Moses Dunbar | |
---|---|
Born | 3 June 1746 Wallingford, Connecticut, British America |
Died | 19 March 1777(1777-03-19) (aged 30) Hartford, Connecticut, United States |
Cause of death | Hanging |
Buried | Hartford, Connecticut, United States |
Allegiance | Great Britain |
Years of service | 1776 |
Children | 7 |
Moses Dunbar (3 June 1746 – March 19, 1777) was a Connecticut land-owner and officer in a Loyalist regiment during the American Revolutionary War. He was one of the few men in the state of Connecticut to be convicted of high treason and executed.
Early life
Moses Dunbar was born in Wallingford, Connecticut on June 3, 1746 to John and Temperance Dunbar, the second of sixteen children. In 1764, Moses married Phebe Jerome of Farmington, Connecticut, with whom he had seven children. Soon after marriage, Moses and Phebe joined the Church of England, causing a rift with Moses' Congregationalist father.
Involvement in the American Revolution
On May 26, 1776, Dunbar's wife Phebe died after months of illness. Dunbar subsequently married Esther Adams. In September, Dunbar traveled to Long Island and in October, he accepted a commission as a Captain in the King's American Regiment, a British provincial regiment which was raised for Loyalist service. He then went back to Farmington, Connecticut, and was trying to persuade some other young men to enlist in the British army when he was arrested, and his royal commission and a list of Loyalist recruits was found in his pocket.
He was indicted for high treason, tried in the superior court in Hartford, Connecticut, and on January 23, 1777, found guilty. on March 19, he was executed on the gallows which stood near the present site of Trinity College. Dunbar is buried in the Ancient Burying ground, in Hartford.
Notes
- William Stone of Stamford and Robert Thomson of Newton were two others; they each also were hanged in 1777
References
Citations
- Anderson, Virginia DeJohn (2017). The martyr and the traitor : Nathan Hale, Moses Dunbar, and the American Revolution. Oxford University Press. p. 12. ISBN 9780199916863.
- Anderson p.12
- Anderson p.30
- Anderson p.35
- Anderson p.150
- Anderson p.156
- Anderson p.159
- Anderson p.161,165
- Anderson p.165
- Anderson pgs.177-179
- Ryan, J. Francis. "Chapter XVII." Plymouth Conn., 1776–1976. Plymouth, Conn.?: n.p., 1976. N. pag. Print.
Sources
- Anderson, Virginia DeJohn (2017). "The Martyr and the Traitor: Nathan Hale, Moses Dunbar, and the American Revolution", Oxford University Press
- Pond, E. LeRoy (1909). "The Tories of Chippeny Hill, Connecticut", Grafton Press
External links
- Moses Dunbar, The Other Connecticut Man Hanged in the Revolution
- Nathan Hale & Moses Dunbar – Two Very Different Victims From Revolutionary America
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- 1746 births
- 1777 deaths
- American Revolutionary War executions
- British military personnel killed in the American Revolutionary War
- Loyalists in the American Revolution from Connecticut
- Loyalist military personnel of the American Revolutionary War
- People from Wallingford, Connecticut
- Connecticut stubs
- People executed by Connecticut by hanging
- People executed for treason against a state of the United States