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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: JEE-JUN |
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JOHNSON, SIR WILLIAM (17151774) , British soldier and , American pioneer
York
Governor George Clinton (d. 1761) superintendent of the affairs of the Six Nations (Iroquois). In 1746 he was made commissary of the province for Indian affairs, and was influential in enlisting and equipping the Six Nations for participation in the warfare with French Canada, two years later (1948) being placed in command of a line of outposts on the New York
governor 's council, and in the same year he resigned the post of superintendent of Indian affairs. In 1754 he was one of the New York delegates to the inter-colonial convention at Albany, N.Y. In 1755 General Edward Braddock, the commander
chief
Pontiac in his conspiracy, and he was instrumental in arranging the treaty of Fort Stanwix in 1768. After the war Sir William retired to his estates, where, on the site of the present Johnstown, he built his residence, Johnson Hall
chief
His son, SIR JOHN JOHNSON (17421830), who was knighted in 1765 and succeeded to the baronetcy on his father's death, took part in the French and Indian War and in the border warfare during the War of Independence, organizing a loyalist regiment known as the " Queen's Royal Greens," which he led at the battle of Oriskany and in the raids (1778 and 178o) on Cherry Valley and in the Mohawk Valley. He was also one of the officers of the force defeated by General John Sullivan in the engagement at Newtown (Elmira), N.Y., on the 29th of August 1779. He was made brigadier-general of provincial troops in 1782. His estates had been confiscated, and after the war he lived in Canada, where he held from 1791 until his death the office of superintendent-general of Indian affairs for British North America. He received L45,000 from the British government for his losses. Sir William's nephew, GuY JOHNSON (1740-1788), succeeded his uncle as superintendent of Indian affairs in 1774, and served in the French and Indian War and, on the British side, in the War of Independence. See W. L. Stone, Life of Sir William Johnson (2 vols., 1865) ; W. E. Griffis, Sir William Johnson and the Six Nations (1891) in " Makers of America " series ; Augustus C. Buell, Sir William Johnson (1903) in " Historic Lives Series "; and J. Watts De Peyster, " The Life of Sir John Johnson, Bart.," in The Orderly Book of Sir John Johnson during the Oriskany Campaign, 7776-1777, annotated by William L. Stone (1882).End of Article: JOHNSON, SIR WILLIAM (17151774) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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