 |



|
 |

John Stark: War, Family, and Betrayal
We often think of the Civil War as the conflict
that pitted “brother against brother,” but
the Revolutionary War also splintered families along
loyalist and patriot lines, even in the most fervently
patriotic families. John Stinson Jr., the nephew of
Patriot General John Stark, a veteran of the Battle
of Bunker Hill and coiner of the phrase, “Live
free or die,” fought alongside his uncle but later
defected to the British side. In this 1781 legal document,
Stark, who raised his nephew, submits a bill for “board
and nursing from the time that he was a year and a half
to the time he was seven years” as well as “interest
for the above sum from the year 1762 to the year 1781.”
Asking for more than seventy-three pounds, an astronomical
sum for the time, Stark's anger over Stinson’s
defection to the British side is expressed through this
bill.
David Gary
Manuscript Cataloger
Gilder Lehrman Collection

GLC01412.42: Charges to
the confiscated estate of John Stinson, Jr.
Dunbarton, New Hampshire, 19 May 1781. Document signed,
2 pages + docket.
|
For more information or to obtain copies, contact Alyson
Barrett at reference@gilderlehrman.com
or call (212) 787-6616 ext. 209.
|
1781 – The Estate of John Stinson Junr. – To John Stark – D –
To the said Stinsons board & nursing from the time that he was a year [inserted: and a half] old, to the time he was seven years, being Two Hundred & Eighty six weeks at Two Shillings & five pence per week – 2/5 –
}£ 31.11.2
To Interest for the above sum from the year 1762 to the year 1781 – nineteen years at 6 per sentum per annum is –
}£ 39.78 ½
}£ 73.18.10 ½
Errors excepted
John Stark
[struck: To Messrs Herriman, Page, & Hogg,
Esqrs Agents for the disposal of Confiscated Lands.]
}
|

Brown, Wallace. The Good Americans: The Loyalists
in the American Revolution. New
York: Morrow, 1969.
Middlekauf, Robert. The Glorious Cause: The American
Revolution, 1763-1789. New
York: Oxford University Press, 1982.
Rose, Ben Z. John Stark: Maverick General.
Victoria, British Columbia: Treeline Press, 2007.
Royster, Charles. A Revolutionary People at War:
The Continental Army and American
Character, 1775-1783. Chapel Hill, North Carolina:
The University of North Carolina Press, 1979.
|

|
|