Reverend John Wise

Is your surname Wise?

Research the Wise family

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

John Wise

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Roxbury, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States
Death: April 08, 1725 (72)
Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts, United States
Place of Burial: Essex, Essex, Massachusetts, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Joseph Wise and Mary Wise
Husband of Abigail Wise
Father of Rev. Jeremiah Wise; John Wise; Lucy White; Mary Wise; Joseph Wise and 2 others
Brother of Joseph Wise; Sarah Williams; Mary Lamb; Henry Wise; Bethiah Scarborough and 3 others

Occupation: Reverend, Minister, Puritan minister, Marriage 5 December 1678
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Reverend John Wise

   "John Wise (1652-1725), American Congregational minister, effectively defended the autonomy of individual congregations. His opinions regarding religious and civil democracy foreshadowed the logic of the Declaration of Independence.

John Wise was born in Roxbury, Mass., in August 1652. He studied in the Roxbury free school and graduated from Harvard in 1673. He then studied theology and preached at Branford, Conn. (serving as chaplain during King Philip's War), and Hatfield, Mass. In 1680 he was called to the Second (Chebacco) Church in lpswich. A dispute with the First Church, from which the body was separating, delayed official organization but Wise was installed in 1683 and remained throughout his life.

Known for his democratic principles, Wise encouraged lpswich citizens to resist Governor Edmund Andros's attempt to raise money by a province tax without legislative authorization. He was tried, convicted, and fined for the remonstrance, and Andros briefly deprived him of his ministerial functions. When Andros was deposed, Wise sued Chief Justice Joseph Dudley in 1689 for refusing his earlier plea for habeas corpus; tradition has it that, though the town had paid his fine and costs, he recovered damages. That year he was a delegate from lpswich to reorganize the Massachusetts colonial legislature.

The General Court appointed Wise chaplain of the unsuccessful 1690 expedition against Quebec, and Wise upon his return wrote a report of the undertaking. He petitioned in 1703 for reversal of the sentence for one of the victims in a witchcraft trial, and he opposed the moves of Increase and Cotton Mather to subordinate Massachusetts churches to associations of clergymen. Wise viewed their proposal as hierarchical and infringing upon the rights of individual congregations. Some years after Increase Mather's advocacy of it in a pamphlet (1705), Wise published a devastating and satirical reply, The Churches' Quarrel Espoused (1710), which reputedly crushed the effort.

Wise's A Vindication of the Government of New-England Churches (1717) reemphasized his position and dealt with the bases of both religious and civil government. His pamphlet A Word of Comfort to a Melancholy Country (1721) advocated paper money for the colony.

Tall and graceful in appearance, and possessing almost legendary physical strength, Wise was an impressive speaker and an earnest, witty, and forceful writer. He married Abigail Gardner, who bore him seven children. He died in lpswich on April 8, 1725.

Wise's 1710 and 1717 pamphlets, reprinted in 1772 for use in the Revolutionary ideological controversy with England, have been adjudged among the finest colonial expositions of democratic principles. An edition of 1860 noted that the Declaration of Independence utilized several passages strikingly similar to those in A Vindication….

Further Reading

Wise's own Narrative of the Quebec expedition is in Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, 2d series, vol. 15 (1902). A good account of him is George A. Cook, John Wise: Early American Democrat (1942). Helpful comments are in Vernon L. Parrington, Main Currents in American Thought (3 vols., 1927-1930; 3 vols. in 1, 1930)."

Gale Encyclopedia of Biography: John Wise

http://www.answers.com/topic/john-wise

Additional biographical links:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Wise_%28clergyman%29

http://www.frc.org/op-eds/the-man-who-inspired-the-declaration-of-i...

http://www.panoramio.com/photo/60607872

http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/645938/John-Wise

http://www.historicipswich.org/rev-john-wise/

http://www.bartleby.com/163/301.html

http://books.google.com/books?id=Q-fBB7uGjYoC&pg=PA256&lpg=PA256&dq...

Links to the written works of Rev. John Wise:

http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000361822

Two narratives of the expedition against Quebec, A. D. 1690, under Sir William Phips. The one by Rev. John Wise, of Ipswich, Mass., and the other by an unknown writer. With an introduction, by Samuel A. Green.

http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/007853547

A vindication of the government of New-England churches (1717) A facsimile reproduction with an introd. by Perry Miller.

http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/001399761

A vindication of the government of New England churches. And The churches' quarrel espoused;

Major Figure!

See, e.g., http://www.bwlord.com/Ipswich/Waters/TwoPatriots/JohnWise.htm#JOHN%....


   "John Wise (1652-1725), American Congregational minister, effectively defended the autonomy of individual congregations. His opinions regarding religious and civil democracy foreshadowed the logic of the Declaration of Independence.

John Wise was born in Roxbury, Mass., in August 1652. He studied in the Roxbury free school and graduated from Harvard in 1673. He then studied theology and preached at Branford, Conn. (serving as chaplain during King Philip's War), and Hatfield, Mass. In 1680 he was called to the Second (Chebacco) Church in lpswich. A dispute with the First Church, from which the body was separating, delayed official organization but Wise was installed in 1683 and remained throughout his life.

Known for his democratic principles, Wise encouraged lpswich citizens to resist Governor Edmund Andros's attempt to raise money by a province tax without legislative authorization. He was tried, convicted, and fined for the remonstrance, and Andros briefly deprived him of his ministerial functions. When Andros was deposed, Wise sued Chief Justice Joseph Dudley in 1689 for refusing his earlier plea for habeas corpus; tradition has it that, though the town had paid his fine and costs, he recovered damages. That year he was a delegate from lpswich to reorganize the Massachusetts colonial legislature.

The General Court appointed Wise chaplain of the unsuccessful 1690 expedition against Quebec, and Wise upon his return wrote a report of the undertaking. He petitioned in 1703 for reversal of the sentence for one of the victims in a witchcraft trial, and he opposed the moves of Increase and Cotton Mather to subordinate Massachusetts churches to associations of clergymen. Wise viewed their proposal as hierarchical and infringing upon the rights of individual congregations. Some years after Increase Mather's advocacy of it in a pamphlet (1705), Wise published a devastating and satirical reply, The Churches' Quarrel Espoused (1710), which reputedly crushed the effort.

Wise's A Vindication of the Government of New-England Churches (1717) reemphasized his position and dealt with the bases of both religious and civil government. His pamphlet A Word of Comfort to a Melancholy Country (1721) advocated paper money for the colony.

Tall and graceful in appearance, and possessing almost legendary physical strength, Wise was an impressive speaker and an earnest, witty, and forceful writer. He married Abigail Gardner, who bore him seven children. He died in lpswich on April 8, 1725.

Wise's 1710 and 1717 pamphlets, reprinted in 1772 for use in the Revolutionary ideological controversy with England, have been adjudged among the finest colonial expositions of democratic principles. An edition of 1860 noted that the Declaration of Independence utilized several passages strikingly similar to those in A Vindication….

Further Reading

Wise's own Narrative of the Quebec expedition is in Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, 2d series, vol. 15 (1902). A good account of him is George A. Cook, John Wise: Early American Democrat (1942). Helpful comments are in Vernon L. Parrington, Main Currents in American Thought (3 vols., 1927-1930; 3 vols. in 1, 1930)."

Gale Encyclopedia of Biography: John Wise

http://www.answers.com/topic/john-wise

Additional biographical links:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Wise_%28clergyman%29

http://www.frc.org/op-eds/the-man-who-inspired-the-declaration-of-i...

http://www.panoramio.com/photo/60607872

http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/645938/John-Wise

http://www.historicipswich.org/rev-john-wise/

http://www.bartleby.com/163/301.html

http://books.google.com/books?id=Q-fBB7uGjYoC&pg=PA256&lpg=PA256&dq...

Links to the written works of Rev. John Wise:

http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000361822

Two narratives of the expedition against Quebec, A. D. 1690, under Sir William Phips. The one by Rev. John Wise, of Ipswich, Mass., and the other by an unknown writer. With an introduction, by Samuel A. Green.

http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/007853547

A vindication of the government of New-England churches (1717) A facsimile reproduction with an introd. by Perry Miller.

http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/001399761

A vindication of the government of New England churches. And The churches' quarrel espoused;

Major Figure!

See, e.g., http://www.bwlord.com/Ipswich/Waters/TwoPatriots/JohnWise.htm#JOHN%....

view all 15

Reverend John Wise's Timeline

1652
August 15, 1652
Roxbury, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States
August 15, 1652
Roxbury, Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts
1673
1673
Age 20
Hatfield, MA
1675
1675
Age 22
Branford, CT
1679
September 2, 1679
Roxbury, Suffolk, Massachusetts
1680
1680
Age 27
Chebacco
1683
1683
Ipswich, MA, United States
1684
1684
Ipswich, Essex County, MA
1685
May 12, 1685
Ipswich, MA, United States
1686
February 16, 1686