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Drawn portrait of George Robert Twelves Hewes

George Robert Twelves Hewes

Participation in key events of the American Revolution made him memorable.

An illustrated map showing George in Massachusetts with a marker at Boston and his parents and siblings shown with him

George was born in Boston, Massachusetts, the sixth of nine children, to a father who ran a tanning business.

Same illustrated map with his father's image removed.

George’s family was not destitute — George was affording schooling and the family owned a slave — but family tragedy quickly struck when George’s father died in 1749, followed by three of George’s siblings.

Same illustrated map with his mother also removed.

In 1755 George’s mother died, leaving him an orphan.

At age 14, he began his apprenticeship as a shoemaker, a trade requiring little social standing or economic startup. George was for a time able to ply his trade at a shop at Griffin's Wharf, and counted British soldiers among his customers. But it wasn't enough—the beginning of the revolutionary era found George spending time in debtor's prison.

An illustrated map showing George by Boston and battle icons indicating the Boston Massacre, the Boston Tea Party, and the tarring and feathering of John Malcolm.

A Witness to War

George participated in three of the most famous revolutionary events in Boston—the Boston Massacre, the Boston Tea Party, and the tarring and feathering of John Malcolm.

On the night of March 5, 1770 George joined the crowd of townspeople gathering on King Street in support of a barber's apprentice attempting to collect payment from a British soldier. George was wounded in the escalating turmoil that became known as the Boston Massacre.

According to a biographer, it was George who caught the body of Crispus Attucks as he fell, whom many later dubbed the first martyr of the Revolution.

Later that night George, who had been unarmed at the time of the Massacre, had an altercation with a British soldier over George's right to carry a cane. George recalled, "I told him I had as good a right to carry a cane as they had to carry clubs." George was one of dozens of townspeople to give a deposition in the trial that ensued.

An illustration of the Boston Tea Party.

If happenstance made George a witness to the Boston Massacre, George volunteered to participate in the Boston Tea Party. On the night of December 16, 1773 George was among the hundred Boston tradesmen "dressed, equipped, and painted" boarding the three ships which carried tea at Griffin’s Wharf.

As soon as he boarded his assigned ship, George was singled out for a special job—obtaining the keys to the ship's hold to take possession of the hated tea. It took George and his compatriots three hours to dispose of the tea chests in Boston Harbor.

On January 25, 1774 George again found himself part of a series of revolutionary events. That afternoon, George witnessed loyalist and customs official John Malcolm in the street threatening a young boy with a large cane. George confronted him, but Malcolm struck George forcefully on the forehead.

Later that night an angry mob descended on Malcolm, stripped him to the waist, and covered him with tar and feathers. George attempted to quell the crowd and offered Malcolm a blanket, but the damage had been done.

An illustrated map showing George in Boston then moving to Richfield Springs, New York

A Revolutionary Celebrity

George was among the last living witnesses to many of the seminal events of the Revolution’s earliest landmark events—the Boston Massacre, Boston Tea Party, and the tarring and feathering of John Malcolm. By then, George had moved with his wife and children to Richfield Springs, New York.

The opening decades of the 19th century saw Americans commemorate the Semi-Centennial, the 50th anniversary of many significant events of the American Revolution. This Golden Jubilee renewed interest not only in the events of the Revolutionary era, but in the people who witnessed and participated in them.

In 1833 author James Hawkes found George in New York, one of the last surviving witnesses of Revolutionary events, and interviewed him for a text he would publish in 1834: A Retrospective of the Boston Tea-Party.

George quickly became a celebrity, and attended anniversary events in Boston in 1835 where he met another biographer, Benjamin Bussey Thatcher, who published his own account of George's memories later that year.

An illustrated image of George later on in life.

George's celebrity status and the publication of two memoirs made him a guest of honor at Fourth of July events for the rest of his life.

An illustrated image of George later on in life.

At the age of 98, George died on November 5, 1840, as the last survivor of the Boston Tea Party. Though he spent much of his early life in ordinary obscurity, his final years saw him celebrated as a patriot hero, a link between a growing nation and its revolutionary beginnings.

George Robert Twelves Hewes or, "The Centenarian," Joseph Greenleaf Cole, 1835; Courtesy of Revolutionary Spaces

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