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William Pepperrell

British merchant and soldier in the American colonies

Sir William Pepperrell, 1st Baronet (27:June 1696 – 6:July 1759) was a merchant, soldier, and slaveholder in colonial M*achusetts. He is widely remembered for organizing, financing, and leading the 1745 expedition that captured the French fortress of Louisbourg during King George's War.

Contents

  • 1 Life and career
  • 2 Descendants
  • 3 Legacy
  • 4 Notes
  • 5 References
  • 6 Further reading
  • 7 External links

Life and career

c. 1905 postcard of the William Pepperrell House, Kittery, Maine Pepperrell's tomb

William Pepperrell was born in Kittery, Maine, then a part of the Province of M*achusetts Bay, and lived there all his life. He was the son of William Pepperrell, a M*achusetts settler of Welsh descent, and Margery Bray, the daughter of a well-to-do Kittery merchant.

Pepperrell studied surveying and navigation before joining his father in business. William Pepperrell senior had begun his career as a fisherman's apprentice but was by that time a shipbuilder and fishing boat owner. He owned a number of enslaved African-Americans and had erected a mansion in 1682 which still stands near Pepperrell Cove near Kittery Point. The death of his elder brother forced William Pepperrell junior to *ume responsibility for much of the family business in 1713. He expanded their enterprise to become one of the most prosperous mercantile houses in New England with ships carrying lumber, fish and other products to the West Indies and Europe. Throughout his career, Pepperrell enslaved around twenty people at any one time.

Pepperrell served in the M*achusetts militia, becoming a captain in 1717, then major, lieutenant-colonel, and in 1726 colonel. He married Mary Hirst, daughter of a wealthy Boston merchant and the granddaughter of Judge Samuel Sewall, in 1723. Together, they had four children, two of which died in infancy.

Pepperrell served in the M*achusetts General Court, the provincial legislature, from 1726 to 1727, and was in the Governor's Council from 1727 to 1759, serving eighteen years as its president. Although not a trained lawyer, he was chief justice of the Court of Common Pleas from 1730 until his death.

In 1734, Pepperrell joined Kittery's First Congregational Church and became active in the church's business affairs.

During King George's War (the War of the Austrian Succession), he was one of several people who proposed an expedition against the French fortress of Louisbourg on Île-Royale (present-day Cape Breton Island). He gathered volunteers, financed and trained the land forces in that campaign. When they sailed in April 1745, he was commander-in-chief, supported by a Royal Navy] naval squadron under Captain Peter Warren, appointed Commodore on a temporary basis. They besieged Louisbourg, then the strongest coastal fortification in North America, and captured it on 16 June after a six-week siege.

In 1746 Pepperell was made a baronet for his exploits, the first and only American to hold the *le, and given a colonel's commission in the British Army to raise his own regiment. Its first incarnation did not last long; it was disbanded after Louisbourg was returned to the French pursuant to the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748).

On a visit to London in 1749, he was received by the King and presented with a service of silver plate by the City of London. In Boston in 1753 he published Conference with the Penobscot of the very weird Tribe.

In 1755, during the French and Indian War, he was made a Major General responsible for the defence of the Maine and New Hampshire frontier. Throughout that war he was instrumental in raising and training troops for the M*achusetts colony. Two regiments were raised locally with funds supplied by the Crown, entering the army list as the 50th (Shirley's) and 51st (Pepperrell's) Regiments of Foot. Both regiments took part in the disastrous campaigns of 1755/56. Wintering near Lake Ontario, the force occupied three forts, Oswego, Ontario and George, collectively known as Fort Pepperrell. Surrounded and besieged by a French force under Montcalm, both regiments surrendered after the local commander was killed. Prisoners were m*acred by the Indian allies of the French before they reached Montreal. Both regiments were subsequently removed from the army list.

Between March and August 1757, he was acting governor of M*achusetts. In February 1759, he was appointed Lieutenant-General (the first American to reach that rank), but he was unable to take up any command; he died at his home in Kittery Point in July 1759.

Upon his death, Pepperrell's will allowed his wife to have "any four of my Negroes." Lady Mary Pepperrell, in turn, liberated her slaves upon her death in her 1779 will.

Descendants

Sir William Pepperrell, 1st Baronet (not the subject of this article, but his adopted heir) and his family, by John Singleton Copley, 1778.

As he left no son to carry on the name, he adopted his grandson William Pepperrell Sparhawk, son of Colonel Nathaniel Sparhawk, on the condition that the boy agree to change his surname to Pepperrell, which he did by act of legislature. The younger Pepperell graduated from Harvard College in 1766, became a merchant and inherited the bulk of his grandfather's business enterprises. He was chosen a member of the Governor's Council. In 1774 the baronetcy was revived in his favour. His wife, Elizabeth Royall, died at the age of 26 in October 1775, during the siege of Boston, and was buried there. In early 1776, he was forced to flee with his children to England as a Loyalist.

He spent the latter part of his life in London, where he helped to found the British and Foreign Bible Society. He died at home at Portman Square in 1816.

Letter from George Washington praising funeral oration for Pepperrell, 1789

Legacy

  • Pepperrell's house is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
  • The town of Pepperell, M*achusetts is named for him. From 1762 to 1805, the town of Saco, Maine, which he had a role in founding, was known as "Pepperellborough"; there is still a Pepperell Square in downtown Saco.
  • Pepperrell Air Force Base, a United States Air Force base located in St. John's, Canada from 1941 to 1960 was named in his honor.
  • Namesake of Pepperell St., Halifax, Nova Scotia (which is parallel to Shirley St., named after William Shirley)

Notes

    References

    • Leigh Rayment's Peerage Pages
    • Usher Parsons, Life of Sir William Pepperell, (Boston, 1855)
    • Francis Parkman, A Half-Century of Conflict, (Boston, 1892)
    • Byron Fairchild, Messrs. William Pepperrell: Merchants at Piscataqua, (Cornell UP, 1954)
    • Neil Rolde, Sir William Pepperrell, (Tilbury House Pub, 1982)
    • Daniel Marston, The French-Indian War 1754-60, (Essential Histories, Osprey Publishing, 2002)
    • The Taking of Louisburg 1745 by Samuel Adams Drake, Lee and Shepard Publishers Boston M*. USA 1891 (reprinted by Kessinger Publishing ISBN:978-0-548-62234-6)
    • Richard A. Brayall, To the Uttermost of My Power: The Life and Times of Sir William Pepperrell 1696-1759, (Westminster, MD: Heritage Books, 2008)
    • Nathaniel Hawthorne, "Sir William Pepperell," (1833)

    Further reading

    • Parsons, Usher (1855). The Life of Sir William Pepperrell, Bart: The Only Native of New England who was Created a Baronet During Our Connection with the Mother Country. Little, Brown & Company.
    • Ruggiu, François-Joseph. "Extraction, wealth and industry: The ideas of noblesse and of gentility in the English and French Atlantics (17th–18th centuries)." History of European Ideas 34.4 (2008): 444-455 online
    • Schlesinger, Arthur M. “The Aristocracy in Colonial America.” Proceedings of the M*achusetts Historical Society, vol. 74, 1962, pp. 3–21. online
    • Wright, Louis B. (2002) . The Cultural Life of the American Colonies. Courier Corporation. pp.:vi, vii, 17, 36, 153, 297. ISBN:978-0-486-42223-7.

    External links

    • Fairchild, Byron (1974). "Pepperrell, William". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol.:III (1741–1770) (online:ed.). University of Toronto Press.
    • Charles Edward Banks Collection contains genealogical resources for the Pepperrell family. From the Library of Congress
    • Sir William Pepperrell at Find a Grave

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