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Thomas Hartley

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Preceded by
  
See below

Name
  
Thomas Hartley

Preceded by
  
District created

Role
  
American Politician


Allegiance
  
United States

Party
  
Federalist Party

Service/branch
  
Continental Army

Succeeded by
  
John Stewart

Thomas Hartley Thomas Hartley Wikipedia

Born
  
September 7, 1748 Reading, Pennsylvania (
1748-09-07
)

Political party
  
Pro-Administration Federalist

Battles/wars
  
American Revolutionary War

Died
  
December 21, 1800, York, Pennsylvania, United States

Battles and wars
  
American Revolutionary War

Previous offices
  
Representative (PA 8th District) 1795–1800

Similar People
  
John Sullivan, Pat Meehan, Mike Fitzpatrick, George Washington, Cornplanter

Thomas Hartley (September 7, 1748 – December 21, 1800) was an American lawyer, soldier, and politician from York, Pennsylvania.

Biography

Thomas Hartley was born in Colebrookdale Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania. At 18 years of age, he moved to York, where he studied law under Samuel Johnson and was admitted to practice law in York County and the courts in Philadelphia in 1769.

In 1774, he was appointed first lieutenant of a company of soldiers in York and the following summer was appointed lieutenant colonel of the First Battalion of York County Associators. In the fall of 1775, he served on an expedition to Canada and upon return was chosen as lieutenant-colonel of the Seventh Pennsylvania Regiment. He served as a member of the 1775 provincial convention at Philadelphia and commanded a 1778 Indian expedition. During the American Revolutionary War Hartley was second in command of the 6th Pennsylvania Regiment in the Continental Army. Beginning in January 1777, he raised and commanded Hartley's Additional Continental Regiment and commanded it as colonel during the major battles of the Philadelphia campaign, including Brandywine, Paoli, and Germantown. In 1778 the unit guarded the Pennsylvania frontier and, on September 24, 1778, mounted a two-week foray against hostile Indians, including the destruction of Catherine's Town. The regiment merged with other units in January 1779 to become the "new" 11th Pennsylvania Regiment and went with the Sullivan Expedition that summer. However, Harley was elected to the Pennsylvania General Assembly in October 1778 and resigned from his military in February 1779.

Hartley served in the Pennsylvania legislature in 1779 and returned to practice law in York. Hartley was a member of the Pennsylvania convention that ratified the federal constitution in 1787. He then represented Pennsylvania in the U.S. House from 1789 until his death in 1800. On February 5, 1791, Hartley became the first Pennsylvanian to join the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States when he took the oath in New York, where the court was then located. Hartley frequently attended social and official functions of President Washington and the First Lady. On July 2, 1791, Hartley greeted President Washington on the President's journey through York and hosted tea for the President at his house.

Hartley was among the original members of the Society of the Cincinnati and a trustee of Dickinson College. On April 28, 1800, he was appointed by Governor McKean as Major General of the Fifth Division of the state militia. Hartley died December 21, 1800, in York, shortly before the end of his sixth term in Congress, and is buried in St. John’s Churchyard in York.

References

Thomas Hartley Wikipedia