Tuesday, June 16, 2026

The Mythic Legacy: Isaac Potts and the Praying Washington

 


Beyond the Valley Forge house being rented to George Washington for his headquarters there’s one additional tale that needs to be told, in it--our cousin--Isaac Potts is the primary anchor of one of the most famous legends in American history.

According to a widely popularized account attributed directly to Isaac later in his life, he was a staunch Quaker pacifist who initially opposed the war. However, while riding through the woods near the Valley Forge encampment, he supposedly stumbled upon George Washington on his knees in the snow, deep in agonizing prayer for his starving troops.

The story goes that Potts was so deeply moved by Washington's profound faith and heavy burden that he returned home, converted to the Patriot cause, and told his wife that America would surely win its independence under such a leader.

While historians today debate whether this spiritual encounter in the woods was a literal occurrence or an idealized piece of early 19th-century Americana, the historical reality remains unassailable: our 1st cousin 8x removed, Isaac Potts, surrendered his homestead to shelter the Commander-in-Chief during the darkest pivot point of the American Revolution.

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and enlightenment. -- Drifting Cowboy

Burying the Guns: How Our Potts Cousins Saved Washington’s Artillery

 


Celebrating America 250

Every genealogist searches for the exact moment their family tree collides with a turning point in history. For our family, that collision didn't just happen in the halls of statecraft or on a standard battlefield line—it happened deep in the roaring, spark-showered interior of the early American iron industry.

As we approach the United States Semiquincentennial, much will be written about General George Washington’s winter headquarters at Valley Forge. Family historians widely know that the pristine stone house Washington rented for his command belonged to our first cousin eight times removed, the Quaker ironmaster Isaac Potts (1750–1803).

But there is a gritty, high-stakes prequel to the Valley Forge encampment that standard history books often omit. It is the story of Isaac’s brothers, Samuel and Thomas Potts, and a desperate, midnight operation to bury the heavy artillery of the Continental Army before the British could seize it.

The Heavy Metal Nerve Center of the Revolution

By 1776, the Potts family operated a massive, interconnected metallurgical empire across Pennsylvania. While Isaac managed the gristmill and shared ownership of the "Valley Forge" ironworks with his brother-in-law William Dewees, his brothers Samuel and Thomas ran the formidable Warwick Furnace in Chester County.

Warwick wasn’t a simple frontier blacksmith shop; it was an industrial powerhouse. When the war erupted, the Potts brothers cast aside their traditional Quaker pacifism to turn their furnaces into a primary munitions foundry for the Patriot cause. In 1776 alone, the Warwick Furnace successfully cast more than 60 heavy cannons for the infant Continental Army and Navy.

This massive production of grapeshot, muskets, and artillery pieces quickly placed a giant target on the backs of the Potts brothers. To the British high command, dismantling the Potts supply chain was just as critical as capturing Philadelphia.

The Disaster at Brandywine and the Retreat to Warwick

In September 1777, the dark reality of war arrived on the family's doorstep. Following the American defeat at the Battle of Brandywine on September 11, a torrential downpour ruined the Continental Army's gunpowder, leaving Washington’s troops virtually defenseless.

Needing an immediate industrial sanctuary to repair firearms, recast ammunition, and forge new weapons, Washington ordered a retreat directly to the Potts family's iron empire. For several tense days, the Warwick Furnace fields became a massive, muddy encampment. The furnace fires burned around the clock as the Potts brothers and their ironworkers labored furiously to re-equip the army.

But the British army, led by General Howe, was hot on their trail.

The Midnight Cache

As British scouts advanced toward Chester County, Washington realized his army had to move immediately. However, the heavy brass cannons—the pride of the Continental artillery—could not be moved quickly enough through the deep, rutted mud fields. If left behind, these guns would be captured, turned against the American lines, and used to crush the rebellion.

In a move calculated to protect both the army and the foundry, the Potts brothers executed a daring plan. Under the cover of darkness, while the final American regiments evacuated the property, Samuel and Thomas coordinated a massive excavation. Using their heavy draft teams and trusted ironworkers, they dragged the massive brass artillery pieces out into the furnace fields.

They dug deep trenches into the soot-stained earth and buried Washington’s cannons completely out of sight, carefully smoothing over the soil to blend with the surrounding landscape.

When the British forces finally raided the Warwick Furnace and the nearby Valley Forge ironworks a few days later, they burned buildings, destroyed equipment, and searched the grounds for weapons. But they missed the prize. The secret ordnance cache remained safely hidden beneath their feet.

Our Spot on the Timeline

Once the British moved on toward Philadelphia, the hidden cannons were safely exhumed and returned to the Continental Line, seeing action in the subsequent campaigns of the war.

Our direct lineage runs through Isaac, Samuel, and Thomas's aunt, Mary Potts (1688–1762), who married Mathias Tyson. Through this tightly bound Montgomery County cousin network, our family didn't just witness the American Revolution from afar. Our kin built the furnaces, cast the iron, sheltered the Commander-in-Chief, and literally buried the big guns that secured the birth of a new Republic.

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and beautiful narrative. -- Drifting Cowboy


Monday, June 15, 2026

Plymouth Rock 1620 to "We the People" 1787 & Beyond: Our Family’s Footsteps Through the American Story

 


By: Drifting Cowboy aka Jerry England 

Celebrating America 250 

Every genealogist eventually hits a moment of profound realization: our ancestors did not live their lives in a vacuum. They weren’t just names on dusty parchment or statistics in a census ledger. They were flesh-and-blood actors walking the stage of history, breathing the smoke of the same conflicts that forged the United States, and building the physical infrastructure of the republic we inherit today.

As we march toward the Semiquincentennial in 2026, I wanted to take a bird's-eye view of our family tree. Instead of looking at individual branches in isolation, I have mapped our ancestors—the blacksmiths, the privateers, the teenage drummers, the frontier scouts, and the elite cavalrymen—directly onto the macro-timeline of early American history.

From the maritime mysteries of 1640s New Haven and the brutal, snow-covered stockades of King Philip’s War, to the freezing trenches of Valley Forge and the high-stakes horse charges of the War of 1812, this is the master timeline of how our direct kin traveled the long, bloody road from Plymouth Rock 1620, to "We the People” 1787, and Beyond 1812.

Early Exploration and Settlement (1620–1629)

1620: The Mayflower Lands at Plymouth

Our ancestral ties to the following foundational Mayflower passengers provide a window into the raw survival and governance of the 1620 settlement:

  • Francis Cooke (c. 1583–1663) | 11th Great-Grandfather
    • Role: A Leiden Separatist and signer of the Mayflower Compact. He arrived with his son John, while his wife Hester joined three years later on the Anne (1623).
  • Richard Warren (c. 1578–1628) | 11th Great-Grandfather
    • Role: A London merchant and signer of the Mayflower Compact. He braved the initial winter alone; his wife Elizabeth and five daughters followed on the Anne.
  • Elder William Brewster (c. 1566–1644) | Paternal Grandfather of the Wife of our 9th Great-Grandfather
    • Role: The spiritual anchor and senior elder of Plymouth. As the only university-trained founder, his theological philosophy fundamentally shaped early colonial civil law.
  • Dr. Samuel Fuller (c. 1580–1633) | Father-in-Law of our 9th Great-Grandmother
    • Role: The colony’s indispensable first physician, surgeon, and deacon, who frequently traveled to neighboring Salem and Charlestown to combat early epidemics.

1623–1628: The Pre-Bay Pioneer Influx

  • Ancestral Intersection: John Rogers (c. 1606–1692) arrives in Plymouth Colony, quickly aligning his family with the Mayflower elite. His line eventually marries into the riches of the early Cape Cod and Rhode Island expansions.
  • Ancestral Intersection: John Pierce (1588–1661) secures the early land patents from the Plymouth Company, establishing foundational family holdings in Watertown, Massachusetts, that anchor the upcoming Puritan vanguard.

1626: The Purchase of Manhattan & The New Netherland Dutch

  • Ancestral Intersection: As Peter Minuit establishes New Amsterdam, our foundational New Netherland Dutch ancestors settle the Hudson River Valley. Through decades of strategic alliances, this resilient Knickerbocker line will directly intersect with the family of future President Martin Van Buren, forever linking our tree to the unique cross-cultural roots of early New York.

🪓 Growth and Consolidation (1630–1675)

1630: John Winthrop Founds Boston & The Great Migration

  • Ancestral Intersection: Captain George Denison arrives as an 11-year-old boy aboard the Lion (1631). He is tutored by the famed "Apostle to the Indians," Reverend John Eliot, absorbing the indigenous customs that would later dictate his frontier warfare tactics.
  • Ancestral Intersection: Thomas Plympton (1620–1676) arrives from Sudbury, England, as an original founder of Sudbury, Massachusetts. He carves out a massive agricultural footprint along the treacherous western flank of the Massachusetts Bay.

1636: The Fracturing of New England (CT & RI Founded)

  • Ancestral Intersection: John Catlin II (Cattell) arrives as an immigrant and pushes deep into the Connecticut River Valley, establishing his homestead at Wethersfield to secure the agrarian frontier.
  • Ancestral Intersection: Captain George Lamberton dominates the New Haven Colony as a merchant prince. He challenges the Dutch fur monopoly by driving English commerce south into the Delaware River Valley, facing arrest and trial at Fort Amsterdam (1642).

1646: The Ship of Air Maritime Disaster

  • Ancestral Intersection: Captain George Lamberton commands the ill-fated "Great Ship" out of New Haven. The vessel vanishes into the Atlantic, prompting the famous atmospheric phantom ship sighting in New Haven Harbor (1647) immortalized by Mather and Longfellow.

1651–1673: The Navigation Acts & Border Surveying

  • Ancestral Intersection: Robert Booth (1602–1672) acts as a foundational surveyor and magistrate along the Maine coast, officially naming and mapping the deep-water harbor of Boothbay, staking an early claim for independent English timber infrastructure.
  • Ancestral Intersection: John Rogers II expands his merchant estate into the Narragansett region, navigating the tightening British trade maritime laws by establishing independent coastal trade networks.

1654: The Mystic Land Grant

  • Ancestral Intersection: For his elite militia service, Captain George Denison is granted 200 acres by Governor John Winthrop Jr. along the Pequotsepos Brook, laying out the historic Pequot Trail with his surveyor's chain.

1662: The Thirty Coats: The Forging of Haddam, Connecticut

  • Ancestral Intersection: Our ancestors participate in the legendary purchase of the lands that would become Haddam, Connecticut. Traded from the local Western Niantic sachems for thirty plush coats, this transaction establishes the bedrock Connecticut farming community where our Bailey and allied lines will act as civic anchors for over a century.

🛡️ Transition to Royal Control (1676–1700)

1675–1676: King Philip’s War Erupts

  • Ancestral Intersection: Captain George Denison fortifies his log-and-stone manor with a heavy stockade. He integrates European cavalry tactics with Mohegan and Pequot scouts on his "militia meadow." His company successfully captures Canonchet, Chief Sachem of the Narragansetts, decisively breaking the southern theater of the war.
  • The Ultimate Sacrifice: On April 18, 1676, our 9th great-grandfather, Thomas Plympton, is ambushed and killed by Native warriors while desperately trying to escort a neighboring family to the safety of the fortified Sudbury Garrison. His death stands as a central pillar of the town's wartime folklore.
  • The Garrison Defenders: The Pierce and Bailey families of Watertown and Newbury form immediate volunteer units, garrisoning their stone homesteads and defending the strategic Merrimack and Charles River corridors from being completely overrun.

1689–1690: King William's War (The Northern Border Slaughters)

  • Ancestral Intersection: On March 18, 1690, a French-Abenaki force executes the Salmon Falls Massacre (Berwick, Maine). Timber mill pioneer Nathan Lord I is caught in the assault and dies during the chaotic wartime evacuation of the settlement.

1692: Frontier Captivity

  • Ancestral Intersection: Moses Littlefield is captured by French forces during a brutal border raid on Wells, Maine. He is marched to Quebec as a prisoner of war and interrogated due to his family's surveying knowledge of English frontier defenses. His infant daughter, the future centenarian Martha Littlefield, survives the raid inside a fortified garrison house.

🪵 Colonial America & The First Great Awakening (1701–1763)

1704: The Deerfield Massacre (February 29)

  • Ancestral Intersection: Both branches of the Catlin line collide with history on this bloody winter night in western Massachusetts. John Catlin III is killed inside the burning palisade defending the garrison houses. His brother, Joseph Catlin (ancestor of the western artist George Catlin), is killed simultaneously in the meadow counter-attack.

1707: Queen Anne's War

  • Ancestral Intersection: Moses Littlefield is killed in action during a border skirmish near Wells, Maine. His widow, Martha Lord, pulls her family back south to the safety of Dover, New Hampshire. It is here that her daughter, Martha Littlefield, marries Thomas Stevens.

1717: The Rebuilding of Pequotsepos Manor

  • Ancestral Intersection: Following a catastrophic fire on the eve of his wedding, Daniel Denison rebuilds the family manor house in Stonington, Connecticut, thriftily recycling the charred, structural timbers of his grandfather Captain George Denison's original home into the new framework.

1730–1760: The First Great Awakening Sweeps the Colonies

  • Ancestral Intersection: The religious revival fundamentally shifts the naming conventions of our tree. Adolphus Skinner Brown is named directly after prominent theological leaders of the Universalist movement sweeping upstate New York's "Burned-Over District."
  • Ancestral Context: The Bailey and Plympton families transition into permanent agricultural dynastic lines, clearing multi-acre properties in central Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New York, funding the construction of early colonial meetinghouses.

1750s: The Post-War Reclamation of Maine

  • Ancestral Intersection: Following the stabilization of the French frontier, Olive Stevens and her husband, master blacksmith John Catland (Catlin), migrate from New Hampshire back to the Maine coast, permanently re-occupying Boothbay and rebuilding the maritime economy with John’s industrial forge.

🦅 The American Revolution (1763–1783)

1765: The Stamp Act Sparks Outrage

1774: The Emergency Militia Acts

  • Ancestral Intersection: Captain Caleb Hall is elected as a civic and military officer of the Kent County Militia in Rhode Island, enforcing mandatory weekly drills and securing interior supply corridors against British foraging parties launching from occupied Newport.

1775–1783: The Revolutionary War

  • Ancestral Intersection: John Catland (1718–1808) serves in Colonel Obadiah Johnson’s Regiment and the 20th Connecticut Militia. Operating his heavy blacksmith forge to manufacture grapeshot and repair weaponry, John continues to march on emergency coastal alarms well into his sixties.
  • Ancestral Intersection: John Gardner (1753–1837) enlists out of Exeter, Rhode Island. He fights under Captain Bates at the grueling Battle of Rhode Island (August 29, 1778), standing his ground at Quaker Hill during a critical rear-guard action that prevents the annihilation of the retreating American army.
  • The Minutemen Mobilization: Members of our Pierce and Plympton lines march directly on the alarms of April 19, 1775, answering the call at Lexington and Concord as part of the Middlesex County militia networks.
  • The Wadsworth Brigade Reinforcements: In June 1776, our 6th great-grandfather, Oliver Bailey (1738–1822), enlists as a Private in the 8th Company under Capt. Cornelius Higgins (Col. William Douglas' 5th Battalion, General Wadsworth's Brigade). Raised to reinforce George Washington’s desperate defense of New York, Oliver stands on the front lines at the brutal Battles of Long Island and White Plains.
  • The Continental Line Vanguard: From 1776 to 1778, our 5th great-grandfather, Zephaniah Rogers (1747–1823), serves on the Continental Line in Colonel Elmore's Regiment (Capt. William Satterlee's Company and later Capt. Daniel Davis's Company), marching through the critical tactical shifts of the mid-Atlantic theater.

1777–1778: The Continental Army at Valley Forge

  • Ancestral Intersection: Our cousin, 13-year-old Putnam Catlin (father of the artist George Catlin), serves as a frontline tactical drummer boy for the 2nd Connecticut Regiment, beating cadences through the freezing mud of Valley Forge and the 100-degree heat of the Battle of Monmouth.

1781: The Battle of Johnstown

  • Ancestral Intersection: Young Solomon Brown (1765–1839), our 4th great-grandfather, enlists as a private and camp musician in Colonel Marinus Willett's New York Levies. He tracks Loyalist raiders through the trackless northern forests and beats tactical signals at the fierce Battle of Johnstown just days after Yorktown falls.

🏛️ The New Nation & Federalist Era (1783–1800)

1785: Legacy of the Eagle & The Society of the Cincinnati

  • Ancestral Intersection: On December 4, 1785, Surgeon Caleb Sweet, Esquire, MD, our 5th great-grandfather, is formally admitted to the highly exclusive Society of the Cincinnati. He is awarded the prestigious Order of the Cincinnati medal—a bronze badge in the shape of an eagle bearing the image of Cincinnatus. Signed off under the legacy of the Society's first President General, George Washington, this honor cements Dr. Sweet’s status as a literal founding father of the new Republic.

1787: The Architecture of the Republic (The Constitutional Convention)

  • Ancestral Intersection: As the U.S. Constitution is hammered out in Philadelphia, our family is operating at the absolute pinnacle of statecraft. Our cousin Roger Sherman (1721–1793) cements his place in immortality as the architect of the Great Compromise and the only person to sign all four foundational papers of the United States: the Continental Association, the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the U.S. Constitution.
  • Ancestral Intersection: Standing shoulder-to-shoulder with Sherman is our cousin Oliver Ellsworth (1745–1807). A towering, underrated Founding Father, Ellsworth helps draft the Constitution, names the "United States," and later authors the Judiciary Act of 1789 before serving as the nation's third Chief Justice.
  • Ancestral Intersection: On December 30, 1787, Solomon Brown marries Mary Sweet in Saratoga County, New York. Decades later, Mary will cut these exact marriage and birth record pages directly out of the family Bible to send to the National Archives as unassailable proof of their frontline Revolutionary alliance.

1789–1800: Standing at Washington's Right Hand

  • Ancestral Intersection: Living to the astronomical age of 101, Martha Littlefield-Stevens (c. 1691–1792) witnesses Washington take office. Her single lifespan bridges the raw, isolated 17th-century world of Indian garrison warfare straight into the constitutional dawn of the United States.
  • The Engine of the State: Our 6th great-granduncle, Colonel Timothy Pickering Jr. (1745–1829), serves at the absolute epicenter of early American power. One of the most brilliant, combative, and unyielding figures of the Federalist era, Pickering operates as George Washington’s adjutant general during the war, and later enters his cabinet as Postmaster General, Secretary of War, and Secretary of State (1795), continuing as Secretary of State under John Adams into 1800.

1796: The Birth of an Artistic Legacy

  • Ancestral Intersection: Our cousin George Catlin (1796–1872) is born to the Revolutionary drummer boy Putnam Catlin. Raised on his father’s war stories and ancestral memories of the Deerfield Raid, George dedicates his life to painting and preserving the vanishing leadership and history of the Indigenous nations of the American West.

🐎 Tensions & The War of 1812 (1808–1815)

1812: The Frontier Mobilization

  • Ancestral Intersection: Inheriting his father Solomon’s early military maturity, 14-year-old Samuel R. Brown (1798–1877), our 3rd great-grandfather, enlists as a Private in Lieutenant Colonel James V. Ball's Squadron of Light Dragoons. He serves as an elite, mounted courier and scout under General Harrison, enduring the brutal, freezing swamp campaigns of the North Western Army.
  • Ancestral Intersection: Simon Weeks enlists as a Private under Lieutenant Colonel Christopher P. Bellinger, taking up arms along the high-stakes Sackets Harbor and Ogdensburg corridors to block British amphibious invasions launching from Canada along the St. Lawrence River.
  • Ancestral Intersection: John Taylor Barstow mobilizes for frontier duty, serving on the New York border lines. His daughter, Polly Barstow, will later marry James Catland, structurally bonding the Denison, Barstow, and Catland lineages.
  • A Hero of Two Wars: Having survived the freezing trenches of the Revolution, an aging Oliver Bailey (1738–1822) steps forward yet again during the War of 1812, cementing his legendary status in family lore as a resilient, multi-generational defender of American sovereignty.

1813: Fort Stanwix & The Road to Ohio

  • Ancestral Intersection: Following his strategic deployments at places like Fort Stanwix, Zephaniah Rogers and his children help pave the great westward migration paths. This generation transforms our family from New England coastal settlers into the pioneering vanguard that settles the wild, rich valleys of Ohio.

1815: The Aftermath and the Jefferson County Convergence

  • Ancestral Intersection: With the northern border permanently secured, the veterans migrate. Samuel R. Brown sells his 160 acres of federal Western Bounty Land scrip to speculators, converting raw frontier land into immediate cash. He uses this capital to buy out the heirs of his father-in-law Simon Weeks, consolidating a massive, independent agricultural homestead in Philadelphia, Jefferson County, New York—setting the stage for his own sons to march forward into the American Civil War.

📚 Deep Dives into Our Ancestral Archive

To explore the full, long-form narratives behind these timeline intersections, check out our dedicated family profiles:

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and editing assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy

Did you ever wonder what the differences were between Pilgrims and Puritans?

 


Here is a direct, high-density breakdown of how historians view these colonial terms, timelines, and numbers:


1. Are "Pilgrims" only those from the Mayflower?

No, but with a strict historical asterisk.


While the 102 passengers on the 1620 Mayflower voyage are universally known as The Pilgrims, historians generally extend the term to the initial wave of religious separatists who arrived in Plymouth Colony on the next three ships: the Fortune (1621), the Anne (1623), and the Little James (1623). Those who arrived on these first four ships are formally referred to by genealogists as "The Old Comers."


2. Are "Puritans" only those who came during the Great Migration?

No.


"Puritan" is a religious definition, not a migration window. The Puritan movement began in England in the 16th century and included millions who never left Europe. Furthermore, Puritans continued to migrate to New England throughout the late 17th and 18th centuries. The ones who arrived during the Great Migration are simply called "Great Migration Puritans."


3. Was the Great Migration 1620–1640?

Technically 1629–1640.


The Mayflower (1620) was an isolated, separate event. The Puritan Great Migration officially kicked off in 1629 with the chartering of the Massachusetts Bay Company and the arrival of Governor John Winthrop's fleet in 1630. It abruptly ended in 1640 with the start of the English Civil War, which gave Puritans a reason to stay in England and fight the King rather than flee across the Atlantic.  


4. What did they call colonists who arrived between 1640 and 1776?

There is no single label for this 136-year span because immigration diversified drastically. Instead, historians categorize them by distinct geopolitical waves:

  • The Cavaliers (1642–1675): Royalist elites and their servants fleeing the English Civil War to settle Virginia (like our ancestor, Colonel George Mason I).
  • The Quakers (1675–1725): Thousands of religious dissidents settling the Delaware Valley (Pennsylvania and New Jersey).
  • The Scotch-Irish and Germans (1717–1775): The massive, pre-revolution frontier wave that pushed through Pennsylvania down into the Appalachian backcountry (like our Boyds and Irvines).

5. How many people living in the US today are direct descendants?

Because New England colonists had massive families and incredibly low infant mortality rates relative to Europe, their descendant pool grew exponentially over 400 years.  

  • Mayflower Pilgrims: The General Society of Mayflower Descendants estimates that roughly 10 million Americans (approx. 3% of the current population) are direct descendants. 
  • Puritans: Estimates for descendants of the 20,000 Great Migration Puritans range from 20 to 30 million Americans (approx. 6% to 9% of the population).

Due to generations of internal marriages within early New England, if you possess a confirmed lineage to one of these groups, you almost always map back to dozens of them at the exact same time.


Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy