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REVOLUTIONARY INCIDENTS
OF QUEENS COUNTY.
/v
We insert some disconnected passages that
were omitted in our Revolutionary Incidents
published in 1846.
1775, Jan. 14. A report was circulated that
unless Queens County organized a committee
(as requested by the Congress) the farmers
would be excluded from the New York mar-
ket, and that some had actually been turned
out, which operated as intended. At Jamaica
a few persons assembled privately, two miles
from the village, made a collection for the
Constable, and got him to call a meeting
secretly. They sent for friends from Hemp-
stead, to make a show of hands, and yet had
but a small majority. — Rivington' s Gazette.
1775, May 10. Thomas Smith, John Hew-
lett and John Townsend, Justices, of Oyster-
bay, hearing of anonymous advertisements
being set up to notify the people to appear at
Jamaica, 33d instant, to choose Deputies to
form a Convention to carry the Resolves of
the Continental Congress into execution, take
this method to perpetuate to posterity, that
they pay no regard to any matter contrary to
the sacred oath they have taken to preserve
the peace of the county as far as they are
able. This protest they entered on the town
records.
At the next town-meeting, April 3, 1776, it
was voted that this protest of Thomas Smith,
Esq., John Hewlett, Esq., and John Town-
send, Esq. , be erased from the records :
For — William Townsend, John Luyster,
Benjamin Birdsall, Samuel Burr, James
Townsend of Duck Pond, Joseph Coles at
Creek, Phillip Youngs, William Willis, Peter
Hegeman, Dr. James Townsend.
Against — Thomas Jackson, Penn Cock,
Mouris Casliow.
1777, April 1. At the annual town-meeting
it was voted to re-enter the narrative of the
three Justices, erased by the vote of ten men,
April 3d, 1776, when the freedom of election
was destroyed, the Congressional party came
into Oysterbay with armed force and took
great numbers of the loyal freeholders and
inhabitants prisoners ; some few they carried
off prisoners, the others they disarmed and
carried off their arms, and obliged them to
sign their paper not to oppose their measures.
This the Congressional party did some months
before the annual town-meeting in April, 1776.
The said narrative being first put on record
to perpetuate to distant ages what a large
majority of loyalists the township contained,
we humbly conceive that if the said narrative
is not re-entered (that now stands erased on
the record) the rising generation may be led
to believe that the great majority of loyalists
that voted against Deputies to form Con-
gresses (at the annual town-meeting, April
4, 1775,) changed their sentiments before the
annual town-meeting, April 3, 1776. These
are the reasons of the subscribers.
Thos. Smith,
John Townsend.*
Entered by order of said meeting, March
34, 1778. John Cock, Clerk.
1775, Dec. 30. Congress orders the arms
received from William Mills, Dirck Amer-
man, and John Stanson or Stein of Captain
Skidmore's company at Jamaica to be re-
turned, and that Jonah Roads, Cornelius Loo-
sie, Mary Mills, Peter Fredericks and Fred-
erick Amerman be paid the value of theirs.
1776, Jan. 4. The Congress recommended
that all persons opposed to the Revolution
should be held up as enemies to their country.
This caused petitions like the following to be
sent in : Thomas Place and Gabriel Van Cott
pray to be restored to the good opinion of the
friends of American liberty. Feb. 10, Cap-
tain Jacob Mott. Feb. 19, William and
Thomas Cock.
1776, May 39. Charles Loosley and Thomas
Elms, Hempstead Harbor, petition the Pro-
vincial Congress to be excused from military
*Thi8 John Townsend, aged 44, married (1767)
Judith Townsend, aged 17. He went once to England
during the war. He died of small pox, 1785, having
lived in concealment (for fear of Whig resentment) at
Peter R. Kissam's. His widow kept his death a secret
till she could secure all his property.
6
Revolutionary Incidents
duty, as they were busy making paper, a
trade they were brought up to in England.
1776, June 27. Judge Thomas Jones,
while peaceably living on his estate at Fort
Neck, was taken by Major Abell and a party
of rebels, by order of Provincial Congress,
and carried to New York, for refusing to ap-
pear before a Committee. Discharged, June
30, on his parole. — His. ii, 295.
In Committee, Queens Co.,)
July 1, 1776. [
The Committee took into consideration a
Resolve of Provincial Congress relating to
removal of stock* from the south side of this
county ; and, as many difficulties and impos-
sibilities do appear, this Committee has ap-
pointed Colonel Remsen, Colonel Robinson
and Samuel Riker to make a representation
thereof to the Provincial Congress and Gene-
ral officers of the Continental army ; and of
the defenceless state of this county, and re-
quest such force as shall be able, with the
county militia, to prevent our being plun-
dered by the Ministerial troops ; and also to
apply for £200.
Benj. Sands, Chairman.
Cow Neck, Aug. 177G.
To George Townsend, Esq.,
Chairman of the Committee of Queens Co. :
Sir: As the New Levies under my com-
mand are ordered immediately to march to
the west end of this Island, and as their
bounty and rations are absolutely necessary
to this end, you will therefore please to send
by the bearer hereof, Thomas T. Jackson, all
the money in your hands which Convention
have allowed for this purpose, his receipt
being your discharge. Your compliance will
oblige
Your very Humble Servant,
John Sands, Col.
To Mr. S.\.muel, Townsend, Esq.:
I desire. Sir, you would deliver the money
for the bounty of Col. Sands' Battalion, agree-
able to the within order,
per me,
George Townsend, Chairman.
♦After the batt'.f of Brooklyn the stock collected by
General Woodhull fell into the hands of the British,
who kept the fat cattle for army tisd and delivered the
milch cows, lean and young cattle, to their owners.
Daniel Chamier, Commissary General, would not help
Judj;e Jones to got payment for his fat cattle.— ^ee/«>
Journal, i, 116-7.
Rec'd, the 9th August, 1776, of Samuel
Townsend, £350, on account of money bor-
rowed of the Congress, which, with the £50
paid said Samuel Townsend, makes the whole
sum borrowed from Congress, £350
£400
George Townsend,
Chairman of County Committee.
1776, Aug. 11. Judge Jones was seized
upon by Lieut. Skinner and a parcel of riHe-
men, conducted to New York, and carried
before a Board of Officers. By order of
George Washington, August 13th, he was
sent to Connecticut ; August 15th, he set sail ;
19th, arrived at Norwich ; 21st, admitted to
parole within certain limits. After the battle
of Brooklyn, Gov. Trumbull let hiiu return
home on parole. — IBs., Vol. ii, 297.
Rec'd, Oysterbay, 13th August, 1776, of
George Townsend, for Col. Sands, by the
hands of Samuel Townsend, £622, 14, 8,*
bounty money, sent by the Convention of the
State of New York, to pay the bounty of mea
lately raised in Queens County for the pur-
pose of guarding the stock of said county.
Tnos. T. Jackson. f
Rec'd, the 13th August, 1776, of Samuel
Townsend, fourteen sheets, to the amount of
£68, 2, 8, rec'd per me as Chairman of
County Committee, the said money to pay the
bounty of the late Draughts under Col. John
Sands. George Townsend.
1776, Aug. 23. A list of one-fourth part of
Capt. Phillip Valentine's company, drafted,
July 25, for the American army in Brooklyn:
Benjamin Cornwell, serv't. Uriah Valentine,
Peter, serv't to Griswold, Samuel Davenport,
William Crocker, Austin Williams,
Daniel Willis, John Carle,
Carr Hubbs, Joseph Smith,
Lott Carman, Samuel Place,
John Newbury, Charles Tims,
John Davis,?: Peter Hurley ,|
Samuel Searing.^ Garret Nostrand.J
Samuel Lockwood.t William Bedle,:):
Richard Seaman, William Johnson, J
*50 sheets, 998 4d each, is £-248, 6. 8
3 do. 72 dollars each, 374, 8
£622, 14, 8
The Continental currency, for convenience, was dis-
tributed in sheets, and not yet cut up into separate
bills.
+1781, Dec. 1.5. Major Thomas Tredwell Jackson,
at Peekskill, petitions Gov. Clinton for his brother to
remove from Queens County.
^Substitutes for James Tobine, Bpenefns and Uriah
Piatt, John Searing, Derick Albertson, Peter Titu8
and Richard Townsend.
At Jamaica, Benjamin Whitehead, Joseph
Dunbar and Peter Mills were drafted, but not
delivered. — Eev. Tncid. Q. Co., p. 78.
1776. The Americans burnt nearly thirty
houses on Long Island, when Washington
abandoned his lines. — Jones' Jour., ii, 808.
After the British got possession of Long
Island, their vessels sailed up the Sound and
lay to on the west side of Great Neck.
Capt. Brinton Payne, of Westchester, hav-
ing observed that a boat went from Wool ley's
to two British ships lying under the Long
Island shore opposite Throg's point, crossed
the Sound on the night of August 29th, and
carried off John Woolley, Jr., a ferryman
and an invalid, and brought him before the
Committee of Safety, at Kingsbridge, one
Hewlett, taken at the same time, having es-
caped. On being examined, Woolley said
that he and Phillip were brothers of Thomas
and sons of Capt. John Woolley, and that he
was going (Aug. 28) to remove his father's
boat from Thome's dock home to a safer
place to be unrigged, when he was taken,
about noon, by the British barge, and carried
on shipboard, where he saw two of Henry
Allen's negroes. The British asked him to
supply them with provisions. He replied
the cattle were all driven off. So they let
him go. Sept. 5th, Woolley, having given a
bond to the Committee, with Richard Thorne
and Henry Stocker as sureties, that he would
not quit the main land nor aid the British,
was suffered to depart.
Col. JosiAn Smith's Journal. — "1776.
I received orders from the New York Conven-
tion ; July 30, was at Huntington, and set out
thence to Queens County, with Col. Sands
and Major Remsen ; 31st, I went down to
Watch Hill, to see the guard at the bottom of
Cow Neck ; Aug. 1, I spent in viewing a
proper place to erect another guard on Great
Neck ; 2d, I set out from Col. Sands' to Suf-
folk County; 10th, received an express (Rich-
ard [Bragaw] and John Sackett) from the
Convention to march all the new levies to the
west end of the Island ; 12th, I set out on
our march and got as far as Huntington ;
18th, got to Lieut. Increase Carpenter's; 14th,
went down to the Ferry, to Gen. Greene's,
and took up quarters for myself and regiment
at [Rem.] Cowenhoven's ; 22d, the Regulars
landed below New Utrecht, and I, with regi-
ment, went down to Flatbush and near the
Regulars, out all night and our advance
Queens County — 2d Series. 7
killed several of them ; 23d, all day in the
woods [of Flatbush] and incessant firing all
day — we killed a number and they wounded
four of us, and shot Col. Martin through the
breast — I was out on sentry in the woods all
night and a dreadful thunder storm ; 26th,
relieved of guard in afternoon; 27th, alarmed
about 2 in the morning, and had many skir-
mishes, and they attempted to force our lines
and killed one of my men, we drove them
back and lay in the trenches all night ; 28th,
lay in the lines all day, exceeding heavy rain
and a continual fire kept up between us and
the Regulars all day, and we lay in the
lines all night ; 29th, lay in the lines till
middle of afternoon and then marched over
to New York, staid there all night and were
alarmed about 2 in the morning that our
army was leaving our lines on Long Island ;
30th, marched to Kingsbridge ; 31st, to New
Rochelle, tried to get passage by water to
Long Island, but could not ; Sept. 1st,
marched to Mamaroneck, and there we em-
barked on board vessels to go home, and
about 11 o'clock at night got ashore at Capt.
Piatt's, Smithtown ; 2d, I got home ; 3d,
went to Southold to see Col. Livingston, but
he had gone to New England ; 6th, I went to
Mrs. WoodhuU's."
Jamaica, Oct. 2, 1776.
To John Hewlett, Esq.:
You are to use your utmost endeavors to
bring me cattle and sheep for the army; when
delivered, a receipt will be given, to be paid
at a certain time and place. If any butcher
or others interfere with you, under pretence
of bringing them to me, without a written
order from me, seize their cattle, put a fair
value on them, and drive them to me, and
the owners shall be paid ; also seize all sheep
and cattle of Rebels who have left their hab-
itations ; and employ proper people to assist
you. For doing whereof this shall be your
warrant.
Jas. Christie, Com. for Cattle & Sheep.
Jamaica. 29 Aug., 177G.
Permit Isaac Bemiet to pass iind repass
without molestation.
Will. Erskine, Brig. Gen.
O O
Flushing, 26th Sep., 1776.
To Luke Bergen :
Ficss two wasjons for the Service of the
Light Dragoons.
S. Birch, Lt. Col.
o o
Revolutionary Inc idents
Long Island,
1776.
You are hereby ordered to preserve for the
KING'S use, 3 loads of hay, 3 of wheat, 3 of
straw, 3 of rye, 3 of barley; 50 bushels of
wheat, 50 of oats, 50 of rye, 50 of barley, 50
of Indian corn ; and not to dispose of the
same, but to an order in writing, from Major
John Morrison, Commissary for forage,
as you will answer the contrary at your peril.
To Israel Pearsall.
A list of creatures taken from John Bowne
by the Major of the Light horse, for the use
of the army, viz. :
21 old sheep, at 13s., £13, 13
15 lambs, at lis., 8, 5
Flushing, 8th Month, 29th, 1776.
9th Mo. , 9Tn. Taken by Capt. Moxsome,
of the Light horse, for the use of the troop,
31 bush, oats, at 3s., £4, 13
1776. The Americans burnt nearly thirty
houses on Long Island when Washington
abandoned his lines. — Jones's Journal, ii, 308.
Admiral Harvey said he served in the
United States in 1776, when a middy. He
was cast away in the Liverpool in February,
on Rockaway Beach. People kind to him, a
Quaker family of the name of Hicks, and an-
other family in particular. Remained quar-
tered on them several weeks, part of the
time in tents, always kindly and hospitably
treated. When they (the crew) came to pay
off, and expected to have a great deal above
allowance to pay for, the good people would
take nothing but the King's allowance, and
told them they were people in distress, and
would take nothing out of their pockets.
The first night of their going ashore and
landing in boats they swamped. The people
came down in wagons and took them up
home, changed and dried their clothes, and
gave them supper. He never forgot it. —
Irving's Life, ii, 180.
1776, Aug. 31. Ezra L'Hommedieu writes
from Hartford to Col. Josiah Smith, on the
road with his regiment from New York east-
ward :
Dear Sir : I am infonned that the Regu-
lars have been down on the Plains and that
it is unsafe for you to pass into any part of
Queens County. Our worthy friend, Gen.
Woodhull, is a prisoner, wounded in the
head and a bayonet run through his arm.
His wound on his head was bad. He was
taken at Increase Carpenter's, alone, in the
afternoon, expecting himself at a place of
safety. I have this information from Col.
Robinson, of Jamaica, who says it may be de-
pended on. I am going eastward, in order to
send over a boat to Long Island.
Lieut. Jabez Fitch writes that ' ' On Sep-
tember 6, 1776, Gen. Woodhull, of the Long
Island militia, was sent from the Mentor to
the hospital at New Utrecht. He was an
aged gentleman, and was taken by a party of
the enemy's light-horse, at Jamaica, and al-
though he was not taken in arras, yet those
bloodthirsty savages cut and wounded him in
the head and other parts of his body, with
their swords, in a most inhuman manner, of
which wounds he died at the hospital ; and
though the director of their affairs took but
little care to preserve his life, yet they were
so generous to his lady as to indulg-e her with
liberty to carry home the general's corpse
and bury it with decency."
John Morin Scott writes (Sept. 6, 1776,)
from White Plains : "Poor Gen. Woodhull,
with a lieutenant and four men, were made
prisoners on Long Island. I had a letter
from him dated the 1st instant, but not dated
from any place, nor does he tell vae how he
was taken. He has lost all his baggage, and
requested of me two shirts and two pairs of
stockings, which I should have sent him,
had not the flag of truce gone before I re-
ceived the letter. I shall comply with his
request by the first opportunity."
A descendant of the inn-keeper. Increase
Carpenter, says Woodhull was in the hall as
the British entered. On arresting him, they
bid him say: "God save the King!" He
replied : ' ' God save us all !" That did not
satisfy his captors, and they fell on him with
their swords. He rushed out of the back
door, followed by the soldiers, who stopped
him a few feet from the door, where a maple
tree to commemorate the deed was planted
by the Carpenter family. Carpenter's grand-
son said he had heard say that Woodhull was
assaulted by the soldiers for refusing to drink
the King's health.
Judge Thomas Jones says, in his History
of New York, ii, 332, (but don't say who told
him), that " Woodhull took up his quarters
at an inn about two miles east of Jamaica.
His militia, panic-struck, left him and re-
turned home, about forty excepted. A party
of light-horse were sent to Jamaica, the even-
Queens County — 3d Series
ing after the battle, (Augvxst 27, 1776), as an
escort to some prisoners taken in the action.
Receiving information wliere Woodhull was,
they surrounded the house and made him
and his party all prisoners. Not the least
opposition was made, not a gun fired. They
asked for quarter, and it was generously
granted. The general, after his surrender,
favored by the darkness of the night, at-
tempted to make his escape, but being dis-
covered by the sentries while attempting to
get over a board fence, he received several
strokes from their broadswords, particularly
one upon the arm. He was carried on board
a man-of-war and treated with hospitality.
The surgeons advised amputation. He would
not consent to this. The wound mortified
and he died in a few days."*
This story of Woodhull's attempting to
escape is offset by the sworn testimony of
Robert Troup : " That while he was confined
on board a transport. Brigadier General
Woodhull was also brought on board in a
shocking mangled condition ; that he asked
the general the particulars of his capture,
and was told by the general that he had been
taken by a party of light-horse under com-
mand of Capt. Oliver Delancey; that he was
asked by the captain if he would surrender ;
that he answered in the affirmative, provided
he would treat him like a gentleman, which
Capt. Delancey assured him he would; where-
upon the general delivered his sword, and
that immediately after said Oliver Delancey,
Jr., struck him; and others of said party,
imitating his example, did cruelly cut and
hack him in the manner he then was. " See
also "Revolutionary Incidents of Suffolk
County," pp. 31-41, and "Queens County in
Olden Times," p. 53.
This fiction of Woodhull's clambering over
a fence may have been borrowed from the
fact that when the British rode up to Robert
Hinchman's house, in Jamaica, he ran out at
the back door, and, as he was getting over
the fence, found himself surrounded on all
sides and had to beg for quarter. All other
accounts agree in this : that the general re-
ceived his wounds (by whomsoever inflicted)
when he was first captured, and none make
*VVe het-itated to give currency to this story while
the MS. containing it was liept private under lock and
key. It is now published entire ; and the credibility
of the story may be estimated by a comparison with
a score or two of other passages in the two volumes
of the " History of New York during the Revolution."
9
any mention of this attempting to escape.—
See "New York Historical Magazine," for
1861, pp. 140-233, and " H. P. Johnston's
Observations," p. 73.
Gen. Woodhull's movements (in removing
cattle out of the way of the enemy) have not
been correctly described by our local histori-
ans. They misplace his letters. They are
given in the order they were written, in my
"Revolutionary Incidents of Suffolk and
Kings Counties," pp. 33-5. It has been
taken for granted that the letter first written
was first received. This is not so. The first
letter, by misadventure, did not reach the
Convention till after the second had been re-
ceived and acted on. On August 25th and
26th Woodhull was at Jamaica village, pre-
paring to move westward, and on the morn-
ing of the 27th he had got to the "west end"
(not westward) of Queens County, probably
where the road runs that serves as a division
line between Kings and Queens Counties,
west of the present Woodhaven. Here he
wrote his first letter of August 27th. Then,
hearing the bad news of the defeat of the
American forces at Brooklyn, he withdrew
eastward to Jamaica village, where he wrote
his second letter of August 27th. He halted
at Jamaica yet on the 28th, whence he dis-
patched his third and last letter.*
Queens County, ss.: 12th Sept., 1776.— I
certify that Abram Probasco, of the township
of Oysterbay, who had taken up arms volun-
tarily in the American army, hath this day
taken the oath of allegiance to His Majesty
King George, before me, John Townsend,
one of His Majesty's justices of the peace of
Queens County. [Probasco received a pardon
from William Howe, January 1, 1777].
"To whom it may concern." These may
certify that Abraham Probasco hath this day
taken the oath of allegiance to the State of i
New York. Dated this 3d day of March , 1784^ \
Prior Townsend, JusticB.-"
1777. On a tombstone in the churchyard.
Flushing, is this inscription : " William Loul-
*This letter was, in the lapse of time, torn in two,
one leaf (through the ignorance of the clerk) was
bound up in Vol. xvi, p. 339, of the MSS. of Provin-
cial Congress and the other in Vol. xviii, p. 35. I
united the two parts and thus printed the U-tters en-
tire. I made a like discovery in a letter (March 9,
ITTH,) relating to Daniel Kissam and Timothy Smith,
which was also torn apart and inserted in Vols, xxvii,
p. 23, and xxxv, p. 563.-8ee -'Revolutionary Inci-
dents of Queens County," pp. 48-50.
10
EeVOLUTIONAKY iNCinENTS
ber, Ensign and Adjutant in the Prince of
Wales' Volunteers, died February 14th, aged
35."
1777, July 13. P. Vandervoort and Rich-
ardson Sands, at Middletown, intercede for
Thomas T. Jackson, a Whig, taken in the
Sound, June 3.
1778, July 34. Died in Jamaica, Rev. Wil
liam Drummond, a Scotch Refugee from New
Canaan, Ct. He was installed Pastor there
of the Congregational church in 1771 and de-
posed in 1777.
1779, June 31. Henry Nicoll was married
to Elsie Willett, of Spring Hill, Flushing.
1780, June 5. The British packet Carteret
was stranded near Jones' Inlet. She was sold
at auction. Four American privateers drove
her ashore, May 34 ; but they were driven
off by a British fleet before they could get
much from her. Her crew escaped with the
mail to Long Island, and so to New York.
Copies of old papers of Anthony Van Nos-
trand, of Wolver Hollow, who was often im-
pressed by the British to do their carting :
1777, June 5. My wagon and one horse
and gears gone in the army. 5th July, I got
one horse again at Denyse's ferry at the Nar-
rows ; and June 39, Samuel Stringham, the
driver, came home. So I charge the King to
twenty-five days for Stringham and thirty-
one days for the horse.
1777, Dec. 35. Justice Cowenhoven met
the people at Pool's, for to pay off for the
waggons and horses, as they were prised; and
I received for my waggon only £13.
1778, Dec. 33. Oysterbay. Received of
Mr. Antony Van Nostrant 10 bushels of In-
dian corn, for use of His Majesty's troops, for
which George Brindley, Esq., Commissary of
Forage, will pay.
Setii Norton, Ass. Com. Forage.
1779, One day to Jamaica for provisions
for John Tuck, Quartermaster of Tarlton's
Legion. One day for Davis, Quartermaster,
to Jamaica and to Town.
1779, Jan. 14. Prest for to go Eastward ;
and 21st, set out from Jericho ; and 34th,
came to Sagg ; and S6th, set out from Sagg
home again ; and 37th, got home again, in
the evening.
1779, Jan. 33 and 34. Prest by the Yagers
from Norridge to go to Jamaica for provisions,
and got home the next night again.
1779, Jan. 28. To Mr. Antony Van Nos-
trand : Sir — You are hereby required to hold
your horses and waggon in readiness at a
moment's warning to cart forage to Oyster-
bay. By order of
JONA. Dix, Collector of Forage.
N. B. — All gentlemen of the army will ex-
cuse him from other service, as he is in the
forage employ.
1779, March 14. Prest for to go Eastward ;
and 15th, set out from Jericho ; and 17th,
came to Sagg ; and 18th, set out from Sagg
home again ; and 31st, got home at night.
1779, April 2. Oysterbay. Received of
Mr. Anthony Van Nostrant ten hundred of
fresh hay for the use of His Majesty's troops
(for which (ieorge Brindley, Esq., Commis-
sary of Forage, will pay) and five miles cart-
age. Seth Norton, Ass. Com. Forage.
1779, May 38. I do certify that Anthony
Van Nostrant, with his waggon, has been em-
ployed in carrying the baggage of the Queen's
Rangers from Oysterbay to Valentine's hill,
from the 17th of May to the above date, being
eleven days inclusive. The above A. V. N.
is now discharged and set at liberty to return
to his respective home, which cannot be less
than two days. J. Graves Stmcoe,
Lt. Col. of Queen's Rangers.
1779, Aug. 25. Oysterbay. Received from
Anthony Van Nostrant twenty -three bushels
of oats for use of His Majesty's troops (for
which George Brindley, Esq., Commissary of
Forage, will pay,) and six miles cartage.
Setii Norton, Ass. Commissary.
One of Mr. Van Nostrand's bills was partly
written in Dutch, his vernacular : —
Oesterbay, ye 3 October,* 1779, Een vraght
rist gereden van Oesterbay na Jericho, voor
Tuck, Quartermaster van de Legion, £0.13.0.
1779, Nov. 14, Sunday. One load of hay
to Jericho for the Legion, fetched by Bill
Davis's son, taken by Holland, Quartermaster
of the Legion.
1779, Dec. 18. Oysterbay. Received from
Anthony Van Nostrand nine hundred of straw,
for use of His Majesty's troops.
N. B. Five miles cartage.
Setii Norton, Ass. Com. of Forage.
To Geo. Brindley, Esq. , Com. of Forage.
1780, June 23. For Granny Rinehart's
fees, [as midwife], paid 16s.
1780. Brought two loads of wood to Jeri-
cho for Major Goolden's corps.
1780, J,uly 6th. New York, Superintend-
ent's office. Pursuant to His Excellency Sir
William Howe's Proclamation of the 17th
July, 1777, Permission is hereby given to
Widow Hegeman in a market craft to Bush-
wick, and thence to Oysterbay [with] 14 lbs.
sugar, 3 galls, molasses, 2 galls, rum, quart,
cwt. rice, 10 yds. calico, 1 lb. whalebone, 7 yds.
Russel, 1 lb. tea, 1 lb. coffee, 1 lb. chocolate,
1 bush, salt, 1 lb. pepper, 1 pr. gloves, 6 yds.
durant ; she having complied with the direc-
tions contained in the above mentioned proc-
lamation. Lamb't Moore, D. S.
To THE officers ATTENDING.
1780, Sept. 33. Received of Isaac Bogart
sixteen hundred of fresh hay for the use of
His Majesty's army, carted twenty miles.
Wm. Shepard, a. C. F.
To Geo. Brindley, Esq., Com, of Forage.
1780, Oct. 15. Jericho. Received of Isaac
Bogart 238 lbs. of flour for the use of the
17tli Dragoons, Capt. Diemar's, &c.
Aut'r Nicholson, Quartermaster.
Ro. Archdale, Capt. 17th Drag.
To Dan'l Weir, Esq., Com. Geu'l, &c.
1780, Oct. 21. Cedar Swamp. Received
from Isaac Bogart, 7^ bushels of Indian corn
and 3^ bushels of bran, for the use of His
Majesty's troops.
Sam'l Clayton, A. C. F.
To Geo. Brindley, Esq. , Com. of Forage.
1780, Oct. 23. Cedar Swamp. Received
from Isaac Bogart 238 lbs. of flour, for the
use of His Majesty's troops.
Art'r Nicholson, Quartermaster.
R. Archdale, Capt. 17th Drag.
To Dan'l Wier, Esq., Com. Qen'l, &c.
[end of van nostrand's papers.]
1781, July 16. De Reidesel to Gen. Delan-
cey : " I have to beg of you to let my perfect
satisfaction and thanks be communicated,
through the proper channel, to Capt. Youngs'
officers and troops and Capt. Van Wyck's
company of foot ; also to such of the Queens
County militia as turned out, for their alert-
ness and willingness to assist Lt. Col. Upham.
It grieves me to be under the necessity of ex-
cluding from this number the Huntington
militia ; but their unwilling conduct and ab-
solute neglect in giving any support to
Lloyd's Neck, but too sensibly obliges me to
it. " — See ' ' Revolutionary Incidents of Queens
County," p. 333.
Queens County — 3d Series. 11
All stragglers, especially negroes, were lia-
ble to be arrested by the British patrols.
Hence the need of a passport like the follow-
ing :—
Cedar Swamp, June 10th, 1782.
Tho bearer, a negro man, l)eing employed
in cartiny provisions for tlie corps of Ya-
gers, is permitted to pass to Flushing Bay
Side unmolested.
OcHSB, Lt. Adj't Yagers.
O o
Having been favored by the kind and con-
siderate courtesy of John D. Jones with a
copy of the " History of New York," by Judge
Thomas Jones, we select some instances of
outrage committed in Queens County during
the war of the Revolution : —
"Thomas Jones, Esq., one of the Judges
of the Supreme Court of the Province, was
known for his loyalty and attachment to the
British Constitution. Yet did a quartermas-
ter of dragoons take his horses from his
ploughs, in the busiest season of the year,
put them into his own wagons, these wagons
laden with the stores of a sutler, and Jones'
own servants obliged to drive the wagons as
far as Southampton, 100 miles, and detained
for three weeks. The servants were com-
pelled to provide for themselves and horses
the whole time, and when discharged received
neither pay nor certificate." — Vol. ii, 89.
"A gentleman who was present told me
that he saw a conductor of a foraging party
put 100 horses into a countryman's barn, and
ordered them littered with oats in the sheaf,
instead of straw, and fed in the same manner.
That above 300 bushels of oats were destroyed
in this way. That the owner in the morning
civilly asked for pay or a certificate. Both
were refused. He was damned for a rebel,
and the party decamped. The name of this
farmer was Israel Oakley, of Queens County,
a loyal subject, and at this very time a Lieu-
tenant in the militia by virtue of a commis-
sion from His Majesty, granted by Gen.
Tryon, in 1778, under the great seal of the
Province of New York, of which he was then
Civil Governor." — Vol. ii, 88.
"One [Derick] Amberman, a miller, [at
the lower part of Foster's Meadow], had sold
some flour to a Major Stockton, of Skinner's
Brigade, who lived in the neighborhood.
The miller, wanting his money, applied for
payment. This the Major looked upon as an
affront ; therefore the next day, in company
with a Major Crew, he went to the mill fully
13
Reyolt'tionary Incidents
bent upon chastising the insolence of the
miller, in daring to ask for the payment of a
just debt. Upon arriving at the mill, Crew
instantly began to horsewhip the poor miller,
and while he was laboring under the disci-
pline of the whip, Stockton deliberately drew
his sword and ran him through the body, of
which wound he instantly died. No inquisi-
tion could be taken, the civil law was at an
end, of course we had no Coroner. Stockton
was, however, taken up, confined and tried
by a Court Martial for the murder, found
guilty, the sentence confirmed, yet, strange
to tell, never carried into execution, and —
what is almost incredible, yet averred as a
fact — Gen. Clinton sent to the widow desiring
her to join in a petition to him to pardon the
murderer of her husband ! This she abso-
lutely refused. The Major continued in jail
a few weeks, was then liberated by the Gen-
eral's order, and publicly walked the streets.
The military scarcely looked upon it as a
crime, at least a crime not worth puni.shing.
Where was the offence in murdering, delib-
erately murdering in cold blood, with malice
prepense, an honest old miller, a loyal subject
of his sovereign, for daring, or rather having
the impudence to ask from an otficer of the
army the payment of a small just debt '!
None, said the Commander-in Chief ; none,
said the military. Stockton was accordingly
discharged, and again employed in His
Majesty's service — a reward for murdering
one of his good, peaceable and loyal sub-
jects."— F(^?. ii, 92.
" I have seen a conductor of wagons, iipon
a foraging party, turn fifty horses into a loyal
farmer's orchard, (one Isaac Lefferts, near
Jamaica), where his apples were gathered
and put into heaps ready for making cider,
and though the farmer earnestly begged the
conductor to put them into a field where the
p isture was better, the request was insult-
ingly refused, and the apples — which, turned
into cider, would have produced £200 — were
totally destroyed. Mr. Lefferts, upon remon-
strating with the conductor against so extra-
ordinary a conduct, was called ' a damned old
rebel.' He had, it is true, been a Committee-
man, but upon Gen. Howe's first proclama-
tion, in November, 1776, he came in, submit-
ted, and renewed his oath of allegiance.
What confidence could be put in the procla-
mations of Generals, when they wei*e so fla-
grantly, unjustly and openly violated? And
yet the proclamation, in consequencoof which
the farmers surrendered, pledged the faith
and honor of the Crown that every person
availing himself of it should be protected by
His Majesty in his life, liberty and property."
— Vol. ii, 87.
" I have seen sixty liorses put into a field
of com belonging to a farmer by the name of
[Johannes] Polhemus, about three miles
[west] from Jamaica, and the whole abso-
lutely destroyed, notwithstanding all his en-
treaties to the conti-ary. The conductor
damned him for a scoundrel, a rebel and a
villain, and swore he would do as he pleased.
This farmer was ever noted for his loyalty,
in consequence of which he had been a con-
siderable sufferer while the rebels possessed
the Island."— TW. ii, 88.
" Tliomas Jackson, of Oysterbay, was a
rebel and left the Island with the rebels.
His father was a Quaker, about seventy years
of age, and a loj-al subject. Yet because the
son had lived on the fatlier's farm when the
rebellion commenced, the e.state was seized
upon by order of the Court of Police, refu-
gees pat upon it, the wood cut down and sold,
and possession kept till the evacuation of
New York in 1783."— Vol. ii, 39.
"John Shoals, of Newtown, (as worthy, as
honest and as steady a hn-alist as ever exist-
ed), loaned the corporation of New York
£1,000. Dui'ing eight years he received no
interest. At the peace the charter was re-
pealed and li(i lost all. So obnoxious was he
to the rebels that upon the evacuation of New
York he was obliged to remove with his fam-
ily to Nova Scotia." — Vol. ii, 60.
"John Willett, of Flushing, was a noted
old loyalist, nearly eighty years of age, and
had been, for opposing the rebellion, four
months a prisoner in Connecticut, some time
in Philadelphia, and some weeks in New
York. He had a mortgage of £381.12, dated
July 25, 1776, upon a lot of valuable wood-
land of John Van Loo, who had gone off the
Island with the rebel army. Permission was
given to Col. Hamilton* to cut down the wood
and carry it away and sell it for his own use.
Not a tree was left, and the mortgaged prem-
ises sank to a trifling value." — Vol. ii, 46.
* Ilamilton was a man of opulent fortune, a super-
nuniurary aid-de-cainp to Ilis Excclloncy, for wliich
he rt'ceivi'd 10 shillings a day for doin;: nothiii};, with
rations of all kinds for his timiUy.—Jone.ertinent
villains, and they returned without the least
satisfaction." — Vol. ii, 91.
"Joseph Baldwin, of Hempstead, had re-
moved to Dutchess County, fifteen years be-
fore the rebellion, leaving unsold a valuable
lot of woodland. The wood was all cut down
and sold by a parcel of refugees, under an
order from the Court of Police, under pre-
tence that the owner was a rebel, though it
was well known to the refugees that he was
Queens County — 3d Series.
15
a confirmed royalist, and would willingly
have repaired to the Royal army ; but then
he must have brought with him a wife and
.seven small children, to have been starved,
or supported by the government." — Vol. ii, 38.
" Daniel Pine, of Hempstead, a worthy
loyal subject, who during his life had op-
posed the rebellion in all its stages, died
during the war, and left the farm on which
he lived to two infant nephews, who were
born and resided at Fishkill. The Court of
Police deemed them rebels, the estate was
seized upon and given by Phillip John Liv-
ingston, manager of rebel estates, to some
refugees, who injured the house, sold the
wood, burnt the fences, and ruined the
fann." — Vol. ii, 39.
" In the spring of 1779, one Green Carryer,
an Irish refugee from Albany, to ingratiate
himself with the British authorities, com-
plained to Col. Birch, at Hempstead, of two
loyal farmers at Oysterbay, one of whom was
a trooper, the other a lieutenant in the mili-
tia, for hoarding corn. Birch sent a quarter-
master with forty men and six wagons to
fetch away the corn, but so as not to reach
the house till evening. That night all the
poultry houses in the neighborhood were
broken open, geese, turkeys, fowls, ducks,
guinea hens, sheep, lambs, calves and pigs
were plundered and filled two wagons. Four
wagons held all the hoarded corn, which in
fact was no more than what all farmers com
monly reserve for use on the farm." — Vol.
i, 323.
"Thomas Smith, Esq., of Oysterbay, was
a gentleman long in the commission of the
peace, of the utmost veracity and in affluent
circumstances. Living adjoining the Sound,
so many attempts were made by the rebels
from New England to take him ofE, that they
obliged him to remove from home, and for
more than four years before the close of the
war he lodged every night with some friend
or acquaintance, making it a rule never to
sleep two nights running at one house. By
this means he escaped their vigilance. His
house was, however, twice broken open,
plundered and robbed, his wife insulted, his
daughters abused and his sons carried off
prisoners to Connecticut." — Vol. i, 268; ii, 158.
" In the spring of 1780 the British garri-
sons of Oysterbay, Huntington and Brook
Haven (part of Delancey's Brigade) were
withdrawn and the works demolished, and
the troops removed to the neighborhood of
New York. Then Connecticut and New Jer-
sey fitted out whale boats which infested the
coasts of Long Island and plundered the in-
habitants." — Vol. ii, 299.
" Capt. Woolley, of the militia, about three
miles from Jamaica, had his house broken
open, was robbed of £700 in cash, the furni-
ture of his house, of several slaves, and was
carried prisoner to Connecticut." — Vol. i, 268.
"Richard Townsend, Esq., was robbed of
a large store of goods and carried prisoner
into New England."— Ft>?. i, 268.
"Judge Thomas Jones had his house
broken open, completely plundered, and him-
self carried into Connecticut. Miss Floyd, a
visitor, was also robbed of everything she
had. One Chichester acted as a guide. He
with six others was caught, taken to New
York, put in the Provost, but finally dis-
charged." — Vol. i, 294.
"John Townsend, Esq., of Oysterbay, was
served in the same manner, with this addi-
tion, that they almost destroyed his house, a
genteel mansion." — Vol. i, 268.
" William Nicoll, Esq., of Suffolk County,
was twice plundered ; Col. Richard Floyd
was twice plundered, his cattle, sheep and
several slaves carried off. Col. Benjamin
Floyd was robbed and carried to Connecticut,
and while released on parole had his house
again broken open in the dead of night by a
party from New England, who took away his
furniture and robbed him of £1,000 in cash."
— Vol. i, 268.
"Mr. Seaton, an Englishman, was plun-
dered by the same party, who took away his
furniture and stript his wife and three daugh-
ters of the very clothes upon their backs." —
Vol. i, 269.
•'John Hewlett, Esq., of Oysterbay, had
his house broken open and was himself car-
ried to Pokeepsie and lodged in jail for five
months." — Vol. i, 269.
"Major Parker and Major Hudson were
also plundered and carried to Connecticut."
"Judge Thomas Jones had liis cattle taken
by the rebels in August, 1776, but they were
recovered by the British at Brooklyn after
the battle, and consumed by the soldiers, and
though he proved his property and exhibited
vouchers, Daniel Chamier, Commissary Gen-
eral, would not pay him for them." — Vol.
i, 117.
16
Revolutionary Incidents
" Dr. Benjamin Tredwell, of North Side, a
gentleman of fortune and character, and of
one of the first families on the Island, a warm
and steady loyalist, was fond of horses and
loved the sports of the turf. Col. Birch, of
the 17th Dragoons, in one of his rides acci-
dentally met on the road this Dr. Tredwell,
mounted on a noble horse, descendant of the
famous ' Wildair,' and worth one hundred
and fifty guineas. Birch ordered him to dis-
mount and unsaddle. The Doctor told the
Colonel who he was, but it had no effect.
Birch then bid his servant unsaddle the horse
and give the saddle to the Doctor to carry
home on his own back and be damned. He
led away the horse and told the Doctor to be
thankful that the saddle too wasn't taken as
well as the horse. On the Doctor's applica-
tion at Headquarters, he was charged with
being a rebel and threatened with the Pro-
vost."— FoZ. i, 114
"In May, 1781, a British guard ship lay
at the Two Brothers, a mile below White-
stone. Four whale boats came out from the
main shore, made the crew presents of poul-
try, lamb, veal, vegetables, &c. , and in re-
turn were regaled with grog, wine and punch.
In the evening those whale boats went direct
to Thomas Hicks', broke open his house,
robbed him of several hundred pounds in
cash, plate, linen, library, and as much fur-
niture as the boats could contain, and re-
turned to New Rochelle. As they passed the
guard ship on their return, they gave three
cheers, which the ship cordially returned !" —
Vol. i, 304.
The winter of 1779-80 was uniformly dry
and cold, and the severest ever known in
the middle Colonies. The snow, deep and
drifted, began to fall about November 10, and
continued almost every day till the middle of
March. In the woods it lay at least four
feet upon a level. It was with the utmost
difficulty that the farmers got their wood.
The springs were low. It was called the
"Canada winter." — Janes, i, 320.
In 1780 David Colden, of Flushing, had a
stall-fed ox, which he intended killing, at
New Year's, for his own use. He had him
every day, at sunset, put into his barn, and
the doors secured with padlocks and iron
bars ; but one night the fastenings were
broken open and the ox killed, cut up and
carried away, only the skin and entrails left.
— Jonex, i, 3G3.
1780, July. Gen. Robertson proclaimed
that the farmers should bring half their fresh
hay to the hay-yard, and the rest should re-
main untouched, with all the salt hay, to the
owners. But the Commissaries took all the
fresh and half the salt hay, and no redress
was to be had. If Providence had not fa-
vored the country with one of the mildest
winters (1780-1) perhaps ever known in
America, not a horse nor a horned beast
could have survived the month of March,
Nay, had the winter been as severe as the
preceding one, all the hogs and sheep upon
the Island must have starved. Among those
who complained of this breach of faith was
Micajah Townsend, (a venerable man of over
eighty years, of fair character and opulent
fortune, who had served His Majesty as a
captain of militia in his younger days), for
which he was taken up, escorted under a
guard of soldiers from his own house to
Hempstead, at least twelve miles, and there
detained close prisoner for several days. —
Jones, i, 367 ; ii, 28.
Queens County women married to British
subjects: — 1783, August 11, Miss Woolsey,
daughter of Benjamin Woolsey, deceased, to
Mr. Palmer, of 54th Regiment ; Jemima
Townsend to Capt. Fraser ; Jane, daughter
of Abram Rapelye, to William Garden.
On a pane of glass of the Bragaw home-
stead, cut with a diamond, is the name of
Finlay McKay, an officer of the Scotch Fusi-
leer Guards, who were quartered at Newtown
during the Revolution.
During the Revolutionary war, the farmers
on Cow Neck (as Manhasset was then called)
suffered many hardships by having soldiers
billeted in their houses, having their teams
taken at the pleasure of the British to cart
warlike stores, and their woodland cut off.
Many of their hardships are now forgotten.
Peter Onderdonk, of Flower Hill, wrote down
in an old account book the following memo-
randa : —
Sept. 14, 1776. My wagon and horses en-
tered the King's service. Nov. 21, my son
Andrew, who had been taken as a driver, re-
turned home sick from the British camp,
leaving my wagon and horses. Oct. 26, Jon-
athan Dix, collector of forage, pressed a mare
from me to go in His Majesty's service.
1779, April 12. Be it remembered that
eighteen Canadian Frenchmen were billeted
on me in order to cut all the wood belonging
to William Cornwell and Richard Sands.
" When tyranny holds up its head,
Then glorious liberty is fled 1"
The above Frenchmen went away. May 14,
but returned again in parties for a week
afterwards, and then quit, not cutting Rich-
ard Sands' woods. Dec. 23, I had Joseph
Thome's order to bring the Hessian guard
one and a quarter cords of wood, being two
sled loads.
1780, July 30. Twelve loads of wood were
cut and carted out of my woods by order of
Robert Sutton, without asking me liberty.
1781, Sept. 24. Hope Mills (a tory from
Jamaica) is debtor to me for two loads of hay
and one pair of wagon sides which he took
from me for the King.
1782, Nov. 13. Capt. Westerhagen came
here with his company to quarters, (a German
hireling), and with violence drove my sick
daughter Elizabeth and Jannetie Rapalye out
of their sick beds. Ingratitude ! He quit
his quarters here January 7, 1783 — a German
hireling !
1783, Jan. 17. Ensign Wagner came here
to quarter with his guard. He left February
28 — a hireling !
Edward Thorne is debtor to me (on account
of the damage I sustained by his neglect of
furnishing the troops with wood who were
quartered at William Dodge's) to cutting
forty walnut saplings and upwards of one
hundred chestnut rails, value £20. The above
damage I received from the troops of Capt.
De Westerhagen and Ensign Wagner, done
in eleven weeks ; some of the wood was car-
ried to William Salt's by his soldiers. This
is besides the wood burnt at my house by
Capt. Westerhagen, eighty loads, value £60.
1781, May 12. "Ille quern requiris est in-
ventus. " This seems to be a message from a
friendly W^hig, sent by a spy, and written in
Latin with the hope that if detected it might
not be understood. The purport of it is :
" The man you seek is found."
1781, Aug. 30. Robert Comely, Jr., left
Philadelphia several years ago, and is now at
Lloyd's Neck as a wood-cutter on other men's
land, for the use of the British army. He
Qtteens County— 2d Series. 17
has also been a sutler for selling strong drink
for army use.
1781, Nov. 29. Messrs. McFarren and
Thomas Grinnel report that Major Davis and
Capt. Grinnel, who went to Long Island to
fetch clothing for the army of New York
State, were captured on Friday last by the
British and carried into New York city.
1782, Jan. 28. Obadiah Wright has a per-
mit from Clinton to bring off from Long
Island goods for the use of this State to the
amount of £10,000, part in goods, part in
specie, to the Commissioners in Pokeepsie.
1782, Nov. 19. Gov. Clinton (at the re-
quest of Gen. Washington) desires Major
Hendrick WyckofE to visit Long Island, under
pretence of trade, to spy the British for us,
their numbers, commanders, stations, their
winter arrangements, &c.
1782, Nov. 22. Gov. Clinton wishes Capt.
John Grinnel to visit Long Island to spy the
British forces. "It is a disagreeable busi-
ness."
A whale-boat's crew came to the house of
William (now Thomas) Jones, plundered it
and carried off two slaves, Robin and Dick.
Dick, being old, was left at Blue Point ;
Robin was sold on the Main, and it was a
long time before he returned home.
A whale-boat's crew once came within one
hundred rods of Capt. David Jones' house,
(since Meinell's), when Jones fired a field-
piece, which he kept for his company, on
them. They returned the fire with small
arms, but Jones beat them off. This same
crew went next day to Rockaway, got embar-
rassed in the creeks, and were taken by a
company of militia.
The Services of Huntington in Queens
County.
The farmers of Huntington also were com-
pelled by the British authorities to contribute
largely of their labor and produce to the sup-
port of the troops in Queens County. We
give a few instances out of a great many:
1776, Aug. By order of John Hewlett,
Esq., Elizabeth Wood sent a pair of oxen to
Head Quarters, for the use of Government.
Never returned nor paid for.
1776, Sept. 1. Ten cattle were driven to
Newtown for the use of His Majesty's troops,
and received by the Quartermaster then pres-
ent. Sept. 16, a pair of cattle from Piatt
18
RevoI;I:tionary Incidents
Carll and another from Timothy Carll were
driven, by Gen. Delancey's orders, to New-
town. Never paid for.
1776, Sept. Henry Downing and James
Lefford took from Jonas Rogers a span of
horses and liarness for His Majesty's service.
Never returned nor paid for.
177G, Sept. 4. Isaac Dennis' wagon and
horses were prest into Government service by
Joshua Mills, who was appointed to take
horses and wagons. Not paid for. Two
horses and driver of Jonathan Jarvis were
prest into Government service (Gen. Cleave-
land) by John Dunbar, who took other horses
also. Never returned, and no pay.
1776, Sept. Sarah Scudder says: "There
came three men to my door with Joseph Ben-
nett's mare, taken for Col. Birch's service
and never paid for. I asked their names, and
one of them replied, ' My name is William
Burns,' and the other two men afterwards
proved to be Micah Burns and Robert Mor-
rell."
1776, Sept. 4. John Dunbar took two
horses of Z. Piatt, and a driver, to Newtown.
The horses were lost and the driver returned.
Piatt sent a careful man, but could not find
them.
1776, Sept. Joshua Mills, wagon-master,
and John Dunbar, inhabitants of Jamaica,
took a mare from N. Harrison and put her
into Government service.
1776, Sept. 4. John Dunbar prest into
Government service a horse of E. Smith,
which was entered in Capt. Beaman's book.
The horse was never returned, but he re-
ceived its wages (£3, 18) to Sept. 30, from
Capt. Dickson.
1776, Oct. David Resco's team was prest,
by order of Dr. Johnson, under Col. Birch,
of the 17th Dragoons, to carry fowls or poul-
try to Flushing.
1776, Oct. 6. William and Micah Burns,
by order of Col. Birch, took two horses from
Henry Smith.
1776, Nov. 5. Prest from Nathan Valen-
tine into His Majesty's service, by Capt.
Thomas Woolley, by order of Major Menzies,
of Gen. Delancey's Regiment, two horses,
sent to Hell Gate ; also from Jonathan Jarvis
three horses and a saddle, taken to White-
stone ferry and never returned ; and Nov. 6,
from Jo.seph White, a very valuable saddle
horse, lost in the service of Government.
No pay.
1776, Nov. 22. Received of Moses Rolph
one wagon load of English hay, weighing
1000 lbs., for His Majesty's magazine, for
which John Morrison, Commissary, will pay
you, as witness my hand.
Barak Snethen.*
1776, Nov. 26. Capt. Thomas Woolley
took Silas Wickes' wagon, horses and driver,
to carry troops eastward to press teams.
1777, May. Michael Bedell carted baggage
for Delancey's troops, 2d Battalion, to Hal-
let's Cove, by order of Col. Brewerton.
1777, June 20. A horse was prest from
Henry Titus, by order of Col. Fanning, to
carry baggage to Hell Gate. Never returned.
1777, Aug. 6. A horse and saddle were
prest from Phillip Skidmore into His Majes-
ty's service, by John Dunbar, of Newtown,
and never returned nor paid for.
1777, Dec. N. H. carted baggage for the
troops to the west end of the Plains, by order
of Major Green, of Delancey's Battalion.
1777, Dec. 20. Capt. [Mark] Kerr, of De-
lancey's 1st Battalion, took into Government
service Lemuel Carll's mare, and kept her
nine months, and no pay. Carll went to
Flushing three times before he got her, and
then gave Capt. Barent Roorback six guineas
to let him have her again.
1778, Aug. 3. Long Swamp. Received
100 weight of hay and nine bushels oatsf
from Joel Smith, for one troop of liight
Dragoons, on His Majesty's service.
Benjamin Tkedwell,:}: Q. M.
of H. L. D., Q. Co. M.
1778, Aug. 3. Long Swamp. I have re-
ceived from Phillip Smith two bushels corn,f
for the use of one troop of Light Dragoons,
on His Majesty's service.
D. Lent, Qr. Mast,
of N. Y. L. D., Q. Co. M.
1780, Jan. 12. J. Jarvis' ox-team was prest
to cart baggage to Flushing for the Hessiau
Regiment, by order of Gen. Leland.
1780, Jan. A load of fresh hay (8.^ cwt.)
was taken from Joliu Oakley, by order of
Jacob Jackson, Jerusalem, Collector of For-
age.
* Lived at Glen Cove.
t This grain was used for baiting the horses, while
riding through the county.
t Father of Thomas Trcdwell, Asscniblyuiau, of
Hempstead.
1780, March 22. This certifies that Oba-
diah Piatt's wagon and horses have been em-
ployed three days to carry the baggage of the
Prince of Wales' American Regiment from
Lloyd's Neck to Flushing Fly.
John Garden,* Major.
1780, July 23. Received of P. Smith, for
the use of Capt. Whitehead's troop of Light
Dragoons, on His Majesty's service, two bush-
els Indian corn and eighteen meals of victuals.
Cornelius Rapelye, ^
^ Qr. Mas., Q. Co. M.
1780, July 31. Received of John Ketcham
rations for fourteen horses, one day, of Capt.
Hewlett's troop of Queens County Militia.
Stephen Hewlett,
^ Captain Q. Co. M.
1780, Aug. 21. Huntington South. Re-
ceived from George Norton 120 lbs. oats, for
the use of my troops on duty to the east part
of Long Island, commanded by Col. Simcoe.
Never paid for.
Stephen Hewlett, Captain.
1780, Sept. 23. Jamaica. I certify that
eight wagons (four ox-teams) were employed
two days in carrying the sick of the 2d Bat-
talion Light Infantry from Huntington to Ja-
maica. Thomas Armstrong, Maj. Com't.
R. Abercrombie, 1st Capt.
1780, Nov. 21. N. H. carted hay to Her-
ricks.
"^ 1780, Dec. Capt. Israel Youngs, Deputy
Superintendent of Forage, took a load of salt
hay from Joseph White ; Nov. 21, he took
a load of English hay.
y/ 1781, June. When Colonel Ludlow left
Lloyd's Neck, Captain Lester prest horses,
wagon and driver from John Buffit, to carry
the baggage to Flushing.
1781, Nov. 12. Cold Spring. Received
of Richard Conklin fourteen rations of hay
for the use of the Queens County Brigade
horses now employed carting forage for the
Commissary General.
>^ Isaac Youngs, Supt. of Forage.
To George Brinley, Esq.
1781, Dec. 10. To John Hewlett, Superin-
tendent of Forage. I certify that there have
been eight horses of the Queens County Bri-
gade (now employed carting forage for the
Commanding General) rationed one night on
English hay belonging to Samuel Lewis.
Peter Walters.
* Carden died at Charleston, 1782.
Queens County — 2d Series. 19
1782, Feb. 6. I certify that seventeen
horses of the Queens County Brigade, now
employed carting forage for the Commissary
General, have been rationed one night on salt
hay of D. Rusco.
John Hewi,ett, Supt. of Forage.
To George Brinley.
1783, Feb. 21. East Woods. This is to
certify that Jasper Kellum brought a load of
baggage for the Corps of Guides and Pioneers
from Long Swamp to East Woods, six miles.
Jonathan Williams, Captain.
Colonel Tarlton at Jericho.
1777, Nov. Zophar Piatt was prest, with
his ox-team, by Major Cochran, to carry a
load of boards to Tarlton's quarters at Jeri-
cho. He also took forty pounds of butter,
without giving a receipt or pay. Job Sam-
mis was employed one day in carting poultry
to Jericho by Tarlton's orders.
1778, Nov. 24. Lieut. -Col. Cochran took
from Henry Smith six geese and two dozen
fowls and twenty pounds of butter, and from
E. Gillet a cheese and fourteen pounds of
butter.
1778, Dec. 10. Quartermaster Davis took
504 feet of boards from Solomon Ketcham
and 400 feet from S. Saiaunis, and carted
them to Jericho.
1778, Dec. 23. Tarlton's troops, on their
march from Smithtown to Jericho, took four
fat hogs from Jeremiah Ruland and three
from Zebulon Buffet. Daniel Blatchly had
bought five dozen and ten fowls to carry to
New York market for Christmas. They
were taken from him by Tarlton's orders,
also two barrels of cider.
1779, Oct. 7. Received of James Oakley a
small heifer of 248 pounds weight, for the
u^e of the sick of the Provincial cavalry.
John Tuck, Qr. Mas. Brit. Legion.^
Banastre Tarlton, Lt. Col.
1779, Oct. 20. Tarlton, being out on a
party of pleasure and grousing, came to Tim-
othy Carll's house and in person took a cow
out of his pasture and killed her for his
troops. No pay.
1780, March 5. Received of Nehemiah
Whitman five bushels oats for the use of the
2d Battalion Jersey Volunteers stationed at
Jericho.
Geo. Lambert, Lt. & acting Qr. Mas. *
John Colden, 2d Major.
20
Revolutionary Incidents
1780, March 5. Jericho. These certify
that P. Smith's and E. Hart's wagons were
employed one day in collecting forage for the
2d Battalion Jersey Volunteers.
John Antill, 1st Major.
1780, March 8. Received of S. Oakley 10
bushels corn, 12 bushels oats, 3 cwt. fresh
hay, and 25 cwt. Plain hay, for the use of
the 2d Battalion Jersey Volunteers, stationed
at Jericho. John Golden, 2d Major.
To Isaac Brush, Sir : If you can get me
a good quarter of veal, or a good pig, or a
half-dozen good chickens amongst your com
pany, pray do it, for I cannot live on salt
meat every day, and you will oblige.
Sir, yours to serve,
Cor's Van Horne.
Colonel Simcoe at Oysterbat.
Col. Simcoe, of the Queens Rangers, had
his quarters at Oysterbay, 1778, '79 and '80.
He drew his supplies freely from Hunting-
ton, and left many bills unpaid.
1778, Dec. 30. Capt. Mc«ill took from off
David Conklin's barn fifty boards. They
were carried to Oysterbay to construct sol-
diers' barracks.
1779, Jan. 3. He took from Israel Wood
115 pine boards, and January 16 he carried
away 100 more.
1779, Jan. 3. Simcoe sent a party and ript
from Stephen Kelsey's barn ninety five al-
most new white pine boards, and also took
some new ones in a pile. These Kelsey had
to cart to Oysterbay. They also took a glass
window, turnips and potatoes. In April they
carried off half a ton of English hay ; and
August 19, ten bushels oats were delivered
to the same party, commanded by Spencer
and Broadstreet.
1779, Jan. 23. Zophar Piatt was prest,
with his sled, one day, to carry boards to
Oysterbay.
1779, March 17. Taken from Selah Carll,
by Quartermaster Moffet, of Simcoe's regi-
ment, a new saddle, circingle, eight bushels
oats and two bags. No pay.
1779, April. Simon Fleet entertained Sim-
coe and his officers and waiters better than
two days, and kept twenty horses on good
keeping, and charged £5. Simcoe left him
.only |2.
1779, May. Simcoe sent his men and im-
pressed from Jonas Rogers a wagon, horses
and driver to cart wood for Capt. Thomas,
and kept them in his service twelve days, for
which no pay was received.
1779, May 11. John Hendrickson was im-
pressed five days, to cart wood to Oysterbay,
by order of Capt. Thomas, under Simcoe.
1779. One Sunday in August, twenty-six
bushels of oats were taken from Solomon
Ketcham, which he was obliged to cart six
miles, to Oysterbay, for Simcoe.
1779. Thomas Conklin carted a load of
hay to Oysterbay, by order of Simcoe. An
ox-team was employed four days in carrying
Simcoe's baggage to Harlem. August 19,
thirty bushels oats were carted to Oysterbay.
Jamaica.
1777, Nov. 20. Josiah Rogers' ox-team
was prest to carry baggage for Col. Cruger,
of Gen. Delancey's Regiment, to Jamaica,
three days.
1777. From Nathan Piatt was taken four
hundred feet of boards, by Thomas Van
Wyck, and carried to Jamaica.
1777, Nov. Job Sammis carted baggage to
Jamaica, by order (as said) of Col. Brewerton.
1778, Sept. Israel Carll's ox-team was em-
ployed four days in carting Gen. Tryou's bag-
gage to Jamaica.
1779, Thomas Conklin, by order of Col.
Richard Hewlett, went to Jamaica after pro-
visions.
1780, Sept. Ichabod Jarvis was three days
carting baggage to Jamaica, commanded by
Col. Abercrombie.
1780, Sept. 15. Jonathan Jarvis carted
baggage foe Col. Abercrombie, of the Light
Infantry, to Jamaica.
1780, Nov. 17. Herricks. This may cer-
tify that Jonathan Kelsey has delivered eight
cwt. of Plain hay for the use of Col.Wonnb's
troop, which Mr. John Cutler will give re-
ceipt for. John Knight, Ass't Com'y.
1781. John Carman carted baggage for
Col. Ludlow, from Lloyd's Neck to Jamaica.
1781, Dec. 17. Office of Police, Jamaica.
The Trustees of the township of Huntington
are hereby authorized to raise on the town
£176 in addition to the poor-rate, it being the
sum i)aid by composition for labor in digging
Queens County— 2d Series.
21
a wsll for the garrison at Lloyd's Neck, un-
der direction of Lt. Col. Upham.
George D. Ludlow, Sup't.
1782, April 26. I certify that M. Heart; and
Z. Rogers, with two wagons and horses, were
employed transporting provisions from Ja-
maica to Lloyd's Neck, for the use of the
King's troops at this post, April 25 and 26.
J. Upham, Lt. Col. Commandant, &c.
To Peter Paumier, Esq.,
D. Com'y Qen'l.
1782, June 1. To Brook Watson, Esq.,
Commissary General : These certify that
Whitehead Gildersleeve has been employed
two days, with his wagon and horses, in re-
moving provisions from Jamaica to Lloyd's
Ne'ck, for the use of His Majesty's troops
^here. Thomas Cutler,
r Capt. of Volunteers of New England.
Referred to the Wagon Master General,
August 14th, 1783, by Gregory Townsend,
President of the Board of Claims.
1783, Oct. 1. I certify that T. Conklin
was employed three days, with his wagon
and horses, in removing one family from
Lloyd's Neck to Jamaica.
B. Thompson, Lt. Col.
Commanding King's A. Dragoons.
To Brook Watson, Esq.
1782, Dec. Jonathan Brush's spaa of
horses, wagon and driver carted baggage to
Jamaica, by order of Sergt. Sackett, of Col.
Thompson's Regiment.
Extracts from Gaine's and Rivington's
Newspapers.
1776, Dec. 3. David Colden, Flushing,
offers for sale a span of horses for £60.
1776, Dec. 9. For sale, by Robert Crom-
meline, (for no fault, only he won't live in
the country), a negro man, a very handy fel-
low at painting, glazing and house- work.
1777, Jan. 6. Five Dollars reward. Ran
away from Waters Smith, Newtown, (Dec.
23), a negro man. Jack, of yellowish com-
plexion, bushy hair, and aged thirty. — Oaine.
1777, Feb. 3. Went off Sunday from his
master, Archibald Hamilton, late Captain
31st Regiment, a negro, CufEy, a short, thick-
set fellow. If he applies to any officer to
serve him, he is requested to secure him. If
any other secures him, two guineas reward. —
Oaine.
nil, March 24. Wanted, an overseer
(with a wife capable of managing the female
business) for a large farm, thirty miles from
the Ferry, southside of Long Island. — Oaine.
1777, March 31. To be sold, a quantity of
good whale oil, by Samuel Way, of Hemp-
stead. — Oaine.
1777, March 31. Wanted, in a gentleman's
family on Long Island, a woman capable of
teaching his daughters reading, writing and
needlework. Apply to Rev. Mr. Inglis, New
York. — Oaine.
1777, March 31. To let, a small house, in
a pleasant situation, and two genteel rooms,
on the road from the Ferry to Newtown, Jo-
seph Woodward living thereon.
1777, March 31. To let, the farm at Ja-
maica occupied by Alexander Wallace, 25
acres of good land, will mow a good burthen
of grass, young orchard, &c. Apply to Wa-
ters Smith, Newtown.
1777, April 14. Died lately, in Newtown,
James Emmot, who practiced law many years
in New York, with unblemished character.
1777, April 28. Handsome Reward. Lost,
some time ago, between Flushing and New
York, a box containing prints of different
sorts.
1777, May 12. To let, a farm of over 200
acres, (36 of wood), north side of Hempstead
Plains.
1777, May 12. Died lately, in Newtown,
the wife of Dr. Richard Bailey, much be-
loved by all her acquaintance.
1777, June 2. Found, last Friday week, a
bundle of dry goods, on the road from the
Ferry to Jamaica. Apply to the printer.
1777, June 4. Lost, May 20, going through
Jamaica, a black leather pocket-book, with a
strap and " Thos. Danlap" in gilt letters on
the outside. In it were two half-Joes and
some small money, which the finder is wel-
come to, and two dollars reward, by bringing
the book and papers to Major Alexander
Campbell, in Jamaica.
1777, June 30. Board and lodging wanted
in Long Island by three single gentlemen.
They expect only plain victuals and will give
no trouble. A. Bishop, New York.
1777, July 21. Five Dollars Reward. Ran
away from Nicholas Ogden, Long Island, 5th
instant, a negro lad, Duke, or changed to
Dick, aged 20. He had on a white swan-
skin double-breasted jacket, white drilling
h.
22
Revolutionary Incidents
breeches, tow-cloth shirt, blue and white
stockings.
1777, July 28. Wanted, twenty or thirty
men to work, on Long Island, to make beef-
barrel staves, the price to be agreed for by
the thousand and received on the spot. A
generous price given to loyal subjects.
J. Saunders, Inspector of Staves.
1777, Aug. 18. Eight Dollars Reward.
Ran away from Abram Lent, Newtown, 14th
instant, a negro man, Wan, this country
born, aged twenty-four. He has a large scar
in his forehead and lip.
1777, Sept. 8. I, Benjamin Carpenter, of
Jamaica, butcher, August 22, beat Joseph
French, Esq., when his hands were held. 1
am sorry for it, and will publish this ac-
knowledgment two weeks in the papers, and
read it at the General Muster at the head of
each company of Jamaica militia, and will
pay £5 currency to the Vestry for the use of
the poor.
1777, Sept. 15. Ten Dollars Reward. Ran
away, February last, from Abram Lent, New-
town, a negro man, Dick, born in Bermuda,
yellowish complexion, and has lost his left
eye.
1777, Oct. 6. William Prince, Flushing,
has for sale a large collection of fruit trees,
English cherries, all sorts ; peaches, nectar-
ines, apricots, apple, pear, plum and quince
trees ; filbert and Barcelona nut trees, the
Illinois and Madeira-nut tree, blackwalnut
and butternut, American medlar or persim-
mon tree, fig trees, many sorts ; black, white
and English mulberry trees ; red, white and
black raspberries and currants ; gooseberries
and grapes, many sorts ; a great variety of
strawberry vines ; monthly roses and a great
variety of others ; most kinds of American
shrubs not here mentioned. Any gentleman
who has a mind to see a catalogue may have
any number at Gaine's or Rivington's. Also
a large number of the Newtown and Spitzen-
berg apple trees, fit for sending to England
or elsewhere. Orders left at Gaine's or on
board the Flushing boat, near Fly Market
Ferry .stairs, Oliver Thorne, now master.
1777, Oct. 27. To be sold at the New Lots,
November 6, or at private sale, by Isaac Og-
den, Jamaica, a two and a three year old filly,
well matched and dark bay. Their sire is
Nathaniel Herd's " Wilkes." Also a yearling
colt and a breeding mare with a foal by her
side, the two last from the noted " Figure."
1777, Nov. 17. To be sold at vendue, 24th
instant, at the house of Ann Betts, adminis-
tratrix, eight miles from the Ferry, on the
Jamaica road, a part of the moveable estate of
late Thomas Betts, horses, cows, hogs, farm-
ing utensils and household furniture.
1778, Jan. 5. James Leonard and one Lewis
were loaded, December 10, at Hempstead
Harbor, with wood, for New York, by John
Monfort and David Laton, and have not since
been heard of. If they don't return in four-
teen days, as promised, means will be taken
to bring them to j ustice.
1778, January 15. Twenty shillings ster-
ling reward. Deserted, Enos Blakely, of
Connecticut, aged 24, from Capt. P. Bailey's
"detachment of Royal Fencible Americans, at
New York, and re-enlisted in Capt. Gal-
braith's company, at Newtown, and absconded
January 13.
1778, Jan. 19. Thomas Brooks, of Leeds,
England, married, at Newtown, Elizabeth
Sarly, of New York.
1778, Feb. 9. Amos Underbill offers a rea-
sonable reward for a lee- board that broke
loose and drifted away, 2d instant, from the
" Pembroke," in Hellgate.
1778, Feb. 16. Died, at Flushing, 10th
instant, of small pox, taken by inoculation,
aged 47, Susanna, wife of Hon. Samuel Cor-
nell, a refugee from Newbern. Interred,
12th, in the parish church. The husband
died Thursday, [Gaine, Jan. 18, 1781], a gen-
tleman of fortune and probity, member of
His Majesty's Council of North Carolina,
leaving five daughters.
1778, March 16. For sale, April a, the
dwelling house of James Burling, in the
townspot of Flushing, forty rods from the
landing, also plate and furniture.
1778, March 16. For sale, a farm of 150
acres, a quarter mile south of the townspot,
Jamaica, and 50 acres of salt meadow on
Long Neck. Apply to Amos Denton, John
and Samuel Skidmore, executors.
1778, April 6. Samuel Carman, at Fort
Neck, found concealed upon the beach oppo-
site Fort Neck a hogshead nearly full of rum,
supposed to be part of the cargo of Capt.
McDowell, cast away in November.
1778, April 20. Four Dollars Reward.
Ran away (7th instant) from Waters Smith,
Newtown, a negro wench aged thirty-four.
She had on a striped linsey short gown and
petticoat, a scar under one eye, supiwsed to
Queens County— 2d Serieb.
S3
be lurking in one of the negro houses in New
York.
1778, May 30. It is requested (to prevent
further trouble) that the oflBLcer who was
lately at Mr. Burroughs', Newtown, with a
young bay mare marked T. M. No. 35, on
her back, will send her directly to Lieut.
Murray, Brooklyn Ferry, as she is his prop-
erty.
1778, June 27. Wanted, a young lad who
is a good accomptant and can be well recom-
mended. Enquire at Mr. Robert Morrell's,
Flushing.
1778, Aug. 8. Suitable reward. Lost, on
the road between Jamaica and Flushing, a
silver watch gilt, "James Duncan" on a sil-
ver slide, two steel seals and chain.
1778, August 19. To be sold, a bay horse,
fifteen hands high, performs his actions well,
price £40. To be seen at Mr. Vanderbilt's,
Flushing.
1778, Aug. 31. One guinea reward. Lost,
some time since, between Brooklyn Ferry and
Newtown, a small bundle of lace that had
been worn some time.
1778, Sept. 7. Found, 3d inst., between
Bedford and Newtown, a gold watch. Apply
to the Quartermaster of the 2d Battalion of
Light Infantry, at Bedford.
1778, Sept. 9. Edward Titus, of Newtown,
took up a chestnut mare a fortnight ago.
The owner may have her, paying charges.
1778, Sept. 16. Auction (31st inst.) of all
the household furniture of Mr. Simeon Lu-
grin, Jamaica. Sale to begin at 10 o'clock in
the morning. N. B. To be sold at same time,
a fine-toned double harpsichord. Mr. Lugrin
was schoolmaster at Burton, N. Y. , from
1799 to 1809.
1778, Sept. 30. Alexander Wallace, Ja-
maica, offers three guineas reward for Bet, a
young negro wench, aged sixteen, yellow,
pock-pitted, had on a green waistcoat and
petticoat, and took a calico gown.
1778, Oct. 5. Four dollars reward paid by
Richard Greaves, at Isaac Kipp's, New York.
Ran away from William Sackett, Newtown,
(Sept. 26), a negro wench, Susan, her right
leg bent forward, had on a light calico gown
and dark blue petticoat.
1778, Oct. 24. To let, a good house of sev-
eral rooms, and a barn with stables, in a con-
venient retired situation, a quarter mile from
Mr. Underbill's mill, Flushing. Apply to
David Colden.
1778, Nov. 2. The owner will please take
away and pay charges for two pieces of cloth,
left last February, to be dressed, with Isaac
Lawrence, Whitestone.
1778, Nov. 16. Persons wanting to pur-
cbase wood, may be supplied with any quan-
tity by sending boats to Cold Spring Harbor,
delivered on the beach by Israel Youngs.
[Nov. 24, 1779, Youngs gave his parole at
Pokeepsie. July 29, Loring said he might
be exchanged for Johannes Snedeker.]
1779, Jan. 13. To be sold, a plantation of
thirty acres in the centre of Newtown, occu-
pied by James Long, an excellent stand for a
trader. Apply to Jacob and Isaac Rapelye.
1779, Feb. 1. To be sold, a farm of 110
acres, on the main road to Flushing, one and
a half miles from the landing, whence boats
pass two or three times a week to New York,
well wooded, meadowed and watered ; thirty
barrels cider can be made one year with an-
other ; house one and a half stories high, nine
rooms on a floor, convenient for a store or
tavern, two barns and other outhouses. Ap-
ply to James Morrell, Flushing, or Robert
Morrell, on the premises.
1779, Feb. 1. To be sold, a pleasant situ-
ated little farm of eighty acres, upland and
salt meadow, in Flushing, within about half
a mile of David Colden's, a two-story house,
with fine prospect of Flushing Bay and all
the vessels that pass through the Sound.
Fence lately made. Apply to John Lawrence,
New York.
1779, Feb. 1. One guinea reward. Lost,
January 14, at Newtown, a silver watch, by
James Harper.
1779, Feb. 1. John Prentice, from Scot-
land, went on Long Island, about twelve
months ago, to keep an English school, but
has not since been heard of. Any one giving
information will be thankfully recompensed
for their trouble.
1779, Feb. 3. To let, the house, barn and
other offices, &c. , in the townspot of Jamaica,
southeast of the Presbyterian meeting house
and opposite the tavern late of Widow
Combes. Apply to Richard Deane, distiller,
or Terence Kerin, New York.
17 i^9, Feb. 14. For sale, the plantation of
William and Benjamin Creed, 120 acres, a
quarter mile from the townspot, Jamaica, on
the great road to Flushing.
1779, Feb. 22. To be sold, a plantation of
150 acres, three miles from Jamaica, on the
24
Eevolxjtionary Incidents
road to Springfield, a kitchen by the door,
salt meadow three miles distant. Apply to
Benjamin Everit, near by.
1779, March 8. Jaques Johnson offers to
sell his plantation in Flushing, a mile from
Jamaica and four miles from Flushing, [town-
spot], 135 acres upland and 8 salt meadow,
well wooded and watered, the house and
garden in thorough repair, twenty hogsheads
cider can be made from the orchard in a tol-
erable season. Its vicinity to Jamaica makes / ^
it worth the attention of any gentleman in-^ ' ^
clined to live in such an agreeable neighbor-
hood.
1779, March 8. Two guineas reward.
Lost on Long Island, a fortnight ago, a port-
manteau trunk, containing papers of no use
but to the owner.
1779, March 17. For sale, a large store-
house at Flushing, built of white-pine boards,
34 feet by 128, two stories and has three
floors. Enquire of Oliver Thorne.
1779, March 17. Handsome reward. Lost,
last October, a gilt trunk, containing papers
and articles of value, committed to the care
of Mr. Van Dyke, at Newtown landing, to be
conveyed to Burling Slip. He has since re-
moved and can't be found.
1779, April 24. For sale, three frame
buildings on Long Island, twenty-three miles
from New York, near a landing, most new,
(one a storehouse, 22 by 14 feet, and two sto
ries high), and may be removed thence with
little expense to New York, to be put on va-
cant or burnt lots. Enquire of William
Mott.
1779, June 7. Married, at Hon. Judge Lud
low's house, Hempstead, May 26, Francis
Dashwood* to Ann Ludlow, sister to the
Judge, a perfectly amiable lady, with a hand-
some fortune.
1779, June 23. A second-hand phaeton
to be sold, with harness for two horses. En-
quire of William Bellard, next the meeting
house, Jamaica.
1779, June 26. To be sold, a storehouse,
at Flushing, 28 by 34 feet, three floors. En-
quire of Oliver Thorne.
1779, July 12. For sale, and immediate
possession given, Samuel Nottingham'sf farm,
in Newtown, a mile from the landing, 92
acres, 10 or 12 of salt meadow on Flushing
creek.
♦Appointed Postmaster General of Jamaica, in 1782.
tile was a Quaker preacher and went to England.
1779, Aug. 21. Found, not far from Jeri-
cho, a red morocco pocket book, by the con-
tents the property of Rev. Epenetus Town-
send, late from Halifax Apply to Samuel
Jarvis and pay for this advertisement.
1779, Aug. 25. At vendue, Aug. 30, the
furniture, farming utensils and farm of
Thomas Hallett, deceased, near the centre of
Flushing, Jamaica and Newtown. It has 90
acres, part in salt meadow, grafted fruit, &c.
1. Fishkill. Thomas Men-
zies, a resident of Fredericksburg, a half pay
British officer, a prisoner since May, 1776, on
parole, is no better than James Grant, a pris-
oner who took horse to New York and vio-
lated his parole."
1779, Sept. 8. To be sold, 21st instant, 3
o'clock, afternoon, a small place of 26 acres,
agreeably situated at Pembroke, in Oysterbay,
near Hempstead Harbor, in a plentiful and
good neighborhood. It has a grove of fine
locust and is in good fence. Also a saddle-
mare, filly, chaise-horse and breeding-mare.
Abram Walton.
1779, Oct. 13. Died, Wednesday, at Ja-
maica, of fever, John, son of the late Henry
Cuyler, of New York, merchant.
1779, Oct. 16. Francis Green, New York,
agent for Henry and James Lloyd, offers five
guineas reward for information against tres-
passers. The two farms [on Lloyd's Neck]
have a written protection of the Commander-
in-Chief, and are not in the same predicament
as other estates, under the management of
the Barrack Master General. [Mav 12, 1784,
the Legislature forfeited Henry Lloyd's es-
tate.]
1779, Oct. 18. For sale, the farm of 200
acres, salt and fresh, where Isaac Underbill
lives, in Flushing, one and a half miles from
the townspot. The grist-mill makes the best
superfine flour and has a dock where boats of
thirty tons may load, or at the mill-door.
David Underbill, Musqueto Cove, Amos and
Letitia Underbill and William Rhinelander,
New York.
1779, Oct. 25. A large black ox came, a
few days ago, to John Williamson's farm, Ja-
maica.
1779, Nov. 6. If Samuel Balding, that
lived at Westbury, will call at Hugh Parker's
office, Brooklyn Ferry, and settle for the arti-
cles purchased by him, July 23, at vendue, it
will oblige the above subscriber.
Queens County — 3d Series.
1779, Nov. 8. Handsome reward. Ran
away from Edward Bardin, 6th instant, Isa-
bella, a negro woman, aged 28, born on Long
Island, and formerly belonged to Capt. White-
head, Jamaica. She talks a little thick.
1779, Nov. 20. Lost, five receipts from
Seth Norton, Assistant Commissary of Forage,
to Minnie Van Siclen, for 13 cwt. fresh hay,
27 cwt. straw, and 20 bushels Indian corn,
and one for pasture of several horses, directed
to George Brindley, and endorsed "pay to
John Kelly;" also two promissory notes, one
of £15.12, payable to John Noblet, from Jacob
Moore, the other from Peter Harris to Noblet
for £3.10.3.
1779, Dec. 8. For sale, George Folliot's
dwelling house, in the townspot, Jamaica,
and 24 acres land, and all the furniture and
farming utensils.
1779. If Ebenezer Smith, that had some
cattle on the Jamaica road, December 19, will
call on Mr. French, the first time he go^s
along, he shall be well rewarded.
1780, Jan. 30. " Mrs. Hicks, sister to
Capt. Tom's wife, of Long Island, has come
out to live among us, Whigs on the Main."
1780, Feb. 7. Richard Betts, executor,
offers for sale the farm of Capt. Samuel
Fish, in the townspot of Newtown, a mile
from Juniper Swamp.
1780, Feb. 7. Taken up, some days ago, a
long boat, rows with six oars. Apply to
John McConnell, at Hallet's Cove.
1780, Feb. 19. Wanted to rent, by T. B.,
in Jamaica, Flushing, Hempstead or New-
town, for this year, a small farm, not over
100 acres, with house, barn and stables,
meadow, orchards, &c.
1780, Feb. 21. Richard Betts, executor of
Capt. Samuel Fish, Newtown, will sell at
vendue, March 7, his homestead of 11 acres,
with orchard and cider-mill, in the townspot.
Also salt meadow and upland, one and a half
miles distant, near Coe's mills, and one-third
of his right to Juniper Swamp, a mile from
the house.
1780, Feb. 23. To be sold, at Flushing, a
well improved farm of 145 acres, genteel
house and convenient outhouses. Dr. Wil-
liam Stewart, New York.
1780, Feb. 29. At vendue, March 22, the
farm of Nathaniel Mills, Jamaica, 62 acres
good for grain or grass, 25 acres of wood, or-
chard, &c. The house has four rooms and
25
Peter and
three fire-places. Charles Arding,
Nathaniel Mills, executors.
1780, March 1. At vendue, the farm of
Talman Waters, deceased, 230 acres, 30 of
woodland, 35 of orcharding and 30 of salt
meadow, also furniture and farming utensils.
William and John Waters.
1780, March 17. James Cornweli, Her-
ricks, offers for sale his two-story dwelling
house, 20 feet by 26, two fireplaces, two bed-
rooms portioned off with pine boards, a gar-
ret, &c. Apply to John Smith, to know the
value thereof.
1780, March 20. To let, the farm of 35
acres, (8 of which is mowing ground), occu-
pied by Thomas Apthorp, Esq., Jamaica.
The house has six rooms, three fire-places,
and cellar under the whole. Enquire of the
owner. Waters Smith, Newtown, or William
Forbes, Jamaica.
1 780 , March 20. Sarah , widow of Jonathan
Fish, Newtown, has to let a pleasant farm.
1780, March 20. Robert Cromraeline, Flush-
ing, offers for sale timber, being part of a
storehou.se at the landing ; beams 19 feet,
posts 17 feet, plates 35 feet. Enquire of
Thomas Ellison, New York.
1780, April 8. Taken up adrift in the
Sound, a sloop's mainsail. Apply to Henry
Ludlam, Hog Island, Oysterbay.
1780, April 15. For sale, the hull of the
ship Betsey, as she lays ashore on Hell Gate
rocks, also 4 four-pounders, 4 three-pounders,
4 swivels, long-boat, &c.
1780, April 17. At vendue, April 29, the
house, barn, and 8 acres of good land, with
excellent orchard, opposite the church, in
Flushing ; also 9 acres salt meadow, a mile
off, being the estate of Peter Van De Water,
deceased. Also a horse, two cows and sundry
household furniture. John Rodman and John
Field, executors.
1780, May 13. Wanted to hire or pur-
chase, a farm near Jamaica, or between Ja-
maica and Brooklyn Ferry.
1780, May 13. Lost, (Wednesday), between
Jamaica and Brooklyn ferry, a bundle of
papers wrapped up in a newspaper, contain-
ing a lease of a farm in Jamaica, small ac-
count books and accounts against sundry per-
sons, sale of goods, receipts, &c. Whoever
delivers it to William Betts, Jamaica, shall
be thanked and rewarded for his trouble.
1780, May 22. Richard Townsend has re-
moved from northside of Hempstead Plains
2G
Hkvolitionary Incidents
to a house opposite Fly Market, New York.
Dry goods cheap, also rum, wine, sugar, &c.,
wholesale and retail.
1780, May 29. Five guineas reward. Sto-
len from Nathaniel Underhill, Newtown, a
few days since, a three-year-old chestnut-
brown horse, branded M. C. on the left thigh
— a natural trotter.
1780, June 20. For sale, a house and forty
acres of land, including orchard and meadow,
one-quarter mile from the church and meet-
ing-house in Jamaica, well wat»?red, well
calculated for a store and tan-yard. David
Lambersou, on the premises, will give title.
1780, July 1. For sale, the hull of the
snow " Hope," lying in Newtown Creek.
1780, July 10. Charles Crommeline offers
for sale a gentleman's country-seat of 180
acres, 20 of woodland, northside the Plains,
best fruit, &c.
1780, Aug. 9. To be sold and immediate
possession given, the farm, head of Cow
Neck, of 18 acres, 2 of which is woods,
orchard, &c. Apply to Thomas Woolley,
Cherry street, New York.
1780, Aug. 16. James Creighton, attorney-
at-law, Jamaica, at the office of police, draws
all kinds of deeds of sale, mortgages, leases,
wills, bonds, petitions, memorials and every
other instrument of writing, in the most reg-
ular and legal manner, upon the former cus-
tomary terms.
1780, Aug. 19. Died at Newtown, John
Sweeten, deputy commissary of forage.
1780, Sept. 2. Died, at his seat near Ja-
maica, Samuel Sackett, late of New York
city, after a few days' illness.
1780, Sept. 18. For sale, the house where
William Dudley now lives, in Jamaica, with
the bake-house and two acres of land.
1780, Sept. 25. Died last week, at Ja-
maica, Mrs. Marsh, in an advanced age.
1780, Oct. 9. Died last week, on Long
Island, Captain James Hosmer, a refugee
from Connecticut, but has lived in New York
city some time past.
1780, Oct. 21. A pair of chestnut-colored
horses, strong and sound, for sale by David
Golden, Flushing ; price, 40 guineas.
1780, Oct. 21. For sale, Oct. 25, the stock
and farming utensils of Samuel Sackett, de-
ceased, near Jamaica. Christopher Smith
and Carey Ludlow, Executors.
1780, Oct. 22. To be sold and immediate
possession given, the farm of Daniel Nos-
trandt, Fre.sh Meadow, two miles from Ja-
maica and three from Flushing, 129 acres,
orchard, &c.
1780, Dec. 11. William Glean, Flushing,
offers for sale his valuable farm of 140 acres,
part woodland and 3 acres of meadow, Head
of the Fly.
1780, Dec. 11. John Ropkins, who has re-
sided some time on Long Island, intends for
England in the first fleet.
1780, Dec. 11. The creditors of Mrs.
Elizabeth Colville, deceased, of Newtown,
will bring their accounts to William Qrigg
or Henry Roome, New York.
1780, Dec. 18. For sale, Daniel Bowne's
farm of 155 acres, three miles east of Flush-
ing, called Pigeon Meadow. Enquire of
Jacob Su\dam or James Bowne, living near.
1780, Dec. 23. Joseph Greswold, distiller.
New York, offers for sale an elegant country
seat, with over 200 acres of land, ncjrth side
of Hempstead Plains.
1781, Jan. 8. Persons liaving demands on
the estate of Samuel Seaman, late of West-
bury, will bring their accounts to John Wil-
liams, Samuel Way, or Henry Post, Execu-
tors.
1781, Jan. 10. James Way offers for sale
the place of 50 acres where Jacob Hallett
lives, at Newtown landing.
1781, Jan. 10. To be sold and possession
given May 1, a house and half-acre of land
in Flushing, facing the Jamaica road. En-
quire of Pepperell Bloodgood, next door.
1781, Jan. 13. Died, (Tuesday), Alice,
wife of Colonel Hamilton, aged 37, and
grand daughter of Lieutenant-Governor Col-
den.
-^1781, Jan. 22.- For sale, John Troup's
beautiful farm at Jamaica, at a proper dis-
tance from Beaver Pond, with two houses
thereon. One house adjoins the main street
and is a fine stand for business ; the other a
country seat, with rich meadow. Also, a
small house on the road from Jamaica to
Flushing by Blackstump.
1781, Jan. 22. One guinea reward. Ran
away from John Wheeler, living at Jamaica,
a negro fellow, Dick, or Mink.
1781, Jan. 22. To let, the dwelling house
of late Mrs. Marsh, long a noted public
house and eligible stand for any kind of
business, with seven acres of land. Also to
be sold, the house and lot next the above, on
the main street, to the west, in the pre.sent
Queens County — 2d Series.
37
A
occupation of William Warne, Jamaica.
Rev. John Sayre, New York.
1781, Jan. 27. Francis Beven, master of
the schooner Christopher, picked up a small
yawl, with two oars, in the mouth of Cow
Bay.
1781, Jan. 31. Taken up (23d instant) at
Jonathan Lawrence's farm, near Hallett's
Cove, a yawl.
1781, Feb. 2. At vendue, (March 5th), the
farm of Matthew Franklin, deceased. Flush-
ing, one and a half miles from the landing,
on the road to Fresh Meadow, half a mile
from a grist mill, one hundred and sixty
acres, fourteen of salt meadow. John Far-
rington and James Bowne, Executors. It
lies south of Jamaica.
1781, Feb. 2. For sale, the farm of David
Lamberson, of forty acres and six of wood-
land. The house is now occupied as a store
and has a considerable run of business. It is
suitable for a gentleman's country-seat, or
would support a considerable family, if well
attended to.
1781, Feb. 12. To be sold. A lot of ex-
cellent land, being part of the estate of Mrs.
Marsh, deceased, and situate at Jamaica,
L. I. , containing 17 acres, a part of which is
an orchard. It joins the cemetery of the
English Church on the east ; lies along the
Main street, and is bounded on the west by
the Dutch parsonage, which is now occupied
-'by the Rev. Mr. John Bowden, and on the
north by lands of the Widow Banks and oth-
ers. Apply to the Rev. John Sayre, No. 33
Smith street. New York.
1781, Feb. 18. Patrick Wall, New York,
cautions people against Thomas Ogilvie, his
apprentice, now residing in Flushing. He
also absconded June, 1799.
1781, Feb. 26. At vendue, (March 20), the
farm of John Mott, deceased, of one hundred
and forty acres, east side of Cow Neck.
Richard Sands and Adam Mott, Executors.
1781, Feb. 26. The creditors of Major Al-
exander Menzies, of Delancey's Third Battal-
ion will present their accounts, by May 1, to
his widow, Sarah, at Hempstead, Adminis-
tratrix.
1781, Feb. 26. To let, by Mary and Sam-
uel Franklin, New York, on April next, the
seat of Walter Franklin, deceased, head of
Newtown Creek, seven miles from Brooklyn
ferry, twenty-nine acres upland, manured, a
few acres salt meadow. The creek flows
within a few rods of the house, whence boats
come to market daily, fowl and pigeon
house, &c.
1781, Feb. 28. At vendue, April 2, the
farm of Abraham Brinckerhoff, a mile from
the town spot, Newtown, of one hundred and
fifteen acres, also moveables. Samuel Wal-
dron, Isaac and George Brinckerhoff, Execu-
tors.
1781, March 3. To let, as elegant a dwell-
ing as any in the Province, thirty miles from
New York, south side of Long Island ; a
noble prospect of the sea, fishing and fowling
abundant the whole year. The house stands
in a fourteen-acre field ; large garden, fruit,
coach-house and stable. Fire-wood quarter
of a mile distant. George Stanton, New
York.
1781, March 17, Gilbert Wright, Jericho,
will sell at vendue (27th instant) his farm of
fifty acres. It has an orchard and timber for
for fences.
1781, March 19. For sale or to let, a house
with twelve acres of land, opposite the Eng-
lish Church, Jamaica. It has four rooms on
first floor and four on the second, five fire-
places, and a barn for twenty horses. The
garden has asparagus, strawberries, raspber-
ries and fruit-trees. Enquire of John Living-
ston, on the premises, or Phillip Livingston,
Hellgate.
1781, March 19. At vendue, (April 9), by
James Mackrell, a two-story house and small
lot, an excellent stand for business, in the
town of Flushing, with the stock in trade,
(dry goods and groceries). Also a farm of
forty acres, (fifteen of which is in wheat).
The house has a fine prospect of the water.
1781, March 21. $5 reward. Ran away
from James Fuller, New York, an apprentice
boy, Benjamin Kiersted. He had on a fus-
tian jacket, drab velvet breeches and round
hat, supposed to be carried away on board
the pettiauger " Blacksnake," John Graham,
master, of Hog Island, south side of Long
Island. Whoever harbors him will answer
the penalty of the law for damages.
1781, March 21. Vendue at James Bayeu's,
Fort Neck, of farming utensils and stock of
Thomas Jones, Esq.
1781, March 24. One guinea reward. Ran
away from William Talman, Flushing, (19th
instant,) a negro man, Oliver, (now calls him-
self Joe), aged 27, of a thin, long face. Had
28
Revot.utxonatit Incidents
on a blue short sailor's coat, gray homespun
waistcoat and breeches.
1781, March 26. The partnership of Sea-
man, Willets & Co., of Westbury, is dis-
solved. All persons will leave their accounts
with Parsons & Prior, New York.
1781, April 7. For sale, Richard Smith's
farm, Herrick's, of eig^lity acres, convenient
for a storekeejier or house of entertainment.
The meadow, at Rockaway, cuts eighteen
loads of salt hay. Also his furniture and
farming utensils. Hendrick Hagner, Charles
Doughty and John Allen, creditors.
1781, April 9. Auction, at Bayside, (April
12), at the farm of Whitehead Hicks, de-
ceased. A pair of stout, well-tempered coach
horses, breeding and riding mares, an excel-
lent breed of hogs, phaeton, riding chair,
sulky, excellent milch cows, fourteen acres
stout, promising green wheat, farming uten-
sils, &c.
1781, April 14. Cary Ludlow, near Ja-
maica, offers at vendue, (25th instant), at
Rochford's, several lots of woodland, twenty-
nine acres, one and a half miles south of Ja-
maica, bounded by Widow Betts, Samuel
Doughty and John Williamson ; and salt
meadow at Jamaica South, bounded north by
meadow late of Isaac Rhodes, east and south
by Nicholas Everet, west by owners un-
known.
1781, April 16. To let, part of the large
and pleasant house in Jamaica occupied by
Rochford. Enquire of Dudley, Walsh & Co.,
New York.
1781, June 2. The copartnership of Ray &
Fitzsimons having been dissolved, Robert
Ray continues the business beyond Jamaica ;
Peter Fitzsimons, at Newtown ; where they
will serve their old customers and others who
may please to favor them with their com-
mands, upon the lowest terms.
1781, June 18. Charles Arding, being un-
der a necessity of leaving this country, will
embark, the first opportunity. He offers for
sale the farm where he lives, near Jamaica,
of sixty acres, half in grain and grass for
mowing. The house is large and neatly fin-
ished, has a spacious arched hall through the
middle, and every accommodation for a gen-
tleman ; two gardens neatly paled in, plenti-
fully stored with all kinds of vegetables, a
variety of the best fruit-trees, and neces.sary
outljuildings. Cattle, horses and household
furniture sold at same time.
1781, June 21. New Bricks. Any quan-
tity of the best sort may be had of Esau Cox
& Co. , at the brick-kilns, Whitestone.
1781, July 7. Good brick sold at Abraham
Lawrence's Point. Any quantity supplied
by Strong & Cox.
1781, July 21. Mary, wife of John Boss,
Newtown, being ill-treated by her husband,
left him and cautions buyers of the land.
1781, Sept. 12. Two halfjoes reward.
Stolen from Benjamin Hildreth, Bahana
Island, Hellgate, on the night of September
2, a brown horse.
1781, September 24. Vendue, October 2,
at the house of Oliver Willis, near by, of the
elegant farm of Isaac Smith, Esq., Herricks,
of one hundred and fifty acres, and twenty-
five of timber-land adjoining, a spring of
water by the door, twenty-five acres orchard-
ing, a lot of meadow at Near Rockaway
South that cuts twenty loads of hay.
1781, Oct. 10. To let, an elegant country
seat, north side of Hempstead Plains, six
miles from Jamaica. Of the two hundred
acres, thirty-six are woodland. John Le
Chevalier Roome, New York.
1781, Oct. 27. Wanted, a private tutor to
teach Latin, &c. , to go in a gentleman's fam-
ily at Flushing. Apply to Colonel Colden,
New York.
1781, Nov. 24, William Lanman, mer-
chant, intends closing his accounts immedi-
ately, and will dispose at public sale, (Decem-
ber 17), at Jamaica, of dry goods, groceries,
china and glassware. Sale to continue till
all is sold.
1781, Nov. 26. Taken up (12th instant)
by William Lawrence, near Hallett's Cove, a
bay horse with a large blaze in his face, and
legs white up to the knees.
1782, Jan. 5. William Palmer married
Sally, daughter of John Fish, Newtown.
1782, Jan. 9. " December 28, a box of
mine was taken from Isaac Van Dyke's
house. Long Island, and plundered by per-
sons unknown. Suspecting (kleb Haviland,
of Queens County, on insufficient grounds, I
propagated false rumors. I am .sorry and
make this public reparation. Jacob Abra-
hams, January 8, 1782."
1782, Jan. 15. The town of Hempstead
paid Nehemiah Sammis, Benjamin Lawrence
and (leorge Clerk £18, for entertaining sundry
shipwrecked mariners of His Majesty's ship
" Swallow:" and £?>, 4k, to Increase Pettit,
Queens County — 3d Series.
39
for entertaining three men belonging to a
privateer.
1782, Jan. 16. Joshua Carpenter, Jamaica,
offers for sale his house, barn, and farm of
one hundred and twenty acres, with orchard
and salt meadow.
1783, Jan. 38. To let and be entered on
May 1, the church parsonage at Newtown,
seventeen acres, with house, barn and out-
houses, and orchard. A handsome situation
for a genteel family. Enquire of Joseph
Burroughs and Jacob Moore, Trustees.
1783, Jan. 30. For sale, the farm of forty-
five acres, formerly of Joseph Provoost, de-
ceased, near Hallett's Cove. Apply to John
Bowne, New York.
1783, Feb. 4. The creditors of Malcolm
Morrison, of Jamaica, will send their ac-
counts to William Bogle, at Jamaica.
1783, Feb. 11. At private sale, and to be
entered on May 1, the farm of Peter Ryerson,
[Fosters Meadow], on the road from Jamaica
to Hempstead. The house has six finished
rooms, four fire places, smoke-house, shin-
gled barn, stone well by the door, tolerably
well timbered, by estimation one hundred
acres, more or less. It has an excellent store
for a grocery and another for dry goods.
1783, Feb. 30. At vendue, March 13, the
farm of the late Talman Waters, Flushing
Fly, two hundred acres, twenty of orchard,
twenty of woods, and twenty of salt meadow.
The house has four fire-places. Samuel
Doughty, John and William Waters, Execu
tors.
1783, Feb. 35. To be sold and possession
given May 1, the house and lot of one acre
now occupied by Mr. Cross, Jamaica, with
two good shops adjoining.
/' 1783, March 3. Charles Doughty offers to
let one year a farm of one hundred and fifty
acres, one and a half miles from Flushing
landing.
1783, March 3. A gardener wanted by a
gentleman on Long Island, twenty miles from
New York. Enquire of Mr. Beesly, tavern-
keeper. Flushing.
1783, March 4. To be sold on reasonable
terms, and time given for the payment of the
money, if most agreeable to the purchaser, a
two-and-a-half-story house, barns, cow-house,
coach house and two gardens enclosed with
pale fence, together with the demesne there-
unto belonging, nineteen acres of extraordi
nary fine meadow-land, in the most pleasant
and healthy part of the town-plat of Jamaica,
being part of the estate of John Troup, Esq.,
now in possession of Charles McEvers. Pos- ^
session given May 1, but the purchaser may
improve the gardens immediately.
1783, March 9. The creditors of John Van
Nostrand, Jr., shopkeeper, of Hempstead,
will bring their accounts (April 5) to Samuel
Clowes, Assignee.
1783, March 11. Edward Bardin presents
his compliments to the public and informs
them that he has removed from New York to
Jamaica and opened a tavern by the name of
Vauxhall, (formerly Thomas Rochford's).
Tea and coffee, and entertainments great and
small, at shortest notice — the best kind of
liquors.
1783, April 1. To let, in Jamaica, two or
three genteel rooms, with cellar and garden,
and privilege in the kitchen, stable, &c. En-
quire of Waters Smith, Jamaica.
1783, April 1. At vendue, (April 10), a
valuable farm of one hundred and seventy-
five acres, well situated for a gentleman's
country seat, on the East River, five miles
from New York. The river abounds with
fish, which may be taken the season through;
two stately rows of cherry-trees (one of red,
the other black,) are standing on the river's
bank ; sixteen acres of fresh and eight of
salt meadow and ten of woodland, the whole
well-watered by fine springs. Title given by
John Howes and John Parsell.
1783, April 15. Vendue (April 18) of the
valuable farm of Elias Doughty, deceased, in
Flushing, near the Great Plains, of about
two hundred acres upland. A large lot of
salt meadow, four or five miles distant, yields
sixty or seventy loads of salt hay in good sea-
sons. John and Charles Doughty, Executors,
New York Ferry.
1783, April 33. At public auction, 13
o'clock, (April 33), a likely negro wench, aged
33, and her male child, aged 33 months. She
understands all kinds of housework, and was
brought up in Flushing. Sold only for want
of employ. The property warranted.
1783, May 35. Alexander McAuley & Co.
have removed from Jamaica to New York,
and hope friends in the country will continue
to favor them.
1783, June 33. David Casseboom, of East
Woods, married (June 19) Mi.ss Jane Brass,
of Beth page, a lady of fortune.
90
Revolutionary Incidents
1782, July 6. Lost, between Joseph Wood-
ward's and Newtown, 32 guineas and $1 in
small change, in a green and white silk purse.
A handsome reward jf brought to Thomas
Hallett, Brooklyn Ferry.
1782, July 8. A single man, capable of
instructing about twenty children in reading,
writing and arithmetic, and bringing a good
recommendation, will meet with suitable en-
couragement by applying to Joseph Bur-
roughs, Newtown.
1782, July 27. Samuel Ockerson, of Ix>ng-
bridge, N. J., died on Long Island, aged 55.
1783, Aug. 24. Mr. Palmer, 54th Regiment,
married a daughter of Benjamin Woolsey,
deceased, of Queens County.
1782, Sept. 2). To be sold, several high-
bred stallions, among them " Lofty" and
" Bratus," belonging to cavalry officers, botli
capital four mile horees ; also " Comus" and
two or three capital hunters. To be seen at
Jamaica. Enquire of Mi. Betts, Queenshead.
The prices are left with the groom.
1782, Oct. 2. Died, at Newtown, Donald
McDonald, printer.
1782, Nov. 27. For sale, the islands called
Two Brothers, a good house and barn there-
on, two miles above Hellgate. Enquire of
Henry Brasher, Water street. New York.
1782, Dec. 18. Lost, ten days since, on
Long Island, a double-lidded and double-
hinged snuff-box, which opens four different
ways, with a crest on the lid, of a lion ram-
pant. A guinea reward, if delivered to the
printer.
.J 1782, Dec. Address of the principal inhab-
itants of Queens and Kings Counties to David
Scott, Captain and Commissary of British
Artillery Horse. They lament his departure
for England, admire his civil and military
conduct, his zeal and attention in His Majes-
ty's service ; his behavior as a civilian, dis-
tinguished with justice and agreeable man-
ners, which are so necessary to promote His
Majesty's interest in this country. They
hope his endeavors will be rewarded. Signed
by:-
yA Arch. Hamilton, Colonel Cora. Q. Co. Militia.
Jeremiah Vanderbelt, Major K. Co. Militia,
Nicholas Schei.ck, Captain K Co. Militia,
John Rapelye, late Colonel K. Co. Militia,
Dowe Ditmars, Ensign Q. Co. Militia,
Daniel Rapelye, Lieutenant Q. Co. Militia,
Johannes Remsen, Lieutenant K. Co. Militia,
Joseph French, Justice Quorum, Q. Co.,
Daniel Lent, Cornet, Q. Co. Horse,
Christopher Benson, Captain N. Y. Rangers,
Maurice Lott, late Sheriff, Kings Co. ,
Cornelius Wyckoff, Justice Quorum, K. Co.,
Samuel Hallett, Captain Delancey's Brigade,
Jeromus Lott, Lieutenant-Colonel,
Peter Lott, ('aptain,
Richard Betts, Captain,
John Polhemus, Lieutenant,
Isaac Cortelyou, Thomas Harriot,
Hendrick Eldert, Hendrick Wyckoff,
Denyse Denyse, John Benham,
Daniel Luyster, William Van Nuise,
Garret Luyster, Albert Terhune,
Nathaniel Moore, 3d, Theophylact Bache,
Nathaniel Mooi'e, 2d, John Johnston,
David Moore, Whitehead Cornell,
Nicholas Wyckoff, Jaques Cortelyou,
Jacob Snedeker, Simon Cortelyou,
Nicholas Williamson, Joseph Hallett,
John Williamson, William Hallett,
Gozen Ryers, Samuel Doughty,
Henry Van Buren, Charles Doughty,
John Wetherhead, William Doughty,
Isaac Eldert, Johannes Lott,
Isaac Rapelye, Jurrian Lott,
Jacob Rapelye, Joost Wyckoff,
Abraham Lent, William Cowenhoven,
John Moore, August's Van Cortland,
Joseph Moore, John Waters.
1783, Jan. 6. Josiah Brown, grocer, ac-
quaints the public that he has removed from
Jamaica, and offers for sale the house now
occupied by John Dudley.
1783, Jan. 18. $2 reward. Lost, between
Newtown and Brooklyn, a hanger, with black
handle and silver lion head.
1783, March 5. At vendue, (20lh instant),
all the estate, moveable and immoveable, of
Richard Gardiner, of Flushing, deceased :
a house of two rooms, garret, fourteen acres
of land, brook of water by the door, suitable
for the tanning business. Apply to Daniel
Nostrand, Black Stump.
1783, April 2. To be sold or exchanged
for a house in New York, a house and farm
of sixty acres, near Jamaica, pleasant and
remote from business.
1783, April 28. Bark ! Bark ! Bark !
A generous price given for two hundred
cords. Thomas Hazard, John Cole, Jacob
Polhemus. [Newtown.]
1783, May 10. The creditors of Mrs. Sarah
Scudder, of Newtown, deceased, will settle
with (ileorge Rapelye and Richard Alsop.
1783, June 7. For sale and immediate pos-
session given, a blacksmitli's shop, an ex-
ceeding good stand. One set of tools com-
plete, in the centre of Jamaica town. En-
quire of Isaac Roop, Brooklyn Ferry.
1783, June 21. The partnership between
Isaac Roop and Jonathan Jones, of Jamaica,
blacksmiths, will be dissolved January 1.
Debtors will pay and creditors be paid.
1783, July 9. Mr. Bennet, who formerly
taught school at Thomas Betts', Esq., be-
tween Brooklyn Ferry and Jamaica, is desired
to call on tlie Printer.
1783, Sept. 10. Thomas Lester offers for
sale or exchange for goods, the house, barn
and three acres of land, a mile from Her-
ricks, north side the Plains, commodious for
public business. Apply to James Peters,
New York, for particulars.
1783, Sept. 10. Two guineas reward.
Ran away from Widow Suydam, Flushing;
" Peg," aged 20, very black and thick-set.
1783, Sept. 10. Handsome reward. Ran
away from Edward Bardin, Jamaica, " Sam,"
a mulatto. He had on a striped jacket and
trowsers made of bed-tick. He carried off
a bag of clothes, red waistcoat, buckskin
breeches and two pair of white breeches.
War Correspondence of Colonel Ham
ILTON and Ma,JOR KiSSAM.
To Captain Stephen Thome, Cow Neck.
Innerwick, June 14th, 1777.
Orders by Archibald Hamilton, Esq. , Colonel
Commandant of the Regiment of Queens
County Militia, for the better regulating
of that corps.
1. Every Captain is to keep an exact return
or list of the number of men in his district
fit to bear arms.
2. He is to warn all his men regularly to
a field-day or muster with their arms com-
plete. No excuse but want of health will be
admitted.
3. He will give particular orders to his
subalterns to attend constantly, as it is the
officers' duty to give good example to the
soldiers.
4. Any of those people commonly called
Quakers, who were aiders or abettors of this
unnatural rebellion, are to be constantly
warned to appear, and to be fined for a non-
QuEENS County — 2d Series. ~ 31
compliance. At the same time every lenity
will be shown to those few who held fast
their integrity.
5. Any militia man or soldier who shall
neglect to appear when warned, or shall con-
tumaciously refuse any lawful order, will not
only be fined but sent to the Provost-guard.
Every Captain is to read these orders at the
head of his company and insert them in an
Orderly book kept for that purpose.
Rules, kv.
Each company is to have a call and size-
roll, in which the men's names are to be in-
serted according to their ranks, as front or
rear rank, that they be well instructed in the
rank to which they belong (to facilitate the
drawing them up for field exercises) to place
the smallest men in the front rank.
That when a company is ordered to meet,
that their names be regularly called over.
That the officers see that the men appear
clean and decent under arms ; that they are
sober and behave with decorum on their way
to and from as well as at the muster or exer-
cising ground, and that their arms and accou-
trements are in good order.
That the officers be particularly careful in
expediting any orders they may receive ;
that they endeavor to encourage the men in
the attention to muster and training days ;
that both officers and men avoid disobedience,
murmuring or any marks of envy or disre-
spect, which betray an ignorance of the value
of subordination, the basis of all good order
and discipline.
Hempstead Pi,ains, \
Friday Morning, 11 o'clock. S
Sir : — I this morning received an express
from Setauket,* that the Rebels invested
that post early this morning, [August 22,
1777]. I have orders from (ieneral Delancey
to muster the militia and march to Hunting-
ton forthwith. You will therefore order the
Captains on the north side of the Plains to
collect their companies and, with the assist-
ance of horses and wagons, meet me at the
windmill, f to which place I have ordered the
companies from the southside. Captains
Coles, Van Wyck and Youngs you'll order
* See Revolutionary Incident
p. «)>.
t The uinflmi
Plains.
of .'Suffolk Connty.
tavern was nortlisicle of Hempstead
32
directly on for Huntington. I doubt not
your using the utmost expedition, and am
Yours, &c., G. G. Ludlow.
INNERWICK, near FJ;U8HING, }
17th March, 1778. ^
the Militia of Great and Cow
Orders for
Necks.
It is Colonel Hamilton's positive orders
that the companies of Captains Thorne and
Cornwell mount guard every niglit at the
place that Major Kissam shall think most
requisite. This guard to consist of one ser-
geant, one corpf)ral and sixteen privates. No
age to excuse those who are in good circum-
stances, as they are hereby ordered to hire
one to do their duty, if they are not able to
do it themselves. The Captains to take care
that this order is strictly complied with. No
person to be excused from this duty but doc-
tors, and to continue till further orders.
Archibald Hamilton,
Colonel Commandant of Queens Co. Militia.
Orders sent to Major Kissam, for the Militia
of Queens County in the Parishes of Oys-
terbay and Hempstead.
Innerwick, 26th March, 1778.
It is Colonel Hamilton's orders that the
Captains of the Regiment of Queens County
Militia in the Parishes of Oysterbay and
Hempstead, do immediately meet and settle
a proper mode for establishing sufficient
guards on Great Neck, Cow Neck and Matin-
ecock Point, or any other place that may re-
quire it for the defence of that part of the
Island. If the common methods of doing
duty by companies is found inadequate to the
purpose, guards must be hired, and paid by
a general tax on these companies according
to their strength. A return of this plan is to
be sent as soon as possible to Colonel Hamil-
ton for his consideration and approbation.
Major Kissam will appoint the place and
be present at the meeting, and make his re-
port to Colonel Hamilton. He is likewise to
get a complete return of the strength of their
respective companies, from each of these
Captains. He is also to appoint proper guard-
houses and to take care and give orders that
they be supplied with fire- wood.
Revolutionary Incidents
Innerwick, 1st May, 1778.
Regimental Orders.
Governor Tryon has been pleased to make
the following promotions in the Regiment of
Queens County Militia, whereof Gabriel G.
Ludlow, Esq., is Colonel: — John Woolley,
Jr., Esq., to be Captain of a Company, in the
room of Stephen Thorne, Esq. , who has leave
to resign upon account of his health. Ed-
ward Thorne, gentleman, to be First Lieuten-
ant ; Robert Sutton, gentleman, to be Second
Lieutenant ; and Joseph Thorne, gentleman,
to be Ensign in said Company.
Any soldier of Queens County Militia who
refuses or neglects his guards is to be fined
£5 for every offence. Tlie Captains to take
care that this order is strictly put in execu-
tion. For neglect of smaller duties, they are
to be fined 20 shillings for every offence, the
Captains to be answerable that this order is
complied with. A. H.
To Major Kissam.
Innerwick, 1st May, 1778.
Orders for the Regiment of Queens County
Militia.
It is Colonel Hamilton's order that no sol-
dier, upon any pretence, shall quit the troops
or company in which he is now mustered,
without leave from the commanding officer
of the regiment. Those who presume to act
contrary to this order will be fined £10 and
treated as deserters, the captains to be an-
swerable, if this order is not complied with.
The guards from Red Spring Point to Oak
Neck are to be very strict in their duty.
They are to seize all persons and boats com-
ing from the Rebel shore, and keep them in
custody, reporting them to Colonel Hamilton,
and waiting for his directions. If any one
suffers or assists them to escape, he will be
treated as a traitor to his King. No boats to
be permitted to remain upon the shore along
the Sound, for fear that deserters or Rebels
may make their escape by then». If any
boats are found along shore after this order
is known, the officers are to see that they are
cut to pieces. Any commissioned officer who
neglects his duty or refuses, will be fined
£20, and will be dismissed with infamy.
Whatever things are seized coming from the
Rebel shore are to belong to the persons who
seize them.
Queens County
Innerwick, 16th May, 1778.
To John Kissam, Major of Queens County
Militia.
It is Colonel Hamilton's positive orders
that no further steps shall be taken [by Cap-
tain Daniel Youngs] in the affair betwixt Pe-
ter Hegeman and Mrs. Knapp, until he
comes to enquire into the merits of the cause
himself, which will be soon. A. H.
-2d Series.
33
Herricks, May 33d, 1778.
To Major Kissam.
Sir : — It is Major General Tryon's order
that in future no boats are to go from Long
Island to the Main, and that the ferrymen at
the different ferries be immediately acquaint-
ed with the same. You'll therefore please to
forward this order to such ferrymen as are
within your district.
I am, sir, your most obedient servant,
G. G. Ludlow, Colonel.
are relieved, the Captains to be answerable
that their proportion of men is kept up, oth-
erwise they (the Captains) will be severely
fined. The townships of Jamaica, Flushing
and Newtown are to furnish the party for
next Thursday, and the other townships to
take it in rotation.
A party of ten soldiers and two non-com-
missioned officers are to parade every even-
ing in the town of Flushing, opposite the
Meeting-house, with arms and ammunition
complete, who are to mount guard at White-
stone ; one non-commissioned officer and five
men to mount guard at Lewis's house, and
one non-commissioned officer and five men at
Pinfold's, who are to give an alarm in case
of any Rebels landing. Captain Hoogland's
company is to take the guard this evening ;
Captain Ludlum's to-morrow, and Captain
Betts's on Thursday, and so in succession.
Whatever company fails in their guard, the
Captain will be fined £30 for every failure.
A. H.,
Col. Commandant Queens Co. Militia.
To Major Kissam.
Head Quarters, New York, )
25th May, 1778. f
General Orders.
Queens County is to furnish one hundred
men, and Kings County fifty, to assemble at
Brooklyn Church, Wednesday morning, at 5
o'clock, to work upon the redoubts near
Brooklyn. The same party are to remain till
the works are finished ; or they may be re-
lieved from time to time, as may be thought
most commodious to the county.
Innerwick, 26th May, 1778.
Regimental Orders.
The Captains of the Regiment of Queens
County Militia are immediately to meet and
settle their proportion of men for the work-
ing party that is to march to Brooklyn.
They are to parade at Brooklyn Church on
Thursday morning, at 5 o'clock, and are to
carry their provisions with them. They will
be allowed rum by the Government. Every
Captain is to send to Colonel Hamilton, who
will deliver twenty haversacks for the use of
the working party of such company. Colonel
Hamilton orders this duty to be done by
townships, and to be relieved every fifth day.
Two commissioned officers are to go with the
working party, who are to remain till they
On His Majesty's Service.
7'« Major Kissam, Cow Neck.
Innerwick, 38th May, 1778.
Regimental Orders.
Major Kissam and the Captains of the
Regiment of Queens County Militia will meet
at Hempstead, on Tuesday. June 2d, at 13
o'clock, to settle their proportion of men for
the third relief, which will be on Friday, 5th
June, and to be answerable that there is no
stop put to the working party. No Refugee
is to go upon any Fatigue, but to do every
other duty.
Dear Sir: — 1 beg you will communicate
this order to the Captains in your district,
and take care that they are fulfilled.
1 am your most humble servant,
A. H., Col. Com't, &c.
Innerwick, 6th June, 1778.
Orders for the Militia of Queens County.
The Captains and officers of the Regiment
of Queens County Militia are immediately to
meet and settle the number of fascines each
company must make to furnish one thousand
for the use of His Majesty's works at Brook-
34
REVOLrTIONART INCIDENTS
lyn. They are likewise to furnish one thou-
sand pickets or palisades between seven and
eight feet long, sharpened at one end, from
four and five to six inches in diameter, either
round or split, and two thousand sod pins,
about one foot or fifteen inches long, sharp-
ened at one end, and about half an inch or
three-quarters of an inch in diameter. They
must be as expeditious as possible, that His
Majesty's service may not be retarded. The
fascines and pickets are to be carried and de-
livered at Brooklyn by the wagons of the
country gratis. The drivers will be allowed
fatigue-rum. The reason of this alteration,
by order of His Excellency Governor Tryon,
is owing to the working parties' not having
carried provisions with them, though posi
tively ordered. The fascines and pickets are
to be cut from Rebel woods, or from the
woods of those who have been in rebellion,
as may be most convenient for dispatch.
Colonel Hamilton earnestly recommends it to
the Captains and officers to be very attentive
to this duty, as he is determined to fine those
who are backward or neglectful, in a most
exemplary manner. Major Kissam is to be
answerable that the companies to the East-
ward do their part of this duty. The fas-
cines are to be from eight to ten feet long,
well tied together with three or four withes,
cut square at one end, with four pins to each.
A. H., Col. Com't, &c.
To Major Kissam, &c.
To John Kissam, Major of Queens Co. Militia.
A true return of Captain Seaman's Company,
made this 9th day of June, 1778, agreeable
to orders to me directed.
Captain, Samuel Seaman, (commission bear-
ing date the 9th day of December, in the
17th year of His Majesty's reign, 1776).
Lieutenant, Joseph Birdsall.
Ensign, Townsend Jackson,
1 Clerk, 4 Sergeants, 4 Corporals, 1 Drummer.
49 rank and file, able bodied men.
4 invalids, not fit for duty.
10 above the age of 50 and not ftO.
15 above 60.
Cash by fines, the sum of £13, 18, 4.
Cash paid for theuseof theComp'y, £11, 15,4.
4 absentees, gone in His Majesty's service.
5 do. moved themselves and families
out of the district.
Innbrwick, 13th Junk, 1778.
To Major Kissam.
Dear Sir : — I am this moment favored
with your letter, and am happy to find that
the fascines and pickets are almost ready. I
beg you will be so good as to enquire into the
case of Henry Allen, and settle it agreeable
to humanity for the one and convenience for
the others.
I am, dear sir, yours most sincerely,
A. H.
Hempstead Plains, July 30, 1778.
To Major Kissam.
Sir : — In the absence of Colonel Hamilton,
you will take the command of the Queens
County Militia, and execute such measures as
you shall think necessary for the benefit and
protection of the county. In particular you
will observe the following directions respect-
ing the Beacons on Cow Neck and near Nor-
wich, and take the steps requisite for their
being carried into execution.
Whenever any Beacons* to the Eastward
are seen on fire, you will immediately set fire
to those under your care ; making one fire or
more, as you observe those to the Eastward
have done, in every instance following their
example ; and whenever you have so done
you will send an express to the commanding
officer of the King's forces at Jamaica, in-
forming him that one, two or three beacons
(as the fact shall be) are fired to the East-
ward.
In all cases when you have certain intelli-
gence of tlie enemy being landed on this
Island in force, you will fire all the three
Beacons, and dispatch an express as above,
with the infomiation, always keeping up the
fires until the intelligence shall have reached
New York. You will of course have three
distinct Beacons at each place in readiness to
be fired ; and if it should happen in the day-
time, encourage the smoke as much as pos-
sible.
A corporal and four men are to mount
guard, at each place, on them, night and day,
always keeping a sentinel looking out for sig-
nals. These men you will change weekly,
or at your discretion, and excuse them from
i all military duty. A compensation will
moreover be made them in proportion to
their diligence and service.
I * See Revolutionary Incidental, pf*. M'i, 19i.
These directions are to be strictly observed
by the Guard at each of the two places fixed
on by Brigadier General Delaucey for the
erection of the Beacons ; and the Guard sta-
tioned on the hill near Norwich will also ob-
serve to send an express to Cow Neck when-
ever the Beacons under their care are fired.
William Tkyon, M. G.
Innkrwick, 29th September, 1778.
Dear Major : — I beg you will enquire
into the dispute betwixt Ensign Thome and
Mr. Taylor, and settle it agreeable to justice
and military customs. The road for carting
wood for His Majesty's troops is not to be
stopped upon any account.
I am, dear sir, your most humble servant,
A. H.
Queens County — 2d Series. 35
Court Martial, but do not think it can be of
any service, pro or con. However, you have
done your duty in sending him, and I shall
acquaint General Vaughan with it to-morrow.
I have again sent them back, and will ac-
quaint you with the General's answer. Be
so good as to deliver the enclosed letter.
General Orders, January 2, nT'J.
The Commanding Officer of the Queens County
Militia is to establiifh such guards along the Sound as
he maj' think sulficient both to prevent the Rebel*
from landing and to receive such as may make their
escape from them. They are to be very alert, and in
case of a descent are to give the alarm to the first
established post.
Signed, J. Vaughan, Major General.
Jan. 19, 1779. Major Kissam is to see this
order complied with, his way, and to consult
with Captain Brown, of His Majesty's sloop
"Scorpion," about the proper places for
guards. A. H., &c.
Innerwick, 2d November, 1778.
To Major Kissam.
Dear Sir : — I beg you will be so good as
to enquire into Valentine's affair, and if you
are persuaded that he has gone to the Rebels,
and that there is any collusion in the sale of
his estate, I desire you will put Joseph
Smith, with his family, upon part of it, for
his present support, till further orders.
I am, sir, your most obedient servant,
A. H.
To Major Kissam, at Cow Neck.
Innerwick, 22d November, 1778.
Having had repeated complaints against
one Cutler, in the Forage Department, from
several people in my district, I am, therefore,
to advise him (whoever he is) to be more
careful for the future how he acts, as I am
determined to protect all those under my
command from being ill-used or pillaged, as
they are willing to spare everything they can
for His Majesty's stores.
You are desired to copy several of these
and give theto to the inhabitants.
A. H.,
Colonel Commandant of Queens County Mili-
tia and Aid-de-camp to Major Gen. Tryon.
Colonel Hamilton to Major Kissam.
Dec. 31, 1778. I am this moment favored
■with your letter, and would have sent it with
Pearsall to the President of the General
Colonel Hamilton to Major Kissam.
Jan. 17, 1779. I ani desired by General
Tryon to give orders that the militia guards
for the future (your way) shall consist of
hired men, who are to be paid by a tax from
the companies who otherwise would have
mounted in their turn. You will likewise be
so good as to consult with Captain Brown
about the proper places for such guards, who
will be so obliging as to give you a copy of
the Signals sent by General Tryon. I beg
my compliments to your father, aqd am, with
great regard, dear sir, yours most sincerely.
Circular.
Outpost, Kingsbridge, \
20th January, 1779. S
To Justice Samuel Clowes.
Sir : — His Majesty's service requiring large
and immediate supplies of hay and straw,
which can only be obtained from the country,
His Excellency Sir Henry Clinton has re-
quested my assistance on this occasion.
It is expected from every farmer or inhab-
itant that he will bring into such magazine
as the Commissary General shall direct, that
quantity of these articles of forage not wanted
by the proprietor for carrying his own stock
through the season, nor necessary for sub-
sisting the Light-horse of the militia. But
it is not the General's intention that this con-
tribution should be made to the public exi-
gency without a compensation ; for certifi-
Revolutionart Incidents
cates are to be given of the quantities re-
ceived and payment made both for tlie article
and transportation according to tlie regula-
tions established by the Commander-in-Chief.
It will afford me much pleasure to find the
wants of the army satisfied without distress-
ing the people, and I can devise no better ex-
pedient for this purpose than to put the con-
duct of the collection under discreet and
trusty superintendents, well known and es-
teemed in the quarters whence the supplies
are collected. Mr. Wier, the Commissary
General, has assured me that he will not only
reimburse them and their assistants for their
expenses, but reward them for their trouble.
I therefore hereby appoint you Superin-
tendent for the division or township of Hemp-
stead, and , of your county, to
be your assistant, and recommend to you to
proceed on the business with speed and the
strictest regard to justice and impartiality.
You will apprise the inhabitants of the
General's requisitions and the mischiefs of
withholding the supplies from any unjustifia-
ble motives ; for in that case the surplus
will be taken without payment ; and consist-
ing of straw unthreshed, on the first of
March next, the proprietor will be exposed to
the further loss of the grain in the ear. They
ought also to be informed that no sinister ex-
cuses to evade or delay the actual delivery of
the real surplus will be countenanced, the
King's service requiring an immediate com-
pliance.
In the execution of this trust you will re-
port your transactions to the Commissary
(Jeneral, who will instruct you respecting
the magazines. I have only to add that I
confide in your diligence and prudence, as
well as in the loyalty and zeal of the inhabit-
ants, and that I am, sir, your most obedient
servant. Wii.i.iam Tkyon, (iovernor.
ND, I
Signals.
Sf'ORPioN, OFF Nkw City Island,
.Ianuahv 30tii, 1779.
If the Hebels are attacking any ves.sels, or
landing or landed between this station and
Hempstead Bay, the signals by night are two
fires on Lawrence Hewlett's Point ; by day,
two smokes on the same. If the attack is
made in Cow Bay, the signal by night is one
fire on Lawrence Hewlett's Point ; if by day,
one smoke on the same. The above signals
will be answered from the "Scorpion;" by
day, by hoisting the colors, or hauling them
down if hoisted previously ; by night, with
lights, false-fires or muskets.
Phillip Brown.
Signals. — Colonel Hamilton will be so
good as to place a man at the most convenient
height to see Laurel Hill and Morris's house,
[on York Island]. He will observe what sig-
nals are made from there — if there are three
guns from Laurel Hill and three fires from
there or Morris's house, two guns and two
fires from ditto, or one gun and one fire from
ditto — and report the same to the Com-
mander-in-Chief, on board the " Grand Duke,"
at Whitestone.
Oliver Delancey, Aid-de-Camp.
Signals by day and night for Long Island
and Kingsbridge, to be made from Norwich
Hill, Sutton's Hill and Flushing Heights,
viz. :
1. On the enemy's landing in force east-
ward of Norwich : by night, one beacon fired
at each ; by day, one large smoke at each.
2. On enemy landing in force westward of
Norwich Hill : by night, two beacons fired at
each ; by day, two large smokes at each.
Signals acknowledged from Morris's house:
by night, first signal, one rocket ; second sig-
nal, two rockets ; by day, none.
N. B. — The fires and smokes to be kept up
while the enemy remain on the Island, or
until otherwise observed. After every signal
a Light Dragoon to be sent from Morris's
house to Headquarters with the intelligence.
Mem. — Norwich Hill is two miles south of
Oysterbay, Sutton's Hill* is three miles from
Cow Neck Point, Flushing Heights are near
Ustick's house.
Approved by the Commander-in-Chief,
Wii^iiiAM Tkyon, Major General.
Archibald Hamilton, Aid-de-Camp.
Signals. — On the attack of the Posts at
Kingsbridge, viz. : If at any one of the out-
posts on the Main, to fire one gun from the
\>ost attacked, or platoon where there is no
* Now on the farm nf Joseph O llp,
Adjutant Queens County Militia.
Colonel Hamilton to Major Kissam.
R. 0. July 21, 1779. Major Kissam and
the Captains of the Regiment are immedi-
ately to give in a return to Colonel Hamilton
of the situation, strength and number of
their different guards, that he may be able to
report the same to General Delancey, com-
manding on Long Island. No boat of any
kind, upon any pretence, is to carry passen-
gers from Queens County across the Sound
without a proper pass. Those who trans-
gress will be severely punished for disobedi-
ence of orders.
Signed Robert Morrell,
Adjutant Queens County Militia.
R. 0. Aug. 4, 1779. Colonel Hamilton is
greatly ashamed of and much chagrined with
the misbehavior of the militia on the north-
side of Long Island, the night that Justice
Townsend was taken off.* He is at a loss to
account for the difference of behavior between
those on the northside and those on the south-
side, who by their spirited behavior have
gained honor to themselves and their officers.
Queens County— 2d Series. 39
Colonel Hamilton cannot help disapproving,
in this public manner, of the behavior of Jus-
tice Coles, who had the immediate command
of the guard that night. A good soldier may
be overpowered, but he can never be sur-
prised. Colonel Hamilton desires that Major
Kissam and the officers will take.care that the
guards are sufficiently strong and properly
posted. They ought likewise frequently to
go rounds in the night frequently to see that
the guards are alert, as upon that their own
safety and the safety of the inhabitants de-
pend. General Delancey directs that the
hired guards, in place of being taken off,
shall be reinforced, if necessary. The offi-
cers are to take care that the guards are well
armed and accoutered and provided with
powder and ball. A particular set of good
arms must always be kept for that duty,
which are to be furnished from the different
companies.
♦ See Revolutionary Incidents (Queens Co., p. 217.
Robert Morrell, Adjutant, to Major Kissam.
R. 0. Aug. 29, 1779. Colonel Hamilton
having received orders from General Delan-
cey to furnish two hundred and ten men
from the militia of Queens County, as a
working party, who are to march to and
parade on Brooklyn Heights on Monday
morning, 23d instant, and to carry a blanket
each with them. It is therefore Colonel
Hamilton's orders that the Major and Cap-
tains meet immediately and settle their pro-
portion of men for this duty, and likewise
their proportion of fortifying materials here
after mentioned.
A Captain and two subalterns are to attend
this party. All duties of fatigue are to begin
with the youngest, and every officer to do his
own duty.
3,500 fascines, 9 feet long, well bound, and
stript of their leaves ;
15,000 pickets, of 3 feet and 4 feet long ;
7,000 railing, of 4 inches or 6 inches ;
3,000 palisades, of 7 and 8 inches in diameter
and 10 feet long.
These, when completed, are to be sent to
the Magazine at Brooklyn. Colonel Hamil-
ton expects and requests that both officers
and men will be very assiduous in performing
this service, that we may still deserve the
name of Loyal Queens County.
No person whatsoever is to be excused
from this duty on account of age. Those
40
Revoia'Tionart Incidents
who have not. servants must hire a man in
their room, if they can afford it. Tlie work-
in<^ party is to be relieved every Monday
iiiornin":. witli the same number of men, till
furtlier orders.
Colonel Hamilton to Major Kmnm.
R. O. Aug. 31, 1779. Colonel Hamilton
having received a letter from General Delan-
cev, acquainting him that he has received a
complaint from Kings County that some of
the districts in Queens County have been de-
ficient in their quota of men for the working
party, Colonel Hamilton therefore assures
the Regiment that he will make a strict en-
quiry where the deficiency has been, and the
Captain of the district may depend upon being
severely fined. Colonel Hamilton is much
hurt and extremely sorry to think that a
complaint should be made from Kings County
against loyal Queens County, of their being
remiss in the service of their King ; they
who have so often stood forth in the worst of
times in opposition to Delegates and Con-
gressmen, which is not the characteristic of
every county. These orders are to be read at
the head of each company.
All militia soldiers who have enlisted in
either of the Regiment Light Troops since
the roster for the working-party has been
settled, are still to be enrolled in their former
companies till the working duty is completed,
and in case of refusal to be fined as formerly.
Samuel Tredwell, Clerk of Regiment, to Major
Kissam.
R. O. Sept. 2, 1779. As Colonel Hamil-
ton finds there is a great neglect and remiss-
ness in the officers relieving one another in
the working party at the Ferry, to prevent
such neglect for the future, it is Colonel
Hamilton's orders that Lieutenant Marr, of
Captain Van Dyne's company, shall tal^e the
command of the working party till it is fin-
ished, and Colonel Hamilton will be answer-
able that he shall be sufficiently rewarded for
his trouble by a fine which will be levied
upon all the officers. Lieutenant Marr is im-
mediately to join and take command of the
party.
Colonel O, (J. Ludlow to Major Kissam.
Hempstead, August 31st, 1779.
Sir : — By good intelligence just received, a
party of Rebels in five whaleboats left Nor-
walk, Friday last, intending to be over on the
Island and carry off General Delancey. They
sent a single whaleboat and left one man that
evening, and another man on Cow Neck on
Saturday night to procure information. The
party are most probably now concealed on
the north shore opposite your Neck, waiting
for a signal. You will therefore take such
steps as you may judge proper to cut off their
boats, or intercept their retreat in case they
should land. The Captain of the "Scor-
pion" is already informed by express. Cap-
tain Cornell will inform you respecting the
attempt on Richard Townsend* last night. I
have only to recommend that your measures
may be secret, lest they take the alarm and
put off their enterprise.
Colonel Hamilton to Major Kissam.
Sept. 6, 1779. Dear Sir : — I am this in-
stant favored with your letter enclosing the
seaman's affidavit against John Worden,
whom I have set at liberty till he has time to
get his evidence. I must own I think the
affidavits rather vague. I beg my compli-
ments to your family.
Samuel Tredwell, Clerk, to Major Kissam.
R. O. Oct. 9, 1779. All the Captains of
the Regiment of Queens County Militia are
immediately to give in a return to the Adju-
tant, of the number of wagons and horses in
each of their districts. The troopers will
each reserve one horse for the troop service,
which is not to be returned in this return.
Samuel Tredwell, Clerk of Regiment of Qxieens
County Militia, to Major Kissam.
R. O. Oct, 15, 1779. As there are several
drivers immediately wanted for His Majesty's
service in the Quartermaster General's de-
partment, the Captains of the Regiment of
Queens County Militia are to give in a return,
as soon as possible, to the Adjutant, of the
number of Refugee negroes in each of their
districts, in order that they may be sent down
* See Hfvoliitioiinry Incidpiits. p. 181.
Queens County — 2d Series.
41
to Brooklyn. Tliey will be wanted but for a
short time, and probably on the Island only.
Colonel Hamilton flatters himself that the
Captains will exert themselves in this duty.
Headquakters, New York, }
November 24th, 1779. S
Sir : — By order of His Excellency, the
Commander-in-Chief, I send herewith a num-
ber of proclamations, which you will please
I direct to be put up in different parts of your
district for the information of the inhab-
itants.
It is also the Commander-in-Chief's desire
that where the wood has not been cut off the
Rebel lands by the persons that obtained the
Commandant's permission for that purpose,
that you do immediately give leave to any
persons that may apply, to cut the same for
the supply of the market ; the wood that
may have been cut in consequence of the
Commandant's permission, and that is still
lying in the woods, from the incapacity of
the owners to bring the same to proper land-
ings, it is the Commander-in-Chief's direction
that you immediately order the neighboring
farmers to cart the same to the landings, the
owners paying the rates for carting that shall
be fixed by you, with the advice of three of
the most respectable farmers in your district.
If the owners of such cut wood do not apply
to you for the assistance of the farmers to
cart the same, you are authorized by the
proclamation to allow any person who can
cart the same to the landings, to take the
wood, paying the owner for the cutting, at
such rates as may be settled by you and three
neighboring farmers.
His Excellency also desires that within
fourteen days you make a return to the Com-
mandant of this city, of the names of all pro-
prietors of woodland who do not, in conse
quence of his proclamation, immediately cut
and send to this market a proper proportion
of their wood. I have the honor to be, sir,
your most obedient humble servant.
Signed John Smith, Secretary.
Regulations for the Captains of the Militia
and Justices of the Peace for Queens
County.
1. The troops cantoned in each district in
Queens County are to be supplied with fuel
by the inhabitants of the neighborhood.
2. The Captain of the Militia and the Jus-
tice of the Peace living in the same district
are to join in assessing on the inhabitants of
the beat the requisite quantity of wood.
Those who have no woodlands, and are of
ability, will furnish in proportion.
3. In those districts in which any troops
are hutted, the inhabitants, by direction of
the Captain of Militia, are to cart the wood
to the Common Yard and to unload as or-
dered by the Barrack Master, or Quartermas-
ter of the Regiment, in his absence ; but
where the troops are cantoned or billeted* on
the inhabitants, the Captains of the Militia
are so to regulate the matter that each inhab-
itant may supply the nearest fire, the whole
in the district, nevertheless, to bear an equal
proportion on the quantity requisite, by as-
sessment.
4. Such wagons and horses as may from
time to time be wanted by the Commissary
General or Barrack Master General's depart-
ment, or by commanding officers of corps, on
emergency, for the purpose of carting pro-
visions, forage, feed or baggage, are also to
be supplied by the Captain of the Militia,
who will regulate this service with all possi-
ble equality among the inhabitants who have
teams, in their respective districts.
5. Where different corps are billeted in the
same district, the Captain of the Militia will
so regulate the farmers and their teams as
will best facilitate the supplies.
6. In all cases of difliculty that may arise
in the due execution of these regulations, the
Captains of Militia will apply to the Colonel
of Militia for his directions and aid, who will
apply to the General oflScer of the district, if
necessary, and every inhabitant who shall
pay neglect or disobedience to the order of
the Captain of his district, for the purposes
aforementioned, will be fined according to
the degree of neglect or offence. The fines
to be regulated by the captain and acting
magistrate in their respective districts, and
to be levied by the Captain and reserved by
him for such public use in the township as
may hereafter be directed.
William Tryon, Major General.
Jamaica, 27th November, 1779.
♦The billeting of poldiers is explained on page 64 of
Queens County in Olden Times.
42
Revolutionary Incidents
JAciitenntit Jamen Marr to Majoi' Kissam.
Brooklyn, October 26th, 1779.
SiK : — I received your letter tliis day, about
2 o'clock this afternoon, in behalf of Captain
Woolley's company making their proportion
of fascines and pickets in their own districts ;
and the favor is granted by the engineer, and
me likewise. The dimensions for the fas-
cines are : they are to be nine feet long, well
bound with live withs each, the leaves stript
off, and made very straight ; the pickets four
feet six inches long, well pointed and straight.
The number each week required by the en-
gineer is one thousand fascines, and three
pins for each fascine. The engineer will
try one week's work, and if it will answer,
you may continue them in your own districts
and send them to Brooklyn once every week.
The whole dependence of good fascines lies
on Queens County, for the front part of the
works. No more such favors will be granted
by the engineer to the rest of the militia.
R. O. Dec. 2, 1779. The Cai)tain8 of
Queens County Militia are immediately to
give in a return of the quantity of woodland
in each of their districts, to the Adjutant,
specifying those whose former owners Avere
or are in rebellion. They will likewise dis-
tinguish the Rebel lands that have protec-
tions, mentioning by whom granted and to
whom. Colonel Hamilton expects that those
who have woodlands will immediately cut a
certain quantity agreeable to His Excellency
the Commander-in-Chief's proclamation, for
supplying the inhabitants of New York.
Any who neglect or refuse may depend upon
having their names returned to the Com-
mandant of New York, according to the
Commander-in-Chief's instructions to Colonel
Hamilton, and the Captains of Militia are re-
quested to be very particular in seeing this
put in execution.
Dec. 9, 1779. Colonel Hamilton orders
that the three troops of Light Horse will
turn out at the first alarm, and rendez-
vous as follows : Captain Whitehead's troop
at Major (Jeneral Tryon's quarters, at Ja-
maica, except a sergeant's party, consisting
of a corporal and ten men, who will immedi-
ately repair to Major (leneral Huyne's quar
ters, or oHicer commanding in Flushing ; and
a corporal and three dragoons to remain in
Newtown, with the commanding officer there.
Captain Hewlett's troop will rendezvous, with
all expedition, at Brigadier tJeneial Delan-
cey's quarters, at Westbury, and Captain
Youngs', with equal alertness, at Hunting-
ton, Brigadier General Leland's quarters ;
or, in case of that command's being removed,
to rendezvous at Lloyd's Neck, with the pro-
vincial troops posted there.
Robert Morrell, Adjutant, to Major Kismm.
Flusiiino, December 17tii, 1779.
Sir : — You will please to send these orders
to the Captains of Oysterbay and Hempstead,
inmiediately. I should not have troubled
the Major with the whole of them had it not
been for the unhappy misfortune that hap-
pened last Sunday in my family, by losing
my youngest child by a scald. Therefore I
humbly beg the Major's assistance at this
present time, whilst under affliction. I could
have wished to write more particularly to
you, sir, but having a heart full of trouble,
so that I am not able to express myself fully
to the Major as I could wish to do, therefore
I hope the Major will excuse me at this pres-
ent time. Dear sir, by complying with my
request you will forever oblige your sincere
friend and well-wisher. Sir, I have one
thing more to mention to you, sir : that is to
order the Captains of the Militia in Hemp-
stead and Oysterbay to send in a return
agreeable to the proposal, when we met at
Jamaica last, about the number of horses,
wagons and ox -teams. Some of the Captains
have sent in their return, and some have not.
I am, sir, with great regard, sir, and remain
your most obedient humble servant.
P. S. — Sir, you need not send any orders to
the Captains at Oysterbay, for two Captains
of the Militia were at my house, about half
an hour after I wrote this letter to you, sir,
and they promise to send the orders to the
Captains of Oysterbay township ; but the or-
ders please send as soon as possible to the
Captains in Hempstead, and one order to
Captain Hewlett, who commands the troop of
horse.
Colonel Ilamilton to Major Kissam.
Dec. 18, 1779. I am to beg you will be so
good as to assist Mr. Willett, of the Quarter-
Queens County— 2d Series.
43
master General's department, in procuring
fire- wood for the troops. In case there is no
Rebel woods, (which ought ever to go the
first), there will be a necessity of allotting a
part of every large wood for His Majesty's
service, wliich must be valued, and will be
paid for by the Quartermaster General. This
is the mode adopted in Kings County, and
which I think extremely proper. The wood
must be valued standing, by three respecta-
ble farmers, and confirmed by you. I beg to
hear from you.
Colonel Hamilton to Mr. Thome.
Dec. 31, 1779. The situation of the garri-
son of New York for want of wood is so
alarming that I am to beg (if possible) you
will fall upon some method, and point out
where Mr. Miller may cut about five hun-
dred cords of wood, for which he will pay.
You will be kind enough to consult the Major
upon this subject, to whom I beg my compli-
ments.
Colonel Hamilton to Major Kissam.
Flushing, January 22d, 1780.
Dear Sir : — I have received a letter from
Governor Try on, acquainting me that, as the
Quarter Master General's department has
given up Kings County to the Barrack Mas-
ter General's department to cut wood in, that
I will therefore purchase a number of acres
from the proprietors of woodlands upon the
Necks and Success Pond, for the use of the
Qaartermaster General's department only. I
am therefore to desire that you will be so
good as to assist me in this particular on the
Necks, and prevent any other department
from interfering with the Quartermaster Gen-
eral, till further orders. Enclosed I send you
General Tryon's letter, and if you can fall
upon any plan that will fully answer the pur-
pose of Government, and at the same time be
more eligible to the subject, I beg you may
adopt it. I beg to have the pleasure of hear-
ing from you upon this head. I am likewise
to beg that you will order large and frequent
patrols in the night along your shore, to give
timely notice in case the Rebels should take
advantage of the ice and attempt a descent.
Colonel Hamilton to Major Kissam.
Feb. 4, 1780. I am this instant favored
with your letter of this date, informing me
of the system you have adopted for furnish-
ing the Quartermaster General's department
with a certain quantity of fuel. I very much
approve of it, as it will equally be of service
to the department and moie convenient for
the inhabitants. We are very alert here,
[Flushing]. I have constantly militia dra-
goons patroling the shore and avenues during
the night. I wish you would follow the
same method. I am sorry to find you have
got frost-bit. I have just heard, I know not
with what certainty, that General Kniphau-
sen marched yesterday, with seven thousand
troops, in search of Washington. I sincerely
wish you better.
R. 0. Feb. 4, 1780. A great jealousy
arises between the Captains of the Foot and
Horse, very prejudicial to the service at pres-
ent required, upon account of the soldiers'
leaving the foot companies and enlisting into
the troop. To remedy this evil Colonel Ham
ilton orders that the Captains of the troop,
for the future, shall be answerable for their
men in every respect, as well for carting or
other fatigue, as for their duty as troopers.
The Captains of the foot, therefore, are not to
interfere in warning or fining the troopers,
upon any account or pretence, but are to
apply to the Captains commanding such
troops, who will (and are hereby required to)
take care that such duty is performed. At
the same time. Colonel Hamilton assures the
Regiment that if just complaints are made
against the troopers for any neglect of fa
tigues, the Captain of such troop may depend
upon being severely fined. Any fines that
may have been levied by the Captains of the
foot from the troopers since the patrols were
first in orders, are immediately to be returned
to the owners.
R. O. Feb. 7, 1780. Colonel Hamilton
desires that the officers of the Regiment of
Loyal Queens County will provide them-
selves immediately each with a uniform or
regimentals. It is to be scarlet, faced with
blue, with white lining, white waistcoat and
breeches, and silver buttons, with a silver
epaulet, a weil cocked hat with silver button
and loops and silver hat-band. Whatever
officer appears upon any duty without his
regimentals or side-arms may depend upon
being fined half a Joe for the entertainment
44
Rkvot-utionary Incidents
of liis brother officers. Colonel Hamilton I nel H. therefore trusts it will be cheerfully
again recommends it to the officers to be very complied with. Colonel Hamilton likewise
careful in inspecting the men's arms and am- , desires that the f'aptains will take care that
munition, as we do not know but we may be , no straw is destroyed by throwing it into
called upon every moment.
[A true copy.] Samuel Tredwell,,
Clerk of Regiment Queens County Militia.
Mo'
Timothy Smith 24 ."id
Thi)S.Ap[)lel>y&soii4() 80
James Hewlett 1.5 30
Samnel Hewlett 20 40
John Burtis 14 20
William Hatchings 8 18
John Sands 30 60
Daniel Kissam 32 H4
And..ifcElb.HeiJemanl5 32
Dan'l Hegeman.Vr soii22 44
PetrUiH Onderdonck 15 2.5
Wld.& Dan'l Rapelye7 7
William Salt*
Obadiah Demilt* 7 11
Widow Vanderbilt &
Dnrye 18 36
Bundrick Vanderbilt
& daughter* 22 7
Widow (Tristram)
Dodge* 6 l)^
Joseph Dodge* 15 4
Lieut. Robert Sutton 5
Adam Mott 25 50
Stephen Mott 18 36
Thomas Thome 10 20
Henry Sands* 66 19
Joshua Cornell 10 18
Simon Sands 14 20
Richard Sands 15 20
Edward Sands 4 8
John Mott's estate 10 12
John Cornwi!ll 12
Dr. David Brooks 23 .50
Capt. Steph. Thome 20 20
Thomas Dodge 20 20
Caleb Corjiwell* 1 1
Israel Baxter* 5 8
John Mitchell & con 14 28
Daniel VVhitehead
Kissam* 30 8
Joseph Kissam 10 12
Benjamin Kissam 3
Benjamin Akeily 6
Dr. Samuel Latham 20
Joseph Thonie* 10
.Joseph Pearsall 14
Adrian Onderdonck 14
Rich. Thorne, C. N. 6
Klliert Van Nosuand 1
Caleb Mnrrell 2
Cornelius Cornell 3
Daniel Brinckerhoff 15
.Tohn Sciienck
Piter Schenck
Martin Schenck
William Smith
(ieorge Kapelye
John Searing
Widow Lawrence*
Charles Hicks
Robert Mitchell*
John Allen
John Tliorne
Rictiard Thorne
Widow C;ornell
George Cornell
Samuel Mott Cornell 7
Charles Cornell 7
Samuel Tredwell 10
William Thome 14
Phillip Allen & sons 30
Abram Schenck 11
John Alb.ii, Jr. 8
Henry, Samuel and
13
22
10
15
10
3
15
1
20
16
16
6
James .Mien
Henry Stocker
Beiij imin Woolley
John Toffey
Heiijamin Hewlett
Georire Hewlett
John Woolley
Daniel Kissaui, Jr.
John Mitchell
Widow Mitchell
Lawrence Hewlett
Widow Tredwell
Thomas Tredwell*
Benjamin Tredwell 10
William Moit 30
John Morrell 8
Henry Hauxhurst 4
* Name inserted from another list and date.
Ist District, Captain Woolley,
2d " Captain Youngs,
3d •' Mr. Sands,
4th " Little Neck,
5th " Captain Abram Van Wyck,
6th " Captain Thomas Van Wyck,
Acrpp.
Coids,
1,096
1.901
.579
1.151
654
1,501
7.1
147
300
651
, 300
651
3,003 6,003
Prior Townsend to Major Kissam.
Latting-town, February 28th, 1781.
When we parted with you last, you told
us we might send to you on the Friday
following for orders respecting the wood.
George Underbill doth now apply to you for
orders. Our company meets to-morrow after-
noon. I shall expect some orders from you,
which will be highly necessary, and when-
ever we get them we shall do our endeavors
to put them in execution ; and if the commis-
sions are made out, we should be glad that
our officers might have them, in order that
the contract might be fulfilled. I further
would wish to know what number of [boats]
you have in your quarter that undertakes to
carry the wood contracted for, as there is
some with us that is now waiting an answer.
Cow Neck, March 6th, 1781.
To Mr. Purden.
Sir : — You may remember when we con-
tracted for the delivery of the requisition of
wood by Government, it was agreed, in order
to facilitate tlie transportation thereof, that
there should be two armed vessels to cover
the coasts and protect the boats in passing
and repassing. It therefore becomes neces-
sary that they should attend on that business
immediately, as any delay must necessarily
retard the matter and prevent a performance
of the contract. We must therefore, sir, beg
your assistance to prevent that miscliief, as
there has already been some delay occasioned
thereby. We doubt not, therefore, you will
see it immediately done, as it becomes at
present absolutely necessary. We desire that
one may be stationed at present at Cow Bay
and the other at Hempstead Harbor, with or-
ders to remove to the other harbors as occa-
sion may require. Your attention to this
matter will much oblige, sir, your most obe-
dient and very humble servant,
John Kiss.vm,
In behalf of the contractors.
53
Revolittionary Incidents
New York, March 29th, 1781.
To John Kissam, Esq.
Sir : — Yours of the 28th I have received.
The removal of the armed vessels from
the Sound is an unexpected occurrence, and
which the King's service has made necessary
for tlie present. As soon as it is practicable,
you may depend that guard-vessels will be
ordered to reassume their stations. But the
contractors may go on with the cutting the
wood, and if they think it safe, cart it to the
landings. I am extremely happy to observe
that most part of the farmers show a disposi-
tion to enable the contractors to fulfill their
engagements, and you may be assured that
no censure will fall on the contractors for not
delivering the wood at the fixed periods, if
suitable convoys are not furnished in season.
I am, sir, your most humble servant,
William Crosbie,
Barrack Master General.
NoRTHSiDE, Hempstead, )
April 1st, 1781. )
Major de Wurmb's compliments to Major
Kissam and acquaints him that there is a
picket of one officer and 40 men from to-day
till to-morrow at Cow Bay, (Dr. Latham's
house), in case any whale-boats should come
this night at Cow Neck, Major Kissam may
send there for support.
A list of the wood carted to the landing at
Oysterbay, in Captain Daniel Youngs' Com-
pany, March 20, 1781, 50 cords.
A return of the state of the Company of
Militia of Captain Daniel Youngs, at Oyster-
bay, March 20, 1781 : 1 Captain, 1 Lieuten-
ant, 1 Ensign, 4 Sergeants, 4 Corporals, 80
Privates, — Drummer ; 20 Quakers.
Regimental Orders. April 10, 1781.
To Major Kissam, to he forwarded by him to
the Captains to the Eastward.
As the time fast approaches when horses
will be wanted in the Quartermaster Qeneial's
department, and that a demand will be made
on Queens County for that purpose. Colonel
Hamilton therefore requests and desires that
the Captains, in their respective districts, will
in the meantime look out for good, servicea-
ble horses, as none but young and stout ones
will be taken, and for which a generous price
will be given. The deficiency (if any) will
be made up, as usual, by a small tax, to be
levied by the Captains on every person in the
county, agreeable to the cess-roll, or the value
of their estates. Proper judges will be ap-
pointed on each side to inspect and value the
horses as formerly, and Colonel Hamilton
will give them as early notice as possible of
the number demanded and the place of ren-
dezvous. Colonel Hamilton is so well ac-
quainted with the loyalty of Queens County,
and of their readiness upon every occasion to
serve His Majesty, that he thinks it needless
to say any more upon the head, only to assure
them that he will be happy to assist and
serve them.
Westbury, April 21st, 1781.
To Mnjoi' Kissam.
Sir : — I had the honor to receive yours this
evening, and have forwarded the letter to
Major Delancey immediately. The bearers
of flags of truce, agreeable to general orders,
are to be sent back as soon as they have de-
livered their dispatches ; but if William
Heron has to transact business in his private
affairs on this Island, he must first obtain
His Excellency Governor Robertson's particu-
lar leave for that purpose ; and I shall there-
fore have the honor to wait upon you, sir, to-
morrow morning, at 10 o'clock, in order to
see whether Heron's request is likely to be
granted, and till that time I beg to detain
him at your house or any other proper place.
I am, with great regard, sir, your most obedi-
ent, humble servant,
De Wurmb, Lieutenant-Colonel.
Westbury, April 33d, 1781.
To Major Kissam, Cow Bay.
Sir : — I enclose a passport for Mr. Heron,
and should wish for his return to Stamford
whenever the wind will permit of it. I have
not yet received an answer from New York,
but as soon as those things wanted by Gene-
ral Parsons shall arrive, I will not fail to for-
ward them to the General by anotlier flag. I
have the honor to be, with great regard, sir,
your most obedient, humble servant,
De Wurmb, Lieutenant-Colonel.
Queens County— 2d Series.
63
Brooklyn, April 26th, 1781.
To Captain Poers, Commander of His Majes-
ty's Brig "Argo," &ca., &ca., &ca.
Sir : — Major General De Riedesel begs you
will, in compliance with the directions from
headquarters, as you will see by the enclosed
extract of a letter from the Deputy Adjutant
General, order Mr. William Heron's boat,
which you took possession of a few days ago,
back, in all haste, to the place where you
first found her ; and the men who navigated
her will be sent, without any delay, to that
place, to receive their boat ; and it is request-
ed, sir, that you will please to give such par-
ticular directions to your people, that she and
everything belonging to her may be restored
to them as complete as she was found, with-
out any further detention whatever.
Westbury, April 27th, 1781.
Lieutenant-Colonel De Wurmb to Major Kis-
sam.
Sir : — The enclosed papers will inform you
that the people belonging to the flag of Mr.
Heron are to be sent to the other side, as soon
as Mr. Heron returns. The prisoners I hereby
send, and beg you will be kind enough to
guard them until they leave the Island ; and
in case of necessity, to furnish them with
provisions, which shall be paid for whenever
you will let me know the price thereof. The
boat, which was taken by the " Argo" brig,
will perhaps arrive at Hempstead Harbor to-
day. If you think it necessary, some Yagers
may stay with the prisoners as a guard.
On His Ma.testy's Immediate Service.
Express by the Orderly Dragoon.
Colonel Hamilton to Major Kissam.
May 5, 1781. I beg you will forward the
enclosed order as fast as possible, for fear of
mistakes. I shall expect to see you by 9
o'clock, on Wednesday, at Jamaica. Your
calf is fit to take away. He eats grass like a
cow. I beg my compliments to the old gen-
tleman.
R. O. May 5, 1781. Colonel Hamilton
again reminds the Captains of Queens County
that the horses demanded by the Quartermas-
ter General for His Majesty's immediate ser-
vice are to be delivered on Wednesday, 9th
instant, at Jamaica, by 9 o'clock in the morn-
ing. Each company of foot is to furnish
nine horses, and each troop of horse is to fur-
nish four horses. Colonel Hamilton need not
repeat that none but strong young horses will
pass ; as he is confident that the Captains and
officers, as well as the men, will do their duty
like loyal subjects who have the good of His
Majesty's service warmly at heart. Lieuten-
ant Talman, of Captain Hoogland's company,
and Mr. Oliver Waters, of the troop, are ap-
pointed to inspect and value the horses, on
the part of the county, and as some expenses
will attend this duty, these gentlemen will
give in their charge to the Captains, who are
to raise it by a small tax or cess upon every
individual. Colonel Hamilton thinks it nec-
essary to inform the inhabitants, who are not
so well acquainted with military matters, that
the life of almost every expedition or enter-
prise depends in a great measure on the
Quartermaster General's department being
well supplied with teams and horses for
transporting of guns, ammunition, provi-
sions, rum, &c., &c., &c., without which the
best officer or soldier can do but little I The
smallest reflection upon this head must cer-
tainly induce the inhabitants of loyal Queens
County to bring forth their horses on the ap-
pointed day, in number and in strength.
Riedesel to Colonel Hamilton.
„ Brooklyn, May 10th, 1781.
Sir : — I beg you and the Militia under your
command, in particular Captain Hewlett with
the Queens County Militia Light Horse, will
accept my best thanks for their alertness and
spirited conduct in taking the troublesome
plunderer who styles himself Captain Dickey,*
with his Lieutenant Hendrickson and the
crew under his orders, I shall take pleasure
in reporting the same to His Excellency tlie
Commander-in-Chief, in the favorable light
it merits.
R. O. May 13, 1781. It is with the high-
est pleasure and satisfaction that Colonel
Hamilton acquaints the Regiment of Queens
County Militia in general that he is directed
by the Major General Baron de Riedesel, com-
manding on Long Island, to return them his
best thanks for their alert behavior upon
* See Revolutionary Incidents, p. 199.
54
Revolutionary Incidents
many occasions ; but particularly to Captain
Stephen Hewlett, of tlie Troop, and his party,
for their recent alert and spirited conduct in
taking the noted Rebel partizan plunderer,
Alexander Dickey, with his Lieutenant, crew
and boat ; and he assures them he will repre-
sent it to His Excellency the Commander-in-
Chief in the favorable light it merits. So
public a testimony of the General's approba-
tion must be pleasing to the captors, as it re-
dounds honor to themselves, honor to their
commanding officers and honor to the county
at large, and will certainly stimulate them
upon similar occasions in the cause of loyalty.
I beg Major Kissam will be so good as to
send copies of the above orders to the several
Captains in his district, whom he will direct
to read it at the head of their different com-
panies.
To Major Kissam, to he forwarded by him to
the Officers to the eastward and southicard.
R. O. June 1, 1781. Colonel Hamilton
■was greatly surprised and much hurt to learn
from the Quartermaster General that loyal
Queens County had been so backward in fur-
nishing their proportion of horses for that
department ! He has obtained a farther day
for to make up the deficiency. Colonel Ham-
ilton therefore desires and expects that all
tlie Captains of Horse and Foot do meet him
and Major Kissam at Jamaica, on Tuesday,
12th instant, with the deficient horses, for
which they will receive the full value, pro-
vided they are strong young horses. Any
Captain who is absent without sending a good
excuse may depend upon being severely fined
and reported to the Commander-in-Ohief and
Governor for disobedience of orders. Colonel
Hamilton is determined to do his duty, and
let the blame fall where it ought.
Wood.
MusQUETO Cove, June 5th, 1781.
An account of the quantity of the contract
wood at the different landings, from Red
Spring Point to Oak Neck, on the Sound, viz. :
Cords.
Cords.
John Cock,
7
Henry Cock.
2.5
David Tilly,
1
William (Jock.
14
Stephen Frost,
40
John* Dan. Undcrhill
34
Prior Townnend.
10
John llttwx.
4
William Lattiii!,'.
10
Jacob Valentine,
18
James and John Sands
,20
John Weeks, Ensign,
fi
Nathaniel Coles,
2.5
Daniel Cock,
40
Venus Townsend,
40
JaiueB Carpenter,
4
Contract wood within Hempstead Harbor:
Cords.
James Townsend, 12
John Jackson, 4
C!oles Carpenter, 10
Joseph Wood, 3
Caleb Coles, 10
Cord 8.
Joseph Craft, 3
Robert Coles, 4
Albert. William and
Derick Colea, 3
Brooklyn, June 4Tn, 1781.
To Colonel Hamilton, commanding the Queens
County Militia.
Sir : — Having received His Excellency the
Commander-in-Chief's commands, I have to
request you will direct the proper officers of
Militia under your orders to make a search
through all the roads, woods, houses, huts,
&c., in Queens County, on the night of Wed-
nesday to Thursday next, and take up all
persons under the following descriptions : 1.
People who may or appear to belong to the
navy ; 2. all stragglers who are not inhabit-
ants of Long Island, or not well known by
respectable characters for being quiet sub
jects ; 3. such as have not passports as Refu-
gees, from His Majesty's officers or others
authorized to give certificates ; 4. or any one
that cannot produce some kind of warranta-
ble protection from faithful, loyal subjects,
to testify and prove ther characters.
When you have taken up those who cannot
give the required accounts of themselves, you
will please to send them, with the proper
guard, to the Fort, at Brooklyn, with a report
of the prisoners' names, from whence they
came, where they have resided, and what has
been and is their occupation, profession or
employment, till and when they were taken
up. If the Regular Military assistance should
be wanted, it will be immediately granted by
the nearest posts, on your showing this letter
to the commanding officer, with my request
to grant it. You will have the goodness to
keep the whole secret till the moment of put-
ting it into execution ; afterwards to signify
the same to me, with the circumstances of its
success. As it has been particularly men-
tioned that there are many of the seamen be-
longing to the navy, at and about Rockaway,
it is requested that the officer who may have
the search of that district will make the
strictest enquiry through it. Your very obe-
dient, humble servant,
Riedesel, Major General.
^^ Colonel Hamilton sends the above to
Major Kissam, for him to forward to the offi-
cers to the eastward and southward.
Queens County— 2d Series.
55
Colonel Hamilton to Major Kissam.
June 6, 1781. Enclosed I send you an
order I have received from General De Rie-
desel, which you will be pleased to see fully
executed in your district. You will likewise
be so good as to inform me, by express, of
your success, and forward the prisoners to
me with all dispatch. You have likewise an
order respecting the deficient horses, which
you will take care to enforce. Let you and
me do our duty, at all events, and let the
blame fall where it ought.
JJ^^Qeneral Riedesel's orders must be put
in execution this night and to-morrow morn-
ing.
[1781, June 30. Major Kissam was sur-
prised at night, and carried off by the Rebels
to Connecticut. — See Bevoltitionary Incidents,
p. 173.]
WETHERSFIELn, AUGUST 16tH, 1781.
To Daniel Kissam, Esq.
Honored Sir : — Mine of 27th July, if it
got safe to you, must have informed you of
my being at this place on parole, with a cir-
cuit of three miles from my lodging ; since
which I have remained in the same situation;
and a day or two ago I was informed by Mr.
Reed, who was last week brought away from
East Hampton, that the Commissary of Pris-
oners here had made a proposal of a parole,
exchanging Mr. Reed and myself for Colonel
St. John and son, acquainting Governor
Franklin that, should it not take place, he
should be under the necessity of retaliating
ou us, which I cannot say but my fears are
greater than my hopes will be the case. I
yesterday got leave and took a ride to Hart-
ford to see Mr. Jeremiah Piatt and his brother
Ebenezer, who, on their first hearing of my
being at this place immediately came to see
me, to know whether I was in want of any-
thing, and every few days since, Ebenezer
takes a ride to see me, and with me yesterday
made application to the Deputy Commissary
for leave to go to Long Island and New York
on my parole, for a few days, in order to
work an exchange, but he informed us that
he had often been censured for such indul-
gences, and could not grant it without leave
from the Commissary General of Prisoners ;
and therefore I cannot do anything at present
myself, and expect I must remain here a long
time, unless some friend make an interest for
some other person to be offered. If Colonel
St. John should not be permitted to come out,
there have been four Captains of whale-boats,
, Sellew and Foster, prisoners
to Colonel Hamilton, which Governor Frank-
lin* has had, three of which have been ex-
changed for the Associated Refugees since my
being here ; and I think in justice Colonel
Hamilton has a right to expect from the
Board of Directors at least one of their pris-
oners for a parole or exchange for me.
If it is concluded I must stay any time, or
winter here, I could wish to have some win-
ter clothing sent to me soon, as the morning
and evening already begin to be a little cool,
and I expect by the first frost my pockets will
be nipt pretty well of cash, and consequently
a little of that commodity will be not disa-
greeable to me, as I find all places nearly
alike — no living without money, and espe-
cially one in my situation, expenses running
much higher than I expected. What way to
get things to me, I cannot inform you of, but
should wish that some friend might come
with them in a flag. At present I quarter at
the house of Captain Absalom Williams, in
Wethersfield, and should I be removed from
here, anything that can be left for me will be
forwarded by him ; and I could wish to hear
from the family and friends, as I have not
heard a word from any one there since my
leaving the Island. Communicate my love to
all and acquaint them I should have written
to them, but the uncertainty of a safe convey-
ance renders it difliicult. If I had one of my
old social friends with me here, the country
would be pleasant enough to make it agreea-
ble, although a number of the inhabitants, I
find, endeavor to make it so to me, as there
is a good deal of company, and I enjoy health
well. Mr. Ebenezer Piatt, who carries this
for me to Norwalk, is now waiting, and I
wish it might arrive safe to you. If Colonel
Hamilton and friends want my continuance
here, pray send me a good sum of money and
two inkstands. I am, honored sir, your duti-
ful son, John Kissam.
Parole.
"I, John Kissam, Major of Militia in
Queens County, on Long Island, in British ,
* 1781, Jan 8. Board of Directors of Associated
Loyalists : William Franklin, Daniel Coxe, George
Rome, Anthony Stewart, Jo^iah Martin, George D.
Ludlow, Georsre Leonard, Timothy Ruggles, Edward
Lulwych and Robert Alexander.
66
Revolutionary Incidents
service, do hereby acknowledge myself a
prisoner of war to tlie United States of Amer-
ica, and being now indulged the liberty of
returning to the city of New York on parole,
do pledge my faith and sacred honor that I
will not say, do, or cause to be said or done,
anything that can be in any shape construed
to injure the welfare of the said United
States ; and that unless I can effect an ex-
change of myself for some officer of like rank
or for some other such person as shall be
agreed to and accepted by Abraham Skinner,
Esq. , the American Commissary of Prisoners,
I will return by the way of Elizabethtown
Point, on New Jersey, and render myself a
prisoner to said Commissary General or to his
order, or to some one acting under him, within
thirty days of this date."
The within is a true copy of parole signed
by Major John Kissam. Whereupon it is de-
sired he may pass on directly to Norwalk and
from thence to New York, in such way as
shall be thought best by the Authority there,
he behaving as becometh, &c.
Ez. Williams,
Deputy Commissary General of Prisoners.
Exchange.
To whom it may concern. I do certify that
Major Kissam, of the Regiment of Queens
County Militia, of Long Island, was regularly
exchanged for Major George Wright, of the
Pennsylvania Militia, at New York, the 20th
of October, 1781.
Joshua Loring,
Commissary General of Prisoners.
Militia Orders.
Whereas the regulations hitherto made for
the protection of Great and Cow Necks are
found by experience to be attended with
many inconveniences ; it is ordered that Cap-
tains Thome and Cornell procure fourteen
sufficient and trusty men to mount guard each
night on Cow and Great Necks, at such
places as they shall judge proper, the Cap-
tains to levy ten shillings per man per month
from every person within their beat, who is
sixteen years of age and upwards ; and out of
this fund to pay each man doing duty six
shillings per day for the service required.
Such persons whose poverty must necessarily
excuse them from the contribution are to be
excepted out of this order, and a return of
their names made to the Commanding Officer.
G. G. Ludlow, Colonel.
Caveat.
Sir : — I having with sundry others entered
into a contract with Government to deliver
six thousand cords of wood to the wood-yards
of the Barrack Master General, by certain
periods, and it being represented to me that
your people have sundry times taken some of
the wood at the landing, to be appropriated
for that use. As this, sir, tends to lessen the
quantity and impose a harder burden upon
us, and to discourage the carting the wood to
the landing ; we must beg that you would
adopt some other methods for furnishing
wood for your vessel, unless by concurrence
of the Barrack Master General, who may ac-
count to us for so much. The heavy burden
we are under obliges us to make this applica-
tion, as every person's proportion is laid out
for him to supply : [and this action of yours]
must alter the whole mode of our proceeding.
John Kissam.
.\
Office of Police,
Jamaica, November 23d, 1781.
To Major Kissam.
Sir: — In pursuance of His Excellency Lieu-
tenant Governor Robertson's proclamation,
requiring the inhabitants of Long Island to
furnish an immediate supply of wood for the
citizens of New York in their present distress;
and for the fulfillment of the requisitions
therein contained ; you are hereby called on,
required and empowered to oversee and carry
into execution the following regulation : The
inhabitants of Cow Neck, Great Neck and
Little Neck, and so many of those living to
the eastward as cart to the landings at Hemp-
stead Harbor, are hereby ordered to cut and
cart, without delay, to the nearest landing-
places, so much wood each as will amount to
half the quota laid on them, in consequence
of an assessment made with the Barrack Mas-
ter General's office last spring, for the supply
of six thousand cords of wood from the
north side of the Island ; and all persons sub-
ject to this order are to consider this wood
for the use of the private inhabitants of the
city, and to sell the same at the public affixed
rates for the purpose aforesaid. Those who
Queens County — 2d Series.
57
shall neglect or refuse to comply with the
quota assigned them, are to be compelled, by
employing proper persons to do this duty,
who are to be benefitted by the whole emolu-
ment arising from the sale of such refractory
persons' wood.*
In the enforcing this order you will take
such measures as to you shall seem most ef-
fectual for the immediate supply so much
wanted, and when any person is found so lost
to his private interest and deaf to the public
call as to decline this necessary business, you
are not only to assign his property (hereby
allotted) to others willing to execute the
same, but to represent him to the Office of
Police. Sir, your most humble servant,
George D. Ludlow.
Office of Police, )
Jamaica, December 21st, 1781. ;
To Major Kissam.
Sir: — I have just received a letter from
the Governor, signifying the distress of the
inhabitants of New York, from the want of
wood, and his intentions of sending all the
vessels that can be procured to make one trip
to the Necks. He wishes to know the quan-
tity of wood and the landings where it is to
be found. Without your information I can-
not answer him particularly. In the mean-
while may I say, in general, that the quantity
demanded will be ready for those that call ?
and that the landings are at Little Neck and
both sides of Cow and Great Necks? Your
answer by the bearer will greatly oblige, sir,
your most obedient and humble servant,
George D. Ludlow.
Office of Police, \
Jamaica, March 18tu, 1782. )
To Major Kissam.
Sir: — The Barrack Master General informs
me that a considerable part of the six thou-
sand cords of wood remain yet due from the
inhabitants, particularly about Oysterbay.
The wants of the wood-yard are great and
immediate. I think it but just that the se-
verest measures should be taken to compel
the neglecting farmers, before new demands
are made ; and beg therefore that you would
be at the trouble (with the other gentlemen
♦ The list of 63 fainierg who delivered wood ia here
omitted.
who were appointed) to procure a return of
the delinquents as soon as possible. My or-
ders are to appoint Refugees and others to
cut their wood without delay, by way of im-
mediate supply, and to punish them for con-
tempt of the several injunctions. I wish also
to have a return of the residue of wood due
under the proclamation, and from whom,
that the same means may be made use of
against them. The Captains of Militia are
required to furnish you the state of their sev-
eral beats and to give whatever assistance
you may think necessary to require. I sub-
mit to your consideration whether the most
effectual way to execute the intentions of
Government would not be to authorize Mr.
Okerson to cut and cart by the return-list,
when obtained, he employing persons under
him (and paying them) to make a return of
his proceedings. Colonel Crosby will send
vessels, if required, to any landing, and the
instant execution of some such mode is re-
quired for a present supply, as well as to pre-
vent the wood in your quarter from being
subject to an establishment under the Barrack
office. I am, sir, with esteem, your most
humble servant, George D. Ludlow.
New York, April 17tii, 1782.
To Judge Ludlow, Office of Police, Jamaica.
Dear Sir : — In consequence of a notice
given to the Barrack Master General that
fifteen hundred cords of wood would be ready
to be delivered at Cold Spring Harbor, seven-
teen vessels have been sent to take it on
board, and are now lying there idle on pre-
tences formed by Captain Van Wyck. Let
me beg that you will immediately give direc-
tions that may procure dispatch for these ves-
sels. It is a great loss to Government and a
reflection on the Police, if such an obstinate
disobedience should be continued and remain
unpunished. The bearer will carry your or-
ders and be assistant in carrying them into
execution. I am, dear sir, your humble ser-
vant, James Johnson.
To Major Kissam.
Sir : — Please to issue the necessary orders
and take the wood in question, as well as
compel the farmers to load it. You are fully
informed, and see the expediency of prevent-
ing delay. George D. Ludlow, Supt.
58
Revolutionary Incidents
Major Kismm, to Captain Thomas Van Wyck.
Cow Neck, April 20th, 1782.
It being represented to His Excellency
Governor Robertson tbat the inhabitants in
your district have refused to send their pro-
portion of contracted wood and load the ves-
sels that were sent to take the same on board,
I have received express directions from the
Police to direct that you will, with the force
of your company, put on board such persons'
proportion of wood as are refractory and re-
fuse to send it, whenever a convoy of vessels
attends to receive the same ; and that the
whole quota of six hundred and fifty cords
be ready without delay, and prevent the mis-
chief that must necessarily ensue from the
continuance of the obstinate disobedience of
the inhabitants.
Office op Police, )
Jamaica, April 22r>, 1782. )
To Major Kissam.
Sir : — By direction of His Excellency Lieu-
tenant Governor Robertson, permission is
hereby given William Roe,* of Stamford, to
come with a flag into Oysterbay Harbor and
return with his wife, children and household
goods. Permission is also granted, under the
same authority, to Oliver Lawrence to come
into Cow Bay, with a flag of truce, and fetch
his sister Deborah. These persons are to re-
turn as soon as convenient, and not to pass
beyond the habitations of those they are to
take back with them. These conditions are
to be enforced by your orders, or those ap-
pointed by you.
George D. Ludlow, Superintendent.
J
as last year, six thousand cords.* I wish to
see you, with the Captains of that district,
and confer on the best mode to procure a com-
pliance and preserve the farmers' property.
Will you acquaint them and meet me at the
office on Wednesday next ? Could I see you
before that day and talk the matter over, it
would be agreeable to, sir, your most humble
servant,
George D. Ludlow, Superintendent.
Office of Police,
Jamaica, June 1st, 1782
To Major Kissam.
Sir : — The chief supplies of fuel for the
ensuing winter must be furnished by this
Island, and of course the demand very large.
I have thought it better for the farmer to cut
and cart his share than let it be done by
strangers, and I have proposed a quota. The
demand from Little to Lloyd's Necks will be
♦ William Roe, of Oysterbay, furnished secret in-
telligence to the American cause, in the fall of 1777,
and after, till he was informed against, and then he
had to flee to the Main, in 1780, to escape British ven-
geance.
J
Office of Police,
Jamaica, November 11th, 1782.
To Major John Kissam.
Sir : — I have seen the Governor on the
subject of the flag. He objects to one ex-
pressly for this purpose. But notwithstand-
ing, the two persons pointed out may go,
under your directions and safe-conduct. Let
them confine themselves to the errand, and
they will be justified. If the plundering! is
not stopped by the inhabitants on the other
shore, one general scene of desolation must
be the consequence. It is therefore a com-
mon interest there, as well as here, to bring
such villains to punishment. I am, sir, your
most humble servant,
George D. Ludlow, Superintendent.
Shelburn, N. S., )
February 10th, 1786. )
To Mr. John Kissam.
Dear Sir : — I am sorry that you have left
our country so soon, for had you not, you
would have been likely to have had your loss
made up. The Commissioners are at Halifax
now, taking in the claims of the Loyalists.
My advice to you is to get a certificate from
your State, of your losses and damages, and
services you did for Government, and come
to Shelburn in the spring ; for they are to be
here and take in all claims. This is from
your friend to serve,
Richard Townsend.
Granville, N. S.,
February 22d, 1786
}
To Mr. John Kissam, at Cow Neck, L. I.
Dear Sir : — I embrace this opportunity,
with the blessing of God, to inform you that
* The list of 90 farmers who delivereel wood is here
omitted,
t See Revolutionary Incidents, p. 177.
Queens Cotjntt— 3d Sekies,
6d
I am well, and all the family, and hoping
this may find you and all the family and all
friends the same. These few lines are to
inform you that the Commissioners are com-
ing from England to Halifax, respecting the
claims of the Loyalists, and it is expected
they will go to St. John by the first of May.
I am sorry that you never sent your claims
home, as there was an Act of Parliament for
tliat purpose. But estimates are going to
them every day, and they are very particular
of asking them why they did not comply with
the Act of Parliament. But I believe that if
you come and give yours in by the first of
May, I make no doubt, as yours stands so
fair, but what you may get some of your
losses again. If you come, you must bring a
certificate of the confiscation of it, [your fa-
ther's farm], of the sale of it, when and
where, with the Governor of the State's seal
on it ; as that is requested of every one, of
their claims to have the Governor's seal of
that [State] where it is confiscated and sold,
which I make no doubt but what you can
get.
I expect this sloop right back, by which
you may have a chance to come. And if you
come, bring your commission with you, as it
may be of service to you. Mrs. Thorne joins
with me in love to you and all the family and
all enquiring friends. So I remain your
friend to serve, Edward Thokne.
At the close of this interesting correspond-
ence we may add that Colonel Hamilton left
in 1783, and died in Edinburgh, 1795. George
Duncan Ludlow and his brother, Gabriel G. ,
both died in honored exile, in New Bruns-
wick, 1808. Major Kissam, at the peace,
went to Nova Scotia, but short.ly returned,
and died on his paternal homestead, in his
81st year, 1828, beloved and respected.*
SUFFERINGS OF FRIENDS IN FLUSH-
ING.
1776. Taken from Daniel Bowne, for re-
fusing military service, by Captain Hoog-
* Some account of most of the Tories mentioned in
thJM book may be found in Sabine's Lives of the Loy-
alists, wherein are about 1.000 names, (dlliiitjaapa-ies),
copied, without crediting, from my Revolutionary
Incidents of Queens County.
land's warrant, a silver watch, worth £7, and
a looking-glass, worth £3.
1776, 29th of 8th month. Taken from
John Bowne, by the Major of the Light
Hoi-se, for the use of the army, 21 old sheep,
at 13 shillings each, and 15 lambs, at 11 shil-
lings each ; and 9th of 9th month, taken by
Captain Moxome, 31 bushels of oats, at 3
shillings per bushel.
1776. Distresses made upon the goods of
Ebenezer Beaman, by order of the militia
officers : A dictionary, worth 12 shillings ;
two large pewter basins, 16 shillings ; diaper,
tablecloth, and pewter tunnel, 28 shillings ;
looking-glass, £3 ; an iron-shod cart and tack-
ling, £14 ; a horse, £18, 14s. 1781. Jacob
Lawrence, with three others, took a riding
saddle, worth £5.
1776. Taken from John Lawrence by the
militia Sergeant, for not appearing under
arms, a warming-pan, to the value of £1.
1777. Taken from Ann Field, by order of
Captain Hoogland, being to serve military
purposes, a watch, worth £8 ; 2i bushels of
wheat, £1, 10s.; ahorse, £25. 1781. Three
turkeys, worth 50 shillings, on a demand* of
24 shillings for guarding the fort at White-
stone.
1777. Taken from John Bowne, for not
appearing with the militia, a fat hog, £5.
1778. Taken by Captain Hoogland, for not
appearing under arras when required by the
militia officers, household goods, worth £2,
3s. 6d. 1781. On a demand of 39 shillings,
to defray the charge of guarding the fort at
Whitestone, a pair of boots, £2, 8s.
1778, 5th month. Abel Thomas, a travel-
ing preacher, says : ' ' After the meeting at
Westchester, we went down to the water-side
to go over to Long Island. There was no
boat there. We made a smoke for a signal
to the ferryman on the other side to come for
us, which he did, but informed us he was
under obligation to send all strangers that he
brought over to Colonel Hamilton's, at Flush-
ing. When we were over, lie sent a guard
with us to the Colonel. We informed him
that we intended to hold meetings on the
island. His answer to us was that ' if that
was our business it was a pity to hinder us.'
He readily gave us a permit to travel through
the island. We visited eight meetings, one
a day, and then crossed the Sound.
1780. Taken from John Farrington, a gun,
worth £2 ; a table, £3 ; 2 hogs, £8, 10s.
60
Revolutionary Incidents
1781. Taken by Jacob Lawrence, by Captain
Hoogland's order, linen, worth £3, 12s. 1782.
Goods taken, worth £3, lis. 4.
1780, April 3. Isaac Underbill and Thomas
Willett, being desired by the British com-
manding officers at Flushing to view the
damages, or quantities of timber cut off a
certain tract of timber land consisting of
about 25 acres, belonging to John Bowne,
conclude there hath been taken 5 standard
cords for the use of His Majesty's troops.
David Golden certifies the above appraisers
to be men of fair character, and well quali-
fied to make the estimate.
1781, 12th of 2d month. Jacob Lawrence,
Sergeant, with others, took away from James
Bowne, 11 fowls, worth £3, on a demand of
39 shillings for guarding the fort, &c.
1781, 24th of 2d month. David Rowland,
Sergeant, came to Isaac Underhill's and de-
manded £4 for money advanced for a horse
to go in the King's service, and for expense
in guarding the fort, &c., and on his refusing
to pay it, went into his mill and took 8 bush-
els of Indian corn, worth £4.
1781, 3d month. There came to John Far-
rington's house, David Rowland, a Sergeant
under Captain Hoogland, for a demand of £3,
8s, took away a piece of linen, worth £3, 3s,
being levied by way of tax, as was said, to
defray the expense of guarding the fort at
Whitestone.
1781. Taken at sundry times, from John
Burling, Jr., for fines, by order of Captain
Hoogland, to answer militia purposes : A
pewter dish, worth 8 shillings ; 6 pewter
plates, 12 shillings ; a pair of tongs, 12 shil-
lings ; a table-cloth, £1, 10s.; 7 pewter
plates, 14 shillings ; a copper sauce-pan, 8
shillings ; a pair of andirons, £2 ; 6 silver tea
spoons, £1, 10s. 1781. Taken by Philip
Rusted, 21 bushels of corn and bag, to defray
the expense of guarding the fort at White-
stone, £1, 10s. 1781. Jacob Lawrence took,
on demand of 27 shillings, an overcoat and a
dung-hill fowl, worth 50 shillings.
1781. Taken from Willet Bowne, at sun-
dry times, by order of Captain Hoogland, (be-
ing fines to answer military purposes), a ge-
ography, worth 14 shillings ; 6 pewter plates,
12 shillings ; 2 bushels of wheat and the bag,
£2 ; 9 bushels of corn, £3, 12s. ; a watch, £8.
1781. Two bushels of corn and the bag,
£1, 4s.
1781, 4th of 3d month. Then came Moses
Fowler, and demanded of Phebe Cornell £4.
On her refusal to pay, he searched her closet
and found money to the value of £3, 18s, be-
ing levied by way of tax, as was said, for de-
fraying the expense of guarding the fort at
Whitestone.
1781, 29th of 6th month. Philip Husted,
Sergeant, and Jacob Lawrence with him, de-
manded 25 shillings of Solomon Underbill,
for guarding the fort, and took wheat to that
value.
Total amount of distraints of Friends in
Flushing, from 1776 to 1782, was £194, lis.
lOd.
A list of Friends who, being opposed to
war, were fined and distressed of their goods
for refusing to stand guard, go on an alarm,
furnish horses for war, work on the fort at
Brooklyn, or do any kind of military service :
1777.
Feb. 27. Stephen Denton and John Wa-
ters, having a key with them, unlocked Sam-
uel Willets' chest, and took £1, 10s, for his
son not appearing at an alarm ; and Aug.
16, took a saddle, worth 21 shillings, and a
side of leather, 10 shillings. In June, Penn
Weeks took 10 shillings, which he found in a
garment hanging in the house.
Feb. 27. Sergeant John Waters demanded
£1, 10s, of Henry Whitson, Jr., for not ap-
pearing at the alarm. On his refusal to pay,
he searched the house, found the key, un-
locked a chest, and took £1, 10s, as he said.
From Charles Clements 3 fowls were taken,
worth 6 shillings.*
March. Henry Post, 2 silk handkerchiefs,
10s. ; and Aug. 28, 15 yards cloth, £5, lOs.f
April 4. Elias Hicks, pair of shoes, 10s.*
Aug. 16. John Powell, a tankard and
steelyards, 20s.*
June 7. A cow, worth £6, was taken from
John Smith, for a fine of £5, levied on him
for not appearing at the alarm to Huntington.
July. Adonijah Underbill, pair stock-
ings and silk handkerchief.
Aug. 28. Elias Hicks, pair silver buckles,
18s, 2 pair stockings, 15s, 2 handkerchiefs,
5s. f March 3, a great-coat, 26s, for a fine of
12s.§
Sept. 1. Thomas Seaman, Sr., Westbury,
a watch, £8, for his son.f
♦ Guard, t Alarm. § Fort.
Queens County — 2d Series.
61
Aug. 15. John Willis, seed-wheat, at 10s.
a bushel, f
Oct. 17. James Oakley, a gun, 34s.
Nov. 3. Williams Seaman, Jr., 1 silk hand-
kerchief, 10s, and another, 3s.; deerskin
gloves, 10s. ;* and March 9, 1778, a bag and
2 sides sole leather, 26s.
Nov. Samuel Hicks, 2 pieces of cloth,
84s, 6d.§
Nov. Joseph Willets, 2 silk handker-
chiefs, 10s. ;* and Dec. 2 cakes tallow, 26s. §
Dec. 15. John Titus, side of leather and
pot of butter, 8 lbs.
Dec. 15. Henry Post, £1, 3s. 8i.§
Dec. 17. William Titus, leather and to-
bacco, £2, 15s.
1778.
Jan. 7. Edmund Smith, coverlet, £3, and
sheet, 20s, taken from his bed.f
Feb. 17. Thomas Seaman refusing to pay,
they made diligent search and found his
wife's pocket-book, and took, as they said,
£2, 2, 11.*
Feb. 28. John Smith, for refusing to let
his horse go on an alarm, £1.
March 11. On Joseph Willets's refusing to
pay his fine, they searched till they found
his daughter's pocket-book and took 8s. in
money.
March 11. They took from John Titus's
wife 17 lbs. flax, 15s.*
May 30. Silas Hicks, pair hand irons, 14s, §
on a demand for 8s.
Oct. 9. John Carl, pot of butter and a bas-
ket, 26s. ;* and 1780, Jan. 20, a high chest,
table and wheel, £6, Is.; and July 15, 2
wheels, £2, 12s.*
June. Elias Hicks, pair stockings, 5s, and
razor-case and 2 razors, 4s, for refusing to
pay toward having men to work on the forti-
fications near Brooklyn ferry.
Aug. Israel Pearsall, Hempstead Harbor,
6 bushels Indian corn, £2, 8s, taken by Sea-
mans Weeks, by order of Captain John
WooUey.
Nov. 9. Samuel Way, 2 cheeses, worth
26s, on a demand of 20s, to pay the guard.
Nov. 10. Richard Mott, a saddle, £3.*
June 20. Jonathan Titus, 6 knives and
forks, 10s. §
1779.
Jan. 25. Thomas Titus, distrained of
£10, Is, for the Fort, guard, and to pay for
horses bought to go for the use of the army.
May. From James Hubbs, pair shoes.
Aug. 5. Richard Willis, Jr., saw and bri-
dle, 8s. ; handkerchief and bridle, 10s. ; pair
trousers, 10s.; saddle, blanket, leather, bag
and 2 bushels rye, £6, 10s, and Oct. 14, corn,
pair stocks and silk handkerchief. *
Aug. 21. Samuel Hicks, 20i lbs. cheese,
£1, 6s, for a fine of 20s.*
Dec. 26. Silas Downing, distrained of 3
bushels wheat, for not complying with an
order to cart wood to Brooklyn ferry for the
use of the army.
1780.
Jan. 18. John Loines distrained of 5 bush-
els wheat, £5, for not giving £5 toward pay-
ing for horses raised for the use of the army,
and for the guard and Fort.
Jan. 19. Obadiah Valentine and Daniel
Toifey, by two warrants from Captain Cor-
nell, came to levy (by sale of goods) a fine of
£7, lis. on Thomas Seaman, for the guard,
Fort and horses, and took 8 bushels wheat,
£7, 4s.
Jan. 26. John Wright, a bushel of rye,
for refusing to pay 8s. dividend due on build-
ing the Fort.
July 16. John Searing, 13i yards linen
and 6i yards cloth, £5, 5s.
Dec. 17. John Smith, 1 sheep, for not
carting wood to Hempstead for the soldiers.
TORIES IN QUEENS COUNTY.
It is well known that at the outbreak of
the Revolution, in 1776, the great majority
of the people of Queens County were Loyal-
ists and organized to resist the action of the
Whigs, who were so feeble in the county
that Congress sent thither Colonel Herd with
a regiment of soldiers to disarm the Loyalists.
But when the British arms prevailed, at the
battle of Brooklyn, Queens County was left
at the mercy of the Loyalists, who to a cer-
tain degree made reprisals on the now power-
less Whigs.
The Legislature of the State of New York,
however, did what they could to relieve their
faithful friends in Queens County, and pro-
ceeded to pass sundry laws confiscating the
property of the more active Loyalists. In-
dictments were also laid before the Grand
* Guard, t Alariu. § Kort.
* Guard.
63
Revolutionary Incidents
Juries in Duchess County,* as appears by the
following affidavit :
Duchess Comity, ss.: Examination and de-
position of Abel Smith, of Poughkeepsie,
goldsmith, taken before the Grand Jury, at a
Court of Oyer and Terminer and general jail
delivery in said county.
Being duly sworn, he says, that he went to
New York city in October, 1777, and contin-
ued there and on Long Island till August,
1783 ; that in 1780 he knew the following
persons and in the following offices under the
British Government on Long Island, viz. :
John Kissam, yeoman, of Hempstead, as
Major of the militia ; Joseph Thorne, of
Hempstead, yeoman, as Captain of a company
of militia ; Edward Thorne. of Hempstead,
yeoman, as a Lieutenant of a company of mi-
litia ; and in the same year and afterwards
Thomas Thorne, of Hempstead, yeoman,
acted as a private in the horse-guards of the
miMtia ; that in 1781 he knew Stephen Hew-
lett, of Hempstead, yeoman, then in the office
of Captain of a troop of horse on Long Island,
under the British Government there ; that in
1777 he knew Israel Youngs, of Oysterbay,
miller, who was then a Captain of a troop of
horse, under said British Government ; that
in 1779 he knew Hewlett Townsend, of
Hempstead, yeoman, who was then and af-
terwards employed and acted as a purchaser
of cattje for the use of the British troops
then levying war against the people of this
State ; that in 1780 and 1781 he knew on
Long Island John Hewlett, of Oysterbay,
Esq. , who then acted as collector of forage
for the British army; that in the last men-
tioned years he knew Isaac Youngs, of Oys-
terbay, miller, who acted as deputy collector
of forage, under said John Hewlett, Esq. ;
that he formerly knew Joseph Tobias, Jr.,
late of Charlotte Precinct, in Duchess County,
laborer, and that he, in 1776 and 1777, fre-
quently saw him in Charlotte Precinct, where
he then resided, and that he frequently after-
wards saw him in Queens County, on Long
Island, and in New York city in 1781 and
1782, and that he understood he was there of
his own free will, that said Tobias went
sometimes in a boat from Oysterbay to New
York, and for some time in 1781 he attended
* By the Coiifl-^cation Act, the Grand Jurors of any
county could indict for offences against this State
committed in another county.— .S'ee Jonei's Journal,
II, 5J3.
a shop of merchandize in New York city; and
that he frequently saw Samuel Hoxie, late of
Charlotte Precinct,* goldsmith, in said Pre-
cinct, and that he afterwards voluntarily
went to Oysterbay and since into New York
city, where he continued to reside, and that
he frequently saw said Hoxie in 1777, and
since then, in Queens County and New York
city, being then garrisoned by British troops.
Abel Smith.
Sworn and examined in the presence of the
Grand Jury, July 19, 1783, in pursuance of
of an act of the Legislature for the forfeiture
and sale of the estate of persons who have
adhered to the enemies of this State, and for
declaring the sovereignty of the people of this
State in respect to all property within the
same. Before me,
George Froeligh, Foreman.
Preferred into Court July 19, 1783, at the
Duchess County Oyer and Terminer. En-
tered in the Supreme Court minutes October
23, 1783.
Here follows another indictment :
Ducliess County, ss. : The examination and
deposition of Nehemiah Heartt, of Charlotte
Precinct, Duchess County, merchant, taken
before the Grand Jury of Duchess County,f
at a Court of Oyer and Terminer and general
jail delivery in said county, July 18th, 1783.
Being duly sworn, he says, that in 1779,
and at divers times since, he saw Henry
Nicoll and Henry Peters, of New York city,
merchants, acting as Captains of militia in
said city, under David Mathews, Esq. , of said
city ; that the militia were paraded for re-
view and were trained in aid of the British
troops then levying war against the people
of this State ; that several times in 1779,
1780 and 1781, he saw Frederick Rhinelander,
of New York, and John Carpenter, of Brook-
lyn, butcher, in New York city, then garri-
soned by British troops ; and that they were
concerned as part owners in one or more ves-
sels of war cruising under commissions from
the King of Great Britain, against the vessels
of the United States ; and that in the said
three years he saw Lambert Moore, Esq., and
* Joseph Ford, a refugee from this precinct, and a
tavern-lteeper at Jamaica, had Ins land, east of the
Qualjer lot. forfeited.— Sfee OnJerJunk's Qwent Cuuniif
in Olden Times, p. (i7.
t These defendants were notified in Loudon'* new8-
pajjer of the 7th, I4th, Slst and aSlh of August, 178.1.
Thomaj Bttts, of (iueeus County, was also indicted.
/
John Moore, gentleman, of New York, in
employment and directing and managing
business in the Superintendent's office, New
York ; and that at several times in said three
years he saw Israel Youngs, of Oysterbay,
miller, acting as an officer of a troop of horse
on Long Island ; also Isaac Youngs, miller,
Penn Weeks, late of Oysterbay and since of
Huntington, Johannis Barnet [or Bennet] and
Thomas Place, Jr., yeomen, of Oysterbay,
employed in service in said troop of horse on
Long Island ; and at several times in said
three years he saw John Hewlett, of Oyster-
bay, Esq., acting as a Commissary in the ser-
vice of the King of Great Britain ; and at
different times in said three years he saw Ar-
thur Dingey, of Huntington, yeoman, acting
as a Captain of militia in the British service,
and employed in erecting a fort on Lloyd's
Neck, in 1776 and 1777 ; and afterwards he
saw Leffert Lefferts, of Bedford, Esq., and
Nicholas Covenhoven, of Brooklyn, yeoman,
acting as wagon-masters or appraisers and
collectors of wagons and horses for the Brit-
ish service, in the present Southern District
of New York ; and at several times in 1778,
and since, he saw John Titus, of New York
city, merchant, employed in merchandizing,
who told deponent that he had been out of
the British Lines for a considerable time since
the war, and had been employed as Commis-
sary for the American army, and that he had
got into New York city, in 1778, with about
100 hogsheads of rum, which he had pur-
chased out of the British Lines for Conti-
nental money.
Nehemiah Heartt.
A true bill preferred in Court, July 19,
1783.
George Froeligh, Foreman.
Elntered in the minutes of the Supreme
Court, October 22, 1783.
Queens County — 2d Series. 63
Lord 1780, at the 1st ward of the City of Al-
bany, in the County of Albany, with force
and arms, &c. , did adhere to the enemies of
this State, against the peace of the people of
the State of New York and their dignity.
And the said Dowe Van Dyne having (accord-
ing to the form of the Act of the Legislature,
entitled "An Act for the forfeiture and sale
of the estates of persons who have adhered
to the enemies of this State, and for declaring
the Sovereignty of the people of this State in
respect to all property within the same,")
been notified to appear and traverse the said
indictment, and not having appeared and
traversed within the time, and in the manner,
in and by the said Act limited and required ;
it is therefore considered that the said Dowe
Van Dyne do forfeit all and singular the
Estate, both real and personal, whether in
possession, reversion or remainder, held or
claimed by him within this State, to the peo-
ple of this State.
Judgment signed this 29th day of Decem-
ber, 1783. Robert Yates.
New York Supreme Court, ss.: Of the
term of October, in the 8th year of the Inde-
pendence of this State.
Be it remembered, that on the 8th day
of June, in the 5th year of the Independence
of the State of New York, the Jurors of the
people of this State, for the body of the
County of Albany, did upon their oath pre-
sent, that Dowe Van Dyne, now or late of
Newtown, in Queens County, Captain, on the
15th day of September, in the year of our
1784, Nov, 16. A petition in favor of Sam-
uel Jones, as Judge, was signed by Burr,
Hamilton, Popham, Riker, Crimshier and 24
other eminent lawyers of New York.
At the close of the Revolution there was an
exodus of the more active Tories, who feared
the vengeance of the returning Whigs. Had
they quietly remained on their farms they
would have suffered but little if any harm.
But they dared not trust to the unknown
future, and hastily sold off their possessions
and embarked for Nova Scotia, New Bruns-
wick, Canada and the British Isles. The de-
parture of so many wealthy, talented and re
spectable inhabitants was no doubt a great
loss to the Island, and a greater loss to the
emigrants themselves. After wasting their
money and their energies in the unpropitious
climate and soil of Nova Scotia, many re-
turned to the land of their birth, where, for a
generation at least, they had to bear the
taunts and jeers of the Whigs. But the To-
ries at length had their revenge at the polls,
and Queens County was strongly Federal (for
that party favored them) till within the past
thirty years.
After the peace some of the Whigs sued
the Loyalists for trespass. Here follow some
instances :
y
64
Revolutionary Incidents
1784, March 19. Abraliam Monfort sues
John Hewlett for damages, £10, before Jor-
dan Seaman, Esq., for a debt due his father,
Jost Monfort.* Hewlett pleads that Monfort
sues without the addition of " Executor" or
"Administrator." Verdict for plaintiff, £6.8,
and costs, £1.8.
1784, April. Benjamin Rushmore vs.
Thomas Van Wyck. Statement of the case.
Governor Tryon, August 5th, 1778, forbid
any person buying cattle in Suifolk County,
except for the British army, under penalty of
forfeiture to either buyer or seller. Benjamin
Rushmore and Clark Cock disobeyed, where-
upon Thomas Van Wyck, as Captain of Mili-
tia, received orders from Abijah Willard,
Commissary of Cattle, to go with some Light
Dragoons to Rushmore and Cock's to bring
their cattle to Hempstead, which had been
driven by them from Suffolk County, contrary
to the above order, and to require the own-
ers (Rushmore and Cock) to assist in driving
them. He did so, and now Rushmore has
lately sued Van Wyck before Jordan Seaman,
Esq., for trespass and £10 damages. Rush-
more said in Court that Van Wyck obliged
him to assist in driving his cattle from his
house to Cock's, and thence to Hempstead.
Whereupon, ore tenus, Van Wyck pleaded
Tryon's proclamation and order. Rushmore
replied that Van Wyck carried him by way
of Cock's house, which was out of the way
and contrary to orders. The Justice gave
judgment 16 shillings damages, and 7 shil-
lings and 9 pence costs.
1784, April 34. Joseph White sued John
Hewlett, of Oysterbay, for £10 damages, be-
fore Jordan Seaman, at Daniel Dodge's, Jeri-
cho, for that John Hewlett by force compelled
liim to move a Meeting House at Oysterbay,
when Colonel Simcoe lay there, for which he
charged six days' work, at 16 shillings per
day, and for coming after him in the night to
go with his team to draw the house, 2 shil-
lings ; and he further saith that John Hew-
lett had billeted nine horses and five men on
him for two days and two nights, at a charge
of 18 shillings ; and for driving cattle for him
to Brooklyn Ferry upon this condition, that
* Soon after the British got possession of the Island,
Hewlett rode around the country and took from the
Wliisis live stock, and whatever else was needed by
the King's troops. Hence tliis suit. Tlie Legislature
(March 17, 17H3) enacted that in all cases of trespass
the defendant could not plead the order of the enemy.
John Hewlett was to get a liorse out of the
army for him, and he further saith that when
he came to the Ferry, Hewlett said that if he
would prove himself a friend to the British
government he would recover his horse for
him ; therefore Hewlett not performing on
his part, he charges him 33 shillings for
driving the cattle. John Hewlett saith he
confesseth the facts, and he owes White
nothing ; that he had not compelled him to
move the Meeting House, nor engaged to pay
him for his work ; that he did endeavor to
recover White's horse, but could not succeed
unless White would prove, &c.; and that
White had ordered him with his team to
draw said Meeting House, for which he
charges him 50 shillings, unless he could
produce an order. Verdict for plaintiff, £5,
and costs, 18 shillings and 9 pence. Defend-
ant appealed by a writ of certiorari to the
Supreme Court.
1784, April 10. William Wright sues
John Hewlett before Jordan Seaman, Esq.,
for £1.13, for driving sheep to the King's
troops, in September, 1776. Hewlett pleads
that he acted by orders from Headquarters,
Long Island, September 4, 1776, and did not
employ him to drive said sheep. Verdict for
plaintiff, £1.10.3.
1784, April 17. William Sackett, of New-
town, sues Daniel Rapelye, at William Betts's,
for false imprisonment. Verdict for plain-
tiff, £10 and costs. Rapelye appealed by
certiorari.
Johannis Polhemus, a Tory, kept a tavern,
during the Revolution, at what is now Wood-
haven. Before he went in exile to Nova
Scotia he sold his farm (October 4th, 1783,) to
Samuel Van Wyck, for £1,800,
1781, May 32. Peter Frederickson sues
Joseph Oldfield, before Benjamin Everett,
Esq., at Nathaniel Box's Inn, Springfield, for
taking from him a gun and cutlass, damages
£10. Oldfield pleads that he took them un-
der orders verbally from Lord Cornvvallis,
that Long Island was then under control of
British troops, and that the 6th article of the
Definitive Treaty of Peace was a bar. Plea
overruled and verdict for plaintiff. A certio-
rari was issued June 5, 1784.
1784, May 18. Twenty-six persons ban-
ished by the Legislature of the State of New
York, for adhering to the King of Great
Britain, have been permitted to return.
^
Queens County — 2d Series.
65
1786, July. William Sackett, Newtown,
sues Justice Richard Alsop, Abraham Polhe-
mus, Sr. and Jr., and Charles and George
Debevoice, for trespass, in catting off his
woodland from November 16, 1779, to March,
1780, for the construction of huts, and fuel
for the use of the 37th and 54th Regiments of
British troops and the Regiment de Land-
grave, to his damage, £800. The defendants
plead (1.) That Long Island was then con-
quered by the enemy, and (2.) An order of
Governor Tryon to take wood from the most
convenient places, giving Rebel woods the
preference. Alsop, it seems, after the receipt
of the above order, requested Abraham Pol-
hemus to show the Hessian troops quartered
at his house and neighborhood the way to
Sackett's woods. The Hessians then im-
pressed the horses and wagons of Polliemus
and Debevoice, to cart the wood to their quar-
ters. Verdict given for plaintiff, £190 dam-
ages and 6 pence costs.
1788, Sept. 4. William Cornwell, of Cow
Neck, sues Stephen Thorne, and gets a ver-
dict of £418.12 damages and 6 pence costs.
Witnesses for plaintiff, William Doty and
Richard Sands ; for defendant, John Kissam
and Stephen Thome, Jr.
1788, Sept. 4. Isaac Hendrickson .sues
Whitehead Cornell, of Rockaway, and recov-
ers 10 shillings damages and 6 pence costs.
Witnesses for plaintiff, Martha Davenport
and Uriah Hendrickson ; for defendant, Mi-
cajah Mott, Stephen Bales, John Foster,
Richard Hewlett and Mary Covert.
1788, Sept. 8. George Norton vs. William
and Timothy Cornell, verdict £.')2, and 6
peace costs. Witnesses for plaintiff, Peter
Huff and Piatt Carll ; for defendant, John
Latham, Richard Thorne, John Remsen,
Isaac and Jacob Willets.
1789, Sept. 1. Henry and Timothy Titus
vs. Isaac Youngs. Robert Troup for plain-
tiff, Aaron Burr (in behalf of Harison) for
defendant. The reasons for putting off this
trial are that John Hewlett, Jr., says that
Youngs lives forty miles beyond Albany ;
Thomas Van Wyck, in Nova Scotia, and
Lemuel Douglass, in Demarara, are impor-
tant witnesses.
The suits against the Tories (under the
Trespass Act) for damages done the Whigs
did not amount to much. Able lawyers, dis-
agreeing jurors, certioraris, and the law's de-
lay were obstacles in the way of indemnity.
Other Suits, supposed to be mostly pok
Trespass During the War.
1784.
Ezra L'Hommedieu vs. Richard Hewlett, £ —
Rev. Abraham Keteltas, vs. Richard Betts, —
Samuel Cornell and Benjamin Sands vs.
John Kissam and Edward Thorne, —
1785.
John Skidmore vs. Elijah and Obadiah
Pettit, £225
John Hendrickson vs. Joseph Langdon, 30
Uriah Mitchell vs. Benjamin Coe, 60
J. L. Skidmore vs. Samuel Simmons,
(trespass), 50
Samuel Norton vs. Samuel Stringham, 10
Abraham Keteltas vs. Nicholas Ludlam, 20
John Wright vs. David Seaman, —
David Brooks vs. John Farmer, 18
1787.
June 4, John Luyster vs. John Remsen ;
for plaintiff. Skinner ; for defendant,
D'Harrt. —
Phineas Carll vs. Israel Youngs, 100
1788.
Jacob Foster vs. Stephen and John
Bates, £12.10.
Jacob Foster vs. Joseph Dorland, 3. 5.6
John Sands ».'*. John Kanagy, 10.10.
Benjamin Birdsall vs. Michael Williams, —
Isaac Bogart vs. Isaac Remsen, 10. 1.
Edmund Smith vs. Stephen Hewlett, 20. 4.
John Sands vs. Richard Hewlett, 50.
Uriah Mitchell vs. William and Debo-
rah Smith, (trespass), 11.11.
(Elizabeth Dorland sworn.)
Phillip Allen vs. John Wortman, 92.17.6
Abraham Keteltas vs. William Talman, 4.
Ephraim Baylis vs. Nicholas Ludlam, 18. 4.
Nehemiah Carpenter vs. Tunis Covert, 12.
Same y«. Isaac Amberman, 12.12.
Thomas Wickes vs. Thomas Van Wyck
and Obadiah Valentine, no plea,
Jesse Brush vs. Henry Van Mater, Judgment.
Increase Carpenter vs. Stephen Carman, £8
Daniel Duryea vs. Abraham Lott, —
William Glean vs. Daniel Whitehead, 10
Mary, Executor of Elias Baylis, vs. George
Watts, 32
John Sands vs. George Elwin, —
William Loines vs. Thomas Van Wyck, of
Ovsterbav, £2,789
66
Revolutionary Incidents
List of names, supposed to be Loyalists or
Refugees, taken from the account books of
Drs. Tredwell and Searing, 1776-83 :
Aptliorp, James, '75.
Archibald, John, '84.
Akins, Mrs., '81 ; Robert, '86.
Avery, [Samuel], at John Alburtis', '78 ; Jo-
seph, '87.
Ayres, Conductor, '78.
Baley, at Jackson Mott's, '83.
Bean, [Thomas?], '81.
Benning, Colonel.
Blissard, at Joseph Thome's, '78.
Blunt, John, at Townsend Willis', '80.
Bogardus, at Benjamin Cheeseman's, '84.
Booth, Joseph, refugee, '78.
Bowen, Captain, '81.
Bower, Barney, sutler, at James Cornell's, '81.
Braine, Mrs., at Captain Cornell's, '81.
Brill, Mr. and son, '80.
Brotherson, John, '77.
Brown, Lieutenant, Harbor; Mr., at Thomas
Farrington's, Westwoods, '83.
Brundage, John and Jeremiah, '82.
Buffington, Jacob, '81.
Bulson, [Benjamin], '85.
Burgess, '80.
Burket, George, '82.
Burrows, schoolmaster, '78.
Cam, or Carr, Mr. schoolmaster, '81.
Campbell, Molly ; Major, at Success, '82.
Canaga, John.
Carr, Charles, refugee, '81, at Esq. Smith's.
Carson, '81.
Case, Mr., schoolmaster, '81.
Casted, Mrs., '82.
Chase, Mr., '77.
Charlick, John, '83.
Ciser, [Cheshire], Mr., at John Carle's.
Chyle, John, '83.
Conway, Richard, schoolmaster, '79.
Clark, Adjutant, '79.
Clayton, James, '81.
Close, Lieutenant, '82 ; Benjamin, '78.
Crane, Thomas, at Poole's, '81.
Cochran, Mrs. '77.
CofEee, '80.
Cook, Micah, '80.
Crow, Captain ; son William, '82.
Compton, '83.
Cromwell, Benjamin, '76 ; Isaac, '81.
Cudney, at Francis Davenport's, '82.
Cunningham, '79.
Danford, William, '83.
Delancey, Warren, '76.
Desbrosses, James, '76.
Denny, [Penny?] '81.
Devoe, Andrew, Success, '82 ; Frederick, '80 ;
Daniel, '84.
Def riest, [Dehurst ?], at Philip Valentine's,'78.
Derbrig, at Stephen Cornell's, '82.
Devanport, Lewis and Newberry, '82.
Dikeman, Josiah, at Van Brunt's, '81 ; Eze-
kiel, '82.
Dickenson, Major, '78.
Dickerson, Captain Gilbert, '77 ; Stephen,
refugee, '78.
Dickson, John and Thomas, '80.
Docerty, at Colonel Tred well's, '81.
Dongan, John, '78.
Drisdel, John.
Duffee, Thomas, '76.
Fassha, Peter, '83.
Finch, at Joseph Thome's.
Filkins, Isaac, '81.
Flin, '78.
Follett, John, Ridgefield, "77.
Gaittar, Charles, Hempstead, '80.
Gardner, Miss, at Thomas Titus's, '83.
Grey, Elizur, '83.
Grifiis, Captain, '81.
Gray, silversmith, '83.
Greene, Captain, '81 ; Samuel, '77.
Halse, at Thomas Powell's, '77.
Hambleton, '76.
Hemfer, John, '76.
Halsted, at Philip Allen's, '78.
Houghton, Captain, '80.
Hanford, Thomas, '80.
Hatfield, Philip, at Joseph Thome's, '78.
Holmes, at Stephen Cornell's, '81.
Hosack, Polly, '81.
Hoyt, Isaac, '80; Mr., schoolmaster, '81.
Hubbard, '80.
Johnston, Mrs., at Isaac Latten's, '82.
Jenkins, 82.
Jervis, John, '82.
Jordan John, '78.
Katerhorn, Garrison, '82.
King, Jacob, '76.
Knap, Jonathan, '81.
Lake, Daniel, '77.
Lawson, '82.
Leroy, Francis, '82.
Langdon, refugee, at Jerusalem, '80.
Lapum, [Lapham], at Esq. Smith's, '80.
Lounsbury, at David Jones's, '80.
Mangel, at Mrs. Menzies's, '81.
Marsh, John, '82.
Maybe, Widow Ann, '84.
Mayes, '82.
Mays, James and Andrew, '82.
McDonald, Captain, at William Cornell's, '81.
McEvers, Charles, '77.
McLean, Neal, at William Alliby's, '81.
Merrit, Captain, and son, John, '78.
Miles, Captain Samuel, '80.
Miller, Hendrick and William, '78.
Montross, Joseph, '84.
Morehouse, Jonathan, '81 ; James, Sr.
Mullener, William, '76.
Murray, Mr., '78.
Murrow, Daniel, '80.
Mushroc, Miss, at Richard Kirk's, '82.
Nash, Samuel, '81.
Nat, Hannah, '77.
Nicholson, '82.
Nolter, at Mr. Cumming's, '85.
O'Hara, refugee, '78.
Olive, Dr.
Ogden, John, '78 ; Mr. Ogden, Sr., '81.
Olmstead, Ambrose, '78.
Onderwood, Joseph, '82.
Osburn, Captain, Salem, '77. Paid David
Willis, for board.
Palmer, Benjamin, '79.
Parent, Daniel and John, '82.
Pell, Elijah, '82.
Perry, '80.
Perse, Jacob ; William, '80.
Pratt, Jonathan, '77.
Prou, '83.
Pryer, Thomas, at John Searing's, '83.
Purdy, Elias, at Searingtown, '81.
Reynolds, Jacob and Samuel, '78.
Ryder, Zadoc, of Fredericksburg, at Thomas
Cornell's, '77.
Rix, Mr. and Nancy, '81.
Seacau, Miss, at Richard Kirk's, '82.
Seaman, Adam, refugee, '80.
Series, Mrs., wife of Purser of "Scorpion,"
at Lawrence Hewlett's, '78.
Shaver, paper-maker, '77.
Shapher, '82.
Sharp, Henry, '83.
Sharpston, Jacob, '82.
Sherman, "81.
Sherod, Joseph, '84.
Simpson, William, '76.
Sillabrig, Thomas, '79.
Slover, at John Thome's, '81.
Smith, Joseph, refugee, '78 ; Robert, at Suc-
cess, '81 ; James, at H. Allen's, '81 ; Mr.,
"a sutler," '80; Josiah, or Ciah, refugee,
'80.
Queens County— 2d Sebies. 67
Souther wick, at James Cornell's, '78.
Stebbins, '76.
Stevens, Thomas, at Esq. Smith's ; Daniel,
at Captain Woolley's, '82 ; Joseph, '76.
Stone, Lieutenant, at Charles Cornell's, '81.
Stoutenburg, Peter, '76.
Sweet, Ruscom, at Captain Cornell's.
Theall, Captain, Cortland's Manor, '77.
Thomas, Peter, '78.
Thompson, '80.
Thurman, Daniel, of Captain Allison's com-
pany, '77.
Traves, '81.
Trump, Johannes, Jacob, Herman.
Ustick, '81.
Vernon, '83.
Van Mater, '81.
Waldron, '84.
Ward, William, '77.
Webb, William, '79.
West, James, '83.
Whaley, Peter, '79.
White, Nathaniel, '76.
Whiteman, Colonel, '83.
Whiting, Captain, '82.
Wickham, Major, '80.
Wilson, at Esq. Smith's, Herricks, '79.
Wood, Lieutenant, at H. Hagner's, '81.
Wright, George, '77 ; Captain, '78.
An imperfect list of Militia Officers, 1776
to '83, in the Eastern part of Queens County,
under British authority. There were seven-
teen companies in all, and each Captain exer-
cised a military control in his district, sub-
ject, however, to his superior officers.
1. Captain Benjamin Hewlett, Hempstead ;
Sergeants Elijah Wood, Andrew Allen,
Elijah Spragg, Zebulon Smith, Lott Car-
man, Silvester Bedle.
2. Captain Stephen Thorne, Cow Neck ;
Sergeants Seaman Weeks, John Fritz,
Thomas Smith.
3. Captain Woolley, Great Neck.
4. Captain Timothy Cornell, Hempstead ;
Sergeants Abraham DeMott, Jacob and
Martin Van Nostrand.
5. Captain D.ivid Jones, Oysterbay South ;
Sergeants Jacob Covert, William Wood,
Robert Wilson, Tunis Van Cott.
6. Captain Samuel Seaman, Oysterbay South;
Sergeant James Balding.
68
Revolutionary Incidents
7. Captain Charles Cornell, Success ;
Sergeants Obadiali Valentine, Solomon
Powell, David Searing, Samuel Place,
Daniel Toffey, Peter Vandewater, Henry
Post, Richard Hewlett, Pearce Pool, Eli-
jah Smith, James and Samuel Davenport.
8. Captain Thomas Van Wyck, Eastwoods ;
Sergeants Daniel Terry, Penn Weelcs, Jo-
hannes Bennett, Benjamin and John Wal-
ters, Joseph and Stephen Denton.
9. Captain Abraham Van Wyck, W^olver
Hollow;
Sergeants Abraham Remsen, Jacob Ca-
show, Nicholas Van Cat, Jost Snedeker.
10. Captain Daniel Youngs, Lieutenant George
Weeks, Oysterbay;
Sergeants Justus Macoun, Daniel Weeks,
Robert Wilson, Joseph Lattin, William
Bennett.
11. Captain Jervis Coles, Musqueto Cove ;
Sergeants Henry Craft, Simon Hauxhurst,
William Frost, Abraham Seamans, Daniel
Albertson.
During the war the civil courts in Queens
County were suspended, the jail torn down,
and military rule prevailed. When the Brit-
ish were about evacuating the Island, the in-
habitants were apprehensive of outrages from
robbers, and were urgent to have civil au-
thority re-established. Hence the following
correspondence :
Duck Pond, April Stii, 1783.
To Samuel Toioiisend, Esq., Oysterbay.
Dear Sir: — I embrace the earliest oppor-
tunity in acquainting you of a meeting pro-
posed at Colonel John Sands's, at Cow Neck,
on Thursday next, at 10 o'clock, to consult on
our situation of danger from robbers on the
withdrawing the troops, and a remedy, also,
in the practicability of having a share in the
election for Governor of the State of New
York. The election is to commence the last
Tuesday in this month. Please to attend
yourself, if possible, and inform one of the
substantial men in Suffolk County, and desire
his attendance. Reasons very interesting re-
quire our utmost exertions.
Yours, James Townsend.
Queens County, April IOtii, 1783.
To Thomas Trechcell and Thomas Wickes.
Gentlemen: — We have this day met a
number of persons of Queens County at Mr.
Hendrick Onderdonk's, at Hempstead Harbor.
These, as well as ourselves, are under great
apprehensions of the confusions, robberies
and other disagreeable circumstances we shall
labor under until civil government can take
place. They have addressed the Governor,
George Clinton, on the subject for relief. Like-
wise, as the election for a Governor is shortly
to take place, and they think themselves en-
titled to a voice with the rest of their fellow-
citizens. They have asked the Governor's
opinion and advice. We were deputed by a
number of the people of Huntington to attend
the meeting and approve their measures and
means, as soon as we can collect the sense of
the people more at large, to adopt similar
measures. If time will not permit us to send
a person to His Excellency, we beg that you
will use your influence with the Governor,
and give us the earliest intelligence of its
success. The bearer of this, Mr. Onderdonk,
goes to the Governor for Queens County, and
can give you more particular information.
John Wickes,
Stephen Kelcy.
April 10th, 1783.
To George Clinton, Governor of Nexo York.
We, the subscribers, have been appointed
a Committee, by sundry persons of Flushing,
Hempstead and Oysterbay, to congratulate
your Excellency on the return of peace and
the independence of the United States of
America, and to express our apprehension of
the dangerous situation we are in before civil
government takes place. We wish to have
your advice how we are to proceed. We
think ourselves entitled to a voice with our
fellow-citizens of the State in the approach-
ing election. The bearer, , has
direction to explain our wishes more at
large. [Names omitted].
The jail of Queens County, that stood in
Jamaica, was torn down by the British, during
the occupation of that town, to construct bar-
racks for the soldiers (juartered there. Hence
the following bills for guarding prisoners,
Queens County — 2d Series.
69
&c. Some were sent to the Bridewell, in
New York.
Account of Emory Hewlett for keeping
three prisoners from November 1st to 29th,
1783:
Victualling 3 men, at £1.10 per week, £6.
4 cords of wood, at £1.8, 5.12
Use of room for prisoners and guard,* 6.
9 lbs. candles, at 2 shillings, 18
3 pairs of irons, at 4 shillings, 12
£19. 2
1783, Dec. 27. The Constable of West-
chester County took up Joseph Lockwood, on
suspicion of murder committed on Long
Island, carried him to Long Island, and
thence, by order of Prior Townsend, Esq. , to
New York jail. In 1787, £12.16.10 wa.s al-
lowed him by the Supervisors.
Flushing, July 17th, 1784.
John Thome, Supervisor, Dr. to Joseph
Beasley, innkeeper, for the guard :
£s.d.
1.
4.6
3.
1.
9
2.6
2.
3.6
1.
1.6
To 2 grogs,
3 suppers, at Is. 6d.,
3 pints spirits.
Lodging 2 men,
1 lb. candles,
July 18th.
2 glasses bitters and 2 breakfasts,
1 grog and 1 lb. candles,
1 grog and 3 pints spirits,
July 19th.
2 grogs,
1 grog and supper,
1 dinner, by Esq. Talman,
£1.2.9
Queens County to Jonathan Pearsee, Jailer,
New York, Dr. :
Keeping and maintaining 4 prisoners, f
from June 23d to November 1st, 1784,
at 1 shilling a day, 528 days, £26. 8
Gaol fees, 6 shillings each, 1. 4
Deduct 16 days' maintenance, while on
trial. 16
£26.16
*The Supervisors deducted £4 on the use of room.
t They robbed Thomas Thome's house, June 18th,
at night. Two. William Guthrj' and Joseph Alexan-
der, were hnnged at Beaver Pond. Jamaica ; the others
were pardoned.— "S'ee Rewlutionary Incidents, p. 186.
Jamaica, September 24th, 1784.
£s.
To guarding the prisoners one night, 7
To supper, breakfast, and one dram, 16
To John Searing, guarding the prison-
ers and expenses of it, 16
To Samuel Burr, do., 16
To Daniel Clement, do. , and going to
Hempstead Harbor and expenses, 1. 5
1784, Sept. 25. Queens County to Uriah
Mitchell, Dr. :
Expenses of 9 men and horses, going
as a guard to New York for the pris-
oners, £5.10.5
Wagon-hire to fetch them up, 1. 4.
Expenses of 12 men, as guard, from
September 22d to 25th, 3 days, at 12
shillings per day each, 21.12.
Expenses of 9, men and horses, as a
guard, 5. 8.
Wagon-hire to carry them down, 1. 4.
William Betts's [innkeeper] account, 10.12.
William Thurston, blacksmith, for sta-
ples, &c. , 18.
Ringing the bell and cleaning out the
church,* 1.15.
Expenses for horses and Mr. Creed, 5.
£48. 8.5
1784, Nov. 1. Queens County to Uriah
xMitchell, Dr.:
Expenses of myself and horse, going
after prisoners to New York and
returning,
Wagon-hire,
Keeping the horses at the ferry,
Nehemiah Hincliman's account,
Blacksmith's work.
Digging the graves.
Rope and handkerchiefs,
SherifE's fees for hanging,
Mr. Pearsee's account,
Under- SherifE's account,
Constables' account.
* The trial was held in the Presbyterian Church,
Jamaica.
£2.
1. 4.
10.
8.17.
17.
18.
14.
10.
26.16.
1. 6.
4
9.16.
6
£61. 8.10
70
Revolutionary Incidents Queens County — 2d Series.
Jamaica, November 1st, 1784.
Queens County to Neheraiali Hindi man, Dr
To timber, boards and spikes, [for a
gallows],
To 3 coffins, at 16 shillings,
To 2 carpenters, 4 days, at 12 shillings
per day,
To help in raising gallows,
To Tike, wagon and horses, to take
gallows to the Pond,
To my trouble.
£1. 5
1.12
4.16
4
4
16
£8.17
Jamaica, November 2d, 1784.
Queens County Dr. :
To Samuel Burr, Constable, for ex-
penses for fetching the criminals
to Jamaica, £1.12.9
To John Searing, Daniel Clement,
John Oosline, Piatt Smith, Peter
Hendrickson, £1.12 each, 8.
£9.16.6
1784, Nov. 2, Augustine Mitchell's ac-
count of expenses fetching the criminals to
Jamaica:
New York, 9s. 7d. ; Ferry, 6s. 6d. ; Ja-
maica, 10s. 3d.; ' £1.6.4
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