USA > New Hampshire > Rockingham County > Newfields > History of Newfields, New Hampshire, 1638-1911 > Part 24
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Nathaniel Frost of Captain Bell's Company, age 27, stature 6, light complexion, brown hair, blue eyes, "left at H. Town," missing.
John Foss of Captain Robinson's Company, age 28, stature 6, dark complexion, brown hair, dark eyes, left at Skeenborough, missing.
John Barker of Captain Blodget's Company, age 20, stature 5-4, dark complexion, light hair, black eyes, left at Albany, sick.
Jona S. Dudley of Captain Robinson's Company, age 22, stature 5-8, dark complexion, brown hair, dark eyes, left at Manchester, deserted.
Robert Pike, Jr., of Newmarket, was appointed January 16. 1777, First Lieutenant in Colonel Scammell's Regiment in the Continental service. And March 26, Samuel Gilman and Mr. Odiorne were ordered to provide barracks for said Regiment.
The Portsmouth Committee of Safety gave notice to the State Committee at Exeter May 19, 1777, "That they have committed to Gaol as Tories refusing to take the oath, the following persons, viz .: Isaac Rindge, John Pierce, William Hart, James Sheafe & Peter Pease & William Torrey."1
The same day these prisoners in the Gaol at Portsmouth, memorialized the State Committee of Safety as follows :
The Humble Memorial of Isaac Rindge, William Torrey, William Hart, Peter Pearse, John Pierce & James Sheafe, all prisoners in Portsmouth Gaol, Sheweth, That your Memorialists on February last were laid under Bonds in the sum of five hundred Pounds each, to remain good and peaceable subjects within this State for the term of one year ;- which obligation your Memorialists have on their part strictly adhered to ;- And the Honble Committee at the same time on their part, promised them safety and protection; Notwithstanding which to the great surprise of your memorialists The Committee of Portsmouth without any accusation of any crime, have confined them to close gaol.
Now your Memorialists further relying on the good faith plighted them to take the matter under their consideration and make such order thereon as may liberate your memorialists according to the tenor of
1 Prov. Pap. VIII : 569.
251
CIVIL, LEGISLATIVE AND MILITARY, 1727-1787.
the Bonds and according to the promises and assurances made them by that Committee at the time as afore-mentioned.
The census of June 1, 1777, gave Newmarket 238 polls, and amount of ratable estate, £468, 16s., 8d., the proportion of £14, 4s., 111/2d., to £1,000. Newmarket was exceeded in number of polls and amount of ratable estate by five towns in Rockingham County, and by ten towns in the State.
Josiah Adams of Newmarket, June 7, 1777, was appointed Justice of the Peace for the County of Rockingham.
Lieut. Robert Pike received, June 26, authority to enlist men to be marched to Providence for the defence of Rhode Island. He probably enlisted the 34 men required and so earned his Cap- tain's commission.
Capt. James Hill, June 27, of Newmarket, was "chosen & appointed Lieutenant Colonel of the fourth regiment of Militia in this State commanded by Colo Nicholas Gilman."
Dr. John Marsters, September 5, 1777, petitioned the Commit- tee of Safety for release from Gaol.
Captain Gilman was placed upon a committee, November 20, 1777, "to consider the accounts & abstracts of Brigadier-General Stark and report thereon."
Capt. Samuel Gilman was a member of the House from New- market, December, 1777, and was allowed £9, 4s., for 14 days at- tendance and six miles travel.
During the time from February 11 to March 14, 1778, the ac- counts, etc., of the roll of Capt. Robert Pike's Company amount- ing to £759, 12s., were paid.
Walter Bryent, April 2, 1778, was appointed Justice of the Peace for Rockingham County.
A convention met at Concord, June 10, 1778, "to form a Per- manent Plan of Government." Newmarket failed to send a delegate.
An act was passed, November, 1778, "to prevent the return to this State of certain persons therein named and of others who have left or shall leave or either of the United States of America and have joined or shall join the Ennemies thereof." John Wentworth, late governor of the state, heads the list of 77 names including "Jacob Brown and George Bell of Newmarket, Traders. ''1
1 Prov. Pap. VIII : 810-12.
252
HISTORY OF NEWFIELDS.
The Committee of the House, on sick and disabled soldiers, re- ported, October 31, 1778, "that Lieut. Joseph Hilton who was wounded while fighting with the enemy on the 7th of Oct. 1777 near Stillwater ought to be enrolled and receive half pay from the first day of Oct. 1778." He was ordered to be enrolled ac- cordingly.
Resolutions were passed, April 20, 1780, affirming that New Hampshire will "comply with the requisition of Congress with respect to the furnishing supplies for the Continental army," and that all pastures belonging to "absentees from the United States" should be used for the fattening of cattle for the use of the army, and that Capt. Samuel Gilman, trustee of Governor Wentworth's estate, "be directed to exchange any horses or horse-kind or any other cattle unfit for beef on said farm, for beef cattle for the same purpose." By a vote, April 27, Captain Gilman was directed "to deliver to Mark Hunking Wentworth Esq. all the furniture now in his hands at Portsmouth, also fam- ily pictures at Wolfborough," belonging to the estate of Gov- ernor Wentworth.1
By a vote of the "Council Board June 9, 1780, a bill empow- ering Samuel Gilman, trustee, to sell the stock of cattle &c., on the Gov. Wentworth estate," was passed.2
The General Assembly gave the towns of Stratham and New- market, November 2, 1780, leave "to raise money by a Lottery to repair the Bridge between said Towns."
The Council Board voted, November 14, 1781, "to receive the report of the Comee on Col. Gilman's selling the Lands of the late Gov. Wentworth;" and that he "sell no more of said Estate until the further order of the General Court."3
A vote was passed, January 11, 1782, ordering Captain Gil- man "to proceed in selling the Estate of the late Gov. Went- worth."
The selectmen of Newmarket-Walter Bryent, Jr., Joseph Doe and Wentworth Cheswell-October 31, 1782, warned the "legal Inhabitants paying taxes" "to meet at the Old Meeting House" November 18, to choose certain officers, and "To take into Con- sideration the Plan of Government proposed by the Convention
1 Prov. Pap. VIII : 861.
2 Prov. Pap. VIII : 915.
3 Prov. Pap. VIII : 855-7.
253
CIVIL, LEGISLATIVE AND MILITARY, 1727-1787.
of this State, by their Resolution of the 21st of August last to be laid before the People-and Take such order thereon as the Meeting may think proper."
At the meeting November 18, after the vote electing Col. James Hill representative was declared, objection was made that the proceedings of the meeting were not legal because the voters had not taken the oath of allegiance, and after discussion "for Some Time" the meeting was adjourned to November 25.
At the adjourned meeting it was voted by a large majority to proceed to finish the business of the Warrant. Whereupon Capt. Samuel Gilman, Captain Neal, Theodore Carlton and Nathaniel Gilman "dissented against the above Vote by Reason the Voters not being Qualified-" After votes for councillors had been brought in, the meeting was adjourned to December 9. At this second adjourned meeting a paper was presented by the dis- senters giving reasons for their action, which were as follows :
1st Because when the Votes were brought in for a representative and an objection was made against any Persons Voting who had not taken the Oath of Allegiance to the State the Moderator did not take care to see the Voters quallified according to Law, but Declared Colo Hill chosen by a Majority of only One Vote, when it was Notoriously known that many of the Persons that voted had not taken the Oath according to Law.
2dly Because after the Objection was made aforesaid and debated upon and the Act of the State enjoining the Aforesaid Oath was Read and the Meeting adjourned - on that Account no Entry thereof was made, but on the adjournment the Moderator proceeded in the Vote for Counsellors in the Same Manner as before without the Voters being Quallified and further Adjourned the Meeting to Consider of the Plan of Government without any Notice being taken of the utter illegality of such proceeding-
3dly Because we Apprehend that many People were misled into such undue measures by Colo Hill publickly declaring in the Meeting that the Act enjoining an Oath of Allegiance was not intended for the people here but only made for the People in the upper part of the State - and therefore because many who were not Quallified and others that were Qualified Conceiving the proceedings to be illegall did not vote either for Representative or Councellors, We as aforesaid do Dissent and Protest against the proceedings had or to be had in the Premises - and request an Entry of the foregoing on the Records -
Samuel Gilman, Robert Pike, Bradstreet Gilman, Andrew Gilman, Samuel Neal, James Gilman, Daniel Hilton, Nath1 Gilman, Joseph S. Gil- man, Theodore Carlton, Hubartus Neal, Jacob Fowler-
254
HISTORY OF NEWFIELDS.
After the reading of the paper, upon motion, it was voted "to adjourn the Meeting to the Widdow Longfellow's House Imme- diately-" and meeting there, "after Reading the Plan of Gov- ernment and debateing thereupon-it was put whether the said Plan Should be Received or Not, it past in the Affirmative Ten for it, and Three against it-" The meeting then dissolved.
In the House, December 20, 1782, it was voted "That the elec- tion of Col. James Hill as a member from Newmarket be con- sidered. as irregular and insufficient to entitle him to a seat in the House." Yeas 43, nays 17.
On the first Tuesday of June, 1783, the Constitutional Conven- tion sent out a "Third Form of Government" which was ratified by the people and established by the Convention, October 31, 1783. Slavery was never legalized in New Hampshire, though it practically existed to some extent, Indians and negroes hav- ing been held and sold as property.
Nathaniel Rogers of Newmarket was delegate to the Consti- tutional Convention adopting the Federal Constitution, voting yea. Also a delegate to the Convention in 1791-92 at Concord to revise the Constitution.
A definitive treaty with Great Britain was consummated, September 30, 1783, on November 4, the army was disbanded, and December 23, Washington resigned his commission.
Nathaniel Ewer and 38 others sent, March 23, 1784, a peti- tion to "his Excellency the President and Honble Council for the State of New Hampshire," asking the appointment of James Smith, "a person of good reputation and well qualified," as Jus- tice of the Peace for Rockingham County.
Another petition, April 5, 1784, is similarly addressed by the inhabitants of Newmarket as follows :
humbly Shews-
That the necessity of appointing civil Officers of integrity uprightness & ability is of the last importance, & deeply felt by your Petitioners- That as your Petitioners wish that Persons may be appointed in this town to the Office of Justices of the Peace, whose lives, Abilities & Estate will not only do honor to the town, but tend to make the govern- ment under which we live permanent & respectable. That as a multi- plicity of business is transacted in that part of the Town called Lamper-River, which part of the town for some time past has been, & now is, destitute of a person in Commission for the Conservation
255
CIVIL, LEGISLATIVE AND MILITARY, 1727-1787.
of the Peace- Your Petitioners humbly beg leave to mention to your Excellency & honours, Jeremy Bryent Esqr as a Person (resident in said part of the town) best qualified, in their opinion, for that Important office- Your Petitioners mean not to dictate, but humbly pray your Excellency & honours, if you think the above named Person worthy, that he may be appointed to the aforesaid important Office &, as in duty bound, will ever pray &c-
James Hill, Daniel Hill, John Shute, Jacob Fowler, Edward Hilton, Saml Gilman, Andrew Gilman, Thos Taylor, Levi Chapman, Robert Pike Jr., William Cario, Philip Fowler, Nath1 Gilman, Thomas Bennett, Walter Bryent Jr, John Bennet, Winthrop Smith, Eliphalet Smith, Benja Mead, Wentworth Cheswill, Levi Kinnison, Moses Kinnison, Josiah Hilton, Robert Goodwin, Jonath Wigens, Jacob Ames, John Watson, Cotton Bennet, David Chapman, Levi Pickering, Dudly Smart, Richard Hilton, Samuel Ward, John Sanborn, Solomon Daniels, Edward Wells, Wm French, Thomas Hanaford, Zebulon Barber, John Ames, Thos Carlton, Charles Smart, jr, Joseph Saweige, Samuel Waymouth, Hilton Smart, Wiggin Doe, Sam Chapman, John M. Smith, Andrew Smith, thomas Wiggin, Benning Brackett, Daniel Hilton, Samuel Pickering, John Perkins, Jacob Folsom, William Folsom, Jacob Hersey, John Marston.
Hubartus Neal and 38 others of the leading men of Newmarket, June 14, 1785, petitioned the House of Representatives then in session for authority to call a special meeting to make choice of a representative as follows:
Humbly Shows the Subscribers Inhabitants of Newmarket, That at the last Annual Meeting held in Newmarket for the Choice of a Repre- sentative a Vote was Obtained to desolve said Meeting without any Choice being made, Contrary to the Minds of a great Number of said Inhabitants-
Your Petitioners conceiving themselves Injured they therefore pray your Honrs would Grant Liberty to the Selectmen of Newmarket, to call a meeting to make Choice of a Representative to Represent said Town in the General Court the Current year-and as bound Shall pray &c-
John Langdon and Nicholas Gilman were delegates from New Hampshire to the National Convention, holding a session from May to September, 1787, to revise the Articles of Confederation, and September 17, the Convention sent out a new plan of govern- ment, the Federal Constitution.
Elisha Thomas, presumably a citizen of Newmarket, sent, April 18, 1788, the following petition to the President and Privy Council of New Hampshire :
256
HISTORY OF NEWFIELDS.
The Petition of Elisha Thomas now a Prisoner in the Gaol at Dover in the County of Strafford in said State-humbly sheweth- That at the Supreme Court of Judicature of said State, holden at Dover in said County of Strafford, on the third Tuesday of April instant, your peti- tioner was convicted upon an Indictment for the Murder of Captain Peter Drowne of New Durham upon the fourth day of February last, upon which conviction the Honble Judges of said Court passed upon your petitioner the Sentence of Death & appointed Thursday the twenty second day of May next for carrying into execution the dreadful Sentence. The love of life implanted by the Supreme Creator & disposer of it, in the breasts of all his Creatures, the anxious solicitude each Child of Nature discovers to grasp one short space more; added to a full conviction of the necessity of a serious & solemn preparation to meet the Judge of Judges, Empires & Worlds- induces him most humbly to implore your Excellency & Honors to respite for a space, that to you may appear reasonable, the execution of the awful Sen- tence,- that thereby in the fragment that yet remains of a life, like that of other Mortals greatly sullied & dishonored by frailty & imper- fection ; he may have an opportunity of importuning an all merciful God for the pardon & expiation of his many Sins, of Securing an interest in the sufferings of his Redeemer, and of obtaining that peace which the World cannot give, & without the attainment of which, he and all his fellow Mortals must forever be miserable-
Your Petitioner might here suggest, that he has an Innocent wife, & two remaining children, whom the hand of public Justice is about to bereave of their only hope of Support .- for whom he feels the most earnest Sollicitude- & whom he should wish might be so left, as to be above necessity-or compulsion to depend upon the cold hands of Charity-that as he is about to quit the World, he would also wish to to do justice to his fellow Mortals & thereby be enabled to die in peace with all men .- From the Benevolence Humanity and mercy, which constitute so conspicuous a part of the Characters of your Excellency & Honors, he is fully sensible that your Goodness will add a few to the days of life now allotted him; and while he approaches the throne of Grace and most devoutly implores the pardon of all his Sins, he shall not cease ardently to pray, that Heaven will be pleased to bless your Excellency and Honors-with Wisdom Health & long and uninter- rupted happiness, and his latest breath while employed in requesting Mercy for himself will also implore the benediction of Heaven upon you & your Posterity-
ELISHA THOMAS.1
The next day two other petitions, one signed by fifty-five per- sons and the other by fifty-three "ladies of Dover," were sent in asking for such reprieve, saying "if the request be granted it will afford them great sensible pleasure." In due order these
1 Prov. Pap. XI : 547.
257
THE REVOLUTION AND WAR OF 1812.
petitions were considered and a respite was granted "until Tues- day the third day of June next."
Col. Thomas Tash, January 10, 1791, resigned his commission as Justice of the Peace in favor of his son Thomas, "If the presi- dent & Counsel Sees fite to appoint him in my Room."
Chapter XVI.
THE REVOLUTION AND WAR OF 1812.
The citizens of Newmarket, like those of other towns in the vicinity, felt the chafing of the British yoke, and when the time was ripe for open rebellion for the most part were ready to take up arms for their independence. The forced reshipment and removal out of the province of two cargoes of tea, in June and September, 1774, by the citizens of Portsmouth and vicinity, in- dicated the growing feeling of the colonists towards the mother country and heralded the coming storm. But the first overt act of the Revolution was doubtless the seizure, under the leadership of John Langdon and John Sullivan, of Fort William and Mary, December 14 and 15, 1774, with its store of arms and ammuni- tion and all without bloodshed. Its one hundred barrels of gunpowder, fifteen cannon and sixty stand of arms, wisely se- creted for the time in different localities, afterwards did good ser- vice at Bunker Hill and other places. The primal cause was the reception of the copy of an order passed by the King and Council prohibiting the exportation to America of military stores of any kind, and was precipitated by information received by way of Paul Revere's express from Boston, that the British war frigate Scarborough was to be sent to Newcastle to take possession of the Fort.
Capt. Eleazer Bennett, who died in 1851, aged 101 years and six months, who was at work December 15, 1774, in the employ of General Sullivan in his mill at Packer's Falls, received word, and went to the Fort with Sullivan, Capt. Winborn Adams, Job Demeritt, and others. Peter French was also of the company. They took a gondola belonging to Benjamin Mathes who was too old to accompany them.
17
258
HISTORY OF NEWFIELDS.
A convention of delegates, meeting at Exeter January 25, 1775, addressed the people counselling peace, harmony and union among themselves, the practicing of economy, the promotion of manufactures, the avoiding of law suits, drilling themselves in military tactics, and appealing to the Divine Being to espouse their righteous cause and secure to them liberty.
Such counsel had its effect, companies were formed and drilled, and on April 19 the men of New Hampshire dropped their imple- ments of industry, seized their weapons of war, and in companies larger or smaller hurried to the front. The women hastened to make clothes, bake bread and mould bullets for their husbands and sons, and at daylight bade them good bye with quivering lips. And later, while the men went forth to repel the invading army, the women tilled the soil, and spun yarn and wove cloth to clothe the family.
The Third Provincial Congress at Exeter, April 21, 1775, ap- pointed Col. Nathaniel Folsom to take chief command of the troops who had gone or might go to the assistance of their suf- fering brethren in the Province of Massachusetts Bay. On May 18 a regiment of New Hampshire men, consisting of 584, exclu- sive of drummers and fifers, had enlisted, and others in Massa- chusetts regiments. Israel Gilman of Newmarket was commis- sioned lieutenant-colonel of Col. James Reed's Regiment.
The Fourth Provincial Congress, August 24, 1775, voted "That Nathaniel Folsom Esq. be the General Officer over the Militia in this Colony," and "That Colo Nicholas Gilman be appointed Colonel of the Tenth Regt of Militia in this Colony, & Capt Jeremiah Folsom be Lieut Colonel, Lieut. Thomas Bartlett his first Major, & Capt. Stephen Clark his second Major."
- This Congress, November 15, 1775, voted "That Col. Jeremiah Folsom be allowed & paid out of the Treasury the ballance of his account for fire arms amounting to Three pounds seven shillings twopence."
The Fifth Provincial Congress ordered that Robert Holmes, a soldier in Capt. George Jerry Osborne's Company, whose name had been omitted on the roll, be paid out of the treasury six- teen shillings and six pence in full for his wages, "which ought to have been entered upon the roll."
Robert Holland of Newmarket, aged 19, enlisted May 1, 1775,
259
THE REVOLUTION AND WAR OF 1812.
in Captain Moore's company, Colonel Stark's regiment. He marched with Capt. Henry Dearborn's company in Col. B. Ar- nold's detachment, to Quebec. He also served for Newmarket in the Fifth company of Colonel Cilley's regiment, in 1781.
The following is the pay roll of Captain Gilman's company, Col. Enoch Poor's regiment, from the time of entry, May 25, to August 1, 1775 :
Capt. Samuel Gilman
Samuel Leavitt
Lt. Benjamin Kimball
Jonathan Leavitt
2d. Lt. Harvey Moore
John Mason
Sergt. Robert Pike
Edward Mason
Sergt. John Colcord
James Morrison
Sergt. Ward Cotton Weeks
John Morrison
Sergt. James Huse
William Pike
Corp. Eliphalet Neal
David Robinson
Barnabas McBride
Job Rowell
Corp. William Renton
William Simpson
Corp. Joseph Boynton
Daniel Stevens
Drummer Jonathan Robinson
Joseph Sawyer
Fifer Dudley Leavitt Chase
Jonathan Sawyer
Ater Bennett
Joseph Tallant
Moses Bly
Elisha Thomas
Joseph Bean
Eliphalet Veazie Joshua Veazie
Joseph Clark
Edward Chase
Thomas Veazie
Eliphalet Coffin
Thomas Wiggin
Joseph Chapman
Gideon Wiggin
Zebulon Doe
Nehemiah West Eliphalet Woodward
Moses Davis
Jonaa Stone Dudley
Eliphalet Emery
Thomas Foss
Jonathan Severance
James Goodwin
Phinehas Wiggin
Thomas Honyford
William Badger
Jonathan Heath
Solomon Howard
Enoch Heath
Levi Chapman
. Thomas Hale
Gideon Knight
Moses Bradley
James Kennison Benjamin Knight
Thomas Wood Solomon Smith
In October, 1775, the same men, besides Edward Fox and Thomas Sperling, acknowledge the receipt of four dollars from Timothy Walker, Jr., for the regimental coats promised by the Colony of New Hampshire.
Andrew Nealley received for Moses Davis.
260
HISTORY OF NEWFIELDS.
The Third Provincial Congress, June 1, 1775, commissioned Israel Gilman of Newmarket lieutenant-colonel of Col. James Reed's regiment. This regiment was in the battle of Bunker Hill, and was still encamped on Winter Hill June 21, 1775, with 455 men and officers.
Capt. Jeremiah Folsom, Capt. Hubartus Neal and James Hill were members of this Congress, meeting at Exeter April 21, 1775, and Capt. Jeremiah Folsom, Edward Parsons, of the Fourth Provincial Congress meeting at Exeter, May 17, 1775. On July 4, 1775, this Congress voted "That a Publick Stock of Fire arms shall be provided for the use of this Colony;" "That five hun- dred good fire arms be Provided & that a committee of three members of this body be chosen to procure them as soon as may be, and that Capt. Jeremiah Folsom, Mr. Moses Parsons and Capt. Stephen Evans be the committee for that Purpose, and that they Previously Enquire how cheap they can procure them, and make report as soon as may be to this Congress, if sitting, or otherwise to the committee of Safety, upon whose appropbation they are to procure the same. Also that the committee of Safety be and are hereby Impowered to Advance out of the Treasury such sums as they shall think proper to the said Committee for procuring Materials for the Purpose of making Fire arms &c."
Wentworth Wiggin, aged 30, and Lewis Kynoston, aged 24, were mustered in Captain Adams' company, Colonel Poor's regi- ment, June 2, 1775.
List of soldiers from Newmarket in Capt. Samuel Gilman's company, Colonel Poor's regiment, June 6, 1775 :
Capt Samuel Gilman
Lt. Benjamin Kimbel
Lt. Henry Moore
Age
Robert Pike Junr
28
Husbandman
John Colcord
28
Husbandman
Eliphalet Neal
23
Joiner
Joseph Chapman
22
Husbandman
William Badger
23
Ship Wright
Ward Cotton Weeks
21
Clothier
Jeremiah Foss
21
Husbandman
James Goodwin
50
Husbandman
John Mason
30
Husbandman
William Renton
31
Husbandman
Jonathan Robinson
30
Cooper
William Simpson
33
Ship Wright
261
THE REVOLUTION AND WAR OF 1812.
Gideon Wiggin
25
Husbandman
Barnabas McBride
39
Husbandman
Jona Stone Dudley
21
Cordwainer
Thomas Haniford
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