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Thomas Person

Thomas Person
Born (1733-01-19)January 19, 1733
Surry County, Virginia
Died November 16, 1800(1800-11-16)
Allegiance  United States of America
Service/branch Hillsborough District militia
Years of service 1776–1783
Rank US-O7 insignia.svg Brigadier General 1776–1800
Battles/wars American Revolutionary War

Thomas Person (1733–1800) was an American politician and Anti-Federalist organizer.

Born January 19, 1733 in Virginia to William and Ann Person. He married his cousin, Johanna Philpot; the two had no children, and his nephew William Person Little was adopted as his heir. General Thomas Person spent most of his life in service to Granville County, North Carolina.

In 1756, after several years working for Lord Granville as a surveyor, Thomas Person was recommended for the position of Justice of the Peace for Granville County. By the year 1762, he had become the county's sheriff.

After his election to represent Granville County in the North Carolina General Assembly in 1764, Thomas Person would find himself on the side of the disaffected colonials in the War of the Regulation. When the Battle of Alamance ended in defeat for the Regulators, Governor William Tryon issued a series of amnesty proclamations for combatants and rioters, from which Thomas Person was specifically excluded, even though he was not present at the battle. Person was held for three weeks in Hillsborough but was eventually released without trial, due either to lack of evidence or his personal friendship with Edmund Fanning.

In spite of his issues with Governor Tryon, Representative Person continued to serve in the state General Assembly until the beginning of the American Revolution, when he was named to the extra-legal North Carolina Provincial Congress. This body would eventually "concur with the delegates of the other colonies in declaring independency." In April 1776, Person was elected Brigadier General of the Hillsborough District militia. His service consisted mostly of raising troops and collecting supplies rather than fighting on the field, and he turned over command the following year to John Butler, who would lead the unit in the Battle of Guilford Court House. Person spent the rest of the war serving on the North Carolina Council of State.


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