Thomas Bull (Pennsylvania politician) explained

Thomas Bull
State House:Pennsylvania
Term Start:1793
Term End:1801
Birth Date:9 June 1744
Spouse:
    Children:8
    Relatives:Thomas K. Bull (grandson)

    Thomas Bull (June 9, 1744 – July 13, 1837) was an American politician from Pennsylvania. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Chester County from 1793 to 1801.

    Early life

    Thomas Bull was born on June 9, 1744, to William Bull.[1]

    Career

    Bull was manager for Potts & Rutter at the Warwick Furnace.[1]

    Bull was appointed lieutenant colonel in 1776[1] and later commissioned as a colonel in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War.[2] [3] He was taken prisoner and imprisoned in New Jersey and Long Island.[1] After returning from the war, he continued to work as a manager at the Warwick Furnace.[1] He held an interest in Joanna Furnace in Robeson Township, Berks County until about 1831.[1]

    Bull was a delegate to the convention which framed the Pennsylvania Constitution of 1776 or 1790, sources differ.[1] [2] He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Chester County from 1793 to 1801.[2] [4] Around 1810 or 1812, he was associated with the construction of a road from Lancaster Turnpike to Welsh Mountain.[1]

    Bull helped build St. Mary's Church in East Nantmeal (later Warwick Township).[1]

    Personal life

    Bull married Ann Hunter, daughter of John Hunter, of Whiteland on February 28, 1771. She died in 1817. He married Lydia Crowell, a widow, of Cape May, New Jersey, in 1819.[1] He had eight children, Elizabeth (born 1771), Mary (1774–1798), Ann (1776–1850), Martha (1779–1850), Sarah (1779–1817), Levi (1780–1859), James Hunter (1782–1797) and Margaret (1787–).[1] His son Levi was an Episcopal clergyman and lawyer. His grandson Thomas K. Bull was a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.[2] He lived near Warwick Furnace[3] and purchased some land from the Warwick Company near the south branch of French Creek.[1] He was a vestryman of St. Peter's Episcopal Church.[1]

    Bull died on July 13, 1837.[1] A few years prior to his death, an act of Congress paid Bull an annual pension of for his service in the Revolutionary War.[1]

    Notes and References

    1. Book: History of Chester County, Pennsylvania, with Genealogical and Biographical Sketches . Futhey . Cope . Gilbert . Louis H. Everts . 1881 . 114, 489–491 . . 2023-12-15.
    2. News: History of the Presbyterian Church in the Forks of Brandywine, Chester County, PA., from A.D. 1735 to A.D. 1885 . McClune . James . 1885 . J.B. Lippincott Company . 129 . . 2023-12-15.
    3. Book: Bulletins of the Chester County Historical Society, 1918 . 1918 . 47 . . 2023-12-15.
    4. Book: Chester County and Its People . Thomson . W. W. . 1898 . The Union History Company . 438 . . 2023-12-15.