SeacoastNH Home

FRESH STUFF DAILY
Seacoast New Hampshire
& South Coast Maine

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

How many eyes has a typical person? (ex: 1)
Name:
Email:

Discover more than 1,000 places to go
 
Touring | Free Newsletter | Feedback | Buy the Book | The Blog
Home Famous People Framers of Freedom Senator Samuel Livermore
Senator Samuel Livermore Print E-mail
Written by Peter E. Randall   

Samuel Livermore
NH FRAMERS OF FREEDOM

He may not be at the top of your list of New Hampshire heroes, but Sam Livermore was in the thick of things. Livermore was close to the last British governor and became land-rich. But when the Revolution came, he served as in the US Senate and as NH Chief Justice, defining the early laws of the state.

 

 

MORE Framders of Freedom

Member of Contiental Congress, US Senator, Chief Justice of NH Supreme Court, member of Continental Congress -- and more.

As a warm friend of the royal governor, a successful lawyer and the virtual master of the remote township of Holderness, Samuel Livermore might well have been pardoned if he had been less than enthusiastic in joining the rebel cause at the outbreak of the Revolution.

By 1775, he had moved from Portsmouth and Londonderry to Holderness where, through grants and outright purchases, he had acquired half of the total land area. He constructed housing, mills and a church, and settled into the role of a country squire. Some questioned his patriotic loyalties when he moved away from the political activities in the southern part of the state but his actions were soon forgotten and he became one of New Hampshire's most valued statesmen during the last two decades of the 1700s.

Portsmouth Politics

Livermore was a native of Waltham, Massachusetts, and a graduate of Princeton. After a year of legal practice in his hometown, he moved to Portsmouth in 1758 and soon had a reputation as a skilled and energetic lawyer. There was no thought of revolution in the late 1750s, and Livermore soon became friendly with Governor Benning Wentworth. His ties to the royal government were further cemented when he married the daughter of the Rev. Arthur Browne, an Anglican minister and close ally of the governor.

A few years later, however, as political conflicts arose between the people and the royal government, Livermore moved inland to Londonderry, then the second largest town of the province. He was elected to represent the town in the General Assembly for 1768-70, but in 1769 he was recalled to Portsmouth by Governor John Wentworth and appointed as judge advocate in the Admiralty Court and attorney general. The first appointment was one of the most lucrative and honored positions in the province and indicates the esteem in which he was held by the governor.

By 1774, however, he moved back to Londonderry and the next year to Holderness, a migration that many people assumed was an attempt to escape the growing revolt.

Continental Congress

Livermore must have been an extremely able royal justice and attorney to have been able to satisfy both the governor and the people. It is apparent that he succeeded, for in 1776 the legislature appointed him attorney general for the new state. While he might not have been an outspoken patriot in the early days of the Revolution, he soon became one of the most important members of the civil government.

In 1779, he was elected by the General Court as a commissioner to the Continental Congress as a New Hampshire representative in the controversy over the towns along the Connecticut River. He was elected as a full member of the Congress in 1785, '89 and '91. He was also elected to two terms in the U. S. Senate, beginning in 1793, but he resigned during his second term due to ill health.

Along with his national activities, Livermore also continued in state politics. He was appointed chief justice of the state Supreme Court and as a member of the state Constitutional Convention in 1788, he was a leader in the ratification of the federal Constitution in New Hampshire.

His public career came to an end in 1801 when he left the Senate and returned to Holderness. He died there in 1803 at age 71.

© Peter E. Randall. Originally published in "NH: Years of Revolution," Profiles Publications and the NH Bicentennial Commision, 1976. Reprinted by permission of the author. Originally published online here in 1997.

SEE ALSO the Livermores of Livermore Street

OUTSIDE LINKS 
 US Senate web site
 New Hampshire state web site

NH STATE HISTORIC MARKER
in Holderness, NH

Samuel Livermore (1732-1803)
Proprietor of more than half the Town of Holderness, this jurist, congressman and senator was New Hampshire's first attorney general and second chief justice. In 1788 he spurred the State's approval of the proposed Federal Constitution, thus insuring its ratification and the formation of the present Government of the United States.

 

 

 

Please visit these SeacoastNH.com ad partners.

Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner

Portsmouth Herald

Portsmouth Herald Latest Headlines
Portsmouth Herald News from SeacoastOnline.com
  • Alleged carjacker burglarized officer's home, police say

    NORTH HAMPTON — A Maine man remains behind bars without bail on fugitive charges and also faces a $1 million cash bail on charges that he burglarized the home of...

  • Portsmouth police log

    8:21 a.m. Report taken from a resident who wanted to press charges against a friend who had borrowed, but not returned a car.10:34 a.m. Durgin Lane caller reported a...

  • Grandmother smoked crack before high-speed chase, manhunt, say police

    PORTSMOUTH — A Boston grandmother had been smoking crack Friday night before the car she was riding in crashed into a Seabrook police cruiser, sped up Route 1 at 100...

  • Smuttynose owner sees growth, expansion

    If you want to see what a company looks like at a time of rapid growth, visit Smuttynose Brewing Co. on Heritage Avenue in Portsmouth.

  • Penguin Plunge raises $571K for Special Olympics

    HAMPTON — Against all human instinct, more than 1,000 Granite Staters took a dip in the Hampton Beach waters for the 11th Annual Penguin Plunge this past weekend.

  • Historic building's renovation raises ire

    SOUTH BERWICK, Maine — As construction continues at 25 Academy St., several residents have voiced concern over the style of the building's front facade, stating the original historic home had...

  • Middle school program recognizes effort, conduct

    PORTSMOUTH — Tien Peduzzi ripped open his third term report card last Wednesday with trepidation.

  • Federal farming bill supports agriculture

    RYE — The 2008 U.S. Department of Agriculture's Farm Bill offers New Hampshire citizens owning or managing farmland or forest land, growing specialty crops, running a greenhouse, or farming organically,...

  • Seacoast area municipal meetings

    Today in Portsmouth:Cultural Commission - Art Speak, 6:30 p.m., City Manager's Conference Room, City HallCity Council, Capital Improvement Plan workshop, 6:30 p.m., Eileen Dondero Foley Council Chambers, City Hall

  • Pats fans root for Saints

    PORTSMOUTH — Roy Schluntz of North Berwick, Maine, is a New England Patriots fan through and through. So when he couldn't root for his team this year in the Super...

  • Portsmouth news briefs

    PORTSMOUTH — I Eat Locally, a Web site offering half-price gift certificates to about a dozen Seacoast restaurants, has chosen Families First Health and Support Center to receive a portion...

  • City Council to hold work session on capital improvement plan

    PORTSMOUTH — A city spending plan totaling more than $186 million over the course of the next six years will be presented to the City Council tonight, but the council...

  • Rye to buy Goss Farm for $1.3M

    RYE — A piece of the town's past may become a fixture of the future as the Board of Selectmen agreed to a purchase and sale agreement for the development...

  • Alleged carjackers to appear in court today

    STRATHAM — Two Maine residents are scheduled to be arraigned this morning in Hampton District Court on multiple felony charges, including the alleged Feb. 5 carjacking of a Stratham resident...

  • SAD 35 crunches numbers

    SOUTH BERWICK, Maine — There was an audible sigh of relief as the School Administrative District 35 School Board learned last week that the projected reduction in state subsidy would...

  • TIF district mulled in South Berwick

    SOUTH BERWICK, Maine — As the town considers its options for creating a Tax Increment Finance district, representatives from several town departments joined Town Manager John Schempf at a presentation...

  • Sen. D'Allesandro renews push for video slots in New Hampshire

    CONCORD — Senate Finance Chairman Lou D'Allesandro has tried unsuccessfully a dozen times in as many years to get reluctant New Hampshire lawmakers to expand gambling.

  • Celtics overtaken by Magic

    BOSTON — The Orlando Magic needed less than 48 hours to go from a terrible third quarter to a terrific one.

  • Web site for recycled building stock starts today

    Not long ago, I wrote about the Habitat for Humanity ReStore in Dover, a very cool place where people can find recycled and overstocked building material. And one of my...

  • York County news briefs

    OGUNQUIT, Maine — The Lincoln Day Dinner, held by the York County Republican Committee, will be held Thursday, Feb. 25, at Jonathan's Restaurant, 92 Bourne Lane. The event begins at...

Banner
Tuesday, February 09, 2010 
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner

Copyright 1996-2009 SeacoastNH.com. All rights reserved. Privacy Statement
PO Box 7158, Portsmouth, New Hampshire 03802 | 603-427-2020

Site by enorm.new.