Reade was prominent in New York business, political and social life. He was first a member of the vestry of Trinity Church in 1715, and later a warden of the Church, a role in which he served for over fifty years. In 1725, the same year he endorsed "a petition to ban the sale and export of spoiled flour", he was elected assessor of the East Ward of New York. Reade was appointed a member of the governor's council by then Governor of the Province of New York, Robert Monckton, in 1761, serving until his death in 1771. While on the council, he advised the next governor, Sir Henry Moore, and his Lt. Governor, Cadwallader Colden, to "delay the issuance of the stamped paper required by the unpopular Stamp Act." Reade participated in the grand jury, with Frederick Philipse II as Justice of the Supreme Court of Judicature, of New York Slave Conspiracy trials of 1741 which, based upon questionable testimony, resulted in death sentences for thirty-four defendants and the deportation of ninety-one others away from the colony.
Laurence Reade, who was a merchant in partnership with Richard Yates. In his will, Laurence acknowledged and provided for the three children he had with "a mulatto woman on the Island of Jamaica."
Reade died on March 2, 1771, at which point he had considerable holdings in mines, minerals, and ores, which were left to his three surviving sons in his will.
Descendants
Through his daughter Anne, he was the grandfather of Gerrit Van Horne Jr., who married Ann Margaret Clarkson, the sister of General Matthew Clarkson, both children of David Clarkson and Elizabeth Clarkson, a cousin through the French family. Through his daughter Sarah, he was the grandfather of James Abraham de Peyster, a Loyalist during the Revolutionary War who married Catherine Livingston and moved to Saint John, New Brunswick, where he eventually became treasurer of the province; Sarah de Peyster ; and Mary Reade de Peyster, who married Dr. Jacob Ogden Jr. in 1789. Joseph was also the grandfather of Joseph Reade and John Reade, who established a prominent freighting business and married Catherine Livingston in 1774. They were the parents of Catherine Livingston Reade, wife of Nicholas William Stuyvesant ; Helen Sarah Reade, wife of Erie Canal CommissionerJames Hooker ; and Anne Reade, the wife of Robert Kearney.
Legacy
Reade Street in New York City's Lower Manhattan is named after him.