George Robert Twelves Hewes

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George Robert Twelves Hewes

Also Known As: "George Hughes"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Boston, Suffolk County, Province of Massachusetts
Death: November 04, 1840 (98)
Richfield Springs, Otsego County, New York, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of George Hewes and Abigail Hewes
Husband of Sallie Hughes
Father of Solomon Hewes; Elizabeth Hewes; Shubael Hewes; George Robert Twelves Hewes; Eleven F. Hughes and 1 other
Brother of Solomon Hewes

Managed by: Private User
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About George Robert Twelves Hewes

DAR# A059133

George Robert Twelves Hewes

Robert Hewes was born in Boston, on September 5th 1742. When the Boston Tea Party occurred he was 31 years old. In his early life Robert was not fortunate to get a good education and his main employment was farming, fishing and shoe-making, which also was his father's trade. In 1758 he attempted to enlist in the army to serve against the French, but did not “pass muster”. He was later unsuccessful in his attempt to join the navy and then resumed shoe-making.

Mr. Hewes’ character was both excitable and patriotic which drove him to participate in various disturbances in Boston from the time of the passage of the Stamp Act. One of the most famous of such disturbances was the Boston Massacre of 1770. On March 5th Hews was among the crowd of Bostonian involved in the confrontation with British Soldiers. He received a shoulder injury from being stricken by a soldier’s rifle.

from: http://www.boston-tea-party.org/participants/george-hewes.html

Tara Ross · On this day in 1742, George Robert Twelves Hewes is born in Boston. He would later become one of the last survivors of the Boston Tea Party.

One historian describes Hewes: He was “as much a rank-and-file participant in the political events and the war as historians have found.” He didn’t belong to any particular organization. He owned no property. He was not an officer in the military. He held no other public position. He struggled and was poor for most of his life. And yet, without people like Hewes, the Revolution surely would have floundered.

Hewes was living as a shoemaker in Boston in the years before the Revolution. When British soldiers arrived and began their de facto occupation of the city, he soon found himself involved in some pivotal pre-war events.

You may recall that the Boston massacre was sparked when a British soldier failed to pay a barber for his services. Hewes was in the crowd that day, likely feeling sympathetic because he’d recently been in a similar situation: A soldier had failed to pay Hewes for work that had been done on his shoes. During the Boston massacre, one of the men killed, James Caldwell, apparently fell into Hewes’s arms.

Hewes was present at the Boston Tea Party. One blacksmith recounted the men who were sent to destroy the tea that day: “It was proposed that young men, not much known in town and not liable to be easily recognized should lead in the business.” He stated that “most of the persons selected for the occasion were apprentices and journeymen.” Hewes was one of these men. And he was appointed boatswain for one of the ships that night.

As fate would have it, Hewes was one of the primary players in one last event in Boston. In 1774, he attempted to stop a much-hated British customs officer who was threatening to strike a child. John Malcolm was very angry that Hewes had dared to intervene. Wasn’t Hewes a mere shoemaker—a man of lower standing? He struck out at Hewes, as one newspaper later reported: “Malcolm struck [Hewes], and wounded him deeply on the forehead, so that Mr. Hewes for some time lost his senses.” After he’d recovered a bit, Hewes obtained a warrant for Malcolm’s arrest. Unfortunately, a mob went after Malcolm and inflicted their own version of justice: Malcolm was tarred and feathered. Then he was threatened with hanging, unless he apologized for his behavior and gave up his customs commission. Malcolm agreed.

One of Hewes’s memoirs recounts a chance meeting between Malcolm and Hewes soon after Malcolm had recovered from his injuries. “‘How do you do, Mr. Malcolm?’ said Hewes, very civilly, the next time he met him. ‘Your humble servant, Mr. George Robert Twelves Hewes,’ quoth he,—touching his hat genteely as he passed by. ‘Thank ye,’ thought Hewes, ‘and I am glad you have learned better manners at last.’”

Hewes served in the Revolution for a time, primarily as a privateer and as a member of the militia. Much of his life after the war is lost to history. But in the 1830s, a historian discovered Hewes, still living in obscurity in upstate New York. Hewes’s story might have been lost, but for his longevity. He lived to be 98 years old.

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George Robert Twelves Hewes's Timeline

1742
August 25, 1742
Boston, Suffolk County, Province of Massachusetts
September 26, 1742
Old South Church, Boston, Suffolk County, Province of Massachusetts
1771
May 1, 1771
1773
February 3, 1773
1781
March 12, 1781
Massachusetts, United States
1784
June 25, 1784
Wrentham, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States
1794
September 10, 1794
Maryland, United States
1840
November 4, 1840
Age 98
Richfield Springs, Otsego County, New York, United States
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