Pennsylvania's at-large district
In office
March 4, 1793 – March 4, 1795
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
In office
March 4, 1789 – March 4, 1791
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
8th Vice-President of Pennsylvania
In office
October 31, 1787 – October 14, 1788
PresidentBenjamin Franklin
Preceded byCharles Biddle
Succeeded byDavid Redick
Personal details
Born
John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg

(1746-10-01)October 1, 1746
Trappe, Province of Pennsylvania, British America
DiedOctober 1, 1807(1807-10-01) (aged 61)
Gray's Ferry, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic-Republican
RelationsMuhlenberg family
Conrad Weiser (maternal grandfather)
ProfessionMinister, Politician, Soldier
Signature
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service Continental Army
Years of service1776–1783
Rank Major General
Commands8th Virginia Regiment
Battles/warsAmerican Revolutionary War
 • Battle of Brandywine
 • Battle of Germantown
 • Battle of Monmouth
 • Siege of Yorktown
Peter Muhlenberg statue by Blanche Nevin at the United States Capitol building.

Early life and education edit

Muhlenberg was born October 1, 1746, in Trappe in the Province of Pennsylvania to Anna Maria Weiser, the daughter of Pennsylvania Dutch pioneer and diplomat Conrad Weiser, and Henry Muhlenberg a German Lutheran pastor. He was sent, together with his brothers, Frederick Augustus and Gotthilf Henry Ernst in 1763 to Halle. They were educated in Latin at the Francke Foundations.[2] He left school in 1767 to start as a sales assistant in Lübeck, but returned that same year to Pennsylvania.

Career edit

He briefly served in the British Army's 60th Regiment of Foot,[3] and also served for a short while in the German dragoons, earning the nickname "Teufel Piet" (Devil Pete) before returning to Philadelphia in 1767, where he was given a classical education from the Academy of Philadelphia (the modern University of Pennsylvania). He was ordained in 1768 and headed a Lutheran congregation in Bedminster, New Jersey, before moving to Woodstock, Virginia.

Muhlenberg visited England in 1772 and was ordained into the priesthood of the Anglican Church, although he served a Lutheran congregation. Since the Anglican Church was the state church of Virginia, he was required to be ordained in an Anglican church in order to serve a congregation in Virginia. Besides his new congregation, he led the Committee of Safety and Correspondence for Dunmore County, Virginia. He was elected to the House of Burgesses in 1774, and was a delegate to the First Virginia Convention. He owned slaves.[4]

Military career edit

After the American Revolutionary War broke out in 1775, the Continental Army was formed. Muhlenberg was authorized to raise and command the 8th Virginia Regiment of the Continental Army's Virginia Line as its colonel. He was very likely chosen due to his influence in the German-American community. Of the eight colonels in the Virginia Line, Muhlenberg was the youngest at 29 and only Patrick Henry had less military experience.[5]

According to a biography written by his great-nephew in the mid-19th century,[6] on January 21, 1776, in the Lutheran church in Woodstock, Virginia, Muhlenberg took his sermon text from the third chapter Ecclesiastes, which starts with "To every thing there is a season..."; after reading the eighth verse, "a time of war, and a time of peace," he declared, "And this is the time of war," removing his clerical robe to reveal his Colonel's uniform. Outside the church door the drums began to roll as men turned to kiss their wives and then walked down the aisle to enlist, and within half an hour, 162 men were enrolled.[7] The next day he led out 300 men from the county to form the nucleus of the 8th Virginia Regiment. Though it is accepted that Muhlenberg helped form and lead the 8th, historians doubt the account of the sermon, as there are no reports prior to Muhlenberg's great-nephew's biography.[6][8]

Muhlenberg's unit was first posted to the South, to defend the coast of South Carolina and Georgia. In early 1777, the Eighth Regiment was sent north to join Washington's main army. Muhlenberg was made a brigadier general of the Virginia Line and commanded that Brigade in Nathanael Greene's division at Valley Forge. Muhlenberg saw service in the Battles of Brandywine, Germantown, and Monmouth. After Monmouth, most of the Virginia Line was sent to the far south, while General Muhlenberg was assigned to head up the defense of Virginia using mainly militia units.

At the Battle of Yorktown, he commanded the first brigade in Lafayette's Light Division.[9] His brigade was part of the Corps of Light Infantry, consisting of the light infantry companies of the line regiments of Massachusetts (ten companies), Connecticut (five companies), New Hampshire (five companies), and Rhode Island and New Jersey (one each). They held the right flank and manned the two trenches built to move American cannons closer to Cornwallis' defenses. The battalion commanded by American Lt. Colonel Alexander Hamilton and French Lieutenant Colonel Jean-Joseph Sourbader de Gimat led the night bayonet attack that stormed Redoubt No. 10 on October 14, 1781.

At the end of the war (1783), he was brevetted to major general and settled in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania.

Muhlenberg was also an original member of the Pennsylvania Society of the Cincinnati.[10]

Political career edit

After the war, Muhlenberg was elected to the Supreme Executive Council of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1784. He was elected Vice-President of the Council, a position comparable to that of Lieutenant Governor, on October 31, 1787. His term as Vice-President ended on a mysterious note. On October 14, 1788, the minutes of the Executive Council report that Muhlenberg had left Philadelphia without tendering his resignation—why his resignation was needed or expected is not noted—so a messenger was sent after him. That night, after the messenger returned with the resignation, the Council met at President Benjamin Franklin's home to choose Muhlenberg's successor, electing David Redick to the position.

Muhlenberg was elected to the 1st Congress (1789–1791) as one of the at-large representatives from Pennsylvania. His brother Frederick was the Speaker of the House for that same Congress. He was the first founder of the Democratic-Republican Societies in 1793. Muhlenberg served in Congress as a Republican during the 3rd Congress 1793–1795 and 5th Congress 1799–1801 for the 1st district. Muhlenberg was elected by the legislature to the U.S. Senate on a second ballot in February 1801 over George Logan, but resigned on June 30 of that same year.[11]

President Thomas Jefferson appointed him the supervisor of revenue for Pennsylvania in 1801 and customs collector for Philadelphia in 1802. He served in the latter post until his death.

On August 3, 1805, Muhlenberg wrote a letter to the residents of the primarily-German Northampton and Berks counties in a successful attempt to tilt those counties toward incumbent Governor Thomas McKean, who, in the midst of a badly fractured state Republican Party, was running with Federalist support, in his bid for reelection. Muhlenberg noted that although McKean's opponent, Simon Snyder, was of German descent, his election would elevate the Republican Party's radical Democratic faction to power and, with calls for a Constitutional Convention to elevate the power of the state legislature over the governor and especially the judiciary, result in anarchy.[12] McKean's margin of victory, 6,772-3,216, over Snyder in Northampton and Berks secured his narrow, 43,644-38,483, statewide margin of victory over Snyder.[13]

Personal life edit

On November 6, 1770, he married Anna Barbara "Hannah" Meyer, the daughter of a successful potter.[14] Together they had six children, including:[15]

  • Francis Swaine Muhlenberg (1795–1831), a U.S. Representative from Ohio who married Mary Barr Denny (1806–1893) in 1831, shortly before his death in December 1831. After his death, Francis' widow married Richard Hubbell Hopkins.[15]

On his 61st birthday, Muhlenberg died in Gray's Ferry, Pennsylvania, on October 1, 1807, and is buried at the Augustus Lutheran Church in Trappe, Pennsylvania.

Legacy edit

 
Peter Muhlenberg Memorial in Washington, D.C., on Connecticut Avenue. The inscription reads "John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg 1746 – 1807 Serving His Church, His Country, His State".[16]

References edit

 
Peter Muhlenberg statue in front of the Shenandoah County Courthouse in Woodstock, Virginia
  1. ^ Kennedy, Will P. "Capital Sidelights." Washington, D.C.: The Sunday Star, October 11, 1942, p. 27 (subscription required).
  2. ^ Archiv der Franckeschen Stiftungen, AF St/S B I 94 I, 575–577
  3. ^ Horn, Joshua (November 9, 2015). "Peter Muhlenberg: The Pastor Turned Soldier". Journal of the American Revolution. Retrieved November 29, 2015.
  4. ^ "Congress slaveowners", The Washington Post, January 19, 2022, retrieved July 11, 2022
  5. ^ https://allthingsliberty.com/2015/11/peter-muhlenberg-the-pastor-turned-soldier/
  6. ^ a b "History Detectives Season 5, Episode 5 – Transcript" (PDF). Oregon Public Broadcasting. 2007. Retrieved August 20, 2008.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on February 22, 2011. Retrieved August 9, 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. ^ . The Lutheran. 2007. Archived from the original on January 4, 2014.
  9. ^ Hamner, Christopher. Black-Robed Regiment. Teachinghistory.org. Accessed June 2, 2011.
  10. ^ "Officers Represented in the Society of the Cincinnati". The American Revolution Institute of the Society of the Cincinnati. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
  11. ^ Sanford W. Higginbotham, The Keystone in the Democratic Arch: Pennsylvania Politics, 1800-1816 (Harrisburg, PA: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1952), pp. 32-34.
  12. ^ Sanford W. Higginbotham, The Keystone in the Democratic Arch: Pennsylvania Politics, 1800-1816 (Harrisburg, PA: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1952), pp. 96-100.
  13. ^ Sanford W. Higginbotham, The Keystone in the Democratic Arch: Pennsylvania Politics, 1800-1816 (Harrisburg, PA: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1952), pp. 99-100.
  14. ^ Association, John Conrad Weiser Family (1960). The Weiser family: a genealogy of the family of John Conrad Weiser, the elder (d. 1746); prepared on the two hundred fiftieth anniversary of his arrival in America, 1710-1760. John Conrad Weiser Family Assoc. p. 168. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  15. ^ a b Wayland, John Walter (1980). A History of Shenandoah County, Virginia. Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 623. ISBN 978-0-8063-8011-7. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  16. ^ "John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg". aoc.gov. Architect of the Capitol. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  17. ^ The Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society, Volume 1. Kentucky State Historical Society. 1903. p. 36.
  18. ^ Bicentennial:Dunmore 1772-1778; Shenandoah 1778-1972 *Shenandoah County Bicentennial Committee 1972) p. 54

Further reading edit

  • Cecere, Michael. "The Fighting Parson's Farewell Sermon." Journal of the American Revolution, April 15, 2020.
  • Hocker, Edward W. The Fighting Parson of the American Revolution: A Biography of General Peter Muhlenberg, Lutheran Clergyman, Military Chieftain, and Political Leader (1936).
  • Muhlenberg, Henry Augustus. The Life of Major-General Peter Muhlenberg: Of the Revolutionary Army (1849). online
  • Rightmyer, Thomas Nelson. "The Holy Orders of Peter Muhlenberg." Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church 30.3 (1961): 183-197. online

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by Member, Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania,
representing Montgomery County

October 24, 1785 – October 16, 1788
Succeeded by
Zebulon Potts
Preceded by Vice-President of Pennsylvania
October 31, 1787 – October 14, 1788
Succeeded by
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by
District Created
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Pennsylvania's at-large congressional district

1789–1791
Served alongside: George Clymer, Thomas Fitzsimons, Thomas Hartley, Frederick A.C. Muhlenberg, Henry Wynkoop, Daniel Hiester and Thomas Scott
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Pennsylvania's at-large congressional district

1793–1795
Served alongside: Thomas Fitzsimons, John W. Kittera, Thomas Hartley, Frederick A.C. Muhlenberg, James Armstrong, Thomas Scott, Andrew Gregg, Daniel Hiester, William Irvine, William Findley, John Smilie, and William Montgomery
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Pennsylvania's 4th congressional district

1799–1801
alongside: Robert Brown
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 3) from Pennsylvania
1801
Served alongside: James Ross
Succeeded by

peter, muhlenberg, senator, muhlenberg, redirects, here, pennsylvania, state, senate, member, henry, augustus, muhlenberg, john, peter, gabriel, muhlenberg, october, 1746, october, 1807, american, clergyman, military, officer, served, during, american, revolut. Senator Muhlenberg redirects here For the Pennsylvania State Senate member see Henry Augustus Muhlenberg John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg October 1 1746 October 1 1807 was an American clergyman and military officer who served during the American Revolutionary War A member of Pennsylvania s prominent Muhlenberg family political dynasty he became a respected figure in the newly independent United States as a Lutheran minister and member of the United States House of Representatives and United States Senate 1 Peter MuhlenbergUnited States Senatorfrom PennsylvaniaIn office March 4 1801 June 30 1801Preceded byWilliam BinghamSucceeded byGeorge LoganMember of the U S House of Representatives from Pennsylvania s 4th districtIn office March 4 1799 March 4 1801Preceded byJohn ChapmanSucceeded byIsaac Van HorneMember of the U S House of Representatives from Pennsylvania s at large districtIn office March 4 1793 March 4 1795Preceded byConstituency establishedSucceeded byConstituency abolishedIn office March 4 1789 March 4 1791Preceded byConstituency establishedSucceeded byConstituency abolished8th Vice President of PennsylvaniaIn office October 31 1787 October 14 1788PresidentBenjamin FranklinPreceded byCharles BiddleSucceeded byDavid RedickPersonal detailsBornJohn Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg 1746 10 01 October 1 1746Trappe Province of Pennsylvania British AmericaDiedOctober 1 1807 1807 10 01 aged 61 Gray s Ferry Pennsylvania U S Political partyDemocratic RepublicanRelationsMuhlenberg familyConrad Weiser maternal grandfather ProfessionMinister Politician SoldierSignatureMilitary serviceAllegiance United StatesBranch serviceContinental ArmyYears of service1776 1783RankMajor GeneralCommands8th Virginia RegimentBattles warsAmerican Revolutionary War Battle of Brandywine Battle of Germantown Battle of Monmouth Siege of YorktownPeter Muhlenberg statue by Blanche Nevin at the United States Capitol building Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Military career 2 2 Political career 3 Personal life 4 Legacy 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEarly life and education editMuhlenberg was born October 1 1746 in Trappe in the Province of Pennsylvania to Anna Maria Weiser the daughter of Pennsylvania Dutch pioneer and diplomat Conrad Weiser and Henry Muhlenberg a German Lutheran pastor He was sent together with his brothers Frederick Augustus and Gotthilf Henry Ernst in 1763 to Halle They were educated in Latin at the Francke Foundations 2 He left school in 1767 to start as a sales assistant in Lubeck but returned that same year to Pennsylvania Career editHe briefly served in the British Army s 60th Regiment of Foot 3 and also served for a short while in the German dragoons earning the nickname Teufel Piet Devil Pete before returning to Philadelphia in 1767 where he was given a classical education from the Academy of Philadelphia the modern University of Pennsylvania He was ordained in 1768 and headed a Lutheran congregation in Bedminster New Jersey before moving to Woodstock Virginia Muhlenberg visited England in 1772 and was ordained into the priesthood of the Anglican Church although he served a Lutheran congregation Since the Anglican Church was the state church of Virginia he was required to be ordained in an Anglican church in order to serve a congregation in Virginia Besides his new congregation he led the Committee of Safety and Correspondence for Dunmore County Virginia He was elected to the House of Burgesses in 1774 and was a delegate to the First Virginia Convention He owned slaves 4 Military career edit After the American Revolutionary War broke out in 1775 the Continental Army was formed Muhlenberg was authorized to raise and command the 8th Virginia Regiment of the Continental Army s Virginia Line as its colonel He was very likely chosen due to his influence in the German American community Of the eight colonels in the Virginia Line Muhlenberg was the youngest at 29 and only Patrick Henry had less military experience 5 According to a biography written by his great nephew in the mid 19th century 6 on January 21 1776 in the Lutheran church in Woodstock Virginia Muhlenberg took his sermon text from the third chapter Ecclesiastes which starts with To every thing there is a season after reading the eighth verse a time of war and a time of peace he declared And this is the time of war removing his clerical robe to reveal his Colonel s uniform Outside the church door the drums began to roll as men turned to kiss their wives and then walked down the aisle to enlist and within half an hour 162 men were enrolled 7 The next day he led out 300 men from the county to form the nucleus of the 8th Virginia Regiment Though it is accepted that Muhlenberg helped form and lead the 8th historians doubt the account of the sermon as there are no reports prior to Muhlenberg s great nephew s biography 6 8 Muhlenberg s unit was first posted to the South to defend the coast of South Carolina and Georgia In early 1777 the Eighth Regiment was sent north to join Washington s main army Muhlenberg was made a brigadier general of the Virginia Line and commanded that Brigade in Nathanael Greene s division at Valley Forge Muhlenberg saw service in the Battles of Brandywine Germantown and Monmouth After Monmouth most of the Virginia Line was sent to the far south while General Muhlenberg was assigned to head up the defense of Virginia using mainly militia units At the Battle of Yorktown he commanded the first brigade in Lafayette s Light Division 9 His brigade was part of the Corps of Light Infantry consisting of the light infantry companies of the line regiments of Massachusetts ten companies Connecticut five companies New Hampshire five companies and Rhode Island and New Jersey one each They held the right flank and manned the two trenches built to move American cannons closer to Cornwallis defenses The battalion commanded by American Lt Colonel Alexander Hamilton and French Lieutenant Colonel Jean Joseph Sourbader de Gimat led the night bayonet attack that stormed Redoubt No 10 on October 14 1781 At the end of the war 1783 he was brevetted to major general and settled in Montgomery County Pennsylvania Muhlenberg was also an original member of the Pennsylvania Society of the Cincinnati 10 Political career edit After the war Muhlenberg was elected to the Supreme Executive Council of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1784 He was elected Vice President of the Council a position comparable to that of Lieutenant Governor on October 31 1787 His term as Vice President ended on a mysterious note On October 14 1788 the minutes of the Executive Council report that Muhlenberg had left Philadelphia without tendering his resignation why his resignation was needed or expected is not noted so a messenger was sent after him That night after the messenger returned with the resignation the Council met at President Benjamin Franklin s home to choose Muhlenberg s successor electing David Redick to the position Muhlenberg was elected to the 1st Congress 1789 1791 as one of the at large representatives from Pennsylvania His brother Frederick was the Speaker of the House for that same Congress He was the first founder of the Democratic Republican Societies in 1793 Muhlenberg served in Congress as a Republican during the 3rd Congress 1793 1795 and 5th Congress 1799 1801 for the 1st district Muhlenberg was elected by the legislature to the U S Senate on a second ballot in February 1801 over George Logan but resigned on June 30 of that same year 11 President Thomas Jefferson appointed him the supervisor of revenue for Pennsylvania in 1801 and customs collector for Philadelphia in 1802 He served in the latter post until his death On August 3 1805 Muhlenberg wrote a letter to the residents of the primarily German Northampton and Berks counties in a successful attempt to tilt those counties toward incumbent Governor Thomas McKean who in the midst of a badly fractured state Republican Party was running with Federalist support in his bid for reelection Muhlenberg noted that although McKean s opponent Simon Snyder was of German descent his election would elevate the Republican Party s radical Democratic faction to power and with calls for a Constitutional Convention to elevate the power of the state legislature over the governor and especially the judiciary result in anarchy 12 McKean s margin of victory 6 772 3 216 over Snyder in Northampton and Berks secured his narrow 43 644 38 483 statewide margin of victory over Snyder 13 Personal life editOn November 6 1770 he married Anna Barbara Hannah Meyer the daughter of a successful potter 14 Together they had six children including 15 Francis Swaine Muhlenberg 1795 1831 a U S Representative from Ohio who married Mary Barr Denny 1806 1893 in 1831 shortly before his death in December 1831 After his death Francis widow married Richard Hubbell Hopkins 15 On his 61st birthday Muhlenberg died in Gray s Ferry Pennsylvania on October 1 1807 and is buried at the Augustus Lutheran Church in Trappe Pennsylvania Legacy edit nbsp Peter Muhlenberg Memorial in Washington D C on Connecticut Avenue The inscription reads John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg 1746 1807 Serving His Church His Country His State 16 Muhlenberg is the namesake of Muhlenberg County Kentucky 17 A memorial to Peter Muhlenberg is located in Washington D C on Connecticut Avenue see image Another memorial to him stands behind the Philadelphia Museum of Art Two statues of Peter Muhlenberg are located in front of the Shenandoah County Courthouse in Woodstock Virginia and the town s Emmanuel Lutheran congregation preserves communion vessels a baptismal font and altar cloth that he used 18 Muhlenberg College in Allentown Pennsylvania displays a statue of John P G Muhlenberg in front of the Haas College Center 2400 Chew Street References edit nbsp Peter Muhlenberg statue in front of the Shenandoah County Courthouse in Woodstock Virginia Kennedy Will P Capital Sidelights Washington D C The Sunday Star October 11 1942 p 27 subscription required Archiv der Franckeschen Stiftungen AF St S B I 94 I 575 577 Horn Joshua November 9 2015 Peter Muhlenberg The Pastor Turned Soldier Journal of the American Revolution Retrieved November 29 2015 Congress slaveowners The Washington Post January 19 2022 retrieved July 11 2022 https allthingsliberty com 2015 11 peter muhlenberg the pastor turned soldier a b History Detectives Season 5 Episode 5 Transcript PDF Oregon Public Broadcasting 2007 Retrieved August 20 2008 Archived copy Archived from the original on February 22 2011 Retrieved August 9 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Muhlenberg a recruiter for the Revolutionary War The Lutheran 2007 Archived from the original on January 4 2014 Hamner Christopher Black Robed Regiment Teachinghistory org Accessed June 2 2011 Officers Represented in the Society of the Cincinnati The American Revolution Institute of the Society of the Cincinnati Retrieved March 19 2021 Sanford W Higginbotham The Keystone in the Democratic Arch Pennsylvania Politics 1800 1816 Harrisburg PA Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission 1952 pp 32 34 Sanford W Higginbotham The Keystone in the Democratic Arch Pennsylvania Politics 1800 1816 Harrisburg PA Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission 1952 pp 96 100 Sanford W Higginbotham The Keystone in the Democratic Arch Pennsylvania Politics 1800 1816 Harrisburg PA Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission 1952 pp 99 100 Association John Conrad Weiser Family 1960 The Weiser family a genealogy of the family of John Conrad Weiser the elder d 1746 prepared on the two hundred fiftieth anniversary of his arrival in America 1710 1760 John Conrad Weiser Family Assoc p 168 Retrieved December 18 2019 a b Wayland John Walter 1980 A History of Shenandoah County Virginia Genealogical Publishing Com p 623 ISBN 978 0 8063 8011 7 Retrieved December 18 2019 John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg aoc gov Architect of the Capitol Retrieved December 18 2019 The Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society Volume 1 Kentucky State Historical Society 1903 p 36 Bicentennial Dunmore 1772 1778 Shenandoah 1778 1972 Shenandoah County Bicentennial Committee 1972 p 54Further reading editCecere Michael The Fighting Parson s Farewell Sermon Journal of the American Revolution April 15 2020 Hocker Edward W The Fighting Parson of the American Revolution A Biography of General Peter Muhlenberg Lutheran Clergyman Military Chieftain and Political Leader 1936 Muhlenberg Henry Augustus The Life of Major General Peter Muhlenberg Of the Revolutionary Army 1849 online Rightmyer Thomas Nelson The Holy Orders of Peter Muhlenberg Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church 30 3 1961 183 197 onlineExternal links editCongressional Biography National Statuary Hall Collection Biography Biography and statue at the University of Pennsylvania History Detectives Muhlenberg Robe Muhlenberg John Peter Gabriel Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Muhlenberg John Peter Gabriel New International Encyclopedia 1905 Muhlenberg Henry Melchior Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1900 John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg at Find a Grave The 8th Virginia Regiment history site Society of the Cincinnati https www americanrevolutioninstitute org Political officesPreceded byDaniel Hiester Member Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania representing Montgomery CountyOctober 24 1785 October 16 1788 Succeeded byZebulon PottsPreceded byCharles Biddle Vice President of PennsylvaniaOctober 31 1787 October 14 1788 Succeeded byDavid RedickU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byDistrict Created Member of the U S House of Representatives from Pennsylvania s at large congressional district1789 1791 Served alongside George Clymer Thomas Fitzsimons Thomas Hartley Frederick A C Muhlenberg Henry Wynkoop Daniel Hiester and Thomas Scott Succeeded byFrederick A C Muhlenberg Thomas Fitzsimons Thomas Hartley Israel Jacobs John W Kittera Daniel Hiester William Findley and Andrew GreggPreceded byFrederick A C Muhlenberg Thomas Fitzsimons Thomas Hartley Israel Jacobs John W Kittera Daniel Hiester William Findley and Andrew Gregg Member of the U S House of Representatives from Pennsylvania s at large congressional district1793 1795 Served alongside Thomas Fitzsimons John W Kittera Thomas Hartley Frederick A C Muhlenberg James Armstrong Thomas Scott Andrew Gregg Daniel Hiester William Irvine William Findley John Smilie and William Montgomery Succeeded by1st John Swanwick 2nd Frederick A C Muhlenberg 3rd Richard Thomas 4th Samuel Sitgreaves and John Richards 5th Daniel Hiester 6th John Andre Hanna 7th John W Kittera 8th Thomas Hartley 9th Andrew Gregg 10th David Bard and Samuel Maclay 11th William Findley 12th Albert GallatinPreceded byRobert BrownJohn Chapman Member of the U S House of Representatives from Pennsylvania s 4th congressional district1799 1801 alongside Robert Brown Succeeded byRobert BrownIsaac Van HorneU S SenatePreceded byWilliam Bingham U S senator Class 3 from Pennsylvania1801 Served alongside James Ross Succeeded byGeorge Logan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peter Muhlenberg amp oldid 1178281130, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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