Career
He was chosen as selectman at the first town meeting of Pepperellborough in 1762. Chase was active during the Revolutionary War, serving on the town"s first Committee of Correspondence and on its Committee of Inspection. He was a lumberman and farmer, and prominent in religious and civic matters relating to the town and the Saco River.
Chase was one of the largest taxpayers in the area.
He was described as "stately and commanding in figure, six feet in height, vigorous and erect even in old age, eloquent in conversation and pre-eminently so in prayer." "His tongue seemed oiled from root to tip expressing eloquence. I thought him the finest looking old man I ever saw, long hair down over his shoulders, white as snow.." Chase lived to be 100 years old.
Chase"s brother, Samuel Chase, was a signer of the Declaration of Independence and served as a Supreme Court justice. Dea. Chase"s house in Saco, Master of Engineering still exists (as a private residence) and has been recently restored.