General George Washington Named General John Sullivan as Officer of the Day at Dorchester Heights on March 17, 1776
General John Sullivan, a hero in the War for Independence and a key figure in ending the Siege of Boston, was born in Somersworth, NH on February 17, 1740. Sullivan was the third of five sons born to Owen Sullivan of Limerick and Margery Browne of Cork, both indentured servants from Ireland. He and his brothers were home-schooled by their father, who had been a teacher in Ireland. His brother James Sullivan was governor of Massachusetts and his brothers Daniel and Ebenezer also fought in the American Revolution. John became a lawyer, served in the New Hampshire legislature, and was chosen as a member of the First Continental Congress in 1774 and the Second Continental Congress in 1775. As the Revolutionary War escalated, Sullivan was selected as one of General George Washington’s eight Brigadier Generals in the Colonial Army. "Sullivan developed also as a military engineer and for a considerable Washington entrusted to Sullivan the c...