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Governor William Eustis "William Eustis (June 10, 1753
- February 6, 1825) was an
early American statesman.
He was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts and studied at the Boston
Latin School before he entered Harvard College, from which he graduated
in 1772. He studied medicine under Dr.
Joseph Warren and helped care for the wounded at the
Battle of Bunker Hill, where Warren
was killed. He served the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary
War as surgeon of the artillery regiment at Cambridge and then as a hospital
surgeon.
He entered medical practice in Boston after the war and served as surgeon
with the Shays Rebellion expedition of 1786?1787.
He became vice president of the Society of the Cincinnati, serving from
1786 to 1810 and again in 1820.
He served in the Massachusetts General Court from 1788 to 1794 and was a
member of the Governor's Council for two years; and served two terms in the
United States House of Representatives from 1801 to 1804, representing
Massachusetts in the 7th and 8th Congresses, and having won close races over
Josiah Quincy III and John Quincy Adams. While in the House he was one of
the managers appointed by the House of Representatives in 1804 to conduct
the impeachment proceedings against John Pickering, judge of the United
States District Court for New Hampshire.
He served as United States Secretary of War from March 7, 1809 to January
13, 1813. During his tenure, he attempted to prepare the U.S. Army for the
outbreak of the War of 1812, and resigned in the face of criticism following
American reversal on the battlefield.
He was appointed ambassador to Holland by President James Madison,
serving from 1814 to 1818.
He returned home from Europe because of ill health, at which time he
purchased and resided in the historic Shirley Mansion in Roxbury,
Massachusetts. He was again elected to the United States House of
Representatives and served 1820 to 1823, presiding as chairman of the U.S.
House Committee on Military Affairs during this time. He ran unsuccessfully
for Governor of Massachusetts three times (in 1820, 1821 and 1822) and was
finally elected governor and served two terms, from 1823 to 1825.
He died in Boston while governor in February 1825 and is buried at the
Old Burying Ground, in Lexington, Massachusetts."
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engines. w200701
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