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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/26040-8.txt b/26040-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4eda160 --- /dev/null +++ b/26040-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2255 @@ +Project Gutenberg's Log-book of Timothy Boardman, by Samuel W Boardman + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Log-book of Timothy Boardman + Kept On Board The Privateer Oliver Cromwell, During A + Cruise From New London, Ct., to Charleston, S. C., And + Return, In 1778; Also, A Biographical Sketch of The Author. + +Author: Samuel W Boardman + +Release Date: July 12, 2008 [EBook #26040] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOG-BOOK OF TIMOTHY BOARDMAN *** + + + + +Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Anne Storer and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +book was produced from scanned images of public domain +material from the Google Print project.) + + + + + + + Transcriber's Notes: + 1) Characters following ^ are supercripted-in the case of + ^oClock, it is just the "o". + 2) Inconsistent spellings and hyphenations have been left + as printed. + + + * * * * * + + + + + LOG-BOOK + OF + TIMOTHY BOARDMAN; + + KEPT ON BOARD THE PRIVATEER OLIVER CROMWELL, + DURING A CRUISE FROM NEW LONDON, CT., + TO CHARLESTON, S. C., AND RETURN, IN 1778; + + + ALSO, + + A BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH + OF THE AUTHOR. + + BY THE REV. SAMUEL W. BOARDMAN, D.D. + + + ISSUED UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE RUTLAND + COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY. + + + ALBANY, N. Y.: + JOEL MUNSELL'S SONS. + 1885. + + + + +PREFACE. + + +Under the auspices of the Rutland County Historical Society, is +published the Log-Book of Timothy Boardman, one of the pioneer settlers +of the town of Rutland, Vermont. This journal was kept on board the +privateer, Oliver Cromwell, during two cruises; the second one from New +London, Conn., to Charleston, S. C.; the third from Charleston to New +London, in the year 1778. It seems that the Log-Book of the first cruise +was either lost, never kept, or Mr. Boardman was not one of the crew to +keep it. It was kept as a private diary without any view to its ever +being published. + +When this manuscript, on coarse, unruled paper, was brought to light, it +came to the knowledge of the officers of the county historical society, +who, at once, decided that it was a document of considerable value and +should be published. Correspondence was accordingly opened with the +Rev. Samuel W. Boardman, D.D., of Stanhope, New Jersey, a grandson of +Timothy, to whom this document properly belonged, asking his permission +to allow the society to publish it. The Reverend Doctor immediately gave +his consent; and in his own words: "Supposed it was largely dry details. +Still these may throw side lights of value, on the history of the +times." At the same time he also consented to furnish a biographical +sketch of his grandfather to be published with the Log-Book. Accordingly +the sketch was prepared, but it proves to be not only a sketch, but a +valuable genealogy of that branch of the Boardman family. This sketch +was collected from many sources, mostly from manuscripts. + +The Boardmans in Rutland county are all known as a strictly industrious, +upright, religious, scholarly race; and they are so interwoven with the +early history, business and educational interests of the county, that +this document must meet with general favor and interest. + + JOHN M. CURRIER, + _Sec. of the Rutland County_ + _Historical Society._ + + + + + BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH + OF + DEA. TIMOTHY BOARDMAN. + + BY + REV. SAMUEL W. BOARDMAN, D.D. + + Stanhope, New Jersey. + + + + +BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH. + + +There is still preserved a letter from England, written in a fine hand, +with red ink, dated Obeydon? Feb. 5, 1641, and directed, + + "to her very loveing sonne + SAMUEL BOREMAN, + Ipswich in New England + give this with + haste." + +The letter is as follows: + +"Good sonne, I have receaved your letter: whereby I understand that you +are in good health, for which I give God thanks, as we are all--Praised +be God for the same. Whereas you desire to see your brother Christopher +with you, he is not ready for so great a journey, nor do I think he dare +take upon him so dangerous a voyage. Your five sisters are all alive and +in good health and remember their love to you. Your father hath been +dead almost this two years, and thus troubleing you no further at this +time, I rest, praying to God to bless you and your wife, unto whome we +all kindly remember our loves. + + Your ever loving mother, + "JULIAN BORMAN." + +This letter exhibits many of the characteristics of the Puritans to whom +the Bormans belonged. They were intensely religious; this short letter +contains the name of God three times and speaks of both prayer and +praise. The Puritans were an intelligent people, reading and writing; +this letter is a specimen of the correspondence carried on between the +earliest settlers and their kindred whom they had left in England. They +were an affectionate people, "remembering their loves" to one another; +and praying, for one another, as this mother did for her son and his +wife. This short letter has the word "love" four times. + +They were a persistent people, those who came hither did not shrink from +the hardships around them. They came to stay, and sent back for their +friends. Samuel desired Christopher to follow him. Many of their +families were large, there were at least nine members of this Puritan +household. Samuel was born probably about 1610; he had emigrated from +England in 1635 or 1636. His name is found at Ipswich, Mass., about 1637 +where land was assigned to him. Ipswich had been organized in 1635 with +some of the most intelligent and wealthy colonists. His father died +after Samuel's emigration to America, in 1639. His wife's name was Mary; +their oldest child, so far as we have record, was Isaac, born at +Wethersfield, Ct., Feb. 3, 1642. He probably journeyed through the +wilderness from Ipswich, Mass., which is twenty-six miles north of +Boston, to Wethersfield, Ct., about one hundred and fifty miles, in 1639 +or 1640. + +Between 1630 and 1640 many of the best families in England sent +representatives to America. It is said that Oliver Cromwell was at one +time on the point of coming. Between February and August, 1630, +seventeen ships loaded with families, bringing their cattle, furniture +and other worldly goods, arrived. One ship of four hundred tons brought +one hundred and forty passengers, others perhaps a larger number. Among +them were Matthew and Priscilla Grant, from whom Gen. Grant was of the +eighth generation in descent. Bancroft says, "Many of them had been +accustomed to ease and affluence; an unusual proportion were graduates +of Cambridge and Oxford. The same rising tide of strong English sense +and piety, which soon overthrew tyranny forever in the British Isles, +under Cromwell, was forcing the best blood in England to these shores." +The shores of New England says George P. Marsh, were then sown with the +finest of wheat; Plymouth Rock had but just received the pilgrims; the +oldest cottages and log-cabins on the coast were yet new, when Samuel +Boreman first saw them. The Puritans were a people full of religion, +ministers came with their people; they improved the time on the voyage, +Roger Clap's diary, kept on shipboard 1630, says, "So we came by the +good hand of our God through the deep _comfortably_, having preaching +and expounding of the word of God _every day for ten weeks_ together by +our ministers." Mr. Blaine says that the same spirit which kept +Cromwell's soldiers at home to fight for liberty after 1640, impelled +men to America before that time, so that there was probably never an +emigration, in the history of the world, so influential as that to New +England from 1620 to 1643. + +It is possible that Christopher Boreman fought and perhaps fell in the +army of the commonwealth. But why did so many of the early settlers, +quickly leave the Atlantic coast for the Connecticut valley? Their first +historians say there was even then "a hankering for new land." They +wished also to secure it from occupation by the Dutch who were entering +it. Reports of its marvelous fertility, says Bancroft, had the same +effect on their imagination, as those concerning the Genesee and Miami +have since exerted, inducing the "western fever," "Young man go West." +The richness of the soil of the Wethersfield meadows has been celebrated +as widely as the aroma of its onions. It is only three miles from +Hartford and was for two centuries one of the most prominent communities +in Connecticut. There was scarcely a more cultured society anywhere. "It +were a sin," said the early colonists "to leave so fertile a land +unimproved." The Pequod war had annihilated a powerful and hostile tribe +on the Thames in 1637. Six hundred Indians perished, only two whites +were killed. Connecticut was long after that comparatively safe from +Indians. In 1639, the people formed themselves into a body politic by a +voluntary association. The elective franchise belonged to all the +members of the towns who had taken the oath of allegiance to the +commonwealth. It was the most perfect democracy which had ever been +organized. It rested on free labor. "No jurisdiction of the English +monarch was recognized; the laws of honest justice were the basis of +their commonwealth. They were near to nature. These humble emigrants +invented an admirable system. After two centuries and a half, the people +of Connecticut desire no essential change from the government +established by their Puritan fathers." (Bancroft). + +The first emigration of Puritans to the Connecticut river is supposed to +have been to "Pyquag," now Wethersfield, in 1634. The next year 1635, +witnessed the first to Windsor and Hartford; while in the following year +1636, Rev. Thomas Hooker and his famous colony made the forest resound +with psalms of praise, as in June, they made their pilgrimage from the +seaside "to the delightful banks" of the Connecticut. Hooker was +esteemed, "The light of the western churches," and a lay associate, John +Haynes, had been governor of Massachusetts. The church at Wethersfield +was organized while Mrs. Boreman's letter given above, was on its way, +Feb. 28, 1641; Samuel and Mary Boreman were undoubtedly among its +earliest members. His first pastor there was Rev. Richard Denton, +whom Cotton Mather describes, as "a little man with a great soul, an +accomplished mind in a lesser body, an Iliad in a nutshell; blind of an +eye, but a great seer; seeing much of what eye hath not seen." In the +deep forests, amid the cabins of settlers, and the wigwams of savages, +he composed a system of Divinity entitled "Soliloquia Sacra." Rev. John +Sherman, born in Dedham, England, Dec. 26, 1613, educated at Cambridge, +who came to America in 1634, also preached here for a short time. He +was afterwards settled at Watertown Mass., had twenty-two children and +died in 1685. The colony at New Haven, which was soon united with them, +was founded in 1638, under Rev. John Davenport and Gov. Theophilus +Eaton. They first met under an oak and afterward in a barn. After a day +of fasting and prayer they established their first civil government on a +simple plantation covenant "to obey the Scriptures." Only church members +had the franchise; the minister gave a public charge to the governor to +judge righteously, with the text: "The cause that is too hard for you +bring it unto me, and I will hear it," "Thus," says Bancroft, "New Haven +made the Bible its statute book, and the elect its freemen." The very +atmosphere of New Haven is still full of the Divine favor distilled +from the honor thus put upon God's word in the foundation of its +institutions. There were five capital qualities which greatly +distinguished the early New England Puritans. I. Good intellectual +endowments; they were of the party of Milton and Cromwell. II. Intense +religiousness; the names Pilgrim and Puritan, are synonymous with +zealous piety. III. Education; many were graduates of colleges; they +founded Harvard in 1636. IV. Business thrift; godliness has the promise +of the world that now is, as well as of that which is to come. V. Public +spirit; they immediately built churches, schools, court houses, and +state houses. + +The newly married son to whom Julian Borman, the Puritan widow, with +seven children, wrote from England in 1641, obviously partook of these +common characteristics. He was soon recognized as a young man to be +relied upon. "Few of the first settlers of Connecticut," says Hinman, +author of the genealogy of the Puritans, "came here with a better +reputation, or sustained it more uniformly through life." + +In 1646-7-8. He was a juror. + +1649. Appointed by the Gen. Court, sealer of weights and measures. + +1657-8-9-60-61-62-63, and many years afterward, representative of +Wethersfield in the Legislature of Connecticut, styled "Deputy to the +General Court." + +Hinman says, few men, if any, in the colony, represented their own town +for so many sessions. + +1660. On the grand jury of the colony. + +1670. Nominated assistant. + +1662. Distributor of William's estate. + +1662. Appointed by Gen. Court on committee to pay certain taxes. + +1665. Chairman of a committee appointed by the Legislature, to settle +with the Indians the difficulty about the bounds of land near +Middletown, "in an equitable way." + +1660. On a similar committee to purchase of the Indians Thirty Mile +Island. + +1665. Chairman of a committee of the Legislature to report on land, +petitioned for by G. Higby. + +1663. Appointed chairman of committee to lay out the bounds of +Middletown. + +He died just two hundred and twelve years ago in April, 1673. His estate +was appraised by the selectmen of Wethersfield, May 2, 1673 at £742, +15_s_, about $4,000. His son Isaac then 31 years old is not named in the +settlement of the estate, and had perhaps received his patrimony. He had +ten children, seven sons and three daughters, of whom the youngest was +six years old; he had three grandchildren, the children of his oldest +son, Isaac. All his children received scriptural names, as was common in +Puritan families. His descendants are now doubtless several thousands in +number. Only a very small part, after two hundred and fifty years, of a +man's descendants bear his name. His daughters and their descendants, +his sons' daughters and their descendants, one-half, three-quarters, +seven-eights, diverge from the ancestral name, etc., till but a +thousandth part, after a few centuries retain the ancestral name, and +those who retain it owe to a hundred others as much of their lineage as +to him. Such is God's plan; the race are endlessly interwoven together; +no man liveth unto himself. But a few comparatively, of the descendants +of Samuel Borman can now be traced. His own name, however, has been +carried by them into the United States Senate; into the lower house of +Congress; into many State Legislatures; to the bar and to the bench; +into many pulpits, and into several chairs of collegiate and +professional instruction. Yet these can represent but a few of his +descendants who have been equally useful. Probably a larger number of +them are still to be found in Connecticut than in any other state. Among +them is the family of Rev. Noah Porter, D. D., LL. D., the President of +Yale College, who married a daughter of Rev. Dr. N. W. Taylor. The +prayers of Julian Borman for "her good sonne"--"her very loving sonne, +Samuel Boreman" already reach, under the covenant promise of Him who +remembers mercy to a thousand generations, a widely scattered family. + +In the above letter the name is spelled both with and without the letter +"_e_" after "_r_;" the letter "_d_" is not found until 1712. The letter +"_a_," was not inserted until 1750; so that the descendants of Samuel, +may still bear all these names, Borman, Boreman, Bordman or Boardman, +according to the generation at which the line traced, reaches the parent +stock. It is said that the name, however spelled, is still pronounced +"Borman," at Wethersfield. The rise of Cromwell in England, the long +Parliament, the Westminster Assembly, the execution of Charles the +First, the establishment of the commonwealth, its power by sea and land, +the death of the Protector, the restoration of Charles the Second, were +events of which Samuel must have heard by letter from his brother and +sisters, as well as in other ways. He doubtless had numerous kinsmen on +the side of both his father and his mother, who were involved in these +movements of the times in England. Perhaps Richard Boardman, one of the +first two "Traveling Methodist Preachers on the continent," who came +here from England in 1769, was among the descendants. + +At the same time the pioneer legislator in the Colonial General Court +just established in the wilds of America, was aiding to lay Scriptural +foundations for institutions of civil and religious liberty in the New +World. He left a Thomas Boreman, perhaps an uncle, in Ipswich, Mass. +During the thirty-seven years of his life, after his emigration, he saw +new colonies planted at many points along the Atlantic coast. He saw the +older colonies constantly strengthened by fresh arrivals, and by the +natural increase of the population. Several other Boremans came to +New England very early, some of whom may have been his kindred. He +accumulated and left a considerable estate for that day, derived in part +undoubtedly, from the increase in the value of the new lands, which he +had at first occupied, and which he afterward sold at an advanced price. +Some in every generation, of his descendants have done likewise; going +first north, and east, and then further and further west. One of the +descendants of his youngest son Nathaniel, now living, a man of +distinguished ability, Hon. E. J. H. Boardman of Marshalltown, Iowa, +is said to have amassed in this manner a large fortune. + +Samuel Boreman died far from his early home and kindred. He was not +buried beside father or mother, or by the graves of ancestors who had +for centuries lived and died and been buried there; but on a continent +separated from them by a great ocean. He was doubtless buried on the +summit of the hill in the old cemetery at Wethersfield, in a spot which +overlooks the broad and fertile meadows of the Connecticut river. In the +same plot his children and grandchildren lie, with monuments, though +no monument marks his own grave. In his childhood, he may have seen +Shakespeare and Bacon. He lived cotemporary with Cromwell; and Milton, +who died, a year after he was buried at Wethersfield. His wife Mary, the +mother of us all, died eleven years later, in 1684, leaving an estate +of $1,300. As his body was lowered into the grave, his widow and ten +children may have stood around it, the oldest, Isaac, aged 31, with his +two or three little children; the second, Mary, Mrs. Robbins, at the age +of twenty-nine; Samuel, Jr., twenty-five; Joseph twenty-three; John +twenty-one; Sarah, eighteen; Daniel, fifteen; Jonathan, thirteen; +Nathaniel, ten; Martha, seven. Most of these children lived to have +families, and left children, whose descendants now doubtless number +thousands. Isaac had three sons and one daughter and died in 1719, at +the age of seventy-seven. Samuel had two sons and three daughters, and +died in 1720, at seventy-two years of age. Daniel, then fifteen; from +whom Timothy Boardman, the author of the Log-Book, was descended; had +twelve children, nine sons and three daughters, and died in 1724, at the +age of seventy-six. Jonathan had two sons and three daughters, and died +September 21, 1712, at the age of fifty-one. Nathaniel married in +Windsor, at the age of forty-four, and had but one son, Nathaniel, and +died two months after his next older brother Jonathan, perhaps of a +contagious disease, November 29, 1712; at the age of forty-nine. The +descendants of Nathaniel are now found in Norwich, Vt., and elsewhere; +and those of Samuel in Sheffield, Mass., and elsewhere. But the later +descendants of the other sons, except Samuel, Daniel and Nathaniel, and +of the daughters, I have no means of tracing. They are scattered in +Connecticut and widely in other states. During the lives of this second +generation occurred King Phillip's war, which decimated the New England +Colonies, and doubtless affected this family with others. Within their +time also, Yale College was founded, and went into operation first at +Wethersfield, close by the original Borman homestead. + +The writer of this has made sermons in the old study of Rector Williams, +the president of the college, near the old Boardman house, which was +standing in 1856, the oldest house in Wethersfield. The second +generation of Boardmans, of course occupied more "new lands." Daniel, +the fifth son of Samuel, owned land in Litchfield and New Milford, then +new settlements, as well as in Wethersfield. Jonathan married in +Hatfield, Mass. + +The third generation, the grandchildren of Samuel, the names of +twenty-nine of whom (seventeen grandsons and twelve grand-daughters), +all children of Samuel's five sons, are preserved; went out to occupy +territory still further from home. We have little account however, +except of the nine sons of Daniel, the seventh child of Samuel. Daniel +the great-grandfather of Timothy, the author of the Log-Book, was +married to Hannah Wright just a hundred years before the marriage of +that great-grandson, June 8, 1683, while the war-whoop of King Phillip's +Narraganset savages was still resounding through the forest. Of his +twelve children, two sons, John and Charles, died before reaching full +maturity, John at the age of nineteen, near the death of two of his +uncles, Jonathan and Nathaniel, in 1712; and Charles the youngest child, +at the age of seventeen, very near the time of his father's death, in +1724. One son died in infancy. Of his daughters, Mabel, married Josiah +Nichols, and for her second husband John Griswold of New Milford; Hannah +married John Abbe of Enfield; and Martha married Samuel Churchill of +Wethersfield. Of his six surviving sons, Richard was settled at +Wethersfield; he married in Milford, and had three children. His second +son Daniel, born July 12, 1687, was graduated at Yale College in 1709, +became the first minister of New Milford in 1712 and died in the +ministry with his people, August 25, 1744. Hinman says: "He gave +character and tone to the new settlement, by his devotion and active +service." + +He was a man of deep piety, and of great force of character. It is +related that an Indian medicine man, and this Puritan pastor met by the +sick-bed of the same poor savage. The Indian raised his horrid clamor +and din, which was intended to exorcise according to their customs the +evil spirit of the disease. At the same time Mr. Boardman lifted up his +voice in prayer to Him who alone can heal the sick. The conflict of +rival voices waxed long and loud to see which should drown out the +other. Mr. Boardman was blessed with unusual power of lungs like his +nephew Rev. Benjamin Boardman, tutor at Yale and pastor in Hartford, who +for his immense volume of voice, while a chaplain in the Revolutionary +army was called by the patriots the "Great gun of the gospel." The +defeated charmer, acknowledged himself outdone and bounding from the +bedside hid his defeat in the forest. Mr. Boardman died about the time +his parishioners and neighbors were on the famous expedition to Cape +Breton and the capture of Louisburg and when Whitfield's preaching was +arousing the church. He was twice married and had six children. His +second wife, the mother of all but his oldest child was a widow, Mrs. +Jerusha Seeley, one of nine daughters of Deacon David Sherman of +Poquonnoch. Their children were: + +I. Penelopy, Mrs. Dr. Carrington. + +II. Tamar, wife of Mr. Boardman's successor in the pastorate at New +Milford, Rev. Nathaniel Taylor; mother of Major-General Augustine +Taylor, of the war of 1812; and grandmother of Prof. Nathaniel W. +Taylor, D.D., of New Haven. + +III. Mercy, the wife of Gillead Sperry, and grandmother of Rev. Dr. +Wheaton of Hartford. + +IV. Jerusha, wife of Rev. Daniel Farrand of Canaan, Ct., and mother of +Hon. Daniel Farrand (Yale, 1781), Judge of the Supreme Court of Vermont. +This judge had nine daughters, one of whom married Hon. Stephen Jacobs, +of Windsor, also a Judge of the Supreme Court of Vermont. + +Rev. Daniel Boardman left but one son, the Hon. Sherman Boardman, who +was but sixteen years old at the time of his father's death. From the +age of twenty-one he was for forty-seven years constantly in civil or +military office. He was for twenty-one sessions a member of the General +Assembly of Connecticut, of which his great-grandfather Samuel, had been +so long a member. His four sons, Major Daniel (Yale, 1781), Elijah, +Homer, and David Sherman (Yale, 1793), were all members of the +Connecticut Legislature, in one or both branches, for many years. Elijah +was also elected a United States Senator, from Connecticut in 1821. He +founded Boardman, Ohio, and died while on a visit there Aug. 18, 1823. +His son, William W. Boardman (Yale, 1812), was speaker of the house of +the Connecticut Legislature, and elected to Congress in 1840. He left +an ample fortune, and his large and comely monument stands near the +centre of the old historic cemetery of New Haven, Ct., in which city he +resided. This branch of the family, second cousins of the author of the +Log-Book, though descended from the Puritan pastor Daniel Boardman, are +now associated with the Protestant Episcopal church. + +The brothers of the pastor, grandsons of Samuel, were scattered in +various places. Richard settled in Wethersfield, as already noticed. +Israel settled at Stratford, and had two sons and one daughter. Joshua, +received by his father's will the homestead, but afterward removed to +Springfield, Mass. Benjamin settled at Sharon, and received from his +father lands in Litchfield and New Milford, lands which the family had +probably purchased while the son and brother was preaching there. +Timothy, the ninth child of Daniel, only twelve years old when his +brother became pastor at New Milford, died only a few days before the +birth of his namesake, and first grandchild, the author of the Log-Book. +He lived and died in Wethersfield. His enterprise however, like that of +his grandfather who emigrated from England, and that of his father who +acquired lands in Litchfield and New Milford, went out, as that of many +of their descendants does to-day, in the west, for "more land." He and +his brother Joshua, and other thrifty citizens of Wethersfield, fixed +upon the province of Maine as the field of their enterprise. Timothy and +Joshua owned the tract of land, thirty miles from north to south, and +twenty-eight from east to west, which now, apparently, constitutes +Lincoln Co. They had a clear title to eight hundred and forty square +miles, about twenty-two townships, along or near the Atlantic coast. By +the census of 1880, the assessed valuation of real estate in this county +was $4,737,807; of personal property $1,896,886. Total $6,634,693. It +embraces 3,213 farms; 146,480 acres of improved land, valued, including +buildings and fences at $4,403,985; affording an annual production, +valued at $759,560. The population was 24,326 of whom 23,756 were +natives of Maine. + +This tract which should have been called "Boardman county," had been +originally purchased of the Indians by one John Brown, probably as early +as the close of King Phillip's war. It was purchased by the Boardman +brothers in 1732, from the great-grandchildren of John Brown, requiring +a considerable number of deeds which are now on record in the county +clerk's office at York, Maine. These deeds were from Wm. Huxley, Eleazar +Stockwell, and many others, heirs of John Brown, and of Richard Pearse +his son-in-law. Two of them show $2,000 each as the sums paid for their +purchase. + +William Frazier, a grandson of Timothy, and an own cousin of the +author of the Log-Book, received something more than two townships, and +although German intruders early settled upon these lands, many of whose +descendants are now among the leading citizens of that county, yet there +seems to be little reason to doubt that if, after the close of the +Revolutionary war, the author of the Log-Book and other heirs had gone +in quest of those ample possessions, something handsome, perhaps half of +the county, might have been secured. There is a tradition that the true +owners were betrayed as non-resident owners of unimproved lands often +are, by their legal agents, who accepted of bribes to defraud those +whose interests they had promised to secure. + +Timothy Boardman 1st, died in mid-life, at the age of fifty-three, and +this noble inheritance was lost to his heirs. The county became thickly +settled, and the Boardman titles though acknowledged valid, were it is +said, confiscated by the Legislature of Massachusetts in favor of the +actual occupants of the soil, as the shortest though unjust settlement +of the difficulty. + +The fourth generation, the great-grandsons of Samuel included several +men of prominence, some of whom have been already noticed. Hon. Sherman +Boardman of New Milford; Rev. Benjamin Boardman, the army chaplain, of +Hartford, and others. The majority of the family, however, were plain +and undistinguished men of sterling Puritan qualities, and of great +usefulness in their several spheres, in the church and in society. Many +were deacons and elders in their churches, these were too numerous for +further especial mention, except in a single line. The third child of +Timothy, the Maine land proprietor, only four years old when Lincoln +Co., Me. was purchased by his father, became a carpenter, ship-builder +and cabinet maker, and settled in Middletown, Ct., which his +great-grandfather Samuel had surveyed nearly a century before. He +married Jemima Johnson, Nov. 14, 1751, and his oldest child, born Jan. +20, 1754, was the author of the Log-Book. The preaching of Whitfield, +and the "Great Awakening" of the American churches, North, South and +Central, at this time, and for a whole generation, immediately preceding +the Revolutionary war, had very much quickened the religious life even +of the children of the New England Puritans. The Boardman family +obviously felt the influence of this great revival. The country was +anew pervaded with intense religious influences. + +Many letters and other papers remain from different branches of the +family of this and of more recent dates, exhibiting a deeply religious +spirit. The boy Timothy grew up in an atmosphere filled with such +influences. Many of the habits and feelings brought by the Puritans from +England still prevailed. To the day of his death he retained much of the +spirit of those early associations. He left a double portion to his +oldest son. He inherited the traits of the Puritans; intelligence; +appreciation of education; deference for different ages and relations in +society; piety, industry, economy and thrift. His advantages at school +in the flourishing village of Middletown must have been exceptionally +good; he early learned to write in an even, correct and handsome hand, +which he retained for nearly three-quarters of a century; his school +book on Navigation is before me. + +More attention was paid to a correct and handsome chirography, at that +time, the boyhood of Washington, Jefferson, Sherman and Putnam, than at +a later day when a larger range of studies had been introduced. "The +Young Secretary's Guide," a volume of model letters, business forms, +etc., is preserved; it bears on the first leaf "Timothy Boardman, his +Book, A.D. 1765." The hand is copy-like, and very handsome, and +extraordinary if it is his, as it seems to be; though he was then but +eleven years old. A large manuscript volume of Examples in Navigation, +obviously in his handwriting, doubtless made in his youth, is also +before me. The writing and diagrams are like copper-plate. No descendant +of his, so far as known to the writer could have exceeded it in +neatness and skill. In his early boyhood the French and Indian war +filled the public mind with excitement; reports of the exploits of Col. +Israel Putnam were circulated, as they occurred. The conquest of Canada +under Gen. Wolf filled the colonies with pride and patriotism. But +already disaffection between the mother country and the colonies had +arisen. Resistance to the tea tax and other offensive measures were +discussed at every fireside. The writer before he was seven years old +caught from the author of the Log-Book, then over eighty, something of +the indignant feeling toward England which the latter had acquired at +the very time when the tea was thrown overboard into Boston harbor. +Timothy Boardman was ripe for participation in armed resistance when +the war came. He was just twenty-one as the first blood was shed at +Lexington and Concord, April 19, 1775. Putnam who had left his plow in +the furrow, was with his Connecticut soldiers, in action, if not in +chief command at Bunker hill. Timothy Boardman joined the army which +invested Boston, under Washington in the winter of 1775-1776. He was +stationed, doubtless with a Connecticut regiment, on Dorchester Heights, +now South Boston. + +After completing this service, in the great uprising of the people to +oppose the southward progress of Burgoyne, he was called out and marched +toward Saratoga, but the surrender took place before his regiment +arrived. With his father he had worked at finishing houses, and the +inside of vessels built on the Connecticut river, on which Middletown +is situated. In the winter he was employed largely in cabinet work, in +the shop; I have the chest which he made and used on the _Oliver +Cromwell_. + +Congress early adopted the policy of sending out privateers or armed +vessels to capture British merchant vessels. These vessels became prizes +for the captors. The _Oliver Cromwell_ was chartered by Connecticut, +with letters of marque and reprisal from the United States. Captain +Parker was in command. The _Defence_ accompanied the _Oliver Cromwell_; +they sailed from New London; Timothy Boardman then twenty-four years of +age enlisted and went on board; he commenced keeping the Log-Book April +11, 1778; he seems to have been head carpenter on board the ship, and to +have had severe labors. His assistants appear to have deserted him +before the close of the voyage. It was his duty to make any needful +repairs after a storm, or in an engagement and to perform any such +service necessary even at the time of greatest danger. In a terrific +storm it was decided to cut away the mast. His hat fell from his head, +but he scarcely felt it worth while to pick it up, as all were liable so +soon to go to the bottom. In action, his place was below deck, to be in +readiness with his tools and material to stop instantly, if possible, +any leak caused by the enemies' shot. At one time the rigging above him +was torn and fell upon him, some were killed; blood spattered over him, +and it was shouted "Boardman is killed." He, however, and another man on +board, a Mr. Post, father of the late Alpha Post of Rutland, were +spared to make their homes for half a century among the peaceful hills +of Vermont. + +In the following year 1779, he seems to have sailed down the Atlantic +coast on an American merchant vessel. He was captured off Charleston, S. +Carolina, by the British, but after a few days' detention, on board his +Majesty's vessel, it was thought cheaper to send the prisoners on shore +than to feed them, and he and his companions were given a boat and set +at liberty. They reached Charleston in safety. The city was under +martial law, and the new-comers were for about six weeks put upon +garrison duty. About this time Lord Cornwallis was gaining signal +advantages in that vicinity, while Gen. Gates, who had received the +surrender of Burgoyne, three years before, was badly defeated. After +completing this service the author of the Log-Book, started to walk home +to Connecticut. He proceeded on foot to North Carolina, where Andrew +Jackson was, then a poor boy of twelve years. Jackson's father, a young +Irish emigrant died within two years after entering those forests, and +his widow soon to become the mother of a President, was "hauled" through +their clearing, from their deserted shanty, to his grave, among the +stumps, in the same lumber wagon with the corpse of her husband. He had +been dead twelve years when the pilgrim from Connecticut passed that +way. Overcome, probably by fatigue and by malaria, his progress was +arrested in North Carolina by fever, and he lay sick all winter among +strangers. + +In the spring of 1780, unable probably, to proceed on foot, he embarked +from some port, on a merchant ship bound for St. Eustatia, a Dutch +island, in the West Indies. He was again captured and taken prisoner by +the British. + +He was, however, transferred to a British merchant vessel on which he +rendered a little service by way of commutation, when he was set at +liberty on St. Eustatia. The island has an area of 189 square miles, +population 13,700; latitude 17°, 30', North. Climate generally healthy, +but with terrific hurricanes and earthquakes, soil very fertile and +highly cultivated by the thrifty Hollanders, with slave labor. It has +belonged successively to the Spanish, French, English and Dutch. Having +been enfeebled by his fever of the winter before, Timothy Boardman now +twenty-six years old, worked for several months at his trade with good +wages. I have heard him say that there the tropical sun shone directly +down the chimney. He used to relate also, how fat the young negroes +would become in sugaring time, when the sweets of the canefield flowed +as freely as water. He returned home to Connecticut probably late in +the year 1780. Vermont was then the open field for emigration. It was +rapidly receiving settlers from Connecticut. I have no knowledge that he +ever made any account of the immense tract in Maine, purchased and held +by deeds, still on record at York, Me., by his grandfather, and in which +he, as the oldest grandson, born a few days after his grandfather's +death and named for him, might have been expected to be interested. + +He was now twenty-seven. A large family of younger children had long +occupied his father's house. He sought a home of his own. His younger +brothers Elisha and Oliver were married and settled before him. He seems +to have inherited something of the ancestral enterprise of the Puritans, +"hankering for new land." All his brothers and sisters settled in +Connecticut, but he made his way in 1781 to Vermont. For a year +1781-1782, he worked at his trade in Bennington. During this time, he +purchased a farm in Addison, it is supposed of Ira Allen, a brother of +the redoubtable Ethan Allen; but the title proved, as so often happened, +with the early settlers to be defective. He recovered, many years +afterward, through the fidelity and skill of his lawyer, the Hon. Daniel +Chipman of Middlebury, the hard earned money which he had paid for the +farm at Chimney Point. It shows how thrifty he must have been, and how +resolute in his purpose to follow a pioneer life in Vermont, that after +this great loss he still had money, and a disposition to buy another +farm among the Green Mountains. Having put his hand to the plow, he did +not turn back. He did not perhaps like to have his Connecticut kindred +and friends think he had failed in what he had undertaken. He had saved +a good portion of his wages for six or seven years. He had received, as +the most faithful man in the crew, a double share in the prizes taken by +the _Oliver Cromwell_. He had perhaps received some aid from his father. +Though he had paid for and lost one unimproved farm, he was able to buy, +and did purchase another. He came to Rutland, Vt., in 1782 and bought +one hundred acres of heavily timbered land from the estate of Rev. +Benajah Roots, whose blood has long flowed in the same veins, with his +own. He perhaps thought that if he bought of a minister, he would get a +good title. He may have known Mr. Roots, at least by reputation, in +Connecticut, for he had been settled at Simsbury, Ct., before coming to +a home missionary field in Rutland. The owner of the land was in doubt +whether to sell it. + +The would-be purchaser had brought the specie with which to buy it, in a +strong linen bag, still it is supposed preserved in the family, near the +same spot. "Bring in your money," said a friend, "and throw it down on a +table, so that it will jingle well." The device was successful, the +joyful sound, where silver was so scarce, brought the desired effect. +The deed was soon secured, for the land which he owned for nearly sixty +years. + +A clearing was soon made on this land at a point which lies about +one-half mile south of Centre Rutland, and a-half mile west of Otter +creek on the slope of a high hill. It was then expected that Centre +Rutland would be the capital of Vermont. In 1783, he erected amid the +deep forests, broken only here and there by small clearings, a small +framed house. He never occupied a log-house; as he was himself a +skillful carpenter, house-joiner and cabinet maker and had been reared +in a large village, a city, just as he left it, his taste did not allow +him to dispense with so many of the comforts of his earlier life as many +were compelled to relinquish. + +He returned to Middletown, and was married, Sept. 28th, 1783, to Mary, +the eighth child and fifth daughter of Capt. Samuel Ward of Middletown, +who had twelve children. The Ward family were of equal standing with his +own. The newly married couple were each a helpmeet unto the other, and +had probably known each other from early life in the same church and +perhaps in the same public school. They were both always strongly +attached to Middletown, their native place; it cost something to tear +themselves away and betake themselves to a new settlement, which they +knew must long want many of the advantages which they were leaving. I +remember the pride and exhileration with which, in his extreme old age, +he used to speak of Middletown, as he pointed out on his two maps, one +of them elaborate, in his native city, the old familiar places. He +revisited it from time to time during his long life, the last time in +1837, only a year and a-half before his death. + +In his journeys between Rutland and Middletown, which he visited with +his wife, the second year after their marriage, he must have met many +kindred by the way. His Uncle Daniel Boardman lived in Dalton, and his +Uncle John in Hancock, Mass., while three brothers of his wife, and a +sister, Mrs. Charles Goodrich, resided in Pittsfield. Mrs. Ward, his +mother-in-law, lived also in Pittsfield with her children, till 1815, +when she was ninety-six years old, her oldest son seventy-six, and her +eighth child, Mrs. Boardman, over sixty. She and her son-in-law, Judge +Goodrich, the founder of Pittsfield, who was of about her own age, +lived, it is said to be the oldest persons in Berkshire Co. He had also +a cousin Mrs. Francis at Pittsfield, and a favorite cousin Elder John +Boardman, at Albany and another cousin, Capt. George Boardman in +Schenectady. These three cousins were children of his uncle Charles of +Wethersfield. His grandmother Boardman, the widow of the Maine land +proprietor, also spent her last days in Dalton, and died there at her +son Daniel's, about the time when Timothy first went to Vermont. + +His youngest brother William, distinctly remembered my grandfather's +playing with him, and bantering him when a little child, and also the +September morning when with his father and mother he rode over in a +chaise to Capt. Ward's to attend Timothy's wedding. He told me that when +Timothy was there last, he shed some tears, as he cut for himself a +memorial cane, by the river's bank, where he used to play in boyhood, +and said he should never see the place again. William, whom he used to +call "Bill," named a son for him, Timothy. + +The spot where he built his first house, and called on the name of the +Lord, and where his first two or three children were born, is now off +the road, at a considerable distance, about a-half mile north-east of +the house, occupied by his grandson, Samuel Boardman, Esq., of West +Rutland. It is near a brook, in a pasture, cold, wet, bunchy and stony, +and does not look as if it had ever been plowed. He had better land +which he cultivated afterward, and which yielded abundantly. But at +first he must have wrung a subsistence from a reluctant soil. Yet +the leaf-mould and ashes from burned timber on fields protected by +surrounding forests would produce good wheat, corn and vegetables. Near +that spot still stands one very old apple tree and another lies fallen +and decaying near by. So tenacious are the memorials of man's occupancy, +even for a short time. + +After a few years he removed this small framed house, fifty rods +westward and dug and walled for it a cellar which still remains, a +pit filled with stones, water and growing alders. He then made some +additions to the house as demanded by his growing family. He also built +near it a barn. His house was still on the cold, bushy land which slopes +to the north-east, and is now only occupied for pasturage. Here seven +young children occupied with him his pioneer home. + +The tradition used to be, that at first he incurred somewhat the +derision of his neighbors, better skilled in backwoodsman's lore than +himself, by hacking all around a tree, in order to get it down. It is +said that some imagined his land would soon be in the market, and sold +cheap; that the city bred farmer, better taught in navigation and +surveying, than in clearing forests and in agriculture, would become +tired and discouraged and abandon his undertaking. But he remained and +persevered, and his good Puritan qualities, industry, frugality, good +management, and persistency for the first ten or fifteen years, +determined his whole subsequent career and that of his family. He was +never rich, but he secured a good home, dealt well with his children, +and became independent for the remainder of his life. Indeed, like most +New England Puritans, of resolute and conscientious industry, and of +moderate expenditures, he was always independent after he was of age. + +A man of such character, and of so fair an education would, of course, +soon be valued in any community, and be especially useful in a new +settlement where skill with the pen and the compass are rarer than in +older places. + +He was appreciated and was soon made town clerk of Rutland, and county +surveyor for Rutland county. He was also in time made captain of the +militia, in recognition perhaps, in part, of his Revolutionary services. +He was also made clerk of the Congregational church, I have some of his +church records. On Nov. 20th, 1805, he was elected a deacon. He was +also on the committee to revise the Articles of Faith and Rules of +Discipline. About 1792, he bought fifty acres of good land lying west of +his first purchase, and on this ground, one hundred rods west of his +previous home, and about half a mile south-west of the spot first +occupied, he erected in 1799, a good two-story house, which is still in +excellent preservation, where till his death, he lived in a home as +ample and commodious as the better class of those with which he had been +familiar in his native state. + +In sixteen years after coming to the unbroken forest on what has since +been called "Boardman hill," he had won a good position in society and +in the church, and a comfortable property. He was afflicted in the +death of his oldest daughter and child, Hannah, October 26, 1803. But +this was the only death that occurred in his family for more than +fifty-three years. His six remaining children lived to an average age +of about eighty. + +The Congregational church in West Rutland, one of the oldest in Vermont, +had been formed in 1773, nine years before his arrival. He became a +member in 1785, and his wife in 1803. Not long after his coming, Rev. +Mr. Roots, the pastor, died, and the widely known Rev. Samuel Haynes, a +devout, able and witty man, became their pastor, and so continued for +thirty years, until his dismission in 1818. Timothy Boardman's children +were early taken to church, were trained and all came into the church +under, the ministry of Rev. Mr. Haynes. + +He said that he would sooner do without bread than without preaching, +and he was always a conscientious and liberal supporter of the church. +He appreciated and co-operated with his pastor. In the great revival of +1808, five of his children were gathered into the church. One of them, +perhaps all of them, were previously regarded by their parents as +religious. + +In politics he was a Federalist. In respect to the war with Great +Britain 1812-1815, his views did not entirely coincide with those of +some others, including his associate in the diaconate, Dea. Chatterton, +who was a rigid Democrat. This eminently devout and useful man, was so +burdened with Dea. Boardman's lukewarmness in promoting the second +war with Great Britain, against whose armies both had fought in the +Revolution, that he felt constrained to take up a labor with him, hoping +to correct his political errors by wholesome church discipline. It must +have been a scene for a painter. + +Perhaps no better man or one more effective for good, ever lived in West +Rutland than Dea. Chatterton. In both politics and religion he was +practical and fervid. The church meeting was crowded. + +The occasion compelled my grandfather, as Paul was driven, in his +epistle to the Corinthians, and as Demosthenes was forced in his oration +for the crown, to enter somewhat upon his own past record. Though a very +modest and unpretentious man, yet it is said that the author of the +Log-Book, on this memorable occasion straightened himself up, and boldly +referred his hearers to the glorious days of the war for Independence, +which had tried men's souls, and when he had forever sealed the +genuineness of his own patriotism, by hazarding his life both by sea +and land for his country. + +Weighed in the balances on his own record, so far from being found +wanting, his patriotism was proved to be of the finest gold; and his +place like that of Paul, not a whit behind that of the chiefest apostle. +Though he did not feel it to be his duty to fall in behind the tap of +the drum, and volunteer to fight, beside the aged democratic veteran who +served with him at the communion table; yet he showed that the older was +not a better soldier; that with diversities of politics, there was the +same loyalty, and that his own patriotism was no less than his +brother's. + +The tremendous strain which the struggle for American Independence put +upon the generation who encountered it, was touchingly illustrated in +the lives of these two men, a generation, or two generations after the +struggle had been successfully closed. Amid the quiet hills of Vermont, +the minds of both were affected for a time, with at least partial +derangement. Dea. Boardman labored temporarily under the hallucination, +that he was somehow liable to arrest, and prepared a chamber for his +defence. He was obliged, for a time to be watched, though he was never +confined. A journey to Connecticut, on horseback, with his son Samuel, +when he was perhaps sixty years old, effected an entire cure. Dea. +Chatterton in his extreme old age, after a life of remarkable piety, +became a maniac and was obliged to be confined. He had suffered peculiar +hardships, perhaps on the prison-ships, in the Revolution; and his +incoherent expressions, in his insanity, sixty years afterward, and just +before his death, were full of charges against the "British." + +Timothy Boardman's supreme interest in life, however, was in his loyalty +to Christ, and his intense desires were for the extension and full +triumph of Christ's kingdom. The revivals which prevailed in the early +part of the century and the consequent great expansion of aggressive +Christian work, were in answer to his life-long prayers, as well as +those of all other Christians; and he entered heartily, from the first, +into all measures undertaken for the more rapid spread of the gospel. He +was greatly interested in the formation of the American Board of +Commissioners for Foreign Missions, and read the _Missionary Herald_, +with interest from its first publication, until his death. The formation +of the Bible Society, Tract Society, Seaman's Friend Society, Sunday +School Society, American Home Missionary Society, etc., engaged his +interest, and received his support. He made himself an honorary member +of the A. B. C. F. M. near the close of his life, in accordance with the +suggestion of his sister Sarah, whom he greatly valued, the wife of Rev. +Joseph Washburn, and afterward of Dea. Porter, both of Farmington, Ct., +by the contribution to Foreign Missions, at one time, of one hundred +dollars. + +In social and domestic life, he was a son of the Puritans and of the +Connecticut type. He exacted obedience, and somewhat of reverence +from his children. They did not dare, to the last, to treat him with +unrestrained familiarity. His wife and children stood, waiting at their +chairs, until he was first seated at the table. He gave his children a +good education for the time, sending them to "Master Southard." His +habitual temper of mind was one of deep reverence toward God. He sat in +awe during a thunder storm, and a cyclone which passed over his home +deeply impressed him. His letters abound in affectionate and in +religious sentiments. He was scrupulous in the observance of the +Sabbath; required it of his children, and he expected it of the stranger +within his gates. The family altar probably never failed from the day he +first entered with his newly married wife, into their pioneer home, amid +the forests, till his death. He was solemn, earnest and felicitous in +prayer. The atmosphere of his home was eminently that of a christian +household. Two of his four sons became officers in their churches, and +also both his sons-in-law. Four of his grandsons entered the Christian +ministry, and a granddaughter is the wife of a clergyman. Those who +regard the Puritans in general, as too severe in industry, in frugality, +in morals and in religious exercises, would have regarded him as too +exacting in all these directions. He certainly could not on one hundred +and fifty acres of land, which he found wild, and not all of it very +good, have reared a large family, and supported public institutions as +he did; have given each of his sons at settlement in life, six hundred +dollars, and left to each at his death, eight hundred, if he had not +practiced through life, a resolute industry, and a somewhat rigid +economy. + +It is worthy of notice that like his grandfather, Timothy Boardman of +Wethersfield, he owned, what by a little change of circumstances, might +have brought, not a competence merely but wealth to his heirs. Early in +his residence at Rutland, he became possessed, with many others of a +small lot in what was called the "Cedar Swamp." These lots were valued +almost exclusively for the enduring material for fences which they +afforded. Their cedar posts supplied the town. They obtained also on the +rocky portions of these lands a white sand, which was employed for +scouring purposes, and also for sprinkling, by way of ornamentation, +according to the fashion of the times, the faultlessly clean, white +floors of the "spare rooms." Timothy Boardman's cedar lot, is now one of +the largest marble quarries in Rutland, a town which is said to furnish +one-half of all the marble produced in the United States. It brought to +one of his sons, a handsome addition to farm profits, but was disposed +of just before its great value was appreciated and lost, as in case of +the Maine lands. + +His grandfather Timothy Boardman, is said to have been "a short, stocky +man;" his monument, and until recently that of his father Daniel, son of +the emigrant from England, might both be seen, near together in the old +cemetery at Wethersfield. + +The author of the Log-Book, was a little below the average height, of +rather full face, with a peach-bloom tinge of red on each cheek in old +age, and of light complexion, and light hair. His motions were quick, +and his constitution healthful, though he was never strong. He had +undoubtedly a mind of fair ability; inclined perhaps to conservative +views, and acting as spontaneously, it may be in criticism, as in any +other exercise of its energies. I remember to have received reproof and +instruction in manners, from him when I was five or six years of age. +He was careful of his possessions, and articles belonging to him, were +very generally marked "T. B." + +It is a tradition among the older kindred, that the writer, though he +does not remember it, finding at the age of five or six, on grandpa's +premises, some loose tufts of scattered wool, and being told that they +were his, expressed the candid judgment, that it could not be so, +"because they were not marked T. B." + +I am not aware that he was much given to humor, yet he would seem not to +have been entirely destitute of it from the philosophical account he +gave of the advantages of his position, when some one ventured to +condole with him on the steep hill of nearly a mile which lay between +his house and the church. He said it afforded him two privileges, first +that of dropping down quickly to meeting, when he had a late start; and +secondly, that of abundant time for reflection on the sermon while he +was going home. + +His wife, undoubtedly his equal in every respect, to whom much of his +prosperity, usefulness, and good repute, as well as that of his family +was due, after a married life of fifty-three years and three months, +died in Dec., 1836. She had long been feeble. Her children watched +around her bedside on the last night in silence till one of her sons, +laying his hand upon her heart, and finding it still, said "we have no +longer a mother." I remember the hush of the next morning, throughout +the house, when we young children awoke. It was lonely and cold in +grandma's room, and only a white sheet covered a silent form. + +At eighty-three he was alone, and he deeply felt, as was natural, that +loneliness. Yet he had affectionate children, and with his youngest son, +who had four daughters, to him kind and pleasant granddaughters, he made +his home for the remainder of his life. With the oldest of these he made +in 1837, as already noticed, his last visit to Connecticut, going as far +as New Haven and the city of New York. On this journey he went in his +own carriage. He visited us, once at least in Castleton, at the house +where the Log-Book was so long concealed. I remember his figure there, +as that of a "short and stocky man," who seemed to me very old. He died +while on a visit to Middlebury, where two of his children had been +settled for more than twenty years, at the house of his youngest +daughter and youngest child, Betsey, then the widow of Dea. Martin Foot. +She and her six daughters did everything possible for his comfort. A +swelling made its appearance upon his shoulder, and the disease advanced +steadily to a fatal termination. His appointed time had come. From his +death-bed he sent to his children a final letter of affectionate +greeting and counsel. The feeble hand, whose lines had been so fair and +even for nearly three-quarters of a century, wanders unsteadily across +the pages, expressive of a mind perhaps already wandering with disease. +And so the fingers that had traced the neat lines of the Log-Book, on +board the _Oliver Cromwell_, in 1778, "forgot" sixty years afterwards +"their cunning," and wrote no more. He was buried beside his wife, in +the cemetery at West Rutland, near the church where he had worshipped +nearly sixty years. + +On the death of his wife, he had ordered two monumental stones to be +prepared just alike, except the inscriptions; one of which was to be for +her, and the other for himself. They may be seen from the road, by one +passing, of bluish stone standing not very far from the fence, and about +half way from the northern to the southern side of the lot. On these +stones was inscribed at his direction, where they may now be read, the +words, contained in Rev. 14: 13, divided between the two stones; on the +one: "I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, write Blessed are the +dead, which die in the Lord from henceforth;" and on the other: "Yea +saith the Spirit that they may rest from their labors and their works do +follow them:" + +His children were: + +Hannah, born July 23, 1784; died Oct. 26, 1803. + +Timothy, born March 11, 1786; settled in Middlebury, and died there +April, 1857. + +Mary, born Jan. 27, 1788; married Dea. Robert Barney of East Rutland +1824; died at her son's house, in Wisconsin, 1871. + +Dea. Samuel Ward, born Nov. 27, 1789; died in Pittsford, Vt., May 13, +1870. + +Dea. Elijah, born March 9, 1792; died Sept. 24, 1873. + +Capt. Charles Goodrich, born Feb. 19, 1794; died Dec. 17, 1875. + +Betsey, born, 1796; married Dea. Martin Foot of Middlebury; died April +26, 1873. + +The proclivity of the Puritans for education is illustrated in the fact, +that only five years after the foundation of Yale College one of this +family, Daniel a grandson of Samuel, the emigrant from England, became a +student there and was graduated in 1709, and that wherever different +branches of the family have since been settled they have generally sent +sons to the nearest colleges, not only many to Yale, but several to +Dartmouth, Williams, Middlebury, Union, and others. The eighth and ninth +generations are now in the process of education, in various institutions +east and west. The descendants of Timothy Boardman who have entered +professional life, are: + +Hon. Carlos Boardman (grad. Middlebury College 1842), a lawyer and +judge, in Linnaeus, Mo., oldest son of Capt. Charles. G. Boardman, of +West Rutland. + +Rev. George Nye Boardman, D.D. (Middlebury College 1847). Prof. of +Systematic Theology, in Chicago Theological Seminary, Chicago, Ill. + +Rev. Samuel W. Boardman, D.D. (Midd. Col., 1851). Pastor of the First +Presbyterian Church, Stanhope, N.J. + +Rev. Simeon Gilbert Boardman (Midd. Col., 1855). Pastor of the +Presbyterian Church, Champlain, N.Y. + +Charles Boardman, a member of the class of 1850, in Middlebury College, +and who died of typhoid fever in the sophomore year, doubtless had in +view the Christian ministry. + +These four were sons of Dea. S. W. Boardman, of Castleton. + +Horace Elijah Boardman, M.D. (Midd. Col., 1857), in practice at Monroe, +Wis., youngest son of Dea. Elijah Boardman, of West Rutland. + +Harland S. Boardman M.D., (Midd., 1874), a grandson of Timothy 4th, and +son of Timothy 5th, of Middlebury, was graduated at the Homeopathic +Hospital College of Cleveland, Ohio, 1877. He is now practicing at +Ludlow, Vt. + +William Gilbert Boardman, in practice of dentistry in or near Memphis, +Tenn., a grandson of Dea. Elijah Boardman. + +Edgar William Boardman, M.D., son of Dr. Horace E., now practicing at +Janesville, Wis.; both he and his father were graduated at the "Hahneman +Medical College and Hospital, of Chicago." + +---- [space]Webster, M.D., grandson of Mary, Mrs. Dea. Robert Barney, in +practice in Schuylerville, N.Y. + +Dea. Martin Foote, the husband of Betsey, was a student in Middlebury +College for two years, it is believed, in the distinguished class of +1813, but by reason of impaired health, he was unable to complete the +course. + +A few words in regard to the Log-Book may not be inappropriate. It seems +to be a mere waif that has floated on the current, and among a thousand +things that have perished, to have been, as it were by accident, +preserved. A portion of the volume seems to be a kind of a private +journal kept by my grandfather, for a few weeks in 1778. He does not +appear to have valued it greatly, as on the blank leaves, he has made +some entries of his business, as town clerk, and some as county +surveyor, and afterward, a few notes of account with his son Elijah, who +took a part of his farm. His last entry in it, as if it were in part a +waste blank book, was made forty-eight years after he left the _Oliver +Cromwell_, in 1826. + +It must have come into my father's hands with some other papers, on the +division of his father's effects in 1839. Both seem to have been +reluctant to destroy anything, though they did not much value it. My +father, at last, weary of keeping it, would seem to have given it to me +merely for its blank pages, as scribbling paper. Six leaves, apparently +blank, were torn out. Several pages are covered with mere vacant +scrawling by my boyish hand; whether I threw it away in utter contempt, +or concealed it back of the old chimney, in curious conjecture whether +some unborn generations, would not at some distant day discover it, and +puzzle over it, I cannot tell. I have no recollection of it whatever; +except that I had a general impression that we used to have more of +grandfather's writings than we possessed in later years. Whether we had +still others I know not. How little of such writing survives for a +century! It was lost for forty years, till a quarter of a century after +we had sold and left the house. It was found in 1884, in a dark recess, +back of the chimney, in the garret, by Master Fred. Jones, the son of an +esteemed friend, who in her childhood, about the time of the loss of +this manuscript, was a member of my father's household. Many years +afterwards, she became the worthy mistress of the house, and this lad, +exploring things in general, came across this old Log-Book. If it is of +any interest or value; to him and to Dr. J. M. Currier, the accomplished +secretary of the Rutland County Historical Society, and to James +Brennan, Esq., an old schoolmate who took an interest in the manuscript, +is due all the credit of its publication. + + + + + JOURNAL + AND + SAILING DIRECTIONS + OF THE + OLIVER CROMWELL + SECOND CRUISE. + + + + +JOURNAL OF THE SECOND CRUISE. + + +April 7th the Defence had Five Men Broke out With the Small Pox. + +9th they Lost a Man w^th the Small Pox. + +10th Exersis^d Cannon & Musquetry. + +11th Saw a Sail the Defence Spoke with her She was a Frenchman from +Bourdeaux Bound to the West Indies. + +13th Cros^d the Tropick Shav^d & Duck About 60 Men. + +14th at four Oclock Afternoon Saw a Sail Bearing E S E. We Gave Chase to +her & Came Up With her at 8 Oclock She was a Large French Ship we Sent +the Boat on Board of her She Informed us of two English Ships which She +Left Sight of at the time we Saw her. + +15th at Day Break We saw two Sail Bareing SEbS Distance 2 Leagues We +Gave Chase Under a Moderate Sail at 9 oClock P. M. Came Up with them +they at First Shew French Colours to Decoy us when we Came in About half +a Mile of us the Ups with English Colours We had Continental Colours +Flying We Engaged the Ship Admiral Kepple as Follows When We Came in +About 20 Rods of her We Gave her a Bow Gun She Soon Returned us a Stern +Chaise & then a Broad Side of Grape & Round Shot Cap^t Orders Not to +fire till we Can See the white of their Eyes We Got Close Under their +Larbard Quarter they Began Another Broad Side & then We Began & hel^d +Tuff & Tuff for About 2 Glasses & Then she Struck to Us at the Same time +the Defence Engaged the Cyrus who as the Kepple Struck Wore Round Under +our Stern We Wore Ship & Gave her a Stern Chase at which She Immediately +Struck. The Loss on our Side was One Kill^d & Six Wounded one Mortally +Who Soon Died Our Ship was hull^d 9 Times with Six Pound Shott Three +of which Went through Our Birth one of which wounded the Boatswains +yoeman the Loss on their Side was two Kill^d & Six wounded their +Larbourd quarter was well fill^d with Shott one Nine Pounder went +through her Main Mast. Imploy^d in the After-noon Takeing out the Men +& Maning the Prise The Kepple Mounted 20 Guns 18 Six Pounders & two +Wooden D^o with about 45 Men, the Cyrus Mounted 16 Six Pounders with +35 Men Letters of Marque Bound from Bristol to Jamaica Laden with Dry +Goods Paints & C. + +18th Cap^t Day Died. + +19th Cap^t Brown of The Ship Adm^l Kepple & Cap^t Dike of the +Cyrus with Three Ladies & 8 Men Sett off in a Long Boat for S^t Kitts +O^r Cap^tns Parker & Smedleys Permition. + +20th Imploy^d in taking things out of the Prise Viz. One Chist of +Holland a Quantity of Hatts & Shoes Cheeses Porter & Some Crockery Ware +Small Arms Pistols Hangers two Brass Barrel Blunderbusses a Quantity of +Riggen & C. + +21^st At Three oClock Afternoon we wore Ship to the Southward The +Prises Made Sail to the Northward we Lost Sight of them at Six. + +May 2^nd Sprung Our Foretopmast Struck it & Ship^d Another in its +Room. + +8^th Saw a Sail over Our Starboard bow We Gave Chase to her She was a +French Guineaman Bound to the Mole With 612 Slaves on Board Our Cap^t +Put 6 Prisoners on Board of Her Left her Just at Dark. + +11^th At 5 o'Clock in the Morning Saw a Sail at the Windward two +Leagues Distance Bearing Down Upon Us we Lay too for her till She Came +in half Gun Shott of us the Man at Mast head Cry^d out 4 Sail to the +Leeward Our Officers Concluded to Make Sail from her Supposing her to be +a Frigate of 36 Guns after we Made Sail We Left as Fast as we wanted She +Gave Over Chase at two oClock Afternoon She was the Seaford of 28 Guns. + +22^nd Sprung our Maintop sail Yard. + +28^th Made the Land at Port Royal. + +29^th the Ship Struck Bottom Thrice. + +30^th Came over the Bar this Morning & Arriv^d in this Harbour In +Company with the Ship Defence Com^ed by Sam^ll Smedly. Charlestown, +S^th. C^na. May y^e 30^th 1778. + + +SAILING DIRECTIONS OF THE SECOND CRUISE. + + +--------+--------+-----------+---------+ + |April | H | Course | Nth Latt| + +--------+--------+-----------+---------+ + | 1 | 1 | SW | 31.18 | + | | 4 | SE | | + | 2 | 10 | EbS | 31.20 | + | 3 | | ESE | 30.58 | + | 4 | | SE | 30.21 | + | 5 | | ESE | 29.44 | + | 6 | | SEbE | 29.22 | + | 7 | | SE | 29.54 | + | 8 | | ESE | 28.7 | + | 9 | | SSbS | 26.29 | + | 10 | | SW | 25.6 | + | 11 | | SSW | No Obs | + | 12 | | South | 22.35 | + | 13 | | SSW | No Obs | + | 14 | | SSW | 20.17 | + | 15 | 7 | South | 19.18 | + | | 12 | West | | + | 16 | | East | 19.16 | + | 17 | | WNW | 19.14 | + | 18 | | NNW | 19.35 | + | 19 | | NW | 19.46 | + | 20 | | NbW | No Obs | + | 21 | | NNW | 20.20 | + | 22 | | SbE | 19.15 | + | 23 | | SbE | 18.10 | + | 24 | | SbE | 16.30 | + | 25 | | South | 14.30 | + | 26 | | South | 12.54 | + | 27 | | NbW | 13.8 | + | 28 | 1 | SbE } | | + | | 11 | NbW } | 12.35 | + | 29 | 1 | NbW | 13.16 | + | | | Calm | | + | 30 | | NNW | 15.00 | + | May | | | | + | 1 | | NNW } | | + | 2 | 1 | NNW } | 16.53 | + | | 8 | South | 16.21 | + | 3 | 1 | NNW } | | + | | 8 | South } | 16.56 | + | 4 | | North | 17.21 | + | 5 | 7 | North } | | + | | 9 | SbW } | 17.8 | + | 6 | 1 | SSW } | | + | | 9 | North } | 17.20 | + | 7 | 1 | SbW } | 17.27 | + | | 6 | North } | | + | 8 | 1 | NbE } | | + | | 9 | South } | | + | | 11 | NbE } | 17.39 | + | 9 | 1 | SW } | | + | | 12 | NW } | 17.30 | + | 10 | | East | 18.20 | + | 11 | | WNW | 19.32 | + | 12 | 1 | North } | | + | | 8 | NW } | 21.7 | + | 13 | 1 | NW | | + | | | West | 21.50 | + | 14 | | SE | No Obs | + | 15 | | SW | No Obs | + | 16 | | West } | | + | | | NW } | 22.25 | + | 17 | | West } | | + | | | North } | 22.29 | + | 18 | | West | 22.22 | + | 19 | | West | No Obs | + | 20 | | West } | | + | | | NW } | 23.38 | + | 21 | | NW | 25.8 | + | 22 | | NbW | 27.45 | + | 23 | | NW | No Obs | + | 24 | | NW | 30.18 | + | 25 | | West | 30.10 | + | 26 | | West | 30.31 | + | 27 | | West | No Obs | + | 28 | | NW | 32.7 | + | 29 | | West | 32.23 | + | 30 | | West | No Obs | + +--------+--------+-----------+---------+ + + +An Account of the Months, Days And Knots Run, by the Ship Oliver +Cromwell in her Second Cruise. + + +-------------+------------+--------------+ + | Months | Days | Knots | + +-------------+------------+--------------+ + | March | 1 | 9 | 1148 | + | April | 1 | 30 | 2084 | + | May | 1 | 30 | 3086 | + +-------------+------------+--------------+ + | Total 3 | 69 | 63.18 | + +-------------+------------+--------------+ + + + + + CONTRACT + BETWEEN + TIMOTHY BOARDMAN + AND + CAPT. PARKER. + + FOR THE THIRD CRUISE. + + + + +Charlestown, July 6^th, 1778. + +Conversation Between Cap^t Parker & My Self this Day. + + +P^r. What are you Doing a Shore. + +My Sf. I wanted to See You Sir. + +P^r. Verry well. + +My Sf. The Term of my Inlistment is up & I would be glad of a Discharge +Sir. + +P^r. I cannot Give you One, the Ship is in Distress Plumb has been +trying to Get You away. + +My Sf. No Sir, I can have Good Wages here & I think it Better than +Privatiering I can^t Think of Going for a Single Share I had a hard +task Last Cruise & they all Left me. + +P^r. You have had a hard task of it & I will Consider you. & You Shall +have as Much again as You Expect. Ranny & those that Leave me without a +Discharge will Never Get anything you Better go aboard Boardman. I will +Consider you & you,ll _Lose Nothing by it_. + +My Sf. I am Oblig^d to you Sir. & So went on Board. + + + + + JOURNAL + AND + SAILING DIRECTIONS + OF THE + OLIVER CROMWELL + THIRD CRUISE. + + + + +JOURNAL OF THE THIRD CRUISE. + + +July 24 Weigh^d Anchor at 5 Fathom hole & Came Over the Bar In +Comp^y with the Notredame a 16 Gun Brig & two Sloops. Mett a French +Ship of 28 Guns on the Bar Bound in. + +25^th A Smooth Sea. + +29^th Saw A Sail Gave Chace. + +30^th Saw A Sail Gave Chace. + +31^st Saw two Sail Gave Chace. Light winds. + +August 6th at half after Six Afternoon Saw a Sail & Gave Chace, at 11 +Gave her a Bow Gun which Brought her too She was a Big from New Orleans +in Missippi Bound to Cape Francois a Spainard Went on Board Kept her All +Night & Lett her Go at 10 ^oClock the Next Day her Cargo was Furr & +Lumber She had Some Englismen on Board the Occasion of our Detaining her +So Long. + +7^th At 5 OClock Afternoon Made the Land the Island of Abaco. + +8^th at 10 ^oClock Harbour Island Bore East Dis^t 2 Leagues. + +9^th Hard Gales of wind. + +10^th Fresh Gales of wind & Heavy Squals. + +11^th Fresh Breeses & a Rough Sea. + +12 at Six Afternoon Caught a Great Turtle which was Kook^d the Next +Day for the Entertainment of the Gentlemen of the Fleet No Less than 13 +Came on Board to Dine. + +14 At 2 oClock P M Harbour Island Bore SbW 1 League Dis^t Sent the +Yoll on Shore The Brig Sent her Boat a Shore too. + +15^th The two Boats Returned with a two Mast Boat & 4 Men Belonging to +New Providence Squally Night & Smart Thunder & Lightning. + +16^th Cros^d the Bahama Banks from 8 Fathom of water to 3-3/4 Came +to Anchor at Night on the Bank. + +17^th Arriv^d at the Abimenes Fill^d our Water Cask & Hogg^d +Ship & Boot Top^t the Ship. + +18^th At Day Break Weigh^d Anchor together with the Rice Thumper +Fleet at Noon Parted with Them & Fired 13 Guns the Other fir,d their +Guns Which was a 16 Gun Brigg the Notredame Command by Cap^t Hall A 10 +Gun Sloop Com^d by Cap^t Robberts A 12 Gun Sloop Com^d by John +Crappo or Petweet & Stood to the westward a cross^d the Gulf. + +19^th at Day the Cape of Floriday bore west we stood for it a +Cross^d the Gulf we Came out of the Gulf in five fathom of Water & +Within 30 Rods of a Rieff in the Space of 15 Minutes in About a League +of the Shore Which Surpris^d the Capt. & Other Officers we have the +Ship in Stays & beat off the wind being moderate. + +20^th Saw a Sail & Gave her Chace & Came Up She was a Saniard a +Palacca from Havanna Bound to Spain She Inform^d us of the Jamaica +Fleet that they Pass^d the Havanna ten Days Back Which made us Give +over the Hopes of Seeing them. + +22 Saw this Spaniard about a League to the Windward. + +23 a Sunday, Saw a Ships Mast in Forenoon & Just at Night A Large +Jamaica Puncheon Floating we hoisted out our Boat^e & went in Persuit +of it but Could not Get it we Suppos^d it was full of Rum this +Afternoon a Large Swell brok & Soon after A fine Breese Which +Increas^d harder in the Morn^g. + +24^th Sun about two hours high we Saw white water in About a Mile +Under our Lee Bow we Saw the Breakers which was on the Bahama Banks +which Surpris^d our Officers & Men Greatly we Put our Ship About & had +the Good Fortune to Clear them the wind Blew harder we Struck Top +Gallant Yards & Lanch^d Top Gallant Masts Lay too Under one Leach of +the Four Sail Got 6 Nine Pounders Down in the Lower hold & Cleard the +Decks of unecessary Lumber The Wind Continued verry hard The air was +Verry Thick Just before Night the Sea Came in Over our Larboard Nettens +on the Gangway. All the officers Advis^d to Cut away the Main Mast +which we Did, Just at Dusk, All the hope we had was that it would not +Blow harder, but it Continued harder till After Midnight About one +oClock it Seemd to Blow in whirlwinds which oblig^d us to Cut away our +Four Mast & Missen Mast. Soon after the Wind Chang^d to the Eastward +which Greatly Encourag^d us Being Much Affraid of the Bahama Banks the +fore Mast fell to the windward & Knock^d our Anchor off the Bow So +that we Cut it away for fear it would Make a hole in the Bow of the Ship +our Fore Mast Lay along Side for two hours After it fell, it Being +Impossible to Get Clear of it We Bent our Cables for fear of the Banks +that we Might try to Ride it out if we Got on. + +25 Moderated Some But Verry Rough So that we Could Do no work. + +26 Got a Jury Mast Up on the Main Mast. + +27 Got up Jury Masts on the Fore & Mison Masts. + +30 at 8 oClock in the Morning Saw a Brigg over our weather Bow 2 Leagues +Dis^t We Kept our Course She Stood the Same way Just at Night we gave +her two Guns but She kept on at Night we Lost Sight of her. + +31^st at 5 in the Morning Saw the Brigg a Head Gave her Chace Came up +with her about Noon we hoisted our Colours She hoisted English Colours, +we Gave her one gun which made them come Tumbling Down. + +Sep^tr 1^st We Saw a Sail a Head Giving us Chace She hoisted Englis +Colours & we & the Brigg hoisted English Colours She Came Down towards +us we Put the Ship about & She Came Close too us we up Parts & Our +Colours She put about & we Gave her about 12 Guns Bow Chaces & She Got +Clear She was a Small Sloop of 6 or 8 Guns. + +Sep^t 2^nd Got Soundings of Cape May 45 Fath^m. + +Sep^t 3^rd at Night Lost Sight of The Prise. + +Sep^t 4^th Saw a Sail A Privatier Schoner She kept Round us all Day +& hoisted English Colours we hoisted English Colours but She thought +Best Not to Speak with. + +Sep^t 5^th Made the Land at 9 oClock in the Morning the South Side +of Long Island against South Hampton & Came to Anchor Under Fishes +Island at 12 oClock at Night Saw five Sail at 2 Afternoon Standing to +the Westward two of them Ships. + +Sep^t 6^th 1778 New London. Arriv^d in this Harbour. + + +SAILING DIRECTIONS OF THE THIRD CRUISE. + + +--------+-------+----------+----------+ + | Days | H | Course | Obser'n | + +--------+-------+----------+----------+ + |July | | | No Latt | + | 25 | | SW | 32.19 | + | 26 | | SSW | | + | 27 | | EbS | 32.07 | + | 28 | | WSW | 31.33 | + | 29 | | SE | 31.29 | + | 30 | | SSE | 30.20 | + | 31 | | SEbS | 30.30 | + |======================================| + | August | + |======================================| + | 1 | | SE | 30.15 | + | 2 | | Calm | 30.05 | + | 3 | | SE | 29.44 | + | 4 | | SSW | 28.38 | + | 5 | | SSW | 27.02 | + | 6 | | South | 26.20 | + | 7 | | SW | No Obsn | + | 8 | | NNE | No Obsn | + | 9 | | East | 26.15 | + | 10 | {1 | East} | 26.32 | + | | {9 | West} | | + | 11 | | SE | 26.24 | + | 12 | | WNW | No Obsn | + | 13 | | WNW | No Obsn | + | 14 | Stood | Off & on | 25.38 | + | 15 | | WSW | 25.50 | + | 16 | | West | No Obsn | + | 17 | | West | No Obsn | + | 18 | | Abimenes| | + | 19 | | West | 25.30 | + | 20 | | East | No Obsn | + | 21 | | | No Obsn | + | 22 | | NW | 26.04 | + | 23 | | NE | 27.40 | + | 24 | | West | { 28.14 | + | | | | { L78.54 | + | 25 | | West | {No Obsn | + | | | | { L78.39 | + | 26 | | NE | { 30.02 | + | | | | { L77.42 | + | 27 | | NE | {30.36 | + | | | | {L77.11 | + | 28 | | NE | {32.02 | + | | | | {L75.39 | + | 29 | | NE | 34.08 | + | | | | L74.51 | + | 30 | | {NE | 36.02 | + | | | {NbE | L73.01 | + | | | {North | | + | 31 | | {NbW | 38.10 | + | | | {East | L72.53 | + |======================================| + | September | + |======================================| + | 1 | | {North | 38.38 | + | | | {SE | L72.52 | + | 2 | | {SE | 38.46 | + | | | {NbE | L72.18 | + | 3 | | {NW | 38.35 | + | | | {EbS | L72.01 | + | 4 | | {NWbW | 38.25 | + | | | {EbS | L72.18 | + | 5 | | | 39.25 | + | | | | L72.06 | + +--------+-------+----------+----------+ + + +An Account of the Months, Days, & Knots the Ship Olv^r Cromwell Run +the Third Cruise. + + +---------------+---------+------------+ + | Months | Days | Knots | + +---------------+---------+------------+ + | July | 1 | 7 | 211 | + | August | 1 | 31 | 860 | + | September | 1 | 6 | 151 | + +---------------+---------+------------+ + | Total 3 | 44 | 1222 | + +---------------+---------+------------+ + + + + +GUNNER'S REMARKS. + + + + +REMARKS OF OUR GUNNER ON CHARLESTOWN, IN S. C. + + +Charlestown is Pleasantly Situated on Ashley River on verry low Land it +was Extreamly well Built but the Fire which happen^d in January last +has Spoiled the Beauty of the Place, it may if times alter be as +pleasant & Beautifull with Regard to y^e Buildings as ever. But I +Cannot Behold such a Number of my fellow beings (altho Differing in +Complexion) Dragged from the Place of their Nativity, brought into a +Country not to be taught the Principles of Religion & the Rights of +Freeman, but to Be Slaves to Masters, who having Nothing but Interest in +View without ever Weting their own Shoes, Drive these fellows to the +Most Severe Services, I say I cannot behold these things without Pain. +And Expressing my Sorrow that are Enlighten^d People, a People +Professing Christianity Should treat any of God's creatures in Such a +Manner as I have Seen them treated Since my arrival at this Place. & I +thank God who Gave me a Disposition to Prefer Freedom to Slavery. + +I have Just mentioned a People Professing Christianity. I believe there +is a few who now & then go to Church but by all the Observation I have +been able to make I find that Horse Racing, Frolicking Rioting Gaming +of all Kinds Open Markets, and Traffick, to be the Chief Business of +their Sabbaths. I am far from Supposing there is not a few Righteous +there But was it to have the chance which Soddom had, that if there was +five Righteous men it Should Save the City. I believe there would be +only a Lot & Family, & his wife I should be afraid would Look Back. + +Another remark that I shall make is this, Marriage in Most Countrys is +Deemed Sacred, and here there are many honourable and I believe happy +Matches, But to see among the Commonalty a Man take a Woman without so +much Ceremony as Jumping over a Broom Stick at the time of their +Agreement, to see her Content herself to be his Slave to work hard to +maintain him & his Babs & then to Content herself with a flogging if she +only says a word out of Doors at the End of it, and then take his other +Doxy who Perhaps has Served him well--and so one Lover to another, +Succeeds another and another after that the last fool is as welcome as +the former, till having liv,d hour out he Gives Place & Mingles with the +herd who went Before him. These things may to some People who are +unacquainted with such Transactions appear Strange and Odd, but how +shall I express myself--what Feelings have I had within myself to behold +one of these Slaves or Rather whole Tribes of them belonging to one +Master who Perhaps has the happiness of an Ofspring of beautifull +Virgins whose Eyes must be continually assaulted with a Spectacle which +Modesty forbids me to Mention. I have Seen at a Tea table a Number of +the fair Sex, which a Man of Sentiments would have almost Ador,d and a +man of Modesty would not have been so Indecent as to have Unbutton^d +his knee to adjust his Garter--Yet have I Seen a Servant of both Sexes +Enter in Such Dishabitable as to be oblig^d to Display those Parts +which ought to be Concealed. To see Men Approach the Room where those +Angelick Creatures meet & View those Beautifull Countenances & Sparkling +Eyes, which would almost tell You that they abhor,d the Cruel imposition +of their Parents, who Perhaps Loaded with a Plentifull fortune, would +not afford a decent Dress to their Servants to hide their Shame from +such Sight I have turn^d my Eyes. I would not mean to be two Severe +nor have it thought but there are great numbers who have a Sence of the +Necessity of a Due decorum keep their Servants in a Verry Genteel manner +and do honor to their keepers but those who have Viewed such scenes as +well as myself will testify to this Truth & Say with me that Droll +appearances would Present themselves to view that in Spite of all that I +could Do would Oblige me to give a total grin, the Particular above +mentioned altho they appear a Little forecast are absolutely matters of +fact & not Indeed to Convey any I^ll Idea to y^e mind. + +In a Commertial way by what little opportunity I have had to make any +Remarks on them. I find that in Casting up their accounts that there are +a Number which Deservs to be Put on y^e C^r Side. But money getting +being Mankinds Universal harvest I find as many Reapers as one would +wish to see in Such an Open Field for every one to have a fare Sweep +with the Sickle which as frequently cuts your purse Strings as anything +Else, their Rakes are Most Excellent nothing is lost for want of +geathering & you may depend on it their Bins are so Close that But a +trifle of what they Put in ever Comes out of the Cracks. Sometimes you +will see a small Trifle peep its Nose out on a Billiard Table, now & +then the four knaves will tempt a Small Parcell to walk on the Table, & +I believe Black Gammon, Shuffle Board, horse Racing, & that Noble Game +of Roleing two Bullets on the Sandy Ground Where if there Should be +y^e Least Breath air it would Blind you all those would help a little +of it to Move & if I added Whoreing and Drinking they would Not Deny the +Charge. If the things Mentioned above are to be Deemed Vices. I think no +Person that Comes to Carolina will find any Scarcity, Provided they have +such articles as Suits such a Market. I cannot from my hart Approve of +their Method of Living--not but that their Provision is Wholesome but In +Genral they Dont Coock it well. Rice bares the Sway, in Room of Bread, +with any kind of victuals and Ever in Families of Fashion you will see a +Rice Pudding (If it Deserves the Name) to be Eat as we do our Bread, I +am affraid of Being too cencorious or I would Remark Numberless things +which to a Person unacquainted with Place would even Look Childish to +mention but as I only make this Obs^n for my own amusement never +Intending they Shall be ever seen but by Particular friends. I shall +omit any niceities of Expressions and Shall write a few more Simple +facts I have seen Gamblers, Men Pretended Friends to you that would hug +you in their Bosoms till they were Certain they had Gotten what they +could from you, & then for a Shilling would Cut Your Throat. I would not +Mean by this to Convey the Idea of their being a Savage people in +General. There are Gentlemen of Charracter & who Ritchly Deserve +the Name--but as there are Near Seven Blacks to one White Man, the +Austerities used to the Slaves in their Possessions, is the Reason as I +immagion of their looking on & Behaving to a White Man who Differs from +them in their Manners and not bred in their Country in a Way Not much +Different from which they treats their Blacks. I Have been told that the +Place is Much alterd from what it was Before the Present Dispute & that +a Number of the Best Part of People are Moved out of Charlestown for the +honour of Charlestown. I will believe it and wish it may be Restor^d +to its Primitive Lusture. However let me not look all on the Dark Side +there are Many things well worth Praise, there Publick Buildings are +well finish^d & Calculated for the Convenience of Publick & Private +Affairs, their Churches make a verry fine Appearance and are finish^d +Agreeable to the Rules of Architecture. I do not Mean that they are the +Most elegant I ever Saw, but so well Perform^d as would Declare those +who Reared them Good Artissts, the Streets are well Laid out & a verry +good Brick Walk on Each Side for foot Passengers, their Streets are not +Pav^d but Verry Sandy, and the heat of the Climate is Such that the +Sand is Generally verry Disagreeable & Occasions a number of Insects +Commonly Call^d Sand flies, the Lowness of the Land and the Dead water +in Different Places in the Town & out of it Occasions another Breed of +Insects well Known by the Name of Musketoes. These Creatures are well +disciplined for they do Not Scout in private Places nor in Small +Companies as tho Affraid to attack but Joining in as many Different +Colloums as there are Openings to Your Dwellings they make a Desperate +push and Seldom fail to Annoy their Enemy in Such a Manner that they +leave their Adversary in a Scratching humor the Next Morning thro^o +Vexation. It would be endless to mention the advantages & Disadvantages +of the Place but this I am fully Assur^d of. If the White People would +be so Industrous as to till the Land themselves and see every thing Done +so as to have less of those Miserable Slaves in the Country the Place to +me would have a verry Different Appearance. I have heard it Alleg^d as +a Pretext for keeping so many Slaves that white People cannot Endure the +heat of the Climate & that there can be but verry little done without +these Slaves, that there could be but a verry little done is to me a +Matter of Doubt, but that there would be but Verry little If the People +Retain their Luxury & Love of all kinds of Sport is to me Beyond all +doubt. I have Seen more Persons than a few worry themselves at Gaming In +an Excessive hot Day in Such a Manner that a Moderate Days work would be +a Pleasure to it. These things have convinc^d me of the Foolish wicked +and Absurd Notions which People seem to have Adopted in General that +Because these Issacars are like Issacars of Old. Strong Asser Couching +Down between two Burthens and have not Got the means of Preserving their +Liberty were they Ever So Desirous of it and are kept in Such a +miserable manner as never to know the Blessings of it. I say these +things have Convinc^d me of the Notorious Violation of the Rights of +Mankind and which I think no Rational Man will Ever try to Justify. +America my Earnest Prayer is that thou mayst preserve thy Own Freedom +from any Insolvent Invaders who may attempt to Rob the of the Same--but +be Sure to let Slavery of all kinds ever be Banish^d from thy +habbittations. + +Fins Camsiocelo. + + + + +SONGS. + + + + +A SEAMAN'S SONG. + + +1 + + Come all you Joval Seaman, with Courage Stout & bold + that Value more your Honour, than Mysers do their Gold + When we Receive Our Orders, we are Oblig^d to go + O'er the Main to Proud Spain, Let the Winds Blow high or Low. + + +2 + + It was the fifteenth of September, from Spithead we Sat Sail + we had Rumbla in our Company, Blest with a Pleasant Gale + we Sailed away together, for the Bay of Biscay, o + Going along Storms Come on, and the winds Began to Blow. + + +3 + + The winds and Storms increas^d the Bumbla Bore away + and left the Cantaborough, for No Longer Could She Stay + & when they Came to Gibralter, they told the People So + that they thought we were Lost, in the Bay of Biscay, O. + + +4 + + But as Providence would have it, it was not quite so Bad + But first we lost our Missen Mast, and then went off our Flag + the Next we Lost our Main Mast, one of our Guns also + With five Men, Drowned then, in the Bay of Biscay, O. + + +5 + + The Next we Lost our foremast, which was a Dreadfull Stroke + and in our Larboar Quarter, a Great hole there was Broke + and then the Seas come Roleing in, our Gun Room it Did flow + Thus we Rold and we told, in the Bay of Biscay, O. + + +6 + + It was Dark and Stormy Weather, Sad and Gloomy Night + Our Captain on the Quarter Deck, that Day was kill^d Outrite + the Rings that on his fingers were, in Pieces burst Also + Thus we were in Dispare, in the Bay of Biscay, O. + + +7 + + But when we Came to Gibralter, and lay in our New Hold + the People they Came flocking Down, our Ship for to Behold + they Said it was the Dismalest Sight, that Ever they Did know + We never Pind, But Drunk Wine, till we Drowned all our Woe. + + + + +A COUNTRY SONG. + + +1 + + On the Sweet Month of May we'll Repair to the Mountain + And Set we Down there by a Clear Crystial fountain + Where the Cows sweetly Lowing In a Dewy Morning + Where Phebus oer the Hills and Meddow are Adorning. + + +2 + + A Sweet Country Life is Delightfull and Charming + Walking abroad in a Clear Summer's Morning + O your Towns and Your Cities Your Lofty high Towers + Are not to be Compar,d with Shades & Green Bowers. + + +3 + + O Little I regard your Robes and fine Dresses + Your Velvets & Scarlets and Other Excesses + My own Country Fashions to me is More Endearing + Than your Pretty Prisemantle or your Bantle Cloth Wearing. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Log-book of Timothy Boardman, by Samuel W Boardman + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOG-BOOK OF TIMOTHY BOARDMAN *** + +***** This file should be named 26040-8.txt or 26040-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/0/4/26040/ + +Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Anne Storer and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +book was produced from scanned images of public domain +material from the Google Print project.) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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Samuel W. Boardman, D.D.. + </title> + <style type="text/css"> +/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */ +<!-- + p { margin-top: .75em; + text-align: justify; + margin-bottom: .75em; + } + + .notes {background-color: #dfdbdb; color: #000; padding: .5em; + margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; text-align: center;} + + h1,h2,h3,h4,h5 { + text-align: center; /* all headings centered */ + clear: both; + } + hr { width: 33%; + margin-top: 2em; + margin-bottom: 2em; + margin-left: auto; + margin-right: auto; + clear: both; + } + + body{margin-left: 10%; + margin-right: 10%; + } + + .box { width: 700px; + margin: 0 auto; + text-align: center; + padding: 1em; + border-style: none; } + + .pagenum { visibility: hidden; + position: absolute; + left: 92%; + font-size: smaller; + text-align: right; + } /* page numbers */ + + .center {text-align: center;} + .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;} + + .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;} + + // --> + /* XML end ]]>*/ + </style> + </head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +Project Gutenberg's Log-book of Timothy Boardman, by Samuel W Boardman + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Log-book of Timothy Boardman + Kept On Board The Privateer Oliver Cromwell, During A + Cruise From New London, Ct., to Charleston, S. C., And + Return, In 1778; Also, A Biographical Sketch of The Author. + +Author: Samuel W Boardman + +Release Date: July 12, 2008 [EBook #26040] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOG-BOOK OF TIMOTHY BOARDMAN *** + + + + +Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Anne Storer and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +book was produced from scanned images of public domain +material from the Google Print project.) + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<p class="notes">Transcriber’s Note:<br /> +Inconsistent spellings and hyphenations<br /> +have been left as printed.</p> + +<hr style="width: 95%;" /> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p> +<h1>LOG-BOOK</h1> + +<h3>OF</h3> + +<h1>TIMOTHY BOARDMAN;</h1> + +<p class="center"> +<span class="smcap"><strong>Kept on Board the Privateer Oliver Cromwell, during a<br /> +Cruise from New London, Ct., to Charleston,<br /> +S. C., and Return,<br /> +in 1778;</strong></span></p> + +<h3>ALSO,</h3> + +<h1>A BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH</h1> + +<h2>OF THE AUTHOR.</h2> + +<h2>BY THE REV. SAMUEL W. BOARDMAN, D.D.</h2> + +<hr style="width: 15%;" /> + +<h5>ISSUED UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE RUTLAND<br /> +COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY.</h5> + +<hr style="width: 15%;" /> + +<p class="center"><strong>ALBANY, N. Y.:<br /> +JOEL MUNSELL’S SONS.</strong><br /> +1885.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img1.png" width="500" height="110" alt="Page header" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>PREFACE.</h2> + + +<p>Under the auspices of the Rutland County Historical Society, is +published the Log-Book of Timothy Boardman, one of the pioneer settlers +of the town of Rutland, Vermont. This journal was kept on board the +privateer, Oliver Cromwell, during two cruises; the second one from New +London, Conn., to Charleston, S. C.; the third from Charleston to New +London, in the year 1778. It seems that the Log-Book of the first cruise +was either lost, never kept, or Mr. Boardman was not one of the crew to +keep it. It was kept as a private diary without any view to its ever +being published.</p> + +<p>When this manuscript, on coarse, unruled paper, was brought to light, it +came to the knowledge of the officers of the county historical society, +who, at once, decided that it was a document of considerable value and +should be published. Correspondence was accordingly +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span> opened with the +Rev. Samuel W. Boardman, D.D., of Stanhope, New Jersey, a grandson of +Timothy, to whom this document properly belonged, asking his permission +to allow the society to publish it. The Reverend Doctor immediately gave +his consent; and in his own words: “Supposed it was largely dry details. +Still these may throw side lights of value, on the history of the +times.” At the same time he also consented to furnish a biographical +sketch of his grandfather to be published with the Log-Book. Accordingly +the sketch was prepared, but it proves to be not only a sketch, but a +valuable genealogy of that branch of the Boardman family. This sketch +was collected from many sources, mostly from manuscripts.</p> + +<p>The Boardmans in Rutland county are all known as a strictly industrious, +upright, religious, scholarly race; and they are so interwoven with the +early history, business and educational interests of the county, that +this document must meet with general favor and interest.</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 35em;"> +<span class="smcap">John M. Currier,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: -1.5em;"><em>Sec. of the Rutland County</em></span><br /> +<em>Historical Society.</em></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p> +<h2>BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH</h2> + +<h4>OF</h4> + +<h1>DEA. TIMOTHY BOARDMAN.</h1> + +<h4>BY</h4> + +<h3><span class="smcap">Rev. Samuel W. Boardman,</span> D.D.</h3> + +<h3>Stanhope, New Jersey.</h3> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img2.png" width="500" height="85" alt="Page header" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH.</h2> + + +<p>There is still preserved a letter from England, written in a fine hand, +with red ink, dated Obeydon? Feb. 5, 1641, and directed,</p> + +<p class="center"> + “to her very loveing sonne<br /> + <span class="smcap">Samuel Boreman,</span><br /> + Ipswich in New England<br /> + give this with<br /> + haste.”</p> + +<p>The letter is as follows:</p> + +<p>“Good sonne, I have receaved your letter: whereby I understand that you +are in good health, for which I give God thanks, as we are all—Praised +be God for the same. Whereas you desire to see your brother Christopher +with you, he is not ready for so great a journey, nor do I think he dare +take upon him so dangerous a voyage. Your five sisters are all alive and +in good health and remember their love to you. Your father hath been +dead almost this two years, and thus troubleing you no further at this +time, I rest, praying to God to bless you and your wife, unto whome we +all kindly remember our loves.<br /> + +<span style="margin-left: 25em;">Your ever loving mother,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 30em;" class="smcap">“Julian Borman.”</span></p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> +This letter exhibits many of the characteristics of the Puritans to whom +the Bormans belonged. They were intensely religious; this short letter +contains the name of God three times and speaks of both prayer and +praise. The Puritans were an intelligent people, reading and writing; +this letter is a specimen of the correspondence carried on between the +earliest settlers and their kindred whom they had left in England. They +were an affectionate people, “remembering their loves” to one another; +and praying, for one another, as this mother did for her son and his +wife. This short letter has the word “love” four times.</p> + +<p>They were a persistent people, those who came hither did not shrink from +the hardships around them. They came to stay, and sent back for their +friends. Samuel desired Christopher to follow him. Many of their +families were large, there were at least nine members of this Puritan +household. Samuel was born probably about 1610; he had emigrated from +England in 1635 or 1636. His name is found at Ipswich, Mass., about 1637 +where land was assigned to him. Ipswich had been organized in 1635 with +some of the most intelligent and wealthy colonists. His father died +after Samuel’s emigration to America, in 1639. His wife’s name was Mary; +their oldest child, so far as we have record, was Isaac, born at +Wethersfield, Ct., Feb. 3, 1642. He probably journeyed through the +wilderness from Ipswich, Mass., which is twenty-six miles north of +Boston, to Wethersfield, Ct., about one hundred and fifty miles, in 1639 +or 1640.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> +Between 1630 and 1640 many of the best families in England sent +representatives to America. It is said that Oliver Cromwell was at one +time on the point of coming. Between February and August, 1630, +seventeen ships loaded with families, bringing their cattle, furniture +and other worldly goods, arrived. One ship of four hundred tons brought +one hundred and forty passengers, others perhaps a larger number. Among +them were Matthew and Priscilla Grant, from whom Gen. Grant was of the +eighth generation in descent. Bancroft says, “Many of them had been +accustomed to ease and affluence; an unusual proportion were graduates +of Cambridge and Oxford. The same rising tide of strong English sense +and piety, which soon overthrew tyranny forever in the British Isles, +under Cromwell, was forcing the best blood in England to these shores.” +The shores of New England says George P. Marsh, were then sown with the +finest of wheat; Plymouth Rock had but just received the pilgrims; the +oldest cottages and log-cabins on the coast were yet new, when Samuel +Boreman first saw them. The Puritans were a people full of religion, +ministers came with their people; they improved the time on the voyage, +Roger Clap’s diary, kept on shipboard 1630, says, “So we came by the +good hand of our God through the deep <em>comfortably</em>, having preaching +and expounding of the word of God <em>every day for ten weeks</em> together by +our ministers.” Mr. Blaine says that the same spirit which kept +Cromwell’s soldiers at home to fight for liberty after 1640, impelled +men to America before that time, so that there was probably never an +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> +emigration, in the history of the world, so influential as that to New +England from 1620 to 1643.</p> + +<p>It is possible that Christopher Boreman fought and perhaps fell in the +army of the commonwealth. But why did so many of the early settlers, +quickly leave the Atlantic coast for the Connecticut valley? Their first +historians say there was even then “a hankering for new land.” They +wished also to secure it from occupation by the Dutch who were entering +it. Reports of its marvelous fertility, says Bancroft, had the same +effect on their imagination, as those concerning the Genesee and Miami +have since exerted, inducing the “western fever,” “Young man go West.” +The richness of the soil of the Wethersfield meadows has been celebrated +as widely as the aroma of its onions. It is only three miles from +Hartford and was for two centuries one of the most prominent communities +in Connecticut. There was scarcely a more cultured society anywhere. “It +were a sin,” said the early colonists “to leave so fertile a land +unimproved.” The Pequod war had annihilated a powerful and hostile tribe +on the Thames in 1637. Six hundred Indians perished, only two whites +were killed. Connecticut was long after that comparatively safe from +Indians. In 1639, the people formed themselves into a body politic by a +voluntary association. The elective franchise belonged to all the +members of the towns who had taken the oath of allegiance to the +commonwealth. It was the most perfect democracy which had ever been +organized. It rested on free labor. “No jurisdiction of the English +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span> +monarch was recognized; the laws of honest justice were the basis of +their commonwealth. They were near to nature. These humble emigrants +invented an admirable system. After two centuries and a half, the people +of Connecticut desire no essential change from the government +established by their Puritan fathers.” (Bancroft).</p> + +<p>The first emigration of Puritans to the Connecticut river is supposed to +have been to “Pyquag,” now Wethersfield, in 1634. The next year 1635, +witnessed the first to Windsor and Hartford; while in the following year +1636, Rev. Thomas Hooker and his famous colony made the forest resound +with psalms of praise, as in June, they made their pilgrimage from the +seaside “to the delightful banks” of the Connecticut. Hooker was +esteemed, “The light of the western churches,” and a lay associate, John +Haynes, had been governor of Massachusetts. The church at Wethersfield +was organized while Mrs. Boreman’s letter given above, was on its way, +Feb. 28, 1641; Samuel and Mary Boreman were undoubtedly among its +earliest members. His first pastor there was Rev. Richard Denton, whom +Cotton Mather describes, as “a little man with a great soul, an +accomplished mind in a lesser body, an Iliad in a nutshell; blind of an +eye, but a great seer; seeing much of what eye hath not seen.” In the +deep forests, amid the cabins of settlers, and the wigwams of savages, +he composed a system of Divinity entitled “Soliloquia Sacra.” Rev. John +Sherman, born in Dedham, England, Dec. 26, 1613, educated at Cambridge, +who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> +came to America in 1634, also preached here for a short time. He +was afterwards settled at Watertown Mass., had twenty-two children and +died in 1685. The colony at New Haven, which was soon united with them, +was founded in 1638, under Rev. John Davenport and Gov. Theophilus +Eaton. They first met under an oak and afterward in a barn. After a day +of fasting and prayer they established their first civil government on a +simple plantation covenant “to obey the Scriptures.” Only church members +had the franchise; the minister gave a public charge to the governor to +judge righteously, with the text: “The cause that is too hard for you +bring it unto me, and I will hear it,” “Thus,” says Bancroft, “New Haven +made the Bible its statute book, and the elect its freemen.” The very +atmosphere of New Haven is still full of the Divine favor distilled from +the honor thus put upon God’s word in the foundation of its +institutions. There were five capital qualities which greatly +distinguished the early New England Puritans. I. Good intellectual +endowments; they were of the party of Milton and Cromwell. II. Intense +religiousness; the names Pilgrim and Puritan, are synonymous with +zealous piety. III. Education; many were graduates of colleges; they +founded Harvard in 1636. IV. Business thrift; godliness has the promise +of the world that now is, as well as of that which is to come. V. Public +spirit; they immediately built churches, schools, court houses, and +state houses.</p> + +<p>The newly married son to whom Julian Borman, the Puritan widow, with +seven children, wrote from +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span> +England in 1641, obviously partook of these +common characteristics. He was soon recognized as a young man to be +relied upon. “Few of the first settlers of Connecticut,” says Hinman, +author of the genealogy of the Puritans, “came here with a better +reputation, or sustained it more uniformly through life.”</p> + +<p>In 1646-7-8. He was a juror.</p> + +<p>1649. Appointed by the Gen. Court, sealer of weights and measures.</p> + +<p>1657-8-9-60-61-62-63, and many years afterward, representative of +Wethersfield in the Legislature of Connecticut, styled “Deputy to the +General Court.”</p> + +<p>Hinman says, few men, if any, in the colony, represented their own town +for so many sessions.</p> + +<p>1660. On the grand jury of the colony.</p> + +<p>1670. Nominated assistant.</p> + +<p>1662. Distributor of William’s estate.</p> + +<p>1662. Appointed by Gen. Court on committee to pay certain taxes.</p> + +<p>1665. Chairman of a committee appointed by the Legislature, to settle +with the Indians the difficulty about the bounds of land near +Middletown, “in an equitable way.”</p> + +<p>1660. On a similar committee to purchase of the Indians Thirty Mile +Island.</p> + +<p>1665. Chairman of a committee of the Legislature to report on land, +petitioned for by G. Higby.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> +1663. Appointed chairman of committee to lay out the bounds of +Middletown.</p> + +<p>He died just two hundred and twelve years ago in April, 1673. His estate +was appraised by the selectmen of Wethersfield, May 2, 1673 at £742, +15<em>s</em>, about $4,000. His son Isaac then 31 years old is not named in the +settlement of the estate, and had perhaps received his patrimony. He had +ten children, seven sons and three daughters, of whom the youngest was +six years old; he had three grandchildren, the children of his oldest +son, Isaac. All his children received scriptural names, as was common in +Puritan families. His descendants are now doubtless several thousands in +number. Only a very small part, after two hundred and fifty years, of a +man’s descendants bear his name. His daughters and their descendants, +his sons’ daughters and their descendants, one-half, three-quarters, +seven-eights, diverge from the ancestral name, etc., till but a +thousandth part, after a few centuries retain the ancestral name, and +those who retain it owe to a hundred others as much of their lineage as +to him. Such is God’s plan; the race are endlessly interwoven together; +no man liveth unto himself. But a few comparatively, of the descendants +of Samuel Borman can now be traced. His own name, however, has been +carried by them into the United States Senate; into the lower house of +Congress; into many State Legislatures; to the bar and to the bench; +into many pulpits, and into several chairs of collegiate and +professional instruction. Yet these can represent but a few of his +descendants who have +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> +been equally useful. Probably a larger number of +them are still to be found in Connecticut than in any other state. Among +them is the family of Rev. Noah Porter, D. D., LL. D., the President of +Yale College, who married a daughter of Rev. Dr. N. W. Taylor. The +prayers of Julian Borman for “her good sonne”—“her very loving sonne, +Samuel Boreman” already reach, under the covenant promise of Him who +remembers mercy to a thousand generations, a widely scattered family.</p> + +<p>In the above letter the name is spelled both with and without the letter +“<em>e</em>” after “<em>r</em>;” the letter “<em>d</em>” is not found until 1712. The letter +“<em>a</em>,” was not inserted until 1750; so that the descendants of Samuel, +may still bear all these names, Borman, Boreman, Bordman or Boardman, +according to the generation at which the line traced, reaches the parent +stock. It is said that the name, however spelled, is still pronounced +“Borman,” at Wethersfield. The rise of Cromwell in England, the long +Parliament, the Westminster Assembly, the execution of Charles the +First, the establishment of the commonwealth, its power by sea and land, +the death of the Protector, the restoration of Charles the Second, were +events of which Samuel must have heard by letter from his brother and +sisters, as well as in other ways. He doubtless had numerous kinsmen on +the side of both his father and his mother, who were involved in these +movements of the times in England. Perhaps Richard Boardman, one of the +first two “Traveling Methodist Preachers on the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> +continent,” who came +here from England in 1769, was among the descendants.</p> + +<p>At the same time the pioneer legislator in the Colonial General Court +just established in the wilds of America, was aiding to lay Scriptural +foundations for institutions of civil and religious liberty in the New +World. He left a Thomas Boreman, perhaps an uncle, in Ipswich, Mass. +During the thirty-seven years of his life, after his emigration, he saw +new colonies planted at many points along the Atlantic coast. He saw the +older colonies constantly strengthened by fresh arrivals, and by the +natural increase of the population. Several other Boremans came to New +England very early, some of whom may have been his kindred. He +accumulated and left a considerable estate for that day, derived in part +undoubtedly, from the increase in the value of the new lands, which he +had at first occupied, and which he afterward sold at an advanced price. +Some in every generation, of his descendants have done likewise; going +first north, and east, and then further and further west. One of the +descendants of his youngest son Nathaniel, now living, a man of +distinguished ability, Hon. E. J. H. Boardman of Marshalltown, Iowa, is +said to have amassed in this manner a large fortune.</p> + +<p>Samuel Boreman died far from his early home and kindred. He was not +buried beside father or mother, or by the graves of ancestors who had +for centuries lived and died and been buried there; but on a continent +separated from them by a great ocean. He was +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> +doubtless buried on the +summit of the hill in the old cemetery at Wethersfield, in a spot which +overlooks the broad and fertile meadows of the Connecticut river. In the +same plot his children and grandchildren lie, with monuments, though no +monument marks his own grave. In his childhood, he may have seen +Shakespeare and Bacon. He lived cotemporary with Cromwell; and Milton, +who died, a year after he was buried at Wethersfield. His wife Mary, the +mother of us all, died eleven years later, in 1684, leaving an estate of +$1,300. As his body was lowered into the grave, his widow and ten +children may have stood around it, the oldest, Isaac, aged 31, with his +two or three little children; the second, Mary, Mrs. Robbins, at the age +of twenty-nine; Samuel, Jr., twenty-five; Joseph twenty-three; John +twenty-one; Sarah, eighteen; Daniel, fifteen; Jonathan, thirteen; +Nathaniel, ten; Martha, seven. Most of these children lived to have +families, and left children, whose descendants now doubtless number +thousands. Isaac had three sons and one daughter and died in 1719, at +the age of seventy-seven. Samuel had two sons and three daughters, and +died in 1720, at seventy-two years of age. Daniel, then fifteen; from +whom Timothy Boardman, the author of the Log-Book, was descended; had +twelve children, nine sons and three daughters, and died in 1724, at the +age of seventy-six. Jonathan had two sons and three daughters, and died +September 21, 1712, at the age of fifty-one. Nathaniel married in +Windsor, at the age of forty-four, and had but one son, Nathaniel, and +died two months after his next older +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> +brother Jonathan, perhaps of a +contagious disease, November 29, 1712; at the age of forty-nine. The +descendants of Nathaniel are now found in Norwich, Vt., and elsewhere; +and those of Samuel in Sheffield, Mass., and elsewhere. But the later +descendants of the other sons, except Samuel, Daniel and Nathaniel, and +of the daughters, I have no means of tracing. They are scattered in +Connecticut and widely in other states. During the lives of this second +generation occurred King Phillip’s war, which decimated the New England +Colonies, and doubtless affected this family with others. Within their +time also, Yale College was founded, and went into operation first at +Wethersfield, close by the original Borman homestead.</p> + +<p>The writer of this has made sermons in the old study of Rector Williams, +the president of the college, near the old Boardman house, which was +standing in 1856, the oldest house in Wethersfield. The second +generation of Boardmans, of course occupied more “new lands.” Daniel, +the fifth son of Samuel, owned land in Litchfield and New Milford, then +new settlements, as well as in Wethersfield. Jonathan married in +Hatfield, Mass.</p> + +<p>The third generation, the grandchildren of Samuel, the names of +twenty-nine of whom (seventeen grandsons and twelve grand-daughters), +all children of Samuel’s five sons, are preserved; went out to occupy +territory still further from home. We have little account however, +except of the nine sons of Daniel, the seventh child of Samuel. Daniel +the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> +great-grandfather of Timothy, the author of the Log-Book, was +married to Hannah Wright just a hundred years before the marriage of +that great-grandson, June 8, 1683, while the war-whoop of King Phillip’s +Narraganset savages was still resounding through the forest. Of his +twelve children, two sons, John and Charles, died before reaching full +maturity, John at the age of nineteen, near the death of two of his +uncles, Jonathan and Nathaniel, in 1712; and Charles the youngest child, +at the age of seventeen, very near the time of his father’s death, in +1724. One son died in infancy. Of his daughters, Mabel, married Josiah +Nichols, and for her second husband John Griswold of New Milford; Hannah +married John Abbe of Enfield; and Martha married Samuel Churchill of +Wethersfield. Of his six surviving sons, Richard was settled at +Wethersfield; he married in Milford, and had three children. His second +son Daniel, born July 12, 1687, was graduated at Yale College in 1709, +became the first minister of New Milford in 1712 and died in the +ministry with his people, August 25, 1744. Hinman says: “He gave +character and tone to the new settlement, by his devotion and active +service.”</p> + +<p>He was a man of deep piety, and of great force of character. It is +related that an Indian medicine man, and this Puritan pastor met by the +sick-bed of the same poor savage. The Indian raised his horrid clamor +and din, which was intended to exorcise according to their customs the +evil spirit of the disease. At the same time Mr. Boardman lifted up his +voice in prayer to +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span> +Him who alone can heal the sick. The conflict of +rival voices waxed long and loud to see which should drown out the +other. Mr. Boardman was blessed with unusual power of lungs like his +nephew Rev. Benjamin Boardman, tutor at Yale and pastor in Hartford, who +for his immense volume of voice, while a chaplain in the Revolutionary +army was called by the patriots the “Great gun of the gospel.” The +defeated charmer, acknowledged himself outdone and bounding from the +bedside hid his defeat in the forest. Mr. Boardman died about the time +his parishioners and neighbors were on the famous expedition to Cape +Breton and the capture of Louisburg and when Whitfield’s preaching was +arousing the church. He was twice married and had six children. His +second wife, the mother of all but his oldest child was a widow, Mrs. +Jerusha Seeley, one of nine daughters of Deacon David Sherman of +Poquonnoch. Their children were:</p> + +<p>I. Penelopy, Mrs. Dr. Carrington.</p> + +<p>II. Tamar, wife of Mr. Boardman’s successor in the pastorate at New +Milford, Rev. Nathaniel Taylor; mother of Major-General Augustine +Taylor, of the war of 1812; and grandmother of Prof. Nathaniel W. +Taylor, D.D., of New Haven.</p> + +<p>III. Mercy, the wife of Gillead Sperry, and grandmother of Rev. Dr. +Wheaton of Hartford.</p> + +<p>IV. Jerusha, wife of Rev. Daniel Farrand of Canaan, Ct., and mother of +Hon. Daniel Farrand (Yale, 1781), Judge of the Supreme Court of Vermont. +This judge<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span> +had nine daughters, one of whom married Hon. Stephen Jacobs, +of Windsor, also a Judge of the Supreme Court of Vermont.</p> + +<p>Rev. Daniel Boardman left but one son, the Hon. Sherman Boardman, who +was but sixteen years old at the time of his father’s death. From the +age of twenty-one he was for forty-seven years constantly in civil or +military office. He was for twenty-one sessions a member of the General +Assembly of Connecticut, of which his great-grandfather Samuel, had been +so long a member. His four sons, Major Daniel (Yale, 1781), Elijah, +Homer, and David Sherman (Yale, 1793), were all members of the +Connecticut Legislature, in one or both branches, for many years. Elijah +was also elected a United States Senator, from Connecticut in 1821. He +founded Boardman, Ohio, and died while on a visit there Aug. 18, 1823. +His son, William W. Boardman (Yale, 1812), was speaker of the house of +the Connecticut Legislature, and elected to Congress in 1840. He left an +ample fortune, and his large and comely monument stands near the centre +of the old historic cemetery of New Haven, Ct., in which city he +resided. This branch of the family, second cousins of the author of the +Log-Book, though descended from the Puritan pastor Daniel Boardman, are +now associated with the Protestant Episcopal church.</p> + +<p>The brothers of the pastor, grandsons of Samuel, were scattered in +various places. Richard settled in Wethersfield, as already noticed. +Israel settled at Stratford, and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span> +had two sons and one daughter. Joshua, +received by his father’s will the homestead, but afterward removed to +Springfield, Mass. Benjamin settled at Sharon, and received from his +father lands in Litchfield and New Milford, lands which the family had +probably purchased while the son and brother was preaching there. +Timothy, the ninth child of Daniel, only twelve years old when his +brother became pastor at New Milford, died only a few days before the +birth of his namesake, and first grandchild, the author of the Log-Book. +He lived and died in Wethersfield. His enterprise however, like that of +his grandfather who emigrated from England, and that of his father who +acquired lands in Litchfield and New Milford, went out, as that of many +of their descendants does to-day, in the west, for “more land.” He and +his brother Joshua, and other thrifty citizens of Wethersfield, fixed +upon the province of Maine as the field of their enterprise. Timothy and +Joshua owned the tract of land, thirty miles from north to south, and +twenty-eight from east to west, which now, apparently, constitutes +Lincoln Co. They had a clear title to eight hundred and forty square +miles, about twenty-two townships, along or near the Atlantic coast. By +the census of 1880, the assessed valuation of real estate in this county +was $4,737,807; of personal property $1,896,886. Total $6,634,693. It +embraces 3,213 farms; 146,480 acres of improved land, valued, including +buildings and fences at $4,403,985; affording an annual production, +valued at $759,560. The population was 24,326 of whom 23,756 were +natives of Maine.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span> +This tract which should have been called “Boardman county,” had been +originally purchased of the Indians by one John Brown, probably as early +as the close of King Phillip’s war. It was purchased by the Boardman +brothers in 1732, from the great-grandchildren of John Brown, requiring +a considerable number of deeds which are now on record in the county +clerk’s office at York, Maine. These deeds were from Wm. Huxley, Eleazar +Stockwell, and many others, heirs of John Brown, and of Richard Pearse +his son-in-law. Two of them show $2,000 each as the sums paid for their +purchase.</p> + +<p>William Frazier, a grandson of Timothy, and an own cousin of the author +of the Log-Book, received something more than two townships, and +although German intruders early settled upon these lands, many of whose +descendants are now among the leading citizens of that county, yet there +seems to be little reason to doubt that if, after the close of the +Revolutionary war, the author of the Log-Book and other heirs had gone +in quest of those ample possessions, something handsome, perhaps half of +the county, might have been secured. There is a tradition that the true +owners were betrayed as non-resident owners of unimproved lands often +are, by their legal agents, who accepted of bribes to defraud those +whose interests they had promised to secure.</p> + +<p>Timothy Boardman 1st, died in mid-life, at the age of fifty-three, and +this noble inheritance was lost to his heirs. The county became thickly +settled, and the Boardman titles though acknowledged valid, were it is +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span> +said, confiscated by the Legislature of Massachusetts in favor of the +actual occupants of the soil, as the shortest though unjust settlement +of the difficulty.</p> + +<p>The fourth generation, the great-grandsons of Samuel included several +men of prominence, some of whom have been already noticed. Hon. Sherman +Boardman of New Milford; Rev. Benjamin Boardman, the army chaplain, of +Hartford, and others. The majority of the family, however, were plain +and undistinguished men of sterling Puritan qualities, and of great +usefulness in their several spheres, in the church and in society. Many +were deacons and elders in their churches, these were too numerous for +further especial mention, except in a single line. The third child of +Timothy, the Maine land proprietor, only four years old when Lincoln +Co., Me. was purchased by his father, became a carpenter, ship-builder +and cabinet maker, and settled in Middletown, Ct., which his +great-grandfather Samuel had surveyed nearly a century before. He +married Jemima Johnson, Nov. 14, 1751, and his oldest child, born Jan. +20, 1754, was the author of the Log-Book. The preaching of Whitfield, +and the “Great Awakening” of the American churches, North, South and +Central, at this time, and for a whole generation, immediately preceding +the Revolutionary war, had very much quickened the religious life even +of the children of the New England Puritans. The Boardman family +obviously felt the influence of this great revival. The country was anew +pervaded with intense religious influences.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> +Many letters and other papers remain from different branches of the +family of this and of more recent dates, exhibiting a deeply religious +spirit. The boy Timothy grew up in an atmosphere filled with such +influences. Many of the habits and feelings brought by the Puritans from +England still prevailed. To the day of his death he retained much of the +spirit of those early associations. He left a double portion to his +oldest son. He inherited the traits of the Puritans; intelligence; +appreciation of education; deference for different ages and relations in +society; piety, industry, economy and thrift. His advantages at school +in the flourishing village of Middletown must have been exceptionally +good; he early learned to write in an even, correct and handsome hand, +which he retained for nearly three-quarters of a century; his school +book on Navigation is before me.</p> + +<p>More attention was paid to a correct and handsome chirography, at that +time, the boyhood of Washington, Jefferson, Sherman and Putnam, than at +a later day when a larger range of studies had been introduced. “The +Young Secretary’s Guide,” a volume of model letters, business forms, +etc., is preserved; it bears on the first leaf “Timothy Boardman, his +Book, A.D. 1765.” The hand is copy-like, and very handsome, and +extraordinary if it is his, as it seems to be; though he was then but +eleven years old. A large manuscript volume of Examples in Navigation, +obviously in his handwriting, doubtless made in his youth, is also +before me. The writing and diagrams are like copper-plate. No descendant +of his, so far as known to the writer could +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> +have exceeded it in +neatness and skill. In his early boyhood the French and Indian war +filled the public mind with excitement; reports of the exploits of Col. +Israel Putnam were circulated, as they occurred. The conquest of Canada +under Gen. Wolf filled the colonies with pride and patriotism. But +already disaffection between the mother country and the colonies had +arisen. Resistance to the tea tax and other offensive measures were +discussed at every fireside. The writer before he was seven years old +caught from the author of the Log-Book, then over eighty, something of +the indignant feeling toward England which the latter had acquired at +the very time when the tea was thrown overboard into Boston harbor. +Timothy Boardman was ripe for participation in armed resistance when the +war came. He was just twenty-one as the first blood was shed at +Lexington and Concord, April 19, 1775. Putnam who had left his plow in +the furrow, was with his Connecticut soldiers, in action, if not in +chief command at Bunker hill. Timothy Boardman joined the army which +invested Boston, under Washington in the winter of 1775-1776. He was +stationed, doubtless with a Connecticut regiment, on Dorchester Heights, +now South Boston.</p> + +<p>After completing this service, in the great uprising of the people to +oppose the southward progress of Burgoyne, he was called out and marched +toward Saratoga, but the surrender took place before his regiment +arrived. With his father he had worked at finishing houses, and the +inside of vessels built on the Connecticut river, on +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> +which Middletown +is situated. In the winter he was employed largely in cabinet work, in +the shop; I have the chest which he made and used on the <em>Oliver +Cromwell</em>.</p> + +<p>Congress early adopted the policy of sending out privateers or armed +vessels to capture British merchant vessels. These vessels became prizes +for the captors. The <em>Oliver Cromwell</em> was chartered by Connecticut, +with letters of marque and reprisal from the United States. Captain +Parker was in command. The <em>Defence</em> accompanied the <em>Oliver Cromwell</em>; +they sailed from New London; Timothy Boardman then twenty-four years of +age enlisted and went on board; he commenced keeping the Log-Book April +11, 1778; he seems to have been head carpenter on board the ship, and to +have had severe labors. His assistants appear to have deserted him +before the close of the voyage. It was his duty to make any needful +repairs after a storm, or in an engagement and to perform any such +service necessary even at the time of greatest danger. In a terrific +storm it was decided to cut away the mast. His hat fell from his head, +but he scarcely felt it worth while to pick it up, as all were liable so +soon to go to the bottom. In action, his place was below deck, to be in +readiness with his tools and material to stop instantly, if possible, +any leak caused by the enemies’ shot. At one time the rigging above him +was torn and fell upon him, some were killed; blood spattered over him, +and it was shouted “Boardman is killed.” He, however, and another man on +board, a Mr. Post, father of the late +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> +Alpha Post of Rutland, were +spared to make their homes for half a century among the peaceful hills +of Vermont.</p> + +<p>In the following year 1779, he seems to have sailed down the Atlantic +coast on an American merchant vessel. He was captured off Charleston, S. +Carolina, by the British, but after a few days’ detention, on board his +Majesty’s vessel, it was thought cheaper to send the prisoners on shore +than to feed them, and he and his companions were given a boat and set +at liberty. They reached Charleston in safety. The city was under +martial law, and the new-comers were for about six weeks put upon +garrison duty. About this time Lord Cornwallis was gaining signal +advantages in that vicinity, while Gen. Gates, who had received the +surrender of Burgoyne, three years before, was badly defeated. After +completing this service the author of the Log-Book, started to walk home +to Connecticut. He proceeded on foot to North Carolina, where Andrew +Jackson was, then a poor boy of twelve years. Jackson’s father, a young +Irish emigrant died within two years after entering those forests, and +his widow soon to become the mother of a President, was “hauled” through +their clearing, from their deserted shanty, to his grave, among the +stumps, in the same lumber wagon with the corpse of her husband. He had +been dead twelve years when the pilgrim from Connecticut passed that +way. Overcome, probably by fatigue and by malaria, his progress was +arrested in North Carolina by fever, and he lay sick all winter among +strangers.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> +In the spring of 1780, unable probably, to proceed on foot, he embarked +from some port, on a merchant ship bound for St. Eustatia, a Dutch +island, in the West Indies. He was again captured and taken prisoner by +the British.</p> + +<p>He was, however, transferred to a British merchant vessel on which he +rendered a little service by way of commutation, when he was set at +liberty on St. Eustatia. The island has an area of 189 square miles, +population 13,700; latitude 17°, 30', North. Climate generally healthy, +but with terrific hurricanes and earthquakes, soil very fertile and +highly cultivated by the thrifty Hollanders, with slave labor. It has +belonged successively to the Spanish, French, English and Dutch. Having +been enfeebled by his fever of the winter before, Timothy Boardman now +twenty-six years old, worked for several months at his trade with good +wages. I have heard him say that there the tropical sun shone directly +down the chimney. He used to relate also, how fat the young negroes +would become in sugaring time, when the sweets of the canefield flowed +as freely as water. He returned home to Connecticut probably late in the +year 1780. Vermont was then the open field for emigration. It was +rapidly receiving settlers from Connecticut. I have no knowledge that he +ever made any account of the immense tract in Maine, purchased and held +by deeds, still on record at York, Me., by his grandfather, and in which +he, as the oldest grandson, born a few days after his grandfather’s +death and named for him, might have been expected to be interested.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> +He was now twenty-seven. A large family of younger children had long +occupied his father’s house. He sought a home of his own. His younger +brothers Elisha and Oliver were married and settled before him. He seems +to have inherited something of the ancestral enterprise of the Puritans, +“hankering for new land.” All his brothers and sisters settled in +Connecticut, but he made his way in 1781 to Vermont. For a year +1781-1782, he worked at his trade in Bennington. During this time, he +purchased a farm in Addison, it is supposed of Ira Allen, a brother of +the redoubtable Ethan Allen; but the title proved, as so often happened, +with the early settlers to be defective. He recovered, many years +afterward, through the fidelity and skill of his lawyer, the Hon. Daniel +Chipman of Middlebury, the hard earned money which he had paid for the +farm at Chimney Point. It shows how thrifty he must have been, and how +resolute in his purpose to follow a pioneer life in Vermont, that after +this great loss he still had money, and a disposition to buy another +farm among the Green Mountains. Having put his hand to the plow, he did +not turn back. He did not perhaps like to have his Connecticut kindred +and friends think he had failed in what he had undertaken. He had saved +a good portion of his wages for six or seven years. He had received, as +the most faithful man in the crew, a double share in the prizes taken by +the <em>Oliver Cromwell</em>. He had perhaps received some aid from his father. +Though he had paid for and lost one unimproved farm, he was able to buy, +and did purchase another. He came to Rutland, Vt., in 1782 and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> bought +one hundred acres of heavily timbered land from the estate of Rev. +Benajah Roots, whose blood has long flowed in the same veins, with his +own. He perhaps thought that if he bought of a minister, he would get a +good title. He may have known Mr. Roots, at least by reputation, in +Connecticut, for he had been settled at Simsbury, Ct., before coming to +a home missionary field in Rutland. The owner of the land was in doubt +whether to sell it.</p> + +<p>The would-be purchaser had brought the specie with which to buy it, in a +strong linen bag, still it is supposed preserved in the family, near the +same spot. “Bring in your money,” said a friend, “and throw it down on a +table, so that it will jingle well.” The device was successful, the +joyful sound, where silver was so scarce, brought the desired effect. +The deed was soon secured, for the land which he owned for nearly sixty +years.</p> + +<p>A clearing was soon made on this land at a point which lies about +one-half mile south of Centre Rutland, and a-half mile west of Otter +creek on the slope of a high hill. It was then expected that Centre +Rutland would be the capital of Vermont. In 1783, he erected amid the +deep forests, broken only here and there by small clearings, a small +framed house. He never occupied a log-house; as he was himself a +skillful carpenter, house-joiner and cabinet maker and had been reared +in a large village, a city, just as he left it, his taste did not allow +him to dispense with so many of the comforts of his earlier life as many +were compelled to relinquish.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span> +He returned to Middletown, and was married, Sept. 28th, 1783, to Mary, +the eighth child and fifth daughter of Capt. Samuel Ward of Middletown, +who had twelve children. The Ward family were of equal standing with his +own. The newly married couple were each a helpmeet unto the other, and +had probably known each other from early life in the same church and +perhaps in the same public school. They were both always strongly +attached to Middletown, their native place; it cost something to tear +themselves away and betake themselves to a new settlement, which they +knew must long want many of the advantages which they were leaving. I +remember the pride and exhileration with which, in his extreme old age, +he used to speak of Middletown, as he pointed out on his two maps, one +of them elaborate, in his native city, the old familiar places. He +revisited it from time to time during his long life, the last time in +1837, only a year and a-half before his death.</p> + +<p>In his journeys between Rutland and Middletown, which he visited with +his wife, the second year after their marriage, he must have met many +kindred by the way. His Uncle Daniel Boardman lived in Dalton, and his +Uncle John in Hancock, Mass., while three brothers of his wife, and a +sister, Mrs. Charles Goodrich, resided in Pittsfield. Mrs. Ward, his +mother-in-law, lived also in Pittsfield with her children, till 1815, +when she was ninety-six years old, her oldest son seventy-six, and her +eighth child, Mrs. Boardman, over sixty. She and her son-in-law, Judge +Goodrich, the founder of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> +Pittsfield, who was of about her own age, +lived, it is said to be the oldest persons in Berkshire Co. He had also +a cousin Mrs. Francis at Pittsfield, and a favorite cousin Elder John +Boardman, at Albany and another cousin, Capt. George Boardman in +Schenectady. These three cousins were children of his uncle Charles of +Wethersfield. His grandmother Boardman, the widow of the Maine land +proprietor, also spent her last days in Dalton, and died there at her +son Daniel’s, about the time when Timothy first went to Vermont.</p> + +<p>His youngest brother William, distinctly remembered my grandfather’s +playing with him, and bantering him when a little child, and also the +September morning when with his father and mother he rode over in a +chaise to Capt. Ward’s to attend Timothy’s wedding. He told me that when +Timothy was there last, he shed some tears, as he cut for himself a +memorial cane, by the river’s bank, where he used to play in boyhood, +and said he should never see the place again. William, whom he used to +call “Bill,” named a son for him, Timothy.</p> + +<p>The spot where he built his first house, and called on the name of the +Lord, and where his first two or three children were born, is now off +the road, at a considerable distance, about a-half mile north-east of +the house, occupied by his grandson, Samuel Boardman, Esq., of West +Rutland. It is near a brook, in a pasture, cold, wet, bunchy and stony, +and does not look as if it had ever been plowed. He had better land +which he cultivated afterward, and which yielded abundantly. But at +first<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> +he must have wrung a subsistence from a reluctant soil. Yet the +leaf-mould and ashes from burned timber on fields protected by +surrounding forests would produce good wheat, corn and vegetables. Near +that spot still stands one very old apple tree and another lies fallen +and decaying near by. So tenacious are the memorials of man’s occupancy, +even for a short time.</p> + +<p>After a few years he removed this small framed house, fifty rods +westward and dug and walled for it a cellar which still remains, a pit +filled with stones, water and growing alders. He then made some +additions to the house as demanded by his growing family. He also built +near it a barn. His house was still on the cold, bushy land which slopes +to the north-east, and is now only occupied for pasturage. Here seven +young children occupied with him his pioneer home.</p> + +<p>The tradition used to be, that at first he incurred somewhat the +derision of his neighbors, better skilled in backwoodsman’s lore than +himself, by hacking all around a tree, in order to get it down. It is +said that some imagined his land would soon be in the market, and sold +cheap; that the city bred farmer, better taught in navigation and +surveying, than in clearing forests and in agriculture, would become +tired and discouraged and abandon his undertaking. But he remained and +persevered, and his good Puritan qualities, industry, frugality, good +management, and persistency for the first ten or fifteen years, +determined his whole subsequent career and that of his family. He was +never rich, but he secured a good home, dealt well with his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> children, +and became independent for the remainder of his life. Indeed, like most +New England Puritans, of resolute and conscientious industry, and of +moderate expenditures, he was always independent after he was of age.</p> + +<p>A man of such character, and of so fair an education would, of course, +soon be valued in any community, and be especially useful in a new +settlement where skill with the pen and the compass are rarer than in +older places.</p> + +<p>He was appreciated and was soon made town clerk of Rutland, and county +surveyor for Rutland county. He was also in time made captain of the +militia, in recognition perhaps, in part, of his Revolutionary services. +He was also made clerk of the Congregational church, I have some of his +church records. On Nov. 20th, 1805, he was elected a deacon. He was also +on the committee to revise the Articles of Faith and Rules of +Discipline. About 1792, he bought fifty acres of good land lying west of +his first purchase, and on this ground, one hundred rods west of his +previous home, and about half a mile south-west of the spot first +occupied, he erected in 1799, a good two-story house, which is still in +excellent preservation, where till his death, he lived in a home as +ample and commodious as the better class of those with which he had been +familiar in his native state.</p> + +<p>In sixteen years after coming to the unbroken forest on what has since +been called “Boardman hill,” he had won a good position in society and +in the church,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> +and a comfortable property. He was afflicted in the +death of his oldest daughter and child, Hannah, October 26, 1803. But +this was the only death that occurred in his family for more than +fifty-three years. His six remaining children lived to an average age of +about eighty.</p> + +<p>The Congregational church in West Rutland, one of the oldest in Vermont, +had been formed in 1773, nine years before his arrival. He became a +member in 1785, and his wife in 1803. Not long after his coming, Rev. +Mr. Roots, the pastor, died, and the widely known Rev. Samuel Haynes, a +devout, able and witty man, became their pastor, and so continued for +thirty years, until his dismission in 1818. Timothy Boardman’s children +were early taken to church, were trained and all came into the church +under, the ministry of Rev. Mr. Haynes.</p> + +<p>He said that he would sooner do without bread than without preaching, +and he was always a conscientious and liberal supporter of the church. +He appreciated and co-operated with his pastor. In the great revival of +1808, five of his children were gathered into the church. One of them, +perhaps all of them, were previously regarded by their parents as +religious.</p> + +<p>In politics he was a Federalist. In respect to the war with Great +Britain 1812-1815, his views did not entirely coincide with those of +some others, including his associate in the diaconate, Dea. Chatterton, +who was a rigid Democrat. This eminently devout and useful man, was so +burdened with Dea. Boardman’s +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> +lukewarmness in promoting the second war +with Great Britain, against whose armies both had fought in the +Revolution, that he felt constrained to take up a labor with him, hoping +to correct his political errors by wholesome church discipline. It must +have been a scene for a painter.</p> + +<p>Perhaps no better man or one more effective for good, ever lived in West +Rutland than Dea. Chatterton. In both politics and religion he was +practical and fervid. The church meeting was crowded.</p> + +<p>The occasion compelled my grandfather, as Paul was driven, in his +epistle to the Corinthians, and as Demosthenes was forced in his oration +for the crown, to enter somewhat upon his own past record. Though a very +modest and unpretentious man, yet it is said that the author of the +Log-Book, on this memorable occasion straightened himself up, and boldly +referred his hearers to the glorious days of the war for Independence, +which had tried men’s souls, and when he had forever sealed the +genuineness of his own patriotism, by hazarding his life both by sea and +land for his country.</p> + +<p>Weighed in the balances on his own record, so far from being found +wanting, his patriotism was proved to be of the finest gold; and his +place like that of Paul, not a whit behind that of the chiefest apostle. +Though he did not feel it to be his duty to fall in behind the tap of +the drum, and volunteer to fight, beside the aged democratic veteran who +served with him at the communion table; yet he showed that the older was +not a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> +better soldier; that with diversities of politics, there was the +same loyalty, and that his own patriotism was no less than his +brother’s.</p> + +<p>The tremendous strain which the struggle for American Independence put +upon the generation who encountered it, was touchingly illustrated in +the lives of these two men, a generation, or two generations after the +struggle had been successfully closed. Amid the quiet hills of Vermont, +the minds of both were affected for a time, with at least partial +derangement. Dea. Boardman labored temporarily under the hallucination, +that he was somehow liable to arrest, and prepared a chamber for his +defence. He was obliged, for a time to be watched, though he was never +confined. A journey to Connecticut, on horseback, with his son Samuel, +when he was perhaps sixty years old, effected an entire cure. Dea. +Chatterton in his extreme old age, after a life of remarkable piety, +became a maniac and was obliged to be confined. He had suffered peculiar +hardships, perhaps on the prison-ships, in the Revolution; and his +incoherent expressions, in his insanity, sixty years afterward, and just +before his death, were full of charges against the “British.”</p> + +<p>Timothy Boardman’s supreme interest in life, however, was in his loyalty +to Christ, and his intense desires were for the extension and full +triumph of Christ’s kingdom. The revivals which prevailed in the early +part of the century and the consequent great expansion of aggressive +Christian work, were in answer to his life-long prayers, as well as +those of all other +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> +Christians; and he entered heartily, from the first, +into all measures undertaken for the more rapid spread of the gospel. He +was greatly interested in the formation of the American Board of +Commissioners for Foreign Missions, and read the <em>Missionary Herald</em>, +with interest from its first publication, until his death. The formation +of the Bible Society, Tract Society, Seaman’s Friend Society, Sunday +School Society, American Home Missionary Society, etc., engaged his +interest, and received his support. He made himself an honorary member +of the A. B. C. F. M. near the close of his life, in accordance with the +suggestion of his sister Sarah, whom he greatly valued, the wife of Rev. +Joseph Washburn, and afterward of Dea. Porter, both of Farmington, Ct., +by the contribution to Foreign Missions, at one time, of one hundred +dollars.</p> + +<p>In social and domestic life, he was a son of the Puritans and of the +Connecticut type. He exacted obedience, and somewhat of reverence from +his children. They did not dare, to the last, to treat him with +unrestrained familiarity. His wife and children stood, waiting at their +chairs, until he was first seated at the table. He gave his children a +good education for the time, sending them to “Master Southard.” His +habitual temper of mind was one of deep reverence toward God. He sat in +awe during a thunder storm, and a cyclone which passed over his home +deeply impressed him. His letters abound in affectionate and in +religious sentiments. He was scrupulous in +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span> +the observance of the +Sabbath; required it of his children, and he expected it of the stranger +within his gates. The family altar probably never failed from the day he +first entered with his newly married wife, into their pioneer home, amid +the forests, till his death. He was solemn, earnest and felicitous in +prayer. The atmosphere of his home was eminently that of a christian +household. Two of his four sons became officers in their churches, and +also both his sons-in-law. Four of his grandsons entered the Christian +ministry, and a granddaughter is the wife of a clergyman. Those who +regard the Puritans in general, as too severe in industry, in frugality, +in morals and in religious exercises, would have regarded him as too +exacting in all these directions. He certainly could not on one hundred +and fifty acres of land, which he found wild, and not all of it very +good, have reared a large family, and supported public institutions as +he did; have given each of his sons at settlement in life, six hundred +dollars, and left to each at his death, eight hundred, if he had not +practiced through life, a resolute industry, and a somewhat rigid +economy.</p> + +<p>It is worthy of notice that like his grandfather, Timothy Boardman of +Wethersfield, he owned, what by a little change of circumstances, might +have brought, not a competence merely but wealth to his heirs. Early in +his residence at Rutland, he became possessed, with many others of a +small lot in what was called the “Cedar Swamp.” These lots were valued +almost<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span> +exclusively for the enduring material for fences which they +afforded. Their cedar posts supplied the town. They obtained also on the +rocky portions of these lands a white sand, which was employed for +scouring purposes, and also for sprinkling, by way of ornamentation, +according to the fashion of the times, the faultlessly clean, white +floors of the “spare rooms.” Timothy Boardman’s cedar lot, is now one of +the largest marble quarries in Rutland, a town which is said to furnish +one-half of all the marble produced in the United States. It brought to +one of his sons, a handsome addition to farm profits, but was disposed +of just before its great value was appreciated and lost, as in case of +the Maine lands.</p> + +<p>His grandfather Timothy Boardman, is said to have been “a short, stocky +man;” his monument, and until recently that of his father Daniel, son of +the emigrant from England, might both be seen, near together in the old +cemetery at Wethersfield.</p> + +<p>The author of the Log-Book, was a little below the average height, of +rather full face, with a peach-bloom tinge of red on each cheek in old +age, and of light complexion, and light hair. His motions were quick, +and his constitution healthful, though he was never strong. He had +undoubtedly a mind of fair ability; inclined perhaps to conservative +views, and acting as spontaneously, it may be in criticism, as in any +other exercise of its energies. I remember to have received reproof and +instruction in manners, from him when I was five +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> +or six years of age. +He was careful of his possessions, and articles belonging to him, were +very generally marked “T. B.”</p> + +<p>It is a tradition among the older kindred, that the writer, though he +does not remember it, finding at the age of five or six, on grandpa’s +premises, some loose tufts of scattered wool, and being told that they +were his, expressed the candid judgment, that it could not be so, +“because they were not marked T. B.”</p> + +<p>I am not aware that he was much given to humor, yet he would seem not to +have been entirely destitute of it from the philosophical account he +gave of the advantages of his position, when some one ventured to +condole with him on the steep hill of nearly a mile which lay between +his house and the church. He said it afforded him two privileges, first +that of dropping down quickly to meeting, when he had a late start; and +secondly, that of abundant time for reflection on the sermon while he +was going home.</p> + +<p>His wife, undoubtedly his equal in every respect, to whom much of his +prosperity, usefulness, and good repute, as well as that of his family +was due, after a married life of fifty-three years and three months, +died in Dec., 1836. She had long been feeble. Her children watched +around her bedside on the last night in silence till one of her sons, +laying his hand upon her heart, and finding it still, said “we have no +longer a mother.” I remember the hush of the next morning, throughout +the house, when we young children awoke. It was +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> +lonely and cold in +grandma’s room, and only a white sheet covered a silent form.</p> + +<p>At eighty-three he was alone, and he deeply felt, as was natural, that +loneliness. Yet he had affectionate children, and with his youngest son, +who had four daughters, to him kind and pleasant granddaughters, he made +his home for the remainder of his life. With the oldest of these he made +in 1837, as already noticed, his last visit to Connecticut, going as far +as New Haven and the city of New York. On this journey he went in his +own carriage. He visited us, once at least in Castleton, at the house +where the Log-Book was so long concealed. I remember his figure there, +as that of a “short and stocky man,” who seemed to me very old. He died +while on a visit to Middlebury, where two of his children had been +settled for more than twenty years, at the house of his youngest +daughter and youngest child, Betsey, then the widow of Dea. Martin Foot. +She and her six daughters did everything possible for his comfort. A +swelling made its appearance upon his shoulder, and the disease advanced +steadily to a fatal termination. His appointed time had come. From his +death-bed he sent to his children a final letter of affectionate +greeting and counsel. The feeble hand, whose lines had been so fair and +even for nearly three-quarters of a century, wanders unsteadily across +the pages, expressive of a mind perhaps already wandering with disease. +And so the fingers that had traced the neat lines of the Log-Book, on +board the <em>Oliver Cromwell</em>, in 1778, “forgot” sixty years afterwards +“their<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> +cunning,” and wrote no more. He was buried beside his wife, in +the cemetery at West Rutland, near the church where he had worshipped +nearly sixty years.</p> + +<p>On the death of his wife, he had ordered two monumental stones to be +prepared just alike, except the inscriptions; one of which was to be for +her, and the other for himself. They may be seen from the road, by one +passing, of bluish stone standing not very far from the fence, and about +half way from the northern to the southern side of the lot. On these +stones was inscribed at his direction, where they may now be read, the +words, contained in Rev. 14: 13, divided between the two stones; on the +one: “I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, write Blessed are the +dead, which die in the Lord from henceforth;” and on the other: “Yea +saith the Spirit that they may rest from their labors and their works do +follow them:”</p> + +<p>His children were:</p> + +<p>Hannah, born July 23, 1784; died Oct. 26, 1803.</p> + +<p>Timothy, born March 11, 1786; settled in Middlebury, and died there +April, 1857.</p> + +<p>Mary, born Jan. 27, 1788; married Dea. Robert Barney of East Rutland +1824; died at her son’s house, in Wisconsin, 1871.</p> + +<p>Dea. Samuel Ward, born Nov. 27, 1789; died in Pittsford, Vt., May 13, +1870.</p> + +<p>Dea. Elijah, born March 9, 1792; died Sept. 24, 1873.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> +Capt. Charles Goodrich, born Feb. 19, 1794; died Dec. 17, 1875.</p> + +<p>Betsey, born, 1796; married Dea. Martin Foot of Middlebury; died April +26, 1873.</p> + +<p>The proclivity of the Puritans for education is illustrated in the fact, +that only five years after the foundation of Yale College one of this +family, Daniel a grandson of Samuel, the emigrant from England, became a +student there and was graduated in 1709, and that wherever different +branches of the family have since been settled they have generally sent +sons to the nearest colleges, not only many to Yale, but several to +Dartmouth, Williams, Middlebury, Union, and others. The eighth and ninth +generations are now in the process of education, in various institutions +east and west. The descendants of Timothy Boardman who have entered +professional life, are:</p> + +<p>Hon. Carlos Boardman (grad. Middlebury College 1842), a lawyer and +judge, in Linnaeus, Mo., oldest son of Capt. Charles. G. Boardman, of +West Rutland.</p> + +<p>Rev. George Nye Boardman, D.D. (Middlebury College 1847). Prof. of +Systematic Theology, in Chicago Theological Seminary, Chicago, Ill.</p> + +<p>Rev. Samuel W. Boardman, D.D. (Midd. Col., 1851). Pastor of the First +Presbyterian Church, Stanhope, N.J.</p> + +<p>Rev. Simeon Gilbert Boardman (Midd. Col., 1855). Pastor of the +Presbyterian Church, Champlain, N.Y.</p> + +<p>Charles Boardman, a member of the class of 1850, in Middlebury College, +and who died of typhoid fever in +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> +the sophomore year, doubtless had in view the Christian ministry.</p> + +<p>These four were sons of Dea. S. W. Boardman, of Castleton.</p> + +<p>Horace Elijah Boardman, M.D. (Midd. Col., 1857), in practice at Monroe, +Wis., youngest son of Dea. Elijah Boardman, of West Rutland.</p> + +<p>Harland S. Boardman M.D., (Midd., 1874), a grandson of Timothy 4th, and +son of Timothy 5th, of Middlebury, was graduated at the Homeopathic +Hospital College of Cleveland, Ohio, 1877. He is now practicing at +Ludlow, Vt.</p> + +<p>William Gilbert Boardman, in practice of dentistry in or near Memphis, +Tenn., a grandson of Dea. Elijah Boardman.</p> + +<p>Edgar William Boardman, M.D., son of Dr. Horace E., now practicing at +Janesville, Wis.; both he and his father were graduated at the “Hahneman +Medical College and Hospital, of Chicago.”</p> + +<p>—— Webster, M.D., grandson of Mary, Mrs. Dea. Robert Barney, in +practice in Schuylerville, N.Y.</p> + +<p>Dea. Martin Foote, the husband of Betsey, was a student in Middlebury +College for two years, it is believed, in the distinguished class of +1813, but by reason of impaired health, he was unable to complete the +course.</p> + +<p>A few words in regard to the Log-Book may not be inappropriate. It seems +to be a mere waif that has floated on the current, and among a thousand +things that have perished, to have been, as it were by accident, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> +preserved. A portion of the volume seems to be a kind of a private +journal kept by my grandfather, for a few weeks in 1778. He does not +appear to have valued it greatly, as on the blank leaves, he has made +some entries of his business, as town clerk, and some as county +surveyor, and afterward, a few notes of account with his son Elijah, who +took a part of his farm. His last entry in it, as if it were in part a +waste blank book, was made forty-eight years after he left the <em>Oliver +Cromwell</em>, in 1826.</p> + +<p>It must have come into my father’s hands with some other papers, on the +division of his father’s effects in 1839. Both seem to have been +reluctant to destroy anything, though they did not much value it. My +father, at last, weary of keeping it, would seem to have given it to me +merely for its blank pages, as scribbling paper. Six leaves, apparently +blank, were torn out. Several pages are covered with mere vacant +scrawling by my boyish hand; whether I threw it away in utter contempt, +or concealed it back of the old chimney, in curious conjecture whether +some unborn generations, would not at some distant day discover it, and +puzzle over it, I cannot tell. I have no recollection of it whatever; +except that I had a general impression that we used to have more of +grandfather’s writings than we possessed in later years. Whether we had +still others I know not. How little of such writing survives for a +century! It was lost for forty years, till a quarter of a century after +we had sold and left the house. It was found in 1884, in a dark recess, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> +back of the chimney, in the garret, by Master Fred. Jones, the son of an +esteemed friend, who in her childhood, about the time of the loss of +this manuscript, was a member of my father’s household. Many years +afterwards, she became the worthy mistress of the house, and this lad, +exploring things in general, came across this old Log-Book. If it is of +any interest or value; to him and to Dr. J. M. Currier, the accomplished +secretary of the Rutland County Historical Society, and to James +Brennan, Esq., an old schoolmate who took an interest in the manuscript, +is due all the credit of its publication.</p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p> + +<h1>JOURNAL</h1> + +<h4>AND</h4> + +<h1>SAILING DIRECTIONS</h1> + +<h4>OF THE</h4> + +<h2>OLIVER CROMWELL</h2> + +<h3>SECOND CRUISE.</h3> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img3.png" width="500" height="131" alt="Page header" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>JOURNAL OF THE SECOND CRUISE.</h2> + + +<p>April 7th the Defence had Five Men Broke out With the Small Pox.</p> + +<p>9th they Lost a Man w<sup>th</sup> the Small Pox.</p> + +<p>10th Exersis<sup>d</sup> Cannon & Musquetry.</p> + +<p>11th Saw a Sail the Defence Spoke with her She was a Frenchman from +Bourdeaux Bound to the West Indies.</p> + +<p>13th Cros<sup>d</sup> the Tropick Shav<sup>d</sup> & Duck About 60 Men.</p> + +<p>14th at four Oclock Afternoon Saw a Sail Bearing E S E. We Gave Chase to +her & Came Up With her at 8 Oclock She was a Large French Ship we Sent +the Boat on Board of her She Informed us of two English Ships which She +Left Sight of at the time we Saw her.</p> + +<p>15th at Day Break We saw two Sail Bareing SEbS Distance 2 Leagues We +Gave Chase Under a Moderate Sail at 9 oClock P. M. Came Up with them +they at First Shew French Colours to Decoy us when we Came in About half +a Mile of us the Ups with English Colours +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> +We had Continental Colours +Flying We Engaged the Ship Admiral Kepple as Follows When We Came in +About 20 Rods of her We Gave her a Bow Gun She Soon Returned us a Stern +Chaise & then a Broad Side of Grape & Round Shot Cap<sup>t</sup> Orders Not to +fire till we Can See the white of their Eyes We Got Close Under their +Larbard Quarter they Began Another Broad Side & then We Began & hel<sup>d</sup> +Tuff & Tuff for About 2 Glasses & Then she Struck to Us at the Same time +the Defence Engaged the Cyrus who as the Kepple Struck Wore Round Under +our Stern We Wore Ship & Gave her a Stern Chase at which She Immediately +Struck. The Loss on our Side was One Kill<sup>d</sup> & Six Wounded one Mortally +Who Soon Died Our Ship was hull<sup>d</sup> 9 Times with Six Pound Shott Three +of which Went through Our Birth one of which wounded the Boatswains +yoeman the Loss on their Side was two Kill<sup>d</sup> & Six wounded their +Larbourd quarter was well fill<sup>d</sup> with Shott one Nine Pounder went +through her Main Mast. Imploy<sup>d</sup> in the After-noon Takeing out the Men +& Maning the Prise The Kepple Mounted 20 Guns 18 Six Pounders & two +Wooden D<sup>o</sup> with about 45 Men, the Cyrus Mounted 16 Six Pounders with +35 Men Letters of Marque Bound from Bristol to Jamaica Laden with Dry +Goods Paints & C.</p> + +<p>18th Cap<sup>t</sup> Day Died.</p> + +<p>19th Cap<sup>t</sup> Brown of The Ship Adm<sup>l</sup> Kepple & Cap<sup>t</sup> Dike of the +Cyrus with Three Ladies & 8 Men Sett off in a Long Boat for S<sup>t</sup> Kitts +O<sup>r</sup> Cap<sup>tns</sup> Parker & Smedleys Permition.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span> +20th Imploy<sup>d</sup> in taking things out of the Prise Viz. One Chist of +Holland a Quantity of Hatts & Shoes Cheeses Porter & Some Crockery Ware +Small Arms Pistols Hangers two Brass Barrel Blunderbusses a Quantity of +Riggen & C.</p> + +<p>21<sup>st</sup> At Three oClock Afternoon we wore Ship to the Southward The +Prises Made Sail to the Northward we Lost Sight of them at Six.</p> + +<p>May 2<sup>nd</sup> Sprung Our Foretopmast Struck it & Ship<sup>d</sup> Another in its +Room.</p> + +<p>8<sup>th</sup> Saw a Sail over Our Starboard bow We Gave Chase to her She was a +French Guineaman Bound to the Mole With 612 Slaves on Board Our Cap<sup>t</sup> +Put 6 Prisoners on Board of Her Left her Just at Dark.</p> + +<p>11<sup>th</sup> At 5 o’Clock in the Morning Saw a Sail at the Windward two +Leagues Distance Bearing Down Upon Us we Lay too for her till She Came +in half Gun Shott of us the Man at Mast head Cry<sup>d</sup> out 4 Sail to the +Leeward Our Officers Concluded to Make Sail from her Supposing her to be +a Frigate of 36 Guns after we Made Sail We Left as Fast as we wanted She +Gave Over Chase at two oClock Afternoon She was the Seaford of 28 Guns.</p> + +<p>22<sup>nd</sup> Sprung our Maintop sail Yard.</p> + +<p>28<sup>th</sup> Made the Land at Port Royal.</p> + +<p>29<sup>th</sup> the Ship Struck Bottom Thrice.</p> + +<p>30<sup>th</sup> Came over the Bar this Morning & Arriv<sup>d</sup> in this Harbour In +Company with the Ship Defence Com<sup>ed</sup> by Sam<sup>ll</sup> Smedly. Charlestown, +S<sup>th</sup>. C<sup>na</sup>. May y<sup>e</sup> 30<sup>th</sup> 1778.</p> + +<hr style="width: 40%;" /> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p> +<h2>SAILING DIRECTIONS OF THE SECOND CRUISE.</h2> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img54.png" width="500" height="648" alt="table" title="" /> +</div> + +<p> </p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span></p> +<p class="center"><strong>An Account of the Months, Days And Knots Run, by the Ship Oliver +Cromwell in her Second Cruise.</strong></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/img55.png" width="400" height="224" alt="table" title="" /> +</div> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CONTRACT</h2> + +<h4>BETWEEN</h4> + +<h1>TIMOTHY BOARDMAN</h1> + +<h4>AND</h4> + +<h1>CAPT. PARKER.</h1> + +<h4>FOR THE THIRD CRUISE.</h4> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img4.png" width="500" height="94" alt="Page header" title="" /> +</div> + +<p> </p> + +<p>Charlestown, July 6<sup>th</sup>, 1778.</p> + +<p>Conversation Between Cap<sup>t</sup> Parker & My Self this Day.</p> + +<hr style="width: 15%;" /> + +<p>P<sup>r</sup>. What are you Doing a Shore.</p> + +<p>My Sf. I wanted to See You Sir.</p> + +<p>P<sup>r</sup>. Verry well.</p> + +<p>My Sf. The Term of my Inlistment is up & I would be glad of a Discharge +Sir.</p> + +<p>P<sup>r</sup>. I cannot Give you One, the Ship is in Distress Plumb has been +trying to Get You away.</p> + +<p>My Sf. No Sir, I can have Good Wages here & I think it Better than +Privatiering I can<sup>t</sup> Think of Going for a Single Share I had a hard +task Last Cruise & they all Left me.</p> + +<p>P<sup>r</sup>. You have had a hard task of it & I will Consider you. & You Shall +have as Much again as You Expect. Ranny & those that Leave me without a +Discharge will Never Get anything you Better go aboard Boardman. I will +Consider you & you,ll <em>Lose Nothing by it</em>.</p> + +<p>My Sf. I am Oblig<sup>d</sup> to you Sir. & So went on Board.</p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p> + +<h2>JOURNAL</h2> + +<h4>AND</h4> + +<h1>SAILING DIRECTIONS</h1> + +<h4>OF THE</h4> + +<h2>OLIVER CROMWELL</h2> + +<h3>THIRD CRUISE.</h3> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img5.png" width="500" height="125" alt="Page header" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>JOURNAL OF THE THIRD CRUISE.</h2> + + +<p>July 24 Weigh<sup>d</sup> Anchor at 5 Fathom hole & Came Over the Bar In +Comp<sup>y</sup> with the Notredame a 16 Gun Brig & two Sloops. Mett a French +Ship of 28 Guns on the Bar Bound in.</p> + +<p>25<sup>th</sup> A Smooth Sea.</p> + +<p>29<sup>th</sup> Saw A Sail Gave Chace.</p> + +<p>30<sup>th</sup> Saw A Sail Gave Chace.</p> + +<p>31<sup>st</sup> Saw two Sail Gave Chace. Light winds.</p> + +<p>August 6th at half after Six Afternoon Saw a Sail & Gave Chace, at 11 +Gave her a Bow Gun which Brought her too She was a Big from New Orleans +in Missippi Bound to Cape Francois a Spainard Went on Board Kept her All +Night & Lett her Go at 10 <sup>o</sup>Clock the Next Day her Cargo was Furr & +Lumber She had Some Englismen on Board the Occasion of our Detaining her +So Long.</p> + +<p>7<sup>th</sup> At 5 OClock Afternoon Made the Land the Island of Abaco.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> +8<sup>th</sup> at 10 <sup>o</sup>Clock Harbour Island Bore East Dis<sup>t</sup> 2 Leagues.</p> + +<p>9<sup>th</sup> Hard Gales of wind.</p> + +<p>10<sup>th</sup> Fresh Gales of wind & Heavy Squals.</p> + +<p>11<sup>th</sup> Fresh Breeses & a Rough Sea.</p> + +<p>12 at Six Afternoon Caught a Great Turtle which was Kook<sup>d</sup> the Next +Day for the Entertainment of the Gentlemen of the Fleet No Less than 13 +Came on Board to Dine.</p> + +<p>14 At 2 oClock P M Harbour Island Bore SbW 1 League Dis<sup>t</sup> Sent the +Yoll on Shore The Brig Sent her Boat a Shore too.</p> + +<p>15<sup>th</sup> The two Boats Returned with a two Mast Boat & 4 Men Belonging to +New Providence Squally Night & Smart Thunder & Lightning.</p> + +<p>16<sup>th</sup> Cros<sup>d</sup> the Bahama Banks from 8 Fathom of water to 3¾ Came +to Anchor at Night on the Bank.</p> + +<p>17<sup>th</sup> Arriv<sup>d</sup> at the Abimenes Fill<sup>d</sup> our Water Cask & Hogg<sup>d</sup> +Ship & Boot Top<sup>t</sup> the Ship.</p> + +<p>18<sup>th</sup> At Day Break Weigh<sup>d</sup> Anchor together with the Rice Thumper +Fleet at Noon Parted with Them & Fired 13 Guns the Other fir,d their +Guns Which was a 16 Gun Brigg the Notredame Command by Cap<sup>t</sup> Hall A 10 +Gun Sloop Com<sup>d</sup> by Cap<sup>t</sup> Robberts A 12 Gun Sloop Com<sup>d</sup> by John +Crappo or Petweet & Stood to the westward a cross<sup>d</sup> the Gulf.</p> + +<p>19<sup>th</sup> at Day the Cape of Floriday bore west we stood for it a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>Cross<sup>d</sup> the Gulf we Came out of the Gulf in five fathom of Water & +Within 30 Rods of a Rieff in the Space of 15 Minutes in About a League +of the Shore Which Surpris<sup>d</sup> the Capt. & Other Officers we have the +Ship in Stays & beat off the wind being moderate.</p> + +<p>20<sup>th</sup> Saw a Sail & Gave her Chace & Came Up She was a Saniard a +Palacca from Havanna Bound to Spain She Inform<sup>d</sup> us of the Jamaica +Fleet that they Pass<sup>d</sup> the Havanna ten Days Back Which made us Give +over the Hopes of Seeing them.</p> + +<p>22 Saw this Spaniard about a League to the Windward.</p> + +<p>23 a Sunday, Saw a Ships Mast in Forenoon & Just at Night A Large +Jamaica Puncheon Floating we hoisted out our Boat<sup>e</sup> & went in Persuit +of it but Could not Get it we Suppos<sup>d</sup> it was full of Rum this +Afternoon a Large Swell brok & Soon after A fine Breese Which +Increas<sup>d</sup> harder in the Morn<sup>g</sup>.</p> + +<p>24<sup>th</sup> Sun about two hours high we Saw white water in About a Mile +Under our Lee Bow we Saw the Breakers which was on the Bahama Banks +which Surpris<sup>d</sup> our Officers & Men Greatly we Put our Ship About & had +the Good Fortune to Clear them the wind Blew harder we Struck Top +Gallant Yards & Lanch<sup>d</sup> Top Gallant Masts Lay too Under one Leach of +the Four Sail Got 6 Nine Pounders Down in the Lower hold & Cleard the +Decks of unecessary Lumber The Wind Continued verry hard The air was +Verry Thick Just before Night the Sea Came in Over our Larboard Nettens +on the Gangway. All the officers Advis<sup>d</sup> to Cut away the Main Mast +which we Did, Just<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> +at Dusk, All the hope we had was that it would not +Blow harder, but it Continued harder till After Midnight About one +oClock it Seemd to Blow in whirlwinds which oblig<sup>d</sup> us to Cut away our +Four Mast & Missen Mast. Soon after the Wind Chang<sup>d</sup> to the Eastward +which Greatly Encourag<sup>d</sup> us Being Much Affraid of the Bahama Banks the +fore Mast fell to the windward & Knock<sup>d</sup> our Anchor off the Bow So +that we Cut it away for fear it would Make a hole in the Bow of the Ship +our Fore Mast Lay along Side for two hours After it fell, it Being +Impossible to Get Clear of it We Bent our Cables for fear of the Banks +that we Might try to Ride it out if we Got on.</p> + +<p>25 Moderated Some But Verry Rough So that we Could Do no work.</p> + +<p>26 Got a Jury Mast Up on the Main Mast.</p> + +<p>27 Got up Jury Masts on the Fore & Mison Masts.</p> + +<p>30 at 8 oClock in the Morning Saw a Brigg over our weather Bow 2 Leagues +Dis<sup>t</sup> We Kept our Course She Stood the Same way Just at Night we gave +her two Guns but She kept on at Night we Lost Sight of her.</p> + +<p>31<sup>st</sup> at 5 in the Morning Saw the Brigg a Head Gave her Chace Came up +with her about Noon we hoisted our Colours She hoisted English Colours, +we Gave her one gun which made them come Tumbling Down.</p> + +<p>Sep<sup>tr</sup> 1<sup>st</sup> We Saw a Sail a Head Giving us Chace She hoisted Englis +Colours & we & the Brigg hoisted English Colours She Came Down towards +us we Put the Ship about & She Came Close too us we up Parts & Our +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span> +Colours She put about & we Gave her about 12 Guns Bow Chaces & She Got +Clear She was a Small Sloop of 6 or 8 Guns.</p> + +<p>Sep<sup>t</sup> 2<sup>nd</sup> Got Soundings of Cape May 45 Fath<sup>m</sup>.</p> + +<p>Sep<sup>t</sup> 3<sup>rd</sup> at Night Lost Sight of The Prise.</p> + +<p>Sep<sup>t</sup> 4<sup>th</sup> Saw a Sail A Privatier Schoner She kept Round us all Day +& hoisted English Colours we hoisted English Colours but She thought +Best Not to Speak with.</p> + +<p>Sep<sup>t</sup> 5<sup>th</sup> Made the Land at 9 oClock in the Morning the South Side +of Long Island against South Hampton & Came to Anchor Under Fishes +Island at 12 oClock at Night Saw five Sail at 2 Afternoon Standing to +the Westward two of them Ships.</p> + +<p>Sep<sup>t</sup> 6<sup>th</sup> 1778 New London. Arriv<sup>d</sup> in this Harbour.</p> + +<hr style="width: 55%;" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span></p> +<h2>SAILING DIRECTIONS OF THE THIRD CRUISE.</h2> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img68.png" width="500" height="523" alt="table" title="" /> +</div> + + +<p> </p> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p> +<p class="center"><strong>An Account of the Months, Days, & Knots the Ship Olv<sup>r</sup> Cromwell Run +the Third Cruise.</strong></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/img69.png" width="400" height="227" alt="table" title="" /> +</div> + + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p> +<h1>GUNNER’S REMARKS.</h1> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img6.png" width="500" height="86" alt="Page header" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>REMARKS OF OUR GUNNER ON CHARLESTOWN, IN S. C.</h2> + + +<p>Charlestown is Pleasantly Situated on Ashley River on verry low Land it +was Extreamly well Built but the Fire which happen<sup>d</sup> in January last +has Spoiled the Beauty of the Place, it may if times alter be as +pleasant & Beautifull with Regard to y<sup>e</sup> Buildings as ever. But I +Cannot Behold such a Number of my fellow beings (altho Differing in +Complexion) Dragged from the Place of their Nativity, brought into a +Country not to be taught the Principles of Religion & the Rights of +Freeman, but to Be Slaves to Masters, who having Nothing but Interest in +View without ever Weting their own Shoes, Drive these fellows to the +Most Severe Services, I say I cannot behold these things without Pain. +And Expressing my Sorrow that are Enlighten<sup>d</sup> People, a People +Professing Christianity Should treat any of God’s creatures in Such a +Manner as I have Seen them treated Since my arrival at this Place. & I +thank God who Gave me a Disposition to Prefer Freedom to Slavery.</p> + +<p>I have Just mentioned a People Professing Christianity. I believe there +is a few who now & then go to Church but by all the Observation I have +been able to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> +make I find that Horse Racing, Frolicking Rioting Gaming +of all Kinds Open Markets, and Traffick, to be the Chief Business of +their Sabbaths. I am far from Supposing there is not a few Righteous +there But was it to have the chance which Soddom had, that if there was +five Righteous men it Should Save the City. I believe there would be +only a Lot & Family, & his wife I should be afraid would Look Back.</p> + +<p>Another remark that I shall make is this, Marriage in Most Countrys is +Deemed Sacred, and here there are many honourable and I believe happy +Matches, But to see among the Commonalty a Man take a Woman without so +much Ceremony as Jumping over a Broom Stick at the time of their +Agreement, to see her Content herself to be his Slave to work hard to +maintain him & his Babs & then to Content herself with a flogging if she +only says a word out of Doors at the End of it, and then take his other +Doxy who Perhaps has Served him well—and so one Lover to another, +Succeeds another and another after that the last fool is as welcome as +the former, till having liv,d hour out he Gives Place & Mingles with the +herd who went Before him. These things may to some People who are +unacquainted with such Transactions appear Strange and Odd, but how +shall I express myself—what Feelings have I had within myself to behold +one of these Slaves or Rather whole Tribes of them belonging to one +Master who Perhaps has the happiness of an Ofspring of beautifull +Virgins whose Eyes must be continually assaulted with a Spectacle which +Modesty forbids me to Mention. I +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> +have Seen at a Tea table a Number of +the fair Sex, which a Man of Sentiments would have almost Ador,d and a +man of Modesty would not have been so Indecent as to have Unbutton<sup>d</sup> +his knee to adjust his Garter—Yet have I Seen a Servant of both Sexes +Enter in Such Dishabitable as to be oblig<sup>d</sup> to Display those Parts +which ought to be Concealed. To see Men Approach the Room where those +Angelick Creatures meet & View those Beautifull Countenances & Sparkling +Eyes, which would almost tell You that they abhor,d the Cruel imposition +of their Parents, who Perhaps Loaded with a Plentifull fortune, would +not afford a decent Dress to their Servants to hide their Shame from +such Sight I have turn<sup>d</sup> my Eyes. I would not mean to be two Severe +nor have it thought but there are great numbers who have a Sence of the +Necessity of a Due decorum keep their Servants in a Verry Genteel manner +and do honor to their keepers but those who have Viewed such scenes as +well as myself will testify to this Truth & Say with me that Droll +appearances would Present themselves to view that in Spite of all that I +could Do would Oblige me to give a total grin, the Particular above +mentioned altho they appear a Little forecast are absolutely matters of +fact & not Indeed to Convey any I<sup>ll</sup> Idea to y<sup>e</sup> mind.</p> + +<p>In a Commertial way by what little opportunity I have had to make any +Remarks on them. I find that in Casting up their accounts that there are +a Number which Deservs to be Put on y<sup>e</sup> C<sup>r</sup> Side. But money getting +being Mankinds Universal harvest I find as +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span> +many Reapers as one would +wish to see in Such an Open Field for every one to have a fare Sweep +with the Sickle which as frequently cuts your purse Strings as anything +Else, their Rakes are Most Excellent nothing is lost for want of +geathering & you may depend on it their Bins are so Close that But a +trifle of what they Put in ever Comes out of the Cracks. Sometimes you +will see a small Trifle peep its Nose out on a Billiard Table, now & +then the four knaves will tempt a Small Parcell to walk on the Table, & +I believe Black Gammon, Shuffle Board, horse Racing, & that Noble Game +of Roleing two Bullets on the Sandy Ground Where if there Should be +y<sup>e</sup> Least Breath air it would Blind you all those would help a little +of it to Move & if I added Whoreing and Drinking they would Not Deny the +Charge. If the things Mentioned above are to be Deemed Vices. I think no +Person that Comes to Carolina will find any Scarcity, Provided they have +such articles as Suits such a Market. I cannot from my hart Approve of +their Method of Living—not but that their Provision is Wholesome but In +Genral they Dont Coock it well. Rice bares the Sway, in Room of Bread, +with any kind of victuals and Ever in Families of Fashion you will see a +Rice Pudding (If it Deserves the Name) to be Eat as we do our Bread, I +am affraid of Being too cencorious or I would Remark Numberless things +which to a Person unacquainted with Place would even Look Childish to +mention but as I only make this Obs<sup>n</sup> for my own amusement never +Intending they Shall be ever seen but by Particular friends. I shall +omit any niceities of Expressions and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span> +Shall write a few more Simple +facts I have seen Gamblers, Men Pretended Friends to you that would hug +you in their Bosoms till they were Certain they had Gotten what they +could from you, & then for a Shilling would Cut Your Throat. I would not +Mean by this to Convey the Idea of their being a Savage people in +General. There are Gentlemen of Charracter & who Ritchly Deserve the +Name—but as there are Near Seven Blacks to one White Man, the +Austerities used to the Slaves in their Possessions, is the Reason as I +immagion of their looking on & Behaving to a White Man who Differs from +them in their Manners and not bred in their Country in a Way Not much +Different from which they treats their Blacks. I Have been told that the +Place is Much alterd from what it was Before the Present Dispute & that +a Number of the Best Part of People are Moved out of Charlestown for the +honour of Charlestown. I will believe it and wish it may be Restor<sup>d</sup> +to its Primitive Lusture. However let me not look all on the Dark Side +there are Many things well worth Praise, there Publick Buildings are +well finish<sup>d</sup> & Calculated for the Convenience of Publick & Private +Affairs, their Churches make a verry fine Appearance and are finish<sup>d</sup> +Agreeable to the Rules of Architecture. I do not Mean that they are the +Most elegant I ever Saw, but so well Perform<sup>d</sup> as would Declare those +who Reared them Good Artissts, the Streets are well Laid out & a verry +good Brick Walk on Each Side for foot Passengers, their Streets are not +Pav<sup>d</sup> but Verry Sandy, and the heat of the Climate is Such that the +Sand is Generally verry Disagreeable +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>& Occasions +a number of Insects +Commonly Call<sup>d</sup> Sand flies, the Lowness of the Land and the Dead water +in Different Places in the Town & out of it Occasions another Breed of +Insects well Known by the Name of Musketoes. These Creatures are well +disciplined for they do Not Scout in private Places nor in Small +Companies as tho Affraid to attack but Joining in as many Different +Colloums as there are Openings to Your Dwellings they make a Desperate +push and Seldom fail to Annoy their Enemy in Such a Manner that they +leave their Adversary in a Scratching humor the Next Morning thro<sup>o</sup> +Vexation. It would be endless to mention the advantages & Disadvantages +of the Place but this I am fully Assur<sup>d</sup> of. If the White People would +be so Industrous as to till the Land themselves and see every thing Done +so as to have less of those Miserable Slaves in the Country the Place to +me would have a verry Different Appearance. I have heard it Alleg<sup>d</sup> as +a Pretext for keeping so many Slaves that white People cannot Endure the +heat of the Climate & that there can be but verry little done without +these Slaves, that there could be but a verry little done is to me a +Matter of Doubt, but that there would be but Verry little If the People +Retain their Luxury & Love of all kinds of Sport is to me Beyond all +doubt. I have Seen more Persons than a few worry themselves at Gaming In +an Excessive hot Day in Such a Manner that a Moderate Days work would be +a Pleasure to it. These things have convinc<sup>d</sup> me of the Foolish wicked +and Absurd Notions which People seem to have Adopted in General that +Because these Issacars are +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> +like Issacars of Old. Strong Asser Couching +Down between two Burthens and have not Got the means of Preserving their +Liberty were they Ever So Desirous of it and are kept in Such a +miserable manner as never to know the Blessings of it. I say these +things have Convinc<sup>d</sup> me of the Notorious Violation of the Rights of +Mankind and which I think no Rational Man will Ever try to Justify. +America my Earnest Prayer is that thou mayst preserve thy Own Freedom +from any Insolvent Invaders who may attempt to Rob the of the Same—but +be Sure to let Slavery of all kinds ever be Banish<sup>d</sup> from thy +habbittations.</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 25em;">Fins Camsiocelo.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p> +<h1>SONGS.</h1> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img7.png" width="500" height="161" alt="Page header" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>A SEAMAN’S SONG.</h2> + +<div class="box"> + +<p class="center">1</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 11em;"> + Come all you Joval Seaman, with Courage Stout & bold<br /> + that Value more your Honour, than Mysers do their Gold<br /> + When we Receive Our Orders, we are Oblig<sup>d</sup> to go<br /> + O’er the Main to Proud Spain, Let the Winds Blow high or Low.</p> + + +<p class="center">2</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 11em;"> + It was the fifteenth of September, from Spithead we Sat Sail<br /> + we had Rumbla in our Company, Blest with a Pleasant Gale<br /> + we Sailed away together, for the Bay of Biscay, o<br /> + Going along Storms Come on, and the winds Began to Blow.</p> + + +<p class="center">3</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 11em;"> + The winds and Storms increas<sup>d</sup> the Bumbla Bore away<br /> + and left the Cantaborough, for No Longer Could She Stay<br /> + & when they Came to Gibralter, they told the People So<br /> + that they thought we were Lost, in the Bay of Biscay, O.</p> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span></p> +<p class="center">4</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 11em;"> + But as Providence would have it, it was not quite so Bad<br /> + But first we lost our Missen Mast, and then went off our Flag<br /> + the Next we Lost our Main Mast, one of our Guns also<br /> + With five Men, Drowned then, in the Bay of Biscay, O.</p> + + +<p class="center">5</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 11em;"> + The Next we Lost our foremast, which was a Dreadfull Stroke<br /> + and in our Larboar Quarter, a Great hole there was Broke<br /> + and then the Seas come Roleing in, our Gun Room it Did flow<br /> + Thus we Rold and we told, in the Bay of Biscay, O.</p> + + +<p class="center">6</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 11em;"> + It was Dark and Stormy Weather, Sad and Gloomy Night<br /> + Our Captain on the Quarter Deck, that Day was kill<sup>d</sup> Outrite<br /> + the Rings that on his fingers were, in Pieces burst Also<br /> + Thus we were in Dispare, in the Bay of Biscay, O.</p> + + +<p class="center">7</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 11em;"> + But when we Came to Gibralter, and lay in our New Hold<br /> + the People they Came flocking Down, our Ship for to Behold<br /> + they Said it was the Dismalest Sight, that Ever they Did know<br /> + We never Pind, But Drunk Wine, till we Drowned all our Woe.</p> + +</div> + + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p> +<h2>A COUNTRY SONG.</h2> + +<div class="box"> +<p class="center">1</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 11em;"> + On the Sweet Month of May we’ll Repair to the Mountain<br /> + And Set we Down there by a Clear Crystial fountain<br /> + Where the Cows sweetly Lowing In a Dewy Morning<br /> + Where Phebus oer the Hills and Meddow are Adorning.</p> + + +<p class="center">2</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 11em;"> + A Sweet Country Life is Delightfull and Charming<br /> + Walking abroad in a Clear Summer’s Morning<br /> + O your Towns and Your Cities Your Lofty high Towers<br /> + Are not to be Compar,d with Shades & Green Bowers.</p> + + +<p class="center">3</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 11em;"> + O Little I regard your Robes and fine Dresses<br /> + Your Velvets & Scarlets and Other Excesses<br /> + My own Country Fashions to me is More Endearing<br /> + Than your Pretty Prisemantle or your Bantle Cloth Wearing.</p> + +</div> + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Log-book of Timothy Boardman, by Samuel W Boardman + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOG-BOOK OF TIMOTHY BOARDMAN *** + +***** This file should be named 26040-h.htm or 26040-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/0/4/26040/ + +Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Anne Storer and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +book was produced from scanned images of public domain +material from the Google Print project.) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Log-book of Timothy Boardman + Kept On Board The Privateer Oliver Cromwell, During A + Cruise From New London, Ct., to Charleston, S. C., And + Return, In 1778; Also, A Biographical Sketch of The Author. + +Author: Samuel W Boardman + +Release Date: July 12, 2008 [EBook #26040] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOG-BOOK OF TIMOTHY BOARDMAN *** + + + + +Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Anne Storer and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +book was produced from scanned images of public domain +material from the Google Print project.) + + + + + + + Transcriber's Notes: + 1) Characters following ^ are supercripted-in the case of + ^oClock, it is just the "o". + 2) Inconsistent spellings and hyphenations have been left + as printed. + + + * * * * * + + + + + LOG-BOOK + OF + TIMOTHY BOARDMAN; + + KEPT ON BOARD THE PRIVATEER OLIVER CROMWELL, + DURING A CRUISE FROM NEW LONDON, CT., + TO CHARLESTON, S. C., AND RETURN, IN 1778; + + + ALSO, + + A BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH + OF THE AUTHOR. + + BY THE REV. SAMUEL W. BOARDMAN, D.D. + + + ISSUED UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE RUTLAND + COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY. + + + ALBANY, N. Y.: + JOEL MUNSELL'S SONS. + 1885. + + + + +PREFACE. + + +Under the auspices of the Rutland County Historical Society, is +published the Log-Book of Timothy Boardman, one of the pioneer settlers +of the town of Rutland, Vermont. This journal was kept on board the +privateer, Oliver Cromwell, during two cruises; the second one from New +London, Conn., to Charleston, S. C.; the third from Charleston to New +London, in the year 1778. It seems that the Log-Book of the first cruise +was either lost, never kept, or Mr. Boardman was not one of the crew to +keep it. It was kept as a private diary without any view to its ever +being published. + +When this manuscript, on coarse, unruled paper, was brought to light, it +came to the knowledge of the officers of the county historical society, +who, at once, decided that it was a document of considerable value and +should be published. Correspondence was accordingly opened with the +Rev. Samuel W. Boardman, D.D., of Stanhope, New Jersey, a grandson of +Timothy, to whom this document properly belonged, asking his permission +to allow the society to publish it. The Reverend Doctor immediately gave +his consent; and in his own words: "Supposed it was largely dry details. +Still these may throw side lights of value, on the history of the +times." At the same time he also consented to furnish a biographical +sketch of his grandfather to be published with the Log-Book. Accordingly +the sketch was prepared, but it proves to be not only a sketch, but a +valuable genealogy of that branch of the Boardman family. This sketch +was collected from many sources, mostly from manuscripts. + +The Boardmans in Rutland county are all known as a strictly industrious, +upright, religious, scholarly race; and they are so interwoven with the +early history, business and educational interests of the county, that +this document must meet with general favor and interest. + + JOHN M. CURRIER, + _Sec. of the Rutland County_ + _Historical Society._ + + + + + BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH + OF + DEA. TIMOTHY BOARDMAN. + + BY + REV. SAMUEL W. BOARDMAN, D.D. + + Stanhope, New Jersey. + + + + +BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH. + + +There is still preserved a letter from England, written in a fine hand, +with red ink, dated Obeydon? Feb. 5, 1641, and directed, + + "to her very loveing sonne + SAMUEL BOREMAN, + Ipswich in New England + give this with + haste." + +The letter is as follows: + +"Good sonne, I have receaved your letter: whereby I understand that you +are in good health, for which I give God thanks, as we are all--Praised +be God for the same. Whereas you desire to see your brother Christopher +with you, he is not ready for so great a journey, nor do I think he dare +take upon him so dangerous a voyage. Your five sisters are all alive and +in good health and remember their love to you. Your father hath been +dead almost this two years, and thus troubleing you no further at this +time, I rest, praying to God to bless you and your wife, unto whome we +all kindly remember our loves. + + Your ever loving mother, + "JULIAN BORMAN." + +This letter exhibits many of the characteristics of the Puritans to whom +the Bormans belonged. They were intensely religious; this short letter +contains the name of God three times and speaks of both prayer and +praise. The Puritans were an intelligent people, reading and writing; +this letter is a specimen of the correspondence carried on between the +earliest settlers and their kindred whom they had left in England. They +were an affectionate people, "remembering their loves" to one another; +and praying, for one another, as this mother did for her son and his +wife. This short letter has the word "love" four times. + +They were a persistent people, those who came hither did not shrink from +the hardships around them. They came to stay, and sent back for their +friends. Samuel desired Christopher to follow him. Many of their +families were large, there were at least nine members of this Puritan +household. Samuel was born probably about 1610; he had emigrated from +England in 1635 or 1636. His name is found at Ipswich, Mass., about 1637 +where land was assigned to him. Ipswich had been organized in 1635 with +some of the most intelligent and wealthy colonists. His father died +after Samuel's emigration to America, in 1639. His wife's name was Mary; +their oldest child, so far as we have record, was Isaac, born at +Wethersfield, Ct., Feb. 3, 1642. He probably journeyed through the +wilderness from Ipswich, Mass., which is twenty-six miles north of +Boston, to Wethersfield, Ct., about one hundred and fifty miles, in 1639 +or 1640. + +Between 1630 and 1640 many of the best families in England sent +representatives to America. It is said that Oliver Cromwell was at one +time on the point of coming. Between February and August, 1630, +seventeen ships loaded with families, bringing their cattle, furniture +and other worldly goods, arrived. One ship of four hundred tons brought +one hundred and forty passengers, others perhaps a larger number. Among +them were Matthew and Priscilla Grant, from whom Gen. Grant was of the +eighth generation in descent. Bancroft says, "Many of them had been +accustomed to ease and affluence; an unusual proportion were graduates +of Cambridge and Oxford. The same rising tide of strong English sense +and piety, which soon overthrew tyranny forever in the British Isles, +under Cromwell, was forcing the best blood in England to these shores." +The shores of New England says George P. Marsh, were then sown with the +finest of wheat; Plymouth Rock had but just received the pilgrims; the +oldest cottages and log-cabins on the coast were yet new, when Samuel +Boreman first saw them. The Puritans were a people full of religion, +ministers came with their people; they improved the time on the voyage, +Roger Clap's diary, kept on shipboard 1630, says, "So we came by the +good hand of our God through the deep _comfortably_, having preaching +and expounding of the word of God _every day for ten weeks_ together by +our ministers." Mr. Blaine says that the same spirit which kept +Cromwell's soldiers at home to fight for liberty after 1640, impelled +men to America before that time, so that there was probably never an +emigration, in the history of the world, so influential as that to New +England from 1620 to 1643. + +It is possible that Christopher Boreman fought and perhaps fell in the +army of the commonwealth. But why did so many of the early settlers, +quickly leave the Atlantic coast for the Connecticut valley? Their first +historians say there was even then "a hankering for new land." They +wished also to secure it from occupation by the Dutch who were entering +it. Reports of its marvelous fertility, says Bancroft, had the same +effect on their imagination, as those concerning the Genesee and Miami +have since exerted, inducing the "western fever," "Young man go West." +The richness of the soil of the Wethersfield meadows has been celebrated +as widely as the aroma of its onions. It is only three miles from +Hartford and was for two centuries one of the most prominent communities +in Connecticut. There was scarcely a more cultured society anywhere. "It +were a sin," said the early colonists "to leave so fertile a land +unimproved." The Pequod war had annihilated a powerful and hostile tribe +on the Thames in 1637. Six hundred Indians perished, only two whites +were killed. Connecticut was long after that comparatively safe from +Indians. In 1639, the people formed themselves into a body politic by a +voluntary association. The elective franchise belonged to all the +members of the towns who had taken the oath of allegiance to the +commonwealth. It was the most perfect democracy which had ever been +organized. It rested on free labor. "No jurisdiction of the English +monarch was recognized; the laws of honest justice were the basis of +their commonwealth. They were near to nature. These humble emigrants +invented an admirable system. After two centuries and a half, the people +of Connecticut desire no essential change from the government +established by their Puritan fathers." (Bancroft). + +The first emigration of Puritans to the Connecticut river is supposed to +have been to "Pyquag," now Wethersfield, in 1634. The next year 1635, +witnessed the first to Windsor and Hartford; while in the following year +1636, Rev. Thomas Hooker and his famous colony made the forest resound +with psalms of praise, as in June, they made their pilgrimage from the +seaside "to the delightful banks" of the Connecticut. Hooker was +esteemed, "The light of the western churches," and a lay associate, John +Haynes, had been governor of Massachusetts. The church at Wethersfield +was organized while Mrs. Boreman's letter given above, was on its way, +Feb. 28, 1641; Samuel and Mary Boreman were undoubtedly among its +earliest members. His first pastor there was Rev. Richard Denton, +whom Cotton Mather describes, as "a little man with a great soul, an +accomplished mind in a lesser body, an Iliad in a nutshell; blind of an +eye, but a great seer; seeing much of what eye hath not seen." In the +deep forests, amid the cabins of settlers, and the wigwams of savages, +he composed a system of Divinity entitled "Soliloquia Sacra." Rev. John +Sherman, born in Dedham, England, Dec. 26, 1613, educated at Cambridge, +who came to America in 1634, also preached here for a short time. He +was afterwards settled at Watertown Mass., had twenty-two children and +died in 1685. The colony at New Haven, which was soon united with them, +was founded in 1638, under Rev. John Davenport and Gov. Theophilus +Eaton. They first met under an oak and afterward in a barn. After a day +of fasting and prayer they established their first civil government on a +simple plantation covenant "to obey the Scriptures." Only church members +had the franchise; the minister gave a public charge to the governor to +judge righteously, with the text: "The cause that is too hard for you +bring it unto me, and I will hear it," "Thus," says Bancroft, "New Haven +made the Bible its statute book, and the elect its freemen." The very +atmosphere of New Haven is still full of the Divine favor distilled +from the honor thus put upon God's word in the foundation of its +institutions. There were five capital qualities which greatly +distinguished the early New England Puritans. I. Good intellectual +endowments; they were of the party of Milton and Cromwell. II. Intense +religiousness; the names Pilgrim and Puritan, are synonymous with +zealous piety. III. Education; many were graduates of colleges; they +founded Harvard in 1636. IV. Business thrift; godliness has the promise +of the world that now is, as well as of that which is to come. V. Public +spirit; they immediately built churches, schools, court houses, and +state houses. + +The newly married son to whom Julian Borman, the Puritan widow, with +seven children, wrote from England in 1641, obviously partook of these +common characteristics. He was soon recognized as a young man to be +relied upon. "Few of the first settlers of Connecticut," says Hinman, +author of the genealogy of the Puritans, "came here with a better +reputation, or sustained it more uniformly through life." + +In 1646-7-8. He was a juror. + +1649. Appointed by the Gen. Court, sealer of weights and measures. + +1657-8-9-60-61-62-63, and many years afterward, representative of +Wethersfield in the Legislature of Connecticut, styled "Deputy to the +General Court." + +Hinman says, few men, if any, in the colony, represented their own town +for so many sessions. + +1660. On the grand jury of the colony. + +1670. Nominated assistant. + +1662. Distributor of William's estate. + +1662. Appointed by Gen. Court on committee to pay certain taxes. + +1665. Chairman of a committee appointed by the Legislature, to settle +with the Indians the difficulty about the bounds of land near +Middletown, "in an equitable way." + +1660. On a similar committee to purchase of the Indians Thirty Mile +Island. + +1665. Chairman of a committee of the Legislature to report on land, +petitioned for by G. Higby. + +1663. Appointed chairman of committee to lay out the bounds of +Middletown. + +He died just two hundred and twelve years ago in April, 1673. His estate +was appraised by the selectmen of Wethersfield, May 2, 1673 at L742, +15_s_, about $4,000. His son Isaac then 31 years old is not named in the +settlement of the estate, and had perhaps received his patrimony. He had +ten children, seven sons and three daughters, of whom the youngest was +six years old; he had three grandchildren, the children of his oldest +son, Isaac. All his children received scriptural names, as was common in +Puritan families. His descendants are now doubtless several thousands in +number. Only a very small part, after two hundred and fifty years, of a +man's descendants bear his name. His daughters and their descendants, +his sons' daughters and their descendants, one-half, three-quarters, +seven-eights, diverge from the ancestral name, etc., till but a +thousandth part, after a few centuries retain the ancestral name, and +those who retain it owe to a hundred others as much of their lineage as +to him. Such is God's plan; the race are endlessly interwoven together; +no man liveth unto himself. But a few comparatively, of the descendants +of Samuel Borman can now be traced. His own name, however, has been +carried by them into the United States Senate; into the lower house of +Congress; into many State Legislatures; to the bar and to the bench; +into many pulpits, and into several chairs of collegiate and +professional instruction. Yet these can represent but a few of his +descendants who have been equally useful. Probably a larger number of +them are still to be found in Connecticut than in any other state. Among +them is the family of Rev. Noah Porter, D. D., LL. D., the President of +Yale College, who married a daughter of Rev. Dr. N. W. Taylor. The +prayers of Julian Borman for "her good sonne"--"her very loving sonne, +Samuel Boreman" already reach, under the covenant promise of Him who +remembers mercy to a thousand generations, a widely scattered family. + +In the above letter the name is spelled both with and without the letter +"_e_" after "_r_;" the letter "_d_" is not found until 1712. The letter +"_a_," was not inserted until 1750; so that the descendants of Samuel, +may still bear all these names, Borman, Boreman, Bordman or Boardman, +according to the generation at which the line traced, reaches the parent +stock. It is said that the name, however spelled, is still pronounced +"Borman," at Wethersfield. The rise of Cromwell in England, the long +Parliament, the Westminster Assembly, the execution of Charles the +First, the establishment of the commonwealth, its power by sea and land, +the death of the Protector, the restoration of Charles the Second, were +events of which Samuel must have heard by letter from his brother and +sisters, as well as in other ways. He doubtless had numerous kinsmen on +the side of both his father and his mother, who were involved in these +movements of the times in England. Perhaps Richard Boardman, one of the +first two "Traveling Methodist Preachers on the continent," who came +here from England in 1769, was among the descendants. + +At the same time the pioneer legislator in the Colonial General Court +just established in the wilds of America, was aiding to lay Scriptural +foundations for institutions of civil and religious liberty in the New +World. He left a Thomas Boreman, perhaps an uncle, in Ipswich, Mass. +During the thirty-seven years of his life, after his emigration, he saw +new colonies planted at many points along the Atlantic coast. He saw the +older colonies constantly strengthened by fresh arrivals, and by the +natural increase of the population. Several other Boremans came to +New England very early, some of whom may have been his kindred. He +accumulated and left a considerable estate for that day, derived in part +undoubtedly, from the increase in the value of the new lands, which he +had at first occupied, and which he afterward sold at an advanced price. +Some in every generation, of his descendants have done likewise; going +first north, and east, and then further and further west. One of the +descendants of his youngest son Nathaniel, now living, a man of +distinguished ability, Hon. E. J. H. Boardman of Marshalltown, Iowa, +is said to have amassed in this manner a large fortune. + +Samuel Boreman died far from his early home and kindred. He was not +buried beside father or mother, or by the graves of ancestors who had +for centuries lived and died and been buried there; but on a continent +separated from them by a great ocean. He was doubtless buried on the +summit of the hill in the old cemetery at Wethersfield, in a spot which +overlooks the broad and fertile meadows of the Connecticut river. In the +same plot his children and grandchildren lie, with monuments, though +no monument marks his own grave. In his childhood, he may have seen +Shakespeare and Bacon. He lived cotemporary with Cromwell; and Milton, +who died, a year after he was buried at Wethersfield. His wife Mary, the +mother of us all, died eleven years later, in 1684, leaving an estate +of $1,300. As his body was lowered into the grave, his widow and ten +children may have stood around it, the oldest, Isaac, aged 31, with his +two or three little children; the second, Mary, Mrs. Robbins, at the age +of twenty-nine; Samuel, Jr., twenty-five; Joseph twenty-three; John +twenty-one; Sarah, eighteen; Daniel, fifteen; Jonathan, thirteen; +Nathaniel, ten; Martha, seven. Most of these children lived to have +families, and left children, whose descendants now doubtless number +thousands. Isaac had three sons and one daughter and died in 1719, at +the age of seventy-seven. Samuel had two sons and three daughters, and +died in 1720, at seventy-two years of age. Daniel, then fifteen; from +whom Timothy Boardman, the author of the Log-Book, was descended; had +twelve children, nine sons and three daughters, and died in 1724, at the +age of seventy-six. Jonathan had two sons and three daughters, and died +September 21, 1712, at the age of fifty-one. Nathaniel married in +Windsor, at the age of forty-four, and had but one son, Nathaniel, and +died two months after his next older brother Jonathan, perhaps of a +contagious disease, November 29, 1712; at the age of forty-nine. The +descendants of Nathaniel are now found in Norwich, Vt., and elsewhere; +and those of Samuel in Sheffield, Mass., and elsewhere. But the later +descendants of the other sons, except Samuel, Daniel and Nathaniel, and +of the daughters, I have no means of tracing. They are scattered in +Connecticut and widely in other states. During the lives of this second +generation occurred King Phillip's war, which decimated the New England +Colonies, and doubtless affected this family with others. Within their +time also, Yale College was founded, and went into operation first at +Wethersfield, close by the original Borman homestead. + +The writer of this has made sermons in the old study of Rector Williams, +the president of the college, near the old Boardman house, which was +standing in 1856, the oldest house in Wethersfield. The second +generation of Boardmans, of course occupied more "new lands." Daniel, +the fifth son of Samuel, owned land in Litchfield and New Milford, then +new settlements, as well as in Wethersfield. Jonathan married in +Hatfield, Mass. + +The third generation, the grandchildren of Samuel, the names of +twenty-nine of whom (seventeen grandsons and twelve grand-daughters), +all children of Samuel's five sons, are preserved; went out to occupy +territory still further from home. We have little account however, +except of the nine sons of Daniel, the seventh child of Samuel. Daniel +the great-grandfather of Timothy, the author of the Log-Book, was +married to Hannah Wright just a hundred years before the marriage of +that great-grandson, June 8, 1683, while the war-whoop of King Phillip's +Narraganset savages was still resounding through the forest. Of his +twelve children, two sons, John and Charles, died before reaching full +maturity, John at the age of nineteen, near the death of two of his +uncles, Jonathan and Nathaniel, in 1712; and Charles the youngest child, +at the age of seventeen, very near the time of his father's death, in +1724. One son died in infancy. Of his daughters, Mabel, married Josiah +Nichols, and for her second husband John Griswold of New Milford; Hannah +married John Abbe of Enfield; and Martha married Samuel Churchill of +Wethersfield. Of his six surviving sons, Richard was settled at +Wethersfield; he married in Milford, and had three children. His second +son Daniel, born July 12, 1687, was graduated at Yale College in 1709, +became the first minister of New Milford in 1712 and died in the +ministry with his people, August 25, 1744. Hinman says: "He gave +character and tone to the new settlement, by his devotion and active +service." + +He was a man of deep piety, and of great force of character. It is +related that an Indian medicine man, and this Puritan pastor met by the +sick-bed of the same poor savage. The Indian raised his horrid clamor +and din, which was intended to exorcise according to their customs the +evil spirit of the disease. At the same time Mr. Boardman lifted up his +voice in prayer to Him who alone can heal the sick. The conflict of +rival voices waxed long and loud to see which should drown out the +other. Mr. Boardman was blessed with unusual power of lungs like his +nephew Rev. Benjamin Boardman, tutor at Yale and pastor in Hartford, who +for his immense volume of voice, while a chaplain in the Revolutionary +army was called by the patriots the "Great gun of the gospel." The +defeated charmer, acknowledged himself outdone and bounding from the +bedside hid his defeat in the forest. Mr. Boardman died about the time +his parishioners and neighbors were on the famous expedition to Cape +Breton and the capture of Louisburg and when Whitfield's preaching was +arousing the church. He was twice married and had six children. His +second wife, the mother of all but his oldest child was a widow, Mrs. +Jerusha Seeley, one of nine daughters of Deacon David Sherman of +Poquonnoch. Their children were: + +I. Penelopy, Mrs. Dr. Carrington. + +II. Tamar, wife of Mr. Boardman's successor in the pastorate at New +Milford, Rev. Nathaniel Taylor; mother of Major-General Augustine +Taylor, of the war of 1812; and grandmother of Prof. Nathaniel W. +Taylor, D.D., of New Haven. + +III. Mercy, the wife of Gillead Sperry, and grandmother of Rev. Dr. +Wheaton of Hartford. + +IV. Jerusha, wife of Rev. Daniel Farrand of Canaan, Ct., and mother of +Hon. Daniel Farrand (Yale, 1781), Judge of the Supreme Court of Vermont. +This judge had nine daughters, one of whom married Hon. Stephen Jacobs, +of Windsor, also a Judge of the Supreme Court of Vermont. + +Rev. Daniel Boardman left but one son, the Hon. Sherman Boardman, who +was but sixteen years old at the time of his father's death. From the +age of twenty-one he was for forty-seven years constantly in civil or +military office. He was for twenty-one sessions a member of the General +Assembly of Connecticut, of which his great-grandfather Samuel, had been +so long a member. His four sons, Major Daniel (Yale, 1781), Elijah, +Homer, and David Sherman (Yale, 1793), were all members of the +Connecticut Legislature, in one or both branches, for many years. Elijah +was also elected a United States Senator, from Connecticut in 1821. He +founded Boardman, Ohio, and died while on a visit there Aug. 18, 1823. +His son, William W. Boardman (Yale, 1812), was speaker of the house of +the Connecticut Legislature, and elected to Congress in 1840. He left +an ample fortune, and his large and comely monument stands near the +centre of the old historic cemetery of New Haven, Ct., in which city he +resided. This branch of the family, second cousins of the author of the +Log-Book, though descended from the Puritan pastor Daniel Boardman, are +now associated with the Protestant Episcopal church. + +The brothers of the pastor, grandsons of Samuel, were scattered in +various places. Richard settled in Wethersfield, as already noticed. +Israel settled at Stratford, and had two sons and one daughter. Joshua, +received by his father's will the homestead, but afterward removed to +Springfield, Mass. Benjamin settled at Sharon, and received from his +father lands in Litchfield and New Milford, lands which the family had +probably purchased while the son and brother was preaching there. +Timothy, the ninth child of Daniel, only twelve years old when his +brother became pastor at New Milford, died only a few days before the +birth of his namesake, and first grandchild, the author of the Log-Book. +He lived and died in Wethersfield. His enterprise however, like that of +his grandfather who emigrated from England, and that of his father who +acquired lands in Litchfield and New Milford, went out, as that of many +of their descendants does to-day, in the west, for "more land." He and +his brother Joshua, and other thrifty citizens of Wethersfield, fixed +upon the province of Maine as the field of their enterprise. Timothy and +Joshua owned the tract of land, thirty miles from north to south, and +twenty-eight from east to west, which now, apparently, constitutes +Lincoln Co. They had a clear title to eight hundred and forty square +miles, about twenty-two townships, along or near the Atlantic coast. By +the census of 1880, the assessed valuation of real estate in this county +was $4,737,807; of personal property $1,896,886. Total $6,634,693. It +embraces 3,213 farms; 146,480 acres of improved land, valued, including +buildings and fences at $4,403,985; affording an annual production, +valued at $759,560. The population was 24,326 of whom 23,756 were +natives of Maine. + +This tract which should have been called "Boardman county," had been +originally purchased of the Indians by one John Brown, probably as early +as the close of King Phillip's war. It was purchased by the Boardman +brothers in 1732, from the great-grandchildren of John Brown, requiring +a considerable number of deeds which are now on record in the county +clerk's office at York, Maine. These deeds were from Wm. Huxley, Eleazar +Stockwell, and many others, heirs of John Brown, and of Richard Pearse +his son-in-law. Two of them show $2,000 each as the sums paid for their +purchase. + +William Frazier, a grandson of Timothy, and an own cousin of the +author of the Log-Book, received something more than two townships, and +although German intruders early settled upon these lands, many of whose +descendants are now among the leading citizens of that county, yet there +seems to be little reason to doubt that if, after the close of the +Revolutionary war, the author of the Log-Book and other heirs had gone +in quest of those ample possessions, something handsome, perhaps half of +the county, might have been secured. There is a tradition that the true +owners were betrayed as non-resident owners of unimproved lands often +are, by their legal agents, who accepted of bribes to defraud those +whose interests they had promised to secure. + +Timothy Boardman 1st, died in mid-life, at the age of fifty-three, and +this noble inheritance was lost to his heirs. The county became thickly +settled, and the Boardman titles though acknowledged valid, were it is +said, confiscated by the Legislature of Massachusetts in favor of the +actual occupants of the soil, as the shortest though unjust settlement +of the difficulty. + +The fourth generation, the great-grandsons of Samuel included several +men of prominence, some of whom have been already noticed. Hon. Sherman +Boardman of New Milford; Rev. Benjamin Boardman, the army chaplain, of +Hartford, and others. The majority of the family, however, were plain +and undistinguished men of sterling Puritan qualities, and of great +usefulness in their several spheres, in the church and in society. Many +were deacons and elders in their churches, these were too numerous for +further especial mention, except in a single line. The third child of +Timothy, the Maine land proprietor, only four years old when Lincoln +Co., Me. was purchased by his father, became a carpenter, ship-builder +and cabinet maker, and settled in Middletown, Ct., which his +great-grandfather Samuel had surveyed nearly a century before. He +married Jemima Johnson, Nov. 14, 1751, and his oldest child, born Jan. +20, 1754, was the author of the Log-Book. The preaching of Whitfield, +and the "Great Awakening" of the American churches, North, South and +Central, at this time, and for a whole generation, immediately preceding +the Revolutionary war, had very much quickened the religious life even +of the children of the New England Puritans. The Boardman family +obviously felt the influence of this great revival. The country was +anew pervaded with intense religious influences. + +Many letters and other papers remain from different branches of the +family of this and of more recent dates, exhibiting a deeply religious +spirit. The boy Timothy grew up in an atmosphere filled with such +influences. Many of the habits and feelings brought by the Puritans from +England still prevailed. To the day of his death he retained much of the +spirit of those early associations. He left a double portion to his +oldest son. He inherited the traits of the Puritans; intelligence; +appreciation of education; deference for different ages and relations in +society; piety, industry, economy and thrift. His advantages at school +in the flourishing village of Middletown must have been exceptionally +good; he early learned to write in an even, correct and handsome hand, +which he retained for nearly three-quarters of a century; his school +book on Navigation is before me. + +More attention was paid to a correct and handsome chirography, at that +time, the boyhood of Washington, Jefferson, Sherman and Putnam, than at +a later day when a larger range of studies had been introduced. "The +Young Secretary's Guide," a volume of model letters, business forms, +etc., is preserved; it bears on the first leaf "Timothy Boardman, his +Book, A.D. 1765." The hand is copy-like, and very handsome, and +extraordinary if it is his, as it seems to be; though he was then but +eleven years old. A large manuscript volume of Examples in Navigation, +obviously in his handwriting, doubtless made in his youth, is also +before me. The writing and diagrams are like copper-plate. No descendant +of his, so far as known to the writer could have exceeded it in +neatness and skill. In his early boyhood the French and Indian war +filled the public mind with excitement; reports of the exploits of Col. +Israel Putnam were circulated, as they occurred. The conquest of Canada +under Gen. Wolf filled the colonies with pride and patriotism. But +already disaffection between the mother country and the colonies had +arisen. Resistance to the tea tax and other offensive measures were +discussed at every fireside. The writer before he was seven years old +caught from the author of the Log-Book, then over eighty, something of +the indignant feeling toward England which the latter had acquired at +the very time when the tea was thrown overboard into Boston harbor. +Timothy Boardman was ripe for participation in armed resistance when +the war came. He was just twenty-one as the first blood was shed at +Lexington and Concord, April 19, 1775. Putnam who had left his plow in +the furrow, was with his Connecticut soldiers, in action, if not in +chief command at Bunker hill. Timothy Boardman joined the army which +invested Boston, under Washington in the winter of 1775-1776. He was +stationed, doubtless with a Connecticut regiment, on Dorchester Heights, +now South Boston. + +After completing this service, in the great uprising of the people to +oppose the southward progress of Burgoyne, he was called out and marched +toward Saratoga, but the surrender took place before his regiment +arrived. With his father he had worked at finishing houses, and the +inside of vessels built on the Connecticut river, on which Middletown +is situated. In the winter he was employed largely in cabinet work, in +the shop; I have the chest which he made and used on the _Oliver +Cromwell_. + +Congress early adopted the policy of sending out privateers or armed +vessels to capture British merchant vessels. These vessels became prizes +for the captors. The _Oliver Cromwell_ was chartered by Connecticut, +with letters of marque and reprisal from the United States. Captain +Parker was in command. The _Defence_ accompanied the _Oliver Cromwell_; +they sailed from New London; Timothy Boardman then twenty-four years of +age enlisted and went on board; he commenced keeping the Log-Book April +11, 1778; he seems to have been head carpenter on board the ship, and to +have had severe labors. His assistants appear to have deserted him +before the close of the voyage. It was his duty to make any needful +repairs after a storm, or in an engagement and to perform any such +service necessary even at the time of greatest danger. In a terrific +storm it was decided to cut away the mast. His hat fell from his head, +but he scarcely felt it worth while to pick it up, as all were liable so +soon to go to the bottom. In action, his place was below deck, to be in +readiness with his tools and material to stop instantly, if possible, +any leak caused by the enemies' shot. At one time the rigging above him +was torn and fell upon him, some were killed; blood spattered over him, +and it was shouted "Boardman is killed." He, however, and another man on +board, a Mr. Post, father of the late Alpha Post of Rutland, were +spared to make their homes for half a century among the peaceful hills +of Vermont. + +In the following year 1779, he seems to have sailed down the Atlantic +coast on an American merchant vessel. He was captured off Charleston, S. +Carolina, by the British, but after a few days' detention, on board his +Majesty's vessel, it was thought cheaper to send the prisoners on shore +than to feed them, and he and his companions were given a boat and set +at liberty. They reached Charleston in safety. The city was under +martial law, and the new-comers were for about six weeks put upon +garrison duty. About this time Lord Cornwallis was gaining signal +advantages in that vicinity, while Gen. Gates, who had received the +surrender of Burgoyne, three years before, was badly defeated. After +completing this service the author of the Log-Book, started to walk home +to Connecticut. He proceeded on foot to North Carolina, where Andrew +Jackson was, then a poor boy of twelve years. Jackson's father, a young +Irish emigrant died within two years after entering those forests, and +his widow soon to become the mother of a President, was "hauled" through +their clearing, from their deserted shanty, to his grave, among the +stumps, in the same lumber wagon with the corpse of her husband. He had +been dead twelve years when the pilgrim from Connecticut passed that +way. Overcome, probably by fatigue and by malaria, his progress was +arrested in North Carolina by fever, and he lay sick all winter among +strangers. + +In the spring of 1780, unable probably, to proceed on foot, he embarked +from some port, on a merchant ship bound for St. Eustatia, a Dutch +island, in the West Indies. He was again captured and taken prisoner by +the British. + +He was, however, transferred to a British merchant vessel on which he +rendered a little service by way of commutation, when he was set at +liberty on St. Eustatia. The island has an area of 189 square miles, +population 13,700; latitude 17 deg., 30', North. Climate generally healthy, +but with terrific hurricanes and earthquakes, soil very fertile and +highly cultivated by the thrifty Hollanders, with slave labor. It has +belonged successively to the Spanish, French, English and Dutch. Having +been enfeebled by his fever of the winter before, Timothy Boardman now +twenty-six years old, worked for several months at his trade with good +wages. I have heard him say that there the tropical sun shone directly +down the chimney. He used to relate also, how fat the young negroes +would become in sugaring time, when the sweets of the canefield flowed +as freely as water. He returned home to Connecticut probably late in +the year 1780. Vermont was then the open field for emigration. It was +rapidly receiving settlers from Connecticut. I have no knowledge that he +ever made any account of the immense tract in Maine, purchased and held +by deeds, still on record at York, Me., by his grandfather, and in which +he, as the oldest grandson, born a few days after his grandfather's +death and named for him, might have been expected to be interested. + +He was now twenty-seven. A large family of younger children had long +occupied his father's house. He sought a home of his own. His younger +brothers Elisha and Oliver were married and settled before him. He seems +to have inherited something of the ancestral enterprise of the Puritans, +"hankering for new land." All his brothers and sisters settled in +Connecticut, but he made his way in 1781 to Vermont. For a year +1781-1782, he worked at his trade in Bennington. During this time, he +purchased a farm in Addison, it is supposed of Ira Allen, a brother of +the redoubtable Ethan Allen; but the title proved, as so often happened, +with the early settlers to be defective. He recovered, many years +afterward, through the fidelity and skill of his lawyer, the Hon. Daniel +Chipman of Middlebury, the hard earned money which he had paid for the +farm at Chimney Point. It shows how thrifty he must have been, and how +resolute in his purpose to follow a pioneer life in Vermont, that after +this great loss he still had money, and a disposition to buy another +farm among the Green Mountains. Having put his hand to the plow, he did +not turn back. He did not perhaps like to have his Connecticut kindred +and friends think he had failed in what he had undertaken. He had saved +a good portion of his wages for six or seven years. He had received, as +the most faithful man in the crew, a double share in the prizes taken by +the _Oliver Cromwell_. He had perhaps received some aid from his father. +Though he had paid for and lost one unimproved farm, he was able to buy, +and did purchase another. He came to Rutland, Vt., in 1782 and bought +one hundred acres of heavily timbered land from the estate of Rev. +Benajah Roots, whose blood has long flowed in the same veins, with his +own. He perhaps thought that if he bought of a minister, he would get a +good title. He may have known Mr. Roots, at least by reputation, in +Connecticut, for he had been settled at Simsbury, Ct., before coming to +a home missionary field in Rutland. The owner of the land was in doubt +whether to sell it. + +The would-be purchaser had brought the specie with which to buy it, in a +strong linen bag, still it is supposed preserved in the family, near the +same spot. "Bring in your money," said a friend, "and throw it down on a +table, so that it will jingle well." The device was successful, the +joyful sound, where silver was so scarce, brought the desired effect. +The deed was soon secured, for the land which he owned for nearly sixty +years. + +A clearing was soon made on this land at a point which lies about +one-half mile south of Centre Rutland, and a-half mile west of Otter +creek on the slope of a high hill. It was then expected that Centre +Rutland would be the capital of Vermont. In 1783, he erected amid the +deep forests, broken only here and there by small clearings, a small +framed house. He never occupied a log-house; as he was himself a +skillful carpenter, house-joiner and cabinet maker and had been reared +in a large village, a city, just as he left it, his taste did not allow +him to dispense with so many of the comforts of his earlier life as many +were compelled to relinquish. + +He returned to Middletown, and was married, Sept. 28th, 1783, to Mary, +the eighth child and fifth daughter of Capt. Samuel Ward of Middletown, +who had twelve children. The Ward family were of equal standing with his +own. The newly married couple were each a helpmeet unto the other, and +had probably known each other from early life in the same church and +perhaps in the same public school. They were both always strongly +attached to Middletown, their native place; it cost something to tear +themselves away and betake themselves to a new settlement, which they +knew must long want many of the advantages which they were leaving. I +remember the pride and exhileration with which, in his extreme old age, +he used to speak of Middletown, as he pointed out on his two maps, one +of them elaborate, in his native city, the old familiar places. He +revisited it from time to time during his long life, the last time in +1837, only a year and a-half before his death. + +In his journeys between Rutland and Middletown, which he visited with +his wife, the second year after their marriage, he must have met many +kindred by the way. His Uncle Daniel Boardman lived in Dalton, and his +Uncle John in Hancock, Mass., while three brothers of his wife, and a +sister, Mrs. Charles Goodrich, resided in Pittsfield. Mrs. Ward, his +mother-in-law, lived also in Pittsfield with her children, till 1815, +when she was ninety-six years old, her oldest son seventy-six, and her +eighth child, Mrs. Boardman, over sixty. She and her son-in-law, Judge +Goodrich, the founder of Pittsfield, who was of about her own age, +lived, it is said to be the oldest persons in Berkshire Co. He had also +a cousin Mrs. Francis at Pittsfield, and a favorite cousin Elder John +Boardman, at Albany and another cousin, Capt. George Boardman in +Schenectady. These three cousins were children of his uncle Charles of +Wethersfield. His grandmother Boardman, the widow of the Maine land +proprietor, also spent her last days in Dalton, and died there at her +son Daniel's, about the time when Timothy first went to Vermont. + +His youngest brother William, distinctly remembered my grandfather's +playing with him, and bantering him when a little child, and also the +September morning when with his father and mother he rode over in a +chaise to Capt. Ward's to attend Timothy's wedding. He told me that when +Timothy was there last, he shed some tears, as he cut for himself a +memorial cane, by the river's bank, where he used to play in boyhood, +and said he should never see the place again. William, whom he used to +call "Bill," named a son for him, Timothy. + +The spot where he built his first house, and called on the name of the +Lord, and where his first two or three children were born, is now off +the road, at a considerable distance, about a-half mile north-east of +the house, occupied by his grandson, Samuel Boardman, Esq., of West +Rutland. It is near a brook, in a pasture, cold, wet, bunchy and stony, +and does not look as if it had ever been plowed. He had better land +which he cultivated afterward, and which yielded abundantly. But at +first he must have wrung a subsistence from a reluctant soil. Yet +the leaf-mould and ashes from burned timber on fields protected by +surrounding forests would produce good wheat, corn and vegetables. Near +that spot still stands one very old apple tree and another lies fallen +and decaying near by. So tenacious are the memorials of man's occupancy, +even for a short time. + +After a few years he removed this small framed house, fifty rods +westward and dug and walled for it a cellar which still remains, a +pit filled with stones, water and growing alders. He then made some +additions to the house as demanded by his growing family. He also built +near it a barn. His house was still on the cold, bushy land which slopes +to the north-east, and is now only occupied for pasturage. Here seven +young children occupied with him his pioneer home. + +The tradition used to be, that at first he incurred somewhat the +derision of his neighbors, better skilled in backwoodsman's lore than +himself, by hacking all around a tree, in order to get it down. It is +said that some imagined his land would soon be in the market, and sold +cheap; that the city bred farmer, better taught in navigation and +surveying, than in clearing forests and in agriculture, would become +tired and discouraged and abandon his undertaking. But he remained and +persevered, and his good Puritan qualities, industry, frugality, good +management, and persistency for the first ten or fifteen years, +determined his whole subsequent career and that of his family. He was +never rich, but he secured a good home, dealt well with his children, +and became independent for the remainder of his life. Indeed, like most +New England Puritans, of resolute and conscientious industry, and of +moderate expenditures, he was always independent after he was of age. + +A man of such character, and of so fair an education would, of course, +soon be valued in any community, and be especially useful in a new +settlement where skill with the pen and the compass are rarer than in +older places. + +He was appreciated and was soon made town clerk of Rutland, and county +surveyor for Rutland county. He was also in time made captain of the +militia, in recognition perhaps, in part, of his Revolutionary services. +He was also made clerk of the Congregational church, I have some of his +church records. On Nov. 20th, 1805, he was elected a deacon. He was +also on the committee to revise the Articles of Faith and Rules of +Discipline. About 1792, he bought fifty acres of good land lying west of +his first purchase, and on this ground, one hundred rods west of his +previous home, and about half a mile south-west of the spot first +occupied, he erected in 1799, a good two-story house, which is still in +excellent preservation, where till his death, he lived in a home as +ample and commodious as the better class of those with which he had been +familiar in his native state. + +In sixteen years after coming to the unbroken forest on what has since +been called "Boardman hill," he had won a good position in society and +in the church, and a comfortable property. He was afflicted in the +death of his oldest daughter and child, Hannah, October 26, 1803. But +this was the only death that occurred in his family for more than +fifty-three years. His six remaining children lived to an average age +of about eighty. + +The Congregational church in West Rutland, one of the oldest in Vermont, +had been formed in 1773, nine years before his arrival. He became a +member in 1785, and his wife in 1803. Not long after his coming, Rev. +Mr. Roots, the pastor, died, and the widely known Rev. Samuel Haynes, a +devout, able and witty man, became their pastor, and so continued for +thirty years, until his dismission in 1818. Timothy Boardman's children +were early taken to church, were trained and all came into the church +under, the ministry of Rev. Mr. Haynes. + +He said that he would sooner do without bread than without preaching, +and he was always a conscientious and liberal supporter of the church. +He appreciated and co-operated with his pastor. In the great revival of +1808, five of his children were gathered into the church. One of them, +perhaps all of them, were previously regarded by their parents as +religious. + +In politics he was a Federalist. In respect to the war with Great +Britain 1812-1815, his views did not entirely coincide with those of +some others, including his associate in the diaconate, Dea. Chatterton, +who was a rigid Democrat. This eminently devout and useful man, was so +burdened with Dea. Boardman's lukewarmness in promoting the second +war with Great Britain, against whose armies both had fought in the +Revolution, that he felt constrained to take up a labor with him, hoping +to correct his political errors by wholesome church discipline. It must +have been a scene for a painter. + +Perhaps no better man or one more effective for good, ever lived in West +Rutland than Dea. Chatterton. In both politics and religion he was +practical and fervid. The church meeting was crowded. + +The occasion compelled my grandfather, as Paul was driven, in his +epistle to the Corinthians, and as Demosthenes was forced in his oration +for the crown, to enter somewhat upon his own past record. Though a very +modest and unpretentious man, yet it is said that the author of the +Log-Book, on this memorable occasion straightened himself up, and boldly +referred his hearers to the glorious days of the war for Independence, +which had tried men's souls, and when he had forever sealed the +genuineness of his own patriotism, by hazarding his life both by sea +and land for his country. + +Weighed in the balances on his own record, so far from being found +wanting, his patriotism was proved to be of the finest gold; and his +place like that of Paul, not a whit behind that of the chiefest apostle. +Though he did not feel it to be his duty to fall in behind the tap of +the drum, and volunteer to fight, beside the aged democratic veteran who +served with him at the communion table; yet he showed that the older was +not a better soldier; that with diversities of politics, there was the +same loyalty, and that his own patriotism was no less than his +brother's. + +The tremendous strain which the struggle for American Independence put +upon the generation who encountered it, was touchingly illustrated in +the lives of these two men, a generation, or two generations after the +struggle had been successfully closed. Amid the quiet hills of Vermont, +the minds of both were affected for a time, with at least partial +derangement. Dea. Boardman labored temporarily under the hallucination, +that he was somehow liable to arrest, and prepared a chamber for his +defence. He was obliged, for a time to be watched, though he was never +confined. A journey to Connecticut, on horseback, with his son Samuel, +when he was perhaps sixty years old, effected an entire cure. Dea. +Chatterton in his extreme old age, after a life of remarkable piety, +became a maniac and was obliged to be confined. He had suffered peculiar +hardships, perhaps on the prison-ships, in the Revolution; and his +incoherent expressions, in his insanity, sixty years afterward, and just +before his death, were full of charges against the "British." + +Timothy Boardman's supreme interest in life, however, was in his loyalty +to Christ, and his intense desires were for the extension and full +triumph of Christ's kingdom. The revivals which prevailed in the early +part of the century and the consequent great expansion of aggressive +Christian work, were in answer to his life-long prayers, as well as +those of all other Christians; and he entered heartily, from the first, +into all measures undertaken for the more rapid spread of the gospel. He +was greatly interested in the formation of the American Board of +Commissioners for Foreign Missions, and read the _Missionary Herald_, +with interest from its first publication, until his death. The formation +of the Bible Society, Tract Society, Seaman's Friend Society, Sunday +School Society, American Home Missionary Society, etc., engaged his +interest, and received his support. He made himself an honorary member +of the A. B. C. F. M. near the close of his life, in accordance with the +suggestion of his sister Sarah, whom he greatly valued, the wife of Rev. +Joseph Washburn, and afterward of Dea. Porter, both of Farmington, Ct., +by the contribution to Foreign Missions, at one time, of one hundred +dollars. + +In social and domestic life, he was a son of the Puritans and of the +Connecticut type. He exacted obedience, and somewhat of reverence +from his children. They did not dare, to the last, to treat him with +unrestrained familiarity. His wife and children stood, waiting at their +chairs, until he was first seated at the table. He gave his children a +good education for the time, sending them to "Master Southard." His +habitual temper of mind was one of deep reverence toward God. He sat in +awe during a thunder storm, and a cyclone which passed over his home +deeply impressed him. His letters abound in affectionate and in +religious sentiments. He was scrupulous in the observance of the +Sabbath; required it of his children, and he expected it of the stranger +within his gates. The family altar probably never failed from the day he +first entered with his newly married wife, into their pioneer home, amid +the forests, till his death. He was solemn, earnest and felicitous in +prayer. The atmosphere of his home was eminently that of a christian +household. Two of his four sons became officers in their churches, and +also both his sons-in-law. Four of his grandsons entered the Christian +ministry, and a granddaughter is the wife of a clergyman. Those who +regard the Puritans in general, as too severe in industry, in frugality, +in morals and in religious exercises, would have regarded him as too +exacting in all these directions. He certainly could not on one hundred +and fifty acres of land, which he found wild, and not all of it very +good, have reared a large family, and supported public institutions as +he did; have given each of his sons at settlement in life, six hundred +dollars, and left to each at his death, eight hundred, if he had not +practiced through life, a resolute industry, and a somewhat rigid +economy. + +It is worthy of notice that like his grandfather, Timothy Boardman of +Wethersfield, he owned, what by a little change of circumstances, might +have brought, not a competence merely but wealth to his heirs. Early in +his residence at Rutland, he became possessed, with many others of a +small lot in what was called the "Cedar Swamp." These lots were valued +almost exclusively for the enduring material for fences which they +afforded. Their cedar posts supplied the town. They obtained also on the +rocky portions of these lands a white sand, which was employed for +scouring purposes, and also for sprinkling, by way of ornamentation, +according to the fashion of the times, the faultlessly clean, white +floors of the "spare rooms." Timothy Boardman's cedar lot, is now one of +the largest marble quarries in Rutland, a town which is said to furnish +one-half of all the marble produced in the United States. It brought to +one of his sons, a handsome addition to farm profits, but was disposed +of just before its great value was appreciated and lost, as in case of +the Maine lands. + +His grandfather Timothy Boardman, is said to have been "a short, stocky +man;" his monument, and until recently that of his father Daniel, son of +the emigrant from England, might both be seen, near together in the old +cemetery at Wethersfield. + +The author of the Log-Book, was a little below the average height, of +rather full face, with a peach-bloom tinge of red on each cheek in old +age, and of light complexion, and light hair. His motions were quick, +and his constitution healthful, though he was never strong. He had +undoubtedly a mind of fair ability; inclined perhaps to conservative +views, and acting as spontaneously, it may be in criticism, as in any +other exercise of its energies. I remember to have received reproof and +instruction in manners, from him when I was five or six years of age. +He was careful of his possessions, and articles belonging to him, were +very generally marked "T. B." + +It is a tradition among the older kindred, that the writer, though he +does not remember it, finding at the age of five or six, on grandpa's +premises, some loose tufts of scattered wool, and being told that they +were his, expressed the candid judgment, that it could not be so, +"because they were not marked T. B." + +I am not aware that he was much given to humor, yet he would seem not to +have been entirely destitute of it from the philosophical account he +gave of the advantages of his position, when some one ventured to +condole with him on the steep hill of nearly a mile which lay between +his house and the church. He said it afforded him two privileges, first +that of dropping down quickly to meeting, when he had a late start; and +secondly, that of abundant time for reflection on the sermon while he +was going home. + +His wife, undoubtedly his equal in every respect, to whom much of his +prosperity, usefulness, and good repute, as well as that of his family +was due, after a married life of fifty-three years and three months, +died in Dec., 1836. She had long been feeble. Her children watched +around her bedside on the last night in silence till one of her sons, +laying his hand upon her heart, and finding it still, said "we have no +longer a mother." I remember the hush of the next morning, throughout +the house, when we young children awoke. It was lonely and cold in +grandma's room, and only a white sheet covered a silent form. + +At eighty-three he was alone, and he deeply felt, as was natural, that +loneliness. Yet he had affectionate children, and with his youngest son, +who had four daughters, to him kind and pleasant granddaughters, he made +his home for the remainder of his life. With the oldest of these he made +in 1837, as already noticed, his last visit to Connecticut, going as far +as New Haven and the city of New York. On this journey he went in his +own carriage. He visited us, once at least in Castleton, at the house +where the Log-Book was so long concealed. I remember his figure there, +as that of a "short and stocky man," who seemed to me very old. He died +while on a visit to Middlebury, where two of his children had been +settled for more than twenty years, at the house of his youngest +daughter and youngest child, Betsey, then the widow of Dea. Martin Foot. +She and her six daughters did everything possible for his comfort. A +swelling made its appearance upon his shoulder, and the disease advanced +steadily to a fatal termination. His appointed time had come. From his +death-bed he sent to his children a final letter of affectionate +greeting and counsel. The feeble hand, whose lines had been so fair and +even for nearly three-quarters of a century, wanders unsteadily across +the pages, expressive of a mind perhaps already wandering with disease. +And so the fingers that had traced the neat lines of the Log-Book, on +board the _Oliver Cromwell_, in 1778, "forgot" sixty years afterwards +"their cunning," and wrote no more. He was buried beside his wife, in +the cemetery at West Rutland, near the church where he had worshipped +nearly sixty years. + +On the death of his wife, he had ordered two monumental stones to be +prepared just alike, except the inscriptions; one of which was to be for +her, and the other for himself. They may be seen from the road, by one +passing, of bluish stone standing not very far from the fence, and about +half way from the northern to the southern side of the lot. On these +stones was inscribed at his direction, where they may now be read, the +words, contained in Rev. 14: 13, divided between the two stones; on the +one: "I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, write Blessed are the +dead, which die in the Lord from henceforth;" and on the other: "Yea +saith the Spirit that they may rest from their labors and their works do +follow them:" + +His children were: + +Hannah, born July 23, 1784; died Oct. 26, 1803. + +Timothy, born March 11, 1786; settled in Middlebury, and died there +April, 1857. + +Mary, born Jan. 27, 1788; married Dea. Robert Barney of East Rutland +1824; died at her son's house, in Wisconsin, 1871. + +Dea. Samuel Ward, born Nov. 27, 1789; died in Pittsford, Vt., May 13, +1870. + +Dea. Elijah, born March 9, 1792; died Sept. 24, 1873. + +Capt. Charles Goodrich, born Feb. 19, 1794; died Dec. 17, 1875. + +Betsey, born, 1796; married Dea. Martin Foot of Middlebury; died April +26, 1873. + +The proclivity of the Puritans for education is illustrated in the fact, +that only five years after the foundation of Yale College one of this +family, Daniel a grandson of Samuel, the emigrant from England, became a +student there and was graduated in 1709, and that wherever different +branches of the family have since been settled they have generally sent +sons to the nearest colleges, not only many to Yale, but several to +Dartmouth, Williams, Middlebury, Union, and others. The eighth and ninth +generations are now in the process of education, in various institutions +east and west. The descendants of Timothy Boardman who have entered +professional life, are: + +Hon. Carlos Boardman (grad. Middlebury College 1842), a lawyer and +judge, in Linnaeus, Mo., oldest son of Capt. Charles. G. Boardman, of +West Rutland. + +Rev. George Nye Boardman, D.D. (Middlebury College 1847). Prof. of +Systematic Theology, in Chicago Theological Seminary, Chicago, Ill. + +Rev. Samuel W. Boardman, D.D. (Midd. Col., 1851). Pastor of the First +Presbyterian Church, Stanhope, N.J. + +Rev. Simeon Gilbert Boardman (Midd. Col., 1855). Pastor of the +Presbyterian Church, Champlain, N.Y. + +Charles Boardman, a member of the class of 1850, in Middlebury College, +and who died of typhoid fever in the sophomore year, doubtless had in +view the Christian ministry. + +These four were sons of Dea. S. W. Boardman, of Castleton. + +Horace Elijah Boardman, M.D. (Midd. Col., 1857), in practice at Monroe, +Wis., youngest son of Dea. Elijah Boardman, of West Rutland. + +Harland S. Boardman M.D., (Midd., 1874), a grandson of Timothy 4th, and +son of Timothy 5th, of Middlebury, was graduated at the Homeopathic +Hospital College of Cleveland, Ohio, 1877. He is now practicing at +Ludlow, Vt. + +William Gilbert Boardman, in practice of dentistry in or near Memphis, +Tenn., a grandson of Dea. Elijah Boardman. + +Edgar William Boardman, M.D., son of Dr. Horace E., now practicing at +Janesville, Wis.; both he and his father were graduated at the "Hahneman +Medical College and Hospital, of Chicago." + +---- [space]Webster, M.D., grandson of Mary, Mrs. Dea. Robert Barney, in +practice in Schuylerville, N.Y. + +Dea. Martin Foote, the husband of Betsey, was a student in Middlebury +College for two years, it is believed, in the distinguished class of +1813, but by reason of impaired health, he was unable to complete the +course. + +A few words in regard to the Log-Book may not be inappropriate. It seems +to be a mere waif that has floated on the current, and among a thousand +things that have perished, to have been, as it were by accident, +preserved. A portion of the volume seems to be a kind of a private +journal kept by my grandfather, for a few weeks in 1778. He does not +appear to have valued it greatly, as on the blank leaves, he has made +some entries of his business, as town clerk, and some as county +surveyor, and afterward, a few notes of account with his son Elijah, who +took a part of his farm. His last entry in it, as if it were in part a +waste blank book, was made forty-eight years after he left the _Oliver +Cromwell_, in 1826. + +It must have come into my father's hands with some other papers, on the +division of his father's effects in 1839. Both seem to have been +reluctant to destroy anything, though they did not much value it. My +father, at last, weary of keeping it, would seem to have given it to me +merely for its blank pages, as scribbling paper. Six leaves, apparently +blank, were torn out. Several pages are covered with mere vacant +scrawling by my boyish hand; whether I threw it away in utter contempt, +or concealed it back of the old chimney, in curious conjecture whether +some unborn generations, would not at some distant day discover it, and +puzzle over it, I cannot tell. I have no recollection of it whatever; +except that I had a general impression that we used to have more of +grandfather's writings than we possessed in later years. Whether we had +still others I know not. How little of such writing survives for a +century! It was lost for forty years, till a quarter of a century after +we had sold and left the house. It was found in 1884, in a dark recess, +back of the chimney, in the garret, by Master Fred. Jones, the son of an +esteemed friend, who in her childhood, about the time of the loss of +this manuscript, was a member of my father's household. Many years +afterwards, she became the worthy mistress of the house, and this lad, +exploring things in general, came across this old Log-Book. If it is of +any interest or value; to him and to Dr. J. M. Currier, the accomplished +secretary of the Rutland County Historical Society, and to James +Brennan, Esq., an old schoolmate who took an interest in the manuscript, +is due all the credit of its publication. + + + + + JOURNAL + AND + SAILING DIRECTIONS + OF THE + OLIVER CROMWELL + SECOND CRUISE. + + + + +JOURNAL OF THE SECOND CRUISE. + + +April 7th the Defence had Five Men Broke out With the Small Pox. + +9th they Lost a Man w^th the Small Pox. + +10th Exersis^d Cannon & Musquetry. + +11th Saw a Sail the Defence Spoke with her She was a Frenchman from +Bourdeaux Bound to the West Indies. + +13th Cros^d the Tropick Shav^d & Duck About 60 Men. + +14th at four Oclock Afternoon Saw a Sail Bearing E S E. We Gave Chase to +her & Came Up With her at 8 Oclock She was a Large French Ship we Sent +the Boat on Board of her She Informed us of two English Ships which She +Left Sight of at the time we Saw her. + +15th at Day Break We saw two Sail Bareing SEbS Distance 2 Leagues We +Gave Chase Under a Moderate Sail at 9 oClock P. M. Came Up with them +they at First Shew French Colours to Decoy us when we Came in About half +a Mile of us the Ups with English Colours We had Continental Colours +Flying We Engaged the Ship Admiral Kepple as Follows When We Came in +About 20 Rods of her We Gave her a Bow Gun She Soon Returned us a Stern +Chaise & then a Broad Side of Grape & Round Shot Cap^t Orders Not to +fire till we Can See the white of their Eyes We Got Close Under their +Larbard Quarter they Began Another Broad Side & then We Began & hel^d +Tuff & Tuff for About 2 Glasses & Then she Struck to Us at the Same time +the Defence Engaged the Cyrus who as the Kepple Struck Wore Round Under +our Stern We Wore Ship & Gave her a Stern Chase at which She Immediately +Struck. The Loss on our Side was One Kill^d & Six Wounded one Mortally +Who Soon Died Our Ship was hull^d 9 Times with Six Pound Shott Three +of which Went through Our Birth one of which wounded the Boatswains +yoeman the Loss on their Side was two Kill^d & Six wounded their +Larbourd quarter was well fill^d with Shott one Nine Pounder went +through her Main Mast. Imploy^d in the After-noon Takeing out the Men +& Maning the Prise The Kepple Mounted 20 Guns 18 Six Pounders & two +Wooden D^o with about 45 Men, the Cyrus Mounted 16 Six Pounders with +35 Men Letters of Marque Bound from Bristol to Jamaica Laden with Dry +Goods Paints & C. + +18th Cap^t Day Died. + +19th Cap^t Brown of The Ship Adm^l Kepple & Cap^t Dike of the +Cyrus with Three Ladies & 8 Men Sett off in a Long Boat for S^t Kitts +O^r Cap^tns Parker & Smedleys Permition. + +20th Imploy^d in taking things out of the Prise Viz. One Chist of +Holland a Quantity of Hatts & Shoes Cheeses Porter & Some Crockery Ware +Small Arms Pistols Hangers two Brass Barrel Blunderbusses a Quantity of +Riggen & C. + +21^st At Three oClock Afternoon we wore Ship to the Southward The +Prises Made Sail to the Northward we Lost Sight of them at Six. + +May 2^nd Sprung Our Foretopmast Struck it & Ship^d Another in its +Room. + +8^th Saw a Sail over Our Starboard bow We Gave Chase to her She was a +French Guineaman Bound to the Mole With 612 Slaves on Board Our Cap^t +Put 6 Prisoners on Board of Her Left her Just at Dark. + +11^th At 5 o'Clock in the Morning Saw a Sail at the Windward two +Leagues Distance Bearing Down Upon Us we Lay too for her till She Came +in half Gun Shott of us the Man at Mast head Cry^d out 4 Sail to the +Leeward Our Officers Concluded to Make Sail from her Supposing her to be +a Frigate of 36 Guns after we Made Sail We Left as Fast as we wanted She +Gave Over Chase at two oClock Afternoon She was the Seaford of 28 Guns. + +22^nd Sprung our Maintop sail Yard. + +28^th Made the Land at Port Royal. + +29^th the Ship Struck Bottom Thrice. + +30^th Came over the Bar this Morning & Arriv^d in this Harbour In +Company with the Ship Defence Com^ed by Sam^ll Smedly. Charlestown, +S^th. C^na. May y^e 30^th 1778. + + +SAILING DIRECTIONS OF THE SECOND CRUISE. + + +--------+--------+-----------+---------+ + |April | H | Course | Nth Latt| + +--------+--------+-----------+---------+ + | 1 | 1 | SW | 31.18 | + | | 4 | SE | | + | 2 | 10 | EbS | 31.20 | + | 3 | | ESE | 30.58 | + | 4 | | SE | 30.21 | + | 5 | | ESE | 29.44 | + | 6 | | SEbE | 29.22 | + | 7 | | SE | 29.54 | + | 8 | | ESE | 28.7 | + | 9 | | SSbS | 26.29 | + | 10 | | SW | 25.6 | + | 11 | | SSW | No Obs | + | 12 | | South | 22.35 | + | 13 | | SSW | No Obs | + | 14 | | SSW | 20.17 | + | 15 | 7 | South | 19.18 | + | | 12 | West | | + | 16 | | East | 19.16 | + | 17 | | WNW | 19.14 | + | 18 | | NNW | 19.35 | + | 19 | | NW | 19.46 | + | 20 | | NbW | No Obs | + | 21 | | NNW | 20.20 | + | 22 | | SbE | 19.15 | + | 23 | | SbE | 18.10 | + | 24 | | SbE | 16.30 | + | 25 | | South | 14.30 | + | 26 | | South | 12.54 | + | 27 | | NbW | 13.8 | + | 28 | 1 | SbE } | | + | | 11 | NbW } | 12.35 | + | 29 | 1 | NbW | 13.16 | + | | | Calm | | + | 30 | | NNW | 15.00 | + | May | | | | + | 1 | | NNW } | | + | 2 | 1 | NNW } | 16.53 | + | | 8 | South | 16.21 | + | 3 | 1 | NNW } | | + | | 8 | South } | 16.56 | + | 4 | | North | 17.21 | + | 5 | 7 | North } | | + | | 9 | SbW } | 17.8 | + | 6 | 1 | SSW } | | + | | 9 | North } | 17.20 | + | 7 | 1 | SbW } | 17.27 | + | | 6 | North } | | + | 8 | 1 | NbE } | | + | | 9 | South } | | + | | 11 | NbE } | 17.39 | + | 9 | 1 | SW } | | + | | 12 | NW } | 17.30 | + | 10 | | East | 18.20 | + | 11 | | WNW | 19.32 | + | 12 | 1 | North } | | + | | 8 | NW } | 21.7 | + | 13 | 1 | NW | | + | | | West | 21.50 | + | 14 | | SE | No Obs | + | 15 | | SW | No Obs | + | 16 | | West } | | + | | | NW } | 22.25 | + | 17 | | West } | | + | | | North } | 22.29 | + | 18 | | West | 22.22 | + | 19 | | West | No Obs | + | 20 | | West } | | + | | | NW } | 23.38 | + | 21 | | NW | 25.8 | + | 22 | | NbW | 27.45 | + | 23 | | NW | No Obs | + | 24 | | NW | 30.18 | + | 25 | | West | 30.10 | + | 26 | | West | 30.31 | + | 27 | | West | No Obs | + | 28 | | NW | 32.7 | + | 29 | | West | 32.23 | + | 30 | | West | No Obs | + +--------+--------+-----------+---------+ + + +An Account of the Months, Days And Knots Run, by the Ship Oliver +Cromwell in her Second Cruise. + + +-------------+------------+--------------+ + | Months | Days | Knots | + +-------------+------------+--------------+ + | March | 1 | 9 | 1148 | + | April | 1 | 30 | 2084 | + | May | 1 | 30 | 3086 | + +-------------+------------+--------------+ + | Total 3 | 69 | 63.18 | + +-------------+------------+--------------+ + + + + + CONTRACT + BETWEEN + TIMOTHY BOARDMAN + AND + CAPT. PARKER. + + FOR THE THIRD CRUISE. + + + + +Charlestown, July 6^th, 1778. + +Conversation Between Cap^t Parker & My Self this Day. + + +P^r. What are you Doing a Shore. + +My Sf. I wanted to See You Sir. + +P^r. Verry well. + +My Sf. The Term of my Inlistment is up & I would be glad of a Discharge +Sir. + +P^r. I cannot Give you One, the Ship is in Distress Plumb has been +trying to Get You away. + +My Sf. No Sir, I can have Good Wages here & I think it Better than +Privatiering I can^t Think of Going for a Single Share I had a hard +task Last Cruise & they all Left me. + +P^r. You have had a hard task of it & I will Consider you. & You Shall +have as Much again as You Expect. Ranny & those that Leave me without a +Discharge will Never Get anything you Better go aboard Boardman. I will +Consider you & you,ll _Lose Nothing by it_. + +My Sf. I am Oblig^d to you Sir. & So went on Board. + + + + + JOURNAL + AND + SAILING DIRECTIONS + OF THE + OLIVER CROMWELL + THIRD CRUISE. + + + + +JOURNAL OF THE THIRD CRUISE. + + +July 24 Weigh^d Anchor at 5 Fathom hole & Came Over the Bar In +Comp^y with the Notredame a 16 Gun Brig & two Sloops. Mett a French +Ship of 28 Guns on the Bar Bound in. + +25^th A Smooth Sea. + +29^th Saw A Sail Gave Chace. + +30^th Saw A Sail Gave Chace. + +31^st Saw two Sail Gave Chace. Light winds. + +August 6th at half after Six Afternoon Saw a Sail & Gave Chace, at 11 +Gave her a Bow Gun which Brought her too She was a Big from New Orleans +in Missippi Bound to Cape Francois a Spainard Went on Board Kept her All +Night & Lett her Go at 10 ^oClock the Next Day her Cargo was Furr & +Lumber She had Some Englismen on Board the Occasion of our Detaining her +So Long. + +7^th At 5 OClock Afternoon Made the Land the Island of Abaco. + +8^th at 10 ^oClock Harbour Island Bore East Dis^t 2 Leagues. + +9^th Hard Gales of wind. + +10^th Fresh Gales of wind & Heavy Squals. + +11^th Fresh Breeses & a Rough Sea. + +12 at Six Afternoon Caught a Great Turtle which was Kook^d the Next +Day for the Entertainment of the Gentlemen of the Fleet No Less than 13 +Came on Board to Dine. + +14 At 2 oClock P M Harbour Island Bore SbW 1 League Dis^t Sent the +Yoll on Shore The Brig Sent her Boat a Shore too. + +15^th The two Boats Returned with a two Mast Boat & 4 Men Belonging to +New Providence Squally Night & Smart Thunder & Lightning. + +16^th Cros^d the Bahama Banks from 8 Fathom of water to 3-3/4 Came +to Anchor at Night on the Bank. + +17^th Arriv^d at the Abimenes Fill^d our Water Cask & Hogg^d +Ship & Boot Top^t the Ship. + +18^th At Day Break Weigh^d Anchor together with the Rice Thumper +Fleet at Noon Parted with Them & Fired 13 Guns the Other fir,d their +Guns Which was a 16 Gun Brigg the Notredame Command by Cap^t Hall A 10 +Gun Sloop Com^d by Cap^t Robberts A 12 Gun Sloop Com^d by John +Crappo or Petweet & Stood to the westward a cross^d the Gulf. + +19^th at Day the Cape of Floriday bore west we stood for it a +Cross^d the Gulf we Came out of the Gulf in five fathom of Water & +Within 30 Rods of a Rieff in the Space of 15 Minutes in About a League +of the Shore Which Surpris^d the Capt. & Other Officers we have the +Ship in Stays & beat off the wind being moderate. + +20^th Saw a Sail & Gave her Chace & Came Up She was a Saniard a +Palacca from Havanna Bound to Spain She Inform^d us of the Jamaica +Fleet that they Pass^d the Havanna ten Days Back Which made us Give +over the Hopes of Seeing them. + +22 Saw this Spaniard about a League to the Windward. + +23 a Sunday, Saw a Ships Mast in Forenoon & Just at Night A Large +Jamaica Puncheon Floating we hoisted out our Boat^e & went in Persuit +of it but Could not Get it we Suppos^d it was full of Rum this +Afternoon a Large Swell brok & Soon after A fine Breese Which +Increas^d harder in the Morn^g. + +24^th Sun about two hours high we Saw white water in About a Mile +Under our Lee Bow we Saw the Breakers which was on the Bahama Banks +which Surpris^d our Officers & Men Greatly we Put our Ship About & had +the Good Fortune to Clear them the wind Blew harder we Struck Top +Gallant Yards & Lanch^d Top Gallant Masts Lay too Under one Leach of +the Four Sail Got 6 Nine Pounders Down in the Lower hold & Cleard the +Decks of unecessary Lumber The Wind Continued verry hard The air was +Verry Thick Just before Night the Sea Came in Over our Larboard Nettens +on the Gangway. All the officers Advis^d to Cut away the Main Mast +which we Did, Just at Dusk, All the hope we had was that it would not +Blow harder, but it Continued harder till After Midnight About one +oClock it Seemd to Blow in whirlwinds which oblig^d us to Cut away our +Four Mast & Missen Mast. Soon after the Wind Chang^d to the Eastward +which Greatly Encourag^d us Being Much Affraid of the Bahama Banks the +fore Mast fell to the windward & Knock^d our Anchor off the Bow So +that we Cut it away for fear it would Make a hole in the Bow of the Ship +our Fore Mast Lay along Side for two hours After it fell, it Being +Impossible to Get Clear of it We Bent our Cables for fear of the Banks +that we Might try to Ride it out if we Got on. + +25 Moderated Some But Verry Rough So that we Could Do no work. + +26 Got a Jury Mast Up on the Main Mast. + +27 Got up Jury Masts on the Fore & Mison Masts. + +30 at 8 oClock in the Morning Saw a Brigg over our weather Bow 2 Leagues +Dis^t We Kept our Course She Stood the Same way Just at Night we gave +her two Guns but She kept on at Night we Lost Sight of her. + +31^st at 5 in the Morning Saw the Brigg a Head Gave her Chace Came up +with her about Noon we hoisted our Colours She hoisted English Colours, +we Gave her one gun which made them come Tumbling Down. + +Sep^tr 1^st We Saw a Sail a Head Giving us Chace She hoisted Englis +Colours & we & the Brigg hoisted English Colours She Came Down towards +us we Put the Ship about & She Came Close too us we up Parts & Our +Colours She put about & we Gave her about 12 Guns Bow Chaces & She Got +Clear She was a Small Sloop of 6 or 8 Guns. + +Sep^t 2^nd Got Soundings of Cape May 45 Fath^m. + +Sep^t 3^rd at Night Lost Sight of The Prise. + +Sep^t 4^th Saw a Sail A Privatier Schoner She kept Round us all Day +& hoisted English Colours we hoisted English Colours but She thought +Best Not to Speak with. + +Sep^t 5^th Made the Land at 9 oClock in the Morning the South Side +of Long Island against South Hampton & Came to Anchor Under Fishes +Island at 12 oClock at Night Saw five Sail at 2 Afternoon Standing to +the Westward two of them Ships. + +Sep^t 6^th 1778 New London. Arriv^d in this Harbour. + + +SAILING DIRECTIONS OF THE THIRD CRUISE. + + +--------+-------+----------+----------+ + | Days | H | Course | Obser'n | + +--------+-------+----------+----------+ + |July | | | No Latt | + | 25 | | SW | 32.19 | + | 26 | | SSW | | + | 27 | | EbS | 32.07 | + | 28 | | WSW | 31.33 | + | 29 | | SE | 31.29 | + | 30 | | SSE | 30.20 | + | 31 | | SEbS | 30.30 | + |======================================| + | August | + |======================================| + | 1 | | SE | 30.15 | + | 2 | | Calm | 30.05 | + | 3 | | SE | 29.44 | + | 4 | | SSW | 28.38 | + | 5 | | SSW | 27.02 | + | 6 | | South | 26.20 | + | 7 | | SW | No Obsn | + | 8 | | NNE | No Obsn | + | 9 | | East | 26.15 | + | 10 | {1 | East} | 26.32 | + | | {9 | West} | | + | 11 | | SE | 26.24 | + | 12 | | WNW | No Obsn | + | 13 | | WNW | No Obsn | + | 14 | Stood | Off & on | 25.38 | + | 15 | | WSW | 25.50 | + | 16 | | West | No Obsn | + | 17 | | West | No Obsn | + | 18 | | Abimenes| | + | 19 | | West | 25.30 | + | 20 | | East | No Obsn | + | 21 | | | No Obsn | + | 22 | | NW | 26.04 | + | 23 | | NE | 27.40 | + | 24 | | West | { 28.14 | + | | | | { L78.54 | + | 25 | | West | {No Obsn | + | | | | { L78.39 | + | 26 | | NE | { 30.02 | + | | | | { L77.42 | + | 27 | | NE | {30.36 | + | | | | {L77.11 | + | 28 | | NE | {32.02 | + | | | | {L75.39 | + | 29 | | NE | 34.08 | + | | | | L74.51 | + | 30 | | {NE | 36.02 | + | | | {NbE | L73.01 | + | | | {North | | + | 31 | | {NbW | 38.10 | + | | | {East | L72.53 | + |======================================| + | September | + |======================================| + | 1 | | {North | 38.38 | + | | | {SE | L72.52 | + | 2 | | {SE | 38.46 | + | | | {NbE | L72.18 | + | 3 | | {NW | 38.35 | + | | | {EbS | L72.01 | + | 4 | | {NWbW | 38.25 | + | | | {EbS | L72.18 | + | 5 | | | 39.25 | + | | | | L72.06 | + +--------+-------+----------+----------+ + + +An Account of the Months, Days, & Knots the Ship Olv^r Cromwell Run +the Third Cruise. + + +---------------+---------+------------+ + | Months | Days | Knots | + +---------------+---------+------------+ + | July | 1 | 7 | 211 | + | August | 1 | 31 | 860 | + | September | 1 | 6 | 151 | + +---------------+---------+------------+ + | Total 3 | 44 | 1222 | + +---------------+---------+------------+ + + + + +GUNNER'S REMARKS. + + + + +REMARKS OF OUR GUNNER ON CHARLESTOWN, IN S. C. + + +Charlestown is Pleasantly Situated on Ashley River on verry low Land it +was Extreamly well Built but the Fire which happen^d in January last +has Spoiled the Beauty of the Place, it may if times alter be as +pleasant & Beautifull with Regard to y^e Buildings as ever. But I +Cannot Behold such a Number of my fellow beings (altho Differing in +Complexion) Dragged from the Place of their Nativity, brought into a +Country not to be taught the Principles of Religion & the Rights of +Freeman, but to Be Slaves to Masters, who having Nothing but Interest in +View without ever Weting their own Shoes, Drive these fellows to the +Most Severe Services, I say I cannot behold these things without Pain. +And Expressing my Sorrow that are Enlighten^d People, a People +Professing Christianity Should treat any of God's creatures in Such a +Manner as I have Seen them treated Since my arrival at this Place. & I +thank God who Gave me a Disposition to Prefer Freedom to Slavery. + +I have Just mentioned a People Professing Christianity. I believe there +is a few who now & then go to Church but by all the Observation I have +been able to make I find that Horse Racing, Frolicking Rioting Gaming +of all Kinds Open Markets, and Traffick, to be the Chief Business of +their Sabbaths. I am far from Supposing there is not a few Righteous +there But was it to have the chance which Soddom had, that if there was +five Righteous men it Should Save the City. I believe there would be +only a Lot & Family, & his wife I should be afraid would Look Back. + +Another remark that I shall make is this, Marriage in Most Countrys is +Deemed Sacred, and here there are many honourable and I believe happy +Matches, But to see among the Commonalty a Man take a Woman without so +much Ceremony as Jumping over a Broom Stick at the time of their +Agreement, to see her Content herself to be his Slave to work hard to +maintain him & his Babs & then to Content herself with a flogging if she +only says a word out of Doors at the End of it, and then take his other +Doxy who Perhaps has Served him well--and so one Lover to another, +Succeeds another and another after that the last fool is as welcome as +the former, till having liv,d hour out he Gives Place & Mingles with the +herd who went Before him. These things may to some People who are +unacquainted with such Transactions appear Strange and Odd, but how +shall I express myself--what Feelings have I had within myself to behold +one of these Slaves or Rather whole Tribes of them belonging to one +Master who Perhaps has the happiness of an Ofspring of beautifull +Virgins whose Eyes must be continually assaulted with a Spectacle which +Modesty forbids me to Mention. I have Seen at a Tea table a Number of +the fair Sex, which a Man of Sentiments would have almost Ador,d and a +man of Modesty would not have been so Indecent as to have Unbutton^d +his knee to adjust his Garter--Yet have I Seen a Servant of both Sexes +Enter in Such Dishabitable as to be oblig^d to Display those Parts +which ought to be Concealed. To see Men Approach the Room where those +Angelick Creatures meet & View those Beautifull Countenances & Sparkling +Eyes, which would almost tell You that they abhor,d the Cruel imposition +of their Parents, who Perhaps Loaded with a Plentifull fortune, would +not afford a decent Dress to their Servants to hide their Shame from +such Sight I have turn^d my Eyes. I would not mean to be two Severe +nor have it thought but there are great numbers who have a Sence of the +Necessity of a Due decorum keep their Servants in a Verry Genteel manner +and do honor to their keepers but those who have Viewed such scenes as +well as myself will testify to this Truth & Say with me that Droll +appearances would Present themselves to view that in Spite of all that I +could Do would Oblige me to give a total grin, the Particular above +mentioned altho they appear a Little forecast are absolutely matters of +fact & not Indeed to Convey any I^ll Idea to y^e mind. + +In a Commertial way by what little opportunity I have had to make any +Remarks on them. I find that in Casting up their accounts that there are +a Number which Deservs to be Put on y^e C^r Side. But money getting +being Mankinds Universal harvest I find as many Reapers as one would +wish to see in Such an Open Field for every one to have a fare Sweep +with the Sickle which as frequently cuts your purse Strings as anything +Else, their Rakes are Most Excellent nothing is lost for want of +geathering & you may depend on it their Bins are so Close that But a +trifle of what they Put in ever Comes out of the Cracks. Sometimes you +will see a small Trifle peep its Nose out on a Billiard Table, now & +then the four knaves will tempt a Small Parcell to walk on the Table, & +I believe Black Gammon, Shuffle Board, horse Racing, & that Noble Game +of Roleing two Bullets on the Sandy Ground Where if there Should be +y^e Least Breath air it would Blind you all those would help a little +of it to Move & if I added Whoreing and Drinking they would Not Deny the +Charge. If the things Mentioned above are to be Deemed Vices. I think no +Person that Comes to Carolina will find any Scarcity, Provided they have +such articles as Suits such a Market. I cannot from my hart Approve of +their Method of Living--not but that their Provision is Wholesome but In +Genral they Dont Coock it well. Rice bares the Sway, in Room of Bread, +with any kind of victuals and Ever in Families of Fashion you will see a +Rice Pudding (If it Deserves the Name) to be Eat as we do our Bread, I +am affraid of Being too cencorious or I would Remark Numberless things +which to a Person unacquainted with Place would even Look Childish to +mention but as I only make this Obs^n for my own amusement never +Intending they Shall be ever seen but by Particular friends. I shall +omit any niceities of Expressions and Shall write a few more Simple +facts I have seen Gamblers, Men Pretended Friends to you that would hug +you in their Bosoms till they were Certain they had Gotten what they +could from you, & then for a Shilling would Cut Your Throat. I would not +Mean by this to Convey the Idea of their being a Savage people in +General. There are Gentlemen of Charracter & who Ritchly Deserve +the Name--but as there are Near Seven Blacks to one White Man, the +Austerities used to the Slaves in their Possessions, is the Reason as I +immagion of their looking on & Behaving to a White Man who Differs from +them in their Manners and not bred in their Country in a Way Not much +Different from which they treats their Blacks. I Have been told that the +Place is Much alterd from what it was Before the Present Dispute & that +a Number of the Best Part of People are Moved out of Charlestown for the +honour of Charlestown. I will believe it and wish it may be Restor^d +to its Primitive Lusture. However let me not look all on the Dark Side +there are Many things well worth Praise, there Publick Buildings are +well finish^d & Calculated for the Convenience of Publick & Private +Affairs, their Churches make a verry fine Appearance and are finish^d +Agreeable to the Rules of Architecture. I do not Mean that they are the +Most elegant I ever Saw, but so well Perform^d as would Declare those +who Reared them Good Artissts, the Streets are well Laid out & a verry +good Brick Walk on Each Side for foot Passengers, their Streets are not +Pav^d but Verry Sandy, and the heat of the Climate is Such that the +Sand is Generally verry Disagreeable & Occasions a number of Insects +Commonly Call^d Sand flies, the Lowness of the Land and the Dead water +in Different Places in the Town & out of it Occasions another Breed of +Insects well Known by the Name of Musketoes. These Creatures are well +disciplined for they do Not Scout in private Places nor in Small +Companies as tho Affraid to attack but Joining in as many Different +Colloums as there are Openings to Your Dwellings they make a Desperate +push and Seldom fail to Annoy their Enemy in Such a Manner that they +leave their Adversary in a Scratching humor the Next Morning thro^o +Vexation. It would be endless to mention the advantages & Disadvantages +of the Place but this I am fully Assur^d of. If the White People would +be so Industrous as to till the Land themselves and see every thing Done +so as to have less of those Miserable Slaves in the Country the Place to +me would have a verry Different Appearance. I have heard it Alleg^d as +a Pretext for keeping so many Slaves that white People cannot Endure the +heat of the Climate & that there can be but verry little done without +these Slaves, that there could be but a verry little done is to me a +Matter of Doubt, but that there would be but Verry little If the People +Retain their Luxury & Love of all kinds of Sport is to me Beyond all +doubt. I have Seen more Persons than a few worry themselves at Gaming In +an Excessive hot Day in Such a Manner that a Moderate Days work would be +a Pleasure to it. These things have convinc^d me of the Foolish wicked +and Absurd Notions which People seem to have Adopted in General that +Because these Issacars are like Issacars of Old. Strong Asser Couching +Down between two Burthens and have not Got the means of Preserving their +Liberty were they Ever So Desirous of it and are kept in Such a +miserable manner as never to know the Blessings of it. I say these +things have Convinc^d me of the Notorious Violation of the Rights of +Mankind and which I think no Rational Man will Ever try to Justify. +America my Earnest Prayer is that thou mayst preserve thy Own Freedom +from any Insolvent Invaders who may attempt to Rob the of the Same--but +be Sure to let Slavery of all kinds ever be Banish^d from thy +habbittations. + +Fins Camsiocelo. + + + + +SONGS. + + + + +A SEAMAN'S SONG. + + +1 + + Come all you Joval Seaman, with Courage Stout & bold + that Value more your Honour, than Mysers do their Gold + When we Receive Our Orders, we are Oblig^d to go + O'er the Main to Proud Spain, Let the Winds Blow high or Low. + + +2 + + It was the fifteenth of September, from Spithead we Sat Sail + we had Rumbla in our Company, Blest with a Pleasant Gale + we Sailed away together, for the Bay of Biscay, o + Going along Storms Come on, and the winds Began to Blow. + + +3 + + The winds and Storms increas^d the Bumbla Bore away + and left the Cantaborough, for No Longer Could She Stay + & when they Came to Gibralter, they told the People So + that they thought we were Lost, in the Bay of Biscay, O. + + +4 + + But as Providence would have it, it was not quite so Bad + But first we lost our Missen Mast, and then went off our Flag + the Next we Lost our Main Mast, one of our Guns also + With five Men, Drowned then, in the Bay of Biscay, O. + + +5 + + The Next we Lost our foremast, which was a Dreadfull Stroke + and in our Larboar Quarter, a Great hole there was Broke + and then the Seas come Roleing in, our Gun Room it Did flow + Thus we Rold and we told, in the Bay of Biscay, O. + + +6 + + It was Dark and Stormy Weather, Sad and Gloomy Night + Our Captain on the Quarter Deck, that Day was kill^d Outrite + the Rings that on his fingers were, in Pieces burst Also + Thus we were in Dispare, in the Bay of Biscay, O. + + +7 + + But when we Came to Gibralter, and lay in our New Hold + the People they Came flocking Down, our Ship for to Behold + they Said it was the Dismalest Sight, that Ever they Did know + We never Pind, But Drunk Wine, till we Drowned all our Woe. + + + + +A COUNTRY SONG. + + +1 + + On the Sweet Month of May we'll Repair to the Mountain + And Set we Down there by a Clear Crystial fountain + Where the Cows sweetly Lowing In a Dewy Morning + Where Phebus oer the Hills and Meddow are Adorning. + + +2 + + A Sweet Country Life is Delightfull and Charming + Walking abroad in a Clear Summer's Morning + O your Towns and Your Cities Your Lofty high Towers + Are not to be Compar,d with Shades & Green Bowers. + + +3 + + O Little I regard your Robes and fine Dresses + Your Velvets & Scarlets and Other Excesses + My own Country Fashions to me is More Endearing + Than your Pretty Prisemantle or your Bantle Cloth Wearing. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Log-book of Timothy Boardman, by Samuel W Boardman + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOG-BOOK OF TIMOTHY BOARDMAN *** + +***** This file should be named 26040.txt or 26040.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/0/4/26040/ + +Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Anne Storer and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +book was produced from scanned images of public domain +material from the Google Print project.) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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