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Capt Jeremiah Putnam

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Capt Jeremiah Putnam Veteran

Birth
Danvers, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
16 Sep 1799 (aged 61)
Danvers, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Danvers, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Continental Army officer during the Revolution.

***

From Lieutenants Jeremiah Putnam and Nathaniel Cleaves

North Rever October the 9th 1776

Sir

this is a Coppey of the preceding⟨gs⟩ On Bord the Galley Independance On the 8th Coll Tupper sent Orders On Bord for Capt. Baker to prosceed On shore and that there Was no further Buisness for him On Bord1 On the 9th at about 7 A.M. We Observed the ships Below to Be moving We Imeadetly Cauld all Hands, after seeing the Other Galley Under way We hove Up and stood Up the river after them and When We got Above the Chevux De' free, spoke With Cook and askt what he Intended to Doo He answered that he Did not know But stood Up the river and said there Was Not Warter Enough to Goo in to the Creek the Wind Being Morderate we gained a head of them wich gave Us Encoregment to keep along it soon after Breessd Up & the ships Gaind Upon Us fast: and at a bout 11 A.M., the[y] Began to fire Upon Us With theire Bow Chases2 at A bout twelf they Over reacht Us which Causd Us to Bare in shore and at ½ P.M. We run her On shore Just Above Dobsey Ferry Where We had not time Enough to Git Our people and things On shore in the Boats: and the shiping Began the fire Wich Oblig'd Us to Swim On shore. But no Livs Lost But, part of theire Guns and Cheif of theire Baggage, And I Observed the Enemy to hawl Up thire Boats And man them, Wich, they Emeadetly Dropt On stern and fired a Brad side of Grape shot as We Ley in the Bushes and Emeadetly sent theire Boat On Bord With a Warp and hove her a long side,3 from your Most Obedt Serts

Jeremh Putnam Lt

Nathaniel Cleaves Liut.

LS, in Cleaves's writing, DLC:GW.

Although Jeremiah Putnam (1737–1797) signs this letter as a lieutenant, Col. Israel Hutchinson's return of the 27th Continental Regiment for 5 Oct., lists him as an ensign "on command on board the galley" (Force, American Archives, 5th ser., 2:901–2). A native of Massachusetts who had served as a sergeant in the Lexington alarm, Putnam joined Col. John Mansfield's Massachusetts regiment as a sergeant in May 1775, and on 1 Jan. 1776 he was commissioned an ensign in Hutchinson's 27th Continental Regiment. Putnam left the Continental army at the end of 1776 and served the remainder of the war as a captain in the Massachusetts militia.
Continental Army officer during the Revolution.

***

From Lieutenants Jeremiah Putnam and Nathaniel Cleaves

North Rever October the 9th 1776

Sir

this is a Coppey of the preceding⟨gs⟩ On Bord the Galley Independance On the 8th Coll Tupper sent Orders On Bord for Capt. Baker to prosceed On shore and that there Was no further Buisness for him On Bord1 On the 9th at about 7 A.M. We Observed the ships Below to Be moving We Imeadetly Cauld all Hands, after seeing the Other Galley Under way We hove Up and stood Up the river after them and When We got Above the Chevux De' free, spoke With Cook and askt what he Intended to Doo He answered that he Did not know But stood Up the river and said there Was Not Warter Enough to Goo in to the Creek the Wind Being Morderate we gained a head of them wich gave Us Encoregment to keep along it soon after Breessd Up & the ships Gaind Upon Us fast: and at a bout 11 A.M., the[y] Began to fire Upon Us With theire Bow Chases2 at A bout twelf they Over reacht Us which Causd Us to Bare in shore and at ½ P.M. We run her On shore Just Above Dobsey Ferry Where We had not time Enough to Git Our people and things On shore in the Boats: and the shiping Began the fire Wich Oblig'd Us to Swim On shore. But no Livs Lost But, part of theire Guns and Cheif of theire Baggage, And I Observed the Enemy to hawl Up thire Boats And man them, Wich, they Emeadetly Dropt On stern and fired a Brad side of Grape shot as We Ley in the Bushes and Emeadetly sent theire Boat On Bord With a Warp and hove her a long side,3 from your Most Obedt Serts

Jeremh Putnam Lt

Nathaniel Cleaves Liut.

LS, in Cleaves's writing, DLC:GW.

Although Jeremiah Putnam (1737–1797) signs this letter as a lieutenant, Col. Israel Hutchinson's return of the 27th Continental Regiment for 5 Oct., lists him as an ensign "on command on board the galley" (Force, American Archives, 5th ser., 2:901–2). A native of Massachusetts who had served as a sergeant in the Lexington alarm, Putnam joined Col. John Mansfield's Massachusetts regiment as a sergeant in May 1775, and on 1 Jan. 1776 he was commissioned an ensign in Hutchinson's 27th Continental Regiment. Putnam left the Continental army at the end of 1776 and served the remainder of the war as a captain in the Massachusetts militia.


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