William Todd (soldier): Difference between revisions
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He traveled around [[Pennsylvania]] and the [[New England]] colonies and was active in [[Boston]]. He joined the militia and then the Continentals, and served at the war's early battles, including [[Battle of Bunker Hill|Bunker Hill]], before returning to [[Pennsylvania]], where he was a member of the convention which established [[Pennsylvania]] as a Commonwealth and State. He became a Judge from his district at the first elections. |
He traveled around [[Pennsylvania]] and the [[New England]] colonies and was active in [[Boston]]. He joined the militia and then the Continentals, and served at the war's early battles, including [[Battle of Bunker Hill|Bunker Hill]], before returning to [[Pennsylvania]], where he was a member of the convention which established [[Pennsylvania]] as a Commonwealth and State. He became a Judge from his district at the first elections. |
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He fought bravely for Independence and re-enlisted, this time being more active in the South, serving until 1781 when [[Lord Cornwallis]] surrendered at [[Yorktown]]. |
He fought bravely for Independence and re-enlisted, this time being more active in the South, serving until 1781 when [[Lord Cornwallis]] surrendered at [[Siege of Yorktown|Yorktown]]. |
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==Later years== |
==Later years== |
Revision as of 02:22, 12 April 2011
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2008) |
William Todd (1739 – October 10, 1810) was an American soldier and politician from Pennsylvania.
Early life
Todd was born in Somerset County New Jersey in 1739, to Irish Immigrants Robert Todd and his second wife Elizabeth. His ancestors were alleged to be Scottish rebels and Jacobites, Cavaliers in the Scottish Civil War who had raised the standard of rebellion too often and been exiled to Ireland from their native Angus, Scotland. His parents moved to Chester County Pennsylvania about 1755 and then by 1760 to the portion of neighboring Philadelphia County that later became Montgomery County. (See History of the Todd family http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~mcmurtriecfr/richard/todd/mtltodds.htm)
French and Indian War
In the French and Indian War, Todd served with the Pennsylvania troops. He fought at the Battle of Kittaning and was involved in the capture of Fort Duquesne, earning the honor of joining the Rangers.
Revolutionary War
Todd was a good friend of Benjamin Franklin and was a player in the brewing situation that would explode into the American Revolutionary War.
He traveled around Pennsylvania and the New England colonies and was active in Boston. He joined the militia and then the Continentals, and served at the war's early battles, including Bunker Hill, before returning to Pennsylvania, where he was a member of the convention which established Pennsylvania as a Commonwealth and State. He became a Judge from his district at the first elections.
He fought bravely for Independence and re-enlisted, this time being more active in the South, serving until 1781 when Lord Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown.
Later years
After the Revolutionary War, Todd was chosen as a member of Pennsylvania's ratifying convention and voted against ratification of the United States Constitution. He held several further political positions in his State, and received a pension for his service in the Revolution, so was well taken care of in his old age.
He died in the town of Unity in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania on October 10, 1810.
His grand niece Mary Todd[1] would later become Abraham Lincoln's wife, and his descendant Robert Todd (named for a rebellious Jacobite ancestor) served in the 8th Kentucky Infantry, C.S.A. during The American Civil War.
References
- ^ Mary Todd Genealogy see generations four and six retrieved 14 June 2008
- Orphaned articles from March 2009
- 1739 births
- 1810 deaths
- Members of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
- Pennsylvania militiamen in the American Revolution
- People from Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania
- People of Pennsylvania in the French and Indian War
- People of Pennsylvania in the American Revolution