- Edward Hand
Edward Hand (
December 31 ,1744 –September 3 ,1802 ) was a physician, farmer, congressman, and a general officer in theContinental Army during theAmerican Revolutionary War . He commanded troops in some of the key battles of the war, including Long Island and Trenton. AsAdjutant General of theContinental Army , he assisted GeneralGeorge Washington in thesiege of Yorktown .Early life and career
Hand was born in Clyduff, King's County,
Ireland . (The present-dayCounty Offaly , King's County was formed in 1556 as one of the earliest English plantations on Irish soil.) Hand earned a medical certificate fromTrinity College, Dublin . In 1767, Hand enlisted as a Surgeon's Mate in the18th (Royal Irish) Regiment of Foot . OnMay 20 , 1767, he sailed with the regiment from the Cove of Cork, Ireland, arriving at Philadelphia onJuly 11 , 1767. In 1772, he was commissioned an ensign. He marched with the regiment to Fort Pitt, on the forks of theOhio River , returning to Philadelphia in 1774, where he resigned his commission.In 1774, Hand moved to
Lancaster, Pennsylvania , where he practiced medicine. OnMarch 13 1775 , he married Catherine Ewing (born25 March 1751 inPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania ). Lancaster was the region of some of the earliest Irish andScots-Irish settlements in Pennsylvania; as a people, they were well-known for their anti-English and revolutionary convictions. Hand was active in forming the Lancaster County Associators, a colonialmilitia .American Revolution
He entered the
Continental Army as alieutenant colonel in thePennsylvania Line . He was promoted tocolonel and commanded the1st Pennsylvania Regiment . He was later promoted tobrigadier general and served as the commander of Fort Pitt fighting British loyalist and their Indian allies. He was recalled, after over 2 years at Fort Pitt, to serve as abrigade commander inMajor General La Fayette 's division.After a few months, he was appointed
Adjutant General of the Continental Army and served during thesiege of Yorktown in that capacity. In recognition of his long and distinguished service, he was, in September 1783, promoted by brevet to major general. He resigned from the Army in November 1783.After the Revolution
Hand returned to Lancaster and resumed the practice of medicine. A Federalist, Hand was active in civil affairs, holding posts that included:
* Chief Burgess of Lancaster
* Presidential elector
* Delegate to the convention for the 1790 Pennsylvania Constitution
* Member of theCongress of the Confederation , 1784-1785
* Member of the Pennsylvania Assembly, 1785-1786Beginning in 1785, he owned and operated
Rock Ford plantation , a convert|177|acre|km2|sing=on farm on the banks of theConestoga River , one mile (1.6 km) south ofLancaster, Pennsylvania . The Georgian brick mansion remains today; the farm is a historic site open to the public. Hand died fromcholera at Rock Ford. He is buried in St. James's Episcopal Cemetery in Lancaster.External links
* [http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=H000153 Hand’s congressional biography]
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6709798 Edward Hand] atFind A Grave
* [http://www.rockfordplantation.org Rock Ford Plantation]
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