Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
people/1670s

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

George Vaughan (New Hampshire official)


FieldValue
nameGeorge Vaughan
imageRoyal Commission of George Vaughan.jpg
image_size250px
altRoyal Commission of George Vaughan (left half)
captionRoyal Commission of George Vaughan
birth_date13 April 1676
birth_placePortsmouth, New Hampshire, United States
death_date
officeLieutenant Governor of the Province of New Hampshire
term_start18 July 1715
term_end30 September 1717
precededJohn Usher
succeededJohn Wentworth
occupationcouncilor, merchant, Colonel of the New Hampshire militia
spouse
Elizabeth Eliott
parentsWilliam Vaughan and Margaret Cutt
childrenSarah, William Vaughan, Margaret, Elizabeth, Abigail, Eliot, Mary, Jane, George

Elizabeth Eliott

George Vaughan (New Hampshire) (13 April 1676 – 20 November 1725) may be best known for being Lieutenant Governor of the Province of New Hampshire for only one year. A graduate of Harvard College in 1696, he was also at various times a merchant, colonel of militia, agent for the province to England, and counsellor.

Life

George Vaughan was born in 1676 to William Vaughan (military officer) and Margaret Cutt Vaughan. His father was a representative of an English trading firm who migrated to the Province of New Hampshire, where he became a wealthy merchant. His mother also came from a family of merchants, one of whom, her uncle John Cutt, was the first royally appointed governor of the province. Vaughan graduated from Harvard College in 1696, and entered the family business in Portsmouth.

In 1697 he married Mary Belcher, the daughter of Massachusetts merchant Andrew Belcher (and sister to future governor Jonathan Belcher). She died in 1699, not long after giving birth to a daughter who also did not survive. In January 1700 he married Mary Elliot.

Career

When Queen Anne's War broke out in 1702, Vaughan joined the provincial militia, in which he was commissioned a colonel. In 1707 he was chosen by the provincial assembly as the colonial agent, and traveled to London. He was able to parlay his London connections into an appointment as the province's lieutenant governor in 1715. He assumed this office in October 1715, during the governorship of Joseph Dudley. Dudley was also governor of neighboring Massachusetts, and did not come to New Hampshire before his replacement in October 1716 by Colonel Samuel Shute, who was also commissioned governor of both provinces. As a result, Vaughan acted as governor during this time.

Vaughan and Shute disagreed on exactly what powers Vaughan held when Shute was not physically present in the province. Vaughan insisted that he had the full powers of the governor during Shute's absence, while Shute felt that Vaughan's powers were limited. The conflict contributed to Vaughan's removal from office in October 1717. Sources disagree on his departure from office:

He "resigned his office, after some months of controversy. This was occasioned by his opinions on some important measures not agreeing fully with those of the General Assembly, especially on the excise and impost laws."

"In 1716, Samuel Shute, a resident of Massachusetts, was appointed governor of that province and of New Hampshire, and soon after a controversy arose between these two highest officials. The Lieutenant Governor claimed that he was the true and sole executive, when the Governor was absent from the Province, and thereby became vested in all of the prerogatives pertaining to that office. He therefore declined to obey the mandate of his superior, when issued from Massachusetts.

"... On the 30th day of September, 1717, Lieutenant-Governor Vaughan was removed from office ...."Hodgdon, George Enos, Reminiscences and genealogical record of the Vaughan family of New Hampshire, (1918), pp. 11–22.https://archive.org/details/reminiscencesgen00hodg

Notes

References

References

  1. Howard, pp. 502–504
  2. Goold, pp. 294–295
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about George Vaughan (New Hampshire official) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report