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Gideon Hawley

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175:, writes about his visit with Hawley on October 2, 1800, and his correspondence with him afterward. Dwight wrote that after dinner he went to Hawley's house to visit and had an interview, "more interesting than words can describe" with Hawley. Dwight had not seen Hawley since he was a young man of eighteen. Dwight writes; "this gentleman was a most intimate friend of my parents. From his youth he had sustained as amiable and unexceptionable a character as can perhaps be found among uninspired men". During this visit in 1800, Gideon's son James was on his deathbed. Hawley wrote to Dwight on April 29, 1801, to tell him of the death of his son James, eight days after his visit. He wrote to Dwight again on September 21, 1802, and both letters are published in Dwight's work, published posthumously in London in 1823. 82:. He married Lucy Fessenden, second daughter of Reverend Benjamin Fessenden (Harvard 1718) and Rebecca (Smith) Fessenden, of Sandwich. They had three sons and two daughters. Lucy died December 25, 1777, at 50. Gideon married again to Mrs. Elizabeth Burchard, widow of Captain David Burchard of Nantucket, on October 7, 1778. 61:
on November 5, 1727. The son of Gideon Hawley and Hannah Bennett who was the daughter of Lieutenant James Bennett. Hawley's mother died at his birth and his father died three years later. He was the grandson of Ephraim and Sarah (Welles)
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who was a preacher to the whites and the Housatonic Indians in Stockbridge. Hawley taught Mohawk, Oneida, and Tuscarora Indians there, with Edwards occasionally visiting to give advice.
126:, had made an unsuccessful attempt at ministry in the late 1740s. Hawley left for the site in 1754. Besides acting as a missionary, Hawley also acted as an interpreter at this post. 341: 331: 321: 154:
there prevented him from returning. The commissioners of the Society for propagating the gospel appointed him pastor of the Indian tribes at
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In 1753, Hawley accepted a position from the commissioners of Indian affairs to establish a mission among the Six Nations at the town of
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did not affect his mission until 1756, when he was forced to leave. He then went to Boston and joined the army as chaplain of Colonel
326: 336: 239: 30: 356: 147: 351: 103: 95: 71: 54: 279: 155: 158:, where he was installed in April 1758 and remained as a missionary until his death in 1807. 135: 79: 67: 316: 311: 63: 8: 218: 74:, first of the Hawley name to come to America in 1629, and was twice great-grandson of 166: 119: 38: 42: 139: 91: 305: 123: 75: 34: 150:, and tried to rejoin his mission in the spring of 1757, but an outbreak of 146:
mission, but the enterprise proved too hazardous. He spent the winter in
58: 23: 151: 143: 27: 296: 142:'s regiment, and attempted after this campaign to return to the 115: 94:
in 1749. He was licensed to preach in May 1750. In 1752, in
262:, Press of E. H. Hutchinson & Co., Buffalo, NY, 1890 297:
The Society of the Hawley Family, Inc. official website
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Biographical Sketches of the Graduates of Yale College
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section of Stratford, now Bridgeport, Connecticut, in
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People of Massachusetts in the French and Indian War
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Society for Propagating the Gospel among the Indians
253:History of the Old Town of Stratford, Connecticut 303: 122:, in the area where another Yale graduate, Rev. 284:New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial 192:born at Stratford, Connecticut, Nov 5 O S 1727 161: 332:Protestant missionaries in the United States 109: 129: 286:, Lewis Historical Publishing, NY, 1914 322:People from Stockbridge, Massachusetts 304: 276:, William Baynes and Son, London, 1823 269:, Henry Holt & Co., New York, 1896 85: 206:There the wicked cease from troubling 118:on the Susquehanna, near what is now 255:, Fairfield Historical Society, 1886 274:Travels in New England and New York 202:installed at Mashpee April 10, 1758 172:Travels in New England and New York 13: 362:American people of English descent 98:, he accepted a position with the 14: 373: 347:Clergy in the American Revolution 290: 327:American Protestant missionaries 196:ordained in Boston July 31, 1754 148:West Springfield, Massachusetts 70:. He was the great-grandson of 198:a missionary to the Indians at 194:graduated at Yale College 1749 1: 224: 200:Onohaguage or the Six Nations 48: 7: 212: 102:, under the supervision of 10: 378: 265:Franklin Bowditch Dexter, 242:The Old New York Frontier, 208:and the weary are at rest 162:Reverend Timothy Dwight IV 96:Stockbridge, Massachusetts 337:American Christian clergy 190:Rev Gideon Hawley who was 110:Missionary to the Indians 251:Reverend Samuel Orcutt, 231:Congregational Library: 204:died Oct'r 3 1807 AEt 80 72:Joseph Hawley (Captain) 357:Yale University alumni 280:William Richard Cutter 246:Gideon Hawley's Coming 156:Mashpee, Massachusetts 90:Hawley graduated from 179:His gravestone reads: 136:French and Indian War 130:French and Indian War 80:Colony of Connecticut 352:American theologians 258:Elias Sill Hawley, 219:Gideon Hawley House 86:Religious education 53:He was born in the 16:American missionary 185:Gideon Hawley 1807 78:, governor of the 22:(1727–1807) was a 260:The Hawley Record 167:Timothy Dwight IV 120:Windsor, New York 39:Susquehanna River 369: 272:Timothy Dwight, 104:Jonathan Edwards 377: 376: 372: 371: 370: 368: 367: 366: 302: 301: 293: 227: 215: 210: 207: 205: 203: 201: 199: 197: 195: 193: 191: 189: 187: 164: 140:Richard Gridley 132: 112: 88: 51: 17: 12: 11: 5: 375: 365: 364: 359: 354: 349: 344: 339: 334: 329: 324: 319: 314: 300: 299: 292: 291:External links 289: 288: 287: 277: 270: 263: 256: 249: 244:Pt. 2, Ch. 3, 237: 226: 223: 222: 221: 214: 211: 182: 181: 180: 163: 160: 131: 128: 111: 108: 87: 84: 50: 47: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 374: 363: 360: 358: 355: 353: 350: 348: 345: 343: 340: 338: 335: 333: 330: 328: 325: 323: 320: 318: 315: 313: 310: 309: 307: 298: 295: 294: 285: 281: 278: 275: 271: 268: 264: 261: 257: 254: 250: 248: 247: 243: 238: 236: 235:(1727 - 1807) 234: 233:Gideon Hawley 229: 228: 220: 217: 216: 209: 186: 178: 177: 176: 174: 173: 168: 159: 157: 153: 149: 145: 141: 137: 127: 125: 124:Elihu Spencer 121: 117: 107: 105: 101: 97: 93: 83: 81: 77: 76:Thomas Welles 73: 69: 65: 60: 56: 46: 44: 40: 36: 35:Massachusetts 32: 29: 25: 21: 20:Gideon Hawley 283: 273: 266: 259: 252: 245: 241: 232: 188:In memory of 184: 183: 170: 165: 133: 113: 99: 89: 52: 19: 18: 317:1807 deaths 312:1727 births 59:New England 37:and on the 306:Categories 225:References 55:Stratfield 24:missionary 152:small pox 49:Biography 240:Halsey, 213:See also 144:Iroquois 68:Trumbull 43:New York 28:Iroquois 169:in his 31:Indians 26:to the 116:Oquaga 64:Hawley 66:from 134:The 92:Yale 41:in 33:in 308:: 282:, 45:.

Index

missionary
Iroquois
Indians
Massachusetts
Susquehanna River
New York
Stratfield
New England
Hawley
Trumbull
Joseph Hawley (Captain)
Thomas Welles
Colony of Connecticut
Yale
Stockbridge, Massachusetts
Jonathan Edwards
Oquaga
Windsor, New York
Elihu Spencer
French and Indian War
Richard Gridley
Iroquois
West Springfield, Massachusetts
small pox
Mashpee, Massachusetts
Timothy Dwight IV
Travels in New England and New York
Gideon Hawley House
Congregational Library: Gideon Hawley (1727 - 1807)
Halsey, The Old New York Frontier, Pt. 2, Ch. 3, Gideon Hawley's Coming

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