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WILLIAM
WHIPPLE was considered to have "a discerning
mind, a sound judgement, and integrity." History
might have cast him in a bigger role had he been
ambitious, but with Whipple the country came first.
He was content to play one of history's difficult
supporting roles and he never sought the center
of the stage.
Wood, Rum, Slaves
Born in Kittery, Maine, on January 14, 1730,
Whipple attended the local grammar school and then
went to sea on a merchantman. By the time he was
21 he was a sea captain, plying the Atlantic carrying
wood to the West Indies, rum to Africa, and slaves
to Portsmouth. In 1759 he left the sea and established
himself as a merchant in Portsmouth in partnership
with his brother, Joseph. As a merchant, he became
an early victim of the British trade restrictions
of the 1760s and because of this, an early adherent
to the rebel cause in Portsmouth.
Declaration Of Independance
In 1775 he was elected to the Committees
of Safety for Portsmouth and for New Hampshire. The
next year he was elected as a delegate to the Continental
Congress. In Philadelphia he voted for and signed
the Declaration of Independence. Whipple served in
the Congress until 1779, devoting all his abilities
to the politics of waging a revolution. Twice he
took leave from Congress to lead the New Hampshire
militia against the British. Appointed a brigadier
general by the New Hampshire legislature in 1777,
he led the state's militia in the battles of Stillwater
and Saratoga. After these monumental American victories,
Whipple was one of the officers chosen to negotiate
the surrender of Gen. Burgoyne and his army. In the
summer of 1778 Whipple led New Hampshire's militia
south to back Gen. John Sullivan in an attempt to
capture Rhode Island. The plan never matured and
Whipple saw no action.
Taxes & Supreme Court
In 1780 Whipple was elected to the first
of several terms in the New Hampshire legislature.
In May of 1782, Superintendent of Finance Robert
Morris appointed Whipple tax collector for the state
of New Hampshire. Whipple accepted the difficult
and unpopular job because someone had to. His duties
were to receive and transmit the state's taxes, to
expedite the collection of these taxes by all proper
means and to urge the local authorities to comply
with the requisitions of Congress. Times were hard
in New Hampshire, and the state was very slow in
paying its share to the national capital. In August
of 1783 Whipple tried to resign, but Morris would
not let him. In January of 1784 Whipple paid $3000
to the treasury, his first remittance. A few months
later a serious heart ailment gave him grounds enough
to resign.
While serving as tax collector and state
legislator, Whipple also served as a judge of the
Superior Court. He continued to hold this office
and ride the circuit with the court until the fall
of 1785, even though he often fainted and fell off
his horse due to illness. In the late fall his health
forced his retirement and he returned home to Portsmouth.
He died on November 28, l785 and was buried in Portsmouth's
North Burying Ground. One of the Revolution's great
champions, Whipple gave everything to the cause and
died just before his dream of a strong central government
was realized.
By Steve Adams
Originally published in "NH: Years of Revolution," Profiles
Publications and the NH Bicentennial Commision, 1976.
Reprinted by permission of the authors.
© 1997 SeacoastNH.com
List of Seacoast NH Framers of Freedom
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