Frigate Trumbull Marines & Impressed Men (July 1781)

Following is a list of the frigate Trumbull’s Marine contingent of 21 men, 10 impressed seamen and landsmen, 5 presumably impressed negros and a supplemental list of 21 bounty recipients who presumably signed the ship’s articles upon entering. The document was confiscated when the frigate Trumbull was captured on 28 August 1781 and is among the 36 documents found in the Trumbull’s prize court records (HCA 32/465/9) transcribed at the National Archives in Kew, England by Joseph and Joshua Ross in February 2014. Although undated, the list of Marines covers those enlisted between 28 May 1781 and 16 July 1781. Six impressed from ships in the Delaware were entered on 26 July 1781, four others were impressed at Lewes on 28 July 1781 and the five negros entered on 30 July 1781; just nine days prior to her departure from the Capes and ten before Trumbull’s capture.

List of Marines                                                                                

Gilbert Saltonstall         Capt Mar                                            1781

Peter Manifold             Actg Lt                                               

Richard Bourk              Sergt                                                   31 May

Patrick Taggart             Do                                                      14 July

Barnabas Cunningham Corp                                                    6 May

Daniel Burns                Do                                                      30 May

Miles Carpenter            Drummer                                             31 May

John Nicholson            Fifer                                                    14 July

John Patterson            Private                                                 28 May

Richard Allen               Do                                                      30 May

Moliston Wheeler          Do                                                      30 May

John Ealy                    Do                                                      2 June

Elisha Kinyon               Do                                                      2 June

Alexander Clark           Do                                                      2 June

Francis Winstanley       Do                                                      8 June

James Drane               Do                                                      14 June

David Baird                  Do                                                      4 July

Charles Baird               Do                                                      4 July

Solomon Hudson         Do                                                      7 July

John McNarney            Do                                                      16 July

Joseph Sutton             Do                                                      16 June  

List of Impressed Seamen and Landsmen and Negros

Joseph Barclay            Seaman, pressed      Ships                   26 July

John Black                  “                                                         26 July

George Carlton            “                                                         26 July

Thomas Riddle            “                                                          26 July

Robert Day                  “                                                          26 July

William Curtain             “                                                          26 July

John Cook                   Seaman, pressed      Ships                   26 July

Hercules Marriner         Landsman, pressed  Lewis Town          28 July

Sacheveral Wood        “                                                          28 July

Thomas Holston          Landsman, pressed  Lewis Town          28 July

November                    negro                                                  30 July

James                         Do                                                      30 July

George                        Do                                                      30 July

Affrica                         Do                                                      30 July

William                        Do                                                      30 July

Articles with Supplemental List for Bounties                              

David Hurlburt              Landsman                                            3 May

Roger Kelly                  Landsman                                            4 May

John Kuhne                 Marine                                                 4 May

John Thompson           Carp Mate                                           5 May

John Hindley                Landsman                                            6 May

William Lingey             Landsman                                            6 May

John Brady                  Landsman                                            6 May

Barnabas Cunningham Marine                                                 6 May

John Miles                   Marine                                                 6 May

Richard Simon             Seaman                                               7 May

John Lemon                 Seaman                                               7 July

John Brown                 Boy                                                     10 May

James Deveroux          Boy                                                     10 May

Simon Betty                 Boy                                                     15 April

James McKinzey          Seaman                                               20 May

John Jorden                Seaman                                               20 May

Charles Millen              Seaman                                               20 June

William Roe                 Landsman                                            29 June

John Stevens               Seaman                                               20 May

William Roberts           Cooper                                                15 June

Joshua Beebe              Boy                                                     15 June

Richard Nash               Seaman                                               11/16/80

John Maltbie                Landsman                                            11/16/80

William Murray             Boy                                                     11/16/80

Dolphin Hubbard          Ordinary Seaman                                 11/16/80

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Frigate Trumbull Quarter Bill (Aug 1781)

This undated list of 152 Officers and Men likely captured with the frigate Trumbull on 28 August 1781 is taken from a document noting the assignment of each crew member for quarters in battle found among the 36 documents in the Trumbull’s prize court records (HCA 32/465/9) and transcribed at the National Archives in Kew, England by Joseph and Joshua Ross in February 2014. Note that senior officers, as well as the 21 man contingent of Marines, are not included in the list.

Trumbull          Gun No. 1            Thomas Scott           Capt’n

                                                          William Barry           

                                                           James Kelly             

                                                           James Green           

                                                           William Sample        

                                                            John McDonald       

                                                             Henry Hilands          

                                                              Gilbert DeBeau         Boy

                       Gun No. 2                 Benjamin Stubbs      Capt’n

                                                               Roger Kelly              

                                                                Richard Tracy          

                                                                 Isaac Green             

                                                                  John Thompson       

                                                                   John Flanagan         

                                                                   Thomas Austin         

                                                                    James Davorix          Boy

                       Gun No. 3                      John Stevens            Capt’n

                                                                      John Quigg              

                                                                       John Duffy              

                                                                        Thomas Pilkington   

                                                                         John Hays               

                                                                         Alexander Warwick   

                                                                          James Willson         

                                                                          John Maltbie             Boy

                       Gun No. 4                      Jeremiah Bonfoy      Capt’n

                                                                          James Duncan         

                                                                          Charles Skinner       

                                                                           John Trone              

                                                                            John Griffith            

                                                                            William Anderson     

                                                                            Richard Simmons    

                                                                             Touraia Lucas           Boy

                       Gun No. 5                      John Sherman           Capt’n

                                                                              John Bryan              

                                                                               Robert Vernon         

                                                                                Robert Day              

                                                                                 Jacob Whitehead     

                                                                                 John Day                 

                                                                                  John Clayton           

                                                                                  James McConnell      Boy

                       Gun No. 6                       Thomas Short           Capt’n

                                                                                   Robert Armstrong    

                                                                                   Jacob Bostwick       

                                                                                   John Monohon         

                                                                                   Henry McMurdy       

                                                                                    Patrick Cain             

                                                                                    Adam Hill                 

                                                                                     Henry Oath               Boy

                       Gun No. 7                    Gust. Brown              Capt’n

                                                                                   Will. Long                

                                                                                       Abraham Crasse

                                                                                   William Witney         

                                                                                        Thomas Johnson     

                                                                                        John Freeman          

                                                                                         Donald McDonald    

                                                                                         John Searls             

                                                                                         John Thompson        Boy

                       Gun No. 8                      William Roberts        Capt’n

                                                                                   John O’Brian            

                                                                                        William Row             

                                                                                        George Carlton        

                                                                                         John Cook               

                                                                                         Edmund Holbeau     

                                                                                          William Gattey         

                                                                                          Charles Wilkison       Boy

                       Gun No. 9                     Antoine D’Enapollon Capt’n

                                                                                   Louis Martin             

                                                                                         William Curtain         

                                                                                         James Saunders      

                                                                                         James Crocker       

                                                                                          Nicholas Calwell       

                                                                                          Robert Potts            

                                                                                          John Scott                Boy

                       Gun No. 10                     William Haight        Capt’n

                                                                                   Joseph Barclay        

                                                                                          John Black              

                                                                                          Miles Selden            

                                                                                          Thomas Murphy       

                                                                                          James Parker           

                                                                                          Thomas Riddle        

                                                                                          John Brian                Boy

                       Gun No. 11                       Robert Jackson        Capt’n

                                                                                   Thomas Waight        

                                                                                          Robert Denum         

                                                                                          Charles Millen          

                                                                                          John Stripes            

                                                                                          Joshua Denny          

                                                                                          Cornelius Barber      

                                                                                          Step:neg                  Boy

                       Gun No. 12                   Joseph Smith          Capt’n

                                                                                   David Barret             

                                                                                          John Mitchel            

                                                                                          Dolphin Hubbert       

                                                                                          James Ellis              

                                                                                          John Lorin               

                                                                                          David Jones            

                                                                                          James Caulder         

                                                                                          Silvester Marcy         Boy

Quarter Deck   Gun No. 1                          Charles E. Irvine      Capt’n

                                                                                   Samuel Claypoole    

                                                                                          Lewis Ward              

                                                                                          Affrica: neg              

                                                                                          William [crossed out]: neg

                                                                                   Joshua Beeby           Boy

                       Gun No. 2                       Richard Law            Capt’n

                                                                                   John Manley            

                                                                                          John Down              

                                                                                          Dennis O’Laugherty  

                                                                                          James: neg              

                                                                                          George: neg            

                                                                                          John Brown              Boy

                       Gun No. 3                         [blank]                      Capt’n

                                                                                   David Holbert           

                                                                                          Henry McEvar          

                                                                                          Alexander Campbell 

                                                                                          William: neg             

                                                                                          John Downy             Boy

Quarter Bill      Fore Castle           Samuel Ropkins Boatswain

                                                                                   Michael Callahan      

                                                                                         Thomas Brown         

                                                                                          Aron Ball                 

                                                                                          Abraham Callender   

                                                                                          William Smiley          Boy

                       Fore Top Sail Braces              George Nicholson    

                              Fore Braces                           David Moffet           

                                                                                          William Stevens       

                              Fore Top                               Jacob Bemper          Capt’n

                                                                                   Dennis Vinnard        

                                                                                          James Pippinger      

                                                                                          John Bishop            

                                                                                          Alexander Gardiner  

                                                                                          Joseph Summers     

                              Main Top                              Edward Clayton        Capt’n

                                                                                   Samuel Nicholson    

                                                                                          John McCabe          

                                                                                          Miles Kent               

                                                                                          Thomas Martin         

                                                                                          Benjamin Taylor       

                              At the Wheel                          Charles Chamberlain

                                                                                          David Cotteral          

                              Magazine                               Peter Langdon         

                                                                                          George Carle           

                              Pass Powder between Decks  James McKenzie      

                                                                                          Joseph Murray         

                                                                                          John Jurdon            

                              To attend the light room          Richard Nash           

                              Main Hatch                            Lloyd Wharton          

                              Cock-Pitt                         David Morrow      Surgeon

                                                                                   Samuel D. Morrow   

                                                                                          Robert Geddis         

                              In the Hold                             Thomas Knight   Carpenter

                                                                                   John Slader             

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Officers & Men of the Frigate Trumbull confined on HMS Jersey Prison Ship (Aug 1781)

This list of 102 Officers and Men of the frigate Trumbull captured on 9 August 1781 is derived from the rolls of the General Monk and prison ship HMS Jersey transcribed at the National Archives in Kew, England by Joseph and Joshua Ross in February 2014. The list has been edited to offer a complete spelling of the abbreviated Christian name, alternative spellings in parenthesis and includes rate or quality on the vessel if known in brackets. The rate or quarters on the vessel have been determined by other documents found in the prize court records. Following each individual is their final disposition according to the HMS Jersey muster roll records including date of exchange or discharge to the hospital ship HMS Falmouth or other destination.

The second of two vessels named Trumbull, this ship was one of the 13 American frigates authorized by the Continental Congress on 13 December 1775 which also directed that two of the frigates be built in Connecticut. Governor Jonathan Trumbull and the Connecticut Council voted that the vessel should be built at Chatham on the Connecticut River under the supervision of Captain John Cotton (1719-1785) of Middletown. It was laid down in the Spring of 1776 and launched on 5 September 1776. After the frigate had been launched, it was discovered her eighteen feet deep draft would not allow the ship to cross the sandy “Saybrooke Barr” at the mouth of the river where it empties into Long Island Sound. Called the Quinnehtukqut or “long tidal river” by the Indians, the Connecticut River was first charted by Dutch explorer Adriaen Block in 1614 who named it De Versehe or “the freshwater” river. The Connecticut varies in width and is rife with shifting shoals that make navigation difficult for all but vessels with the shallowest draft. The Saybrook Bar, formed by the confluence of river and tidal currents at the river’s exit into the sound, is just twelve feet deep at Spring tide.

In April 1777, as the frigate Trumbull lay in the river at Saybrook awaiting assistance in getting out to deep water, General Howe ordered the Royal Governor of New York to lead a raid into neighboring Connecticut. American General Arnold wrote to Governor Trumbull on 30 April 1777, “I think it very probable they have in Contemplation the Destroying the Continental Frigate at Saybrook, which may be easily effected by a few small Tenders, as there is no Battery or Armed Vessel to Cover her. If she cannot be got over the Barr & secured in harbour, will it not be prudent to move her up the river to some place of greater safety? I know not If your honour or the Continental agents have the Direction of her; that she is greatly exposed & ought to be secured, there is no doubt. I should Imagine she might be easily got over the barr with proper lighters & an Easterly wind, & secured…where she might be got in readiness for the Seas.” As multiple attempts to get the frigate to sea proved unsuccessful, concern increased as the Marine Committee of the Continental Congress wrote to the Eastern Navy Board on 26 October 1777, “getting the ships out of Providence River and the Ship Trumbull out of Connecticut River is a matter of great importance, and what Congress has much at heart; the procuring this with the hazard that may attend it, may be left to your prudence and the good conduct of their Commanders.”

Losing patience with the situation in February 1778, the Continental Congress chastised Connecticut authorities who in turn ordered John Cotton “to endeavor by all practical means in his power, to cause the continental frigate to be removed over said sand bar into the harbor of New London [and] to employ such help of men and materials as he should find necessary.” Trumbull’s commander Continental Navy Captain Dudley Saltonstall “and all other officers and men who belonged to said ship, were directed to render Capt. Cotton every aid and assistance in their power, to effect the important and necessary object, which Congress had so much at heart.” Cotton was also “directed to use his best prudences and discretion in prosecuting the important business of preventing said ships falling into the hands of the enemy, or any other misfortune; and to report his doings to the Governor in the premises, together with all expenses, that the same should be defrayed, and information given to Congress.” President of the Eastern Navy Board William Vernon wrote on 25 March 1778 that in order to release the Trumbull from her confinement “she must be intirely stript of her Yards and Top Mast and all her Story, even to a Swept Hole, that if possible to bring her to 9 or 10 feet Water.”

The frigate remained in the Connecticut River yet another year before she was freed on 11 August 1779 under the temporary command of Captain Elisha Hinman by means of casks of water lashed to her sides with connecting ropes running beneath the keel. When the casks were pumped out, they rose and lifted the ship just enough to pass over the bar. The vessel was then fitted out at New London but did not go to sea until the Spring of 1780 under Captain James Nicholson (1737-1804). Nicholson had previously commanded the frigate Virginia since the Spring of 1777. While that ship was bottled up in the Chesapeake by a British blockade, Nicholson and his crew fought briefly alongside Washington’s army at the Battle of Trenton. Returning to his vessel then lying in the York River, Nicholson was still prevented from getting to sea by British ships blockading the Chesapeake Bay at the Virginia Capes. When the Virginia attempted to break the blockade in the Spring of 1778, she ran aground near Hampton Roads and was captured. Narrowly avoiding surrender himself, Nicholson fled to shore in a small boat and was accused of abandoning the crew by Lieutenant Joshua Barney. Subsequently exonerated by a Congressional inquiry, Captain James Nicholson was appointed to command the 38-gun frigate Trumbull on 20 September 1779 and served with distinction during one of the Revolutionary War’s bloodiest naval battles between the Trumbull and 32-gun British armed vessel Watt on 1 June 1780. Captain of Marines Gilbert Saltonstall said of the two and a half hour close hot action, “We were literally cut all to pieces; not a shroud, stay, brace, bowling, or other rigging standing. Our main top mast shot away, our fore, main mizzen, and jigger gone by the boards…”

After refitting in Philadelphia prior to her final cruise, the frigate Trumbull departed the Delaware Capes on 8 August 1781 escorting a twenty-eight ship convoy of merchantmen in company with a 24-gun privateer and 14-gun letter of marque. Despite a number of sources indicating her date of capture as 28 August, that same day three enemy ships were sighted, two of which bore down on the convoy. As night approached, a severe rain squall carried away the Trumbull’s fore-topmast and main-topgallant mast. Losing the merchant fleet as Trumbull was obliged to run before the wind, the 32-gun HMS Iris under George Dawson- formerly the Continental frigate Hancock- and 18-gun General Monk under Josias Rogers engaged the crippled vessel. Nicholson’s account was published in the Continental Journal of 13 September 1781, “The wreck of the topmast with the yard and rigging laying aback of the foresail and over the bows, the topsail yard arm came through the foresail and on the forecastle, so that with our utmost exertion we could not clear ourselves of the wreck until one of the ships came alongside and the other in sight. Immediately all hands were called to quarters; instead of coming, three quarters of them ran below, put out the lights, matches, &c. With the remainder and a few brave officers we commenced an action with the Iris for one hour and thirty-five minutes, at the end of which the other ship came up and fired into us. Seeing no prospect of escaping in this unequal contest, I struck, having my first and third lieuts. and Capt. Murray, a volunteer, with eight others wounded and 5 killed. My crew consisted of 180 men, 45 of whom were taken out of the new gaol – prisoners of war; they through treachery and others from cowardice betrayed me, or at least prevented my making the resistance I would have done. At no time of the engagement had I more than 40 men upon deck.”

Towed into New York by the Iris, the Trumbull was barely a wreck and not taken into the British service. A few weeks later the Iris was captured by the French, which explains why her muster rolls are not extant in the British National Archives. Eighty-three of Trumbull’s officers and men are entered on the Jersey’s rolls from the General Monk and only nineteen from the Iris. By Nicholson’s own accounting of his compliment of 180 with five dead in the engagement and 102 prisoners on the Jersey, approximately seventy-three men are not accounted for. As the prize court records indicate, Trumbull’s 1st Lieutenant Jonathan Maltbie (Maltby) was kept on board the Iris for his deposition in the libel proceedings. It is suspected that other high ranking commissioned and warrant officers including Captain James Nicholson, Lieutenant Richard Dale and Volunteer Lieutenant Alexander Murray were kept on the Iris or elsewhere off the Jersey prison ship segregated for quick exchange. A number of seaman who did not have positions of importance on the Trumbull- like the gun captains confined on the Jersey- may have been kept on the Trumbull in the meanwhile. Some of those with British sympathies who were impressed, enlisted from jail or who refused to fight may have been promptly released or attached to other vessels directly off the rolls of the Iris, no longer extant. According to Maltbie’s 17 August 1781 deposition, the 760 ton Trumbull armed with “24 twelve pounders and 6 six pounders” was taken on 9 August with 187 men onboard who chiefly signed on in Philadelphia. He testified that “there were five hundred Barrels of Flour (besides Ship’s Stores) on Board…but what was to have been done with the same he does not know”. About himself, Maltbie said he was born in Connecticut where he always resided and that as her 1st Lieutenant, he “has known her [the Trumbull] ever since she was built”. The prize court records include a number of other interesting documents captured with the vessel including; Peter Langdon’s warrant as Gunner dated 22 June 1781, a list detailing each man’s station or quarters during battle; as well as- a list of the Marine detachment, supplemental crew who signed on after the ship’s papers and individuals impressed at Lewis Town just before departure.

A quick analysis reveals seventeen men (17%) quickly exchanged with between 47 and 59 days of confinement and twenty-four additional men (23%) surviving to eventual release after 80 days of confinement. Thirty-nine men (38%) were discharged to the hospital ship HMS Falmouth. No doubt some of these were among the eleven wounded in the engagement leading to Trumbull’s capture. Since no deaths were recorded for any of this group on the HMS Jersey, it is presumed that many of these men either died on the Jersey or subsequently on the Falmouth, but always attributed to the hospital ship. If one assumes all were fatalities, thirty-eight percent appears to be the maximum mortality rate for the Trumbull’s sampling of Jersey prisoners. That is not to say some on the Falmouth survived and were ultimately released or that others did not succumb to wounds or disease shortly after exchange or release from the Jersey. The HMS Jersey’s muster rolls indicate that on occasion, some of the sick recovered sufficiently to be returned to confinement on the prison ship. An additional twenty-two men and boys (22%) were attached to other units, ships or places. The 88th British Regiment of Foot was raised to help protect the West Indies and saw service in Jamaica. A number of Trumbull’s boys were placed on the 8-gun sloop HMS Avenger or 16-gun sloop HMS Rover, which wrecked later in 1781. The eventual fate of these others is unknown.

Entered from the General Monk on 12 August 1781

Joseph Barkley (Barclay) [Pressed Seaman], 25 Aug to Falmouth

Benjamin Stubbs [Gun #2 Capt], 25 Aug to Falmouth

Morrison (Moliston) Wheeler [Private of Marines], 24 Aug to 88th Regt

John Black [Pressed Seaman], 6 Sept to Jersey’s Suppl List

John Downe, 1 Nov to Commissary General

John Day, 23 Aug to 88th Regt

Absalom Twaite, 13 Sept to Falmouth

John Lowring (Loring), 22 Aug to 88th Regt

Robert Vernon, 1 Nov to Commissary General

John Bishop, 31 Aug to Falmouth

Miles (Myles) Carpenter [Drummer], 21 Oct to Falmouth

Joseph Sutton [Private of Marines], 21 Aug to 88th Regt

Jeremiah Bonafoy (Bonfoy, Bonifoy) [Gun #3 Capt], 21 Aug to Avenger

Jacob Hawstick (Bostwick), 10 Oct Exchanged

John Sherman [Gun #5 Capt], 1 Nov to Commissary General

William Long, 1 Nov to Commissary General

John Hassett, 1 Nov to Commissary General

Isaac Thompson, 21 Aug to Avenger

Entered from the General Monk on 13 August

Robert Geddes [Probably Sugeon’s Mate], 29 Sept Exchanged

Samuel Claypoole, 27 Sept to Falmouth

Thomas Knight [Carpenter], 16 Oct to Falmouth

William Roberts [Cooper, Gun #8 Capt], 26 Aug to Falmouth

Thomas Scott [Gun #1 Capt], 1 Nov to Commissary General

John Stevens [Seaman, Gun #3 Capt], 1 Nov to Commissary General

Barnabas Bonus, 1 Nov to Commissary General

Thomas Aston, 1 Nov to Commissary General

John Mitchell, 1 Nov to Commissary General

Elisha Kenyon [Private of Marines], 2 Sept to Falmouth

Gilbert Saltonstall [Capt of Marines], 29 Sept Exchanged

Peter Manifold [Lt of Marines], 29 Sept Exchanged

David Moffett (Moffet), 1 Nov to Commissary General

Richard Law [Midshipman, Quarter Gun #2 Capt], 29 Sept Exchanged

Gustavus Brown [Gun #7 Capt], 10 Oct Exchanged

Edward Clayton [Midshipman], 5 Sept to Falmouth

Denis Kenyard (Dennis Vinnard), 18 Aug to Falmouth

Richard West, 10 Sept to Falmouth

Silvester Mersey (Marcy) [Boy], 29 Sept Exchanged

Henry Barney, 1 Nov to Commissary General

Thomas Murphy, 1 Nov to Commissary General

David Beard (Baird) [Private of Marines], 1 Nov to Commissary General

Charles Beard (Baird) [Private of Marines], 1 Nov to Commissary General

Charles E. Irvine [Quarter Gun #1 Capt], 6 Oct to Falmouth

Samuel Nicholson, 1 Nov to Commissary General

William Stevens, 24 Aug Falmouth

William Anderson, 21 Aug Avenger

Joseph Black, 29 Sept Exchanged

Cato Williams, 18 Oct to New York

Joseph Gardner, 1 Nov to Commissary General

John Eli (Ealy) [Private of Marines], 24 Aug to 88th Regt

Abraham Craft (Crasse), 20 Sept to Falmouth

Denis Lafferty (Dennis O’Laugherty), 20 Sept to Falmouth

William Smiley [Boy], 21 Aug to Avenger

Sacheveral Wood [Pressed Landsman], 27 Sept to Falmouth

John Thompson [Carpenter’s Mate], 29 Aug Jersey Prison ship

Gilbert Debow (DeBeau) [Boy], 14 Aug to Rover

Andre DeAnapollen (Antoine D’Enapollon) Gun #9 Capt], 29 Sept Exchanged

Lewis (Louis) Martin, 29 Sept Exchanged

Edmund Helbow (Holbeau), 29 Sept Exchanged

Richard Allen [Private of Marines], 27 Sept to Falmouth

Alexander Clark [Private of Marines], 25 Aug to 88th Regt

John McDaniel, 24 Aug to New York

Aaron Bell (Aron Ball), 25 Aug to New York

Myles Seldon (Sulton), 14 Aug to ??

Entered from the General Monk on 15 August 1781

David Morrow [Surgeon], 10 Oct Exchanged

Samuel Morrow [Probably Surgeon’s Mate], 10 Oct Exchanged

George Nicholson, 27 Aug to Falmouth

Peter Langdon [Gunner], 1 Nov to Commissary General

Jacob Bamper (Bemper) [Midshipman], 1 Nov to Commissary General

Hercules Marriner [Pressed Landsman], 1 Nov to Commissary General

James Devericks (Davorix, Deveroux) [Boy], 21 Aug to Avenger

Joshua Beebe [Boy], 1 Nov to Commissary General

John Brown, 14 Aug to Rover

Charles Wilkins, 16 Aug to Rover

Entered from the General Monk on 16 August 1781

John Jordan (Jorden) [Seaman], 1 Nov to Commissary General

James Duncan (Doncan), 13 Sept to Falmouth

Patrick Taggard (Taggart) [Sergt of Marines], 14 Aug to 88th Regt

Dolphius Hubbard (Dolphin Hubbert) [Ordinary], 29 Sept Exchanged

Robert Jackson [Gun #11 Capt], 1 Nov to Commissary General

Gusian (Touraia) Lucas [Boy], 22 Aug to Avenger

Entered from the Iris on 14 August 1781

John Patterson [Private of Marines], 14 Aug to Falmouth

Nicholas Calwell, 14 Aug to Falmouth

James Roberts, 14 Aug to Falmouth

David Hurlburt (Halbert) [Landsman], 22 Oct to Falmouth

James Calder, 14 Aug to Falmouth

Barnabas Cunningham [Corp of Marines], 14 Aug to Falmouth

Roger Kelly [Landsman], 14 Aug to Falmouth

Alexander Campbell, 29 Oct to Falmouth

Donald McDonald, 14 Aug to Falmouth

James McConnell, 16 Aug to Falmouth

John Blaney, 14 Aug to Falmouth

Charles Chamberlain [At the Wheel], 17 Aug to Falmouth

Richard Nash [Seaman], 6 Sept to Falmouth

Jacob Whitehead, 16 Aug to Falmouth

David Cotteral [At the Wheel], 16 Aug to Falmouth

James McKinney (McKenzie), 14 Aug to Falmouth

John Mills, 10 Sept to Falmouth

John McCanery, 16 Aug to Falmouth

Nancy Chambers, 17 Aug to Falmouth

Entered from the General Monk on 16 August 1781

Joseph Smith [Purser], 29 Sept Exchanged

Lloyd Wharton [Midshipman], 10 Oct Exchanged

William Haight [Gun #10 Capt], 10 Oct Exchanged

John Manley [Midshipman], 1 Nov to Commissary General

Jonathan Maltbie [1st Lieut], Kept on Iris for Libel deposition 8/17/1781

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Privateers sailing out of Philadelphia

In April 2015, I rediscovered a list of 209 officers and men of the Continental Navy frigate Confederacy first transcribed by William M. Mervine 114 years earlier among a number of power of attorney documents associated with individuals and crews of Revolutionary War private armed ships recorded in Exemplification Book 11 of the early deed books of the City of Philadelphia. Since that time, these records have been moved to the new City Archives building at 548 Spring Garden Street. In the unsuccessful process of searching for the crew of the Continental Navy vessel West Florida under the command of Captain William Pickles, I revisited Exemplification Book 11. Following is a list of those power of attorney records associated with privateers sailing out of Philadelphia. Many are associated with individual crew members with some bearing the names of entire crews. The index below is listed by vessel name followed by her commander in parentheses. Next, the month and year the POA was recorded followed by all pages of Book 11 that includes references to the vessel in brackets. Some of the crew lists are included in Mervine’s contribution to Volume XXVII, No.1 of the Philadelphia Magazine of History and Biography (1903) available online beginning on page 115. Hopefully, this reference will assist other researchers seeking data on the various privateer crews.

Sloop of War Congress (George McElroy) April 1776 [1,2,16,52,53,84,117,118,138,139,177,178]

Sloop of War Chance (John Adams) April/June 1777 [3,4,6,84,104,117,118,133,134]

Brigantine Hancock (Wingate Newman) June 1777 [5,6,22,30,33-35,42,49-51,70,71,102,176,177]

Brigantine Hancock’s Prize Brigantine Polly, April 1777 [17]

Brigantine Hancock’s Prizes Lovely Nelly, Sherbourne, Polly- April 1777 [49-51]

Brigantine Hancock’s Prizes Brig Sherbourne & Sloop Peggy (James Craig) May 1777 [77-80]

Brig General Montgomery (James Montgomery) April 1777 [59-62]

Ship of War Oliver Cromwell (Harman Courter) POA for whole crew, Feb 1777 [170-173,186,226]

Schooner of War Hunter (John Douglass) May 1779 [194-197]

Brigantine Hibernia (Robert Collins) July 1779 [201-214]

Brigantine Hibernia’s prize Brigantine Sally taken at Egg Harbour, July 1779 [216]

Brigantine Convention (William Allen) July 1779 [216]

Schooner Mars (Yelverton Taylor) July 1779 [228-231]

Schooner Mars’ Prizes Schooner Tomlinson, Brigantine Liberty & Brigantine Burgoyne, Oct 1779

Brig Holker (George Geddes) POA for the whole crew, Nov 1779 [237-241,244-247,251-2,264-5,285]

Brig Holker’s prize Ship Golden Rose [264-267]

Brig Mermaid (Thomas Gion) to St. Thomas & West Indies, Dec 1779 [249]

Sloop General Pickering (Jonathan Haraden) Dec 1779 [259-263]

Sloop Active (Peter Day) April 1780 [265,270-272]

Sloop Active’s prize Ship Needham

Brigantine Enterprise (Gardiner, Commander) May 1780 [268]

Schooner Bunker Hill (Sanford Thompson) July 1780 [276-7]

Brig Fair American (Joseph Jackways) 2/6/1781 POA for whole crew, Aug 1780 [284,309-311]

General Green (Samuel Hollingshead) POA for crew, Sept 1780

Brig Holker (Roger Kaighn/Kean/Cane) 9/14/1781 POA for whole crew, Nov 1780 [288-290,387-8,438-9,454-5,472-3]

Brig Ariel (Matthew Lawler) Nov 1780 [297-303,314-315]

Sloop Charleston Packet to Charleston, SC Jan 1781 [305-6]

Brigantine Friendship (John Ball) 10/7/1780 POA for crew to Nicholas Low, Jan 1781 [308-309]

Frigate Confederacy (Seth Harding) POA to Nathaniel Richards and Richards & Sands of Phila [317-321]

Brig Ariel (Peter Miller) POA for crew, May 1781 [325-326]

Brig Ariel’s prize Ship Resolution, May 1782 [439]

Ship Revenge (Peter Day) 5/17/1781 POA for Capt of Marines Archibald Lyons to Henry Osbourne [327]

Ship Franklin (John Angus/Angros) 6/29/1781 POA for crew, June 1781 [332,333,337]

Brigantine Fair American (Phineas Eldridge) July 1781 [338,425,474-5]

Ship Revolution (John McNorton) POA for crew, Aug 1781 [340-341]

Ship Congress (George Geddes) Aug 1781 [341-355,362-365,372-376,379-380,383-386]

Ship Rising Sun (Samuel Canson/Colfaw) 9/14/1781 POA for crew, Aug 1781 [378-379,389-390]

Ship Rising Sun’s prizes Brig Tristram, Ship Shandy

Prize Ship Nonsuch (John Caughey, Prizemaster) Jan 1782 [456-7]

Ship Favour (James Buchanan) POA of Bon Homme Richard veteran William McCollough [491]

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Mordecai Matlack, Midshipman

What we know of Continental Navy Midshipman Mordecai Matlack comes primarily from two sources: “Col. Timothy Matlack, patriot and soldier, a paper read before the Gloucester County Historical Society at the Old Tavern House, Haddonfield, N.J., April 14, 1908” by Dr. A. M. Stackhouse and “Timothy Matlack, Scribe of the Declaration of Independence” (2013) written by Chris Coelho. Born about 1761 at Willistown, Chester County, Pa; Mordecai Matlack was the son of Timothy Matlack, Jr. (1736-1829) and his first wife Ellen or Nelly, daughter of Quaker minister Mordecai Yarnell. Mordecai’s father Timothy Matlack first appears as proprietor of a hardware store on Market Street near Fourth Street in 1762 and eight years later as a dealer of bottled beer on Fourth, the trade of his father Timothy, Sr. Married to the midshipman’s mother at Arch Street Meeting on 5 October 1758, the couple had five children: William, Mordecai, Sybil, Catherine and Martha, the three girls nicknamed Libby, Kitty and Patty.

Mordecai’s brother Billy, two years his senior, served in the War for Independence as a serjeant in Captain Linton’s Company of Col. Bradford’s Battalion of Pennsylvania troops. Their father served as Colonel of the Philadelphia Associators Militia Regiment, participating in the Battles of Trenton and Princeton. Timothy Matlack would later serve as Secretary of the Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania and acted as prosecutor in the court martial of Benedict Arnold for treason in absentia. In 1780, Matlack was elected as a delegate to the Continental Congress. With his brother-in-law Samuel Wetherill, Jr. and others, Matlack also co-founded the Society of Free Quakers in 1781 for members of the Society of Friends who had been disowned for actively supporting the war. Today the “Scribe of the Declaration of Independence” is also known for writing a 12 July 1776 letter to John Ashmead, Clerk for the Continental Navy frigate then under construction at Philadelphia autographed by five signers of the Declaration. This letter includes the extremely rare signature of Button Gwinnett which sold for a record $722,500 at Sotheby’s in 2010.

According to William Bell Clark in “Captain Dauntless” (1949), Mordecai entered service on the 36-gun frigate Randolph under Captain Nicholas Biddle at Philadelphia in November 1776 just six months after his father Timothy, as clerk to the Secretary of the Continental Congress Charles Thomson, transcribed the Declaration of Independence from Thomas Jefferson’s draft. Young Midshipman Matlack sailed from home on his first cruise on 3 February 1777. Arriving five weeks later in Charleston, the young midshipman had already seen his share of what men and the sea could throw in a ship’s way including loss of the mainmast, mutiny and death among the crew, over a dozen succumbing to sickness. Later that year in September, the refit Randolph sailed on a brief but successful cruise which netted several valuable prizes including the 20-gun True Briton and 8-gun Severn. Midshipman Mordecai Matlack must have proved his mettle in action as Captain Biddle presented him with a “handsome sword” as a token of esteem afterwards in addition to the sixteen year old’s share of prize money.  

On 7 March 1778, Midshipman Mordecai Matlack would join Captain Nicholas Biddle and over three hundred of her officers, “picked seamen” and “gentlemen volunteers” in death in the Continental Navy’s single greatest catastrophic loss of the War for Independence. Two years and nine days later, his father Timothy Matlack, Jr. would publicly remember the gruesome end to seventeen year old Mordecai’s life in congruence with recognizing the greater purpose behind such supreme sacrifice in an emotional oration before the American Philosophical Society at Philadelphia on 16 March 1780. “The hardy Sons of America have dared to meet her Enemies on that Element which Britain once, proudly boasting, stiled “her own.”- Alas! too boldly dared the unequal Combat: There the brave neglected Biddle, impelled by too much Virtue, nobly fell.- And, oh! forgive the falling Tear, which a fond Father’s swelling Heart rolls reluctant down his Cheek at the Remembrance. I mourn a darling Son, once the fond Hope and Comfort of my Heart- That dreadful fatal Blast, which rent the Randolph to Splinters, scattered his mangled Limbs in the Air- and they fell, blacked and disfigured, a Prey to the Fishes of the Sea.- I mourn his Loss, but would preserve his Name,- Beloved by all that knew him, esteemed and highly honored by his brave Captain, he fell in the most glorious Cause- and, ’tis just to say, he lived and died unconquered, and from Infancy to that awful Hour the Voice of Fear or of Complaint was never heard from his Lips!- But, wherefore do I weep?- ‘Tis my Glory that I had such a Son to fall in such a Cause.

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