- Call Number:
- HIL-MICL FC LFR .W5I8P3
- Category:
- Family
- Creator:
- Williams, Israel, 1709-1788.
- Material Description:
- 1 microfilm textual records 35 mm
- Background:
- Israel Williams was a Massachusetts Loyalist. He was the son of Rev. William Williams of Hatfield, Massachusetts, who graduated from Harvard College in 1683. Israel Williams graduated from the same college in 1727. After graduation he returned to Hatfield and began accumulating wealth through trading, farming, and land speculation. For several decades he represented Hatfield in the Massachusetts legislature, and served on the executive council from 1761-1767. In 1748, he was appointed the Colonel of the Hampshire County militia and in this capacity was responsible for the defense of western Massachusetts during the French and Indian Wars.
During his long public career he served as a justice of the peace, judge of the court of common pleas for Hampshire County, a judge of the probate court, and was the founder of Williams College. In 1774, he was appointed a Massachusetts mandamus councillor but did not take the oath of office.
As the American Revolution approached, he was forced to withdraw from public life. During the early years of the Revolution, he was considered one of the leading Loyalists in western Massachusetts. As a result, in 1777 he was imprisoned in Northampton for several months and later confined to his house and deprived of his citizenship until 1780. On one occasion when he was an old man, he was taken from his home by a mob and carried several miles, then placed in a room with a fire but with the doors and chimney closed. He was confined there for several hours and on being released was forced to sign a document dictated by the mob. In 1786, he petitioned the British government for compensation for his sufferings and loss of income. At that time he was living quietly in Hatfield, and died there in 1788 at the age of seventy-nine.
- Contents:
The Israel Williams Papers include letters to and from Israel Williams, William and Ephriam Williams, Andrew Oliver, John Hancock, William Shirley, Thomas Hutchinson, who was a close friend, and a number of other individuals. In addition to the correspondence, there are muster rolls, despatches, journals, and numerous other military records, principally from the time of the French and Indian Wars. Undated material has been microfilmed at the beginning of the reel followed by dated items arranged in chronological order.
- Originals:
The original records are held by the Massachusetts Historical Society.
- Archival Ref. No.:
- Ms. N-473
- Finding Aids:
A table of contents is located at the end of the reel. The Table of Contents was compiled by a descendant, John Williams, who donated the Papers to the Society.
See chronological item list via the Massachusetts Historical Society.
Black and white digital images of this collection--produced from the microfilm edition--are available as part of History Vault: Revolutionary War and Early America, a digital resource from ProQuest.