LINCOLN, Benjamin - A Klos Family Project - Revolutionary War General
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LINCOLN, Benjamin, soldier, born
in Hingham, Massachusetts, 24 January, 1733; died there, 9 May, 1810. His
father, Benjamin, was born in Hingham in 1700, his family having been among the
first settlers, the name of Thomas Lincoln, a cooper, appearing on the
town-records as early as 1636. He received only a common school education, and
was a farmer until 1773, holding the offices of magistrate, representative in
the provincial legislature, and colonel of militia. He was also a member of the
provincial congresses of Massachusetts, of which he was secretary, and served on
its committee of correspondence. He was active in organizing and training the
Continental troops, and was appointed major-general of state militia in 1776,
and on 23 May, 1776, was placed at the head of a committee to prepare
instructions for the representatives of the town in the general court, previous
to the Declaration of Independence.
The following is an extract from his instructions entered on the records of the
town:
"You are instructed and directed at all times to give your vote and
interest in support of the present struggle with Great Britain. We ask nothing
of her but peace, liberty, and safety. You will never recede from that claim,
and, agreeably to a resolve of the late house of representatives, in case the
honorable Continental congress declare themselves independent of Great
Britain, solemnly engage, in behalf of your constituents, that they will, with
their lives and fortunes, support them in the measure."
In June of that year he commanded the expedition that cleared Boston harbor
of British vessels. After the American defeat on Long Island he was dispatched
by the council of Massachusetts to re-enforce Washington
with a body of militia, and he subsequently participated in the battle of White
Plains and other engagements. At the close of 1776 Lincoln, with the greater
part of 6,000 militia, was engaged with General William Heath in the attack on
Fort Independence, which resulted disastrously. In the beginning of 1777 he
joined Washington at Morristown with a new
levy of militia, and on 19 February was promoted to major-general, having been
recommended by Washington in a letter to congress dated 20 December, 1776:
"In speaking of General Lincoln, I should not do him justice were I
not to add that he is a gentleman well worthy of notice in the military line.
He commanded the militia from Massachusetts last summer, or fall rather, and
much to my satisfaction, having proved himself, on all occasions, an active,
spirited, sensible man. I do not know whether it is his wish to remain in the
military line, or whether, if he should, anything under thee rank he now holds
in the state he comes from would satisfy him."
He was then stationed at Bound Brook, New Jersey, the advanced post of the
British, where he was surprised by a party of 2,000 men under Lord
Cornwallis and General James Grant on 13 April, but escaped with his aides
before he was surrounded. He remained attached to Washington's
command till July, when he was sent with General Benedict
Arnold to act under General Schuyler
against Burgoyne, for which purpose he raised a
body of New England militia. He sent out a successful expedition, which seized
the posts of the enemy at Lake George, and broke Burgoyne's
line of communication. General Lincoln then joined General
Gates at Stillwater, and took command of the right wing. During the battle
of Bemis's Heights he commanded inside the American works, and on the next day,
in leading a small force to a post in the rear of Burgoyne's
army, fell in with a party of British, supposing them to be Americans, and
received a severe wound, which forced him to retire for a year and lamed him for
life.
He rejoined the army in August, 1778, on 25 September was appointed by
congress to the chief command of the southern department, and for several months
he was engaged in protecting Charleston against General Augustine Prevost. Upon
the arrival of Count d'Estaing he co-operated with the French troops and fleet
in the unsuccessful assault on Savannah; but from the unwillingness of his
allies to continue the siege he was forced to return to Charleston, where in the
spring of 1780 he was besieged by a superior British force under Sir
Henry Clinton. After an obstinate defense he was obliged in May to
capitulate, and in November retired to Massachusetts on parole.
In the spring of 1778 he was exchanged, and immediately joined Washington
on Hudson river. He participated in the siege of
Yorktown, and Washington appointed him
to receive the sword of Lord Cornwallis on the
surrender of the British forces. He held the office of secretary of war from
1781 till 1784, after which he retired to his farm, receiving the thanks of
congress for his services.
In 1787 he commanded the forces that quelled Shays's rebellion in western
Massachusetts, and in that year was elected lieutenant-governor of the state.
Upon the establishment of the Federal government he received from Washington
the appointment of collector of the port of Boston, from which office he retired
about two years before his death. He was a member of the commission that made a
treaty with the Creek Indians in 1789, and of the one that in 1793
unsuccessfully attempted to enter into negotiations with the Indians north of
the Ohio, the other members including Thomas Pickering and Beverly Randolph, of
Virginia, the place appointed for the conference being Sandusky. He kept a
journal of this expedition, which was published entire in the collections of the
Massachusetts historical society (series iii., vol. v.). Accompanying this is an
engraving of an outline sketch taken by a British officer present at the meeting
of the Indians on Buffalo creek, representing Randolph, Pickering, and Lincoln,
General Chapin, several Quakers, two British officers, the Indian orator, and
the interpreter. He was also a member of the Massachusetts convention that
ratified the United States constitution and president of the Massachusetts
society of the Cincinnati from its organization until his death.
He was much esteemed by General Washington,
who presented him with a set of epaulettes and sword knots, which he had
received from a French officer. He devoted his last years to literary and
scientific pursuits, and was a member of the American academy of arts and
sciences, and of the Massachusetts historical society. Harvard gave him the
degree of M.A. in 1780. His correspondence during the adoption of the Federal
constitution was large and important, including letters from the leading
patriots, and a letter from Dr. David Ramsey, the historian, dated Charleston,
19 January, 1788, gives an interesting view of the relations then existing
between New England and South Carolina. While secretary of war he wrote long
letters to his son, which he intended to be read at the meetings of the academy,
containing the results of his observations of the physical features of the
south. A paper upon his belief that trees receive nourishment from the
atmosphere instead of the earth, and one on the ravages of worms in trees, were
published in Cary's "American Museum." Many of his writings
appeared about 1790, including a paper on the migration of fishes, in an
appendix to vol. iii. of Dr. Belknap's "History of New Hampshire," and
three essays, published in the collections of the Massachusetts historical
society: "Observations on the Climate, Soil, and Value of the Eastern
Counties in the District of Maine"; "On the Religious State of
the Eastern Counties"; and on the "Indian Tribes, the Causes of
their Decrease, their Claims, etc." His portrait was painted by Henry
Sargent, a copy of which was presented to the Massachusetts historical society.
(See his life by Francis Bowen in Sparks's "American Biography,"'
second series, Boston, 1847.)
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