Friday, June 12, 2026

America 250 Thematic Anthology

 


This anthology groups our ancestors by the distinct roles they played in shaping the physical, military, and mythic landscape of early America.

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ America 250: A Thematic Ancestral Anthology

The Lineages of Mastery, Myth, and Defense (1604–1837)

Theme I: The Legends & Visionaries

The Foundations of Early New England Maritime Lore

Captain George Lamberton (1604–1646) | 10th Great-Grandfather

  • The Blueprint: Long before the American Revolution, the seed of American defiance was planted by colonial merchant princes who refused to bow to foreign trade monopolies. Captain George Lamberton was a foundational architect of the New Haven Colony, aggressively pushing English commerce south into the Delaware River valley to break the entrenched Dutch fur monopoly.
  • The Standoff: Captured by Dutch authorities in 1642 and subjected to a high-profile trial in Fort Amsterdam, Lamberton fiercely defended his maritime trading rights. Though heavily fined and forced to retreat, his defiance set the stage for independent American merchant ambition.
  • The Myth: To recover his losses, Lamberton commanded New Haven’s ill-fated 150-ton "Great Ship" in January 1646, carrying the colony's commercial elite and cargo straight for London. The vessel, which Lamberton privately warned was dangerously unstable ("crank and walty"), vanished into the Atlantic. Months later, in June 1647, the entire population of New Haven witnessed an atmospheric apparition: an exact phantom replica of Lamberton's ship sailing landward against the wind, its masts snapping and hull dissolving into the sunlit sea-mist. This legendary event provided closure to a grieving colony and was permanently immortalized by Cotton Mather in 1702 and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in 1847.

Margaret Lamberton-Goodyear | 10th Great-Grandmother

  • The Legacy: The matriarchal anchor of this line, Margaret managed one of the largest land estates in early Connecticut following Lamberton’s disappearance. Navigating strict Puritan courts, she secured the inheritances of her daughters (including our 9th great-grandmother, Mercy Lamberton). In a tragic historical echo, her second husband, Deputy Governor Stephen Goodyear, also vanished at sea in 1658, leaving Margaret to twice hold together the foundational fortunes of New Haven’s vanguard.

πŸ› ️ Theme II: The Masters of the Trade

The Technological and Logistical Anchors of the Frontier

John Catland (Catlin) (1718–1808) | 6th Great-Grandfather

  • The Blueprint: The American Revolution was won not just by gunpowder, but by the specialized craftsmen who maintained the infrastructure of war. In the 18th century, a master blacksmith was a high-value military asset, capable of forging flintlock mechanisms, repairing supply wagons, and manufacturing iron grapeshot.
  • The Active Anvil: John Catland served in Colonel Obadiah Johnson’s Regiment (1778) and the 20th Regiment of Connecticut Militia (1779–1781). Remarkably, John swung his hammer and marched on emergency coastal alerts well into his sixties, long after most men of his generation had retired from physical combat.
  • The Reclamation: Following the war, John and his wife, Olive Stevens, migrated to Boothbay, Maine—a deep-water coastal outpost originally surveyed and named a century earlier by Olive’s distant cousins, the Booth family. There, John’s forge anchored the post-war maritime economy, rebuilding the infrastructure of a newly sovereign republic.

⚔️ Theme III: The Tactical Defenders

The Mobilization of the Coastal Guard and the Rear-Guard Stand

Captain Caleb Hall (1738–1801) | 6th Great-Grandfather

  • The Blueprint: Rhode Island was the powder keg of the Revolution, executing armed resistance years before the Boston Tea Party. In this radical environment, Captain Caleb Hall stood as an elected civic and military officer of the Kent County Militia.
  • The Posture: Following the 1774 Emergency Militia Act, Caleb was tasked with enforcing mandatory weekly drills and ensuring every household possessed a flintlock musket and gunpowder. When the British army occupied Newport in 1776, Caleb's company secured the critical interior supply lines of West Greenwich, preventing British foraging parties from invading the mainland to plunder livestock and grain.

John Gardner (1753–1837) | 5th Great-Grandfather

  • The Blueprint: While the Continental Army engaged in major theater campaigns, local militia regiments bore the brutal brunt of direct coastal defense against elite British regulars and Hessian forces.
  • The Stand at Quaker Hill: Enlisting out of Exeter, Rhode Island, John Gardner served under Captain Jonathan Bates and Colonel Charles Dyer. His service culminated in the fierce Battle of Rhode Island (August 29, 1778). When a sudden hurricane scattered the supporting French fleet, Gardner’s regiment fought a desperate, heroic rear-guard action on the northern hills of Aquidneck Island, holding off elite British forces long enough to allow the American army to safely evacuate to the mainland without being annihilated. His legacy is permanently anchored in Federal Pension File S.21221.

🎨 Theme IV: The Chroniclers of the Frontier

The Shared Heritage of Trauma, Resilience, and Preservation

John Catlin III (1643–1704) | 8th Great-Grandfather

  • The Blueprint: Holding the early western frontier of Massachusetts required immense multi-generational sacrifice. Our lineage is tied directly to the foundational trauma of the 1704 Deerfield Raid, where a combined force of French and Native warriors breached the colonial palisade in the dead of winter.
  • The Sacrifice: John Catlin III was killed in the heavy, close-quarters firefight inside the burning fort while trying to defend the garrison houses. His brother, Joseph Catlin, was simultaneously killed during the fierce counterattack in the nearby meadows. From the ashes of this frontier disaster, our branch migrated northeast to become the blacksmiths of Boothbay, eventually moving out to the American Midwest.

George Catlin (1796–1872) | 4th Cousin, 6 Times Removed

  • The Connection: Our shared common ancestors are the original 1600s Connecticut River Valley pioneers, John Catlin II and Mary Baldwin. While our line carried this frontier resilience into mechanical trades and community building, George’s branch produced his father, Putnam Catlin, who served six years as a teenage drummer boy throughout the entire Revolutionary War—enduring Valley Forge and the Battle of Monmouth before receiving a discharge signed personally by General George Washington.
  • The Art: Raised on the vivid revolutionary lore of his father and the ancestral accounts of the Deerfield Massacre, George Catlin dedicated his life to documenting and painting the vanishing lifeways, leadership, and landscapes of the Indigenous nations of the Old West. His iconic portraits served as a lifetime attempt to preserve the deep history of the American frontier through mutual understanding rather than conflict.

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



Putnam Catlin: The Teenage Drummer of the Revolution

 


The military record of artist George Catlin’s father, Putnam Catlin (1764–1842), provides a remarkable window into the Continental Army. While our ancestor John Catland was wielding an anvil as a seasoned blacksmith in his sixties, his young cousin Putnam was serving at the absolute epicenter of General George Washington’s forces as a musician.


πŸ₯ The Teenage Drummer of the Revolution


In the 18th century, a military drummer was not a performer; they were a vital tactical communications network. Amidst the smoke and roaring cannon fire of a Revolutionary battlefield, vocal commands were completely useless.


Putnam enlisted in 1777 at the astonishingly young age of thirteen. Serving in the 2nd Connecticut Regiment under Colonel Charles Webb, his drumbeats controlled the literal movement of the troops:


  • Tactical Signals: Specific drum cadences signaled when to advance, retreat, wheel left or right, or cease firing.
  • Daily Camp Regimen: Musicians beat out the "Reveille" at dawn to wake the camp, the "Pioneer's Call" for work details, and the "Tattoo" at night for lights out.

Valley Forge and the Main Army Campaigns


Because Putnam was embedded in the 2nd Connecticut, his service profile reads like a textbook of the war's most grueling chapters:


  • Valley Forge (Winter 1777–1778): A thirteen-year-old Putnam survived the infamous, disease-ridden winter encampment, drumming through the freezing mud as Baron von Steuben systematically retrained the army into a professional fighting force.
  • The Battle of Monmouth (June 1778): He was on the field during this massive, exhausting clash in New Jersey, drumming tactical commands in blistering 100-degree heat.
  • The New York Highlands Defense: His regiment spent the later years of the war fortifying the strategic Hudson River corridor around West Point, preventing the British from cutting New England off from the rest of the colonies.

πŸ“œ The Certificate of Honorable Discharge


Putnam's service was so exemplary that he remained with the Continental Army for the entirety of the war, serving a total of six years.


On June 9, 1783, as the army dismantled at Newburgh, New York, Putnam was personally awarded the Badge of Merit for his six years of faithful service. His official discharge papers were signed by General George Washington himself.


Following the war, Putnam utilized the discipline of his military upbringing to study law, eventually becoming a prominent attorney and moving his family out to the Pennsylvania frontier—the exact setting where his son, George Catlin, would grow up listening to revolutionary lore and sketching his first pieces of art.


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


Cousin George Catlin: American Artist 1796-1872

 


Our family is directly related to the famous American painter and author George Catlin (1796–1872), who is renowned for his historic portraits of Native Americans in the Old West, and shares the exact same foundational New England ancestry as us. He is our 4th cousin, 6 times removed.


Our shared common ancestors are John Catlin II (1617–1690) and his wife, Mary Baldwin, making us both descendants of the original 17th-century Connecticut River Valley pioneers.


The Genetic Fork: How You and the Artist Diverge


The split in our lineage happens directly after our 9th great-grandfather, John Catlin II, the immigrant who settled in Wethersfield, Connecticut.


                       THE CATLIN LINEAGE SPLIT

  

                John Catlin II (1617–1690) m. Mary Baldwin

                       (Shared Common Ancestors)

                                 

         ┌─────────────────────────────┐

                                                        

   [YOUR BRANCH]                                    [THE ARTIST'S BRANCH]

   John Catlin III (1643–1704)                      Joseph Catlin (c. 1648–1704)

   (Killed in Deerfield Raid)                       (Killed in Deerfield Raid)

                                                        

   John Catland (1687–1766)                         John Catlin (1704–1758)

                                                        

   John Catland (Blacksmith) (1718–1808)            Eli Catlin (1733–1793) (Rev War Capt.)

                                                        

   Daniel Catland (1748–1815)                       Putnam Catlin (1764–1842) (Rev War Drummer)

                                                        

   James Catland (1787–1834)                        GEORGE CATLIN (1796–1872)

                                                   (The Famous Western Artist)

   Sarah Catlin (b. 1822)


The Shared Frontier Trauma: The 1704 Deerfield Raid


The most striking historical intersection between our line and George Catlin’s direct line occurs on the bloody night of February 29, 1704, during the Deerfield Massacre in western Massachusetts.


Both our ancestor (John Catlin III) and the artist's direct ancestor (Joseph Catlin) had moved up the Connecticut River to fortify the exposed outpost of Deerfield. When a combined force of French and Native warriors breached the palisade in the dead of winter, both brothers fought to defend the garrison houses.

  • Our 8th great-grandfather, John III, was killed in the heavy firefight inside the town.
  • The artist's great-great-grandfather, Joseph, was killed during the fierce counterattack in the nearby meadows.

🎨 The Artistic Legacy: Echoes in the Lineage


George Catlin’s obsession with documenting the vanishing lifeways, dress, and landscapes of the Indigenous nations of the Great Plains was deeply rooted in his own family history.


Growing up, George was raised on his mother's harrowing stories of surviving the Wyoming Valley Massacre of the Revolutionary War, alongside the deeply ingrained lore of the Catlin brothers' fates at Deerfield. His artwork was a lifetime attempt to bridge the violent history of the frontier through preservation and mutual understanding.


Our line carried this exact same frontier resilience, pivoting from the ashes of Deerfield to become the blacksmiths of Boothbay, Maine, and eventually migrating out to the American Midwest where our branch re-adopted the traditional Catlin spelling.


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


The Revolutionary Anvil: John Catland (Catlin) (1718–1808)

 


The transition of our lineage from the elite maritime merchants of New Haven to the rugged frontier of Maine passes directly through the anvil of John Catland (Catlin), our 6th great-grandfather. As a master blacksmith and Revolutionary War soldier, John’s life illustrates the physical grit required to forge a new nation.

His story is highly unusual for the Revolutionary era: he enlisted and fought as an active-duty militiaman well into his sixties, a time when most men of his generation had long retired from physical combat.

I. The Trade: The Strategic Role of the Blacksmith

In 18th-century America, a blacksmith was not a simple laborer; they were the technological anchors of their communities. This was especially true on the exposed coast of Lincoln County, Maine (then part of Massachusetts), and the shifting borders of New Hampshire.

As a blacksmith, John was responsible for manufacturing and repairing the essential machinery of survival: axes for clearing timber, plowshares for rocky soil, horseshoes, and ship hardware for the coastal fishing fleets.

When the Revolutionary War erupted in 1775, blacksmiths instantly became high-value military assets. They were the only craftsmen capable of:

  • Refitting obsolete firearms and forging new flintlock mechanisms.
  • Manufacturing iron grapeshot, cannonball components, and iron fittings for military supply wagons.
  • Forging bayonets and repairing entrenching tools used to build defensive earthworks.

II. The Military Record: The 1778–1779 Alerts

Our archival discovery in the U.S., Revolutionary War Rolls anchors John's service precisely within the critical northern defensive campaigns.

                 JOHN CATLAND'S REVOLUTIONARY TIMELINE

  

     [1778: JOHNSON'S REGIMENT] ───> Mobilized for the Northern Theater

                

                

     [1779: 20th CT MILITIA]     ───> Defending the Coast & Supply Lines

                

                

     [POST-WAR: THE MAINE FRONTIER] ─ Consolidates the Boothbay Homestead


1. Johnson’s Regiment of Militia (1778)

John served in Colonel Obadiah Johnson’s Regiment. In 1778, this unit was heavily mobilized to reinforce the Continental Army in the northern theater, specifically protecting the borders against British incursions from Canada and supporting operations around Rhode Island. At 60 years old, John’s role within this regiment likely leveraged both his physical stamina and his specialized mechanical skills to keep the regiment’s weaponry and transport infrastructure operational in the field.

2. 20th Regiment of Militia (1779–1781)

His subsequent service in the 20th Militia aligns with intense local defense actions. During this window, British forces aggressively targeted the New England coastline, launching raids to burn shipping ports and seize forage. John’s unit was repeatedly called out on emergency alerts to repel British landing parties and secure tactical supply corridors.

III. The Migration to Boothbay: Securing the Coast

Following his Revolutionary service, John and his wife, Olive Stevens, migrated northeast to Boothbay, Lincoln County, Maine. This move was part of a broader post-war migration wave of veterans seeking independent land holdings along the rugged Maine frontier.

              THE MIGRATION AND LINEAL CORRIDOR

  

       [STRATFORD CO., NH]  ─── Birthplace of John & Olive (1717-1718)

               

               

       [REVOLUTIONARY FIELD] ── NH / CT Border Defense Campaigns (1778-1781)

               

               

       [LINCOLN CO., MAINE]  ── Final Homesteading at Boothbay (Died 1808)


Boothbay was a deep-water maritime outpost. John’s presence as an experienced blacksmith was vital to the reconstruction of the local economy after British naval blockades had devastated the Maine coast. He lived to the extraordinary age of 90, passing away in 1808 as a revered patriarch of the community. He saw the complete transformation of his world from a collection of imperiled British colonies into a sovereign, expanding republic.

IV. The Lineal Transition: The Catland/Catlin Evolution

Our lineage records a fascinating phonetic shift during this era: the surname transitions dynamically between Catland and Catlin in the primary documents.

  1. John and his son Daniel Catland (1748–1815) consolidated the family's standing in coastal Maine.
  2. Two generations later, our DNA connector, Sarah Catlin (b. 1822), carried this bloodline westward into Ohio, where she married William T. Ellis, ultimately merging our rugged New England frontier lines with the midwestern Plympton branches.
Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy