Ebenezer Tanner, Cook’s Mate

Ebenezer Tanner. According to New London’s Indian Mariners by Jason R. Mancini adapted from his article in Perspectives on Gender, Race, Ethnicity and Power in Maritime America, Mystic Seaport (2006), “A number of the workers (on the Confederacy) were associated with the Mohegan community directly across the river. Many of these men, including Peter Neshoe, Thomas Mosset, Turtle Hunter, Gurden Wyaugs, Ebenezer Tanner, Daniel Uncas, Dennis Mohegan, Simeon Ashbow, and James Jeffrey, were almost exclusively employed as ships riggers between October 1778 and February 1779 (He is listed on the Frigate Confederacy Riggers’ Returns 1778-1779). The nature of this work, which involved detailed knowledge of ship engineering and operation, suggests that these men were all by this time experienced mariners and recognized as such. Furthermore, men from various Indian communities, including some of those involved in the construction of the Confederacy, later sailed as crew members: Simeon Ashbow and Daniel Uncas as marines, Ebenezer Tanner as a cook’s mate, and William Fagins, Jonas Peege, and Turtle Hunter as seamen.” The claim of Ebenezer Tanner for service as seaman on the Confederacy in the amount of $57.06 including interest to 28 January 1780, the date he died at sea, was adjusted by the Treasury Department on 4 January 1793.

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Lloyd Wharton, Midshipman

Lloyd Wharton. Lloyd Wharton was born in 1764, oldest son of influential Philadelphian’s Thomas Wharton, Jr. and Susannah Lloyd Wharton who were married just two years before at Christ Church on 4 November 1762. Until his death in May of 1778, Thomas Wharton, Jr. was the first President of the Pennsylvania Supreme Executive Council, succeeding Benjamin Franklin who presided over the former Committee of Safety. Susannah Lloyd was descended from Thomas Lloyd, President of the Provincial Council. According to the testimony of his brother-in-law William Haight (1762-1837) in pension application #S. 884, Lloyd Wharton of Philadelphia was a midshipman aboard the frigate Trumbull and with about forty sailors was placed onboard the Gen. Monk and separated from the crew of the Trumbull, eventually put on the Jersey prison ship. These events would have occured after the capture of the frigate Trumbull by the frigate Iris and the 18 gun ship General Monk, formerly the Continental frigate Hancock and privateer General Washington, on 28 August 1781. The Trumbull had left port on 8 August 1781, presumably a short time after Wharton’s previous release from the British after his capture on the frigate Confederacy just four months before. Lloyd Wharton would have been about 17 years old at the time of the Confederacy’s capture. According to Volume 2, Page 106 of Names of Persons Who Took the Oath of Allegiance to the State of Pennsylvania Between the Years 1777 and 1789, Philadelphia native Lloyd Wharton, lately 21 years old, took the oath of allegiance on 29 September 1785. Lloyd Wharton married Mary Rogers, born on 17 July 1767, daughter of Isaac Rogers and Hannah Tallman. No evidence can be found of children prior his death in Bordentown, NJ on 10 February 1799 at age 35. Lloyd Wharton’s widow Mary’s younger sister, Sarah Rogers Haight died later the same year on 1 August 1799. Mary apparently remained close to the Haight family as she was interred in the family vault at Morristown, NJ after her death in October of 1847. Two years after his death, Wharton’s younger brother Kearney would name his son Lloyd born, 25 February 1801, to honor the sailor’s memory. Interestingly, his namesake added the surname Bickley by an 1843 act of legislature and was subsequently known as Lloyd Wharton Bickley.

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James Storer, Carpenter

James Storer. James Storer was born 14 April 1742 in Charlestown, MA to John Storer and Mary Griffin Bassett. He was the older brother of Ebenezer Storer (1753-1810) who also served as a carpenter on the Confederacy. He first married Electra Bradley in the North Congregational Church in New Haven on 15 November 1764. They had a son William Storer born on 11 May 1765 who also served in the Revolution and died in New Haven in 1842. Electra died at age 26 on 16 November 1768. He later married Karen Allen and fathered a second son named George Washington Storer of Norwich Landing. James Storer of New London was instrumental in the cutting of timber for the ship’s construction as noted in his letter to Captain Joshua Huntington dated 8 April 1777 transcribed on page 104 of Ships of the American Revolution and Their Models by Harold M. Hahn (1988). Folder 8 of the Frigate Confederacy Papers include a letter written by James Storer to Major Joshua Huntington dated 2 April 1779 demanding seven dollars per day wages plus one bushel of corn versus the six previously paid writing, “You will not expect me to work for smaller wages than those men that cannot dow more work in a day than I and as there is very much wanted as many as six good carpenters…” On 5 October 1792, the Treasury Department settled the claim of the crew member of the Confederacy James Storer, Carpenter dated 19 August 1779 for $94.78.

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Jacob Albright, Private of Marines

Jacob Albright. The Pennsylvania Archives includes General Returns of the Philadelphia Militia indicating that Jacob Albright served in Captain Eyre’s Company of the First Battalion in Northern Liberties in 1776. Also, he served as a private in Captain Jacob Sink’s Sixth Company of Colonel Sharp Delany’s Regiment of Foot beginning 25 June though 12 July 1777. Jacob Albright is noted as a joiner in the same text in Captain John Hewson’s Company. The returns for Captain John Hewson’s Fourth Company of the Second Battalion Regiment of Foot commanded by Colonel Benjamin G. Eyre dated 10 August 1780 note that Jacob Albright “Belong’t to the State Ship Confederacy”. This Jacob Albright may be the namesake of Albright College. It is reported that he served to the end of the Revolutionary War. If so, the following biography taken from www.famousamericans.net/jacobalbright applies. Christened Johannes Jacob Albrecht, Jacob Albright was one of nine children born on a farm in the “Fuchsberg” (Fox Mountain Region), three miles northwest of Pottstown, Pa., Montgomery County, on May 1, 1759. His parents, Johannes and Anna Albrecht, came to America from the Palatinate Region (Wittenburg) of Germany on the ship Johnson of the Holland-American Line, arriving in the port of Philadelphia in September 1732. He was confirmed in the Lutheran faith in 1776 and educated in German, his native language. Historians note that Albright was an intelligent, able student, although it is unknown to what extent he participated in any formal schooling. In his early 20s, during the Revolutionary War, Albright served as drummer boy  in Captain Jacob Witz’s Seventh Company of the 4th Battalion of the Philadelphia Militia, organized in 1781. His brother John was a fifer and the two participated in the battles of Brandywine and Germantown. During the late winter and early spring of 1782 he served guarding Hessian prisoners in Reading, Pa. Today, this region in Reading bears the name “Hessian Camp” from the early Revolutionary encampment of German mercenaries. The Hessian Camp region is only two or three miles southeast of the current Albright campus. In 1785, at age 26, Jacob Albright married Catherine Cope. The newly married couple settled on a 63-acre, fertile farm in the northeastern part of Lancaster County, near the present town of Ephrata. Here he was not only engaged in farming, but he also became known as the “Honest Tiler,” as he manufactured tile used as roofing material. It was his home for the next 23 years of his life. Today, the house and barn still stand, although they were modified in more recent years. How many children were born to Catherine and Jacob remains debated though. Some sources say nine; others say six. It is known, however, that only three survived to maturity. Sarah, their oldest child, married Noah Ranck and settled in Tioga County. His oldest son, Jacob, died without a family. And David, the younger surviving son, married Mary Raidabaugh. They had 11 children. A German Lutheran in his heritage, he was converted in about 1790 to Methodism, when several of his children died causing him to go through a religious crisis. Lutheranism did not give him comfort. He was called to take the message of Methodism to the German-speaking people. Although he felt that he was unfit to preach, contemporary records reveal that he was a powerful and moving speaker, converting many to Methodism. Weakened and in poor health from exhaustion and tuberculosis, Jacob Albright fell ill while traveling from Linglestown, Pennsylvania, northeast of Harrisburg. When he reached Kleinfeltersville, in Lebanon County, he could go no farther and there he died, May 17, 1808, at the age of 49. He was buried there in the Becker family plot. A chapel was built near the burial site and remains as a museum and memorial to Jacob Albright. The movement did not take the name of Evangelical Association until after Jacob Albright’s death. The Evangelical Church united in 1946 with the United Brethren in Christ to form the Evangelical United Brethren Church and that body in turn united with the The Methodist Church in 1968 to form the United Methodist Church. Two institutions have been named after Jacob Albright. Albright Seminary was established by the Pittsburgh Conference in Berlin, PA in 1853 and lasted about 5 years. Albright College in Reading, PA was formed by the merger of several Evangelical institutions and is a United Methodist affiliated school. The main source for his life is a short biography written in 1811 by George Miller, an elder of the Evangelical Association.

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John Ames, Private of Marines

John Ames. According to his pension application #W-20601, John Ames was born in April 1762. He was the son of John Ames and Mary Seldon. “Before he was of age,” while residing in New London, Ames enlisted on board the Confederacy as a Marine for the term of the cruise. He served under Captain Hardy from March 1779 to June 1780 when he was honorably discharged in Philadelphia. He is described by a family member as “near six feet in height.” A resident of Chesterfield after the war, Ames was married to Sarah Fargo, or Sally as he called her, daughter of William Fargo and Anna or Mercy Beebe of the “North Parish” of the First Congregational Church in Montville, CT by the Presbyterian clergyman the Rev. Dr. Roswell Cook on 24 November 1785. John’s brother-in-law William Fargo also fought in the war and was successful in the West Indies trade with his partner Daniel Douglas until he lost two ships in a storm. William Fargo enlisted as a private in 1776, was made corporal in 1780 and sergeant at the siege of Yorktown in 1781 under Lafayette’s command. John Ames left Connecticut with his family and wife’s brother’s son William C. Fargo on 23 January 1807 for Chenango Co. He moved to Plymouth, NY where he was a farmer. John Ames was placed on the pension rolls on 7 August 1818, with commencement of his pension allowance of $96 dollars a year beginning on 27 April 1818. He was dropped from the rolls in May 1820 but restored in October 1823. Robert and John Ames’ ten acres and log house were auctioned in October of 1821, having been foreclosed on by Egbert Benson executor for the estate of John Lawrence. It is probable that Ames’ forty dollar note was held by the former Captain’s Clerk of the Confederacy. John Ames of New York was declarent for Richard Pearse pension application in 1818. John Ames died on 11 October 1844 and is buried in the North Cemetery in Plymouth, NY. His widow Sarah Ames of Chenango County, NY was declarent for the same Richard Pearse’s pension application in 1845. His wife Sarah, born in 1767, died at the age of 95 on 14 March 1862 and is buried in the Old Plymouth Cemetery. Their children included son John Fargo Ames born 1790 and a musician in the War of 1812, Rufus, Salter or Sally, Samuel, Seldon, William , Alice (1787-1870) who married Phineas Newton, Mehitable or Hitty (1789-1876) who married Jonathan Morton, Robert (1794-1826) and Joseph born 1805 and also grandsons John R. and David S. Ames.

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