John Stark - A Family Klos - Revolutionary War General
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John Stark
STARK, John, soldier, born in
Londonderry, New Hampshire, 28 August, 1728; died in Manchester, New Hampshire,
8 May, 1822. His father emigrated from the north of Ireland and settled on the
extreme frontier of New Hampshire in near neighborhood to the Indians, owned
extensive tracts of land about Amoskeag falls, and was an original proprietor of
Dunbarton (then called Starkstown). Here the son grew up with few advantages of
book education, but with abundant training in hunting and all athletic
employments. He made frequent hunting-excursions into the forest, and on one of
these occasions, in 1752, was taken prisoner by the savages, and retained in
captivity till he was ransomed by the colony of Massachusetts. The bold and
defiant bearing of Stark excited the admiration of his savage captors, and after
the initiatory ceremony of running the gantlet, in which he took the unexpected
part of using his club on the Indians, he was released from the drudgery usually
imposed on captives, and was called by them "the young chief." The
knowledge he thus gained of forest life and of the topography of the border was
of great service in subsequent conflicts with the Indians.
In 1755 he was appointed a lieutenant in Major Robert Rogers's famous corps
of rangers, and served with it, soon rising to the rank of captain, through all
the campaigns around Lake George and Lake Champlain, where traditions still
exist of his sagacity and bravery. At the close of the war he retired from the
army and engaged in farming at Derryfield (now Manchester, New Hampshire), and
so continued till tidings reached him of the battle of Lexington. Promptly he
then mounted his horse, and, at the head of several hundred of his neighbors,
set out to join the army at Cambridge. Being there appointed colonel, he in one
day organized a regiment of eight hundred hardy backwoodsmen.
On 17 June, 1775, he was stationed about three miles north of Boston, in a
position from which he had a full view of Banker's and Breed's hills. Seeing
that a battle was inevitable, he waited for no orders, but set out at once for
the ground, which he reached just before the conflict began. He led his men into
the fight, saying: "Boys, aim at their waistbands "--an order
that has become historical. His ammunition giving out, he was forced to retreat,
which he did with much deliberation, leading his men under a hot fire, but in
good order, across Charlestown neck to Merlin hill. After the evacuation of
Boston he marched with his regiment to New York. He was subsequently ordered to
Canada, and then rejoining Washington, was
with him at Trenton and Princeton. Having been slighted, as he thought, in the
promotions, he resigned his commission and retired to his farm.
When information arrived that General Arthur St.
Clair had retreated and Ticonderoga had been taken, New Hampshire flew to
arms, and called for Stark to command her troops. He consented on condition that
he should not be subject to any orders but his own; and to this the council of
state agreed, because the men would not march without him. Setting out with a
small force for Bennington, he there learned that Burgoyne
had dispatched Colonel Frederick Baum with 500 men to seize the stores collected
at that place. Sending out expresses to call in the militia of the neighborhood,
Stark marched out to meet him, hearing of which, Baum entrenched himself in a
strong position about six miles from Bennington, and sent to Burgoyne
for re-enforcements. Before they could arrive, Stark attacked him on 16 August,
1777. Tradition says that he called to his men as he led them to the assault: "There
they are, boys. We beat them today, or Molly Stark's a widow !"--another
of his sentences that has gone into history. Doubts have been cast on its
authenticity, for Mrs. Stark's name was Elizabeth.
The second British force of 500 men, under Colonel Breymann, presently
arriving on the scene, was likewise totally defeated. Of the 1,000 British, not
more than a hundred escaped, all the rest being killed or captured, a result of
great importance, as it led ultimately to the surrender of Burgoyne
at Saratoga. Colonel Baum, who was mortally wounded, said of the provincials: "They
fought more like hell-hounds than soldiers." The American loss was only
about seventy. Washington spoke of it immediately as "the great stroke
struck by General Stark near Bennington "; and Baroness Riedesel, then
in the British camp, wrote: "This unfortunate event paralyzed our
operations."
For this victory Stark was made a brigadier-general, 4 October, 1777, and
given the thanks of congress. He continued in active service during the
remainder of the war, displaying everywhere distinguished ability and commanding
the northern department in 1778 and 1781. In 1783 he retired to his farm, where
he lived in republican simplicity till his death at the age of ninety-three.
When he was eighty-nine years old congress allowed him a pension of sixty
dollars per month ; but with his simple tastes and habits this was not essential
to his comfort. He was a good type of the class of men who gave success to the
American Revolution With the exception of General Thomas
Sumter, he was the last surviving general of the Revolutionary army. He was
buried on his own grounds on the east bank of Merrimack river at Manchester,
where a simple granite obelisk was placed in 1829 to mark his resting-place. The
citizens of Manchester planted memorial trees around it in 1876. In August,
1887, the corner-stone was laid in Bennington of the monument seen in the
illustration, it is an obelisk of limestone, 301 feet high from foundation to
apex. It is also proposed to erect at Manchester a massive equestrian statue in
bronze of the general. Stark's biography was written by Edward Everett in
Sparks's "American Biography." See also his "Life and Official
Correspondence," by his grandson, Caleb Stark (Concord, New Hampshire,
1860).
--His brother, William Stark, soldier,
born in Londonderry, New Hampshire, 12 April, 1724; died on Long Island, New
York, about 1776, acquired a good education, and was among the first to whom the
proprietors granted lands in Londonderry. Previous to the erection of a public
meeting-house the town-meetings were held at his home. He served in the old
French war, and, as a captain of rangers on the northern frontier, was at
Ticonderoga, and fought under General Jeffrey Amherst at Louisburg and General
James Wolfe at Quebec. At the beginning of the Revolution lie applied for the
command of a regiment, but another officer was preferred by the New Hampshire
assembly, and deeming this an insult, he entered the British service as colonel.
He endeavored to persuade his brother John to adopt this course, but without
success. He is described as possessing great bravery and hardihood, but as
wanting in moral firmness. His name appears in the banishment and proscription
act of New Hampshire, and his estate was confiscated. He was a proprietor of
Piggwacket (now Fryeburg, Maine), and a hill there was named for him. His death
was caused by a fall from his horse.-
-John's son, CALEB STARK, merchant, born
in Dunbarton, New Hampshire, 3 December, 1759; died on his estate in Oxford
township, Ohio, 26 August, 1838, served at the age of fifteen as ensign in his
father's regiment at Bunker Hill, and remained with the army until the close of
the war, rising to the rank of brigade-major. He then engaged in commerce in
Boston, and removed in 1828 to Ohio.--Caleb's son, Caleb
Stark, author, born in Dunbarton, New Hampshire, 21 November, 1804;
died there, 1 February, 1864, was graduated at Harvard in 1823, studied law in
Litchfield, and afterward in New York city, and began to practice in Cincinnati,
Ohio, but soon removed to Concord, New Hampshire, and subsequently to Dunbarton,
New Hampshire, retiring from his profession. He was a member of the New
Hampshire legislature, and was the author of "Reminiscences of the French
War, containing Rogers's Expeditions with the New England Rangers, and an
Account of the Life and Military Service of John Stark" (Concord,
1831);" Memoir and Official Correspondence of Gem John Stark; with Notices
of other Officers of the Revolution" (1860): and a " History of
Dunbarton, New Hampshire, from the Grant by Mason's Assigns in 1751 to
1860" (1860).
--John's great-grandson, William Stark, lawyer,
born in Manchester, New Hampshire, about 1820; died in Somerville,
Massachusetts, 29 October, 1873, was graduated at Williams in 1850, studied law,
was admitted to the bar of New York in 1851, and practiced in Nassau. In 1853 he
removed to Manchester, remaining there until 1870, when he was placed in the
McLean asylum in Somerville, Massachusetts, as his faculties had become
impaired. Previously he had devoted himself to literary pursuits and to the care
of a large collection of rare birds and animals. His park in Manchester, which
was open to the public, was widely known. He wrote several poems, and frequently
lectured.
Edited Appletons Encyclopedia,
Copyright © 2001 VirtualologyTM