Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Revolution affects Clinton

by Mary Grow

Major General Carleton Edward Fisher’s 1970 history of Clinton includes a chapter on settlers who moved into the territory that became the town before 1782. He identified 10 of the men he named as Revolutionary veterans: Ezekiel Brown, Jr.; Nathaniel Burrell; Ezekiel Chase, Sr., and three of his six sons, Roger, Ezekiel, Jr. and Jonathan; Fred Jackins; John Spearin, Jr.; Samuel Varnum; and Solomon Whidden or Whitten.

In a later chapter on the military, Fisher named more Revolutionary soldiers, identifying seven who “were proved beyond a doubt to have lived in town during the war and then went into service from here.” They were Ezekiel Brown, Jr., the four Chases, John Spearin, Jr., and William Kendall; the latter’s service was described last week in the article on Fairfield. Still later, in an appendix, Fisher added information on another 16 Revolutionary veterans who died in Clinton.

Due to space limits, this week’s article cannot talk about all these men. Readers tired of the Revolutionary War may skip next week’s installment.

Your writer, after years of dealing with endless contradictions among and within historical sources, commends Fisher’s work highly. He obviously did a great deal of research from many sources on a wide variety of topics and produced a readable and informative book that has the additional virtue of being well indexed.

* * * * * *

Ezekiel Brown Jr., was born in Concord, Massachusetts, in 1743, or on March 8, 1745 (Fisher gave two different dates in two different chapters; Find a Grave says 1745). On Feb. 28, 1770, Brown married Mary Barron (born Jan. 20, 1752, in Concord). They probably moved to Clinton in 1772.

In May 1774, when Ezekiel and Mary’s second child (of 10) and oldest son, Ezekiel, 3rd, was born, the family was back in Concord. Fisher surmised Ezekiel, Jr., might have been studying medicine there, because on June 7, 1776, he “was commissioned a surgeon’s mate in Col. Jonathan Reed’s regiment,” and on Jan. 1, 1777, a surgeon in Col. Brook’s regiment.

Fisher wrote that Brown’s service involved participation in battles leading to British General John Burgoyne’s surrender at Saratoga, New York, on Oct. 17, 1777; and with General Sullivan’s Indian Expedition, the June through October, 1779, American attack led by Major General John Sullivan against upstate New York Iroquois tribes siding with the British.

Brown was discharged Jan. 1, 1781. Fisher wrote that the family returned to Clinton sometime between 1788 and 1790, and Brown became the town’s first doctor. He was also the first town meeting moderator, and served repeatedly; a selectman “almost continuously from 1797 to 1818”; town clerk for four years, tax collector for three years.

In 1818, Fisher wrote, Brown stated in his pension application that he was “unable to do much in his profession” because of age and the loss of “use of his left arm six years before.” The pension was granted.

Brown died in Clinton June 30, 1824; his widow died May 6, 1832. They are buried in Benton’s Ames Cemetery, as are at least four of their sons (among the 85 Browns buried there, according to Find a Grave) and one daughter, Elizabeth (Brown) Gray.

* * * * * *

Fisher listed Nathaniel Burrell (or Burrill) as one of the four sons of John Burrell, Sr., and his wife, Anne (Vinton) (or Anna Vinton, per WikiTree), who came from Massachusetts to Clinton sometime before October, 1781. John, Jr. (born in 1753), Bela (born May 20, 1756), Ziba (born in 1765) and Nathaniel (no birth date given), “who served in the Revolutionary War,” joined the parents.

Nathaniel Burrell is not listed in Fisher’s chapter on the military; nor in his appendix listing Revolutionary War veterans who died in Clinton; nor on any on-line source your writer found. Websites WikiTree and Geni name only John, Jr., Bela and Ziba as John and Anna’s sons.

Geni says John, Jr., was born Oct. 5, 1763 (a decade later than Fisher cited from the 1799 Clinton records), and was a private and a “Rev. War gunner.” Fisher wrote that John Burrell, Jr., had an inn near Pishon’s Ferry on the Kennebec (opposite Hinckley, in northern Fairfield, where state route 23 now crosses the river) in 1810; he was tax collector that year “and held other town offices.” Geni says he died Sept. 1, 1842, in East Sangerville, in Piscataquis County, Maine.

* * * * * *

Fisher identified Ezekiel Chase Sr., as “probably” Clinton’s first settler, referencing a 1771 petition for a land grant from the Kennebec Proprietors in which Chase claimed to have lived on the east side of the Kennebec for 10 years, with a “son that is 18 years old” living on an adjacent lot.

WikiTree says Chase was born May 24, 1728 (FamilySearch says May 28), in Newbury, Massachusetts. He married Anna Spaulding, born in 1731, in Chelmsford, Massachusetts, in Hallowell (or in Fairfield, as his second wife, WikiTree says) in 1747.

Fisher listed one daughter and six sons with birth dates between 1748 (daughter Eleanor) and 1775.

If the family was in Clinton in the 1760s, Fisher dismissed as obviously in error a genealogy that says all the Fisher children were born in Hallowell (although he said Roger [1749] and Ezekiel, Jr., [1761] were, as he named Revolutionary veterans in a later chapter). Other sources offer other birthplaces.

Ezekiel and Anna’s oldest son, Roger, was born Sept. 5, 1749, and in 1771 would have been in his early twenties. Fisher identified him as “without a doubt” the one referenced in his father’s petition. (Perhaps the father meant a son who was over 18?)

Fisher wrote that the Chases went to Hallowell when the Revolution started. Roger was still or again in Clinton in the fall of 1776, when he married a widow named Mary (Smith) Spear there; Fisher surmised he was managing the family’s property.

Ezekiel, Sr., enlisted in a light infantry company from Rowley, Massachusetts, Fisher wrote. (Newbury, his birthplace, and Rowley are north of Boston, about six miles apart.) Fisher said he was paid for service from July 18 to Dec. 31, 1780; but FamilySearch says he “registered for military service in 1781.”

FamilySearch says Ezekiel, Sr., died Jan. 1, 1808, in Fairfield.

Roger enlisted June 1, 1775, “and served …for two months and five days,” Fisher said. He was in Colonel John Nixon’s regiment. Your writer found no other record of his military service. On-line sources say he died Nov. 25, 1819, or June 25, 1822, in Concord, Maine.

Ezekiel, Jr., born June 4, 1761 (in Hallowell, per Fisher, or in Plymouth, Massachusetts, per WikiTree), enlisted from Milton, Massachusetts (about 35 miles from Plymouth; both towns are south of Boston), beginning his service May 18, 1778, apparently for nine months. On Jan. 7, 1781, he re-enlisted, Fisher said.

WikiTree says Ezekiel, Jr., served in 1777 with the Ninth Massachusetts Regiment of the Continental Army.

A descendant posted on the Maine Secretary of State website that Ezekiel Jr., was 16 when he joined the Continental Army. He served in Rhode Island, and was at the 1780 Battle of Springfield, in New Jersey. That same year, “he was captured by the British and imprisoned in the prison ship Jersey in New York harbor for 2 years.”

The account continued: “After the peace was signed, he struggled to get back to Maine, traveling in a cart because he could not walk.” In Maine, his descendant said, he was the second white settler in future Piscataquis County.

WikiTree says Ezekiel, Jr. died Sept. 14, 1843, in Sebec, a southern Piscataquis County town. The descendant gave his home town as Milo, about six miles from Sebec.

The descendant’s account adds that Roger Chase lost two brothers in the war, “one at sea, and Jonathan Chase at the siege of Yorktown in 1781.”

Fisher listed Ezekiel and Anna’s second son, who would have been born between 1750 and 1760, as “Jacob, went to sea and never heard from.” He gave no dates nor other details.

Jonathan, born in 1767 (one on-line source says July, 1767), was drafted Feb. 2, 1778 (according to Fisher; he would have been 10 years old, if all dates are correct), and according to the descendant quoted above and other sources was killed on or about October 19, 1781, during the Battle of Yorktown. Fisher’s two reports on his death, unlike the descendant’s, are worded uncertainly: “is said to have died” and “was reported deceased.”

* * * * * *

Frederick Jackins (or Jacquins, Jackings, many other spellings) was mentioned in the Sept. 11 article in this series as carrying a letter to Québec for Colonel Benedict Arnold as Arnold’s 1775 expedition passed through Clinton on its way up the Kennebec.

WikiTree says Jackins was born in Clinton in 1750, son of Christopher Jackins, who was born somewhere in Maine in 1729 and died in Clinton Village in December 1828, and an unknown mother. This source and Ancestry identify Frederick’s wife as Elizabeth (Jeakins) Jackins (1752 – 1800); both sources claim Frederick and Elizabeth were born in Clinton (a decade or so before the first settlers arrived?).

Your writer found no reference to Jackins’ military service elsewhere in Fisher’s history, nor in any on-line source. He and Elizabeth had three daughters, according to WikiTree, born in 1770, 1775 and 1778. Fisher listed Jackins as a town tax collector in 1797; WikiTree says he died in 1820, in Clinton.

* * * * * *

John Spearin Jr., Fisher said, was born March 4, 1764, in Pownalborough, according to a 1799 town record; but his 1818 application for a pension gave his birth date as March 3, 1765.

His parents, John Spearin Sr. (born July 20, 1720, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire; died in 1790 in Clinton) and Sarah (Call) Spearin (born Sept. 8, 1740, in Amesbury, Massachusetts; died about 1790 in Portsmouth) were married in 1740 and moved to Clinton around 1770.

John, Jr. was a Clinton resident in March 1781, when he went to Beverly, Massachusetts, and enlisted. Fisher commented that John Jr., “is one of the few men who can be proved was living in town and went to that war from here.”

Spearin served in two Massachusetts and one New Hampshire regiment; was at “the capture of Cornwallis [Oct. 19, 1781] and other skirmishes”; and was discharged Dec. 31, 1783.

He came back to Clinton and on Nov. 9, 1784, married Mary Kendall, of Fairfield, sister of William Kendall (see last week’s article). Fisher noted that her birth date was listed as 1765 in the 1799 town record and 1767 in the 1818 document. WikiTree says April 15, 1764: FamilySearch says April 18, 1764.

Fisher said the Spearins had six daughters and four sons between 1786 and 1808, born in Fairfield, Clinton and other towns as the family moved around.

Fisher wrote that Spearin died Nov. 9, 1831, in Hartland. Mary’s death date is given on line as Feb. 20, 1852.

Main sources

Fisher, Major General Carleton Edward, History of Clinton, Maine (1970)

Websites, miscellaneous.

 
 

Responsible journalism is hard work!
It is also expensive!


If you enjoy reading The Town Line and the good news we bring you each week, would you consider a donation to help us continue the work we’re doing?

The Town Line is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit private foundation, and all donations are tax deductible under the Internal Revenue Service code.

To help, please visit our online donation page or mail a check payable to The Town Line, PO Box 89, South China, ME 04358. Your contribution is appreciated!

 
0 replies

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *