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Yorktown BattlefieldColonial Parkway in the Fall
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Yorktown Battlefield
Colonel Timothy Pickering
Portrait of Colonel Timothy Pickering
Artist: Charles Wilson Peale
Independence NHP
Colonel Timothy Pickering
 

Pickering, Timothy. 1745-1829.

Timothy Pickering was born into a fifth generation New England family in Salem, Massachusetts. Graduating from Harvard University in 1763, he passed the bar and became a lawyer. He performed minimal services as a lawyer, preferring to spend his time holding various civil positions in town. As an officer in the Massachusetts militia he wrote and published guidelines for military operations titled "An Easy Plan of Discipline For a Militia". This widely popular book was used throughout the colonies at the outbreak of the American Revolution.

Pickering, now a colonel, stayed in the militia and did not immediately join the American army full time. In May 1777 that would change when, upon the request of George Washington, he became Adjutant General in the army. Pickering went on to succeed Nathanael Greene as Quartermaster General of the army in 1780.

As Quartermaster General, Pickering was greatly concerned with the welfare of the common soldier. He was always angry with those he believed did not do their best to help the soldiers. He referred to his position as Quartermaster General as "an office so burdensome and a service so ungrateful." However, he remained in the position until 1785 when he finally resigned.

Pickering temporarily returned to private life. In 1795 he held the positions of Secretary of War and Secretary of State. Dismissed from the latter position in 1800, he later served in the United States Senate and House of Representatives.

Civil War Earthworks around Yorktown  

Did You Know?
Yorktown played a role in not only the American Revolution but also during the Civil War. In 1862 it was the site of the first siege operations of the Civil War. In May 1862 Confederates abandoned Yorktown and Union troops occupied it for the remainder of the war.

Last Updated: June 19, 2006 at 11:45 EST