William Tryon

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William Tryon (January 27, 1729 to 1788) was colonial governor of the Province of North Carolina (1765-1771) and the Province of New York (1771-1780, though he did not retain much power in the colony beyond 1777).

Governor William Tryon, 1767
Governor William Tryon, 1767

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Tryon was born at Norbury Park, Surrey, England. In 1757, when he was a captain of the First Foot Guards, he married Margaret Wake, a London heiress with a dowry of 30,000 pounds. Her father had been the Honourable East India Company's Governor in Bombay from 1742 to 1750, and had died in Cape Town on the voyage home. In 1764, he was appointed Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina. Upon Arthur Dobbs's death, in 1765, William Tryon became governor.

From 1771 to 1780 he was Governor of New York. While he was on a visit to England the American Revolutionary War broke out, and on October 19, 1775, several months after his return, he was compelled to seek refuge on the sloop-of-war Halifax in New York Harbor but was restored to power when the British took possession of New York, in September 1776. After 1777, British administration ended, but an unofficial underground movement was led by James Robertson (loyalist) and Andrew Elliot.

During the spring and summer of 1776, William Tryon and New York City mayor, David Matthews were both conspirators in a miserably bungled plot to kidnap General George Washington of the Continental Army and assassinate his chief officers. One of Washington's bodyguards, Thomas Hickey, was also involved in the plot. Hickey, while incarcerated by the Patriots for passing counterfeit money, bragged to his cellmate Isaac Ketcham about the plot. Ketcham then revealed the plot to authorities in an attempt to set himself free. Hickey was court-martialed and hanged for mutiny, on June 28, 1776.

In 1777, Tryon was given the rank of major-general and a command position in the British Army. Tryon was also ordered to invade Connecticut and march on the city of Danbury, to destroy an arsenal located there. In 1779, he commanded a series of raids on the Connecticut coast, attacking New Haven, Fairfield, and Norwalk, burning most of Fairfield and Norwalk. Tradition states that Tryon sat on a rocking chair on a hill in Norwalk, watching the town burn, a "puny imitator of Nero". He later boasted of his "extreme clemency" in leaving a single house standing. General Henry Clinton (American War of Independence),never gave Tryon independent command again.

In 1780, he returned to England, and, in 1782, was promoted to lieutenant-general and to the colonelcy of the 29th Regiment of Foot. He died in London.

Like many other pre-Revolutionary officials in America, he has generally been pictured by Americans as a tyrant (e.g., nicknamed "The Wolf" by the citizens of North Carolina). In reality, he seems to have been tactful and a good administrator, who improved the colonial postal service, and to have become unpopular chiefly because, he obeyed the instructions of his superiors and enforced the orders of the British government. By refusing to allow meetings of the Assembly from May 18, 1765 to November 3, 1766, he prevented North Carolina from sending representatives to the Stamp Act Congress in 1765. To lighten the stamp tax, he offered to pay the dues on all stamped paper on which he was entitled to fees. With the support he suppressed the Regulator uprising in 1768-1771, caused partly by the taxation imposed to help with the cost of the governor's fine mansion, now called Tryon Palace, at New Bern, North Carolina (which Tryon had made the provincial capital), and executed seven or eight of the ringleaders, pardoning six others.

Tryon County, New York and Tryon County, North Carolina, former counties in the USA, were named after him. His name remains attached to Fort Tryon Park in Manhattan in New York City, which was in British hands throughout most of the American Revolution and the town of Tryon, North Carolina. One of the two streets that intersect in central Charlotte, North Carolina, defining the downtown, is named Tryon Street. There is also a Tryon Road in Raleigh, North Carolina which is itself in Wake County a county named after Tryon's wife Margaret Wake.

  • Haywood, Marshal D. Governor William Tryon and his Administration in the Province of North Carolina. Raleigh, 1903.


This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

Preceded by:
Arthur Dobbs
Governor of the Royal Colony of North Carolina
1765-1771
Succeeded by:
James Hasell
Preceded by:
Lord Dunmore
Governor of the Province of New York
1771-1780
Succeeded by:
George Clinton
Governor of New York State after 1777
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