Jeremiah Gridley (1702-1767) is considered the greatest New England lawyer of his generation, yet we know little about him.
Most of his renown is a product of the fame of his students, most notably John Adams.
Gridley deserves more.
He was an active participant in the Writs of Assistance trial and the Stamp Act controversy, and as a leader of the Boston bar, an editor, speculator, legislator, and politician, his life touched and was touched by much that was integral to eighteenth-century Massa.