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JOSEPH REED (1741—1785)

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Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 973 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOSEPH REED (1741—1785)  ,
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American politician, was born in Trenton, New Jersey, on the 27th of August 1741 . He graduated at
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Princeton in 1757, studied law under Richard Stockton and, in 1763—65, at the
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Middle Temple,
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London, and practised in Trenton from 1765 until his removal to
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Philadelphia in 1770 . He was president of the second Provincial Congress of Pennsylvania in 1775, was aide-de-camp and military secretary to General Washington in 1775-76, and was adjutant-general with the rank of, colonel in 1776—77 . He resigned his commission in the autumn of 1777, and in 1777—78 was a delegate to the
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Continental Congress . From December 1778 to
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October 1781 he was president of the state Executive Council . During his administration the proprietary rights of the Penn
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family were abrogated (1779), and provision was made for the gradual abolition of
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slavery (178o) . During this time Reed led the attack on Benedict Arnold (q.v.) for the latter's administration of Philadelphia . Reed was elected to Congress in 1784, but died in Philadelphia on the 5th of March 1785 . The
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Life and Correspondence of Joseph Reed (2 vols., Philadelphia, 1874), by his grandson, William B . Reed, is based upon the family papers . It pictures Reed as an heroic patriot and statesman; George Bancroft, on the other hand, in the ninth
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volume (p . 229) of his
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History (1866) and in Joseph Reed: an
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Historical Essay (1867), pictures him as a trimmer of the most pronounced type .

Bancroft's

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principal charge against Reed was based on a passage in Count Donop's
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diary referring to a Col . Reed protected by the
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British in 1776 . In 1876, however, Mr W . S . Stryker discovered that the reference in the diary was really to Col . Charles Read (1715-c . 1780) . Bancroft withdrew this definite charge in the 1876 edition of his History, in which, however, his tone towards Joseph Reed was unchanged . Joseph Reed's son, JOSEPH REED (1772—1846), published the
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Laws of Pennsylvania (5 vols., 1822—24), continuing the
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work of Charles Smith, published in 1810-12, which began with the laws of 1700 . His grandson, WILLIAM BRADFORD REED (1806-1876), graduated at the university of Pennsylvaniain 1822, was a representative in the Pennsylvania legislature 111 1834—35, attorney-general of the state in 1838, and a state senator in 1841 . He was professor of American history in the university of Pennsylvania in 1850-56,
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United States minister to
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China in 1857—58, and in 1858 negotiated a treaty with China, proclaimed in 186o . Besides the biography of his grandfather mentioned above, he published one of Joseph Reed's wife, Life of
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Esther De Berdt, afterwards Esther Reed (1853) .

W . B . Reed's

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brother, HENRY [HOPE REED (1808-1854), graduated at the university of Pennsylvania in 1825, practised. law in Philadelphia, and was assistant-professor of moral philosophy in the university of Pennsylvania in 1831—34 and professor of
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English literature and rhetoric there in 1835-54 . He assisted Wordsworth in the preparation of an American edition of his poems in 1837, edited in
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America Christopher Wordsworth's
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Memoirs of William Wordsworth (1851) and published Lectures on English Literature from Chaucer to Tennyson (1855) .

End of Article: JOSEPH REED (1741—1785)
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