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William Greene (governor)

William Greene Jr. (August 16, 1731 – November 29, 1809) was the second governor of the state of Rhode Island, serving in this capacity for eight years, five of which were during the American Revolutionary War. From a prominent Rhode Island family, his father, William Greene Sr., had served 11 terms as a colonial governor of Rhode Island. His great-grandfather, John Greene Jr. served for ten years as deputy governor of the colony, and his great-great-grandfather, John Greene Sr. was a founding settler of both Providence and Warwick.

William Greene Jr.
Governor William Greene Jr. grave medallion
2nd Governor of Rhode Island
In office
May 4, 1778 – May 3, 1786
Preceded byNicholas Cooke
Succeeded byJohn Collins
20th Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court
In office
February 1777 – May 1778
Preceded byMetcalf Bowler
Succeeded byShearjashub Bourn
Personal details
Born(1731-08-16)August 16, 1731
Warwick, Colony of Rhode Island, British America
DiedNovember 29, 1809(1809-11-29) (aged 78)
Warwick, Rhode Island, U.S.
Resting placeGovernor Greene Cemetery, Love Lane, Warwick
SpouseCatharine Ray
ChildrenRay, Samuel, Phebe, Celia
Parent(s)William Greene Sr. and Catharine Greene
EducationSufficient to write extensive letters
OccupationDeputy, chief justice, governor

Greene served the colony for many years as a Deputy to the General Assembly, a justice and chief justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court, and then as governor. As a governor during the American Revolutionary War, his biggest concerns were the British sacking of the Rhode Island towns of Bristol and Warren, and the British occupation of Newport, which lasted for three years. After eight years as governor, Greene, who supported the use of hard currency, was defeated in the May 1786 election by John Collins who was an advocate of paper money.

Greene married a second cousin, Catharine Ray of Block Island, and the couple had four children, of whom Ray Greene became a United States Senator and Rhode Island Attorney General. Governor Greene died at his estate in the town of Warwick in 1809, and is interred at Governor Greene Cemetery in Warwick, where his parents were interred.

Ancestry and early life edit

Born August 16, 1731, in Warwick in the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, William Greene was the son of William Greene Sr. who had served for 11 one-year terms as the governor of the Rhode Island colony, and the great grandson of John Greene Jr. who had served for ten years as the deputy governor of the colony.[1] His great great grandfather was John Greene Sr. who came from Salisbury, Wiltshire, England in 1635, was one of the original proprietors of Providence with Roger Williams, and later became one of the founding settlers of Warwick.[2] Governor Greene is also descended from early Rhode Island settler and Warwick founder Samuel Gorton, as well as from Frances (Latham) Dungan, the "mother of governors."[3]

Greene's mother was Catharine, the daughter of Benjamin and Susanna (Holden) Greene, and also a descendant of Warwick founder John Greene Sr.[2] She also descends from Randall Holden who was a follower of Anne Hutchinson and signer of the Portsmouth Compact in 1638, establishing the first government in the Rhode Island colony.[1][2]

In 1753 Greene became a freeman from the town of Warwick, and was thus able to vote.[1] In 1762, he married his second cousin, Catharine Ray (July 10, 1731 – January 29, 1794), the daughter of Simon and Deborah (Greene) Ray of Block Island, and also a great granddaughter of Deputy Governor John Greene Jr.[1] Catharine Ray had been a literary companion of Benjamin Franklin, and had a shared correspondence with the statesman.[4]

Political life edit

 
The Governor Greene Mansion where Greene and his father both lived

In October 1771 Greene was on a committee to finish the construction of the court house in the neighboring town of East Greenwich.[1] He was subsequently selected as a deputy from his home town of Warwick in the years 1773, 1774, 1776, and 1777, and in May 1777 was selected as the Speaker of the House of Deputies for the entire colony.[5] When the colony of Rhode Island declared its independence from Great Britain in May 1776, two months before the 13 colonies did so as a whole, Greene was one of the deputies that strongly supported this measure.[6] In December 1776 a large body of British troops occupied Newport and the entire island of Aquidneck (Rhode Island). As a result, on December 10, 1776, Greene was chosen as a member of the colony's Council of War to act when the General Assembly was not in session.[7][6] He subsequently served on the war council every year until the cessation of hostilities in 1781.[8]

Supreme Court justice and governor edit

Greene had begun his public service in February 1767 when he became a justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court (then called the Superior Court of Judicature, Court of Assize, and General Gaol Delivery), filling in for another member for a few months.[9] He served another partial term on this court from 1768 to 1769, then in May 1774 he was again selected as a justice of the court, serving until February 1777 when he became the 20th Chief Justice of this body.[10][11] The only break in his tenure as a justice occurred for a few months during the summer of 1776 when he was given the rank of Colonel, moved temporarily to the War Department, and briefly replaced as justice by John Gardner.[12]

Greene gave up his position as Chief Justice in May 1778 when Governor Nicholas Cooke decided to step down from the arduous task of being a wartime governor, and, at the age of 47, Greene was elected as the second governor of the state.[13] He served as governor for eight years, five of which were during the trying time of the American Revolutionary War.[7] Greene was said to be of "remarkable physical vigor" because two or three times a week he would walk from Warwick or East Greenwich to Providence and return the same afternoon, about 17 miles round trip.[13]

War effects on Rhode Island edit

 
Entry of the French fleet in Newport Bay August 8, 1778 (Drawing by Pierre Ozanne, 1778)

Some of the events occurring during Greene's early tenure as governor included the British sacking of the towns of Bristol and Warren on May 25, 1778, and the subsequent arrival of the French fleet on July 29, 1778, under the command of the Comte d'Estaing.[14] The ensuing Battle of Rhode Island on August 29, 1778, resulted in a stalemate, and the British continued to occupy Aquidneck Island. An encouraging event for the Americans, however, occurred on October 18, 1778, when the American vessel Hawk, under the command of Captain Silas Talbot, captured the British galley Pigot.[14]

In October 1779 the British evacuated Newport, after having laid waste to this once wealthy community. The buildings of Rhode Island College (later Brown University) in Providence were used as a barracks and hospital during the latter part of the war until 1782.[15] The most important event of 1780 was the arrival in Newport of 44 French ships under the command of Admiral De Ternay, who brought 6000 troops to serve under Count Rochambeau.[15] Governor Greene convened a special session of the General Assembly to receive the French during this momentous occasion.[15]

In 1781, after the surrender of Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown to French and American forces, the General Assembly changed the name of Kings County, Rhode Island to Washington County "in perpetual and grateful remembrance of the eminent and most distinguished services, and heroic actions of the illustrious commander-in-chief of the forces of the United States of America."[15] As the new nation was forming, in 1782 Rhode Island and Georgia were the only two states that rejected a 5% import tax proposed by congress. The Rhode Island citizenry and leadership felt that such a tax bore unequally on Rhode Island as a maritime state.[16] This was one of several considerations delaying Rhode Island's entry into the Union.[16] Congressional delegate David Howell was backed by a unanimous vote of the House of Deputies and by Governor Greene in rejecting the import tax.[17]

Post-war period edit

 
The use of paper money, which Greene opposed, was a highly contentious issue during his administration.

Several important acts passed by the General Assembly took place during Greene's tenure as governor, after the war was concluded. In February 1783 an act was passed giving Roman Catholics the same rights as Protestants. During the same session the assembly also passed a copyright law, protecting copyrights for 21 years.[17] In June 1783 a new tariff bill was passed to help relieve some of the debt of the poverty-stricken state.[17] A major human rights act was passed in the General Assembly in February 1784 allowing for the gradual emancipation of slaves. With this act, all children born to slave mothers after March 1 were to be free, and the further sale of any slaves became strictly prohibited.[18]

The main issue of the election in May 1786 concerned the use of paper money. Greene backed a solid currency policy, which was supported by the General Assembly. His primary rival, John Collins, advocated the use of paper money. The soft money supporters won the election, and not only was Collins elected governor, but only 30 of the previous 81 members of the assembly were returned to office following this election.[19]

After the end of his tenure as governor, Greene was not active in the civil affairs of the colony again until 1792 when he became an elector of the presidents and vice presidents of the United States. In this capacity he became a member of the first electoral college in which Rhode Island participated.[20]

Greene died at his estate in Warwick on November 29, 1809, and was buried where his parents were buried. The cemetery was later named after the family, the Governor Greene Cemetery in Love Lane, Warwick.[1][19]

Family edit

 
Grave marker for Governor Greene, Governor Greene Cemetery, Warwick

Governor Greene and his wife Catharine had four children. Ray married Mary M. Flagg, the daughter of George Flagg, esquire, of Charleston, South Carolina, and became Attorney General for the state and a United States Senator. Samuel married Mary Nightingale, the daughter of Colonel Joseph Nightingale of Providence; Phebe married Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Ward Jr., the son of Governor Samuel Ward and Anne Ray; and Celia married her cousin, Colonel William Greene, the son of Benjamin Greene of Warwick.[21] The governor's grandson, also named William Greene III, was a lieutenant governor of Rhode Island under Governor Ambrose Burnside, shortly after the Civil War. Governor Greene was a second cousin of Colonel Christopher Greene, and a third cousin of General Nathanael Greene, both of whom served with distinction during the American Revolutionary War.

Ancestry edit

See also edit

Sources edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Turner 1877, p. 65.
  2. ^ a b c Austin 1887, p. 88.
  3. ^ Austin 1887, pp. 67, 302–5.
  4. ^ Bicknell 1920, p. 1100.
  5. ^ Turner 1877, pp. 65–6.
  6. ^ a b Bicknell 1920, p. 1101.
  7. ^ a b Turner 1877, p. 66.
  8. ^ Smith 1900, pp. 353–394.
  9. ^ Smith 1900, p. 261.
  10. ^ Smith 1900, pp. 309, 325, 344.
  11. ^ Manual - the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations (1891), p. 208-13.
  12. ^ Smith 1900, p. 344.
  13. ^ a b Bicknell 1920, p. 1102.
  14. ^ a b Bicknell 1920, p. 1108.
  15. ^ a b c d Bicknell 1920, p. 1103.
  16. ^ a b Bicknell 1920, p. 1104.
  17. ^ a b c Bicknell 1920, p. 1105.
  18. ^ Bicknell 1920, p. 1106.
  19. ^ a b Bicknell 1920, p. 1107.
  20. ^ Turner 1877, p. 67.
  21. ^ Turner 1877, p. 68.

Bibliography edit

  • Austin, John Osborne (1887). Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island. Albany, New York: J. Munsell's Sons. ISBN 978-0-8063-0006-1.
  • Bicknell, Thomas Williams (1920). The History of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. Vol. 3. New York: The American Historical Society. OCLC 1953313.
  • Smith, Joseph Jencks (1900). Civil and Military List of Rhode Island, 1647–1800. Providence, RI: Preston and Rounds, Co. arnold.
  • Turner, Henry Edward (1877). Greenes of Warwick in Colonial History. Davis & Pitman, Steam Printers. p. 65. william greene governor RI.

External links edit

  • Letter from George Washington to William Greene
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of Rhode Island
1778–1786
Succeeded by

william, greene, governor, confused, with, william, greene, colonial, governor, william, greene, august, 1731, november, 1809, second, governor, state, rhode, island, serving, this, capacity, eight, years, five, which, were, during, american, revolutionary, fr. Not to be confused with William Greene colonial governor William Greene Jr August 16 1731 November 29 1809 was the second governor of the state of Rhode Island serving in this capacity for eight years five of which were during the American Revolutionary War From a prominent Rhode Island family his father William Greene Sr had served 11 terms as a colonial governor of Rhode Island His great grandfather John Greene Jr served for ten years as deputy governor of the colony and his great great grandfather John Greene Sr was a founding settler of both Providence and Warwick William Greene Jr Governor William Greene Jr grave medallion2nd Governor of Rhode IslandIn office May 4 1778 May 3 1786Preceded byNicholas CookeSucceeded byJohn Collins20th Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme CourtIn office February 1777 May 1778Preceded byMetcalf BowlerSucceeded byShearjashub BournPersonal detailsBorn 1731 08 16 August 16 1731Warwick Colony of Rhode Island British AmericaDiedNovember 29 1809 1809 11 29 aged 78 Warwick Rhode Island U S Resting placeGovernor Greene Cemetery Love Lane WarwickSpouseCatharine RayChildrenRay Samuel Phebe CeliaParent s William Greene Sr and Catharine GreeneEducationSufficient to write extensive lettersOccupationDeputy chief justice governorGreene served the colony for many years as a Deputy to the General Assembly a justice and chief justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court and then as governor As a governor during the American Revolutionary War his biggest concerns were the British sacking of the Rhode Island towns of Bristol and Warren and the British occupation of Newport which lasted for three years After eight years as governor Greene who supported the use of hard currency was defeated in the May 1786 election by John Collins who was an advocate of paper money Greene married a second cousin Catharine Ray of Block Island and the couple had four children of whom Ray Greene became a United States Senator and Rhode Island Attorney General Governor Greene died at his estate in the town of Warwick in 1809 and is interred at Governor Greene Cemetery in Warwick where his parents were interred Contents 1 Ancestry and early life 2 Political life 2 1 Supreme Court justice and governor 2 2 War effects on Rhode Island 2 3 Post war period 3 Family 4 Ancestry 5 See also 6 Sources 6 1 Bibliography 7 External linksAncestry and early life editBorn August 16 1731 in Warwick in the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations William Greene was the son of William Greene Sr who had served for 11 one year terms as the governor of the Rhode Island colony and the great grandson of John Greene Jr who had served for ten years as the deputy governor of the colony 1 His great great grandfather was John Greene Sr who came from Salisbury Wiltshire England in 1635 was one of the original proprietors of Providence with Roger Williams and later became one of the founding settlers of Warwick 2 Governor Greene is also descended from early Rhode Island settler and Warwick founder Samuel Gorton as well as from Frances Latham Dungan the mother of governors 3 Greene s mother was Catharine the daughter of Benjamin and Susanna Holden Greene and also a descendant of Warwick founder John Greene Sr 2 She also descends from Randall Holden who was a follower of Anne Hutchinson and signer of the Portsmouth Compact in 1638 establishing the first government in the Rhode Island colony 1 2 In 1753 Greene became a freeman from the town of Warwick and was thus able to vote 1 In 1762 he married his second cousin Catharine Ray July 10 1731 January 29 1794 the daughter of Simon and Deborah Greene Ray of Block Island and also a great granddaughter of Deputy Governor John Greene Jr 1 Catharine Ray had been a literary companion of Benjamin Franklin and had a shared correspondence with the statesman 4 Political life edit nbsp The Governor Greene Mansion where Greene and his father both livedIn October 1771 Greene was on a committee to finish the construction of the court house in the neighboring town of East Greenwich 1 He was subsequently selected as a deputy from his home town of Warwick in the years 1773 1774 1776 and 1777 and in May 1777 was selected as the Speaker of the House of Deputies for the entire colony 5 When the colony of Rhode Island declared its independence from Great Britain in May 1776 two months before the 13 colonies did so as a whole Greene was one of the deputies that strongly supported this measure 6 In December 1776 a large body of British troops occupied Newport and the entire island of Aquidneck Rhode Island As a result on December 10 1776 Greene was chosen as a member of the colony s Council of War to act when the General Assembly was not in session 7 6 He subsequently served on the war council every year until the cessation of hostilities in 1781 8 Supreme Court justice and governor edit Greene had begun his public service in February 1767 when he became a justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court then called the Superior Court of Judicature Court of Assize and General Gaol Delivery filling in for another member for a few months 9 He served another partial term on this court from 1768 to 1769 then in May 1774 he was again selected as a justice of the court serving until February 1777 when he became the 20th Chief Justice of this body 10 11 The only break in his tenure as a justice occurred for a few months during the summer of 1776 when he was given the rank of Colonel moved temporarily to the War Department and briefly replaced as justice by John Gardner 12 Greene gave up his position as Chief Justice in May 1778 when Governor Nicholas Cooke decided to step down from the arduous task of being a wartime governor and at the age of 47 Greene was elected as the second governor of the state 13 He served as governor for eight years five of which were during the trying time of the American Revolutionary War 7 Greene was said to be of remarkable physical vigor because two or three times a week he would walk from Warwick or East Greenwich to Providence and return the same afternoon about 17 miles round trip 13 War effects on Rhode Island edit nbsp Entry of the French fleet in Newport Bay August 8 1778 Drawing by Pierre Ozanne 1778 Some of the events occurring during Greene s early tenure as governor included the British sacking of the towns of Bristol and Warren on May 25 1778 and the subsequent arrival of the French fleet on July 29 1778 under the command of the Comte d Estaing 14 The ensuing Battle of Rhode Island on August 29 1778 resulted in a stalemate and the British continued to occupy Aquidneck Island An encouraging event for the Americans however occurred on October 18 1778 when the American vessel Hawk under the command of Captain Silas Talbot captured the British galley Pigot 14 In October 1779 the British evacuated Newport after having laid waste to this once wealthy community The buildings of Rhode Island College later Brown University in Providence were used as a barracks and hospital during the latter part of the war until 1782 15 The most important event of 1780 was the arrival in Newport of 44 French ships under the command of Admiral De Ternay who brought 6000 troops to serve under Count Rochambeau 15 Governor Greene convened a special session of the General Assembly to receive the French during this momentous occasion 15 In 1781 after the surrender of Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown to French and American forces the General Assembly changed the name of Kings County Rhode Island to Washington County in perpetual and grateful remembrance of the eminent and most distinguished services and heroic actions of the illustrious commander in chief of the forces of the United States of America 15 As the new nation was forming in 1782 Rhode Island and Georgia were the only two states that rejected a 5 import tax proposed by congress The Rhode Island citizenry and leadership felt that such a tax bore unequally on Rhode Island as a maritime state 16 This was one of several considerations delaying Rhode Island s entry into the Union 16 Congressional delegate David Howell was backed by a unanimous vote of the House of Deputies and by Governor Greene in rejecting the import tax 17 Post war period edit nbsp The use of paper money which Greene opposed was a highly contentious issue during his administration Several important acts passed by the General Assembly took place during Greene s tenure as governor after the war was concluded In February 1783 an act was passed giving Roman Catholics the same rights as Protestants During the same session the assembly also passed a copyright law protecting copyrights for 21 years 17 In June 1783 a new tariff bill was passed to help relieve some of the debt of the poverty stricken state 17 A major human rights act was passed in the General Assembly in February 1784 allowing for the gradual emancipation of slaves With this act all children born to slave mothers after March 1 were to be free and the further sale of any slaves became strictly prohibited 18 The main issue of the election in May 1786 concerned the use of paper money Greene backed a solid currency policy which was supported by the General Assembly His primary rival John Collins advocated the use of paper money The soft money supporters won the election and not only was Collins elected governor but only 30 of the previous 81 members of the assembly were returned to office following this election 19 After the end of his tenure as governor Greene was not active in the civil affairs of the colony again until 1792 when he became an elector of the presidents and vice presidents of the United States In this capacity he became a member of the first electoral college in which Rhode Island participated 20 Greene died at his estate in Warwick on November 29 1809 and was buried where his parents were buried The cemetery was later named after the family the Governor Greene Cemetery in Love Lane Warwick 1 19 Family edit nbsp Grave marker for Governor Greene Governor Greene Cemetery WarwickGovernor Greene and his wife Catharine had four children Ray married Mary M Flagg the daughter of George Flagg esquire of Charleston South Carolina and became Attorney General for the state and a United States Senator Samuel married Mary Nightingale the daughter of Colonel Joseph Nightingale of Providence Phebe married Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Ward Jr the son of Governor Samuel Ward and Anne Ray and Celia married her cousin Colonel William Greene the son of Benjamin Greene of Warwick 21 The governor s grandson also named William Greene III was a lieutenant governor of Rhode Island under Governor Ambrose Burnside shortly after the Civil War Governor Greene was a second cousin of Colonel Christopher Greene and a third cousin of General Nathanael Greene both of whom served with distinction during the American Revolutionary War Ancestry editAncestors of William Greene governor 16 John Greene Sr 1597 1658 8 John Greene Jr 1620 1708 17 Joan Tattersall4 Samuel Greene 1671 1720 18 William Almy 1601 1676 9 Ann Almy 1627 1709 19 Audry Barlow 1603 after 1676 2 William Greene Sr 1695 1758 20 Samuel Gorton 1593 c 1677 10 Benjamin Gorton died 1699 21 Mary Mayplet5 Mary Gorton 1673 1732 22 Richard Carder died c 1676 11 Sarah Carder died 1724 23 Mary died 1691 1 William Greene Jr 1731 1809 24 John Greene 1597 1658 12 Thomas Greene 1628 1717 25 Joan Tattersall6 Benjamin Greene 1666 1757 26 Rufus Barton died 1648 13 Elizabeth Barton died 1693 27 Margaret3 Catharine Greene b 1695 14 Randall Holden 1612 1692 7 Susannah Holden 1670 1734 30 William Dungan died 1636 15 Frances Dungan c 1630 1697 31 Frances Latham 1611 1677 See also edit nbsp United States portal nbsp New England portal nbsp Rhode Island portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp American Revolutionary War portalList of governors of Rhode Island List of colonial governors of Rhode Island List of lieutenant governors of Rhode Island Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations History of Rhode IslandSources edit a b c d e f Turner 1877 p 65 a b c Austin 1887 p 88 Austin 1887 pp 67 302 5 Bicknell 1920 p 1100 Turner 1877 pp 65 6 a b Bicknell 1920 p 1101 a b Turner 1877 p 66 Smith 1900 pp 353 394 Smith 1900 p 261 Smith 1900 pp 309 325 344 Manual the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations 1891 p 208 13 Smith 1900 p 344 a b Bicknell 1920 p 1102 a b Bicknell 1920 p 1108 a b c d Bicknell 1920 p 1103 a b Bicknell 1920 p 1104 a b c Bicknell 1920 p 1105 Bicknell 1920 p 1106 a b Bicknell 1920 p 1107 Turner 1877 p 67 Turner 1877 p 68 Bibliography edit Austin John Osborne 1887 Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island Albany New York J Munsell s Sons ISBN 978 0 8063 0006 1 Bicknell Thomas Williams 1920 The History of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Vol 3 New York The American Historical Society OCLC 1953313 Smith Joseph Jencks 1900 Civil and Military List of Rhode Island 1647 1800 Providence RI Preston and Rounds Co arnold Turner Henry Edward 1877 Greenes of Warwick in Colonial History Davis amp Pitman Steam Printers p 65 william greene governor RI External links editLetter from George Washington to William GreenePolitical officesPreceded byNicholas Cooke Governor of Rhode Island1778 1786 Succeeded byJohn Collins Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Greene governor amp oldid 1170854816, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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