'''John Pintard''' (May_18, 1759 - June_21, 1844) was an American Merchant and Philanthropist. He was a descendant of Antoine_Pintard, a Huguenot from La Rochelle, France. He was orphaned in his first year when both his parents, his father, John, a seagoing merchant, and his mother, Mary_Cannon, died on a voyage to Haiti. He was raised by his uncle, Lewis Pintard, and attended grammar school under the Reverend Leonard_Cutting at Hempstead, Long Island. He attended the College at New Jersey (which later became Princeton_University), but left school to join the patriot forces when the British arrived at New_York. He went on various expeditions to harass the enemy. He returned to school briefly and received the degree of A.B. in 1776. He served as deputy commissary of prisoners at New York under his uncle Lewis. His duties were to examine and relieve the wants of the prisoners. On November 12, 1784, he married Elizabeth_Brashear, daughter of Col. Abraham_Brashear of Paramus,_New_Jersey. Pintard had inherited a legacy from his maternal grandfather, John Cannon, and this allowed him to go into the China and East India trade. Like his father and his grandfather before him, John served as an alderman to the City of New York. He was rated as one of New York’s most successful and prosperous merchants when in 1792 he lost his fortune by engaging with William Duer in Alexander_Hamilton’s scheme to fund the national debt. He had personally endorsed notes for over a million dollars and was imprisoned for the debt. John Pintard resided in Newark,_New_Jersey for eight years and declared bankruptcy in New York. He never recovered his old fortune, but his position and respect in the community enabled him to contribute generously to the projects he sponsored. In 1803, John Pintard went to New_Orleans to seek his fortune but decided not to settle there. He filed a very favorable report of the French colony to Albert_Gallatin, secretary of the treasury, and minister to France James_Monroe, a relative by marriage to his wife’s aunt. Pintard’s report was instrumental in convincing Thomas_Jefferson to purchase the Louisiana_Territory. He served as first city inspector for many years after 1804, and was authorized by the corporation of New York to issue fractional notes during the War of 1812. John was secretary of the Mutual Assurance Company from 1809 to 1829. From 1819 to 1829 he served as secretary of the New York Chamber of Commerce. He served as treasurer of the Sailor’s Snug Harbor from 1819 to 1823 and was instrumental in the purchase of the property on Staten_Island where the home is now located. He also was a founder of the New_York_Historical_Society and the Massachusetts_Historical_Society. John Pintard served as manager of the New York lotteries and was first sagamore of the Tammany_Society. On February 19, 1805 he began the efforts which became the present free school system in New York. He was also active in the movement that resulted in the building and completion of the Erie_Canal. John Pintard surveyed the plans for the streets and avenues in upper New York City. A deeply religious man, he was one of the chief supporters of the General Theological Seminary and founded the American Bible Society, which he always called his "brat." He was vestryman for the Huguenot Church of New York City for thirty-four years and his translation of the "Book of Common Prayer" from English to French is still used today. In 1822, the degree of LL.D. was conferred on him by Allegheny_College. Blind in his later years, he died at the home of his daughter, Louise, in New York on June 21, 1844. Pintard, John Pintard, John