Herman Husband: Difference between revisions
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'''Herman Husband''' (1724–1795), also known as '''Harmon Husband''', was a farmer, radical, pamphleteer, author, and preacher. He is best known as a leader of [[War of the Regulation|The Regulators]], a populist rebellion in the Carolinas in the years leading up to the |
'''Herman Husband''' (1724–1795), also known as '''Harmon Husband''', was a farmer, radical, pamphleteer, author, and preacher. He is best known as a leader of [[War of the Regulation|The Regulators]], a populist rebellion in the Carolinas in the years leading up to the [[American Revolutionary War]]. He was born on December 3, 1724, in [[Cecil County, Maryland]]<ref name=cecil>''Annual Report of the [[American Historical Association]] For The Year 1894, [[Washington, D.C.]], [[United States Government Publishing Office|Government Printing Office]], 1895, pp. 155 ''-'' 157.</ref> to William Husband and Mary Kinkey/Kankey. He was no doubt named after his maternal grandfather, Herman Kankey (c.1680-1732). Herman was raised as an [[Anglican]], but became disenchanted with his original faith. One of the many to be inspired to the [[First Great Awakening|Great Awakening]] after hearing [[George Whitefield]] preach, he became a "New Light" [[Presbyterian]] and then a [[Quaker]]. Husband was twice elected to the [[North Carolina]] assembly, but was expelled during his second term. |
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==Affiliation with Benjamin Franklin== |
==Affiliation with Benjamin Franklin== |
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Moving to [[Loves Creek, North Carolina|Loves Creek]] in what is now [[Siler City, North Carolina|Siler City]],<ref>{{cite web|title=Sandy Creek Baptist Association|url=http://www.sandycreekba.com/352391|accessdate=27 October 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=North Carolina Historical Marker Program, Herman Husband|url=http://ncmarkers.com/Markers.aspx?MarkerId=K-62|accessdate=May 9, 2019}}</ref> North Carolina<ref name=cecil/><ref>{{cite web|title=Husband's Mill Randolph County|url=http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/tag/sandy-creek/|accessdate=27 October 2013}}</ref> and later to Sandy Creek<ref>{{cite web|title=Sandy Creek Husband's Mill|url=http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/tag/sandy-creek/|accessdate=27 October 2013}}</ref> in what is now Randolph County in the 1750s, Husband established himself as a farmer and religious leader. He was later asked to leave the Quaker Meeting and he did so but continued to follow many of their tenets including strict pacifism. Philosophically he was drawn to the wisdom of [[Ben Franklin]]. Husband and Franklin kept up a correspondence through John Willcox,<ref>George Willcox 1988. ''John Willcox 1728-1793 of Chester County, Pennsylvania, Cumberland County, North Carolina and Chatham County, North Carolina''. Historical Research Company. page 27. |
Moving to [[Loves Creek, North Carolina|Loves Creek]] in what is now [[Siler City, North Carolina|Siler City]],<ref>{{cite web|title=Sandy Creek Baptist Association|url=http://www.sandycreekba.com/352391|accessdate=27 October 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=North Carolina Historical Marker Program, Herman Husband|url=http://ncmarkers.com/Markers.aspx?MarkerId=K-62|accessdate=May 9, 2019}}</ref> North Carolina<ref name=cecil/><ref>{{cite web|title=Husband's Mill Randolph County|url=http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/tag/sandy-creek/|accessdate=27 October 2013}}</ref> and later to Sandy Creek<ref>{{cite web|title=Sandy Creek Husband's Mill|url=http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/tag/sandy-creek/|accessdate=27 October 2013}}</ref> in what is now Randolph County in the 1750s, Husband established himself as a farmer and religious leader. He was later asked to leave the Quaker Meeting and he did so but continued to follow many of their tenets including strict pacifism. Philosophically he was drawn to the wisdom of [[Ben Franklin]]. Husband and Franklin kept up a correspondence through John Willcox,<ref>George Willcox 1988. ''John Willcox 1728-1793 of Chester County, Pennsylvania, Cumberland County, North Carolina and Chatham County, North Carolina''. Historical Research Company. page 27. |
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</ref> a merchant of Cross Creek, now [[Fayetteville, North Carolina]], who went to [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]] twice annually to purchase goods. John Willcox was the son of Thomas Willcox whose paper mill in [[Concord Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania]], manufactured paper used by Benjamin Franklin for his publications.<ref>George Willcox 1988. ''John Willcox 1728-1793 of Chester County, Pennsylvania, Cumberland County, North Carolina, and Chatham County, North Carolina''. Historical Research Company. pages 1-2. |
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</ref> Husband was thus in receipt of political pamphlets of a patriotic nature which he reprinted and circulated among his fellow citizens.<ref name=cecil/> |
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==Regulator Rebellion== |
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In the 1760s, he was involved in the resistance to the corrupt practices of predatory government officials- mainly the lawyers and judges. He was elected to the colony's assembly and spoke out against governmental abuses. His story is reminiscent of that of [[John Wilkes]]. He was jailed for speaking out and then set loose when an [[angry mob]] of armed backwoods farmers was coming to free him. The resisters organized and began calling themselves "Regulators" because they wanted to regulate the government, that is- to force it to obey the laws. Thus the movement is known as the [[War of the Regulation|Regulator Rebellion]]. [[Mob action]] was taken to prevent the worst abuses of the courts. |
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Husband always denied he was a Regulator, and indeed, as a pacifist, he wouldn't take part in violence or threats of violence. But he was a spokesman and a symbol for the resistance. He had several tracts printed the best-known being "Shew Yourselves to be Freemen" (1769),"An Impartial Relation of the First and Causes of the Recent Differences in Public Affairs" (1770), and "A Fan For Fanning And A Touchstone For Tryon" (1771). In 1770, Husband was [http://projects.newsobserver.com/under_the_dome/faq/who_has_been_expelled_from_the_legislature expelled] from the state legislature, ostensibly for [http://projects.newsobserver.com/under_the_dome/herman_husbands_libel_charge libel] but most likely due to his affiliation with the Regulators. |
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When the officers of [[Rowan County, North Carolina]] agreed to decide the dispute between themselves and the Regulators through a committee of arbitration, Husband was selected to serve on the committee.<ref name=cecil/> |
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Husband accompanied the Regulators on the morning of the [[Battle of Alamance]] (May 16, 1771) and sought to bring about an adjustment. Seeing this was impossible, he mounted his horse and rode away, his Quaker principles dictating that he avoid participation in a fight. |
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A small powderhorn used by Husband's cousin, Harmon Cox, at the Battle of Alamance and later carried by Husband when he fled to Somerset County, Pennsylvania, was donated to the Alamance Battlefield North Carolina State Historical Site by a descendant, Nick Sheedy, in 2008. |
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After the "rebellion" was crushed at the Battle of Alamance, Husband fled to [[Maryland]] under the name "Tuscape Death" and later called himself "Old Quaker". He only openly reclaimed his own name after the [[American Revolution]]. |
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Husband continued his journeys both physical and metaphysical eventually settling in an area known as "The Glades" in what was then [[Bedford County, Pennsylvania|Bedford County]] and later became part of [[Somerset County, Pennsylvania|Somerset County]] in [[Western Pennsylvania]] and becoming a millennial preacher as well as a political reformer. He called for [[progressive taxation]], paper money, and, as a proponent of greater participation of common people in government as well as in religion, more democracy. In 1782 he released a pamphlet entitled "Proposals to Amend and Perfect the Policy of the Government of the United States of America" where he argued in favor of smaller legislative districts and legislatures for each county in order to maximize the influence of voters. For the first federal elections in 1788 Husband argued in favor of electing congressmen in districts instead of by the statewide method that was used. |
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==Whiskey Rebellion== |
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His outspoken nature and reputation for radicalism drew him into the [[Whiskey Rebellion]] (1794), where he served as a delegate to the Parkison's Ferry and [[Brownsville, Pennsylvania|Redstone]] meetings attempting to moderate the violent resistance to the excise tax on whiskey championed by Treasury Secretary [[Alexander Hamilton#Secretary of the Treasury|Alexander Hamilton]]. He is also associated with the raising of a [[liberty pole]] at Brunerstown (present-day [[Somerset, Pennsylvania]]) in the [[town square]], adorned with an [[ensign]] proclaiming, "Liberty and No Excise". |
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When federal troops marched over the [[Allegheny Mountains]], ostensibly to put down the revolt, they found no rioters but a lack of provisions which led them to thieve from local farmers, from which they acquired the ignominious name of the "Watermelon Army". The federal forces rounded up suspects including Husband who was specifically sought after. The detainees were held in miserable conditions and then marched back east for trial. He was tried and condemned to death. Friends interceded to secure Husband's release.<ref name=cecil/> |
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==Death== |
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At the age of 70, he died about June 19, 1795 in a tavern outside [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]], allegedly from an illness contracted in prison. His burial location is unknown.<ref name="Jones">{{cite web |last1=Jones |first1=Mark H. |title=Herman Husband |website=NCPedia|url=https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/husband-or-husbands|year=1988|accessdate=May 9, 2019}}</ref> |
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==References== |
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<references/> |
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* {{cite web|url=http://www.northcarolinahistory.org/encyclopedia/55/entry|publisher=North Carolina History Project|title=Herman Husband|author=Carney, Richard|accessdate=May 9, 2019}} |
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* {{cite web|url=http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/6233/|publisher=History Matters|title=Shew Yourselves to be Freemen”: Herman Husband and the North Carolina Regulators, 1769|accessdate=May 9, 2019}} |
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* Hogeland, William. ''The Whiskey Rebellion: George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and the Frontier Rebels Who Challenged America's Newfound Sovereignty''. New York: Scribner, 2006. {{ISBN|0-7432-5490-2}}. |
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{{Whiskey Rebellion}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Husband, Herman}} |
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[[Category:1724 births]] |
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[[Category:1795 deaths]] |
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[[Category:American tax resisters]] |
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[[Category:People of colonial North Carolina]] |
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[[Category:People disowned by the Quakers]] |
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[[Category:People expelled from United States state legislatures]] |
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[[Category:People from Cecil County, Maryland]] |
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[[Category:People of the Whiskey Rebellion]] |
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[[Category:People from Randolph County, North Carolina]] |
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[[Category:Activists from North Carolina]] |
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[[Category:People from Siler City, North Carolina]] |
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[[Category:18th-century American politicians]] |
Revision as of 15:21, 29 September 2020
Herman Husband | |
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Born | Oct. 3, 1724 Cecil County, Maryland, Province of Maryland, (British Royal Colony), British North America, British Empire |
Died | June 19, 1795 (aged 71) |
Resting place | Husband Cemetery, Somerset, Somerset County, Pennsylvania |
Nationality | American |
Other names | Harmon Husband |
Occupation(s) | farmer, regulator, pamphleteer, author, preacher |
Movement | North Carolina Regulators, Whiskey Rebellion |
Spouse(s) | Else Phoebe Cox, Mary Pugh, Emey Allen, |
Children | 8 |
Herman Husband (1724–1795), also known as Harmon Husband, was a farmer, radical, pamphleteer, author, and preacher. He is best known as a leader of The Regulators, a populist rebellion in the Carolinas in the years leading up to the American Revolutionary War. He was born on December 3, 1724, in Cecil County, Maryland[1] to William Husband and Mary Kinkey/Kankey. He was no doubt named after his maternal grandfather, Herman Kankey (c.1680-1732). Herman was raised as an Anglican, but became disenchanted with his original faith. One of the many to be inspired to the Great Awakening after hearing George Whitefield preach, he became a "New Light" Presbyterian and then a Quaker. Husband was twice elected to the North Carolina assembly, but was expelled during his second term.
Affiliation with Benjamin Franklin
Moving to Loves Creek in what is now Siler City,[2][3] North Carolina[1][4] and later to Sandy Creek[5] in what is now Randolph County in the 1750s, Husband established himself as a farmer and religious leader. He was later asked to leave the Quaker Meeting and he did so but continued to follow many of their tenets including strict pacifism. Philosophically he was drawn to the wisdom of Ben Franklin. Husband and Franklin kept up a correspondence through John Willcox,[6] a merchant of Cross Creek, now Fayetteville, North Carolina, who went to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania twice annually to purchase goods. John Willcox was the son of Thomas Willcox whose paper mill in Concord Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania, manufactured paper used by Benjamin Franklin for his publications.[7] Husband was thus in receipt of political pamphlets of a patriotic nature which he reprinted and circulated among his fellow citizens.[1]
Regulator Rebellion
In the 1760s, he was involved in the resistance to the corrupt practices of predatory government officials- mainly the lawyers and judges. He was elected to the colony's assembly and spoke out against governmental abuses. His story is reminiscent of that of John Wilkes. He was jailed for speaking out and then set loose when an angry mob of armed backwoods farmers was coming to free him. The resisters organized and began calling themselves "Regulators" because they wanted to regulate the government, that is- to force it to obey the laws. Thus the movement is known as the Regulator Rebellion. Mob action was taken to prevent the worst abuses of the courts.
Husband always denied he was a Regulator, and indeed, as a pacifist, he wouldn't take part in violence or threats of violence. But he was a spokesman and a symbol for the resistance. He had several tracts printed the best-known being "Shew Yourselves to be Freemen" (1769),"An Impartial Relation of the First and Causes of the Recent Differences in Public Affairs" (1770), and "A Fan For Fanning And A Touchstone For Tryon" (1771). In 1770, Husband was expelled from the state legislature, ostensibly for libel but most likely due to his affiliation with the Regulators.
When the officers of Rowan County, North Carolina agreed to decide the dispute between themselves and the Regulators through a committee of arbitration, Husband was selected to serve on the committee.[1]
Husband accompanied the Regulators on the morning of the Battle of Alamance (May 16, 1771) and sought to bring about an adjustment. Seeing this was impossible, he mounted his horse and rode away, his Quaker principles dictating that he avoid participation in a fight.
A small powderhorn used by Husband's cousin, Harmon Cox, at the Battle of Alamance and later carried by Husband when he fled to Somerset County, Pennsylvania, was donated to the Alamance Battlefield North Carolina State Historical Site by a descendant, Nick Sheedy, in 2008.
After the "rebellion" was crushed at the Battle of Alamance, Husband fled to Maryland under the name "Tuscape Death" and later called himself "Old Quaker". He only openly reclaimed his own name after the American Revolution.
Husband continued his journeys both physical and metaphysical eventually settling in an area known as "The Glades" in what was then Bedford County and later became part of Somerset County in Western Pennsylvania and becoming a millennial preacher as well as a political reformer. He called for progressive taxation, paper money, and, as a proponent of greater participation of common people in government as well as in religion, more democracy. In 1782 he released a pamphlet entitled "Proposals to Amend and Perfect the Policy of the Government of the United States of America" where he argued in favor of smaller legislative districts and legislatures for each county in order to maximize the influence of voters. For the first federal elections in 1788 Husband argued in favor of electing congressmen in districts instead of by the statewide method that was used.
Whiskey Rebellion
His outspoken nature and reputation for radicalism drew him into the Whiskey Rebellion (1794), where he served as a delegate to the Parkison's Ferry and Redstone meetings attempting to moderate the violent resistance to the excise tax on whiskey championed by Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton. He is also associated with the raising of a liberty pole at Brunerstown (present-day Somerset, Pennsylvania) in the town square, adorned with an ensign proclaiming, "Liberty and No Excise".
When federal troops marched over the Allegheny Mountains, ostensibly to put down the revolt, they found no rioters but a lack of provisions which led them to thieve from local farmers, from which they acquired the ignominious name of the "Watermelon Army". The federal forces rounded up suspects including Husband who was specifically sought after. The detainees were held in miserable conditions and then marched back east for trial. He was tried and condemned to death. Friends interceded to secure Husband's release.[1]
Death
At the age of 70, he died about June 19, 1795 in a tavern outside Philadelphia, allegedly from an illness contracted in prison. His burial location is unknown.[8]
References
- ^ a b c d e Annual Report of the American Historical Association For The Year 1894, Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office, 1895, pp. 155 - 157.
- ^ "Sandy Creek Baptist Association". Retrieved 27 October 2013.
- ^ "North Carolina Historical Marker Program, Herman Husband". Retrieved May 9, 2019.
- ^ "Husband's Mill Randolph County". Retrieved 27 October 2013.
- ^ "Sandy Creek Husband's Mill". Retrieved 27 October 2013.
- ^ George Willcox 1988. John Willcox 1728-1793 of Chester County, Pennsylvania, Cumberland County, North Carolina and Chatham County, North Carolina. Historical Research Company. page 27.
- ^ George Willcox 1988. John Willcox 1728-1793 of Chester County, Pennsylvania, Cumberland County, North Carolina, and Chatham County, North Carolina. Historical Research Company. pages 1-2.
- ^ Jones, Mark H. (1988). "Herman Husband". NCPedia. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
- Carney, Richard. "Herman Husband". North Carolina History Project. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
- "Shew Yourselves to be Freemen": Herman Husband and the North Carolina Regulators, 1769". History Matters. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
- Hogeland, William. The Whiskey Rebellion: George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and the Frontier Rebels Who Challenged America's Newfound Sovereignty. New York: Scribner, 2006. ISBN 0-7432-5490-2.
- 1724 births
- 1795 deaths
- American tax resisters
- People of colonial North Carolina
- People disowned by the Quakers
- People expelled from United States state legislatures
- People from Cecil County, Maryland
- People of the Whiskey Rebellion
- People from Randolph County, North Carolina
- Activists from North Carolina
- People from Siler City, North Carolina
- 18th-century American politicians