Henry Wisner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Henry Wisner (c.1720– March 4, 1790) was an American miller from Goshen, New York. He was a patriot leader during the American Revolution and represented New York in the Continental Congress.

Henry was born around 1720 in Florida, New York and spent his entire life as a resident of Orange County. He built and operated a gristmill in Goshen and became one of the town's leading citizens.

Orange County first elected him as a representative to New York's colonial Assembly in 1759 and returned him for eleven consecutive years. In 1768 he became a judge in the county's court of common pleas. When New York created a revolutionary government in 1775, Wisner was sent to the Provincial Congress. That body, in turn, named him as a delegate to the Continental Congress where he served through 1776. Wisner voted for the Declaration of Independence but was back in New York, attending the provinial congress when the document was signed.

While in Congress, Henry had learned that one of the Continental Army's difficulties was obtaining powder and shot. When he returned home he built three gunpowder mills in Orange County. At their height he was shipping 1,000 pounds of gunpowder each week to Washington's army. He later financed the erection of cannon and defensive works overlooking the Hudson River, that blocked the British ability to use the river in the Highlands Region.

In 1777, serving again in the provincial congress, Wisner was a member of the committee that drafted the first constitutuion for the state of New York. Under that constitution, Wisner was a member of the state senate from 1777 until 1782. After the war he remained active in civic affairs.

In 1784 he founded an Academy in Goshen, and was one of the founders of the University of the State of New York (now part of the State University of New York. He served as a trustee of the strae university from then until 1787. In 1788 Wisner was a delegate to the state convention called to ratify the U.S. Constitution. He was one of those who opposed ratification, fearing that the strong central government would eventually infringe on state and individual rights.

Henry died at home in Goshen in 1790 and is buried in the Old Wallkill Cemetery at Phillipsburg, New York.

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