Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Patriot of the Upper Hudson: The Life and Legacy of Captain James Wilson

 


When we look back at the American Revolution, our minds often drift to the massive continental battles like Yorktown or Trenton. But the war wasn't just won by sweeping armies; it was secured mile by mile, county by county, by local militias who stood as the first and last line of defense for their homes. For our family, that defense was led by our 6th great-grandfather: Captain James Wilson (1741–1817).

Serving from the opening fractures of 1775 to the formal peace of 1783, Captain Wilson's life is a masterclass in resilience, community leadership, and pioneering grit.

Part I: The Crucible of New York’s Frontier

Born in 1741 along the rolling rural landscapes of eastern New York, James Wilson grew up in a world defined by territorial uncertainty. By the time the Revolutionary War erupted in 1775, he was a mature man in his mid-30s, deeply embedded in his community and ready to lead.

He was commissioned as a Captain in Webster’s Regiment (historically recognized as the 14th Regiment of the Albany County Militia), commanded by Colonel Alexander Webster.

   [British Stronghold]                  [The Neutral Ground]                [Patriot Stronghold]

   New York City (South)  <--->   Columbia/Dutchess Co   <--->       Albany (North)


To understand James’s service, one must understand the terrifying strategic reality of Columbia and Dutchess counties during the war. Situated directly between British-occupied New York City and the Patriot stronghold of Albany, this region was a pressure cooker. It was a vicious civil war fought in the shadows. Neighbors were divided; tenant farmers loyal to the Crown (Loyalists or "Torries") routinely clashed with Patriot selectors.

As a Militia Captain, James wasn't just marching in parade formations. His responsibilities were raw, constant, and dangerous:

  • Suppressing Tory Uprisings: Keeping localized British sympathizers from sabotaging the Patriot cause or launching internal coups.
  • Securing the Supply Lines: Guarding the vital agricultural bounty of the Hudson Valley, which fed George Washington's Continental Army.
  • Frontier Scouting: Leading tactical scouting parties through dense forests to intercept British raiders and protect rural homesteads.

During the critical Saratoga Campaign of 1777, units like Webster's Regiment provided the vital manpower wall that checked British advances, fundamentally turning the tide of the entire global war. James served through it all, seeing the birth of a new nation before finally laying down his sword in 1783.

Part II: Love, Loss, and the Turning of Generations

While James was holding the line against the British, his personal life was marked by the intense, quiet heartbreaks of the era. He married Annatgen Kuhn (1745–1773). In the summer of 1773, Annatgen gave birth to their son, Simon Wilson. Tragically, like so many mothers of the colonial frontier, Annatgen passed away shortly after—leaving James to face the looming storm of the Revolution as both a grieving widower and a single father to an infant son.

Simon grew up listening to the echoes of musket fire and the stories of his father's militia company. James survived the war, living to see his son grow, marry Mary Van Buskirk, and pass the family legacy down to a new generation born into a free United States.

Captain James Wilson passed away on December 3, 1817, in Dutchess County, leaving behind a proud republic and an unbreakable lineage.

Part III: The Lineage of Liberty

The torch lit by Captain James Wilson in the forests of the Hudson Valley passed through five generations of frontiersmen, farmers, and citizens, weaving directly into the fabric of American history.

GEN 1: The Immigrant Roots

  • James III Wilson (1665–1761) & Elizabeth Gowan
  • The Origin: Born in Londonderry, Ireland, James III made the perilous Atlantic crossing to Chester, New Hampshire, anchoring the family’s future in American soil.

GEN 2: The Migration West

  • James Wilson (1720–1768) & Margaret Elizabeth Kay (Key)
  • The Bridge: Born in Fife, Scotland, James pushed the family line down into the fertile, highly contested borderlands of eastern New York, setting the stage for his son's historic role.

GEN 3: The Patriot Captain

  • Capt. James Wilson (1741–1817) & Annatgen Kuhn (1745–1773)
  • The Anchor: Commanding Officer in Webster’s Regiment, New York Militia. Defender of the Upper Hudson Valley.

GEN 4: The Post-War Builders

  • Simon Wilson (1773–1850) & Mary Van Buskirk (1774–1859)
  • The Legacy: Born on the eve of the Revolution, Simon lived to see the young nation expand, transitioning the family from wartime survival to peacetime prosperity in Dutchess County.

GEN 5: Daughters of the Republic

  • Jane Wilson (1794–1871) & Jacobus "Jacob" Winegard (1784–1868)
  • The Continuum: Jane carried the Wilson bloodline into Albany and Schoharie counties. Her daughter, Charity Winegard, would later give birth to Charles H. Plympton—a brave soldier who would defend the Union in the American Civil War, keeping the family's military tradition of defending freedom alive nearly a century after his great-great-grandfather first took up arms.

A Note for our Readers: When we look at our family tree, names and dates can feel distant. But the next time you look at the Hudson River or drive through the historic hills of Dutchess and Columbia counties, remember that the ground beneath you was protected by the vigilance, bravery, and sacrifices of Captain James Wilson. He fought so that his children—and his 6th great-grandchildren—could live in liberty.

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


The Boylston Bloodline — From Colonial Surgeons to a Founding Father

 


Every family tree has a trunk from which unexpected branches grow. In our journey to celebrate America’s 250th anniversary, we often look to the battlefields or the frontier. But sometimes, the path to American independence runs straight through our own DNA to the very rooms where the nation was conceived.

Through our 10th great-grandfather, Thomas Boylston (1615–1653), our family shares a direct bloodline with one of the primary architects of American liberty: the second President of the United States, John Adams.

While Adams is remembered as the blunt, passionate voice of the Continental Congress, the traits that made him a revolutionary were cultivated by his mother’s family—the Boylstons. It is a lineage of grit, intellect, and deep-seated independence that we happen to share.

The Seed of Intellect: A Family of Physicians

When the immigrant Thomas Boylston stepped off the ship Defence in Massachusetts in 1635, he brought with him skills as a surgeon and apothecary from London. He passed this intellectual curiosity down to his son, Dr. Thomas Boylston (1645–1695). While our branch descended through Dr. Thomas’s sister, Elizabeth Boylston, the Massachusetts Boylstons became some of the colony’s most prominent scientific minds.

Dr. Thomas’s brother (and President Adams' great-uncle), Dr. Zabdiel Boylston, famously risked his life and reputation in 1721 by introducing the first smallpox inoculations to America during a devastating outbreak—a brave embrace of science over superstition that John and Abigail Adams would later fiercely champion.

Susanna Boylston: The Mother of Independence

This world of books, medicine, and Boston refinement is where Susanna Boylston (1708–1797) grew up. When she married the agrarian Puritan Deacon John Adams Sr., she brought an elite, energetic spark to their humble Braintree saltbox cottage.

"As my parents were both fond of reading, I was very early taught to read at home."

John Adams, Memoirs

John Adams inherited his short stature, his sharp intellect, and his legendary "fiery temper" directly from Susanna. She was a woman of formidable character who refused to let her children settle for a quiet life. She personally cultivated the mind of the boy who would grow up to defy a king.

Susanna lived an astonishing 89 years. She heard the cannons of Bunker Hill, endured the long anxieties of the Revolutionary War, and witnessed the birth of the Republic. In the twilight of her life, in the spring of 1797, she saw her eldest son sworn in as President of the United States. She passed away just a month into his term, knowing the country was safe in her boy’s hands.

Two Branches of the Same Root

While Susanna’s branch was nurturing a president in Braintree, our direct line was carrying that exact same Boylston fortitude into Rhode Island and the Massachusetts borderlands through the Plimpton family.

As we previously explored in The Seeds of the Boylston Line, the grit of our shared ancestors didn't dilute over the generations. When the Revolutionary War broke out, President John Adams was fighting for independence with his quill in Philadelphia, while his fourth cousins—our 6th great-grandfather Captain Job Plimpton and 5th great-grandfather Corporal Job Plimpton Jr.—were answering the Rhode Island Alarms with muskets in hand.

They were two sides of the same coin: one family bloodline, divided by generations, but completely united in the birth of a new nation.

As we approach America’s 250th anniversary, remembering John Adams isn't just an exercise in reading history books. For us, it’s a family reunion. The fire that burned in the heart of the Old Patriot of Quincy is the very same spark passed down through the centuries to us.

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


Monday, June 29, 2026

Lt. William Smith: Climax at the Siege of Yorktown

 


Lt. William Smith (1748–1824) of Haddam, Connecticut, embodied the patriotic service of a multi-generational New England family that helped build the colonies and secure American independence. As our 6th great-grandfather, his story ties early settlement to Revolutionary heroism. 


Family Roots in Colonial Connecticut


William descended from sturdy pioneer stock. His great-grandfather Simon Smith (c. 1628–1687), an immigrant from Stratford-upon-Avon, England, was among the first settlers of Haddam (originally the Thirty Mile Island plantation) in the early 1660s. Simon and his wife Elizabeth Bateman helped purchase land from the Wangunk Indians and established a homestead. Their son Benjamin Smith (c. 1664–1763) lived to nearly 100, marrying Hannah Benton and continuing as a Haddam farmer. Benjamin’s son Daniel Smith (1716–1793) served as a Corporal in the 7th Connecticut Militia during the Revolution. 


William, born 14 October 1748 to Daniel and Martha, grew up in this river town amid farming, community life, and growing colonial tensions. He married Esther Brainerd (1747–1816) and raised a family, including daughter Esther (who married Thomas Bailey). Like his forebears, he was rooted in Haddam’s agricultural world before war called him to service. 


Service in the 6th Connecticut Regiment


In May 1777, William received a commission as Lieutenant in the 6th Connecticut Regiment, Continental Line. This unit, reorganized for longer-term federal service, drew men from towns like Haddam and participated in the grueling Middle Department campaigns. It fought in the New York–New Jersey theater and at the Battle of Monmouth (1778), enduring harsh winters, supply shortages, and the steady attrition of war. William rose to Captain-Lieutenant, reflecting leadership among reliable New England troops who formed a backbone of Washington’s army. 


On 1 January 1781, he transferred with select comrades into the Corps of Light Infantry—elite, mobile battalions prized for discipline, marksmanship, and bayonet prowess. These units operated under Lafayette and saw high-tempo action. 


Climax at the Siege of Yorktown


By fall 1781, the allied Franco-American army trapped British forces under Cornwallis at Yorktown, Virginia. To tighten the noose, Washington needed to capture two forward British redoubts blocking the second siege parallel. On the night of 14 October 1781, ~400 American light infantrymen assaulted Redoubt 10 while the French attacked Redoubt 9. 


Lt. Col. Alexander Hamilton led the American attack (after asserting seniority). The troops advanced with unloaded muskets and fixed bayonets for surprise and shock. They crossed open ground under fire, pushed through abatis and fraises (some impatiently climbing over obstacles rather than waiting for sappers), and stormed the parapet in fierce hand-to-hand combat. Despite British musketry and grenades, the redoubt fell in about 10 minutes, with most defenders captured. American casualties were relatively light given the intensity. 


This bold nighttime action—exemplifying the Light Infantry’s elite status—allowed completion of the siege lines and intensified bombardment. Cornwallis surrendered on 19 October 1781, effectively ending major hostilities. Connecticut men, including those from William’s circles, were well represented in the Light Infantry battalions at Yorktown. 


Post-War Life and Legacy


William survived the war and returned to Haddam as a farmer and community figure, often remembered with his military rank (Lieutenant or Captain-Lieutenant). Esther died in 1816; he followed on 20 May 1824. They rest in the Old Burying Ground in Haddam. 


From Simon Smith’s founding of Haddam in the 1660s through Daniel’s militia service and William’s Continental and Light Infantry contributions, this family exemplified the arc of early America: immigration and settlement, endurance on the land, and commitment to liberty. Lt. William Smith’s path—from Connecticut farmer to officer in the 6th Regiment and participant in the decisive Yorktown assault—highlights the ordinary citizens who turned the tide of the Revolution. His descendants, including through Esther and the Bailey line, carry forward this patriotic heritage in a town still tied to its colonial roots. 


This narrative draws together the family’s deep Connecticut foundations with William’s specific military record.


Thank you Grok xAI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy


Celebrating America 250: Jackson Bailey, an American Farmer

 


To truly celebrate America’s 250th anniversary, we must look past the textbook battles and political declarations to honor the backbone of the nation: the American farmer. Theirs is a story written in sweat, soil, and sheer endurance. To understand that legacy, I look to the life of my great-grandfather, David Jackson Bailey.

His journey through the sweeping landscapes of the American frontier tells the story of an era when survival required a blend of family devotion, community reliance, and unyielding grit.

The Nebraska Prairie: A Test of Endurance (1884–1902)

Born in Moravia, Iowa, on November 19, 1865, David moved to Elk Horn, Nebraska, when he was just five years old. It was on the bleak Nebraska prairie that he met Lillian Amanda Pierce. The young couple married on October 27, 1884, in Valley County, embarking on a life together that would span more than six decades.

They began farming in Liberty Township, but homesteading in Nebraska during the late 19th century was a brutal test of human will. Settlers like David and Lillian were lured by the widely publicized myth that "rain follows the plow"—the false scientific belief that cultivating the soil would permanently increase rainfall.

Instead, they were met by the harsh realities of the Great Plains:

  • Total Crop Failures: Punishing, multi-year droughts regularly turned fields to dust.
  • Plagues of Locusts: Devastating insect infestations could strip an entire season's crop overnight.
  • Extreme Winters: Sub-zero freezes tested the structural limits of their small, three-room sod house.

While these unforgiving conditions triggered a mass abandonment of the region and plunged families into severe financial depression, David and Lillian stuck it out for nearly twenty years, raising six children against incredible odds.

The Rolling Hills of the Palouse: A Community Effort (1903–1928)

In 1903, seeking a fresh start, the Bailey family migrated West. They settled on Little Bear Ridge near Kendrick, Idaho, where they welcomed their seventh child and turned their hands to dryland wheat farming.

Farming the steep, dizzying slopes of the Palouse before the motorized tractors of the 1920s was a monumental, collaborative family endeavor. It required a unique seasonal work cycle centered entirely around animal power and community survival:

  • Contour Tillage: Using walking plows pulled by heavy draft horse teams, farmers had to plow horizontally along the steep hillsides. This crucial technique prevented precious topsoil from eroding and managed moisture in the dry soil.
  • Fall Seeding: Using horse-drawn deep-furrow split-packer drills, they sowed winter wheat in the autumn to lock in naturally stored winter moisture.

  • The "Threshing Rings": Harvesting was the most demanding time of the year. Because individual families could rarely afford massive threshing machines or feed the massive horse teams required to run them, neighbors formed cooperative "rings." They rotated from farm to farm, sharing equipment, livestock, and hard manual labor.
  • The Water Wagons: July and August harvests were fiercely hot. Dedicated crews used "water monkey" wagons to constantly haul hydration out to the dusty fields for both the exhausted men and the draft horses.

  • The Side Hustle: To supplement their income, David ran a local firewood business. Using a horse-powered drag saw, he felled trees, cut logs into rounds, and split, stacked, and hauled wood to his neighbors.

True self-sufficiency meant that every family member had a role. While the men were in the fields, the women and older children managed large vegetable gardens, canned food, and raised livestock to guarantee survival through the long winter months.

The Final Harvest: The "One-Woman-and-One-Man" Factory

In 1928, David and Lillian officially "retired" to a five-acre tract in Lewiston, Idaho. But for a lifelong American farmer, retirement rarely means resting.

A wonderful article published around 1946 in the Lewiston Orchards Newspaper captures the beautifully resilient spirit of their final years together.

"Molasses Produced From Orchards Grown Sugar Cane"

Excerpts from the original 1946 feature:

An enterprise in Lewiston Orchards meriting mention because of its pioneer character, ingenious construction, unusual production, and the personal history of the owners is the "one-woman-and-one-man" cane molasses factory operated by Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Bailey, whose combined ages total 156 years...


When both Mr. and Mrs. Bailey were approaching the allotted three score and ten years, their children importuned them to retire from the farm. The habits of a lifetime are difficult to cast aside... On the five-acre tract to which they moved, they carry on with the energy and enthusiasm of young people. They keep a horse, a cow, a pig, some chickens, and a few hives of bees.

Powered by "Dynamite"

David engineered a homemade molasses mill using a cane press mounted on a concrete pier. The entire operation relied on a trusted, multi-ton collaborator:

"To the long end of a pole he hitches a fat, wise, old and trusty horse by the forceful name of 'Dynamite'... When the processing begins, 'Dynamite' reluctantly gets into clockwise motion, the press begins to turn, Mr. Bailey feeds the stalks through, and Mrs. Bailey on the opposite side pushes the squeezed stalks aside... She also watches to make certain the cane cider pours into the waiting barrel."

Once collected, David would spend three continuous hours over an outdoor furnace, meticulously stirring, skimming, and testing the bubbling vat. When an onlooker asked how he knew when the molasses was done, David smiled: "The same way my wife knows when jelly has jelled. It takes experience."

A Legacy Written in the Soil

David Jackson Bailey passed away on May 12, 1949, at the age of 83, from pneumonia—the tragic final complication of an injury he suffered while doing what he loved: breaking a horse. Lillian followed him in 1957. At the time of their golden years, they boasted 7 children, 25 grandchildren, and 13 great-grandchildren.

As Lillian beautifully reflected in her later years:

"We endured many hardships but we have a peaceful existence... and wonder why more people our age don't live on acreages where they can enjoy the pleasure of producing their own crops and the good health that continuous hard work brings about."

As we celebrate America 250, we honor Jackson, Lillian, and the generations of pioneer farmers who built this country from the topsoil up. Their endurance is our inheritance.

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


Sunday, June 28, 2026

The Skirmisher of the Delaware: The Story of Sergeant Joseph Hallowell

 


The wartime record of Sergeant Joseph Hallowell (1785–1872) directly links him to the critical defensive actions taken to protect Philadelphia from a British invasion during the height of the War of 1812.

Deep Dive: The Defense of Philadelphia (1814)

When British forces under Admiral Sir Alexander Cochrane sailed up the Chesapeake Bay in August 1814, they burned Washington, D.C., and attacked Baltimore. Panic swept through Pennsylvania. It was widely expected that the British fleet would turn its attention to Philadelphia—the wealthy, cultural heart of the young American republic.

Governor Simon Snyder issued an emergency mobilization of the Pennsylvania Militia. Joseph Hallowell stepped forward and was appointed Sergeant in Captain David Altemus’ Company of Light Infantry.

  • The Chain of Command: His company belonged to the Second Brigade, First Division of the Pennsylvania Militia, under the immediate field command of Brigadier General Thomas Snyder and Major General Isaac Worrell.
  • The Light Infantry Designation: Being in a Light Infantry company meant Joseph was part of an elite, rapid-movement unit. Light infantrymen were selected for their agility and sharp marksmanship. Unlike standard heavy infantry, they were trained to deploy ahead of the main battle lines to act as skirmishers, harass enemy advances, and quickly cover flanks.
  • The Camp Dupont Mobilization: Joseph’s regiment marched to defensive positions south of Philadelphia, primarily stationed along the Brandywine and Delaware rivers at places like Camp Dupont (near Wilmington, Delaware). Thousands of Pennsylvania troops dug massive earthworks and fortifications, creating such a formidable line of defense that the British command ultimately decided a land assault on Philadelphia was tactically impossible. Joseph's military record is officially preserved today in the historic Muster Rolls of the Pennsylvania Volunteers in the War of 1812-1814.

🧬 A Lineage of Patriot Blood & Sacrifice

Joseph's generation was deeply impacted by the realities of American conflict. His family tree highlights an unbroken line of service:

  • The Civil War Connection: Joseph's son, Lieutenant Rifford Randolph Hallowell (1816–1864), carried his father's military spirit right into the American Civil War. Rifford served in the Union Army and gave the ultimate sacrifice, dying in 1864 during the brutal campaigns of the war.
  • The Twin Anchors of Life: Joseph lived an incredibly long, full life of 86 years, surviving both his first wife, Martha Evans, and his second wife, Rebecca Stump. He spent his final decades watching the tiny settlements around Philadelphia transform into a sprawling industrial landscape, finally passing away in Oxford Village in 1872.

πŸ“œ The Skirmisher of the Delaware: The Story of Sergeant Joseph Hallowell

Celebrating America 250

In the late summer of 1814, a dark shadow fell over the eastern seaboard of the United States. The skies over Washington, D.C., glowed red with the flames of the burning Capitol, and the British fleet was charting a course up the coast. The city of Philadelphia—the cradle of American liberty—stood directly in the crosshairs of an empire.

But the British hadn't reckoned on the grit of men like my 4th great-grandfather, Joseph Hallowell.

Born in Chester County, Pennsylvania, in 1785 to Joshua Hallowell and Hannah Trump, Joseph was raised on stories of the Revolution. When the call went out for men to throw up a wall of steel between the British army and Philadelphia, Joseph didn't hesitate. He left his home, kissed his wife Martha goodbye, and marched straight into camp, earning the stripes of a Sergeant in Captain David Altemus’ Company of Light Infantry.

As a Sergeant in the Light Infantry, Joseph wasn't just another man in a static line. He was a leader of skirmishers—the agile, fast-moving eyes and ears of Brigadier General Thomas Snyder’s Second Brigade. While the heavy infantry held the main lines, Joseph and his men pushed out into the thickets and riverbanks along the Delaware, flintlocks primed, ready to ambush British landing parties and stall any advance toward the city.

Through the damp, tense autumn of 1814, Joseph led his men through grueling drills and muddy watches at the fortified encampments protecting the city. Their sheer numbers and defensive readiness broke the British will to strike; Philadelphia remained safe, and the American republic survived its second great trial by fire.

Joseph returned home from the war to build a lasting legacy in Philadelphia County. He was a man of deep resilience, anchoring his family through the loss of his beloved Martha, finding love again with Rebecca Stump, and raising children who inherited his fierce devotion to country. He lived long enough to see his own son, Lieutenant Rifford Hallowell, march off to defend the Union in the 1860s, carrying the same Hallowell courage into a new century.

When old Sergeant Joseph finally went to his rest in June 1872 at the age of eighty-six, he left behind a nation that was whole, strong, and free. He was a defender of the birthplace of independence, a true Pennsylvania patriot, and a proud chapter in our family’s long American trail.

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