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William Shepard

American politician


American politician

FieldValue
nameGeneral William Shepard
imageGilbert Stuart Portrait of William Shepard.jpg
stateMassachusetts
district2nd
term_startMarch 4, 1797
term_endMarch 3, 1803
precededWilliam Lyman
succeededJacob Crowninshield
order2Massachusetts Governor's Council
term_start21792
term_end21796
birth_date
birth_placeWestfield, Province of Massachusetts Bay, British America
death_date
death_placeWestfield, Massachusetts, U.S.
partyFederalist
spouseMarried January 31, 1760
Sarah Dewey
allegianceKingdom of Great Britain
United States
branch
Gadsden flag.svg Continental Army
serviceyears1754–1763{{Citationlast=Abbattfirst=Williamtitle =The Magazine of History with Notes and Queries Vol. XX N. 3-4
page260publisher = Connecticut Valley Historical Societylocation = Springfield, MAdate = March–April 1915}}
1775–1777
rankGeneral
commands4th Massachusetts Regiment
battlesFrench and Indian War
American Revolutionary War
*Battle of Trenton<ref>{{CitationlastConnecticut Valley Historical Societytitle =Papers and proceedings of the Connecticut Valley Historical Society. 1876-1903 1876-1903., Volume IIpage = 260publisher = Connecticut Valley Historical Societylocation = Springfield, MAyear = 1904}}

Sarah Dewey United States Gadsden flag.svg Continental Army 1775–1777 American Revolutionary War

  • Battle of New York
  • Battle of Monmouth
  • Battle of Princeton
  • Battle of Trenton
  • Battle of Yorktown

Shays' Rebellion

William Shepard (Contemporary records, which used the Julian calendar and the Annunciation Style of enumerating years, recorded his birth as November 20, 1737. The provisions of the British Calendar (New Style) Act 1750, implemented in 1752, altered the official British dating method to the Gregorian calendar with the start of the year on January 1 (it had been March 25). These changes resulted in dates being moved forward 11 days, and for those between January 1 and March 25, an advance of one year. For a further explanation, see: Old Style and New Style dates. – November 16, 1817) was a United States representative from Massachusetts (1797–1802), and a military officer in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. As a state militia leader he protected the Springfield Armory during Shays' Rebellion, firing cannon into the force of Daniel Shays and compelling them to disperse. He also served in town and state government and was a member of the Massachusetts Governor's Council.

Life

Born in Westfield in the Province of Massachusetts Bay, he attended the common schools, engaged in agricultural pursuits, and served in the French and Indian Wars for six years. He was a member of the committee of correspondence for Westfield in 1774, and was a lieutenant colonel of Minutemen in April 1775 and served under Colonel Timothy Danielson. He entered the Continental Army in May 1775 as lieutenant colonel and was commissioned Colonel of the 4th Massachusetts Regiment on October 6, 1776, serving throughout the Revolutionary War, including winter at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, where he commanded the 4th Regiment of Massachusetts Continentals, under the overall command of General John Glover. His name is immortalized along with his comrades on stone monuments there. Many letters still exist between Shepard and other commanders, including General George Washington, the Marquis de Lafayette, John Hancock, Samuel Adams, Thomas Jefferson, General Henry Knox and other illustrious founding fathers.[[File:The Capture of the Hessians at Trenton December 26 1776.jpeg|300px|thumb|left|Col. William Shepard was at the Battle of Trenton, N.J. with George Washington, and his likeness appears in the painting [[The Capture of the Hessians at Trenton, December 26, 1776]], by [[John Trumbull]].]]

Shepard was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1785 and 1786 and was selectman for Westfield from 1784 to 1787. In this time local farmers and veterans of the war began to rebel after months of destitution and taxation they believed to be unfairly levied by the powers from Boston. Many were consigned to debtors' prison. Shepard, then a major general in the state militia, called to duty the Fourth Division of the Massachusetts militia in 1786 and defended the Springfield Armory during what became known as Shays' Rebellion (after one of its principal leaders, Daniel Shays), ordering defenders of the arsenal to fire cannons at attacking the rebels at "waist height" with cannons filled with anti-personnel grape shot. Two of the insurgents were mortally wounded. Messages to Governor James Bowdoin expressed his deep regret at the shedding of blood. He kept in constant contact with Governor Bowdoin, Sam Adams, John Hancock, and General Benjamin Lincoln, who arrived in a blizzard from Boston just after the Springfield arsenal attack to pursue Shays and his men into the surrounding towns. That order would earn Shepard a lasting reputation as the "murderer of brethren." The local neighbors were so angry that they mutilated his horses, gouging out their eyes, to his horror. He was a member of the Governor's council of Massachusetts from 1792 to 1796, and was appointed in 1796 to treat with the Penobscot Indians and, in 1797, with the Six Nations.

Shepard was elected as a Federalist to the Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh Congresses, serving from March 4, 1797, to March 3, 1803, representing the 2nd congressional district; he previously unsuccessfully ran for this district in 1792 (for its Hampshire County seat) and 1794.

After retiring, he resumed his agricultural pursuits and died in Westfield, essentially penniless.

Notes

References

Bibliography

References

  1. Shepard, Gerald Faulkner and Donald Lines Jacobus. (1973). [https://books.google.com/books?id=LBobAAAAYAAJ ''The Shepard Families of New England, Volume III: Additional Family Groups'']. New Haven: New Haven Colony Historical Society. pp.102-102.
  2. Connecticut Valley Historical Society. (1904). "Papers and proceedings of the Connecticut Valley Historical Society. 1876-1903 1876-1903., Volume II". Connecticut Valley Historical Society.
  3. Gardner MD, Frank A. "Colonel Timothy Danielson's Regiment" The [[Massachusetts Magazine]] [https://archive.org/stream/massachusettsmag00sale#page/n161/mode/2up (via archive.org)] Vol. II, No. 2, Pg 74
  4. Yale College (1892). [https://books.google.com/books?id=eXoWAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA128 ''A Catalogue, with Descriptive Notices, of the Portraits, Busts, Etc. Belonging to Yale University'']. New Haven: Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor. p. 128.
  5. "A New Nation Votes".
  6. "A New Nation Votes".
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