Transmitted to the Author by a gentleman in Nova Scotia, taken from the "Political Magazine," published in London 1783:
"When the loyal refugees from the Northern provinces were informed of the resolution of the House of Commons against offensive war with the rebels, they instantly saw there were no hopes left them of regaining their ancient settlements, or of settling down again in their native country.
"Those of them, therefore, who had been forward in taking up arms, and in fighting the battles of the mother country, finding themselves deserted, began to look out for a place of refuge, and Nova Scotia being the nearest place to their old plantations, they determined on settling in that province. Accordingly, to the number of 500 embarked for Annapolis Royal; they had arms and ammunition, and one year"s provisions, and were put under the care and convoy of his Majesty"s ship the _Amphitrite_, of 24 guns, Captain Robert Briggs. This officer behaved to them with great attention, humanity, and generosity, and saw them safely landed and settled in the barracks at Annapolis, which the Loyalists soon repaired. There was plenty of wild fowl in the country, and at that time, which was last fall, a goose sold for two shillings, and a turkey for two shillings and sixpence. The captain was at 200 expense out of his own pocket in order to render the pa.s.sage and arrival of the unfortunate Loyalists in some degree comfortable to them. Before Captain Briggs sailed from Annapolis, the grateful Loyalists waited on him with the following address:
"_To Robert Briggs, Esquire, Commander of His Majesty"s Ship "Amphitrite."_
"The loyal refugees who have emigrated from New York, to settle in Nova Scotia, beg your acceptance of their warmest thanks for the kind and unremitted attention you have paid to their preservation and safe conduct at all times during their pa.s.sage.
"Driven from their respective dwellings for their loyalty to our King, after enduring innumerable hardships, and seeking a settlement in a land unknown to us, our distresses were sensibly relieved during an uncomfortable pa.s.sage by your humanity, ever attentive to our preservation.
"Be pleased to accept of our most grateful acknowledgments, so justly due to you and the officers under your command, and be a.s.sured we shall remember your kindness with the most grateful sensibility.
"We are, with the warmest wishes for your health, happiness, and a prosperous voyage,
"With the greatest respect,
"Your most obedient humble servants,
"In behalf of the refugees,
"AMOS BOTSFORD, "TH. WARD, "FRED. HANSIR, "SAM. c.u.mMINS, "ELIJAH WILLIAMS.[139]
"Annapolis Royal, the 20th of October, 1782."
_Letter with Enclosure from the Hon. R. Hodgson, Chief Justice of Prince Edward Island._
"CHARLOTTETOWN, Prince Edward Island, 12th June, 1861.
"SIR,--
"I recently perused, in a newspaper published in Halifax, Nova Scotia, called the "British Colonist," a statement to the purport that you contemplate publishing a history of "The British United Empire Loyalists of America," and have issued a circular to the descendants of the Loyalists, asking for information relating to the lives and adventures of their forefathers.
"I have not seen your circular, and possibly the whole thing may be a mere newspaper fabrication; but it is stated so circ.u.mstantially as to carry with it an air of truth, and I have been induced to copy a brief memoir of my maternal grandfather, Lieut.-Colonel Joseph Robinson, in his own handwriting, now in my possession, and to enclose it to you herewith, to be made use of as you think fit in your intended publication. The memoir would appear, from a statement contained in it, to be written in obedience to some order from the then Secretary at War, possibly calling upon the Loyalists in receipt of half-pay from the British Government for a record of their services, to meet parliamentary enquiry; it is marked on the back of the draft, in Colonel Robinson"s handwriting, as "transmitted." He died in this Island (formerly St.
John"s Island, now Prince Edward Island) in 1808 or 1809. Colonel Robinson was a native of Virginia, and emigrated from somewhere about James River, in that province, to South Carolina, where he resided at the commencement of the revolution. After a reward had been offered for his life, as stated in his memorial, and he had been compelled to abscond, a party of rebels visited his plantation and burned to the ground his dwelling-house and every building upon it, scarcely giving time to my grandmother (as she has often told me) to drag out of the house her two female children in time to save their lives. My grandmother was a woman of heroic spirit, and she, accompanied by a single faithful negro slave, made her way on horseback, in an overland journey of several hundred miles, to East Florida, where she joined her husband. In this journey she carried one of her children before her on the same horse, and the negro man carried the other in the same way on the horse he rode.
"At the termination of the contest, my grandfather"s property, a large and valuable one, was confiscated by the victors, and he embarked with his family for the island of Jamaica, was unfortunately shipwrecked by the way, and lost every particle of property he had left, he, his wife and children, with difficulty escaping drowning. After a short residence in that island he emigrated to St. John"s, in the Province of New Brunswick, and ultimately came to this island.
"He was a member of the House of a.s.sembly of this colony, and its Speaker afterward; an a.s.sistant-Justice of the Supreme Court, and member of the Executive Council, such Council at that time also exercising legislative functions. These last-named offices of Judge and member of Council he held up to his decease.
"I was much too young at his death to be enabled to say anything of my personal knowledge of him; but from his papers which I have perused, I am warranted in saying that he was a man of a refined mind, an excellent cla.s.sical scholar, with a great taste for astronomy, and possessing no ordinary talent in that science, which seems to have amused and occupied his mind in his latter years. The only reward he received was the half-pay of a lieutenant-colonel (his Judgeship was an honorary one, having no salary or emolument); this he enjoyed up to the period of his decease.
"I have somewhat hurriedly put together these observations. You may rely upon the truth of the facts stated, and they are at your service if coming within the scope and meaning of your intended history. At the same time, if the thing be a newspaper hoax, I must beg you to excuse the liberty I have taken in addressing you, and please burn this and the copy of the memoir.
"I have the honour to be, Sir,
"Your obedient servant,
"R. HODGSON,
"_Chief Justice of Prince Edward Island._"
_Report of Joseph Robinson, Lieutenant-Colonel of the late Regiment of South Carolina Royalists, now residing in the Island of St. John, in the Gulf of St. Lawrence._
"To the Right Honourable William Wyndham, Secretary at War.
"At the commencement of the American rebellion, I was an inhabitant of the Province of South Carolina, and major of a regiment of the King"s Militia in Cambden District.
"The insurgents formed a camp in Ninety-six district, and were recruiting men, declaring that as soon as they had forces sufficient for their purpose they would burn and destroy the houses and property of all persons who refused to join them in opposing the King and the authority of Great Britain.
"I then waited upon Lord William Campbell, the Governor of the Province, and received written orders from his lordship to levy forces and march against the rebels, in consequence of which I advanced with about 2,000 men, and found them fortified at Ninety-six Court-house. We defeated them and destroyed their fortifications.
"But in the meantime the violence of the insurgents obliged Lord William Campbell to depart from his Province, and our small army of Royal Volunteers was left without further orders, money, or military stores; wherefore, with much reluctance, I was under the necessity of desiring the men to return to their respective habitations, and by all means not to suffer any false pretences of the rebel party to deceive them, or to efface their principles of loyalty, until we should enjoy a more favourable opportunity.
"A reward being then offered for my life, personal safety induced me to retire to the Cherokee Indian nation, afterwards to the Creek Indians, and, pa.s.sing through many dangers and suffering various hardships, at length arrived at Saint Augustine, in the Province of East Florida, in the year 1777. Soon afterwards, a party of about 300 men, being some of those I formerly commanded in South Carolina, joined me there.
"I formed the regiment, which was styled the South Carolina Royalists, of which General Prevost appointed me lieutenant-colonel, and soon after I received my commission from Sir Henry Clinton, the Commander-in-Chief.
"The said regiment acted in East Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina, in the course of which service I was in several engagements against the enemy--viz., at the Alligator Bridge, in East Florida; at Doctor Brimstone"s Plantation, in Georgia; at New Port Meeting-house, in Georgia; at New Port Bridge, in Georgia; at Stone Ferry, in South Carolina; and afterwards at the reduction of Sunbury Fort, in the Province of Georgia, and the fortifications of Charlestown, in South Carolina. The order from the office of the Secretary at War was not seen or known by me until the 24th of April, 1797; and that I am now fifty-five years of age.
(Signed) "JOSEPH ROBINSON,
"_Lieut.-Colonel of the late South Carolina Royalist Regiment._
"Charlottetown, Island of St. John,
"April 26th, 1797.
"Half-pay commenced 7th November, 1783."
_Letter from Colonel John C. Clark, respecting his Father"s Sufferings in the Revolutionary War, and Settlement in the Midland District._
"ERNEST TOWN, July 9th, 1861.
"Rev. Egerton Ryerson, D.D.
"REVEREND SIR,--
"Having seen your circular, I write to inform you of my late father"s connection with the war of the revolution in the then British colonies.
My father, Robert Clark, Esq., late of the township of Ernest Town, in the county of Addington, deceased, was born March 16th, 1744, on Quaker Hill, in Dutchess county, and Province of New York. He learned the trade of carpenter and millwright, and was the owner of two farms. When the war commenced, his loyal proclivities made it dangerous for him to remain at home, and he joined the British standard as a volunteer in 1776. He had a few opportunities of visiting his family privately, who consisted then of a wife and two children (boys); another son was born during his absence, who was called Robert (after his father), on which occasion the nurse--being a violent _Tory_--whispered the secret to some of the rebels" wives in the vicinity, that Robert Clark was at home, well knowing the secret would be divulged; and for several days and nights after "there were liers-in-wait" about the house to capture the Tory when he made his exit. At length the said nurse told them they had been hoaxed.
"I have a powder-horn now in my possession, which my father owned in the time of the war, with his name cut on it, with the date "Fort Edward, November 4th, 1776." His family were driven from their home and his lands confiscated. Being with General Burgoyne"s army on the 16th of October, 1777, the day previous to the general"s surrender of his army to Generals Gates and Arnold, Burgoyne mustered the provincial volunteers, and told them that he was obliged to surrender his army; that they must leave the camp that night, and, if possible, avoid the army, and try to find their way to Canada.
"They left accordingly, and after some weeks of great suffering and privation, my father reached Canada. He subsequently served two years in his Majesty"s provincial regiment called "Loyal Rangers," commanded by Major Edward Jessup, and was in Captain Jonathan Jones" company, and was discharged the 24th of December, 1783.
"In 1782-83 he was employed by Government to erect the Kingston Mills (then Cataraqui), preparatory to the settlement of the Loyalists in this section of the Province of Quebec. While there employed, his wife and three children arrived in Canada, in the autumn of 1783; they wintered at Sorel, where they all were afflicted with the small-pox, and being entirely among strangers, most of whom spoke a language not understood by them, they were compelled to endure more than the usual amount of suffering incident to that disease; the husband being at a distance, and in the employ of Government, could not leave to administer to their necessity.
"In 1784 his family joined him at the Mills, after immense suffering, having been separated by the vicissitudes of war for the term of _seven years_.