In the
mid-nineteenth century, Hannah Ingraham dictated her
reminiscences to a neighbour, Cornelia Tippet, who
“wrote it down as nearly as possible in the language
of the narrator.” The result was a powerful memoir
that allows us to see the Loyalist experience in the
American Revolution through the eyes of a frightened
child.
On the map of Hannah's travels,
her journey begins at the Ingraham farm
in New Concord, New York, where her parents, Benjamin and
Jerusha Barrit Ingraham, were committed Loyalists. In June of
1776, when local rebels began a round-up of politically suspect
adult males, Benjamin fled to join first a band of Loyalist
partisans, then the King's American Regiment.
While Benjamin served, the
persecution of the Ingraham family continued. Superbly organized
at the local level, the rebels formed “District
Committees” or “Committees of Safety,”
empowered to take any action necessary to suppress dissent,
including arbitrary arrest and confiscation of property. The
“Committee men” of King’s District confiscated
the Ingraham farm and livestock and forced Hannah's mother to
pay rent.
When the fighting ended, there
was no place for Hannah and her family in the new United States.
The soldiers of the King’s American Regiment and their
families were evacuated from New York on the William and King
George, part of the “Fall Fleet” that reached Saint
John on October 4, 1783. From there, the Ingraham family made
their way up the Saint John River to the site of Fredericton,
where they settled down to live in peace for the first time in
seven years.
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