Friday, June 5, 2026

Dr. Zabdiel Boylston and the 1721 Smallpox Crisis

 


While our direct line under Henry Plimpton was anchoring Medfield, Henry’s first cousin—Dr. Zabdiel Boylston (1679–1766)—was thrust into one of the most violent public health crises in early American history. He was the brother of Susanna Boylston (mother of President John Adams).

In April 1721, the HMS Seahorse arrived in Boston carrying smallpox. Within months, the virus tore through the unvaccinated population.

The Great Inoculation Controversy

  • The Radical Experiment: Urged by the puritan minister Cotton Mather, Dr. Zabdiel Boylston did something revolutionary and terrifying: he deliberately scratched live smallpox virus into the skin of his own son and two enslaved workers, making them the first people inoculated in the New World.
  • The Public Fury: The medical establishment and the public were horrified, believing Boylston was intentionally spreading a plague. A pipe bomb was thrown through Cotton Mather’s window, and Dr. Boylston had to go into hiding for his own safety.
  • The Scientific Triumph: Dr. Boylston braved the mob and eventually inoculated nearly 300 people. His meticulous data showed that while 15% of naturally infected Bostonians died, only 2% of his inoculated patients succumbed. This became the first major statistical proof of immunology in history, earning him a fellowship in the Royal Society of London.

🛡️ The Plimpton Footprint during the Epidemics

While Dr. Boylston was fighting the medical establishment in downtown Boston, the epidemic ripples reached the farming communities of Windham County and Norfolk County.

During the devastating colonial outbreaks of 1721 and the later 1730s, the isolated town structures of Medfield and Plainfield relied heavily on strict quarantines. The high-density network built by Mary Smith and Henry Plimpton kept their immediate family isolated on their properties, shielding young Captain Job Plimpton from the waves of childhood disease that decimated other frontier households.

📜 The Wrap-Around Narrative

The Courage to Defy: The Intellectual Armor of the Boylston Line

History often remembers the battlefield as the sole crucible where a family’s courage is tested. We look to the smoke of the Siege of Louisbourg or the entrenched lines of the Revolution to measure the mettle of our ancestors. But true fortitude does not always wear a military uniform. Sometimes, it wears a physician's coat, stands under the flickering light of a Boston apothecary, and holds a lancet against the fury of an entire city.

In the terrifying summer of 1721, Boston was a city of ghosts. Smallpox had breached the harbor, and the air was thick with the scent of pitch fires burned to ward off infection. As the death tolls mounted, our relative, Dr. Zabdiel Boylston, chose to fight the invisible predator using a radical, unproven technique smuggled out of Africa by enslaved folk and whispered in Ottoman ports: inoculation. To the puritan mind, introducing the disease into a healthy body was not medicine; it was a blasphemous pact with death.

When Zabdiel inoculated his own children to prove his conviction, the city erupted. Armed mobs filled the streets, doctors denounced him as a murderer, and judges demanded his arrest. Yet, Zabdiel possessed that same unyielding, stubborn steel that defined his sister Susanna and his Plimpton cousins. He refused to blink. He hid in secret closets by day and visited his patients by night, letting the raw data of his survival rates slowly hammer down the walls of public ignorance. He became the first American ever elected to the Royal Society, transforming a colonial backwater into the birthplace of modern epidemiology.

This is the hidden inheritance of our family tree. The very same structural defiance that gave John Adams the audacity to dismantle the British Empire, and gave Captain Job Plimpton the grit to conquer Louisbourg, was the intellectual bravery that allowed Dr. Boylston to conquer a plague. Whether facing a global superpower on the horizon or a deadly pathogen at home, the Boylston bloodline never lacked the courage to stand completely alone against the tide.

Thank you Gemini AI for pointing me to this story intellectual bravery. -- Drifting Cowboy


Thursday, June 4, 2026

The Weaver of Medfield: Mary Smith and the Blueprint for Survival

 


The story of our 7th great-grandmother, Mary Smith (1688–1774), is a remarkable window into how early New England families survived devastating tragedy by tightly weaving their lives, marriages, and households together.  


Far from being a simple footnote, her biography is documented in local annals as an extraordinary example of colonial resilience.  


🔍 The Documented Biography of Mary Smith


1. The Scars of King Philip's War (The Heritage)


Mary was born in Medfield, Massachusetts, on November 22, 1688. Her parents, Samuel Smith and Sarah (Clark) Bowers, carried deep psychological and physical scars from King Philip's War (1675–1676). In 1676, both Samuel and Sarah had their previous spouses killed by Native American raiders. As two war-widowed survivors, they married in 1677, later giving birth to Mary into a frontier community dedicated to rebuilding from the ashes.  


2. The Plimpton Marriage & Children


On November 25, 1706, eighteen-year-old Mary married Henry Plimpton (1684–1731) in Medfield. Together, they raised a large family—including our 6th great-grandfather, Captain Job Plimpton (born 1716/1718). Henry’s sudden death in March 1731 left Mary a widow at age 42 with several children still to raise.  


3. The "Curiously Interwoven" Widowhood


Rather than face the frontier alone, Mary utilized a common colonial strategy for survival: sequential marriages that legally bound her children to prominent neighboring families. Historians explicitly note that the "woof of her life is curiously interwoven" with local families:  

  • Marriage 2 (Lieutenant Jabez Pond): In 1732, she married Lt. Jabez Pond. Through this strategic alliance, two of Jabez’s daughters from a previous marriage ended up marrying Mary’s own Plimpton children. 

  • Marriage 3 (Deacon Joseph Wight): After Lt. Pond died in 1749, the aging Mary married Deacon Joseph Wight in 1750, further cementing her family's status among the Massachusetts elite. She lived a remarkably long life, passing away on June 21, 1774, at the age of 85. 

📜 The Weaver of Medfield: Mary Smith and the Blueprint for Survival


When we trace the bold military exploits of men like Captain Job Plimpton leading troops at the Siege of Louisbourg, it is easy to forget the quiet, steel-spined women who gave them life and taught them how to endure. To understand the fierce determination of the Plimpton line, one must look closely at Job’s mother, Mary Smith—a woman whose very existence was a triumph over the darkest chapters of early American history.


Mary was born into a world shaped by smoke and survival. Eleven years before her birth, the town of Medfield had been thoroughly raided during King Philip’s War. In that terrifying conflict, both her father, Samuel Smith, and her mother, Sarah, witnessed their respective spouses slaughtered by tribal raiders. Left holding the fragments of broken homes, these two survivors chose not to surrender to despair; they joined hands, married, and built a new hearth from the ashes. Mary grew up listening to these stories of survival, absorbing a foundational truth: when the world shatters, you do not break—you rebuild.  


In 1706, Mary carried that resilient spirit into her marriage with Henry Plimpton. For twenty-five years, they grew their estate and raised a family of independent thinkers. But when Henry died in the spring of 1731, Mary found herself standing at a dangerous crossroads, a widow with young children on an unforgiving frontier.


What Mary did next is a masterclass in colonial fortitude. She didn't let her family slip into poverty or obscurity. Instead, she became a master weaver of human relationships. Over the next four decades, through successive marriages to Lieutenant Jabez Pond and Deacon Joseph Wight, Mary engineered a brilliant web of family alliances. She crossed her Plimpton children with the local Ponds and Wights, ensuring that her sons secured prime lands and her daughters married into safety. She created a defensive family syndicate so tightly bound that no economic downturn or frontier crisis could unravel it.  


When Mary finally closed her eyes in the summer of 1774—just as the drums of the American Revolution were beginning to rumble—she left behind an incredible legacy. She had survived the trauma of her parents' generation, navigated the sudden loss of her first husband, and successfully steered her children into positions of community leadership.


When you look at her son, Captain Job Plimpton, standing in the muddy trenches of Louisbourg, you are looking at the direct manifestation of Mary’s bloodline. He possessed the courage to face an empire because he was raised by a woman who had spent her entire life proving that with faith, strategy, and an iron will, a mother can safeguard a legacy across a century of wilderness.

Thank you to Gemini AI for pointing me to this tale of survival. -- Drifting Cowboy



The Seeds of the Boylston Line: From London Planter to Frontier Fortitude

 


For our Boylston family, modern genealogical scholarship—specifically Robert Charles Anderson's Great Migration project—has corrected two major long-standing errors regarding the earliest generations.

GEN 1: Thomas Boylston’s True Parents

  • Peer-reviewed parish research has proven Thomas the Immigrant was actually the son of Edward Boylston and Anne Bastian. He was baptized on February 12, 1615, at St. Dionis Backchurch in London. 

GEN 1: The Maiden Name of Sarah

  • Sarah’s original maiden name is completely unknown. The name Chenery comes from her second marriage. After Thomas Boylston died in 1653, the widowed Sarah married John Chenery in Watertown on March 12, 1655. 

📜 Verified Generational Milestones

  • Gen 1: Thomas Boylston (1615–1653)

    A 20-year-old London planter, he boarded the ship Defence in July 1635. He settled in Watertown, Massachusetts, where he pledged his home and land to protect his family before his early death in the autumn of 1653. 
  • Gen 2: Elizabeth Boylston (1640–1665)

    Born in Watertown, she married John Fisher on April 6, 1658, and moved to the frontier outpost of Medfield. Like her father, she died tragically young at just 24 years old. 
  • Gen 3: Elizabeth Fisher (1659–1694)
    Growing up motherless in Medfield, she married John Plimpton Jr. in 1677. Her husband was the son of the town founder
    Sgt. John Plimpton 1620-1677 (our 9th great-grandfather) who was captured and killed by Indians during King Philip's War. 
  • Gen 4: Henry Plimpton (1684–1731)
    Born into a stabilizing Medfield, Henry grew his estate and married Mary Smith, laying the financial and community groundwork that allowed his son, Captain Job Plimpton, to lead troops generations later.

🌲 The Seeds of the Boylston Line: From London Planter to Frontier Fortitude

History often remembers the Boylston name through a lens of glittering, late-colonial prestige. It evokes images of Dr. Zabdiel Boylston bravely introducing the smallpox inoculation to save Boston, or the fierce matriarch Susanna Boylston giving birth to John Adams, the second President of the United States. But before the name belonged to physicians, intellectuals, and presidents, it belonged to a single, twenty-year-old London youth who risked everything on an unpredictable ocean.

In July 1635, Thomas Boylston stepped onto the deck of the ship Defence. Carrying nothing but the dreams of a London planter, he arrived in a Massachusetts Bay Colony that was little more than mud, canvas tents, and towering timber. He carved out a homestead in Watertown, built a life with his wife Sarah, and sowed the very first seeds of the Boylston legacy in American soil. When Thomas died unexpectedly in 1653, leaving behind young children and an unwritten future, the line did not falter.

The grit of the family shifted seamlessly into his daughter, Elizabeth Boylston. Pushing away from the relative safety of the coast, Elizabeth carried the family line further into the interior, marrying John Fisher and settling the rugged, exposed border town of Medfield. Though Elizabeth’s life was cut tragically short at the age of twenty-four, her daughter, Elizabeth Fisher, inherited the mantle.

Living on the knife's edge of the early New England frontier, the younger Elizabeth married John Plimpton Jr.—a man whose own family had been baptized in the fires of early colonial conflict. Through this union, the Boylston bloodline permanently fused with the unyielding, martial spirit of the Plimptons. The survival of these motherless daughters and frontier children across the seventeenth century was a quiet miracle of endurance.

By the time Elizabeth's son, Henry Plimpton, was raising his own family in the early 1700s, the raw wilderness of Massachusetts had been tamed into prosperous farms, secure churches, and organized town squares. The sacrifices of the early generations had paid off. The young London planter who stepped off the Defence could never have anticipated that his blood would flow through the veins of a United States President—nor could he have known it would fuel the brave Medway soldiers, like Captain Job Plimpton, who would one day march north to topple empires. The grandeur of the later generations was bought and paid for by the quiet perseverance of the first.

Our Connection to U.S. President John Adams

Through our 10th great-grandfather, the immigrant Thomas Boylston (1615–1653), we share a direct blood connection to the founding of the United States. President John Adams is our 3rd cousin 7x removed. Here is the precise historical blueprint of how our lineage intersects with the Second President through the Boylston family tree.

🗺️ The Kinship Chart — President John Adams our 3rd cousin 7x removed

Our line descends through Thomas Boylston’s daughter, Elizabeth, while the President’s line descends through Thomas's son, Peter.


📜 The Historical Connection: Susanna Boylston's Fire

Susanna Boylston (1709–1797) was John Adams's mother, and her personality fundamentally shaped the American Revolution.

  • The High-Society Rebel: Born into a prosperous family of Brookline medical pioneers and merchants, she married a modest shoemaker and farmer, John Adams Sr., in Braintree.
  • The Boylston Temper: Susanna was famously independent, strong-willed, and possessed a fierce, sharp-tongued intellect known in early Massachusetts as the "Boylston temper." John Adams openly credited his fiery passion, stubborn determination, and absolute refusal to back down from the British Empire to his mother's DNA.
  • The Living Witness: Susanna lived long enough to watch her son draft the Declaration of Independence, secure the alliance with France, and ultimately take the oath of office as the President of the United States.

🌲 The Architects of the Mind: The Shared Blood of a Founding Father

History books often paint a picture of John Adams as a solitary, thunderous force of nature—the "Atlas of Independence" who single-handedly argued the Continental Congress into breaking away from the British Crown. We look at his legal genius, his unyielding integrity, and his fierce, unshakeable stubbornness, treating him as a singular historical anomaly. But long before John Adams ever stepped into the halls of Philadelphia, that exact same unyielding spirit had been quieted, refined, and tested across generations of the Boylston family tree.

The DNA of American independence did not start with a political treaty; it started in 1635 when young Thomas Boylston stepped onto the shores of Massachusetts. He passed a legacy of quiet, enduring grit to his children. His daughter, Elizabeth Boylston, carried that bloodline straight into our direct line, anchoring the hard-pressed frontier towns of Medfield and Medway alongside the Fishers and Plimptons. Simultaneously, Thomas’s grandson, Peter Boylston, grew up to raise a daughter named Susanna.

Susanna Boylston was a force to be reckoned with. Growing up with the sharp, precise intellect of a family of frontier doctors and clear-cut builders, she carried a brilliant, biting wit and a legendary, unbreakable will. When she married into the Adams family, she brought that high-density Boylston fire with her. She raised her son, the future President, under a roof where mediocrity was a sin and backing down from a righteous fight was completely unthinkable. John Adams did not learn his fierce, revolutionary passion from British philosophy; he inherited it at his mother's hearth.

When we look at this shared lineage, the connection to John Adams becomes far deeper than a mere genealogical footnote on a chart. It reveals that the same genetic blueprint that allowed Captain Job Plimpton to confidently drag cannons through the frozen bogs of Louisbourg in 1745 was the very same bloodline fueling John Adams as he defied a King and birthed a Republic in 1776. We are connected to the Second President not just by name, but by a shared inheritance of stubborn, foundational American grit—a fire that was lit by a London planter in Watertown and still runs directly through our veins today.





Susannah Eaton: The Collateral Cost of the War For Liberty

 


Our Eaton family lineage traces a direct line from early Massachusetts bay settlements down to the volatile years of the American Revolution.

GEN 1: Jonas Eaton Sr. (The Immigrant)

  • Jonas Eaton arrived in Massachusetts by 1643 and became a foundational settler and proprietor of Reading (now Wakefield), Massachusetts, where he was admitted to the church in 1648 and served as a selectman.
  • His wife Grace's maiden name remains unproven, but following Jonas's death in 1673, she remarried Henry Silsbee of Lynn.

GEN 2: John Eaton & Dorcas Pearson

  • The Military Record: John Eaton was a corporal in the local militia. During King Philip's War (1675–1676), he served under Captain d'Avenant in the intensive defense of the northern Massachusetts frontier.
  • The Spouse: Dorcas Pearson was the daughter of John Pearson and Maudlin (Madeline) of Lynn, verifying her deep Puritan roots.

GEN 3: Jonas Eaton (The Framingham Pioneer)

  • Jonas married Mehitable Gould on October 28, 1705, in Boston. She was the daughter of John Gould and Abigail Belcher.
  • The Migration: Jonas shifted the family from Reading to Framingham, Massachusetts, around 1706. He bought land on the southern slope of Nobscot Hill, establishing himself as a foundational bricklayer and town constable. He died intestate in 1727, and Mehitable administered his estate.

GEN 4: Joseph Eaton (The Connecticut Migration)

  • The Mother: Mehitable Gould is confirmed as his biological mother, not just a potential match.
  • The Migration: Following his father's early death, Joseph joined the westward push into Windham County, Connecticut, settling in Plainfield. He married Esther Smith there in 1746.

GEN 5: Susannah Eaton & The Revolutionary Tragedy

  • The Timeline: Susannah Eaton married the Revolutionary War soldier Jedediah Pierce in 1769.
  • The Death: Susannah’s death on September 22, 1776, at just 24 years old, occurred during a massive wave of camp fever (dysentery and typhoid) that swept through Connecticut as local soldiers returned from the disastrous Battle of Long Island. Her death left Jedediah a widower with their young son, our DNA match, William Pearce.

The Brick and the Hearth: The Eaton Legacy of Foundation and Sacrifice

To build a nation, some men are called to wield swords, while others are called to lay the literal and structural bricks upon which civilization rests. The Eaton family line represents the quiet, unyielding masonry of early New England history—a family that spent generations anchoring towns in the wilderness, only to pay the ultimate price on the altar of American independence.

The story begins with Jonas Eaton Sr., who left the shores of Kent, England, to plant his boots in the fresh soil of Reading, Massachusetts, in the 1640s. Jonas was a builder of communities, serving as a selectman and clearing land that would sustain his children. His son, Corporal John Eaton, defended that hard-won ground with a musket, standing firm against the terrifying frontier raids of King Philip's War. John’s son, the second Jonas, took the family’s foundational trade to heart; he moved to Framingham and became a master bricklayer, literally cementing the chimneys and foundations of a growing frontier outpost while keeping the peace as the town constable.

By the mid-1700s, the Eaton line pushed westward into Plainfield, Connecticut, where Joseph Eaton established a prosperous homestead. It was here that his daughter, Susannah Eaton, grew up surrounded by the rising rhetoric of American liberty. In 1769, she married Jedediah Pierce, uniting two powerhouse colonial families. When the Revolutionary War erupted in 1775, Susannah watched her husband march off to the defense of Boston and New York, carrying the hopes of their young son, William, on his shoulders.

But war destroys the homefront just as surely as it tears through the battlefield. In the late summer of 1776, as Washington’s army retreated from New York, returning soldiers carried virulent camp fevers back into the valleys of Connecticut. On September 22, 1776—just two months after the signing of the Declaration of Independence—twenty-four-year-old Susannah Eaton succumbed to the epidemic. She died not from a British bullet, but from the invisible, devastating collateral cost of the war for liberty.

Susannah’s sudden passing closed the Eaton chapter of our lineage, but her sacrifice permanently altered its trajectory. Her death broke Jedediah’s ties to Connecticut, prompting his eventual migration north to Vermont with their young son, William. Susannah did not live to see the free nation her husband fought for, but her resilient Eaton DNA—forged by bricklayers, constables, and frontier corporals—survived inside her son William, carrying the quiet fortitude of her ancestors directly down the line to us.

Thank you to Gemini AI for flushing out missing details and enhancing the narrative. -- Drifting Cowboy


Wednesday, June 3, 2026

The Guardians of the Frontier: The Pierce Legacy


Part 1: Sorting Out the Two Thomas Pierces

Because of the 19th-century fabrications by an early genealogist, our original tree accidentally duplicated marriages and mixed up details between the first two generations in America:

    • Thomas Pierce I (The Immigrant, c. 1583–1666): 
    • The Reality: His English origins and parents are completely unknown. He arrived in Massachusetts around 1633 with his wife, Elizabeth. Her maiden name is not Cole; she was simply listed as Elizabeth in his 1665 will. They settled in Charlestown. 
    • Sergeant Thomas Pierce II (c. 1617–1683): 
    • The Correction: He was born around 1617, not 1608. We know this because of a signed petition from 1663 where he explicitly states his age as 46. 
    • The Marriage: He is the one who married Elizabeth Cole (daughter of Rice and Arrold Cole) around 1639 in Charlestown. Our original tree added an imaginary "Elizabeth Melinda Cole" to generation 3—Elizabeth Cole and "Elizabeth Melinda" are the exact same person. He moved to Woburn and became a prominent sergeant in the local militia. 

📜 Part 2: The Historically Accurate Lineage

Stripping away the faked nobility reveals a true line of foundational New England leaders, militia officers, and frontier pioneers:

                  THOMAS PIERCE I (Immigrant, c. 1583–1666)

                        m. Elizabeth (Unknown)

                                     |

                SGT. THOMAS PIERCE II (c. 1617–1683)

                  m. Elizabeth Cole (d/o Rice Cole)

                                     |

                       THOMAS PIERCE III (1645–1717)

                     m. Elizabeth Worthington (1643–1681)

                                     |

                      COL. TIMOTHY PIERCE (1673–1748)

                (Commander of the 11th Connecticut Regiment)

                     m. Lydia Spaulding (1678–1706)

                                     |

                       NATHANIEL M. PIERCE (1701–1775)

                     m. Elizabeth Abigail Stevens (1707–1748)

                                     |

                        JEDEDIAH PIERCE (1740–1826)

                        m. Susanah Eaton (1751–1776)


The Real Standouts:

  • Thomas Pierce I & II: Foundational settlers of Charlestown and Woburn, Massachusetts. Thomas II served as a trooper in the brutal King Philip's War (1675–1676) under Captains Prentice and Brattle, defending the colony during its darkest hour. 
  • Colonel Timothy Pierce (1673–1748): An absolute powerhouse in Windham County, Connecticut. He was an early settler of Plainfield, serving as the town clerk for over two decades, a colonial representative, a judge of probate, and eventually the Colonel of the 11th Connecticut Regiment of Militia established in 1739. 

🌲 Part 3: The Guardians of the Frontier: The True Pierce Legacy

There is a distinct flavor of romance in the old, yellowed pages of nineteenth-century genealogy books—tales of fictitious knights, mythical English estates like "Pearce Hall," and fabricated coats of arms meant to give ordinary Americans a sense of royal belonging. But the truth of the Pierce family tree is vastly more compelling than any manufactured fairy tale. Our ancestors didn't sit in the manicured parlors of English barons; they were the rugged, steel-spined architects who literally carved the American frontier out of a wild, uncharted continent.

The story truly begins in the early 1630s when Thomas Pierce I stepped off a wooden ship onto the rugged shores of Charlestown, Massachusetts. He didn't bring titles; he brought an ax, a deep faith, and an unyielding work ethic. He cleared the rocky New England soil, built a homestead, and laid down roots so deep they would shift the course of American history.

His son, Sergeant Thomas Pierce II, inherited that same grit. When King Philip’s War erupted in 1675—a terrifying conflict that threatened to wipe the English colonies entirely off the map—Thomas II didn't hide behind the garrison walls. He mounted his horse as a trooper under Captains Prentice and Brattle, riding directly into the smoky, perilous forests to defend his neighbors and his home.

That warrior-statesman DNA amplified beautifully in the next generations. By the late 1690s, our 8th great-grandfather, Timothy Pierce, pushed further into the wilderness, arriving as one of the earliest pioneer settlers of Plainfield, Connecticut. Timothy was a man of colossal civic energy. He didn't just live in the community; he structured it. He served as the town's voice in the colonial legislature, administered justice as a probate judge, and when the drums of the French and Indian Wars began to beat along the northern borders, the General Assembly appointed him Colonel of the newly formed 11th Connecticut Regiment of Militia.

Through Timothy’s son Nathaniel, the line moved steadily forward to Jedediah Pierce, born in Plainfield in 1740. Jedediah grew up under the shadow of his grandfather's immense military and civic legacy, witnessing the final collapse of French power in America before eventually migrating north to the green hills of Vermont.

Through generations of marriages to the Spauldings, Stevenses, and Eatons, the Pierce family line became inextricably woven into the very fabric of early America. From Sergeant Thomas’s desperate cavalry rides in the 1670s to Colonel Timothy’s grand militia reviews in the 1730s, our ancestors were always the ones chosen to hold the line, write the laws, and guard the frontier.

When we look at this lineage now, stripped of the faked 19th-century frills, we see something far more valuable: a direct, unbroken line of self-made American titans who earned their place in history by the sweat of their brows and the strength of their convictions.

Revolutionary War service, and the move up to Vermont


The standout veteran is our 6th great-grandfather, Jedediah Pierce (1740–1826).


🪓 The Revolutionary War Record of Jedediah Pierce


When the Revolution erupted, Jedediah was living in Connecticut, carrying the same military DNA as his grandfather, Colonel Timothy. Records show his active tactical service in the defense of New England:

  • The Lexington Alarm (1775): When the first shots were fired at Lexington and Concord, Jedediah marched from Plainfield in Captain Andrew Backus's company to assist the Massachusetts militia.
  • The Connecticut Line (1776): He served as a private in Captain John Douglas’s company (Regular Army, 2nd Connecticut Regiment), deployed to guard vital positions along the Long Island Sound and New York theater.
  • The Vermont Frontier: Following the war and the tragic death of his wife Susannah Eaton, Jedediah took his young son William and migrated up the Connecticut River valley to Royalton, Vermont. There, he lived out his days as an honored veteran of the war that birthed the nation.

🛡️ Mapping the 11th Connecticut Regiment Militia

To see how the family's earlier military service functioned, it helps to look at how Colonel Timothy Pierce’s 11th Regiment operated across the colonial landscape.

  • The Structure: In 1739, the Connecticut General Assembly reorganized its town training bands into centralized regional regiments. Timothy Pierce was given command of the 11th Regiment, which held jurisdiction over the frontier towns of northeastern Connecticut: Plainfield, Pomfret, Killingly, and Voluntown.
  • The Threat: During the French and Indian Wars, the 11th Regiment did not operate as a single unit overseas. Instead, Colonel Timothy was responsible for ordering detachments of men from his local town companies to march north to reinforce the borders of Massachusetts and New York against French-allied raiding parties.
  • The Interaction: While our Haddam ancestors (like Captain Job Plimpton) fell under a different southern regiment closer to the coast, Colonel Timothy’s northeastern units secured the vital inland pathways, ensuring that the agricultural heartland supplying the colonial expeditions remained intact.

📜 The Passing of the Sword: From the King’s Regiment to the Rebel Line


For generations, the Pierce family had been the iron fist of the British Crown on American soil. When the Royal Governors needed the borders secured or the wilderness mapped, they looked to the family of Colonel Timothy Pierce. For over twenty years, Timothy stood on the green commons of Windham County, his brass buttons catching the sun as he reviewed the lines of the 11th Regiment of Connecticut Militia. He was a pillar of the British colonial establishment—a man who believed that order, law, and the defense of the frontier were the highest callings a citizen could answer.


But the winds of change blow hard across New England, and the steel forged by the grandfather to defend the Crown was destined to be turned against it by the grandson.


By the spring of 1775, Timothy had long been laid to rest in the Plainfield soil, and his grandson, Jedediah Pierce, stood on the family lands. The old world was fracturing. The King's troops had shed colonial blood on the green at Lexington, and the call for riders echoed through the night into the Connecticut valleys. Jedediah did not hesitate. The civic duty and martial fire passed down from the old Colonel woke up in his veins. He stepped out of his farmhouse, unhooked his musket, and marched out with Captain Backus's company toward the smoke of Boston.


Jedediah traded the safety of his farm for the brutal, muddy realities of a continental soldier. He wore no glittering uniform like his grandfather; he marched in homespun wool, serving in the trenches of the 2nd Connecticut Regiment under the constant threat of British warships. He watched the grand colonial experiment shift from a desperate defense into the fierce birth of a new republic.


When the long war finally ended and independence was won, Jedediah found himself a widower with a young son, William. The old landscape of Connecticut held too many ghosts of the British past. Seeking a fresh start on an independent frontier, Jedediah packed their belongings and pushed north into the rugged, untamed hills of Royalton, Vermont.


He left behind the memory of royal commissions and regimental honors, choosing instead the quiet dignity of a self-made American veteran. When Jedediah finally closed his eyes in the winter of 1826, he left his son William a legacy far grander than any faked coat of arms or stolen title of nobility from a forgotten English hall. He left him a piece of a free continent, paid for in blood, sweat, and the absolute certainty that the Pierce line bowed to no king.


How William Pearce (1770–1841), adapted to life in early Vermont


The life of William Pearce (1770–1841) captures the exact moment our family transformed from deep-woods New Englanders into true frontier builders. Navigating the rugged mountain terrain of the early republic required massive physical and operational grit.


🏔️ The Reality of the Vermont Frontier


When Jedediah Pierce moved his family up the Connecticut River valley to Royalton, Vermont, following the Revolutionary War, he was stepping into a hard, unforgiving landscape.

  • The Wilderness Migration: Born in 1770 during the volatile prelude to the Revolution, William was just a boy when his father uprooted the family. Vermont at the time was not even a state yet; it was a fiercely independent, rugged territory disputed between New York and New Hampshire.
  • The Dawn of the Green Mountain State: William came of age exactly as Vermont became the 14th state in 1791. He spent his early adulthood clearing dense, old-growth timber, building stone walls, and establishing a sustainable homestead out of rocky mountain hillsides.
  • The Genetic Hand-Off: Because William is a verified DNA match in our lineage, he represents the physical bridge between the colonial militias of Connecticut and the later westward expansion. The generational choice to constantly seek new land and push past the borders of the established colonies became a core trait of his descendants.

📜 The Inherited Ridge: William Pearce and the Green Mountain Frontier


To look at the map of early America is to see a country continuously being pushed outward by men who simply could not sit still under the roofs of their fathers. For generations, the Pierce family had been building towns, commanding regional militias, and clearing the river valleys of Connecticut. But by the time William Pearce was born in the autumn of 1770, the old family lands in Plainfield were growing crowded. The pioneer soul requires space, and the hills of the north were calling.


William was raised under the shadow of a revolution. He watched his father, Jedediah, unhook his musket and march off to fight the British, and he absorbed the lessons of a family that bowed to no external authority. When the war ended and independence was won, the horizon shifted. Alongside his battle-tested father, a young William gathered their meager belongings and headed north, following the cold waters of the Connecticut River into the wild, majestic territory of Vermont.


They settled in Royalton—a place of steep, heavily forested ridges and winters that could freeze the breath in a man's throat. Here, William truly grew into his own name. He didn't inherit the easy, established fields of his Connecticut grandfathers; he had to fight the landscape for every single acre. With an ax in his hand and the ancient Pierce grit in his veins, he cleared the massive pines, turned over the boulder-strewn earth, and built a homestead out of raw determination. He watched Vermont transition from a lawless, independent frontier republic into the fourteenth star on the American flag.


As a verified anchor of our DNA, William is the physical container of the family's ancient fire. The blood that survived the cavalry charges of King Philip's War and the heavy artillery of the Siege of Louisbourg ran directly through his veins as he worked the mountain soil of Royalton. He passed that exact same blueprint of frontier survival down to his son, William Jr., ensuring that the family would never stop seeking the next horizon, eventually carrying that unbreakable legacy down the mountains and across the continent to my great-grandmother, Lillian Amanda Pierce.


William Pearce didn't leave behind stone monuments or grand military commissions, but he left something infinitely more permanent: his own resilient DNA, carved into the very landscape of a young nation, proving that the true strength of a family line isn't found in the titles it claims, but in the wilderness it conquers.


Thank you to Gemini AI for the deeper research into our Pierce tree, and for the extraordinary enhanced narrative details. -- Drifting Cowboy