Thomas Willing, Mayor of Philadelphia

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Honorable Thomas Willing

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, British Colonial America
Death: January 19, 1821 (89)
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
Place of Burial: Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Charles Willing, Mayor of Philadelphia and Anne "Annie" S. Willing
Husband of Ann Willing
Father of Anne Bingham; Charles Willing; Thomas Mayne Willing; Elizabeth Jackson; Mary Clymer and 4 others
Brother of Dorothy Stirling; Anne Francis; Charles Willing; Mary Shippen Byrd; Elizabeth Powel and 3 others
Half brother of Abigail Willing

Managed by: Günther Kipp
Last Updated:

About Thomas Willing, Mayor of Philadelphia

Early life Thomas Willing was born in Philadelphia, the son of Charles Willing (1710–1754), who twice served as mayor of Philadelphia, and Anne Shippen, granddaughter of Edward Shippen, who was the second mayor of Philadelphia. Thomas completed preparatory studies in Bath, England, then studied law in London at the Inner Temple.

Career In 1749, after studying abroad in England, he returned to Philadelphia, where he engaged in mercantile pursuits, in partnership with Robert Morris, until 1793.

Political career A member of the common council in 1755, he became an alderman in 1759, associate justice of the city court on October 2, 1759, and then justice of the court of common pleas February 28, 1761. Willing then became Mayor of Philadelphia in 1763. In 1767, the Pennsylvania Assembly, with Governor Thomas Penn's assent, had authorized a Supreme Court justice (always a lawyer) to sit with local justices of the peace (judges of county courts, but laymen) in a system of Nisi Prius courts. Governor Penn appointed two new Supreme Court justices, John Lawrence and Thomas Willing. Willing served until 1767, the last under the colonial government.

A member of the committee of correspondence in 1774 and of the committee of safety in 1775, he served in the colonial house of representatives. As a member of the Continental Congress in 1775 and 1776, he voted against the Declaration of Independence.[6] Later, however, he subscribed £5,000 to supply the revolutionary cause.

Banker After the war, he became president of the Bank of North America (1781–91), preceding John Nixon, and then the first president of the Bank of the United States from 1791 to 1807. In August, 1807, he suffered a slight stroke, and he resigned for health reasons as president of the bank in November, 1807.

Personal life

In 1763, Willing married Anne McCall (1745–1781), daughter of Samuel McCall (1721–1762) and Anne Searle (1724–1757). Together, they had thirteen children, including:

  • Anne Willing (1764–1801), who married William Bingham (1752–1804)
  • Thomas Mayne Willing (1767–1822), who married Jane Nixon (1775–1823)
  • Elizabeth Willing (1768–1858), who married William Jackson (1759–1828)
  • Mary Willing (1770–1852), who married Henry Clymer (1767–1830)
  • Dorothy Willing (1772–1842), who married Thomas Willing Francis, a cousin
  • George Willing (1774–1827), who married Rebecca Harrison Blackwell (1782–1852)
  • Richard Willing (1775–1858), who married Eliza Moore (1786–1823)
  • Abigail Willing (1777–1841), who married Richard Peters (1780–1848).
  • Willing died in 1821 in Philadelphia, where he is interred in Christ Church Burial Ground.

Descendants Willing was the grandfather of John Brown Francis (1791–1864), who was a governor and United States Senator from Rhode Island.

Willing was also the grandfather of Ann Louisa Bingham (b. 1782), who married Alexander Baring, 1st Baron Ashburton (1774–1848), in 1798, and Maria Matilda Bingham (1783–1849), who was briefly married to Jacques Alexandre, Comte de Tilly, a French aristocrat and later married her sister's brother-in-law, Henry Baring (1777–1848), until their divorce in 1824. Maria later married the Marquis de Blaisel in 1826.[14] Their brother, and Willing's grandson, William Bingham (1800–1852) married Marie-Charlotte Chartier de Lotbiniere (1805–1866), the second of the three daughters and heiresses of Michel-Eustache-Gaspard-Alain Chartier de Lotbinière by his second wife Mary, daughter of Captain John Munro, in 1822.[3] Wikipedia

University of Pennsylvania

DAR# A126943


Continental Congressman, Philadelphia Mayor. Served as a Delegate to the Continental Congress from Pennsylvania in 1775. Also served as a State Court Judge in 1759, Mayor of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1763, and Justice of the Pennsylvania State Supreme Court in 1767.

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Thomas Willing, Mayor of Philadelphia's Timeline

1731
December 19, 1731
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, British Colonial America
1732
March 14, 1732
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, British Colonial America
1764
August 1, 1764
Dorchester, Maryland, USA
1766
1766
1767
April 14, 1767
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
1768
1768
1770
September 15, 1770
1772
July 16, 1772
Philadelphia, PA, United States
1774
April 11, 1774