Thursday, December 21, 2023

Jonas Simonds – A Massachusetts Patriot

Jonas Simonds (1755-1816)
of Lexington, Massachusetts
unrelated to our family                               [Part 2 of 3 posts re: Jonas Simmons & Jonas Simonds] 
 
 
My September 2023 post, Jonas Simmons A Question of Loyalty, recounted the story of one of my 5th great-grandfathers who fought on the side of the British during the Revolutionary War. Over 120 years later, some of his descendants, four sisters from Ohio who are my 4th cousins 3 times removed, mistakenly identified our common ancestor as a patriot. Their applications to the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) were approved despite the fact they were based on the military records of another man with no connection to our family Jonas Simonds of Massachusetts. This post focuses on possible reasons for the sisters' error and Captain Jonas Simonds' involvement in the American Revolution from Lexington to its conclusion.

– THE LISEY SISTERS & THE DAR
 
Effie, Naomi, Emma, and Margaret Lisey were born in 1866, 1869, 1871, and 1880, respectively. Emma and Naomi were the first to apply for membership in the DAR. The sisters were approved sometime before 1908, the year they were listed in a DAR Lineage book. Emma and Naomi almost certainly researched the family and worked on their DAR applications together. They likely applied for membership at the same time, since their DAR member numbers are consecutive (65700 and 65701).
 
Emma and Naomi correctly claimed their line of descent to be from our common ancestors, Jonas Simmons and Elsie Strunk of Rensselaer County, New York. Unfortunately, they used the records of Captain Jonas Simonds of Massachusetts on their applications. Margaret and Effie followed suit, perpetuating the error.
 
 
Source:
vol. 66 (1908), page viewer images 243-244 of 390, pp. 237-238
 
Published: 1923
 

Source:
vol. 66 (1908), page viewer image 244 of 390, p. 238     
 
Published: 1923
 
 
 
Margaret was accepted by 1909, and Effie nearly ten years later. Effie added one new piece of information that Jonas was in Capt. Samuel Mansfield's company, also from Jonas Simonds' record. She referred to Margaret's application No. 73065.


Source:
DAR Lineage book - vol. 74 (1909), page viewer image 32 of 407, pp. 26-27.
 
Published: 1924 
 

 
 
Source:
DAR Lineage book - vol. 137 (1917-1918), page viewer image 161 of 363, p. 159. 
 
Published: 1934
 
 
 
 
 

 – HOW COULD THIS HAPPEN?
 
There are several likely culprits behind the Simonds-Simmons mix up. The first is a lack of records and other sources. Some sources that would have been useful to Emma and Naomi in their research, as well as to the DAR during its verification process, weren't even published until well after the first two applications were approved. Also, it's not uncommon for certain records to be held for a period of years before being made public. For example, federal census records are held for seventy years before they are released.
 

Left: Entry for Jonas Simonds of Massachusetts from Francis B. Heitman’s Historical Register of Officers of the Continental Army During the War of the Revolution, published in 1914.
(Heitman, 497-498)

 
 
 
The next problems are family stories and anecdotes. Since these are often passed down orally through the generations, the stories can be altered through details that have been embellished, forgotten, or left out over the years. Jonas Simmons' loyalty to the Crown is something that might not have been discussed in the Lisey family. In this case, the elders might have said he fought in the Revolution without offering details.
 
Finally, there is the issue of spelling. When Emma and Naomi first started their research they were confronted with numerous records where the surname "Simonds" was spelled Simmons, Simons, Simonds, Simmonds, or Symonds, even though all referred to the same man, Jonas Simonds of Lexington, Massachusetts. 
 
Understandably, finding "Jonas Simmons" written on various records would lead the sisters to believe they had found their ancestor. The other variations would be considered misspellings of "Simmons." A few examples on index cards to muster rolls are shown below.
 
L-R:  A card for 1st Lt. Jonas Simmons from a list of officers "for the newly establish'd 
           Regiment of Artillery" beginning 1st Janr.
        1st Lieutenant Jonas Symonds on command in General Greene’s Division of Gridley’s & 
           Knox’s Artillery Regiment, Continental Troops, commanded by Henry Knox, Esqr5 Oct 
           1776.                      
        Company Muster Roll dated 25 Jan 1780 for Nov & Dec 1779 - "Captain Jonas Simonds'
           Co. in the Reg't of Artillery commanded by Col. John Lamb." Promoted to Captain. 
           (Source: Fold3 on Ancestry.com)
 
Why was Jonas Simonds' name spelled so many different ways? Prior to the mid-1800s spelling was generally based on phonetics. Consequently, clerks and other record keepers spelled names based on someone's pronunciation and they guessed. A double "m" or one? A "d" at the end or not? Even members of the same family sometimes spelled their surname differently. After Noah Webster's 1841 edition of An American Dictionary of the English Language, Corrected and Enlarged was published, spelling gradually became standardized.  
*               *               * 

WHO WAS JONAS SIMONDS OF MASSACHUSETTS?
 
Jonas was the son of Nathan Simonds, a Lexington, Massachusetts farmer, and Hannah Flagg, who died in 1760 when Jonas was about five. He had four siblings. After his father remarried in 1762, five more children were born into the family.
 
In April 1775, Jonas lived with his family in Lexington. As an able-bodied male, he had participated in mandatory militia training since he was 16 years old. The Province of Massachusetts Bay began requiring it in 1631 to ensure settlements were prepared to defend themselves against hostilities from Native Americans.
 
Each town had to have at least one militia company led by an elected captain and consisting of about 60 men. (National Park Service) Many militiamen were veterans of the French and Indian War (1757-1763), during which they learned guerrilla warfare tactics. Some members of each militia received additional tactical training and learned how to respond to an emergency with only a moment's notice. These were the "minute men." 
 
Map highlighting the towns of Concord, Lexington, Burlington, Woburn, and Cambridge in Massachusetts. (Google Maps 2023 with added labeling)

*               *               *
 ~ 1775 ~  
 
THE REVOLUTION BEGINS
 
As relations with Britain became more strained, like-minded men in the colonies formed organized groups such as the Sons of Liberty, a secretive organization founded in Boston in 1765. By the start of the Revolution similar groups were established in all the colonies. Their goals were to undermine Britain's authority, fight tax increases, and resist restrictive laws enacted by the British.

"Green Dragon Tavern, Union Street." Engraver: Russell. 1898 (approximate). Copy photograph from engraving by Russell of the tavern in the North End [of Boston] where the Sons of Liberty planned the Boston Tea Party. (Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 2.0)
 
The Boston group, led by Dr. Joseph Warren, was large and well-organized. Should the British army move against residents of the city and surrounding areas, the Sons of Liberty were ready to implement a plan with two important objectives. Using a method similar to modern-day phone trees, men on horseback would alert citizens that British soldiers (regulars) were on the way. People would continue to spread the word, activating the militias. The other objective was to warn dissidents John Hancock and Samuel Adams to leave their hideout in Lexington to avoid arrest. This put the Simonds family at the epicenter of what would become a major event in American history.
 
~ The Midnight Ride ~  

On the dark, chilly night of April 18, 1775, Joseph Warren's covert operation was put into motion. When silversmith Paul Revere saw two lanterns in the Old North Church tower, he began the fifteen-mile ride to Lexington. After dodging a British patrol, he stopped to knock on doors to quietly warn residents that "the regulars are coming."
 
William Dawes, a tanner and second in command in the Boston militia regiment, was also going to make the ride. He disguised himself so he could make it past British soldiers guarding the Boston Neck, a narrow strip of land that was the only way off the Boston peninsula. Both men knew stealth and caution were important because British patrols were everywhere. If one of them was captured, hopefully the other would make it to Lexington. Revere arrived around midnight, and Dawes at about 12:30 AM. It was now the 19th of April.
 
With no time to waste, Dawes and Revere headed for Concord, about six miles from Lexington. Around 1 AM, they were surprised to find Dr. Samuel Prescott on the road. Prescott was returning home to Concord from Lexington where he had been visiting his fiancée. Revere knew him, so when the doctor offered to help with the mission, Revere and Dawes accepted. 
 
The meeting turned out to be a fortunate one because, after a short distance, the men encountered a British patrol. Revere was captured and Dawes was thrown from his horse. He managed to escape and return to Lexington. Prescott made a dash into the dark, dense woods and was the only one to complete the ride to warn the residents of Concord.

Routes of the British Expedition and the Patriot Messengers. (National Park Service map, Wikipedia Commons, cropped with added highlighting). Insets L-R: Depiction of Samuel Prescott evading a British patrol on the road to Concord, Paul Revere, and William Dawes.

MAP CAPTIONSRight:  "Revere avoids British patrols." 
     (in blue)       Middle: "Revere and Dawes reach Lexington before the British leave Lechmere
                                         Point. Dr. Prescott joins them after they leave for Concord." 
                           Left: "British patrol stops Revere, Dawes, and Prescott. Revere is captured, 
                                         Dawes flees back to Lexington, and Prescott escapes to continue to 
                                         Concord and beyond."
 
THE BATTLES OF LEXINGTON & CONCORD – 
19 April 1775

A young Jonas Simonds answered the call that night. His only weapon was probably a smoothbore flintlock. (Revolutionary War Journal) With that and some rounds of ammunition, he was ready to stand with the Lexington militia against the British regulars. 
 
Just before dawn, seventy-seven militiamen were confronted by over 500 British soldiers on Lexington Green. Seeing they were vastly outnumbered, Captain John Park ordered his militia to retreat. Suddenly, a shot was fired by an unknown party, followed by several volleys from the British. Eight militiamen were killed and nine were wounded in the skirmish. 
 
"The battle of Lexington, April 19th. 1775. Plate I." From "The Doolittle engravings of the battles of Lexington and Concord in 1775." Hand-colored engraving by Amos Doolittle. (Wikimedia Commons)
 
The British moved on to Concord to raid and destroy a cache of colonial military supplies and ammunition. Nearly 400 well-armed and well-trained militiamen and minute men from surrounding areas met them at the North Bridge. This time the British were confronted with an unexpected show of force. They were also at a distinct disadvantage. If they tried to cross the narrow bridge, they would be unable to easily fall back to reload after a volley – and their rigid formation made them easy targets.

Plate III, "The Engagement at the North Bridge in Concord," Amos Doolittle engravings of the Battle of Lexington and Concord, December 1775, reprint by Charles E. Goodspeed, Boston, 1903 - Concord Museum - Concord, Massachusetts, USA. (Wikimedia Commons)
 
Once shots had been fired, both sides had difficulty aiming due to dense clouds of white smoke created by the black powder used in their weapons (see images above). The soldiers soon made a retreat toward Boston. They were pursued by hundreds of militiamen as word spread throughout the Massachusetts countryside that the British regulars had arrived.  
 
An ever-growing force of militia joined in the chase, with Jonas very likely among them, shooting at the retreating soldiers from behind rock walls, buildings, and trees. By the time the regulars reached Boston, thousands of Massachusetts militiamen were in pursuit. The British were trapped as the colonials surrounded the city.
 
THE SIEGE OF BOSTON / BATTLE OF BUNKER HILL
19 Apr 1775  17 Mar 1776
 
Apr 19 - The Siege of Boston begins. 
 
During the first two months of the siege, colonial officers worked quickly to organize the militias and sign up men for one-year enlistments into what would become the Continental Army.
 
(Source: FamilySearch)
May 1 - Twelve days after Lexington and
   Concord Jonas enlists in Colonel Richard Gridley's 
   Regiment of Artillery at Cambridge, a few miles 
   outside of Boston.
 
   This is the only artillery regiment in the
   Continental Army. Jonas is assigned to Captain 
   Edward Crafts' Company and given the rank of 
   2nd Lieutenant.
 
May 10 - During the night, Ethan Allen and about
   100 Green Mountain Boys of the Vermont 
   militia, along with 50 additional men under 
   Colonel Benedict Arnold, row from Vermont 
   across Lake Champlain to capture Fort
   Ticonderoga in an early morning surprise attack. 
   [Arnold changed his loyalties in 1780.]
 
   The fort is manned by a small detachment of 
   only 50 British soldiers who are unaware that 
   Britain and the colonies have been at war for 
   several weeks; no shots are fired. The prizes 
   are artillery (cannons, howitzers, and mortars), 
   ammunition, and the strategically located fort.
 
Jun 15 - The 2nd Continental Congress appoints 
   George Washington as commander-in-chief of
   the newly formed Continental Army.
 
Jun 17 - Jonas is at the Battle of Bunker Hill. The British win the battle after losing twice 
   as many soldiers as the Americans – an expensive victory. The colonial militias totaled 
   about 16,000 men in this battle (Massachusetts 11,500, Connecticut 2,300, New 
   Hampshire 1,200, Rhode Island 1,000). (Wikipedia Commons
 
Positions of the colonial forces (in blue) at the outset of the Battle of Bunker Hill. The length of the scale (lower right) is about the same as the range of a cannon (3500 ft). (Wikimedia Commons by Charlies E Frye CC BY-SA 3.0)

Battle of Bunker Hill by Howard Pyle, 1897. Oil on canvas. (Wikimedia Commons)
  
Jul 29 - The map below shows the positions of the combatants on this date. The British 
   are trapped on two peninsulas they can leave by ship but are not willing to relinquish 
   their positions.
   
Map showing the positions of the newly formed Continental Army & British forces on July 29, 1775, during the Siege of Boston. (Wikimedia Commons, cropped from the original with added labels and highlighting)

 
MAP CAPTIONS:   Top Gen.l [Israel] Putnam's Camp
  (blue boxes)      Left  Head Quarters of the Provincial Army encamped commanded by Gen.l
                                     [Artemas] Ward
                 Bottom Gen.l [John] Thomas's Camp
 
THE GUNS OF FORT TICONDEROGA
16 Nov 1775 – 25 Jan 1776
 
In the fall of 1775, the British were still firmly entrenched in Boston, and George Washington knew he was far short of having enough artillery to force the British out of the city. The solution came in the form of retrieving and transporting artillery captured by Allen and Arnold at Fort Ticonderoga. It would be a monumental task since the fort was nearly 300 miles from Boston.   

Henry Knox was tasked with the assignment. Knox was a 25-year-old former bookseller from Boston serving in the Boston Grenadier Corps. Self-educated in both military tactics and artillery, he organized and engineered all aspects of the expedition. On November 16, 1775, the newly promoted Colonel Knox and hundreds of men, with Jonas possibly among them, departed for Fort Ticonderoga. 
 
On the return trip, Knox used boats, horses, oxen, and sledges to transport 59 pieces of artillery weighing 60 tons. In a December 1775 letter to his wife, Henry Knox wrote, “We shall cut no small figure in going through the Country with our Cannon, Mortars, etc., drawn by eighty yoke of oxen.”
 
Henry Knox Cannon Trail (Hudson Valley River National Heritage Trail/National Park Service)

The expedition traveled through snowstorms, crossed frozen rivers, and traversed the snowy Berkshires in western Massachusetts. Knox finally reached Cambridge on January 25, 1776, with what he called a "noble train of artillery."

Victor Brooks, a historian, called Knox’s achievement "one of the most stupendous feats of logistics" of the Revolutionary War. (Wikipedia)
 
Left: “Knox entering camp with artillery.”
  Wood engraving, hand-colored, ca. 
  1855. William Van Ingen, artist. Henry 
  Knox on horseback with soldiers trans-
  porting a disassembled canon on a sled
  through the snow, winter 1775-76, 
  following his famous capture of artillery
  at Fort Ticonderoga. (Wikimedia) 
 

The Berkshires in Massachusetts, "Mt. Greylock after December snowfall." (Wikimedia by Ericshawwhite CC BY-SA 3.0)

~ 1776 ~ 
 
Jan 10 - Jonas is promoted to 1st Lieutenant in Crafts' Company in the Regiment of 
   Artillery commanded by Col. Henry Knox.

Jan 25 - Knox halts his expedition at Cambridge while he waits for ammunition. 

Mar 4/5 - During the night, Washington's troops build fortifications and move the 
   Ticonderoga artillery onto Dorchester Heights overlooking Boston Harbor. On the 
   morning of the fifth, the British awaken to the realization that they are now 
   overwhelmingly outgunned. 
 
[Watch the one-minute video,"John Lamb's Artillery Company Fort Lee Interviews," to see a reenactment of the men firing a cannon and learn about the importance of artillery in battle.]
 
Mar 10-17 - The British evacuate sick and wounded troops. Thousands of British troops 
   and Loyalists follow, boarding ships bound for Halifax, Nova Scotia.   
 
Jul 4 - The Declaration of Independence is signed in Philadelphia.  
                               
Oct 5 - Jonas is a 1st Lieutenant on command in General Greene's Division, Gridley's and
   Knox’s Artillery Regiment.
                                  
(Source: Fold3 on Ancestry.com)
~ 1777 ~  

 

Jan 1 - Jonas is commissioned captain-lieutenant in Colonel John Lamb’s 2nd Artillery 

   Regiment of the Continental Army, commanded by General Henry Knox.  
     
Apr 11 - Jonas Simonds marries Elizabeth Kinney in New Jersey, probably in Morristown.
 
Marriage record for Capt-Lt. Jonas Simonds & Elizabeth Kinney. (New Jersey Colonial Records. Vol. XXII. Marriage Licenses 1665-1800, p. 348. (Ancestry.com)
 
After only five months of marriage, Jonas participated in two ferocious battles, Brandywine and Germantown, both in southeastern Pennsylvania.
 
Map showing the locations of Valley Forge, Brandywine, and Germantown, Pennsylvania, and Morristown, New Jersey (with added locations and labels).

  

 – THE BATTLES OF BRANDYWINE & GERMANTOWN  

11 Sep 1777 & 4 Oct 1777

Colonel Henry Knox's Artillery Regiment was a critical part of these battles. As second in command of an artillery company, Captain-Lieutenant Jonas Simonds had an important role in both battles.
 
 
 
Right: Battle of Brandywine historic marker in Chadds Ford Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania (by William Pfingsten, 31 May 2008, courtesy HMdb.org).
 

Erected 1952 by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Committee.


 
 
Left: The Revolution in the Wissahickon Battle of Germantown historic marker (by Bill Coughlin, 5 Oct 2013, courtesy of HMdb.org).
 
After the British took Philadelphia, George Washington ordered a surprise attack on the British encampment in nearby German-town. German mercenary troops, called Hessians, and the Americans “...cannonaded from the heights on each side of the Wissihickon [sic], whilst the Riflemen on opposite sides acted on lower ground”…. After three hours, Washington’s troops made an orderly retreat.
       

THE VALLEY FORGE ENCAMPMENT  

19 Dec 1777  19 Jun 1778
 
In December 1777, General George Washington moved his weary Continental troops, numbering around 12,000, and 400 women and children to winter at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. They would remain there for the next six months. Many of the sick and wounded soldiers were quartered at hospitals in the region

The first order of business was to build shelter for the winter. Wood was plentiful but the tools to build log huts were not. It was just one of many struggles the soldiers faced during the encampment.


 

Left: The Valley Forge encamp-
   ment had over 1,500 log huts 
   spread over two miles of 
   fortifications. At the time, it 
   was virtually the fourth largest
   city in the colonies.  
   (Photo: National Park Service)

 
 
The Marquis de Lafayette arrived with Washington, taking on the role of camp inspector, interacting with troops, and working to obtain the resources the soldiers needed.
 
George Washington and Lafayette at Valley Forge. John Dunsmore, artist, ca. 1907. (Wikimedia Commons)
 
As the months wore on, winter conditions took a toll on everyone. Cold, fatigue, shortages of warm clothing, blankets, shoes, food, and other necessities left the soldiers in low spirits and vulnerable to diseases. Typhoid, dysentery, and typhus were common; all were caused by unsanitary conditions and had high mortality rates. 
 
~ 1778 ~
 
Early 1778 - Jonas and Elizabeth welcome a baby girl, Sarah. [Sarah's birth date is 
   unknown. She was probably born in early 1778, making her barely eighteen at the time 
   of her first marriage on August 20, 1796. More information is in the next post.]
 
In February, Baron Friedrich von Steuben, a former Prussian military officer, arrived at Valley Forge to begin training the troops in the art of warfare. Using his military expertise, the Baron developed a drill system, taught the soldiers combat maneuvers, and produced disciplined, combat-ready troops. 

            Right: "Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben" by Charles
                       Willson Peale, 1780. Oil on canvas. (Wikimedia)
  
Realizing the independent-minded colonial veterans wouldn't respond to the rigid European approaches to training, the Baron modified his methods. (National Park Service) He stated,
 
   I should have been pelted had I attempted it, and should inevitably have failed. The genius 
   of this nation is not in the least to be compared with that of the Prussians, Austrians, or 
   French. You say to your soldier [in Europe], "Do this” and he doeth it; but [at Valley Forge] 
   I am obliged to say, “This is the reason why you ought to do that,” and then he does it. 
 
                                    ~ Baron von Steuben to Baron de Gaudy, 1787-88                                 
Baron von Steuben Drilling American Recruits at Valley Forge in 1778 by Edwin Austin Abbey. Oil on canvas. (Wikimedia Commons)
  
Feb 24 - George Washington sends Capt-Lt. Jonas Simonds to harass British shipping in 
   and out of Philadelphia. A letter from Washington to Col. Joseph Ellis of Gloucester 
   County, New Jersey instructs Ellis to have his militia provide cover for Simonds' artillery 
   unit.
 
“From George Washington to Colonel Joseph Ellis, 24 February 1778.” (Founders Online, National Archives)
 
Valley Forge, Philadelphia, and Gloucester County, NJ. (Google map with added locations and labels)

Feb 28 - Washington writes to Captn Lieut. Jonas Simonds and Brig. Genl. Anthony Wayne.

 

“From George Washington to Captain-Lieutenant Jonas Simonds, 28 February 1778.” (Founders Online, National Archives)

“From George Washington to Brigadier General Anthony Wayne, 28 February 1778.” (Founders Online, National Archives)

 

Jun 19 - Washington's army leaves the winter encampment at Valley Forge. His soldiers 

   are in better spirits, focused, and ready for battle.


THE BATTLE OF MONMOUTH, NEW JERSEY
28 June 1778  

 

Jun 28 - This day is humid with temperatures over 90 degrees. Jonas' company (in 
   Lamb's Regiment in Knox's 2nd Continental Artillery Regiment) takes part in an hours-
   long barrage of artillery with the British. Many soldiers on each side become ill due 
   to the extreme heat and lack of water; some die from heat exhaustion.

                                        

THE BATTLE OF WYOMING & MASSACRE
3 July 1778
 
In 1777, most tribes of the Six Nations became allies of American loyalists and the British. By 1778, loyalists and the tribes were making regular raids on settlements across the New York and Pennsylvania frontiers, taking prisoners, and decimating communities.
 
Jul 3 - The Battle of Wyoming and massacre takes place in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania.

 
 
  Marker in Wyoming, Luzerne
  County, Pennsylvania (photo by 
  Michael Beatty, 11 May 2009,
  courtesy HMdb.org). 
 
Erected 1952 by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission.
 
 

 
 
 
Nov 11 - Residents of Cherry Valley, New York are massacred by British and Iroquois 
   forces. It's considered one of the most vicious frontier massacres of the war.
 
Map of Cherry Valley, New York at the time of the massacre. (Wikimedia Commons)
 
 ~ 1779 ~
 
– THE WYOMING VALLEY, PENNSYLVANIA & SULLIVAN-CLINTON INDIAN CAMPAIGNS
 Apr-Dec 1779 & Jul-Oct 1779
 
The Wyoming Valley Campaign was a response to the destruction of many frontier settlements and the massacre of settlers. Continued attacks led to the scorched-earth Sullivan-Clinton Indian Campaign, ordered by George Washington in 1779. The campaign targeted Iroquois Confederacy nations that supported the British - the Seneca, Cayuga, Mohawk, and Onondaga. The Tuscarora and Oneida aligned with the Americans.
 
The 2nd Continental Artillery Regiment, including Captain Jonas Simonds' company, was one of three artillery regiments used as part of this campaign. In the end, forty villages were obliterated, leaving the Iroquois Confederacy's military and political power in ruins and its people dependent on Britain for food and shelter. The British gave them little support.
 
Sullivan-Clinton Campaign Map 1779. The bold lines with arrows show the routes of Sullivan and Clinton. Map submitted by Larry Gerner, 10 Dec 2019, courtesy HMdb.org (with added highlighting - places that were attacked are highlighted in blue)
 
Aug 29 - The Battle of Newtown is the largest battle in the Sullivan Campaign, and the
   British and their Native American allies are subjected to a relentless barrage of 
   artillery. After this, most remaining tribe members flee their villages ahead of the 
   army's arrival.
 
"Burning of Newtown by the Sullivan Expedition 1779." Woodcut print, 1825. (Wikimedia)

Sep 5 - An army of approximately 3,500 soldiers, on foot and horseback, led by Maj. Gen. 
   John Sullivan and Brigadier Gen. James Clinton, arrive in Kendaia. They have orders 
   "to destroy any semblance of Iroquois existence." (Calvasina, Finger Lakes Times)

Sep 7 - Sullivan attacks Kanadesaga.

   commemorative plaque (photo by Scott J. 
   Payne, 26 Mar 2016, courtesy HMdb.org) in
   Binghamton, Broome County, New York.
 
Inscription
             Routes of the Armies of
               General John Sullivan
                           and
               General James Clinton
                          1779
   An expedition against the hostile Indian 
   Nations which checked the aggressions of 
   the English and Indians on the frontiers of 
   New York and Pennsylvania, extending 
   westward the dominion of the United   
   States.
   Erected by the State of New York 1929.
 
Sep 28 - Captain Simon Spaulding's Riflemen burn the town of Painted Post near Elmira, NY.
 
  marker (photo by Craig Swain, 30 
  May 2010, courtesy HMdb.org)

Inscription: The final episode of 
  the Sullivan-Clinton Campaign 
  was the advance of Col. Van 
  Cortland's Brigade up the
  Canisteo River to this area two
  miles beyond the Tory-Indian 
  town of Painted Post, burned by 
  Capt. Simon Spaulding's Riflemen
  September 28, 1779.
Erected by the Newtown-Battle Chapt. Sons of the American Revolution.

~ 1780 ~
 
 
 
   Jan 25 - Jonas is certified as a Captain.

 

   Transcription

      Jonas Simonds Appears in A Return of officers
      and men belonging to Massachusetts in Col. 
      John Lamb's 2d Artillery regt certified at Morris-
      town, Jan 29, 1780, by Lt-Col. Commander 
      Ebenr. Stevens and Brig. Gen. H. Knox. 

 

      Rank - Captain.


      Mass. Muster and Pay Rolls.
      Vol. 55, page 22 file n.
 
 
    Source: FamilySearch
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Apr-Oct - The 2nd Artillery Regiment participates in the New Jersey Summer Campaign. 
 
New Jersey became known as "The Crossroads of the American Revolution" because it played such an important part in the war. American headquarters were in Morristown, over 90 battles were fought in New Jersey, Washington crossed it with his army four times, and wintered there three times
 
 ~ 1781 ~
 

– THE SOUTHERN CAMPAIGN & SURRENDER AT YORKTOWN  

15 May 1781 – 14 Dec 1782

 

Jan 1 - Captain Jonas Simonds is transferred to the 4th Continental Artillery Regiment 
   after it is reorganized into a 10-company regiment. He is given command of a company 
   consisting of his own and one other.
 
Feb 20 - Jonas' company is one of four transferred to the Southern Department to 
   keep up the Continental Army's momentum after its victory in The Battle of Cowpens
   South Carolina  a turning point for the Americans.
 
May 15 - The Southern Campaign begins.

Sep 28-Oct 19 - The Americans besiege Yorktown, Virginia.
  
       Oct 19 - British General Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown. After the surrender, the British 
          realize it's unlikely they will win the war. Part of the 4th Artillery Regiment is sent to the 
          Carolinas to join Major General Nathanael Greene's troops.
     

       Oct 23 - Jonas' wife, Elizabeth, is buried in the First Presbyterian Churchyard in Morris-
          town, New Jersey. Jonas is now a 26-year-old widower with a young daughter
           
  

         

           Left: Burial record for Elizabeth (Kinney) 

              Simonds. 

 
 Name: Elizabeth, w. of Capt. Jonas
     Simmons
 
 Date of Burial: Oct 23, 1781


            Source: Register of Deaths, First
            Presbyterian Church, Morristown, 
            New Jersey, p. 74. Date of death
            and cause not given. (ancestry.com)         
 
 

 

 
 
 
~ 1783 ~

 

– THE TREATY OF PARIS

 

Jan 1- Captain Jonas Simonds retires from the Continental Army the same day the 4th 
   Artillery Regiment is reduced to four companies.
 
Jun 11 - The soldiers of the 4th Regiment are furloughed in Philadelphia.
 
Sep 3 - The Revolutionary War formally ends when the Treaty of Paris is signed in France.


American Commissioners of the Preliminary Peace Agreement with Great Britain (oil on canvas, unfinished sketch), 1783-1784. Benjamin West, artist. L to R: John Jay, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Henry Laurens, William Temple Franklin (Benjamin Franklin's grandson). The British delegation, meant to be portrayed on the right, would not sit for West so the painting was never finished. (Wikimedia Commons)
 
Nov 15 - The 4th Continental Artillery Regiment is officially disbanded.
 
Summary of Revolutionary War Service - Captain Jonas Simonds of Massachusetts
  • 2d Lieutenant of Gridley's Regiment of Massachusetts Artillery, May, 1775
  • 1st Lieutenant of Knox's Regiment Continental Artillery, 10th December, 1775
  • Captain-Lieutenant, 2d Continental Artillery, 1st January, 1777
  • Captain, 12th November, 1778
  • Transferred to 4th Continental Artillery, 1st January, 1781
  • Retired 1st January, 1783 (age 28)
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Jonas Simonds was a Massachusetts patriot who served in the American Revolution from April 1775 when the first shots were fired at Lexington, until some of the last days of the war in 1783. His skills, first as an artillerist and then as captain of an artillery company, made him a valuable asset on the battlefield. My 5th great-grandfather, Jonas Simmons of New York, was a loyalist who fought with the British; he is not the soldier who should have a Daughters of the American Revolution plaque on his grave. That honor and recognition belongs to Captain Jonas Simonds of Massachusetts.

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 NEXT: Captain Jonas Simonds - A Life of Service (TBA)


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FURTHER READING & VIEWING
 Artillery
Henry Knox & Ticonderoga
  • "Henry Knox's 'Noble Train of Artillery' : No Ox for Knox," by Derek W. Beck, uses vivid descriptions to take the reader on Col. Knox's Ticonderoga expedition in the cold, snowy winter of 1775-76, as he and hundreds of men transported artillery from Ticonderoga, NY to Boston. By using Knox's diaries, Beck analyzes whether oxen or horses moved the artillery. Published in the Journal of the American Revolution on 4 Feb 2019. https://allthingsliberty.com/2019/02/henry-knoxs-noble-train-of-artillery-no-ox-for-knox/ 
Minute Men & Militia Training
SOURCES

“Boom! Artillery in the American Revolution.” The American Revolution Institute of the Society of the Cincinnati. Exhibition October 1, 2016 - March 26, 2017.  https://www.americanrevolutioninstitute.org/exhibition/boom/

 
Calvasina, Dee. "Beyond the Fence: Remembering Kendaia." Finger Lakes Times, October 10, 2020. https://www.fltimes.com/news/environment/beyond-the-fence-remembering-kendaia/article_53efaeaf-e237-505f-bd9d-10706a188a28.html
 
Greenwalt, Philip S. "Valley Forge EncampmentThe Most Famous Winter in American History." American Battlefield Trust, October 6, 2021 (updated December 28, 2021). https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/valley-forge-encampment
 
Heitman, Francis B. "Historical Register of Officers of the Continental Army During the War of the Revolution." Washington, D. C.: The Rare Book Shop Publishing Company, Inc., 1914. https://archive.org/details/franheitmanreg00bernrich/page/496/mode/2up

 

McCullough, David. 1776. New York, New York: Simon & Schuster, Inc., 2005.
 
McKenney, Janice E. "The Organizational History of Field Artillery 1775-2003." Washington, D. C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History, Library of Congress, 2007. https://history.army.mil/html/books/OH_of_FA/index.html

 

“Military History of Jonas Simonds (n.d. – 7/14/1816).” The State Society of the Cincinnati of Pennsylvania. https://pasocietyofthecincinnati.org/Names/JonasSimonds.html


Schenawolf, Harry. "Matchlocks & Flintlocks: Weapons That Tamed a New World & Claimed an American Revolution" Revolutionary War Journal, March 28, 2018. https://revolutionarywarjournal.com/matchlocks-flintlocks-firelocks-that-tamed-a-new-world-claimed-an-american-revolution/#more-3167 
 
“From George Washington to Colonel Joseph Ellis, 24 February 1778,” Founders Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/03-13-02-0556. [Original source: The Papers of George Washington, Revolutionary War Series, vol. 13, 26 December 1777 – 28 February 1778, ed. Edward G. Lengel. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2003, pp. 653–654.]
 
“From George Washington to Captain Lieutenant Jonas Simonds, 28 February 1778,” Founders Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/03-13-02-0598. [Original source: The Papers of George Washington, Revolutionary War Series, vol. 13, 26 December 1777 – 28 February 1778, ed. Edward G. Lengel. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2003, pp. 698–699.] 

“From George Washington to Brigadier General Anthony Wayne, 28 February 1778,” Founders Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/03-13-02-0601. [Original source: The Papers of George Washington, Revolutionary War Series, vol. 13, 26 December 1777 – 28 February 1778, ed. Edward G. Lengel. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2003, pp. 700–701.]
 

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Bradish-Scott Family History – December 2023