"Loyalist Trails" UELAC Newsletter 2011-50 Dec. 18,
2011
In this issue:
- 1783: Peace Time's First Christmas
-- by Stephen Davidson
- Oldest Loyalist - More Entries Welcome
- Celebrations at Col John Butler and Gov.
Branches
- 2011 Additions made to Loyal Americans Hall of
Honour
- Unidentified Loyalist Spotted in
Chilliwack
- Response to Query: Non-Military
Loyalists,
Quakers, and Indian Maidens
- Response to Query: Calendar List of
1812 Bicentennial Events
Connect with us: Twitter: http://twitter.com/uelac
1783: Peace Time's First Christmas
copyright
Stephen Davidson
December 25, 1783 was the first peace time Christmas many
loyalist children would ever remember. The memories of adult loyalists
depended very much on where they were on that particular December 25th.
Christmas Eve in the Montreal of 1783 was a special occasion
for Hugh Munro,
a loyalist from New York's Tryon County. The Scottish native had only
been in America for two years before the Revolution began. After fleeing
to Canada, he served in Sir John Johnson's First Battalion for the
entire course of the war. December 24, 1783 was the day that the
loyalist received his discharge from service to the crown.
It was also discharge day for Simeon Sherman. The
Massachusetts Bay native had established a farm in Stillwater, New York
before 1776. Loyalty prompted Sherman to join Major Jessup's corps, and
he served the crown throughout the Revolution. At war's end, Sherman
celebrated Christmas at Yamachiche, the refugee camp at near modern day
Trois Rivieres.
Henry Nase kept a diary during the Revolution,
beginning with
Boxing Day, 1776 -- the day that he left home to join a loyalist
regiment. In 1783, the New York loyalist was once again a civilian. The
prospect of a new life along New Brunswick's St. John River filled him
with hope, despite twelve consecutive days of snow and a completely
frozen river.
His entry for December 25, 1783 reads: "I cannot forbear
mentioning the goodness of God to me; having been driven from my Native
home at an early period, this being the seventh Christmas since I left
my beloved Parents, yet it has pleased the Almighty to cause strangers
to take notice of me, and assist me in such a manner that I am now
Comfortable. Since I daily see those who have neither house nor home and
scarcely nourishment or Clothing to guard them against the Attacks of
this rigorous season of the year."
Further up the St. John River, a nine-year old girl name
Hannah Ingraham
was settling into a log cabin her loyalist father had just finished
building for his family. Recounting her experiences of her first
December in New Brunswick, Hannah said: "A good fire was blazing on
the hearth, and mother had a big loaf of bread with us, and she boiled a
kettle of water and put a good piece of butter in a pewter bowl, and we
toasted the bread and all sat round the bowl to eat our breakfast that
morning, and mother said, "Thank God, we are no longer in dread of
having shots fired through our house. This is the sweetest meal I have
tasted for many a day."
On Boxing Day of that year a homesick loyalist named
Joshua Winslow
wrote a letter from Quebec City. Addressed to his wife in
Massachusetts, the letter gives us a very small glimpse of the Christmas
customs of the day. "The Visiting Season is come on, a great
practice here about Christmas and the New Year; on the return of which I
congratulate my Dearest Anna and Friends with you, it being the fifth
and I hope the last I shall be obliged to see the return of in a
Separation from each other while we may continue upon the same Globe."
The first Christmas that loyalists spent in British North
America'
remaining colonies was a miserable one for most refugees. However, if
you were John Graham or one of the passengers aboard the Joseph,
you would have had a very different holiday experience in 1783.
John Graham's first Christmas after the Revolution would
always be a
memorable one. At one of the earliest loyalist compensation hearings in
London, Georgia's former lieutenant-governor was officially recognized
as a loyalist and given funds to cover his losses during the Revolution.
Graham had settled in Georgia thirty years earlier. After
starting
out in business, he eventually established his own plantations at
Monteith (6,000 acres), Mulberry Grove (140 acres) and Swan River.
Appraised at £27,932, the plantations were staffed by 262 enslaved
Africans and comprised the second largest land holdings in Georgia.
In January of 1776, the crown made Graham Georgia's first
lieutenant-governor. However, a rebel uprising compelled Graham to seek
sanctuary in England. Before he left the colony, Graham placed his
important papers in an iron chest and buried it for safe keeping. When
he returned three years later, he discovered that all of his papers had
"perished by damp". By the summer of 1782, Georgia once again became a
rebel colony, and Graham was forced to flee to England.
Just three days before Christmas 1783, John Graham was
recognized as
"a zealous and active loyalist, carried arms and rendered service to
the British Government". He was compensated for all of his financial
losses. It was a Christmas present very few loyalists would receive from
the compensation board in the years to come.
In November of 1783, the last of the loyalists and British
forces in
New York City sailed away to England and Nova Scotia. Most of the 60
passengers bound for Annapolis Royal aboard the Joseph were free
Africans, members of the Black Pioneer Corps. The majority of these
black loyalists were in their twenties, but passengers' ages on the
Joseph's
manifest ranged from seven-months to sixty-five years. Men such as
Thomas Peters and Murphy Steel would later gain prominence in Nova
Scotia and Sierra Leone. However, it would be awhile before any of the
black loyalists actually saw the shores of Nova Scotia.
Hurricane winds out on the Atlantic compelled Captain
Mitchell to seek shelter in Bermuda. The Joseph's passengers and crew
ended up celebrating the Christmas of 1783 amidst palm trees, pink sandy
beaches, and turquoise waters!
Idyllic as it sounds, these 60 loyalists were on islands that
had
endured both food shortages and an outbreak of yellow fever during the
Revolution. Nevertheless, the loyalists of Quebec and Nova Scotia would
doubtless have traded their Christmas snowdrifts for the Black Pioneers'
balmier Bermuda temperatures. By the spring of 1784, the Joseph finally
arrived at its original destination, Annapolis Royal.
Quebec City, London, Bermuda or snowy New Brunswick --these
were
just a few of the places in which loyalists celebrated the Christmas of
1783.
To secure permission to reprint this article
contact the author at stephendavids@gmail.com
Oldest Loyalist - More Entries Welcome
In Loyalist Trails from two weeks ago, I noted the List
of
Oldest
Loyalists, defined as those Loyalists (and in some cases family
members) who reached the greatest age before they left this mortal
life. Several more entries were submitted and I have a couple more
yet to post. A number of you responded, with some good entries:
Alexander Anderson, submitted by Kevin Wisener
Islander, Feb. 13, 1852
On Saturday, the First instant, in the 107th year of his age, ALEXANDER ANDERSON, Esq., of Bedeque. Mr. Anderson was born in the Parish of Murray, near Elgin, Scotland, on the 7th October, 1745. He emigrated to New York in the year 1770, and was concerned on the side of the Crown in the Wars of the Revolution, during which he was three times wounded, once severely, by a shot in the leg. At the Peace, he came to this Island, as a Loyalist, and after some years he married and settled in Bedeque, where he acquired a valuable property of about 1000 acres of land. The deceased's life in this Island was one of untiring industry; his habits, morally and physically, the most orderly and exemplary; he often boasted that he never broke his word with any man, and this he was enabled to do from his punctuality with others. He was of robust frame of body, with strong retentive memory, which he retained until very lately; and though latterly deprived of sight, his cheerfulness, nor interest in passing events, never deserted him. He was 53 years in the Commission of the Peace. So gradual and painless has been his decay, that it may be strictly said, his taper burned out.
Widow Agnes Benner Lawrence, by Phyllis Hamilton and Fred Hayward
Born in Courtmatrix Ireland in 1731, Widow Agnes Benner Lawrence married Peter Miller in 1765. By 1775 the Millers were settled in the Cambridge District of Albany County. Following the Burgoyne defeat in 1777, the family lived first at the refugee camp in Sorel and then acquired land in St. Armand on the Vermont border. Agnes outlived her husband by thirteen years and died on 26 July 1832 at the age of 101 years 8 months. They are buried in the Old Krans Cemetery in St. Armand, Quebec. The transcription on her stone reads - what are one hundred years Should we that period see With all its hopes and thousand fears To last eternity.
John Smith Sr., by Claire Lincoln
John Smith Sr., a proven Loyalist and listed in the Old Loyalist List, appendix B: as Smith, John, Home District Head of the Lake, a settler in 1788, with three sons Benjamin, Stephen and John.
John Smith Sr. was born at Ludgate Hill, London, England on 13 Nov 1747 , married Anna Roy the daughter of Stephen and Annie Roy, came to America and lived in Sussex County, New Jersey where he was a magistrate. He finally settled in Ancaster, Wentworth Cty., Ontario, Canada, where he died on 4 August 1846. He was 98 years of age when he died. When he and his family arrived at the Head of the Lake, he petitioned for land 'not only for himself but for his family', and the petition was granted Sept 28th 1793 He was a Crown Patentee of Lot 47, Conc. 3 and received Lot 46, Conc. 3 for his son Stephen, Lot 45, Conc. 3 for his son Benjamin, and Lot 49, Conc. 4 for his son John. The petition also asked for 'as a man with family' Lot 45 and 46 on concession 4. continguous with lots on Conc. 3. This land was still in the Smith family in 1851 and parts of it into the 1980's.
Other additions this week:
Check out the List
of the Oldest Loyalists for these interesting additions and and send in your
entries - we will start a new list for something else with the New Year.
. . . doug
Celebrations at Col John Butler and Gov. Branches
[Read
this article with photos here]
Saturday, December 03, 2011, was the Christmas celebration of
the Colonel John Butler Branch
at Betty's Restaurant in Niagara Falls. At this well attended function
three ladies were recognized for their active contribution to the Branch
through the years. They were Beverley Craig, Membership Chairperson,
Sylvia Bagley, Corresponding Secretary, and Marion Tait, who served as a
great recruiter and did the 50-50 draws.
Recognizing people for the contributions they make is one of
the
important functions of our leaders. This is another way to encourage
active members.
Among several UELAC members receiving their UELAC
certification that
day were an obviously proud and delighted father and daughter team,
Gordon and Jennie Kinkley UE.
I noted that this Branch has at least two authors doing an
excellent
job in writing the Loyalist story: Gail Woodruff, whose recently
published book was reviewed in the Fall 2011 issue of The Loyalist
Gazette, wrote the Loyalists and Early Settlers on the Niagara River
Parkway, and Earl Plato, who recently published Loyalist History -
Niagara and Fort Erie, and introduced a soon-to-be published book about
his own Loyalist ancestor, Christian James Plato UE, and his son, Peter
James Plato, entitled About Rangers - Mohawk Blood. The efforts of these
writers are celebrated within the Branch and elsewhere.
The Executive for 2012 were also sworn in at this luncheon.
Such enthusiasm and support encourages active members.
On Wednesday, December 07, Grietje and I attended the
Christmas meeting for Governor Simcoe Branch,
held at 51 Donlands Avenue in Toronto, where I was the guest speaker,
talking about Captain John DeCou, eldest son of one of my Loyalist
ancestors, Jacob DeCou UE, who fought in the War of 1812, was a founder
of the Welland Canal, and established a series of mills at DeCew Falls
and Decewsville.
I was quite impressed with the active role that several
members
played during the evening. Audrey Fox UE received three UELAC
certificates. One member, Sandy McNamara, organized a 'Donate to Read a
Book Drive' to raise money for the UELAC Scholarship Fund. This was a
creative, easy and effective project taking minimal effort to accomplish
with maximum results! Another member, Erin Tanner, sold tickets on
donated Christmas goodies with the proceeds of the draw going to the
UELAC Scholarship Fund.
The energy and good feelings created by these simple but
effective
ventures is an example of the kind of action that I mean when I say that
Teamwork Encourages Active Members!
Grietje and I wish each and every one of you a very Merry
Christmas and a happy and prosperous New Year !!!
Robert C.
McBride UE, UELAC President.
2011 Additions made to Loyal Americans Hall of Honour
In 2003 the Bay of Quinte Branch created the "Loyal
Americans Hall of Honour" to both identify and celebrate those
descendants of the United Empire Loyalists who made significant
achievements, either locally, nationally or internationally.
In 2011 the Branch posthumously honoured William Dempsey
UE,
Audrey Kirk UE and Col. Roscoe Vanderwater UE. Their brief
biographies, as well as those for people previously recognized, can
be found in the UELAC
Honours and Recognition folder. FHH
Unidentified Loyalist Spotted in Chilliwack
From time to time, Loyalist Trails includes
photographs of members across Canada especially when they are at a
UELAC event or wearing Loyalist fashion. Increasingly, internet
links are supplied to take readers to the original media site. This
week, Judy Scholz, Chilliwack Branch, was puzzled by a picture that
appeared in the Dec. 13th edition of The Chilliwack Progress.
As treasurer, she felt she knew every member of her branch. In
addition, while the face may be very familiar to those in Eastern
Canada, she was more curious as to what may have been on the
application for "Certificate of Loyalist Lineage". I have confirmed
that the surname is not to be found in the Dominion file, and yet
the UE is clearly evident on the chest. Had it been a more formal
image as in the fifties, there might have been an old silk hat to
aid recognition of the runner. For now, the identity of the
"Loyalist" is uncertain. Perhaps an LT reader can assist with the
identification. Click here to
see the photograph.
FHH
Response to Query: Non-Military Loyalists, Quakers, and
Indian Maidens
By Richard Ripley UE, Genealogist
I completed this Loyalist research project in response to
a
query "Back
to Hutchinson, Ellis and Barton Families" in the Loyalist
Trails Newsletter, in November 2011, as submitted by Ruth
Hutchinson, a daughter of Cyril John Hutchinson. Ruth's father Cyril
had suggested that the family had a Loyalist connection, and also
that there was an unknown marriage in the family's past, a marital
link with a female Indian, who might be an Indian Princess. This
marital link is suggested by certain enduring physical traits. The
research has confirmed that ancestor Marmaduke Hutchinson
(b. 1755) was issued a banishment order from Pennsylvania, due to
his support of Loyalist political and military events. Research also
found a Hutchinson marriage to an Indian maiden. Both aspects of
Ruth's father's recollections have turned out to be true.
This short report is a summary of the report which I sent
Ruth.
Her version contains many more names, dates, details, and source
records.
It is important to note that the Hutchinsons and other
interconnected families in this report were members of the Society
of Friends (Quakers). The Quakers were, and still are, a
peace-loving religious group, which forbade military service.
Marmaduke Hutchinson, Senior, does not appear to have joined a
Loyalist military unit, but gave his support by more subtle means.
These more subtle means were still considered traitorous, and led to
banishment or penalties of property seizure, imprisonment, and even
death.
While military service was unacceptable to Quakers, other
means
of support do seem to have been acceptable within the community. For
this and other reasons, Marmaduke Hutchinson, Senior, is considered
a United Empire Loyalist in this report, who may satisfy the
criteria of UELAC.
One proof of this status appears when Marmaduke
Hutchinson,
Senior, is mentioned in Loyalists in the American Revolution,
Volume 2, page 535, as follows. . . "HUTCHINSON. . . Of Pennsylvania,
ISAAC, THOMAS, and MARMADUKE, of Bucks County, and JOHN, of
Philadelphia County; attainted of treason, and their estates
confiscated." Research shows that Isaac and Thomas appear to have
somehow remained in America, but Marmaduke, perhaps the most ardent
in his Loyalty, chose the Loyalist route, and came to Canada. Before
and after the family's arrival in Canada, the family was Quaker.
One of Marmaduke Hutchinson UE's second great grandsons,
has
been meticulously proven to be Cyril John Hutchinson (13 August
1910 - 23 April 1975), the father of Ruth Hutchinson and her
brothers, Robin (deceased), Steven, and Denis Hutchinson. Cyril was
brought up in the Methodist faith, when his father Arthur Wesley
Hutchinson (1870 -- 1915), converted to the Methodism, sometime
before 1910, when the family was living in Morden, Manitoba.
Marmaduke Hutchinson, Senior, born 07 April 1755 in
Windsor
Twp., Middlesex, New Jersey, but living in Bucks County,
Pennsylvania in 1777, was one of the many children of Jonathon
Hutchinson of New Windsor Twp, Middlesex, Eastern Division, New
Jersey. Jonathon had at least three wives, but the mother of
Marmaduke and some other siblings, was Elizabeth Dosawa, a
Seminole Indian, of a New Jersey tribe. The enduring and
endearing Indian traits of the descendants can be traced back to
Elizabeth Dosawa.
Anyone who is researching their family genealogies,
should
always bear in mind the suggestions and clues from their departed
family members, as well as any features of health or traits which
might come from unknown ancestors.
By 1778, as Loyalist sympathizers and supporters were
undergoing
identification, arrest, and banishment, the following decree was
published…
31 October 1778 - A proclamation by the Supreme Executive
Council of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. . .several names,
including "Isaac Hutchinson, Thomas Hutchinson and Marmaduke
Hutchinson, yeoman; all now or late of the township of New
Britain...have severally adherred to, and knowingly and willingly
aided and assisted the enemies of the State, and the United States
of America, by having joined their enemies within this State. AND
WHEREAS, the following named persons, inhabitants of others of the
United States of America, who have real estates within this Common
Wealth, that is to say...Isaac Hutchinson, Thomas Hutchinson,
Marmaduke Hutchinson...(et al.) to render themselves respectively to
some or one of the Justices of the Supreme Court, or of the Justices
of the Peace of on of the counties within this State, on or before
Tuesday the fifteenth day of December next ensuing, and also abide
their legal trial for such treasons, on pain that every of them the
said ... Isaac Hutchinson, Thomas Hutchinson, Marmaduke
Hutchinson...nor rendering himself as aforesaid, and abiding the
trial aforesaid, shall from and after the said fifteenth day of
December next, stand, and be attainted of High Treason, to all
intents and purposes, and shall suffer such pains and penalties, and
undergo all such forfeitures, as persons attainted of High Treason
ought to do. And all the faithful subjects of this State, are to
take notice of this Proclamation, and govern themselves accordingly.
Given by order of the Council, under the hand of the Honorable
GEORGE BRYAN, Esquire, Vice President, and the seal of the State ,
at Philadelphia, this thirtieth day of October, in the year of our
Lore, one thousand, seven hundred, and seventy eight. Attested to by
TIMOTHY MATLACK, Sec.
[Sources: 'The Research of Charles Robbins Hutchinson
(1838-1927) on the Hutchinson Families in Central New Jersey'
by Charles Robbins Hutchinson, with additions by Richard S.
Hutchinson; Original found in "Colonial Records of Pennsylvania",
Volume 11, by Samuel Hazard, pages 611 and 612.
Loyalist Trails readers who are familiar with the
struggles in Pennsylvania at the time, will know that Timothy
Matlack was a strident and thorough enemy of, identifier of, and
eradicator of Loyalists and their sympathizers. In a way, modern
Canada can thank Matlack for sending so many excellent persons to
Canada, to help in the founding of modern Canada.
Marmaduke is listed in the Pennsylvania Blacklist
Document
above, which indicates he was of the Township of New Britain in
Bucks County about 1778 or before. However, it has been shown that
he was born not in Pennsylvania, but in Windsor Township, Middlesex,
New Jersey. After the Pennsylvania banishment, Marmaduke may have
fled to Crosswicks, NJ, for a time, and then northeast to Paulus
Hook, NJ., where he was listed on 26 Aug 1781 as a carpenter in the
Return of Employees document for the muster roll of the Engineering
Department (National Archives of Canada). By the time Paulus Hook
was evacuated by the British on 22 Nov 1783, Marmaduke and his
family had already fled to Canada in the Spring Fleet sailing.
Marmaduke, his wife Martha, and two children sailed from
New
York on 27 May 1783 on one of 50 ships that left in the evacuation
known as the Spring Fleet. Of the 50 ships left that day, 10 of
these were destined for Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada. The
Hutchinsons arrived at Saint John as civilian refugees, rather than
military loyalists, and received rations for at least 70 days
provided by the British government. They probably went up the Saint
John River before June 1784 and settled in Queen's County, receiving
property in Colonel Spry's land grant, Lot 10 Canning, on the
northeast side of the Saint John River across from Upper Gagetown.
He built a home and cultivated this property, petitioning for it on
21 Jun 1786. This property appears to be the land on which is built
the north end of the current Highway 2 bridge across the Saint John
River.
Land grant record. . .
RS686: Index to New Brunswick Land Grants, 1784 - 1997
Name HUTCHINSON, Marmaduke, Volume B, Page 30, Grant number 105, Place Waterborough Parish, County Queens, Date 15/02/1787, Accompanying plan --No, Acres 75 - Microfilm F16302.
Another land grant record. . .
COLONEL WILLIAM SPRAY'S GRANT
Account of the Settlers, Improvements and Stock on Colonel Spray's Land on the River St. John - taken in April 1786.
[This article was published in We Lived, a Genealogical Newsletter of New Brunswick Sources, 1979-1983, Cleadie B. Barnett, Editor & Publisher]
Lot number 10, Marmanduke Hutchinson, 8 Acres Improved, 1 Dwelling House, 1 Out House, 3 Neat Cattle, 0 Horses, 0 Sheep, 2 HogsFirst petitioned for land in Queens County in 1786.
Again, in 1796, and again in 1801. . .
HUTCHISON (sic), MARMADUKE
Marmaduke Hutchinson Jr. was born sometime in
1790, in
Waterborough Parish, Queens County, New Brunswick.
By 1789, Marmaduke had moved about 40 kms north where he
settled
and improved lands at the mouth of Salmon River at the head of Grand
Lake. It was probably here that Marmaduke met Anthony Terrill, a
loyalist settler from Dutchess County, NY, who would later appear in
Ontario as a neighbour of Marmaduke's daughter. Other neighbours at
the head of Grand Lake were Arthur Branscombe, Roger Barton, and
Jacob Reynolds, the husband of one of Marmaduke's daughters.
Marmaduke was mentioned in 1795 at this same location in a petition
of Anthony Terrill, and was still there in 1797 when he petitioned
for a further 200 acres at his Salmon River site. Marmaduke sold his
original land at Lot 10 Canning in 1800. These properties were in
Waterborough Parish, Queen's County. In March 1805, Marmaduke was
still a resident of the Parish, although the family may have moved a
time or two within the same general area. They remained there until
at least 1807.
By 1809, the Hutchinsons had moved to Prince Edward
County,
Ontario, for they are listed among the Quaker records there
beginning at this time. Whether Marmaduke made the trip or died in
New Brunswick is unknown, for, as yet, he has not been definitely
identified in the Ontario records with his children. Marmaduke's
daughter Dorothy married at West Lake, Ontario, in 1810, and she
relocated with her husband a few years later to Murray Township near
Wooler, Ontario, where they raised their family. Anthony Terrill
appears as her neighbour in Murray beginning in 1816.
[source for the above two paragraphs: http://users.accesscomm.ca/aeq/hutchinso/pafg01.htm#7152,
by Andrew Quackenbush, verified by other records]
Marmaduke, Jr. (1790 - 05 May 1862) married in
1820, Sarah
Bowerman (1800 - 01 April 1882), where they lived in Hillier
Township, Prince Edward County, Ontario, and in Marysburgh, where
together they raised a family of at least eight children. Marmaduke
Jr. was a farmer. One of their children was John Thomas
Hutchinson (1835 -- 1923), the great grandfather of Ruth
Hutchinson and her brothers.
With the death of the living patriarch, Marmaduke
Hutchinson,
Jr., in 1863, the ties of the family weakened somewhat, and some of
the children of the large families dispersed. More contemporary
religions offered alternative belief structures. Sometime in the
early 1900s, John Thomas Hutchinson sought out new opportunities and
good land, in the area of Morden and Lisgar, Manitoba. There, his
son Arthur Wesley Hutchinson (1870 -- 1915) married Alice
Marjorie Lloyd (1885 -- 1936), on 20 October 1909. Then on 13
August 1910, in Morden, Ruth's father Cyril John Hutchinson
was born. Ruth Hutchinson points out, "although my father's Baptism
certificate indeed states Methodist, I believe he was brought up
Anglican, at least after his father, Arthur Wesley, died when my
father was four years old, though have no proof at this point."
In so many of these family genealogies, there are
intermarriages
and connections, which weave back through time, to common roots.
The Barton and Ellis Connection
For example, John Thomas Hutchinson married a girl
named
Anna Ellis, in about 1865, in Prince Edward County. Anna
Ellis was the daughter of Marmaduke Ellis (b. 1816) and his
wife Mehitabel Barton (b. 1821). This is where another
Loyalist-Quaker sub-plot unfolds. Mehitabel Barton was the daughter
of Isaac Barton (1768 -- 1862) & his wife Abba A.
Voak (b. c. 1799). And Isaac Barton was a son of Gilbert
Barton (1734 -- 1782) of Perth Amboy, Middlesex, New Jersey.
Also, Marmaduke Ellis was the son of George Ellis
& Hannah Hutchinson, and Hannah Hutchinson was the
daughter of Marmaduke Hutchinson, Jr. Through this marriage of
second cousins, the Indian traits from Elizabeth Dosawa, entered the
family again, this time through a female line, and reinforced the
traits, which Ruth Hutchinson calls "the beautiful / handsome (!)
Indian genes."
Needless to say, this Barton family was also Quaker. But
Gilbert
Barton nevertheless joined a Loyalist military unit, Captain
VANDERBURGH's Company in His Majesty's Battn. of Chasseurs commanded
by Lt. Col. EMMERICK. In this unit's must roll of October 27th,
1778, is found the following entry… Gilbert BARTON, enlisted 1 April
1778, deserted 17 May 1778. (source: The On-line Institute for
Advanced Loyalist Studies). A search of the Perth Amboy MM (Quaker
Meeting House), has found a note that Gilbert Barton was admonished
for joining a military unit, and he was ordered to quit. However,
this Gilbert Barton continued to work on behalf of the Loyalist
cause, according to the following records from New Jersey. . .
PRIVATEERING AT TOMS RIVER AND VICINITY.
In the early part of 1778 Captain Peter Anderson, in a boat with sixteen men, captured the sloop "Hazard" and brought her into Toms River. She was loaded with Irish beef and pork. The Court of Admiralty to adjust his claim and that of his men, for their prize was held at Allentown, at the house of Gilbert Barton. (Gilbert was said to be supplying beef and pork to Tories (Loyalists))
Family genealogies hold many treasures. For descendants
of
Loyalists, those treasures include a piece of the founding of modern
Canada.
Copyright Richard Ripley UE, 2011. For permission to
cite the above article, please email Richard Ripley at
nffgfamily@hotmail.com.
Response to Query: Calendar List of 1812 Bicentennial
Events
(See
query). Colleen Martin, Alex Lawrence and others have contributed
web sites generally representing specific areas. I found others.
There may be others as well.
Jo Ann Tuskin <jmtuskin@sympatico.ca>
Editor's Note:
Christmas is upon us. Although I expect another
issue around
Christmas, it may very well not be published on that day. It will
likely be the last one for 2011. Nancy and I, and I am sure I also
speak for both UELAC executive members as well as the many contributors
to Loyalist Trails, with you and yours a Merry Christmas.
. .
. doug
--