York, but declined. From 1802 till 1814 he was associate justice of the state supreme court, mean- while declining the mayoralty of New York city, and in the latter year he became chief justice, which post he held till he was called in 1818 to the port- folio of the navy in President Monroe's cabinet. In 1823 he was raised to the bench of the U. S. supreme court, to succeed Judge Brock- hoist Livingston, where he remained till his death. Judge Thompson was inter- ested in many benev- olent enterprises, and at the time of his death was the oldest
vice-president of the
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American Bible society. He made a reputation for sound legal learning on the bench of his native state, which he sustained in the U. S. supreme court. His funeral sermon, which was delivered by Rev. A. M. Mann, in the Reformed Dutch church, Poughkeepsie, was published in pamphlet-form (Poughkeepsie, 1844). The vignette of Judge Thompson is copied from the original painting by Asher B. Durand. Yale and Princeton gave him the degree of LL. D. in 1824 and Harvard in 1835.
THOMPSON, Thomas, philanthropist, b. in
Boston, Mass., 27 Aug., 1798 ; d. in New York city,
28 March, 1869. He was graduated at Harvard in
1817, and studied divinity under William Ellery
Channing, but abandoned it to devote himself to
the fine arts. His first collection of pictures, which
was said to be the finest in Boston at that time and
valued at $92,000, was destroyed in the burning of
Tremont Temple in 1852. He gathered another
collection worth $500,000, and, besides this, pos-
sessed property valued at nearly $1,000,000. He
had bequeathed this to form a fund the income of
which should be used to aid poor needle-women of
Boston, but because his property was taxed in that
city at what he thought an exorbitant rate, he re-
moved to New York about 1860, cancelled his will,
and made another in favor of the needle-women
of Brattleboro', Vt., and Rhinebeck, N. Y. Mr.
Thompson's mode of life was eccentric, and it is
said that before his removal from Boston he had
never travelled on a steamboat or a railroad.
THOMPSON, Thomas W., senator, b. in Boston, Mass., 15 March, 1766 ; d. in Concord, N. H., 1 Oct., 1821. He was graduated at Harvard in 1786, studied law, was admitted to the bar, and
practised in Salisbury from 1790 till 1810, when
he removed to Concord. He was a member of the
state house of representatives, and its speaker in
1813— '14, served in congress in 1805-'7, and was
treasurer of his state in 1809. He was appointed
U. S. senator to fill the unexpired term of Nicholas
Oilman, deceased, and served from 19 Sept., 1814,
till 3 March, 1817. — His grandson, John Leverett,
soldier, b. in Plymouth, N. H., 2 Feb., 1835 ; d. in
Chicago, 111., 31 Jan., 1888, was the son of William
C. Thompson. He studied at Dartmouth and
Williams, and read law in Worcester, Mass., and
Poughkeepsie, N. Y., and then at Harvard law-
school, where he was graduated in 1858. He was
admitted to the bar at Worcester, and continued
his studies in Berlin, Munich, and Paris. In 1860
he settled in Chicago, and at the opening of the
civil war enlisted as a private of artillery. He rose
to be corporal, and was made lieutenant in the 1st
Rhode Island cavalry, in which he was commis-
sioned captain, 3 Dec, 1861 ; major, 3 July, 1862 ;
lieutenant-colonel on 11 July; and colonel on 4
Jan., 1863. In March, 1864, he took command of
the 1st New Hampshire cavalry. He served first
with the Army of the Potomac, and in 1864 with
Sheridan in the Shenandoah valley, taking part in
many engagements, and at the close of the war re-
ceived the brevet of brigadier-general of volunteers.
In 1866 he formed a law-partnership with Norman
Williams. Gen. Thompson was connected with
the work of the Citizens' association, and was presi-
dent of the Union league club of Chicago.
THOMPSON, Waddy, lawyer, b. in Pickens-
ville, S. C, 8 Sept., 1798 ; d. in Tallahassee, Fla.,
23 Nov., 1868. He was graduated at South Caro-
lina college in 1814 and admitted to the bar in
1819. He was a member of the legislature from
1826 till 1830, when he became solicitor of the west-
ern circuit. During the nullification excitement
in 1835 he was elected by the legislature brigadier-
general of militia. From 1835 till 1841 he was a
member of congress, and was active in debate as a
leader of the Whig party, and serving in 1840 as
chairman of the committee on military affairs. In
1842 he was appointed minister to Mexico. Dur-
ing his mission, he made two important treaties,
and procured the liberation of more than 200
Texan prisoners, many of whom were sent home
at his own charge. On his return he published
" Recollections of Mexico," which is valuable as a
calm estimate of that country written on the eve
of the war with the United States (New York, 1846).
He was a cotton-planter in Florida, but spent most
of his time after his return from Mexico on his
estate near Greenville, S. C.
THOMPSON, William, soldier, b. in Ireland
about 1725; d. near Carlisle, Pa., 4 Sept.. 1781.
He emigrated to Pennsylvania, and in the French
and Indian war was captain of a troop of mounted
militia. When a battalion of eight companies was
recruited in Pennsylvania, after the fight at Lex-
ington, he was placed in command, with the rank
of colonel. They were the first troops that were
raised on the demand of the Continental congress,
and they arrived at the camp in Cambridge, Mass.,
before 14 Aug., 1775. On 10 Nov. this regiment
drove back a British landing-party at Lechmere
point. Thompson was made a brigadier-general
on 1 March, 1776, and on 19 March he relieved
Gen. Charles Lee of the command of the forces at
New York. In April he was ordered to Canada to
re-enforce Gen. John Thomas with four regiments,
which were afterward increased to ten. He met
the remnant of the Northern army on its retreat
from Quebec, and assumed the chief command
while Gen. Thomas was sick, yielding it up on 4
June to Gen. John Sullivan, by whose orders, two
days later, he made a disastrous attack on the
enemy at Trois Rivieres. He was there taken pris-
oner, and in August returned to Philadelphia on
parole, but was not exchanged for two years.
THOMPSON, William Tappan, humorist, b. in Ravenna, Ohio, 31 Aug., 1812; d. in Savannah, Ga., 24 March, 1882. His father was a Virginian and his mother a native of Dublin, Ireland, and the son was the first white child that was born in the Western Reserve. He lost his mother at the age of eleven, and removed to Philadelphia with his father, who died soon afterward, and the lad entered the office of the Philadelphia "Chronicle." This he left to become secretary to James D. Wes-