William Greene, 23rd, 25th, 27th, and 29th Gov. of Colonial Rhode Island

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William Greene

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Warwick, Rhode Island
Death: February 22, 1758 (62)
Warwick, Kent County, Rhode Island
Place of Burial: Warwick, Kent County, Rhode Island, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Captain Samuel Greene and Mary Greene
Husband of Catherine Greene
Father of Samuel Greene; Gov. William Greene, Jr.; Margaret Spencer; Benjamin Greene, Sr.; Benjamin GREENE and 2 others
Brother of Mary Fry; Samuel Greene, Jr; Benjamin Benjamin Greene and Anne Greene

Occupation: 23rd, 25th, 27th, and 29th Governor of Colonial Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
Managed by: William Walker Junkman
Last Updated:

About William Greene, 23rd, 25th, 27th, and 29th Gov. of Colonial Rhode Island

William Greene (16 March 1695 - 22 February 1758) was a governor of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. He was a clerk of the county court in Providence, deputy from Warwick, speaker of the Rhode Island Assembly, and then deputy governor from 1740 to 1743. He became governor for the first time in 1743 and served four separate terms for a total of 11 years, and died while in office during his final term.

Ancestry

William Greene was the son of Samuel and Mary (Gorton) Greene, and grandson of John Greene of Warwick, who had spent most of his long life as a public servant, including 10 years as the Deputy Governor of the colony. His great grandfather, also named John Greene, had come from Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, was a surgeon, and an early settler of Warwick in the colony of Rhode Island. His great grandfather on his mother's side was Samuel Gorton, the founder of Warwick, and for a very short period the governor of the two towns of Providence and Warwick.

Career

.  Greene was made a freeman of the colony in 1718, and at the age of 32 was elected a deputy from Warwick in 1727, which office he held for five years. He was the clerk of the county court in Providence and speaker of the Rhode Island Assembly in 1734 and 1739. In 1728 he was appointed, along with John Mumford of Newport, to survey the boundary line between the Rhode Island and Connecticut colonies. When Governor John Wanton died in 1740, Richard Ward became the governor, and Greene became the new Deputy Governor, which office he held until his own election to governor in May 1743. This was one of the rare cases when a Rhode Island governor did not come from the island of Aquidneck where the towns of Newport and Portsmouth are located.

One of the important issues of Greene's first term in office concerned the boundary lines of the colony. Several geographic boundaries were adjusted, and the towns of Barrington, Warren and Bristol were added under Bristol county, and the towns of Tiverton and Little Compton were added to the towns on Aquidneck island in Newport County. Another major issue facing the colony was the war against France and Spain, for which the colony was expected to share in the defense of the Crown. When England declared war against France on 31 March 1744, the colony manned forts and reinforced them with guns and ammunition. Commodore Warren, with the aid of Rhode Island forces, laid siege to Louisbourg in Nova Scotia, which surrendered in June, surprising Europeans that the "strongest fortress of North America had capitulated to American farmers, machanics [sic], and fishermen." The colony also had a few war sloops at its disposal along with 15 privateers and was successful in capturing 20 ships and sending them to Newport.

During Greene's third term, the colony had divided into two hostile camps. The leaders of the two divisions were both future governors, Samuel Ward and Stephen Hopkins, with Greene siding with the Ward camp. Some of the divisive issues concerned war versus peace, paper money versus hard currency, and Providence versus Newport interests. Elections went back and forth between the two opposing sides, and amid the discord, Greene died while in office in February 1758.

Family

William Greene married his second cousin, Catharine Greene, the daughter of Benjamin and Susanna (Holden) Greene, a granddaughter of Randall Holden, and a great granddaughter of the first John Greene. The couple had six children, five of whom survived to adulthood. Their son, William Greene, Jr. became the second governor after Rhode Island became a state.


GEDCOM Note

Married his second cousin. Representative to the RI General Asssembly for 5 yers, Deputy Governor several tems and Governor 11 Years.

Governor of Rhode Island. He served as Governor from 1743 to 1745, 1746 to 1747, 1748 to 1755, and from 1757 until his death. His son, William Greene, Jr., also served as Rhode Island Governor in the 1780s. (bio by: James Charles Rogers III) 
Source Link: https://www.geni.com/documents/view?doc_id=6000000175881509823label=@S51@ Source Link: https://www.geni.com/documents/view?doc_id=6000000175875251855label=@S489@

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William Greene, 23rd, 25th, 27th, and 29th Gov. of Colonial Rhode Island's Timeline

1695
March 16, 1695
Warwick, Rhode Island
1724
August 19, 1724
Warwick, Kent Co., RI
August 19, 1724
Coweset Farm, Warwick, Kent County, Rhode Island, United States
1728
August 28, 1728
Warwick, Kent, Rhode Island, USA
1731
August 16, 1731
Warwick, Kent, Rhode Island, United States
1733
November 2, 1733
Warwick, Kent, Rhode Island
1735
December 9, 1735
1741
April 18, 1741
Warwick, Kent County, RI
1758
February 22, 1758
Age 62
Warwick, Kent County, Rhode Island