Reuben Alward: The Young Adventurer

Similar documents
HENRY¹ OF HINGHAM Sixth Generation

John was a Revolutionary War Veteran and served as a private. See account book 1784, page 2, VA State Library.

REFERENCES APPENDIX A. Will of John Dougherty. Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, Wills, Book C, Page 63, No. 39

Documentation for Stephen Hussey (08 June 1632 to 02 April 1718) father of Pricilla Puella Hussey (10 October 1677 to 23 September 1748)

Transcribed by Peter Arthur Chamberlin From files of George Richard Chamberlin PENSION APPLICATON OF NATHANIEL & HULDAH (PERLEY) CHAMBERLAIN 1

Dorcas, a Free Person of Color in Washington County *Note The spelling was not changed from the original records.

Barbara Chisholm, War of 1812

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Benedict Alford August 26, 1716 After 1790 By: Bob Alford 2010

A Copy of the Letters of Administration on the Estate of Jonathan Jones dec d. The Will of Richard M. Jones. Robert Jones Will

WAR OF 1812 LINCOLN MILITIA SERVICE RECORDS FOR THE DESCENDANTS OF ADAM YOUNG ( ) OF THE GRAND RIVER HALDIMAND TRACT, ONTARIO, CANADA

Last Will and Testament of John Seiger Sen r, deceased 1821 No. S-22 (held in the Lebanon County, Penna, courthouse, Recorder of Wills)

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

North Carolina. in: Alamance County, North Carolina Father: Thomas Bowen ~other: Sarah Born: 1797

The Robert Neill Log House is now being expertly and painstakingly

land in Middleboro formerly belonging to John Howland and elizabeth, his wife, and given to the said John Gorum before John Howland's death.

Descendants of William Holland

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Mason Family Records. Bob Elder 9/1/2011

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

1 This section is a compilation of two sources, by the same author: (i) New Jersey State US-7. Muster Rolls, 1 st Battalion

Joseph Talcott Governor of the Colony of Connecticut,

Descendants of Reginald Edward Smythe

Breedlove Family Genealogy Notes

Adams, Gabriel Trimble County KY Bible record of Gabriel Abrams and Susan Rose From the pension record of Clisby B. Smith # , 18th day of July,

Fig 2. Deed of land in Hanover from Sylvanus Freeman to Elisha Freeman, 23 May 1769.

The Last Will and Testament of Kirk Boott Snr. The Bootts connection to William Strutt of Derby and the Travails of John Wright Boott

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Elias Stallings, Sr Pg 1/5

John Van Patten: Corporal in the Coloured Corps

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements and Rosters

Seven Generations of Ancestors of John D. Hancock

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

[fn p. 60] State of North Carolina Macon County: Personally appeared before me John Howard one of the

Family Group Sheet. William STORER

Hardin Cemetery No. 1

William Peters. pg 1/16

Branch 13. Tony McClenny

WILLS of SNIDOW ANCESTORS

BROTHERS IN REVOLUTIONARY SERVICE John Bradley (c ) / Richard Bradley ( ) / Thomas Bradley ( )

Southern Campaign American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

From Slave Owner s Son to African Baptist Church - how one parcel of land transferred in Digby County, Nova Scotia

Treaty signing over Flamborough to the Crown, August 21 st, 1797 (source: Burlington Historical Society)

The Death of Zebulon M. Pike

John McCord Lamoreaux Requests For Land 1812 Memorials 1812, 1817 & 1831 Introduction - Part 1 of 2 includes 1812 & 1815 petitions 5 Arranged by date

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Will of Daniel Byrnes,Jr. May 27, 1797

~/ADY v. ... In iaao -e01di.el"l.a tiife. ;iane, her ma1.deri nam~, ... years. " '

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Southern Campaign American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

HENRY¹ OF HINGHAM Fifth Generation

Timeline -- John Wilson of Mecklenburg Co., VA, A206701

Southern Campaign American Revolution Pension Statements Pension application of Jacob Aylor S8040 Transcribed by John W. Ragsdale

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

land in Middleboro formerly belonging to John Howland and elizabeth, his wife, and given to the said John Gorum before John Howland's death.

Registry Office for the County of Welland (not inclusive) Record Group Number: 27 documents including mortgages and deeds

THE PRIDE AND BUNNER FAMILY. Geri's Mother's Side. Submitted by Geraldine Raybuck Smith.

Land Claims in Mississippi Territory,

Benjamin Griffith of Baltimore

council met at the home of William Latimer, from 1840 to 1846 at the home of William Vance and later at Tooley s Tavern in Blackstock.

William Caldwell / Baby Family Date Line January 15, 2013

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Southern Campaign American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Southern Campaign American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

I received a.pdf file of the application by from Billy Reeves on 20 Jan 2012, who got it from the National Archives

Jay Family of Bedford Co. Pennsylvania

Dempsey Dubois Crews

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Warren's Grandparents, Jeremiah Jr. and Elizabeth Daggett Reynolds

Southern Campaign American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

JOSEPH HOWELL - REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIER OF OLD BARNWELL DISTRICT, S.C. AND ALLIED FAMILIES,

FICTION by Cherié L. Weible

3. FROM VIRGINIA TO THE CAROLINAS

Shamberger Family Genealogy Notes

Egerton. The origin of the family name is English.

ftp://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/nc/bertie/wills/hardy.txt Transcribed from a copy of the original found at the DAR Library, Washington, DC

Descendants of Richard Singletary

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Robert¹ of Concord Second Generation

CERTIFICATE APPLICATION

JOSEPH WIKERSON, SCIPIO, AND HC. I don t know what HC stands for! In all my searching, all these years, I have

Southern Campaign American Revolution Pension Statements

Blow Family of Surry County, Virginia

1 of 1 4/6/2007 1:07 PM

How to prove that: Sally Winfree married John Denney/Denny

PAULUS DEWITT PAULUS DEWITT, II PETER DEWITT

Page 1. Material in bold is formal print, non-bold is cursory. This Indenture Made the Twenty second Day of November

The founder of Dysons of Stannington

Why is the Treaty at Logstown in 1748 so important? What did it do?

JOSEPH ABBOTT and FAMILY Son of Leonard Abbott of Halifax County, Virginia

A Hamblethorpe will. A rather interesting local will is that of Edward Theaker, which was made in 1632.

Descendants of Brant Canagaradunkwa

PART OF THE TREE RESEARCH SERVICES

Mother County Genealogical Society

Jacob Showalter (Abt ) of Northampton Co. PA Patriarch of the Showalters of Rockingham County, VA

JOSEPH WEAVER, A VETERAN OF THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR HIS LIFE HIS FAMILY HIS HOME HIS SERVICE HIS RESTING PLACE

344 Pennsylvania Pensioners of the Revolution.

Transcription:

Reuben Alward: The Young Adventurer By R. Robert Mutrie In the early spring of 1812, Reuben Alward, aged about twenty-four years old, set out from his parents home on Lake Erie on the eastern edge of Humberstone Township, Welland County, Upper Canada. He headed westward for the Long Point Settlement, as Norfolk County was then known, and its promise of good farmland available for those willing to wrest it from the wilderness. First, he passed by Sugar Loaf, a hamlet later known to us as Port Colborne. The young adventurer then continued on past the settlements of Dunnville and Nanticoke and ended his 50-mile trek at Dover Mills (Port Dover) in Woodhouse Township, Norfolk County. Family Background This might have been Reuben s second trek although he wouldn t have remembered the first. The Alward family migration from New Brunswick to the Niagara District occurred about 1788 right around the time of the young adventurer s birth. The subsequent land petition of Reuben s father, Daniel Alward, dated 18 March 1797 stated, That your Petitioner came to the Province 8 years ago and has rec d one hundred and fifty acres only in Bertie- that purchased the Lot No. 3 - first Concession of Humberstone 1 The original parental grant comprised 100 acres of land in Lot 25 Concession 2 and a half share in the adjoining Lot 25 Concession 1 from Lake Erie in Bertie Township. These properties were located west of present Ridgeway along Gorham Road and running north from Crystal Beach to the Garrison Road (now Highway 3). 2 In an earlier generation, Reuben s grandfather Daniel Alward Sr. also received a grant in Bertie Township, his being Lot 21 Concession 1 with the broken front on Lake Erie east of Ridgeway. 3 This became an unorganized community of cottagers named Thunder Bay for the crescent shaped indentation on Lake Erie. The elder Daniel died in 1800 or 1801 leaving a will dated 23 January 1800 and filed with the registrar 19 March 1801. He named his wife Jemima, and William, Hulder, and Daniel in the younger generation. 4 During the 1790 s the younger Daniel Alward and his wife left their Ridgeway grant and raised their family, including his oldest son Reuben, on a property about five miles west in Lot 3, Concession 1, Humberstone Township on the shore of Lake Erie south of present Sherkston. It was from here that Reuben set out on his adventure. Service in the War of 1812 Reuben Alward arrived in Norfolk County by the time of the April 1812 Woodhouse Township census in which he was listed singly. 5 1 Archives of Ontario, Upper Canada Land Petition of Daniel Alward, A Bundle 1 2 Archives of Ontario, Abstracts of Deeds Register of Bertie Township, Volume A 3 Ibid. 4 Will of Daniel Alward (Sr), Archives of Ontario, Niagara Surrogate Registry, 1801, Doc. No. 257 5 Yeager, William R. Woodhouse Township 1812 Census With Related Documents (1814-1836) Norfolk Historical Society (Simcoe, ON: 1978)

At this time the clouds of war were forming to the south. The hawks in Washington gained sway over the doves in disputes with England, most explosive of which was England s seizure of American merchantmen on the high seas. The American expansionists harboured a desire to capture the Canadian colonies which appeared vulnerable to them. Both England and the United States engaged in troop build-ups along the border, including the two sides of the Niagara River. On 18 June 1812 the United States declared war on England. During the months that followed, local militia companies formed by the settlers in Upper Canada heeded the call to arms and marched to the frontier. The men of Norfolk County mobilized several days ahead of the declaration. On 15 June 1812, Reuben Alward enlisted as a Private in Captain William McCracken's Flank Company of the 2nd Norfolk Militia raised in Woodhouse Township. 6 In November 1812, he marched with his company to guard his former home area on the Niagara frontier. About five miles north of the town of Fort Erie a small stream called Frenchman s Creek flows into the Niagara River. In the present one thousand block of Niagara River Boulevard stands a plaque describing a War of 1812 battle which included the men of McCracken's Flank Company. The plaque inscription reads: In an effort to regain the initiative lost at Queenston, the Americans planned a general invasion for 28 November 1812. Before dawn advance parties crossed the Niagara River to cut communications between Fort Erie and Chippawa and to silence the British shore guns. The attackers failed to destroy the bridge over Frenchman s Creek and the batteries they had overrun were soon retaken by British reinforcements. After confused fighting the advance parties returned to the American shore. The main assault failed to materialize. The fiasco ended American hopes for victory on the Niagara Frontier in 1812 American General Alexander Smyth amassed an army of 5,000 men on the eastern shore of the Niagara River with a plan to destroy the bridge over Frenchman s Creek, a vulnerable point on the main road linking Fort George in Niagara-on-the-Lake to the north and Fort Erie in the south. He would then launch an assault on Fort Erie. Only 1,500 of his soldiers agreed to cross the river with General Smyth. The battle at the bridge resulted in an American retreat and ended their hopes of success in 1812. 7 Although victorious, the fateful battle took a toll on the militia unit, in particular on a twentyfour year old man named Reuben Alward. On that fateful 28 November 1812 he was severely wounded in action. 8 The British Military and Naval Records Index gives the following for Reuben Alward: Private, 2nd Norfolk Militia, wounded at Fort Erie, 28-11-1812 admitted as Militia Pensioner. 9 Not long after, Reuben s father Daniel Alward passed away in Humberstone Township. Probably aged only in his forties, Daniel outlived his father by just a decade when he met his end. He made out his will on 25 December 1812 and it was probated just over a month later on 10 6 National Archives of Canada, Charlotteville Township Papers, Record Group 1, CI-V, MS 658, Reel 074, Document Numbers 1250, 1252 7 Parks Canada web site www.pc.gc.ca/lhn-nhs/on/fortgeorge/edu/edua1_e.asp 8 Op. Cit. 9 National Archives of Canada, British Military and Naval Records Index, C.703C, Record Group 9, I B 4; vol., I pp 9; see also Vol., 2, p. 3; 3; p. 25; 30

February 1813. The bulk of the estate was left to his second wife and widow and their minor children, the youngest aged just one year old. Reuben was given the small sum of ten dollars. 10 Although now disabled in his earlier service, Reuben re-entered the Militia in 1813, serving from 25 February to 24 March 1813 in Captain Abraham A. Rapelje's Flank Company also raised in Woodhouse Township. 11 Post-War Settlement Following the end of the war, on 30 November 1815, Major Sir William Halton, Secretary to Governor Francis Gore wrote a letter to the Surveyor General of Upper Canada stating: the name of Reuben Alward, a Militia pensioner who was very severely wounded in action with the enemy near Fort Erie in Nov 1812 to be inserted on Crown Reserve Lot 11, Concession 11, Charlotteville Twp. as a wounded militia man. A certificate from Colonel N. Coffin noted that Reuben was a private in Captain McCracken s Flank Co. of the 2nd Regiment of Norfolk Militia from 15 Jun to 28 Nov 1812. 12 For his service, Reuben Alward received a pension and a 175-acre Crown Grant comprising all of Lot 11, Concession 11, Charlotteville Twp, Norfolk County. This location sits along the town line of Charlotteville and Windham Townships close to the point where present Highway 3 bends north towards Delhi. 13 Just over eight months later on 13 August 1816, Reuben Alward s name again came before the Land Board of Upper Canada. He put forward a request to lease a Crown Reserve lot located across the road in Lot 20, Concession 14, Windham Township. 14 This 200-acre property was among those held by the Government of Upper Canada to be rented out to settlers thereby raising funds for the state. The petition papers included a mention of oak timber on the lot. His petition reads as follows. The Petition of Reuben Alward, a disabled Militia Man & Pensioner of Charlotteville in the London District - desirous of leasing Lot Number Twenty in the Fourteenth Concession of Windham... Attached was a deposition signed by Lieutenant Colonel Robert Nichol of the 2nd Regiment of the Norfolk Militia:...I certify that Reuben Alward took and subscribed the oath of allegiance as prescribed by Law before me when he volunteered in the Flank Companies in 1812. [signed] Rob. Nichol, Lt. Col. 2nd Norfolk Reg. 10 Will of Daniel Alward (Jr), Archives of Ontario, Niagara Surrogate Registry, 1813 11 Mutrie, R. Robert, The Norfolk Militia in the War of 1812, in The Long Point Settlers, Log Cabin Publishing (Ridgeway, ON: 1992), p. 252-256 12 National Archives of Canada, Charlotteville Township Papers, Record Group 1, CI-V, MS 658, Reel 074, Document Numbers 1250, 1252 13 AO Land Records Index Ref. 01 C13 132005 Surveyor General s office location dated 30 Nov 1815 14 Archives of Ontario Land Petitions A Bundle Leases, Document Number 34

Return to Niagara The young adventurer did not remain long in Norfolk County, leaving just two years later according to a statement by Usual Willson who noted that he bought Reuben s Charlotteville Township land grant for 15 shillings per acre in 1818. Following this Reuben returned to his home area and lived in Bertie Township. There are two post-mortem records of Reuben indicating that he died in Bertie Township in 1830 when he would have been about 42 years old. Perhaps his war injuries prevented him from developing his land grant and brought about his untimely end. On 6 December 1839, Usual Willson filed a land petition noting his purchase from Reuben Alward and that Alward left this part of the Country and died several years ago not having obtained the patent from the Crown for the said Lot [11 Concession 11]. 15 Usual Wilson, yeoman, purchased about 1818 from Reuben Alward, a militia pensioner - 15 shillings per acre. No patent taken out. Wilson lived there cleared about 75 acres - built house and barn. Shortly after purchased said Reuben Alward left this part of country. Joseph Wilson s statement 30 Oct. 1839 of Windham he had seen a person calling himself George Alward and recently removed into Twp. of Charlotteville and representing himself as a half-brother to Reuben Alward. Also knows Jacob Cline of Malahide in London District who married a sister of Reuben. Henry C. Dickout, Twp. of Bertie, Niagara District, acquainted with Reuben Alward (Allwood). Knows of his death and burial in Bertie Twp. some 8 or 10 years ago. He left no heirs. 22 Aug. 1830. In 1839, Effie Phillips of Bayham Twp. and her sister Jemima Cline of Yarmouth Twp. filed an Upper Canada Land Petition stating that they were full blood sisters and only heirs at law of Reuben Alward who died 10 years since intestate and who held land in Lot 11, Concession 11, Charlotteville Twp. Nicholas and Silas Carter gave oath that the women were sisters of Reuben. 16 Epilogue Thus ended the life of the young adventurer, but not the family interest in Norfolk County. Reuben s youngest half brother, John Alward was just an infant at the time of his father s passing. As a youth he may have heard his older brother talk of the Long Point Settlement. About forty years after Reuben s presence in Norfolk, John settled first along the northern boundary of North Walsingham Township then further south on Lot 6 Concession 6, Walsingham Township, Norfolk County west of the village of Walsingham Centre. His family continued in Norfolk well into the twentieth century. 15 Archives of Ontario. Upper Canada Land Petition of Usual Willson W Bundle 22, Document Number 33 16 Archives of Ontario, Upper Canada Land Petition of Effie Phillips and Jemima Cline C Bundle 22, Doc. No. 105

Acknowledgement and Addendum Bruce Connor Johnson Jr. has been researching the Alward family for the past twenty years and has amassed an impressive collection of documents detailing the lives of the family ancestors from colonial times, and he has followed through the generations to the present. I am indebted to him for material used in the story of Reuben Alward. Among the documents he transcribed are the following two wills located in the collections of the Archives of Ontario Surrogate Registry for the Niagara District. Will of Daniel Alward Senior No. 257, Daniel Alward, Will, filed 19th March 1801 "In the name of God amen now as I Daniel Alward Senr (sic-senior) is in helth (sic) and rember (sic) and not know how sun (sic - soon) it will pes (sic - please) god for to take me I am maken my Last will and testment this Day Juery (sic -January) twenth third one thousand Eight hunder. Am in good seine (sic -sane?) and rember first I give my soul to God that gave it me and and (sic) my body for to be bured (sic - buried) in a christian lik maner by my excuers first my funal (sic -funeral) charges for to be paid and all my onest (sic - honest) Depts for to be paid and I give all myplace and moules (sic -mules?) to my son Willam for to taker (sic - take care) of my Loven wife and my Dauter hulder (is this a daughter, Huldah?) is for to have hur hom (sic - her home) on the place as Long as She remain Single and have Liberty for to keep two cowes and one hoss. I give to my son Daniel teen Dolers (sic Ten dollars) for to be paid by my son William and my Loven wife Jemima Alward and Willam Alward for to be my Executers what I have set my hand and seal the day and year above written." signed sealed in the person of us Mathias Haun Junr Mathias X Haun Senr. his mark Peter Haun (signed) Daniel Alward Senr. Will of Daniel Alward Junior "I Daniel Alward of the Township of Humberstone in the County of Lincoln and Province of Upper Canada being in a poor state of health, Calling to mind the uncertainty of life, and the mortality of my body, Being in perfect sound mind and memory I declare this to be my last will and testament, - first I direct soon after my decease my Funeral charges be fully paid by my executor, hereafter constituted and appointedby me also all my just and lawful debts as soon as possible out of such a part of my estate as I shall hereafter direct, my Estate Real to be disposed of and distributed in the following manner,

First I give and Bequeath to my son Rheuben Ten Dollars - Second I give and bequeath unto my son Daniel Two Dollars. Thirdly I give and bequeath uto (sic) my Three Daughters (namely) Jemima Cline, Affe Smith and minor Daughter Elizabeth Each one a cow and Two Sheep, Elizabeth to have hers at her Coming to the age. I direct that Twenty acres of my land off of the Front End be sold to Discharge my debts. I give and devise unto my wife Elizabeth One Equal Third of the Land thas left after the above said Twenty acres is sold, Together, with a loom and all my household furniture, and an Equil Third of my stock after the Before mentioned legacies are Taken out, which I give to her and her Heirs and assigns forever, with a full preveledge of my Dwelling house while my widow. I give and devise unto my four sons namely George, Henry, James and John, to their Heirs and assigns forever the remainder of my Land and moveable property to be Equilly divided amongst them, when the Youngest Comes to the age of Twenty one or marriage - the Beforementioned Land being known and Described By part of The Front of Lot number Three, In Front in The Township of Humbertstone. If my said wife should marry again Before the Children is of age the Childrens share to be Rented out for their use, which I leave to the descretion of my Executor, and If my said Children any of Them shild Decease Before they should Come In possession of Their Respective share If it be one of he four last named Boys, then his intended share be Equilly Divided among the surviving Three, and If one of the Girls their share Divided among the Girls in like manner. I do constitute my brother in law David Baxter, and Brother William Alward, and Abraham Laing to be my sole Exectors Disallowing Revoking and disannuling all other wills by me In any wife named Confirming This and no other to be my last will and Testament, I Witness whereof I do hereby set my hand and seal This Twenty fifth Day of December In the Year of our Lord one Thousand Eight Hundred and Twelve. Signed sealed and acknowledged In the presance of us who were present at the Signing sealing and acknowledging the same" (signed) Daniel Alward (signature of witesses) Daniel Abel Dexter Kerrs? John (X) Beach (his mark)