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Governor William Shirley "William Shirley (1694-1771) was the British governor of
Massachusetts from 1741 to 1759. He was to son of William and Elizabeth Godman Shirley, and was born on December 2, 1694 at Preston Manor in Sussex,
England. He was educated at Cambridge then studied law in London before
moving to Boston in 1731.
His early government jobs included that of surveyor and King's Advocate
for New England. He was appointed the royal Governor in 1741. Following his
failure in a military expedition against Fort Niagara, he was recalled to
England in June of 1756. He was later exonerated, and served as Governor of
the Bahamas from 1761-1769.
He was commander-in-chief of North American forces, and with Charles
Lawrence, the architect of the Great Expulsion, the forcible removal of more
than 12,000 Acadians from Nova Scotia in 1755, an incident some historians
consider one of the earliest examples of ethnic cleansing.
He retired to live with his daughter and her husband (Eliakin Hutchinson)
at the Roxbury house. He died there on March 24, 1771."
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Wikipedia with
relevant CelebrateBoston internal links added. Distributed under the
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engines. w200701
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