Monday, September 9, 2019

First Sunday Lecture: John Wereat, The “Forrest Gump” of Georgia’s Revolutionary Era, 1775-1799

Dr. Lamplugh kicked off the annual "Smyrna Reads" campaign this year with yesterday's lecture on John Wereat. We are reading the U.S. Constitution and exploring America's Founding Era. Thank you, Dr. Lamplugh!

John Wereat, The “Forrest Gump” of Georgia’s Revolutionary Era, 1775-1799
A "Smyrna Reads" Event

Speaker: Dr. George Lamplugh, author of In Pursuit of Dead Georgians

Like Tom Hanks' version of "Forrest Gump" in the movie, John Wereat was in the middle of things for virtually every significant event in Georgia's history between the outbreak of the Revolutionary War in 1775 and his death in 1799. Does that make him a "great" man? Probably not, but he was an "ever-present" one, with a strong sense of public duty and a willingness to sacrifice wealth, health, and comfort for the "common good."

John Wereat was active during the Revolution, in Georgia, where he took part in the bitter factional politics that split the ranks of Georgia patriots; and he also served as the state's "Continental Agent," in charge of arranging shipments between Georgia and Philadelphia. Wereat served as the de facto "governor," for a short time, of the small section of Georgia that was outside the control of the British early in the war. Later, he was taken prisoner by the British and sent to Charleston. After the Peace Treaty was signed in 1783 and Georgia was an independent state, Mr. Wereat was elected several times as State Auditor, in which capacity he had the thankless task of trying to settle the Revolutionary Era financial claims of individual Georgians and of the state government with Congress in Philadelphia. Because of his knowledge of the arcane world of Revolutionary finance, Wereat made numerous friends in Philadelphia and among Georgians who were grateful for his efforts on their behalf. Later, when the Federal Constitution of 1787 was submitted to the states for ratification, John Wereat was unanimously chosen by the state's ratifying convention as its presiding officer. Finally, in 1795, during the furor over the Yazoo Land Fraud in Georgia, Wereat tried, unsuccessfully, to prevent that corrupt Yazoo sale from being approved by the legislature and signed by the governor.

Speaker Biography: Dr. Lamplugh holds a B.A. from the University of Delaware, 1966 (History); and an M.A. and PhD. from Emory University (1971, 1973). He spent 37 years on the high school faculty at The Westminster Schools (1973-2010), where he taught all sorts of History courses (and, for a couple of years, even some Old Testament), served as Head of the History Department, and edited the department's newsletter for a few years. Since he retired from the classroom, he has continued to "do" History, publishing two books on Georgia History in 2015. Moreover, since June, 2010, he has written a blog, "Retired But Not Shy: Doing History After Leaving the Classroom."

The First Sunday Lecture series is sponsored by the Friends of Smyrna Library and Smyrna Library.

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