USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Chelsea > Documentary history of Chelsea : including the Boston precincts of Winnisimmet, Rumney Marsh, and Pullen Point, 1624-1824, vol 1 > Part 59
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The Eustis family seem to have been loyalists,25 and in fear of their lives after the 19th of April, 1775; for on that day, if their aeeount is taken literally, they left the farm and went to Charlton. Even then the town did not enter upon the estate at onee, but it remained vaeant for some time.
THE TOWN IN POSSESSION
March 11, 1776.26 " Voted that the Farm that m! William Eustis Lately Lived on In Chelsea be left to the Care of the Select- men with Respect to the Last years Improvement of the above Said Farnı."
March 25, 1776 27 " Voted to Chuse a Commitee of five parsons - Viz. . . . Cap! Sam11 Sprague Capt Jonth Green Joseph Green Jonth Williams & Sam !! Floyd jnr the above Commitee is to Let
24 [Chap. xviii. They bear the endorsement: " July Term 1785, opened & filed. Atts Ezck : Price Cler." The depositions were taken at Charlton before Jacob Davis, J. P., the first on July 14, the second on July 25.]
25 [Supra, p. 367.]
26 [This was the annual town meeting.]
27 [Between this and the preceding meeting the town and harbor of Boston had been evacuated by the British. Thompson, the owner of the farm, was an Englishman, and his agent an emigrant Loyalist.]
----
595
CHAP. XVII] THE WILL IN TOWN MEETING
out the farme Known by the Name of Eustis farm for one year then Voted to Indemnify the commitee in Leting the above sd farm."
This last vote and others which follow indicate a doubt of the town as to the validity of the town's possession.
March 10, 1777.
" 1ly Voted and Chose Capt Samuel Sprague, Capt Samuel Sar- geant, & Capt Jonathan Green, A Committee to Take possession of a Certain Farm in Chelsea known by the Name of Eustis's Farm In behalf of the Inhabitants of Said Town of Chelsea by Virtue of Governor Richard Bellinghams Last Will and Testament. And also by Virtue of a Judgment of Court [that of 1753] in favour of Said Town whereby Said farm was Recovered.28
2ly Voted to Impower Said Committee In behalf of the Town of Chelsea to let out Said Farm, for one year next after the present Lease thereof is out, and that the Money Said Farm is Let for, to be paid into Said Town's Treasury, to be used by the Town for or towards the Support of an Orthodox Gospel Minister In Said Town." 29
. May 26, 1777. " Voted to adjourn the affair of Messu's Joseph Oliver and Ezra Brintnall Relative to the Farm they hired of the Town,30 that their Accounts may be adjusted at the next Town meeting. . This Town meeting was adjourn'd over to the next Town meeting to Consider of the affair of Joseph Oliver and Ezra Brintnall Respecting their aecounts of Repairing the build- ings and the fences on the Farm they hired of the Town -- The
28
Chelsea April ye 16th 1777
Received of Jonathan Green town treasurer as a witness to the takeing possession of Eustises farm one shilling L. m.
20 Ebenezer Sargeant (Chamberlain MSS., vi. 45). " Chelsea December the 23₫ 1777 -
These may Certify that according to the Best Computation we can make and the Best accounts we have it appears to us that Robert Temple Esq! And his Father have paid in Chelsea for the Farm he hired in Chelsea of my Yeomans and his heirs Eleven pounds ten Shillings Lawful money as Extraordinary Charges by Taxes towards paying for Chelsea parsonage, Buildings, and Lands, and towards the Cost of Said Towns Law Suits Exclusive of the Ministers Salary
.
Samuel Sargeant) Samuel Watts Jonathan Green Daniel Pratt
Assessors and Selectmen of Chelsea.
(Chamberlain MSS., vi. 55.)
30 [Infra, p. 597.]
596
HISTORY OF CHELSEA
[CHAP. XVII
Town Voted to refer said article over to the next Town meeting. At a Town meeting . .. in Chelsea on Thursday ye 8th Day of January 1778. . . . the moderator of the former meeting Viz : Capt Samuel Sargeant appeared at this Town meeting and Called for a Vote to see if the Town would Dismiss the Article in the former Warrant Relative to Joseph Oliver and Ezra Brintnalls accounts that was Referred over to this present Town meeting. And the Town Voted to Dismiss Said article as above Said. And then the Town Voted to adjourn the aforesaid Town meeting Without Day, accordingly the Moderator adjourn'd Said meeting Sine Die The Warrant for this Town meeting being read And return'd The Town proceeded to the Choice of a Moderator, accord- ingly The Town Voted and Chose Capt Jonathan Green Moderator of this present meeting. - for to finish the Business of this Warrants ---
the accounts of Joseph Oliver & Ezra Brintnall being read Rela- tive to their Repairing the buildings and fences on the Farm they hired of the Town the Last year . and also for poles and posts they Brought on said Farm and also for Cash they paid Cap! Sprague for raiseing men to go in the War, as by their account may appear the Vote was Called to See if the Town would allow the whole of the above said accounts and Voted not to allow the whole of said Joseph Olivers and Ezra Brintnalls accounts. -
Voted to allow to Jacob Shute the Sum of .£3-19-7 Voted to allow for the boarding of Jacob Shute 22 Days . 1-12 - 0 16s/3d Voted to allow mr Edes for mending the Windows twice 1-12- 0
15s/9₫ Voted to allow for makeing the hogsty, Celler Stairs & Laying a Linter flour 1- 4-0
Voted not to allow the Quarter of Dollar for nails 1s/6d . 0- 0-0
Voted to allow the Cash paid to Capt Sprague for raiseing men to go in the war 1-19-5-2
Voted to allow to Ezra Brintnall for raising men for to go In ye War the Sum of 10- 0-0
Voted to allow Ezra Brintnall for two hundred pols the Sum of . 4-16-0
Voted to allow for forty Seven posts - the Sum of 2- 7-0
Voted to allow for the Boating and Carting Said pols & posts as may be made to appear by olivers and
1- 0-0
Brintnalls accounts as afore said Sum Total .. £28-10-0-2
Voted to choose a Committee to let the Farm out now under the Improvement of Joseph Oliver & Ezra Brintnall this present year ; and Chose as a Committee for the above Said purpose Capt Jonathan
597
CHAP. XVII] THE WILL IN TOWN MEETING
Green Capt Samuel Sprague Capt Samuel Sargeant (in behalf of the town and that the town will Indemnify the Comtt) " 31; also " to let the farm out for one year only from the first Day April next Ensuing. - Voted that the Farm be let out at publiek Ven- due 32 to the highest Bider proper notiee being given by Notifi- eations being posted up in three or four of the adjacent Town's "; and further " that the Committee that was Chosen by the Town to let out the Farm known by the Name of Eustis's Farm, be a Committee to get a Copy of the Judgment of Court whereby a Certain farm known by the name of Eustis's Farm was recovered now under the Improvement of messu's Joseph Oliver and Ezra Brintnall. And also Voted that the Town would be at the Cost of geting the Copy as afore Said. The Committee that was Chosen for the above Said purpose are as follows Viz: Capt Samuel Sprague Cap! Jonathan Green and Cap! Samuel Sargeant."
No document in this case have I searched for more assidu- ously than the above-mentioned judgment, but in vain,33 though I cannot see how it would have been of the least value after Thompson's appeal.
May 22, 1778. "Voted to appropriate the Sum of Eighty pounds out of the Rent of the Farm Messur's Joseph Oliver and Ezra Brintnall [who appear to have succeeded Eustis as tenants] lives on to the Reverend m: Phillips Payson towards his Salary which will be Due the Twenty Sixth day of October 1779: the above Said Sum is in full for the afore Said Term and the above Said Sum to be paid out of the Town's Treasury "; but "not to appropriate ye Remaining part of the Rent money to any use at this present town meeting. . . . "
The town made a great mistake in using the rents and profits of this farm under the suspended judgment, as it was obliged
31 [The clause in parentheses was interlined in the original.]
22 " To Capt Jonathan Green The Town's Treasurer or his Successor In Said Office
Sr please to pay to Samuel Watts The Sum of Two pounds three Shillings it being for Liquor found at the Vendueing of ye Farm known by the Name of Eustis's Farm
£2-3-0-0-
Dated at Chelsea the
By order of the Select-men Samuel Watts Town Clerk
10: th Day of February 1778 " -
Endorsed on back: "Received the contents of the within order. Samuel Watts." (Chamberlain MSS., vi. 60.) 33 [Infra, pp. 610-613.]
598
HISTORY OF CHELSEA
[CHAP. XVII
to repay thee whole to Thompson.34 A vote of January 18, 1779, settles the fact that Joseph Oliver and Ezra Brintnall were tenants of the Eustis farm.
Jan. 29, 1779. " Voted to give to the Reverend m' Phillips Payson the use Benefit and Improvement of the Farm known by the Name of Eustis's Farm for the Term of one Year from and next after the first Day of April in the year 1779 to the first day of April. 1780: And then Said Farm to be resigned up to the Town or a Committee Chosen by the Town to receive the Same - And the Said Farm or those that Occupy Said Farm to be Subject to Taxes Equal with other farms in Chelsea according to the Value thereof And that the Reverend m" Phillips Payson be at no Cost or Charge in geting possession of Said Farm and also that the Reverend m" Phillips Payson pay no Rent for the farm for Said Term of time And also that the Reverend m' Phillips Payson Deliver the Said farm with the Buildings and fences thereon , In as good order and repair as he receiv'd it in (Extraor- dinary Casualties Excepted) - With as much Dung on the farm as he receives. Voted to Choose a Committee to take possession of Said farm from the present tenants in behalf of Chelsea and Likewise that Said Committee put the Reverend mª Phillips Payson into possession of Said Farm on the begining of next April : and Likewise that Said Committee Receive possession of Said farm from the Reverend m! Phillips Payson at the years End. Which will be on the first Day of April. 1780. In behalf of the Town of Chelsea "; also " to Choose a Committee of Three persons in order to put the Reverend m" Phillips Payson into Possession of the above and beforemention'd Farm; the Com- mittee men for the above Said purpose " to be "Capt Samuel Sprague Capt Samuel Sargeant and Capt Jonathan Green. Voted to Jndemnify said Committee from all Cost and Damage by said trust in said affair "
Having taken the Eustis farm, the town thought it best to seize another of the Bellingham estates, though without the sanction of legal proceedings, so far as is known.
34 [The town held the farm from 1775 until 1787, twelve years; it settled with the attorney of Robert Thompson for ninety pounds in 1788, and paid £12 as costs of court. (Infra, p. 630.) For a little over three years, November 20, 1780, to April 1, 1784, Rev. Phillips Payson accepted the farm in lieu of an annual salary of £80 as minister of the town. Possession by the town during the war was, under the eireumstanees, natural, and for all parties advantageous. The farm buildings were repaired (supra, p. 596), and did not suffer from the populace, as did many estates of Loyalists and Englishmen.]
599
CHAP. XVII] THE WILL IN TOWN MEETING
April 12, 1779 " Voted to Chuse a committee of five parsons to take persesion of a farm in Chelsea Known by the Name of Deacon Daniel Wattses farm" (the Carter farm), and " as a Committee Capt Sam !! Sprague Capt Sam !! Sargeant mr Benja Henderson mr Daniel Pratt mr Joseph Green then Voted to make addition of two more. Voted Lieut Jonth Williams & Lieut James Stowers all the above Named parsons are Chosen as a committee to take Porsesion of a farm known by the Name of Deacon Daniel Wattses farm. Then Voted to rasc a Sum of money to Defray the Charge that should arise in taking porsesion of the aboue sd farm and keeping the same; to Rais a sum of four Hundred pounds to Defray the Charge in taking & keeping possion of the aboue s! farm "; also " to Defend an[d] Endemnify the above sd Com- mittee in taking and in keeping posesion of the above sd farm then Voted to Defend those parsons that keep possesion of the above said farm."
I find no evidence of an actual taking agreeably to the fore- going votes.35
March 13, 1780 " Voted to Indemnify and save harmless the Revª Phillips Payson from all Damiges on account of his Im- proueing the farm Calld Eusteses farm the Last year "; also " to Chuse a Committee to Lett out the farm calld Eustesis farm for one year "; and "as a Committee Capt Jonathan Green Capt Sam" Sargeant Capt Sam" Sprague Then the town Voted to Give to the Revd mr Payson the Improvement of the Buildings and farm in Chelsea that is Called Eusteses farm for one year Next after the first Day of april 1780 to the first Day of april 1781 towards his Support and Likewise Voted to Indemnify and Save harmless the Revd m' Payson from all Damiges that may arise on a Count of his Improueing the above Said farm and Buld- ings this present year and that the Revd mr Phillips Payson Deliver the said farm with the Buildings and fences thereon in as good order and repair as he received it in Extraordinary Casualties Excepted with as much Dung on the farm as he receives Voted to Indemnify sd Committee."
November 13, 1780, the Selectmen ordered the Town Treasurer to pay " to the Revª mr Phillips Payson the Sum of Eighty pounds of Lawfull money which is in full for his Sallary from the 26th day of oct! 1779 to the 26th of oct! 1780 with what he has hereto- fore had by the profitts of a farm called Eustiees farm." 36
35 [See infra, p. 614. Danforth vs. Sargent et al. Benjamin Henderson was moderator; this was the only business transacted.]
Chamberlain MSS., vii. 27.
600
HISTORY OF CHELSEA
[CHAP. XVII
But the later votes indicate a change by which, with certain new features, the use of the farm should be a substitute for his salary.
November 20, 1780. " Voted that the town of Chelsea Do give to the Revd mr Philip Payson the Improvement of the farm in Chelsea that is known by the name of Eusteses farm for the term of three years if he ean and Does peaceably Injoy the Same So Long in the Lieu of the Eighty Pounds that the town Voted to give the Said Revd m" Payson as a annual Sallary and Said farm to be free from all Publiek Rates and taxes Dureing said tarme prouided that the Revd m" Payson for and in Consideration of The Improvement of Said farm Does give the town of Chelsea a full Discharge annually So Long as he Does Improve Said farm for his annual Sallary of Eighty Pounds of Lawfull money that the town Voted to him and also Voted that the town will Indemnify and Save the Revd m' Payson harmliss from all Damages for his Improveing Said farm Dureing Said term Voted nevertheless it is understood & agreed by and with Said Payson and the town that at the Expiration of the above term of three years or when Ever he shall be put out of Possession of Said farm then the old Contraet of Eighty Pounds Shall take place and hold good. Voted and it is further agreed upon by the town and the Revd mr Payson that at any time within Said tarm of three years if the town Should think proper to give up their Claim to Said farm then in that Case the Said Payson Shall resine up Sd farm and Said Contraet of Eighty Pounds Shall at that time take Place again Voted further the town Does prosed in the above Said affare by Vartue of Gouener Richard Belinghams Will and by Vartue of a Judgment of Court." 37
37 The following bill (Chamberlain MSS., vii. 49) is for work done o'! the Eustis estate, in possession of Rev. Phillips Payson under the votes given above.
" Chelsea. March ye 17th 1781
The town of Chelsea to Caleb Pratt Dr to a Difecult Joab Dun on the House of Eustess So Colled to the Hole a mount with Stuff in Clud ... £O: 6: 8 Erors Excpted Caleb Pratt
Chelsea, Febery 2th 1782 the town of Chelsea to Caleb Pratt Dr to makin a well Curb for Wenesemet Farm £0: 6: 0 Caleb Pratt
Chelsea feby: 18: 1782
Capt Jonathan Green Towns Tresurer. Sir please to pay to Caleb Pratt out of Chelsea tresurey twelve Shillings and Eight pence Lawfull money it being the whole amount of the within a count
£0: 12: 8 By order of the Selectmen Samll Sprague Town Clerk Oct ye 29th 1783 Recd the Contents Caleb Pratt.
601
CHAP. XVII] THE WILL IN TOWN MEETING
The next vote indicates that Thompson was making trouble.
July 22, 1782. " Voted that the town will defend their Claim to the farm Called Eustis' farm, by virtue of the Late Govr Bel- linghams will, & the Judgment of Court, (which farm the town of Chelsea have had some years in quiet possession) against all Suits & actions that may be brought Voted to Choose a Committee of five persons in Conjunction with Revd Phillips Payson to defend Sd farm; at their own Expence, with Sd Payson, & in Case they Succeed, Sd Payson to have the profit of Sª farm during his min- istry in Chelsea, Exclusive of his Stated Salary, Sd Committe upon bearing a due proportion of the Charge in Sd Defence, shall be exempted from their proportion of the cighty Pounds Salary, in Case they Succeed in defending Sd farm; & the Sum their proportion of the cighty Pounds Salary amounts to, shall be deducted from Sd eighty Pounds. Voted Capt Jonathan Green, Capt Sam1 Sprague, Joshua Cheever Esq", Capt James Stower, Capt Sam1 Clark for the above Sd Committe Voted to omit the rest of the articles in the warrant respecting Sd farm."
May 11, 1784. " Voted to raise Eighty Pounds for Revd Mr Paysons Salary this present year begining the first Day of april 1784 Exclusive of the farm he improved at the ferry he giving the Town a Discharge for all Demands he has against the town to the first day of Said april, and he gave the town a Discharge the same Day."
Chelsea May 14. 1781
To the Selectmen of the Town of Chelsea
Gentn
I hereby inform you that on the twenty seventh of Apl last I brought into this Town the Widow Rebeckah Payne with her Children, and have put them into the house on the Eustiss farm, I brought them from the Town of Abington in this Commonwealth, and their Names and ages are as follow viz
Widow Rebeckah Payne aged about 40 Years
Her daughter Rebeckah Payne aged about 20 years
also her Daughter Bethany Payne aged about 18 years and her Daughter Hannah Payne aged about 16 years her son Ebenezer Payne aged about 14 years
and her Daughter Sarah Payne aged about 8 years also her daughter Mary Payne aged about 4 years
This information is in compliance with a former Law of this Comon- wealth, from
Your humble Servt
To the Gentn Selectmen of the Phillips Payson Town of Chelsea
(Chamberlain MSS., vii. 59.)
.
602
HISTORY OF CHELSEA
[CHAP. XVII
APPENDIX 11
COL. THOMAS GOLDTHWAIT, as he wrote his name, merchant, selectman, commissioner to adjust the affairs of the Land Bank, representative to the General Court, truck-master, judge, loyalist and refugee, was doubtless well known in his day, for he was a man of ability and unbounded enterprise; but his name is hardly a tradition at Point Shirley, where he resided for some years, and became a man of influenee in the affairs of Chelsea.
Thomas Goldthwait was the son of Capt. John Goldthwait by his second wife, Jane (Tawley) Halsey. His father lived at the North End of Boston, attended the church of Increase and Cotton Mather, and in 1714 was one of the founders of the New North Church. His grandmother, wife of Samuel Goldthwait of Salem, was a daughter of Ezekiel Cheever, the schoolmaster, and a sister of Rev. Thomas Cheever of Rumney Marsh. His half brother Ezekiel was for twenty years (1741-1761) Town Clerk of Boston, and for over thirty years (1740-1776) Registrar of Deeds for Suffolk County; also Clerk of the Inferior Court of Common Pleas. Major Benjamin and Captain Joseph Goldthwait, half- brothers also, served in the expeditions to Louisburg, Cape Breton, or Crown Point.
Thomas Goldthwait was born in Boston January 15, 1717/18. August 26, 1742, he married Esther Sargent, daughter of Colonel Epes Sargent of Gloucester.2 Their children, recorded at Boston, were:
1. Thomas, born April 27, 1743; died Mareh 25, 1749.
2. Catharine, born Jan. 5, 1744/5. Apparently she was adopted about 1758 by Henry Barnes, the merchant in Marlborough who
1 [After Judge Chamberlain gathered his account of Colonel Goldthwait and the appearance of the Goldthwait Genealogy, he added some items which had escaped his notice, and intended to make a rearrangement and to incorporate some new matter, but finding himself unable to do so, left this and some other matters to his editor. This intention has been carried out, and a few facts added as to life at Point Shirley and Colonel Gold- thwait's political career during the years in which he represented the town in the General Court. For a fuller account of his life in England, and his ancestors and descendants, see the Goldthwait Genealogy.]
2 The intention was filed in Boston July 7, 1742. The late Lucius Manlius Sargent of Boston belonged to this family, also Epes Sargent, editor of the Boston Evening Transcript, and Epes Sargent Dixwell, Head Master of thic Public Latin School of Boston.
The Gotsthwart
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٠ جم
603
APPENDIX 1
CHAP. XVII]
contributed to the rebuilding of King's Chapel in 1747, and who concealed from the patriotic party, intent on their capture, Captain Brown and Ensign D'Bernicre when sent by Governor Gage in February, 1775, to sketch the roads between Boston and Worcester. In December, 1775, she prayed the interposition of the General Court, stating that she was his niece and adopted heir, had lived with him about seventeen years, and on his departure from the town was left with a part of his family in possession of his estate; but the Committee of Correspondence of Marlborough had entered upon it, sold a part, and proposed to dispossess them entirely.3 In 1117 she was in Bristol, England, with Henry Barnes and his wife.4 In The Gentleman's Magazine, November, 1784, is this : " Married at Pool, Dr. Sylvester Gardiner formerly of America, aged eighty [he was 77] to Miss Catherine Goldthwait, daughter of Thomas Goldthwait, Esqr., late of Penobscot in New England, aged twenty eight " (she was 40). Gardiner, Maine, was named for her hus- band. Mrs. Gardiner, left a widow in 1786, married William Powell, a wealthy merchant of Boston. She had no children but adopted two of her grandnieces. She lived on Beacon Street, and died in 1830, aged eighty-six.
3. Esther, born Jan. 11, 1745/6; married (1) July 4, 1765, Capt. Timothy Rogers of Gloucester; (2) June 7, 1770, Peter Dolliver of Gloucester, sea captain. Her son Timothy Rogers (born 1766) entered the British Navy, and died at Lisbon in 1797.
Feb. 19, 1746/7, Thomas Goldthwait was married by Rev. Roger Price of King's Chapel to Katharine Barnes, sister of Henry Barnes abovementioned. The children of Thomas Goldthwait by his second wife were:
4. John, born July 9, 1748; died Sept. 15.
5. Thomas, born June 4, 1750; baptized in Trinity Church, Boston, June 17, Josiah Quincy being one of the sponsors. He married in England, but returned to America in 1792. Hon. George Goldthwait, at one time a student at the Boston Latin School, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Alabama in 1856, Adjutant General of the State under the Confederacy, United States Senator 1870 to 1877, was his son; as was also Hon. Henry Goldthwait, Judge of the Supreme Court of Alabama 1839-1847. . His daughter Anne married John A. Campbell of Alabama, a Justice of the United States Supreme Court, later Assistant Secre- tary of War for the Confederate States.
6. Elizabeth, born August 23, 1751; married Richard Bright
8 House Journal, December 13, 1775.
+ Sabine, Loyalists, i. 211.
604
HISTORY OF CHELSEA
[CHAP. XVII
of Walthamstow, England; and died without issue Feb. 12, 1840.
7. Mary, born March 1, 1753; married Francis Archibald, Jr.
8. Jane, baptized Feb. 16, 1755, at Trinity Church, Boston; died unmarried at Walthamstow, England, Feb. 13, 1804.
9. Ilenry, born in Chelsea, March 29, 1759; at the age of sixteen was a private in his father's company at Fort Pownall ; later entered the British army, and died at sea in 1800. Oliver C. Goldthwait of London was his great-grandson.
At the outbreak of the War of the Revolution, Thomas Gold- thwait commanded Fort Pownall at the mouth of the Penobscot, about six miles northeast of Castine.5 In September, 1763, he was appointed by Gov. Bernard captain and truckmaster there; in November, Justice of the Peace and of the Quorum for Lincoln Co. He moved thither, apparently, in the spring of 1764. Gov- ernor Francis Bernard and Thomas Goldthwait purchased lands from Jedidiah Preble, the former commander of the fort, and in 1766 seeured from the heirs of Gen. Waldo two-fifths of a traet of 2400 aeres adjoining this, near the fort, and attempted a permanent settlement." August 5, 1767, he was commissioned a special Justice of the Court of Common Pleas for Lineoln County, and in 1769 Colonel of the Second Regiment of the Lin- coln County militia. He was superseded at the fort, it is said, by John Preble, son of its first commander, in 1770, and reinstated by Gov. Hutchinson in 1771. He was empowered to call the first town meeting of Belfast, Maine, and was chosen moderator when it met Nov. 11, 1773. In 1775 the fort, while under his command, was dismantled by Capt. Mowatt of the British sloop Canceau, who afterwards destroyed Falmouth. Later the people of Belfast appeared in foree and compelled Goldthwait to deliver to them arms and ammunition. The House of Representatives did not approve his eonduet at the dismantling of the fort, and in voting the pay roll for Fort Pownall, Oet. 25, 1775, excepted his name.7
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