Paul Brigham | |
Order: | 2nd |
Office: | Governor of Vermont |
Term Start: | August 25, 1797 |
Term End: | October 16, 1797 |
Lieutenant: | Himself |
Predecessor: | Thomas Chittenden |
Successor: | Isaac Tichenor |
Order1: | 3rd and 5th |
Office1: | Lieutenant Governor of Vermont |
Governor1: | Jonas Galusha |
Term Start1: | October 14, 1815 |
Term End1: | October 23, 1820 |
Predecessor1: | William Chamberlain |
Successor1: | William Cahoon |
Governor2: | Thomas Chittenden (1796–1797) Himself (1797) Isaac Tichenor (1797–1807) Israel Smith (1807–1808) Isaac Tichenor (1808–1809) Jonas Galusha (1809–1813) |
Term Start2: | October 13, 1796 |
Term End2: | October 23, 1813 |
Predecessor2: | Jonathan Hunt |
Successor2: | William Chamberlain |
Birth Place: | Coventry, Colony of Connecticut, British America |
Death Place: | Norwich, Vermont, U.S. |
Spouse: | Lydia Sawyer |
Profession: | Soldier / Judge / Politician |
Party: | Democratic-Republican |
Paul Brigham (January 1746June 15, 1824) was an American Revolutionary soldier and Democratic-Republican politician. He was the second lieutenant governor of Vermont after that state was admitted to the Union in 1791, and upon the death of Vermont's first governor Thomas Chittenden, served as governor for the last seven weeks of Chittenden's term. (During the 14 years before admission to the Union, when Vermont was a largely unrecognized state, several others served as lieutenant governor and two persons served as governor.)
Brigham, son of Paul and Catherine (Turner) Brigham, was born in January 1746, in Coventry in the Colony of Connecticut.[1] The exact date of his birth varies from source to source. Some give his birthday as January 6;[2] others give it as January 17.[3] He married Lydia Sawyer (of Hebron, Connecticut) on October 3, 1767, and the couple had five children.
Brigham served from January 1, 1777 to April 22, 1781 as a captain in the Connecticut Militia during the American Revolutionary War. He was a company commander of Continental troops under the command of General George Washington[4] and wintered in Valley Forge during the winter of 1777.
In the spring of 1782 Brigham and his family moved to Norwich, Vermont, where he was a farmer and a land speculator.[5] He served as high sheriff of Windsor County, Vermont, for five years and as major general of the Vermont Militia. He was chief judge of the county court for five years, and was a presidential elector for Vermont in 1792. He was on the Governor's Council from 1793 to 1796.
Brigham was annually elected lieutenant governor of Vermont for 16 consecutive years, from 1796 to 1813; only the brief Federalist resurgence removed Brigham and other Republicans from office. After conclusion to the War of 1812, which gave life to the moribund Federalist Party all across New England for their opposition, Brigham was again lieutenant governor, this time from 1815 until 1820. Upon the death of Governor Thomas Chittenden, he served for a short time as the second Governor of Vermont from August 25 to October 16, 1797, when the new governor, Isaac Tichenor was sworn in. Brigham then resumed his duties as lieutenant governor. He retired and returned to his home in Norwich in 1820.[4]
Brigham died in Norwich on June 16, 1824. He was interred at Fairview Cemetery in his hometown of Norwich. The journal of his army experiences was published as A Revolutionary Diary of Captain Paul Brigham, November 19, 1777 – September 4, 1778.
The obituary from the New-Hampshire Patriot (NH), July 12, 1824, p. 3, reads: