Background
He was the grandson of Isaac Greenwood, a mathematics professor at Harvard, and son of Isaac Greenwood, the first native-born American dentist.
He was the grandson of Isaac Greenwood, a mathematics professor at Harvard, and son of Isaac Greenwood, the first native-born American dentist.
He was responsible for designing Washington's famous dentures, which were not wood but carved from hippopotamus tusk. He invented the first known "dental foot engine" in 1790. Greenwood served as a fifer during the at sixteen years of age.
He served twenty months in Captain Theodore Bliss's company of the 26th Massachusetts Regiment, playing the fife in the Continental Army from 1775 to 1778. A letter from John Greenwood to Lt. General George Washington on his denture charges, dated 1799, is in the A.D. Black History of Dentistry Collection at Northwestern University.
Greenwood was born on May 17, 1760 in Boston, and lived there for most of his early life. He was excited by the musical sounds of the British regulars which had occupied Boston and later learnt to play several tunes on the fife. On April 19, 1775, the first shots of the were fired at the Battles of Lexington and Concord.
In May, Greenwood heard the news and alone walked 150 miles from Falmouth to Boston, occasionally stopping at taverns to play music for soldiers. Writing in his autobiography, he claimed that when he was asked what he was doing he said, “I was going to fight for my country”. He was thus encouraged to enlist in the army for eight dollars a month.
A few months later in June, the Americans had lost the Battle of Bunker Hill and the British were able to establish encampments in that area north of Charlestown. Greenwood had heard of this whilst walking through Cambridge, west of the battle. He witnessed struggling wounded men returning to Cambridge on foot, which discouraged him from continuing any more service.
He was, however, encouraged to continue after apparently witnessing a wounded Negro, who planned to return to battle after fixing his injuries.
Married Elizabeth Weaver, March 22, 1788.