Display Patriot - P-185311 - Titus HOSMER

Titus HOSMER

SAR Patriot #: P-185311

The following information was assembled from numerous sources and cannot be used directly as proof of Qualifying Service or Lineage.
It is considered a research aid and is intended to assist in locating sources that can be used as proof.
 

State of Service: CT      Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service / Civil Service
DAR #: A058826

Birth: 1736
Death: 04 Aug 1780 Middletown / Middlesex / CT

Qualifying Service Description:
  1. Delegate to Continental Congress; Speaker, Clerk of th eHouse of Representatives
  2. Delegate to, Assistant, General Assembly
  3. Took Oath of Fidelity, 1777
  4. Signed the Articles of Confederation
  5. Justice of the Peace
  6. Member of Council of Safety

Additional References:
  1. SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004
  2. "Roll of State Officers and Members of the General Assembly of Connecticut from 1776 to 1881," Hartford, Connecticut, 1881, pg 9, 11, 14, 17
  3. "Signers of the Articles of Confederation" - The U.S. Constitution Online
  4. Hoardly, Public Records of the Colony of Connetciut, 1771-1776, Vol 15, pg 17, 198, 271
  5. Hoardly, Public Records of the Colony of Connetciut, 1776-1781, Vol 1, pg 3, 224, 253, 378, 523; Vol 4, pg 5

Spouse: Lydia Lord
Children: Stephen Titus; Hezekiah Titus; Richard Grove; Sarah
Members Who Share This Ancestor
Date Approved Society ACN SAR Member Info Lineage via Child View Application Detail
2018-11-16 AZ 83238 Nicolas Kurtz Williams (208062) Stephen   
2020-03-06 AZ 90289 Peter Merker Williams (213011) Stephen   
Location:
Middletown / Middlesex / CT / USA
Find A Grave Cemetery #:

Grave Plot #:
Grave GPS Coordinates:
n/a
Find A Grave Memorial #:
Marker Type:
vertical stone
SAR Grave Dedication Date:

Comments:

Directions to Cemetery / Gravesite:



Author: Nicolas Kurtz Williams

Titus Hosmer graduated from Yale in 1757.  In 1760, he settled at Middletown, Connecticut and practiced law.  He served in numerous town government positions including the Council of Safety during the Revolution.  In 1777, he was elected speaker of the United States House of Representatives and had great influence in prompting the legislature to adopt vigorous measures against Great Britain.  Titus signed the Articles of Confederation in 1777.   In 1780, the Continental Congress appointed him one of the three judges of the then-Maritime Court of Appeals, but he died before taking office.  While in Congress, Titus documented the workings of the Continental government and the battles of the war in great detail.  Dr. Noah Webster regarded Titus as "…one of the three greatest men Connecticut had produced."  Titus and his wife, Lydia Lord, had seven children.


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