Jeremiah Gridley

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Portrait of Jeremiah Gridley by John Smibert, 1731 (Harvard University)

Jeremiah Gridley or Jeremy Gridley (1702-1767) was a lawyer, editor, state legislator, and attorney general in Boston, Massachusetts, in the 18th century. He served as "Grand Master of the Masons in North America" around the 1760s,[1][2] and was associated with the founding of the Boston Bar Association.[3]

Biography

Born in 1702 to Richard Gridley (b.1684) and Rebecca Gridley, Jeremiah attended Harvard College (class of 1725); classmates included Mather Byles.[4] Gridley married Abigail Lewis around 1730. In the 1730s he edited The Weekly Rehearsal, a literary magazine.[5][6][7][8]

Gridley house (built 1740) in Brookline, Massachusetts, as it appeared in the 19th c.

He practiced law in Boston. As a lawyer he trained John Adams, William Cushing, James Otis, Benjamin Pratt, and Oxenbridge Thacher.[9] In 1761 "he defended the 'writs of assistance,' for which the custom house officers had applied to the superior court, and which authorized them to enter houses under suspicion of obtaining smuggled goods, at their own discretion. Gridley had for an antagonist in this case the celebrated patriot, James Otis."[10]

"He was moderator of the town of Brookline 1759, 1760, and 1761, ... representative to the General Court for 1755, 1756, and 1757, and Attorney General in 1767."[11][12][13] He also belonged to the Boston Marine Society.[14]

Gridley died in 1767, and was buried in the Granary Burying Ground.

References

Weekly Rehearsal, edited by Gridley, published in Boston, 1731
  1. ^ History of Saint John's Lodge, of Boston, in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, as shown in the records of the First Lodge, the Second Lodge, the Third Lodge, the Rising Sun Lodge, the Masters' Lodge, Saint John's Lodge, the Most Worshipful Grand Lodge. Boston, Privately printed, 1917; p.19-20. Google books.
  2. ^ Boston Post Boy.; Date: 06-24-1765
  3. ^ Candage. 1903
  4. ^ Quinquennial catalogue of the officers and graduates of Harvard University, 1636-1915. 1915
  5. ^ The Rehearsal was published by John Draper (1731) and Thomas Fleet (ca.1733). http://www.loc.gov/rr/news/18th/204.html
  6. ^ Isaiah Thomas, Benjamin Franklin Thomas. The history of printing in America: with a biography of printers, and an account of newspapers, Volume 1. J. Munsell, printer, 1874
  7. ^ Albert Matthews. Check-list of Boston newspapers, 1704-1780. Colonial Society of Massachusetts, 1907.
  8. ^ Charles E. Clark. Boston and the Nurturing of Newspapers: Dimensions of the Cradle, 1690-1741. New England Quarterly, Vol. 64, No. 2 (Jun., 1991), pp. 243-271
  9. ^ Charles Warren. A History of the American Bar. Little, Brown, and Co., 1911; p.81
  10. ^ National cyclopedia of American biography. 1896
  11. ^ History of Saint John's Lodge, of Boston. 1917; p.19
  12. ^ Boston Gazette, or Weekly Journal; Date: 06-02-1755
  13. ^ Boston Weekly News-Letter; Date: 06-10-1756
  14. ^ Nathaniel Spooner. Gleanings from the records of the Boston Marine Society: through its first century, 1742 to 1842. The Society, 1879

Further reading

Works by Gridley

  • The Weekly Rehearsal. 1731-1735. (Edited/published by Gridley).
  • American Magazine and Historical Chronicle. (May have been edited by Gridley).

Works about Gridley

  • Encyclopædia Americana: A popular dictionary of arts, sciences, literature, history, politics and biography, a new edition. 1845.
  • R.G.F. Candage. Jeremy Gridley. Publications of the Brookline Historical Society. 1903.
  • Lyon N. Richardson. A History of Early American Magazines, 1741-1789 (New York, 1931. Google books.
  • John K. Reeves. Jeremy Gridley, Editor. New England Quarterly, Vol. 17, No. 2 (Jun., 1944), pp. 265-281.
  • Albert Ten Eyck Gardner. A Majestick Shape: 1745. Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, New Series, Vol. 8, No. 2 (Oct., 1949), pp.74-80.