Jonathan Lawrence


Jonathan Lawrence was an American merchant and politician from New York.

Early life

Lawrence was born on October 4, 1737 in Newtown, Queens County in what was then the Province of New York, a part of British America. He was the eighth son born to Patience Lawrence and John Lawrence.
His paternal grandparents were John Lawrence and Deborah Lawrence and his maternal grandparents were Capt. Joseph Sackett and Elizabeth Sackett. His family was large and many members were prominent in New York business and politics. His brother Daniel Lawrence was an Assemblyman and his nephew Nathaniel Lawrence was New York State Attorney General. Congressman James Lent and Recorder Richard Riker were his great-nephews.

Career

At a young age, Lawrence became a merchant, visiting Europe and the West Indies in the employment of his eldest brother, John Lawrence before joining the house of Watson, Murray & Lawrence. After inheriting his brother John's estate and a portion of his brother Nathaniel's estate, he retired, around age thirty-four, and purchased a residence at Hurlgate which had been owned by his great-grandfather Thomas Lawrence, the youngest of three brothers who emigrated to America around 1645.
Beginning in May 1775 Lawrence was a member of the 1st, 3rd and 4th New York Provincial Congresses.

Revolutionary War

In 1772, he had been appointed captain in the provincial militia by the royal government. Once the New York Provincial Congress organized a militia in 1775, he was appointed major of the Queens and Suffolk brigade under Gen. Nathaniel Woodhull.
In August 1776, on the eve of the Battle of Long Island, his militia was sent to drive livestock in an effort to prevent it from falling into British hands. While the activities indirectly claimed the life of Woodhull, he had been ordered to Harlem to seek reinforcements from General George Washington.
Lawrence was appointed by Constitutional Convention to represent the Southern District of New York in the New York State Senate beginning with the 1st New York State Legislature in 1777 to the 6th in 1783. On October 17, 1778, he was one of four elected to the Council of Appointment, serving for one year. He was again one of four elected to the Council on July 22, 1782.
He later served as chairman of the city's committee for the reelection of George Clinton as governor.

Personal life

On March 16, 1766, he married Judith Fish, the daughter of Nathaniel Fish and Jannetje Fish. Jannetje's niece, Elizabeth Berrien, was married to Fish's nephew Nathaniel Lawrence, and was the aunt of John M. Berrien, the United States Attorney General under President Andrew Jackson. Before Judith's death on September 29, 1767, at age seventeen, they were the parents of one son:
After his first wife's death in 1767, he married Ruth Riker, a member of the Riker family, for whom Rikers Island is named. Ruth was the daughter of Andrew and Jane Riker. Together, they were the parents of nine children, including:
Lawrence died on September 4, 1812 in New York City.

Descendants

Through his eldest daughter Judith, he was a grandfather of John Lawrence Ireland, who married Mary Floyd, a sister of John Gelston Floyd, a U.S. Representative, and a granddaughter of David Gelston and William Floyd. Ireland was the father of John Busteed Ireland. Another grandchild was Louisa Anna Ireland, who married Henry Woodhull Nicholl, and was the mother of three: Elizabeth Smith Nicholl, Mary Louisa Ireland, and Judith Ireland.