Showing posts with label DAR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DAR. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Molly Reid Memorial, Londonderry, New Hampshire

 


BIRTHPLACE OF

MARY WOODBURN

WIFE OF

GEN. GEO. REID

1735 - 1823

----------

GEN. STARK SAID OF HER

"IF THERE IS A WOMAN IN

NEW HAMPSHIRE FIT FOR

GOVERNOR, IT IS

             MOLLY REID."

ERECTED BY MOLLY REID

CHAPTER D.A.R.

1899



This monument to Molly Reid is located on High Range Road in Londonderry, New Hampshire, on private property (but visible by the roadside) between Parmenter Road and MacIntosh Road.  She was the wife of General George Reid, who lived in Londonderry (now the part that is Derry) and who fought the American Revolution in Lexington, Concord, Bunker Hill, Trenton, Saratoga, Monmouth,  and with George Washington in Yorktown.  

George Reid was a farmer, who married Mary Woodburn in 1765.  They had five children, Mary Boyd Reid Dinsmoor (d. 1834), James Reid (1767 - 1827), John Reid (1771 - 1834), George Reid (1774 - 1848), and Elizabeth Reid McGregor (1776 - 1847).  The Reid family is buried at Forest Hill Cemetery, and follow the link below to see a blog post with photographs of the Reid family plot.  

Mary Woodburn was the daughter of John Woodburn, an Irish immigrant, and Mary Boyd of Londonderry.  Their farm and homestead was located near the memorial on High Range Road. Their home was a garrison, which was never needed because Londonderry was never attacked by the French or the native people of the area.  Mary (Molly) was born 7 April 1734/5 and died on her birthday in 1823, aged 88 years.   John Woodburn is also buried at Forest Hill in Derry. 


For the truly curious:

The Molly Reid Chapter DAR website:   http://mollyreid.nhsodar.org/    

A 2012 blog post with the gravestone of General George Reid and Mary Reid, buried at Forest Hill Cemetery in Derry, New Hampshire:   https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2012/04/tombstone-tuesday-revolutionary-war.html    


-------------------

To Cite/Link to this post:  Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Molly Reid Memorial, Londonderry, New Hampshire", Nutfield Genealogy, posted June 15, 2021, ( https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2021/06/molly-reid-memorial-londonderry-new.html: accessed [access date]). 

Monday, September 17, 2018

Patriot to Passenger Project


While I was at the General Society of Mayflower Descendants’ Board of Assistants Meeting in Chicago two weeks ago, I had the pleasure of talking with the Florida Mayflower Society Historian Muriel Cushing about the Patriot to Passenger Project. This is a project that Muriel founded a few years ago, and it is a “work-in-progress”, which means that its usefulness grows as more people participate and share their Mayflower lines.

As 2020 nears, the 400th Anniversary Commemoration of the arrival of the Mayflower in Plymouth, Massachusetts, more people are trying to apply to the Mayflower Society.  As a short cut to this often tedious process, some descendants are trying to connect their Revolutionary War Patriots (from the DAR lists of patriots) to a passenger on the Mayflower. 

According to the General Society of Mayflower Descendants’ Facebook page: “The Patriot to Passenger Project is a growing list of Patriots who descend from Mayflower passengers, in an effort to build a bridge between other heritage societies such as the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Sons of the American Revolution.  The Patriot to Passenger Project is a way to help others find their link to a Mayflower Pilgrim and it also benefits our Mayflower members to discover other Mayflower lines of descent so that they can submit supplemental applications to honor and recognize all of their ancestors.”

Click here for the “database” (actually a 135 page PDF with an alphabetic list of patriots): 

I looked up the names of my Revolutionary War patriots and saw that I had a 5th great grandfather named Nathaniel Treadwell (1753 – 1822) who served in the Revolutionary War.  His lineage was already included in my lineage application under Mayflower passenger Isaac Allerton.  However, his name did not appear on the Patriot to Passenger list.   Muriel Cushing’s email Flash1620@comcast.net is on the website, so I contacted her to let her know that Nathaniel Treadwell was missing.  She responded within two hours, and told me that she updates this list every month, and my ancestor would be in the new list. 

Even though it is not a true electronic database, it’s easy to scroll through the alphabetical PDF file to look for surnames that might match your family tree.  There are names of both men and women here, and there is also information linking the wives of some patriots to Mayflower passengers (however, these are listed alphabetically by the man’s name, which could be very inconvenient).

Here is an entry for a Revolutionary War veteran who lived in New Hampshire and his wife was descended from Pilgrim William White, a Mayflower passenger:

Howe, Phineas, (A131662) b. Lancaster, MA., 17 March 1732, d. Concord, N.H. after 1789, son of Phineas Howe and Abigail Bennett; m. Experience Pollard, b., Bolton, MA, 24 April 1741, dau. of William Pollard and Experience Wheeler, desc. of Pilgrim William White (MF 13:99). 
(Experience Pollard 6, Experience Wheeler 5, Josiah Wheeler 4, Elizabeth White 3, Resolved White 2, William White 1) 
  
Note that the number after the patriot’s name is the ancestor number from the DAR database.  The Mayflower Passenger is referenced to a Silver book entry.  The names in parenthesis show the lineage back to a pilgrim passenger on the Mayflower.  See how easy it is to add five or six or seven generations back to the Mayflower with this list of patriots!

Here is another Patriot, with two Mayflower connections.  It would be good luck to find one of these Patriots with six or seven or more lines!

Snow, Caleb (A106635), b. Raynham, MA, Ca. 1766, d. Plymouth, VT., 2 May 1847, son of Caleb Snow and Lydia (Wilbore) Barney, desc. of Pilgrims John Alden, William Mullins (MF 16:3:211) and Peter Brown, (MF 7:186); m. Keene, N.H., 18 Nov. 1790, Lydia Partridge.
(Caleb Snow 6, Caleb Snow 5, Ebenezer Snow 4, Elizabeth Alden 3, Joseph Alden 2, John Alden 1)
(Caleb Snow 6, Caleb Snow 5, Ebenezer Snow 4, Benjamin Snow 3, Rebecca Brown 2, Peter Brown 1)

Once you have found your link to a Mayflower passenger, I hope you would consider applying for membership in the General Society of Mayflower Descendants   https://www.themayflowersociety.org/   


------------------

To Cite/Link to this blog post: Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Patriot to Passenger Project", Nutfield Genealogy, posted September 17, 2018, ( https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2018/09/patriot-to-passenger-project.html: accessed [access date]). 

Thursday, July 6, 2017

Historic Valley Cemetery, Manchester, New Hampshire

Valley Cemetery, photo from the Manchester Historic Association Archives

Can you believe that there is a local cemetery I have NOT yet explored in Manchester, New Hampshire?  Well, I was avoiding the Valley Cemetery for years, but just last week I jumped at the chance to go on an informal tour. Why was I avoiding it?  What changed my mind?

Valley Cemetery covers 20 acres and 10 city blocks in downtown Manchester. It is located only one block east of Elm Street, and near the SNHU arena. This large piece of land was donated in 1841 to the city by the Amoskeag Manufacturing Corporation.  It was considered a “garden cemetery” and a public park for pedestrians and picnicking.   The first person buried here was Mary J. Baldwin in 1841.  Members of the Stark family (brother, sister-in-law and niece of Revolutionary War hero General John Stark) had their old fashioned headstones removed to Valley cemetery when the Christian’s Brook Cemetery was bought for redevelopment in the 1850s.

Valley Cemetery’s most interesting feature is a long valley running diagonally through the area.  This valley used to have a water feature, but the creek is now diverted under Elm Street through a culvert. This water feature had a carriage road, with two foot bridges for visitors. There were once benches and two gazebos located along the creek.  Impressive mausoleums and artistic monuments of all sizes could be seen from the bottom of the valley.  Stone staircases led from the lawns above down to the valley.

Valley Cemetery contains the grave sites of mill workers and also the mausoleums of the families who owned the mills and industries that made Manchester a great city in the 1800s.  Among the wealthy gravesites are also the mass graves from two cholera epidemics in the 1800s.  People from all races and ethnicities are buried here including Samanta Plantin (d. 1899) an African American washerwoman who left a large bequest to Tuskegee Institute.

Valley Cemetery Chapel - now boarded up
The cemetery chapel was built in 1932 by Manchester architect and MIT graduate, Chase R. Whitcher for $12,000. There is a receiving tomb built in 1888 for $4,000, and it can hold 75 coffins during the winter. There are 13 mausoleums, the most impressive is the Blood mausoleum near the Pine Street gate, which was built in 1897 for $40,000.  The Frederick Smyth Mausoleum was built in 1885 of white marble and can be seen on the edge of the valley above a steep precipice.

There is one known Revolutionary War veteran buried here – Archibald Gamble who died in 1844.  There are 65 Civil War veterans including 12 officers including Medal of Honor recipient Lt. Henry F. W. Little, Brevet Brigadier General Joseph Carter Abbott, and Captain John M. Caswell.   I saw several graves of veterans from other wars on my tour, but I have no idea how many are buried here.

[UPDATE July 6, 2017 11:30am - Manchester Historian Pat Van Den Berghe says there are 120 Civil War veterans buried here.]

Martha Bouton Cilley Clarke was buried here in 1926.  She was the founder of the Molly Stark DAR (Daughters of the American Revolution) chapter here in Manchester.  In 1932 the DAR placed a bronze plaque in her honor near her gravesite.   Another famous Manchester resident, Samuel Blodgett, died in 1807 and was buried at Christian Brook Cemetery, and reinterred at Valley.  He was the original engineer of the Amoskeag Falls canal, and Derryfield was renamed Manchester, New Hampshire in his honor in 1810.

Valley Cemetery survived the devastating Hurricane of 1938 which uprooted many trees.  By 1953 the cemetery brook was diverted to a culvert and the gazebos were removed.  Since that time the cemetery has been overgrown and forgotten, a place of vandalism and a residence for the homeless.  In 2001 a group called “Friends of Valley Cemetery” was formed to restore the cemetery, but this effort seems to have been abandoned.  The “Friends” was instrumental in getting the Valley Cemetery listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and the cast iron fence around the perimeter was restored, but not much else was renovated or cleaned up.

Valley Cemetery volunteers Mike Drelick and Michelle Caron

Recently, via social media, a new group of volunteers has formed to clean up the Valley Cemetery.  Headed by Manchester resident Mike Drelick and Michelle Caron, this group meets up at Valley several times a week to cut brush, pull weeds, and pick up trash.  They have done an amazing job this summer of uncovering long lost family plots, and clearing paths long forgotten.  They also meet up to just walk the cemetery, hoping that their presence will drive out the unwanted elements of vandals and drug dealers. 

Griffin Family Plot, nearly completely obscured by brush

According to Mike Drelick, he hopes that these volunteer efforts will spur the city into taking more care of this property so that people will return to Valley Cemetery for walking, bird watching and visiting.  The cemetery has a resident flock of turkeys, wildlife, and lots of birds to watch from songbirds to birds of prey.  Art lovers can enjoy the layout of the artistic paths, mausoleums and historic monuments and tombstones. Nature lovers can enjoy the specimen trees (all labeled) and plantings.  Please join Mike one day for a tour, or check out the amazing photos on his Facebook page “Save Valley Cemetery”.

More graves covered by brush and rendered inaccessible
right next to the stone steps going down to the valley

I think Mike’s plan is already showing progress.  Since he has started organizing the cleanup days, the city has come by daily to pick up the dozens of trash bags and brush collected by the volunteers.  A wood chipper was seen yesterday in the cemetery, with two city workers chopping branches and brush.  Carol Robidoux from Manchester Ink Link website has written up a feature article on Mike’s volunteer effort, and this has caused more people to volunteer.

Compare the condition of these stone steps in 2017 to the
antique photo of the valley at the top of this blog post

Mike grew up nearby the cemetery. He’s seen it through its worst phase and has confidence that Valley Cemetery can again become an asset to Manchester, instead of an eyesore.  He described to me how he could envision people visiting the site again for cookouts and concerts, walking tours and picnics. He wants to work together with the parks department to remove brush.  He describes the cemetery as “beautiful” and wonders why the DAR doesn’t place flags on the graves of veterans, and why no one comes to place flowers on the graves here.

I’m hoping that some genealogists, descendants and family members will see the overgrown family plots and be moved to complain to the city, or turn out for volunteer cleanups.  The graves decorated with Masonic symbols and veteran’s gravestones should be adopted by their fraternity and military brothers as community service.  The DAR should turn out to restore the home of their founder’s grave, like they did with Stark Park several years ago.  I also believe that the Manchester mounted police should patrol the paths and old carriage roads here.  The only police presence I saw during my tour was a cruiser who entered at the Pine Street gate, parked by the chapel for 2 minutes, and left.  People walking would feel safer knowing the mounted police were including the cemetery as part of their beat, and it would drive out the troublemakers.

Obvious and deliberate vandalism,
there are many toppled stones here, and graffiti 
I hope these are not your ancestors


If you are at all curious about saving this historic garden cemetery, look at the facts and links below:

Nine Manchester mayors are buried here:
Jacob F. James
Warren L. Lane
Frederick Smyth
Alonzo Smith
David A. Bunton
Darwin J. Daniels
Joseph B. Clark
David B. Varney
William C. Clarke

Two US Senators:
James Underwood Parker
Daniel Clark

Three New Hampshire Governors:
Frederick Smyth
Moody Currier
Ezekiel Straw

There are 13 private mausoleums:
Aretas Blood
E. W. Harrington
Frederick Smyth
Amos and Mary (Ayer) Gale
Nathan Parker
R. H. Ayer
J. W. Fellows and J. A. Moore
Josiah Crosby
Charles A. Gillis
F. Tenny & J. A. Chamberlain
R. J. Parker
George W. Bailey
W. D. Buck

The Artemas Blood mausoleum, now behind
a chain link fence barrier
The Smyth mausoleum 2017 (volunteers cut back the brush)
The Smyth mausoleum (white marble above the valley)
can be seen in this vintage photo courtesy of the
Manchester Historic Association


Photos of Phase I of the Valley Cemetery Restoration Project sign, which has the names of several men who are still aldermen or mayor of Manchester.  What happened to this project? Was there a Phase II in the planning?





Save Valley Cemetery Facebook page:

Carol Robidoux, “Saving Valley Cemetery”, Manchester Ink Link, June 23, 2017

City of Manchester, New Hampshire Valley Cemetery Page:

United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places Registration Form for Valley Cemetery dated 2004:

Another volunteer effort “Taking Back Valley Cemetery”  headed up by Tanya Frazier, with website and online volunteer registration page at this link:

Other sources of information on Valley Cemetery:

The History of Manchester, by C. E. Potter, 1856

Manchester on the Merrimack, by Grace Holbrook Blood, Manchester Historic Association, 1975

“A Walking Tour of Valley Cemetery”, by the Manchester Historic Association, 2016:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G9h0p6oTORE&feature=youtu.be 

“Autumn Foliage Manchester New Hampshire Cemetery Park”, by 67kneil, 2013:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e1i3SD3xhaQ 

“Historic Places Manchester NH USA Valley St Cemetery”, by 67kneil, 2010:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8halNa9gqTw 


Are your ancestors buried here?  The FindAGrave website has photographed about 65% of the graves at Valley Cemetery.  There are still several outstanding photo requests.  With the volunteers uncovering plots under brush hopefully more will be uploaded to FindAGrave soon.  Here is the link for a list of Valley Cemetery graves listed at FindAGrave:  https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&CRid=103162&CScn=valley&CScntry=4&CSst=32&CScnty=1902&


---------------------------

Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Historic Valley Cemetery, Manchester, New Hampshire", Nutfield Genealogy, posted Jul 6, 2017, (https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2017/07/historic-valley-cemetery-manchester-new.html: accessed [access date])/

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

John Stark Day, Manchester, New Hampshire


In New Hampshire Major General John Stark Day is celebrated on the fourth Monday of April.   He is a local hero, and those of you "from away" may not know who is General John Stark.  He was an officer in the French and Indian War, and also in the American Revolutionary War.  He led the troops at the Battle of Bennington, Vermont, and also is famous for the state motto "Live Free or Die".  You can read more about his life in the links below.

I attended the ceremonies at Stark Park in Manchester, New Hampshire yesterday.  Stark Park is the former Stark homestead, and the place where the family burial ground is located.  Major General John and his wife, Molly Stark are buried here.


The ceremony was celebrated by local officials and a plethora of patriotic organizations such as the DAR, SAR and CAR (Children of the American Revolution).  The New Hampshire Sons of the American Revolution (NHSAR) Colonial Color Guard and bagpiper posted the colors. 



Linda Wood, the Vice Regent of the Molly Stark Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) read the proclamation by New Hampshire Governor Maggie Hassan.  Ted Gatsas, the Mayor of Manchester, read a proclamation, too.  



John "Jack" Manning, the Historian General of the National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution (SAR), and the Secretary of the NH SAR, read some remarks on the life of Major General John Stark.   Bryce Laurendeau, past president of the John Stark Society of the Children of the American Revolution, laid a wreath at the grave of Major General John Stark.  


The NH SAR color guard gave a musket salute


Diana Duckoff, President of the Friends of Stark Park, gave an address about the three new additions to the park this year:  a new flag pole with a green Stark flag, a newly planted maple tree, and the General. John Stark memorial plaque (see below). 


STARK GRAVESITE
American Revolutionary War Hero, Major General John Stark
was born in Derryfield, New Hampshire in 1738.  Upon his death in 1822
this gravesite, on what was the site of the Stark family farm,
became his final resting place.  The General's beloved wife Molly,
who predeceased him in 1814, and other members of the 
Stark family were later laid to rest alongside the General.
The hand-forged wrought iron fence was added to the site in 1913.

Restoration of Stark Gravesite  2013 - 2014
A joint project of the City of Manchester and 
The Friends of Stark Park with the generous support of
The Molly Stark Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution
The National and New Hampshire Societies,
Sons of the American Revolution
and 
Foundations, Families and Friends



There was another ceremony yesterday, too, at the green in Dunbarton, New Hampshire at the statue of Major Caleb Stark.


For the truly curious:

A previous blog post at Nutfield Genealogy about John Stark Day:
http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/04/today-is-general-john-stark-day-in-new.html  

From Janice Brown's Cow Hampshire blog:
http://www.cowhampshireblog.com/2014/04/25/new-hampshire-celebration-john-stark-day/

The Friends of Stark Park:
www.starkpark.com


-----------------------------------

Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "John Stark Day, Manchester, New Hampshire", Nutfield Genealogy, posted April 26, 2016  (  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2016/04/john-stark-day-manchester-new-hampshire.html:  accessed [access date]).

Friday, April 8, 2016

The General John Stark House, Manchester, New Hampshire


General John Stark (1728 - 1822)

The house now known as the General John Stark House in Manchester, New Hampshire was actually built in 1736 by the General's father, Archibald Stark.   The General, who was born in Londonderry, lived in this house until 1765, and two of his eleven children were born there.   The house was originally located along the eastern bank of the Merrimack River near present day Canal Street.  It was moved in 1968 when the Amoskeag Falls bridge and roadway project was begun.  The house was moved to Elm Street, to a parcel of land that was also part of the original 800 acre Stark farm.

The General John Stark House is now owned and operated by the Molly Stark Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution.  Some of the original farm land is now Stark Park, where you will find the General's family burial plot.   April 27th, John Stark Day, is celebrated every year at the Stark Park by the Friends of Stark Park, the DAR and local re-enactors.






For the truly curious:

The General John Stark House
2000 Elm Street
Manchester, New Hampshire

New Hampshire Daughters of the American Revolution    http://nhsodar.org/

Gen. John Stark House Wikipedia article   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gen._John_Stark_House

Stark family genealogy and DNA study http://homepage.usask.ca/~schmutz/StarkLines.html 

Stark Park     http://www.starkpark.com/

A 2015 blog post about the Stark Family Burial Plot
http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/04/tombstone-tuesday-stark-family-plot.html

27 April 2015 blog post for General John Stark Day
http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/04/today-is-general-john-stark-day-in-new.html


------------------------------------------

Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "The General John Stark House, Manchester, New Hampshire", Nutfield Genealogy, posted April 8, 2016 (  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2016/04/the-general-john-stark-house-manchester.html: accessed [access date]).

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Hampton, New Hampshire Celebrates 375 Years!


Founder's Park, Hampton, New Hampshire

This weekend is the kick-off celebration for the 375th anniversary year of the founding of Hampton, New Hampshire.  Reverend Stephen Batchelder led his flock to Hampton, which actually settled on 14 October1638, so the official celebrations for the 375th birthday will be a year long celebration.  A list of the founding families can be found on the stones at Founder's Park, across from the Historical Society, or at this blog post: http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2012/05/founders-park-hampton-new-hampshire.html  

This weekend, at the First Congregational Church of Hampton, founded by Rev. Batchelder / Bachiler, there will be a special service and all descendants of founding families are invited.  This is followed by a lunch and activities. See the web link below for more information and to register.   The official celebration will be a three day event in August 2013 at Tuck Field, next to the Historic Society.  A commission has been formed to plan the celebration.


First Congregational Church, Hampton


First Congregational Church
Hampton, NH
On October 14, 1638 Rev. Stephen 
Bachiler and fifty-five settlers from
Massachusetts laid out Winnacunnet
Plantation and organized what is now
the oldest congregational society in
New Hampshire and the second oldest
continuous church fellowship in the
United States
Presented by
New Hampshire Society
Daughters of the American Revolution
October 14, 1978



For more information:

Descendants Celebration Sunday- register here for the activities this weekend, October 14, 2012 http://www.firsthamptonchurch.org/descendants-celebration-sunday.aspx 

---------------------------
Copyright 2012, Heather Wilkinson Rojo

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Tombstone Tuesday ~ A Revolutionary War General



The Reid Family Plot at Forest Hill Cemetery in Derry, New Hampshire


A plaque given by the Molly Reid Chapter of the DAR, in Derry

GEORGE REID
DIED
Sept. 17, 1815  aged 82 yrs.
MARY REID
Relict of George Reid
DIED
April 7, 1823 aged 88 yrs
JAMES REID
DIED
London, May 6, 1827 aged 60 yrs
JOHN REID
DIED
Philadelphia Dec. 8, 1844, aged 68 yrs
Sons of George & Mary Reid
------------------------
Erected by Elizabeth MacGregor
 George Reid was born in Londonderry (in the part now known as Derry, New Hampshire) and married Mary Woodburn in 1765.  She ran the farm with much success during her husband's long campaigns in the American Revolution, and was the mother of eight children.   General John Stark said of Molly Reid "If there is a woman in New Hampshire fit for governor, 'tis Molly Reid."

George Reid responded to the Lexington Alarm on 19 April 1775 by marching the men of Londonderry, New Hampshire on foot to Medford, Massachusetts to join General John Stark (another Londonderry man).  His 1st NH Regiment was formed at the Battle of Bunker Hill on 17 June 1775 .  This 1st NH Regiment also participated in the Invasion of Canada, the Battle of Trenton and the Battle of Princeton.  He was apponted Lieutenant Colonel in 1777, and then took command of the 2nd NH Regiment and led them to Saratoga and the Battle of Monmouth.

He was made Brigadier General after the war and then put down the Exeter Rebellion in 1786, which was a mob opposing the use of paper money in the then capitol of New Hampshire.  He was also made Sheriff of Rockingham County in 1791.

The Molly Reid Chapter of the DAR in Derry, New Hampshire
http://www.freewebs.com/mreiddar/ 
(this website has more information on the Reid family)

 -----------------------
Copyright 2012, Heather Wilkinson Rojo

Friday, June 4, 2010

General John Stark "Live Free or Die!"


The statue of General John Stark
in Manchester, New Hampshire


You know he said “Live Free or Die” but what else do you know about John Stark? You can learn all about Londonderry’s famous general on June 9th at the Folsom Tavern in Exeter, New Hampshire. The lecture begins at 7PM, admission is $3 for members, $5 for non members. Author Ben Z. Rose, who wrote the book John Stark: Maverick General will discuss Stark’s battlefield history. This is part of a series called “Conversations with Authors” by the American Independence Museum of Exeter, which will continue on September 29th with John P. Resch’s discussion on his book Suffering Soldiers: Revolutionary War Veterans, Moral Sentiment, and Political Culture in the Early Republic. For more information, call the American Independence Museum at 603-772-2622 or check the website at http://www.independencemuseum.org/

John Stark was born 28 August 1728 in Nutfield (now Londonderry) to parents from Scotland and Northern Ireland. When the family home in Londonderry burned in 1736 they moved up to the Merrimack River, above Amoskeag Falls. Several other families followed them and it became the town of Derryfield (now Manchester). The Stark family home is now a museum run by the local Molly Stark chapter of the DAR.

In 1752 John, his brother William and two neighbors were ambushed by Indians whilst out hunting. William escaped, and later ransomed John. He became a member of the famous Roger’s Rangers in the frontier. Two years later John led an expedition for Governor Benning Wentworth to explore western New Hampshire. He was commissioned an officer in January 1757, just before the French and Indian War. These frontier experiences would give him an insight into the colony’s borders and northern defenses that other officers of the time period lacked.

After seeing action at the siege of Fort Ticonderoga he returned home to marry Elizabeth “Molly” Page. They had eleven children. Molly was a tomboy who was an excellent marksman and considered “too much for any man to handle.” There is a statue of a gun carrying Molly overlooking the Deerfield River at the Molly Stark State Park in Vermont. Molly served as a nurse to her husband’s troops, and opened the home in Manchester as a hospital during the Revolution.

When he heard of the attack at Lexington, John Stark was supposedly on his horse within ten minutes, and on his way to Massachusetts. Twelve hundred men from New Hampshire joined him at Medford, Massachusetts. The Massachusetts Provincial Congress appointed him Colonel of the 1st New Hampshire Regiment, which defended Bunker Hill at the infamous battle. They fought the rear action of the battle during the British retreat.

Stark went with George Washington to New Jersey, at the Battle of Trenton. He predicted that the next British attack would come out of Canada, and he was correct when General Burgoyne and 10,000 troops came down from Lake Champlain toward Fort Ticonderoga. He was ordered to Saratoga, but refused and instead he mustered men for the battle at Bennington on August 16th, defeating the British and Hessian forces and greatly affecting Burgoyne, who was forced to surrender on October 17, 1777.

The war lasted six more years. After the war John Stark returned to Manchester and private life with Molly. Washington summoned him to headquarters in 1783 for a personal “thank you”, and given the rank of Major General by brevet. He lived to age 94, the last surviving Revolutionary War general.

Perhaps Stark’s greatest contributions to history are his famous quotes, such as:

"There they are, men! We'll beat them before night or Molly Stark's a widow."

Or "Live free or die- Death is not the worst of evils." Which he wrote for the anniversary of the Battle of Bennington, and the first four words live on as the motto of the state of New Hampshire. Of all the license plate mottos in the United States, this is perhaps the most famous! Most folks don’t know the second part, which I think is the most visionary. Most folks also think he said it at the battle, which is not true.

There is a New Hampshire state roadside marker to General John Stark on the side of Route 28 in Derry, about 2.3 miles south of the Derry Rotary. Nearby is a furniture store called “The General Stark Store”. There is a John Stark Regional High School in Weare, New Hampshire. Flag Hill Distillery in Bennington, New Hampshire is now producing fine vodka named “General John Stark.” Molly is memorialized by the DAR chapter, the Vermont State Park, and a cannon in a New Boston park. There is also a Molly Stark Inn in Bennington, Vermont. A tuberculosis sanatorium in Canton, Ohio was named for Molly Stark in 1929.

-----------

John Stark’s Family Tree:

Generation 1: Archibald Stark, b. 1697 in Glasgow, Scotland, d. 25 June 1758 in Derryfield (Manchester), New Hampshire; married to Eleanor Nichols, b. about 1697 in Londonderry, Northern Ireland. Archibald Stark is buried at the old burial ground in Manchester where his stone reads "Here Lyes The Body of Mr. ARCHIBALD STARK. He Departed This Life June 25, 1758, Aged 61 Years."

Generation 2: General John Stark, b. 28 August 1728 in Londonderry, New Hampshire, d. 8 May 1822 in Derryfield (Manchester), New Hampshire; married on 20 August 1758 in Dunbarton, New Hampshire to Elizabeth Page, "Molly", b. 1737 in Haverhill, New Hampshire, d. 29 June 1814. General John Stark is buried at the John Stark State Park, Manchester, New Hampshire.

1. Caleb Page Stark b. 03 Dec 1759, Dunbarton, New Hampshire, d. 26 Aug 1838, Oxford, Ohio
2. Archibald Stark b. 28 May 1761, Derryfield (Manchester), New Hampshire, d. 11 Sep 1791
3. John Stark b. 17 Apr 1763, Derryfield (Manchester), New Hampshire, d. 24 Nov 1844, Derryfield (Manchester), New Hampshire
4. Eleanor Stark b. 04 Mar 1765, d. 20 Aug 1767
5. Eleanor Stark b. 30 Jun 1767, Derryfield (Manchester), New Hampshire, d. Abt 1843
6. Sarah Stark , b. 11 Jun 1769, Derryfield (Manchester), New Hampshire, d. 29 Jan 1801
7. Elizabeth Stark b. 10 Aug 1771, d. 13 May 1813, Ryegate (Caledonia County), Vermont
8. Mary Stark b. 09 Sep 1773, Derryfield (Manchester), New Hampshire
9. Charles Stark . 02 Dec 1775, Derryfield (Manchester), New Hampshire, d. Nov 1796, At Sea
10. Benjamin Franklin Stark b. 16 Jun 1777, Derryfield (Manchester), New Hampshire, d. 19 Jul 1809
11. Sophia Stark, b. 21 Jun 1782, Derryfield (Manchester), New Hampshire, d. 18 Jun 1870, North Reading, Massachusetts

For more information:

History of Manchester (formerly Derryfield), by C. E. Potter, 1856, Chapter 24

John Stark: Maverick General, by Ben. Z. Rose, Hobblebush Books, Brookline, New Hampshire, 2007

-------------
Copyright 2010, Heather Wilkinson Rojo

Monday, January 11, 2010

The Illiterate Colonel


Joshua Burnham of Milford, New Hampshire

Last week I blogged about Colonel Joshua Burnham, and the fine mansion house he built in Milford, New Hampshire. His house was later sold to the Hutchinson family. Because of their fame as singers, I’ve been able to find many documents about my ancestor the Colonel. You would think that as a Revolutionary War officer, and as someone wealthy enough to build a large estate, he would have left documents for me, the future genealogist, to uncover. But that is not the case with Joshua Burnham.

In my family tree I can count eleven Joshua Burnhams. The Burnham family goes back in time to the Thomas Burnham who arrived on the “Planter” and he settled in Ipswich. Colonel Joshua Burnham was born in Gloucester, Massachusetts in 1754, and he married Jemima Wyman in 1779. He removed to Milford, New Hampshire as a young man, before the start of the American Revolutionary War.

Colonel Burnham first served as a private in the New Hampshire Militia at Milford, under Captain Josiah Crosby and Colonel James Read. He enlisted in April 1775 (probably at the time of the Lexington alarm) was at the Battle of Bunker Hill. He also served in New York, Philadelphia and Canada, and was discharged after four years, lame in one of his ankles. In 1819 he was issued a veteran’s pension. He signed his name, but other people wrote out his application for him. These records were available through the National Archives, and are not unusual. But there was more about Joshua Burnham that I found later.

I went over to Milford to look in the town library’s genealogy room, to see if there was more information about the Burnham family. Milford isn’t far from Londonderry, and I was able to chat up the librarians and town clerk at the town hall. Everyone told me that the Burnham house was still standing, and the family graveyard was nearby. This was good news! And the library had tons of Hutchinson family information, which turned out to be helpful in my Burnham search.

The land where he built his house was originally his father’s land in 1772. The Colonel Burnham house was originally built as a hotel, on the road to Lyndeborough. His plans for the house may have been influenced by some of the mansion houses he saw down South during the War. The ceilings were 13 feet high and there is a front to back hallway with doors at both the front and back of the house, which is not a traditional New England design. He didn’t have enough money to go into the hotel business, so he sold it to Jesse Hutchinson who finished it as a family home for his large family (sixteen children!) It is still standing on North River Road, privately owned, and is known locally as Colonel Burnham’s Tavern.

Colonel Burnham moved into “a little red house on the hill” for his retirement years. He was a frequent visitor to the Hutchinson homestead, and was offered free access to the apple orchards. According to John Wallace Hutchinson in his book “The Story of the Hutchinsons”: “…this honorable old gentleman would be seen going and coming with his pockets full, and they were pockets! They were like bags, and he could carry almost half a peck in each one. He would come over, fill his pockets, and then trudge along towards home.” The Hutchinson family named one of their sons Joshua in his honor.

The Hutchinson family eventually became quite famous and removed to Lynn, Massachusetts. The old homestead in New Hampshire became a summer retreat. The Hutchinsons were celebrities, and friends of P. T. Barnum, he was invited to the house and General Tom Thumb drove his small coach and ponies “through the front door, which is nearly four feet wide, and then down the wide (twelve foot) hallway in which there is a steamboat staircase.” (from the Milford Town History) This sounds like a typical P. T. Barnum publicity stunt! The Hutchinson family sold the house in 1949.

Also from John Wallace Hutchinson: “In those early days among the pioneers, education was sometimes neglected. The colonel, though passing through seven years of renown as a discreet officer, could not write his own name, and while in business kept his accounts by characters. For instance, having sold cheese to a person, he would make a mark of that portion of cheese that that man received. His funeral was the first that I had ever witnessed, and the impression was depressingly suggestive. He died at the age of ninety-three; and engraved as an epitaph upon his tombstone, were these words composed by Brother Joshua:
“’Soldier of the Revolution, zealous in his country's cause,
Faithful to the constitution and obedient to its laws.’”

Thus I was able to obtain a wonderful portrait of Joshua Burnham, not by his own words, but in the biographies and memoirs of a completely different family- the Hutchinsons.

My Burnham Lineage:

Generation 1: Thomas Burnham, born about 1623 in England; died on 19 June 1694 in the Chebacco Parish, Ipswich, Massachusetts; married in June 1645 to Mary Lawrence, daughter of Thomas Lawrence and Joan Antrobus, died 27 March 1715 in Ipswich, Massachusetts.

Generation 2: John Burnham, born about 1648, died 12 January 1703/4 in the Chebacco Parish; married on 6 June 1668 to Elizabeth Wells, daughter of Thomas Wells and Abigail Warner, born 31 July 1646 in Ipswich, died 9 June 1731.

Generation 3: Thomas Burnham, born 30 September 1673 in Ipswich, died 16 December 1748; married on 30 September 1700 in Ipswich to Susannah Boardman, born 1681, died 1748.

Generation 4: Stephen Burnham, born about 1715 in the Chebacco Parish, died about 1790 probably in Milford, New Hampshire; married on 16 August 1735 in Ipswich to Mary Andrews, daughter of Thomas Andrews and Mary Smith, born about 1712 in Ipswich.

Generation 5: Joshua Burnham, born 26 January 1754 in Gloucester, Massachusetts, died 7 June 1835 in Milford; married on 21 January 1779 to Jemima Wyman, daughter of Increase Wyman and Catherine Unknown, born on 10 February 1757 in Billerica, Massachusetts, died on 6 September 1843 in South Boston, Massachusetts.

Generation 6: Jemima Burnham, born 9 May 1783 in Milford, died on 5 August 1868 at 88 Emerson St., South Boston; married on 22 November 1810 in Boston to Romanus Emerson, son of John Emerson and Katherine Eaton, born 1 September 1782 in Townsend, Massachusetts, died 10 October 1852 in South Boston.

From here my lineage follows the Emerson surname…
-----------------------
For more information:

“Old Houses of Milford” compiled in a notebook for Wadleigh Memorial Library, Milford, New Hampshire

“The Story of the Hutchinsons” by John Wallace Hutchinson, 1896 (see pages 8 – 10 for the information on Colonel Joshua Burnham)

“The History of Milford” by George A. Ramsdell, Rumford Press, Concord, New Hampshire, 1901, page 783
-------------------------

Copyright 2010, Heather Wilkinson Rojo

****************
Update May 18, 2010

A reader sent me the following information "I was researching my ancestor Stephen Clark of Epping New Hampshire, when I came across your story about Col. Burnham, who was in the Revolutionary War. He seems to be the only Col. so I concluded that he was the one you were calling, "Illiterate." I have proof that he wasn't. My copier doesn't scan good enough to be able to e-mail the page that I copied last summer when researching at the DAR library in Washingon, DC.

It is page 242 in the State of New Hampshire "Rolls of the Soldiers in the Revolutionary War 1775-1777." Hammond, editor. 1885
It reads:

"[Winter Hill Companies, December, 1775.]
Col. Burnhams report of the Company's recruited in New Hampshire
To the Hon. the Committee of Safety In the Colony of New Hampshire.
Return of the Companies of New Hampshire Militia in the Continental Army December 1775--"

This is followed by a table listing all the towns by name with the higher ranking officers names from each town and a count of all of the lower ranking officers and soldiers.

This doesn't look like something an illiterate person could have been able to do or been able to put his name on, if he were illiterate and couldn't verify the accuracy of the info himself."

Friday, July 31, 2009

Nutfield's Royal Connection



Doña María del Rosario Cayetana Alfonsa Victoria Eugenia Francisca Fitz-James Stuart y Silva

The Duchess of Alba, the grandest grandee in Spain, is said to be able to cross the country from north to south without leaving her estates, and to possess more titles than the Queen of England. She is one of the wealthiest women in the entire world. She has 44 noble titles and 150 hereditary titles. Her name is splashed on headlines in Europe more than the Octomom, Michael Jackson and Angelina Jolie combined in the United States.

I married a Spaniard, and in all our trips to visit the in-laws in Madrid, we often pass the Duchess of Alba’s grand mansion. Of course, I only see it whilst jammed into a public bus, peeking out between the elbows of other Madrileños. We all hope to see the Duchess perhaps in her limo, or out watering the roses.

I recently saw that on top of all her titles, she was applying, with her sisters to belong to DAR. Now, here in lowly Londonderry, membership in the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Society of Mayflower Descendants might be the closest your average Jane Doe can attain to having a “title.” I guess Doña Cayetana wanted to pile another title on her crown.

When I found out how she qualified for DAR membership, I had to chuckle. The lineage was public knowledge, and is easily found with a little time spent googling on the internet. Now thousands of Americans may claim her as a cousin, and perhaps want to crash on her sofa while taking in the sites in Madrid!

William McKean (pronounced McCain, like the presidential candidate) was a Scots Irish immigrant from Northern Ireland, just like most of the first settlers in Nutfield. He, like so many of the Scots Irish, didn’t stay put in New Hampshire, but he removed to Pennsylvania. His grandson, Thomas McKean, was a lawyer and politician, as well as a Revolutionary War officer. He married well twice, and lived in luxury in Philadelphia. He became a signer of the Declaration of Independence, a Continental Congressman, President of Delaware and Governor of Pennsylvania, among other triumphs. I guess grand titles run in this family!

His daughter, Sarah, was only a teenager when she caught the eye of a Spanish grandee at a state dinner in Philadelphia. Señor Don Carlos Martinez d’Yrugo quickly married her and had three children before returning to Spain. Their son Don Carlos Fernando Martinez de Yrujo y McKean became prime Minister of Spain, and the second Marquis de Casa Yrujo, Duke of Sotomayor. He married even better than his grandfather and mother, and his children and descendants began collecting titles, estates and power in Spain. Thus a dynasty was born in lowly Londonderry!

Doña Cayetana FitzJames Stuart is also a direct descendant of the King James II of England by his illegitimate son James FitzJames, 1st Duke of Berwick by his mistress Arabella Churchill.


The Family Tree....

  • Gen. 1. William McKean b. 1704 Northern Ireland d. 18 Nov 1769 in Londonderry, New Hampshire m. Letitia Finney

  • Gen 2: Thomas McKeen b. 19 Mar 1733/4 in New London, Pennsylvania d. 24 Jun 1817 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania m. Sarah Armitage on 3 Sep 1774 in Newcastle, Delaware

  • Gen 3: Sarah Maria Teresa McKean b. 8 Jul 1777 in Newark, Delaware d. 4 Jan 1841 in Madrid, Spain m. Carlos Martinez on 10 Apr 1798 in Philadelphia

  • Gen 4: Carlos Fernando Martinez b. 14 Dec 1802 Washington, DC d. 26 Dec 185 in Madrid, Spain m. Gabriela de Acazar

  • Gen 5. Carlos Manuel Martinez b. 5 Apr 1846 in London, England d. 14 Sep 19 in San Sebastian, Spain m. Maria Caro

  • Gen 6. Pedro Martinez b. 3 Oct 1882 d. 5 Sep 1957 San Sebastian, Spain m. Ana Maria Arazcoz Labayen on 26 Oct 1910

  • Gen 7. Luis Martinez b. 17 Nov 1919 in Madrid, Spain d. 6 Sep 1972 in Houston, Texas m. Maria del Rosario Fitz-James Stuart on 12 Oct 1947 in Seville, Spain as her first husband. 
      The children of her first husband are eligible for DAR or to join the "Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence" and other patriotic organizations because of this marriage.  

-----------------
Copyright 2009, Heather Wilkinson Rojo