Ebenezer Hyde, Crewman

Ebenezer Hyde. Ebenezer Hyde was born on 26 November 1753 at Lebanon, Ct. The youngest son of Elijah Hyde, Sr. and Ruth Tracy, at least two of Ebenezer’s older brothers also served in the Revolutionary War. Elijah, Jr. was a major in the cavalry on Washington’s staff and entertained Washington and Lafayette at the Old Hyde Homestead in Norwich. Brother Caleb was a general. Ebenezer Hyde married Lucy Huntington on 17 November 1776. The daughter of Jonathan Huntington and Eunice Lathrop, Lucy was born about 1 June 1755 and died in May 1833 in Lebanon. The couple had two children, Elizabeth born 15 March 1778 who married Capt. John French in 1804 and Eunice born 29 October 1779 who married Jabez Kelly of Norwich. Ebenezer Hyde was captured with the Confederacy and died aboard the Jersey prison ship in 1781.

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Ezekial Letts, Marine

Ezekiel Letts. Despite the 5th Company of Philadelphia Militia being identified as his command in a return dated 6 February 1781, Ezekiel Letts resigned as Captain of the militia company representing the Middle Ward (West side of Third Street to East Third Street) of Colonel James Reed’s 1st Battalion in November 1780, presumably to enter on board the Confederacy on 16 November. Letts served as Captain of this company since at least the 15 April 1780 return taken at Philadelphia. One incident involving his men which occurred on 10 June 1780 is recorded in the Journal of Samuel Rowland Fisher may have been the impetus for his resignation. He was previously commissioned Captain on 25 August 1779 of Bradford’s First Regiment of Foot according to a muster roll taken at Billingsport on 18 October 1779. Prior to that, Letts had been commissioned Captain of the Middle Ward’s 1st Company of Foot in Colonel William Bradford’s 1st Battalion on 25 June 1777 according to the 12 July 1777 muster roll taken at Billingsport. Prior to his captaincy, Letts was commissioned Lieutenant of Captain Robert Smith’s Company of Colonel Joseph Cowperthwait’s Battalion of Philadelphia Militia on 11 September 1777. Early in the war on 5 January 1776, Ezekiel Letts was commissioned Ensign in Captain John Taylor’s Company of Colonel Anthony Wayne’s 4th Pennsylvania Battalion. He resigned on 11 October 1776, apparently some time after a field promotion to Lieutenant. The reason for his resignation is made clear in a document dated 31 October 1776 and signed by Benjamin Rush which was auctioned at Christies East in 1997 and which is associated with Rush’s petition on behalf of Ezekiel Letts to the Pennsylvania Council of Safety dated 29 October 1776 from Essington which, “Humbly Sheweth, That Your Petitioner Went from here in the beginning of the Year for Canada an Ensign, and has Since been Promoted to the Rank of Lieutenant in the above Battalion. Your Petitioner having labour’ d under a long Sickness and became exceeding Weak, induced him to request his discharge for the recovery of his health, which the General was pleased to grant, and now being greatly rccoverd and growing hearty, begs leave to offer himself a Candidate for a Captaincy in the eleventh Battalion, And Your Petitioner, as in Duty bound, shall ever Pray. I have had the pleasure of knowing Mr. Letts for several years, and beg leave to recommend him as a prudent, sensible, worthy man, & warmly attached to the American cause.” Prior to receiving another officer’s commission, Ezekiel Letts apparently returned to duty after his illness as a Private in Captain Samuel Simpson’s Company of City Guards under Major Lewis Nicola in January or February of 1777. Before the war, Ezekiel Letts married Hannah Farmer at the First Baptist Church of Philadelphia on 13 April 1772. Born on 16 October 1753 and baptized at Christ Church, Philadelphia on 20 April 1754, Hannah was the daughter of Edward Farmer and Hannah Morgan. A 1779 tax record lists Ezekiel Letts next to Edward Farmer’s estate and Hannah’s brothers, James Farmer and the William Farmer estate. In 1774, Ezekiel Letts was one of Philadelphia’s representatives to the Baptist Association meeting. In 1775, he is listed as a tailor on 3rd Street, as his occupation is also noted in his mother-in-law’s probate records. One William Burkelow was indentured to Captain Ezekiel Letts on 6 July 1773 for a term of over nine years as an apprentice to learn “the trade of a tailor, have two quarters’ night schooling in the two first years and three quarters’ in the three last years.”

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Lewis Mory, Midshipman

Lewis Mory. Lewis Mory or Lewis Morey is likely the second son of Robert C. Mory (1736-1793) and Catherine Ginnedo or Guinadeau (1738-1828) of North Kingston, RI. Although genealogical sources indicate his birth date as 24 October 1760, Mory’s grave marker suggests he was born in November 1762. It is possible that he is the Lewis Morey who served as private on board the Massachusetts armed brigantine Freedom under John Clouston from 12 June to 25 December 1776. According to his pension file #W-3286, Lewis Mory first entered on board the Confederacy as a midshipman while the ship was upon the stock at Pocatanuck in the New London River in October 1778. He appears on the Frigate Confederacy Riggers’ Returns of 1778-1779. His two year older brother Robert Mory, a shipwright of South Kingston, also worked on the ship in the summer of 1777 as a carpenter. Robert’s name appears in the Blacksmith’s receipts from May to November 1778 as well. The ship was launched immediately after Lewis Mory’s enlistment and about a month after the launching went to New London where the ship was finished. He is named as Midshipman of the Confederacy in Silas Cleveland’s pension file #S-12486. In 1779, the Confederacy sailed for Philadelphia. Samuel Holt’s widow Margaret, in his pension application #W-3141, suggests that Mory contracted smallpox in Philadelphia in 1779 or 1780 but recovered. Mory’s pension application includes statements from sisters Mary Martin and Sarah Martin Norris that indicate the young midshipman regularly visited the home of their parents Captain Samuel Martin (1730-1786) and his wife Mary (1738-1819) during the war. The Martin’s were neighbors of Holt’s wife Margaret Warnack’s family at that time. After the Confederacy’s capture, Mory was confined on the Jersey prison ship for about nine months. On 8 May 1792, Lewis Mory was awarded $23.19 payment for his services as Midshipman on board the Confederacy commencing 23 July 1780. Shortly after the war a newspaper article indicates Mory, of North Kingston, was paid in full on 30 September 1786 for a L 104 loan made to Jesper Latham and mariner Amos Latham of Groton, Mory’s shipmate on the Confederacy. After the war, Lewis Mory was married to twenty-one year old Elizabeth Beaks of Philadelphia on 10 December 1789 by Samuel Magans, Rector of St. Paul’s in Philadelphia. Mory was a ship master and owner in Philadelphia and according to shipping news published in newspapers at the time, Captain Mory apparently commanded several vessels over the next three decades. Just weeks after his marriage, Mory was cleared out of Philadelphia on the ship Conception to Bilbao, Spain. The Pennsylvania Packet reports his sailing with the brig Susannah from Philadelphia to Rothtort on 12 June 1790. The Pennsylvania Mercury notes he is “not yet arrived” in Philadelphia on the Susannah on 19 March 1791. The New York Shipping News of 4 January 1793 reports Mory’s departure from Philadelphia on the Susannah, bound for Charleston, SC where the City Gazette notes the brig’s landing at Craft’s Wharf with her cargo of flour, brandy, sugar and bar iron. Later that year, the Federal Gazette of 21 August 1793 reports the capture of the brig Susannah and Captain Mory by the British privateer Fanny sailing out of St. Kitt’s under the command of Captain Summerfell. The Susannah was taken on 25 June 1793 near St. Bartholomew’s on the return leg of a voyage to Bordeaux from Phildadelphia. After all the French cargo was removed, Mory and his ship were dismissed only to be detained again and boarded by the Democrat “off our Capes” on Sunday morning 18 August. According to the eyewitness account, the boarding captain behaved “with the utmost insolence to Capt. Mory.” One year later, Mory is in command of the ship Dispatch where his departure from Norfolk to Falmouth is recorded in the Virginia Chronicle of 2 August 1794. The ship apparently returned to Philadelphia by way of L’Orient, France as her 57 day trans-Atlantic crossing is reported in the Philadelphia Gazette of 17 December 1794. The following summer, Mory’s return from Surinam in South America on the brig Dispatch is reported in the Philadelphia Gazette of 22 August 1795. He is probably still sailing the Dispatch in November 1795 when two letters are awaiting Mory at the Philadelphia Post Office. The Philadelphia Gazette also reports Captain Mory clearing the sloop Sally out of Philadelphia for Petit-Goave, Haiti on 4 December 1797. He must have stopped at New York on the way as his arrival is noted there three days later. It is almost eight years later before we find Captain Mory again in the shipping news of the U.S. Gazette on 1 May 1805, in command of the schooner Deborah sailing from Philadelphia to St. Jago de Cuba. Again, Mory is reported as master of the schooner Deborah clearing out of Philadelphia on 26 September 1805, bound for Senegal in Africa. This destination begs the question if her cruise was associated with the slave trade. A newspaper account of 10 January 1807 reports that the schooner Deborah under the command of Captain Mory and carrying a cargo of specie and sugar from Havanna to Philadelphia, was detained by the British privateer Favourite on 9 December 1806 and sent into Nassau in the Bahamas. She was cleared to leave Nassau with her cargo in early January and sailed into New York. Prior to 1805, Mory may have lived on a plantation farm on the Chester Road in Ridley Township, Delaware County near the “Lazaretto” as an advertisement for the sale of the property suggests. Lewis Mory is noted in the Philadelphia directories of 1809, 1813, 1816 and 1818 as a sea captain living at 263 South Front Street. This address no longer exists, having been demolished for the park on the west side of Interstate 95 directly between the Society Hill Towers and Penn’s Landing. His widow Elizabeth is noted as the resident of that address in the 1819 directory. In the 1810 directory, Mory’s address is listed as 297 South Front Street. The federal census of that same year suggests that, in addition to Mory and his wife, a younger female between the ages of 16-25 and a fourth unidentified individual lived within his household in the New Market Ward. Mory appears to have been Master of the brig Madeira shipping out of Philadelphia in the Autumn of 1811 and again in February 1812. A 17 October 1811 article in Poulson’s American Daily Advertiser reports the appreciation of S. Lyman of New York who was a passenger on the brig Swiftsure until it was upset in a gale. Lyman and several others were rescued after ten days on the wreck by Captain Mory who was bound for Madeira, a Portuguese island in the North Atlantic. Still associated with the Madeira wine trade in September 1815 according to Grotjan’s Philadelphia Public Sale Report, Lewis Mory shipped four quarter casks of Madeira on the brig J. Murdoch under the command of J. G. Leuffer. Mory appears to have been shipping out of New York by August of 1817 when letters await him at the post office there. Lewis Mory is named as master of the newly-built 216 ton brig William Henry of New York City, from whence he sailed from the West Side Old Slip for St. Croix in early December 1817. The agents for the ship were Reade and De Peyster. According to shipping news reports, Mory apparently made a second trip with the William Henry, leaving New York in late January and arriving at St. Croix after a nine day voyage. The return trip from West End, St. Croix took 13 days with the brig making New York by 20 February 1818 with her cargo of sugar and rum for owners: A. De Peyster, M. Bathust, G. W. Lynch, T. Moore and C. Cromiler. Captain Lewis Mory died six months later in August 1818 while on a voyage on an unnamed ship owned by James H. Causten of Baltimore, who had lived for a time with Mory and his wife as a boy. Causten may have been Mory’s cabin boy or apprentice as the pension testimony suggests the time to be around the turn of the century. James Hyman Causten (1787-1874) was the son of Baltimore shipping merchant Isaac Causten (1758-1833) and brother of Joseph H. Causten, purser of the USS Constitution and Enterprise during the War of 1812 and the Barbary Wars. Born in Baltimore, James H. Causten married Eliza Myer (1794-1856) in 1813, experienced prolific careers as both a ship master and lawyer, eventually moving to the District of Columbia in 1832. Causten continued practicing law in Washington, specializing in representing ship owners of American vessels and cargo illegally captured by privateers, championing French spoliation claims and later serving as American consul for Chile and Ecuador. Causten may have been aboard the schooner Deborah under Captain Mory as a young man when she was detained in 1806. Two letters dated December 1805 concerning James’ efforts to find an apprenticeship after completing his obligations as a sailor located in Box 1, Folder 1 of the Causten Family Papers Collection at Georgetown University may shed further light on his early relationship with Mory. It is known that Lewis Mory was a friend of James Causten’s father Isaac as the elder Causten posted L 200 in bail for a debt owed by Mory to Conrad Weckerly in December 1797. It is also likely that Captain Mory sailed several vessels on Causten family business leading up to his final voyage in the Summer of 1818. Additional research for Lewis Mory’s merchant career should include the Ship Registers of the Port of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Volume 1 in addtion to; Boxes 91, 92, 111 & 112 of the James H. Causten Papers 1816-1885 in the Causten-Pickett Collection at the Library of Congress. After his death, Captain Lewis Mory was interred in the historic Oak Grove cemetery at St. Mary’s, Georgia. The location of his death there is confirmed by a mortuary notice in the Albany (NY) Gazette of 12 September 1818. Mory’s gravestone can be viewed at: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=mory&GSiman=1&GScid=35913&GRid=51749888& . The inscription reads “Sacred to the memory of Captain Lewis Mory of Philadelphia who departed this life August 13th 1818. Aged 55 years & 9 months. With good will to man, and an unsullied reputation he gained the love and esteem of all that knew him, his Widowed wife grateful in the recollection of departed worth has raised this humble tribute of duteous affection.” Lewis Mory’s will, which was written on 2 October 1810 and proved on 5 September 1818, left his entire estate to his wife Elizabeth who was also named sole executrix. By the time of Captain Mory’s death in 1818, his old friend and fellow midshipman on the Confederacy, Amos Latham was living in Camden County, GA in the vicinity of St. Mary’s. It is possible that the captain met his old friend face to face prior to his death, that Latham cared for him during his mortal illness or that Latham assisted Elizabeth Mory with the arrangements for his gravestone afterward. Amos Latham served as the Cumberland Island lighthouse keeper from 1829 to 1838 and as keeper of the same structure after its relocation to Amelia Island from 1839 until his death in 1842. Captain Mory’s presence and death in St. Mary’s is likely associated with James H. Causten’s conveyance of “Light-Horse” Henry Lee from Nassau to Georgia earlier that year during the Spring of 1818. Having completed his voyage on the William Henry on 20 February 1818, Mory likely went on board Causten’s ship in New York where he also had just landed with a cargo of coffee from Port au Prince. Causten, probably in company with Mory, arrived in Nassau to meet Lee on 1 March 1818 where Causten agreed to land Lee at Cumberland Island, GA. Lee had first approached Causten in Nassau during the previous winter concerning transport arrangements. “Light-Horse” Henry Lee died in Tabby House at Dungeness on Cumberland Island on 25 March 1818, an eyewitness account of his death conveyed in an 11 April 1818 letter from James H. Causten to Lee’s widow Ann. A brief memoir of the events of that time written by Causten, a copy of which can be found in the Virginia Historical Society, may also shed light on the circumstances surrounding the death of Lewis Mory. An abstract of Merchandise entered at the Custom House dated 30 May 1818, suggests that James H. Causten returned to New York with a cargo of Saltpetre. A resident of Philadelphia for most of her life, Mory’s wife Elizabeth lived in the District of Columbia while in her late sixties and early seventies between 1836 and 1841. Despite her absence in the 1840 census records of the Causten household, it is possible that she resided at the 1428 F Street home of James H. Causten where the Washington Hotel now stands, based on her friend and lawyer’s testimony in her 1839 pension application. The captain’s seventy-nine year old widow Elizabeth died on 12 October 1847 and is buried in the cemetery of Old St. Paul’s Church in Philadelphia. The present whereabouts of the “account and memorandum book” of Captain Lewis Mory which his wife had in her possession in 1839 when several pages were cut out and sent in with her application for pension, is not known.

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John Linton, Seaman

John Linton. The claim of John Linton a seaman on the ship Confederacy in the amount of $27.14 including interest to the date of the Confederacy’s capture on 14 April 1781 was adjusted by the Treasury Department on 31 October 1792. One possibility for this individual is the Massachusetts seaman John Linton who served during the Revolutionary War. This seaman is not likely the John Linton who served as Captain of the 7th Company of Colonel William Bradford’s 1st Battalion of Pennsylvania Militia from Philadelphia’s Middle Ward in 1777 and who also served as captain of the Middle Ward’s Third Company in Lt. Col. James Read’s 1st Battalion in 1780. The Middle Ward was bounded by the West side of 2nd Street, Market Street to Chestnut, East and West of Strawberry Alley. The Confederacy’s seaman is much more likely the John Linton who entered the Port of Philadelphia on 24 September 1772 under an indenture to Adam Foulke for four years as a “servant to be employed attending shop.” The post-war 1790 Census lists the Dwelling of shop keeper John Linton on the East Side of Water Street between Chestnut Street and the South Street Wharf along the wharves. One John Linton took the oath of Allegiance in Pennsylvania on 5 January 1779, having taken “the test” in June of 1777. The Confederacy’s seaman is almost certainly the John Linton who witnessed the will of John Frazer of the ship Hyder Alley with other crewmates and officers on 1 April 1782, just before the Hyder Alley secretly sailed one week later. John Frazer may possibly be the John Frayzer who served on a previous cruise of the Confederacy. Other witnesses to the will were Hyder Alley’s commander Lieutenant Joshua Barney and Second Lieutenant Luke Matthewman, who also served as gunnery officer. The will was proved on 27 May 1782, strongly suggesting that John Frazer was one of the fifteen crewman who were killed or wounded on the Hyder Alley during a celebrated naval battle on 8 April 1782 which ended with 53 British casualties and the capture of the General Monk. The General Monk was formerly the Rhode Island privateer Congress under the command of Silas Talbot. The Hyder Alley was orginally a trading vessel owned by John Wright Stanley who intended to deliver tobacco to L’Orient, France but was unable to secure insurance to cover the risk of shipping loss to the General Monk stationed at the mouth of the Delaware Bay. The ship was secretly converted to a privateer by Stanley and John Wilcocks and armed with sixteen guns and 110 men. Joshua Barney, having been commissioned a lieutenant in the Continental Navy in June of 1776 but finding no commands, was appointed master of the Hyder Alley on 25 March 1782. Barney had previously served on the sloop Sachem as executive officer, as prize master of the British privateer Three Friends, on the Andria Doria and as prize master of the British snow Thomas before he was captured in January 1777. He was exchanged in October 1777 and appointed First Lieutenant of the frigate Virginia until its capture in March of 1778. After another exchange in August 1778, Joshua Barney was next appointed First Lieutenant of the Continental sloop Saratoga in the summer of 1780. Barney led the Saratoga’s boarders in the capture of the ship Charming Molly and two brigs. The following day, all three vessels were recaptured by the British Intrepid and Barney was taken to England and confined for almost a year in Mill Prison. He escaped in May of 1781, was recaptured and escaped again, disguised as a British officer. Serving under Barney on the Hyder Alley were First Lieutenant Joshua Starr who would become her commander in May of 1782, Second Lieutenant Luke Matthewman who had previously served as First Lieutenant aboard the Continental Navy sloop Surprize until her scuttling in November 1777, Major McLane, Lieutenant of Marines Scull and John Linton’s crewmate on the Confederacy Master-at-Arms Cornelius Wells. One account of the return of the vessels from this engagement reads, “I saw the ships at Willing’s wharf, and the blood was running from the scuppers of the English ship, whose capture was a glorious one for our merchants, and cleared our Bay from large and small British Cruziers.” Barney sailed again on a privateering cruize commencing on 21 April 1782. It is reasonable to speculate that seaman John Linton also sailed with the Hyder Alley on this short cruise and perhaps with Starr or Barney on subsequent trips. In August of 1782 the General Monk was purchased by Congress, renamed the General Washington and placed under the command of Lieutenant Joshua Barney as a “Packet and Cruzier” on voyages to France.

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John Lawrence, Captain’s Clerk

John Lawrence. John Lawrence (1753-1817) was born 5 July 1753, oldest son of Queens County magistrate William Lawrence (1729-1794) and his wife Anna Brinckerhoff (1733-1770), both of New York. When Long Island was captured in 1776, part of William Lawrence’s home in Newtown was made the headquarters of British and Hessian generals. He served as captain’s clerk on the Confederacy under Captain Seth Harding. According to James L. Howard in Seth Harding, Mariner on pages 152-4, Lawrence lived with the Harding family in Norwich in May 1782 after his release from the Jersey prison ship and even authorized his former captain to obtain funds from his father on his behalf during a trip to New York. At Harding’s request, the elder Lawrence shipped his son’s support in the form of dry goods which was by misfortune confiscated as smuggled contraband by Connecticut authorities. Later in 1786, Lawrence would participate in one of Harding’s West Indies merchant ventures by trading two horses for two hundred gallons of rum resulting in a lucrative return on his investment (Howard, pages 179-80). John Lawrence was “familiarly called the commodore” from his having been an officer on board the frigate Confederacy. John and his brother Isaac Lawrence “were large wholesale dealers and importers of silks and china ware from the East Indies to New York, when few were active in this business.” Other brothers were Richard and William Lawrence. According to Walter Barrett in The Old Merchants of New York City (1863), John Lawrence “lived and did business at 162 Queen (or Pearl) Street. In 1795, he took in his younger brother Isaac, who had been clerk with him for two years previous, and the new sign was placed over the store at 154 Water on the corner of Fly Market…The firm of John & Isaac Lawrence continued until 1803, when the brothers separated after doing a very prosperous and extended commerce…When the house of J. & I. Lawrence dissolved, the store was at 208 Pearl Street…” Isaac became president of the United States Branch Bank in New York in 1817, the same year John died. He had been a director in the old United States Bank, as was his brother John. John Lawrence was married first to Elizabeth Eaton Berrien, widow of cousin Nathaniel Lawrence who died in 1796 and daughter of Judge John Berrien, US Attorney General. He later married Patience Lawrence Riker, the daughter of Samuel Riker, Esq. His children included Madison Samuel, Louisa who married John Campbell, Jane who married Benjamin F. Lee, Julia who married first John P. Smith then Wilson G. Hunt, Patience who married Timothy Gridley Churchill and John who died unmarried. Daughter Jane was a celebrated beauty who was the subject of the painting known as “The White Plume” by Charles Cromwell Ingham, one of the founders of the National Academy of Design. Her husband, Benjamin F. Lee was one of the pioneers in the manufacture of vulcanized rubber for Goodyear. At some point, John Lawrence moved from 162 Pearl Street to 82 Murray Street and finally to 391 Broadway. John Lawrence died in New York on 29 August 1817. Interestingly, Lawrence’s involvement with his crewmates extended long after the war. Apparently the former captain’s clerk held the forty dollar mortgage on Confederacy marine John Ames’ ten acres and log house in Plymouth, Chenango County, NY. Unfortunately the property was foreclosed on by Egbert Benson executor for the estate of John Lawrence and auctioned off in October 1821. Egbert Benson was appointed 1st Attorney General of New York in 1777, served as a delegate to the Continental Congress and the US House of Representatives and sat on the bench of the New York Supreme Court prior to his return to private practice in 1803.

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