History is for Everyone

1756–1775

William French

Westminster Massacre VictimNew Hampshire Grants Settler

Biography

William French was a young man in his twenties living in Westminster, in the part of colonial New Hampshire Grants territory that would eventually become Vermont. The region was caught in a tangled jurisdictional dispute between New York and New Hampshire over land titles, with settlers who had received New Hampshire grants facing the threat of eviction by New York courts and sheriffs. By 1775 this local conflict had merged with the broader imperial crisis, and residents of the Grants increasingly saw New York's authority as another form of the same tyranny that Parliament was imposing on the colonies at large. French was part of this community of aggrieved settlers, men who had every reason to resist authority that threatened their homes and livelihoods.

On March 13, 1775, a group of settlers occupied the Westminster courthouse to prevent New York authorities from holding court and enforcing judgments against debtors and land claimants. The Cumberland County sheriff, William Paterson, responded by organizing a posse that stormed the courthouse during the night. In the assault, the posse fired into the crowd of occupiers. William French was shot and died of his wounds the following day, becoming the first fatality of what the Vermont independence movement would call the Westminster Massacre. The events preceded the battles of Lexington and Concord by five weeks, giving the Westminster confrontation a claim to being among the earliest revolutionary violence in the colonies.

French's death was immediately seized upon by Grants settlers as a symbol of Patriot martyrdom. His gravestone, carved with the inscription that he was murdered by the tools of tyranny, stood as one of the most explicit political statements in the early revolutionary landscape — a piece of funerary art that made an unambiguous political argument in a form that could not be ignored or suppressed. The Westminster Massacre energized the push for Vermont's independence, providing both a rallying point and a founding grievance for the new state that Ethan Allen and others were working to bring into existence.

In Brattleboro

  1. Mar

    1775

    Westminster Massacre

    Role: Westminster Massacre Victim

    # The Westminster Massacre In the early months of 1775, as tensions between American colonists and the British Crown simmered toward a boiling point across the thirteen colonies, a violent confrontation in the small town of Westminster, in what is now Vermont, foreshadowed the bloodshed that would soon engulf the continent. The Westminster Massacre, which occurred on the night of March 13, 1775, stands as one of the earliest deadly clashes of the Revolutionary era — taking place a full five weeks before the more famous battles of Lexington and Concord in Massachusetts. Though often overlooked in broader narratives of the American Revolution, the event played a pivotal role in shaping the political identity of Vermont and demonstrated just how deeply colonial resentment toward arbitrary governance had taken root, even in the remote settlements of the northern frontier. To understand the massacre, one must first understand the complicated jurisdictional struggles that defined life in the region known as the New Hampshire Grants. For decades, settlers who had purchased land titles from New Hampshire found themselves in conflict with the colony of New York, which also claimed authority over the territory. When the British Crown sided with New York in 1764, settlers suddenly found their land titles questioned and their communities governed by officials they had never chosen and did not trust. New York–appointed judges and sheriffs enforced laws and levied fees that many settlers viewed as illegitimate, and the courts became a particular source of resentment. Settlers saw them not as instruments of justice but as tools of an outside power designed to strip them of their property and autonomy. By early 1775, frustration with the New York–controlled courts had reached a critical point. When the Cumberland County court was scheduled to sit in Westminster, a crowd of settlers resolved to prevent it from convening. They occupied the courthouse, determined to block the proceedings they believed served only the interests of New York's colonial administration. The county sheriff responded by raising a posse of armed men and ordering the settlers to vacate the building. The settlers refused. In the tense standoff that followed, the posse fired into the crowd of unarmed or lightly armed occupiers. William French, a young settler, was killed, as was Daniel Houghton, who died from his wounds shortly after. Several others were injured in the gunfire. The reaction was immediate and fierce. Settlers throughout the region denounced the shootings as a massacre, and the word spread quickly through the communities of the New Hampshire Grants. William French, in particular, became a martyr figure, a symbol of the suffering inflicted by a distant and unaccountable government. His death galvanized opposition not only to the New York courts but to the broader structure of outside rule over the Grants. Within weeks, a county convention assembled to formally declare the settlers' grievances, articulating a set of political demands that went far beyond the immediate controversy over the courts. The convention marked a critical step in the process of political organization that would ultimately lead to Vermont declaring itself an independent republic in 1777 — a bold act that made it, for a time, a sovereign entity separate from both the British Empire and the other American states. The Westminster Massacre matters in the broader story of the American Revolution because it reveals that the spirit of resistance was not confined to Boston or Philadelphia. In the hills and valleys of the northern frontier, ordinary settlers were willing to risk their lives to oppose what they saw as tyrannical authority. The event also illustrates how local grievances — over land titles, courts, and governance — intersected with the larger revolutionary movement sweeping the colonies. The people of the New Hampshire Grants did not merely join someone else's revolution; they had their own, rooted in their own experiences of injustice. William French and Daniel Houghton were among the earliest Americans to die in defiance of the political order that the Revolution would ultimately overthrow, and their sacrifice helped set in motion the creation of a new state founded on the principle that legitimate government must answer to the people it governs.

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