STORIES OF REVOLUTIONARY WAR SOLDIERS
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Pioneer Families LLC d/b/a Georgia Pioneers
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Joseph Hawley
Joseph Hawley entered upon his earthly pilgrimage in Northampton, Massachusetts in 1724. He was one of the first who opposed the usurpations of the crown officers and the patriot who wrote to John Adams just as the Congress of 1774 closed and used the truly prophetic language "after all we must fight." He was a man of strong intellect, great penetration of mind, a close observer of men and things, an inflexible friend to the cause of equal rights. In public meetings, in the legislature, in his social intercourse, and at all proper times and places, he sowed the seeds of Liberty broadcast. When told the Colonies were too weak for resistance he replied "We must put to sea. Providence will bring us into port." He was a lawyer of eminence and strongly opposed to accepting public office although he served his State in the Legislature several times. He exemplified the Christian religion by a life of primitive piety but was an uncompromising foe to fanaticism, bigotry, sectarianism and the dogmatical creeds of men. His charity spread its broad mantle over the whole family of man. He held the commission of major of militia but owing to his frequent and sudden attacks of illness he did not serve in the tented field. He enjoyed the esteem and confidence of every friend of freedom and passed peacefully from earth on the 10th of March 1786.
Source: The Sages and Heroes of the American Revolution by L. Carroll Judson