Joseph Cilley (state senator)
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- This article is about the New Hampshire state senator. For his grandson, the U.S. Senator, see Joseph Cilley (senator).
Joseph Cilley (1734-1799) was a New Hampshire state senator and general.
Cilley was born in 1734 at Nottingham, New Hampshire to Captain J. Cilley of the Isles of Shoals and his wife Alice Rawlings. In 1758 Joseph Cilley joined Rogers' Rangers and served in northern New York and Canada. On December 15, 1774 Joseph was with John Langdon and John Sullivan in the raid on Fort William and Mary at New Castle, New Hampshire.
At the start of the American Revolutionary War Joseph was appointed Major of the 2nd New Hampshire Regiment. After the Siege of Boston Joseph Cilley was promoted to Lt. Col. in the 1st New Hampshire Regiment and he and the regiment were sent to reinforce the Continental Army in Canada fighting at the Battle of Trois-Rivières. With the defeat of the Continental Army in Canada the 1st NH was sent to New Jersey and Gen. George Washington's main army. Joseph would take part in the Battle of Trenton and the Battle of Princeton. With the resignation of John Stark, Joseph Cilley took command of the 1st NH and led them during the Saratoga Campaign of 1777, Battle of Monmouth and Battle of Stony Point in 1778. In 1779, Joseph and the 1st NH were with Gen. Sullivan in his Campaign against the Iroquois and Loyalists in western New York.
On March 19, 1779, the N.H. Assembly voted unanimously, "that the worthy Col. Jos. Cilley be presented with a pair of pistols as a token of this State's good intention to reward merit in a brave officer." these pistols are now housed at the Museum of New Hampshire History [1] in Concord, New Hampshire. Joseph Cilley retired from the Continental Army on January 1, 1781.
After the war, he was appointed Major General of the 1st Division of N.H. Militia, June 22, 1786. Joseph Cilley was elected to the New Hampshire Senate and Treasurer, Vice President and President of the Society of the Cincinnati in New Hampshire. Joseph Cilley died on August 25, 1799, at his home in Nottingham.
Cilley married Sarah Longfellow on November 4, 1756. They had ten children, including Greenleaf Cilley who's sons Joseph Cilley would become a U. S. Senator and Jonathan Cilley a member of the U.S. House of Representatives.
[edit] Sources
A List of The Revolutionary Soldiers of Dublin, N.H. by Samuel Carroll Derby Press of Spahr & Glenn, Columbus, Ohio 1901