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James Gibson (seaman)

James Gibson (1706 – 1752) was a merchant in the British colonies of Jamaica and the Province of Massachusetts Bay. During King George's War (1744–1748), William Shirley, the Governor of Massachusetts, debated whether to siege and capture the French fortress of Louisburg on Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. According to Gibson's journal, he convinced Governor Shirley that the siege would be successful and used his personal wealth to provide 300 soldiers for the campaign.[1] Gibson wrote an account of the Siege of Louisburg, and it was published in London in late 1745.

Early life edit

James was born on April 1, 1706, in Boston, Massachusetts to James and Mary Gibson.[2] His father was a mariner and purchased a tavern called "Marlborough Arms" in 1711, located at the corner of Kilby and State streets adjacent to Bunch-of-Grapes.[3] His mother Mary was licensed to sell strong drink in the tavern on June 30, 1712.[4] In 1722, Mary deeded the tavern to her three children: Mary, James, and John. According to his journal, he served in the Royal Regiment of Foot Guards in the British Army,[5] and was ordered to the island of Barbados. While serving in Barbados, he met a widow named Thomazin (Duesbury) Barton, the daughter of James and Rebecca Duesbury. James and Thomazin were married in the parish of Saint Michael, Barbados on 24 October 1730.[6] The Gibsons moved to Boston prior to 1735, and their only child, Mary Duesbury Gibson, was born there on December 27, 1737.[7]

Merchant and Ship Captain edit

According to his great-grandson, Lorenzo Dow Johnson (1805–1867), Gibson was a prosperous merchant who owned a plantation on the island of Jamaica, owned a mansion in the neighbourhood of Beacon Hill, Boston, was a ship captain, was a shareholder in Long Wharf, and owned land in what is now Maine, both near the village of Stroudwater, now a neighbourhood of Portland, Maine and beyond the Kennebec River.[8] Boston land records record several purchases that he made between 1722 and 1745 including the Marlborough Arms tavern and the land in the west side of Beacon Hill, and refer to him as "Gentleman" and "Esquire".[9] His father-in-law did own a plantation in Barbados, but Thomazin did not inherit it when her father died in 1717.[10] There was a lucrative triangular trade between New England, the West Indies and Africa, and Boston's Long Wharf was known to be the busiest port in Colonial America. In 1722, his mother deeded one-third of the Marlborough Arms tavern to him, which was located just a few blocks from Long Wharf on State Street. In 1735, younger brother John deeded his interest in the tavern to James, provided that their mother Mary receive rent for six years.[11] James sold the Marlborough Arms to Roger Passmore in 1741.[12] Several of his descendants who published biographies on him were active Methodists and chose not to speculate whether Gibson's trading included either slaves or rum. The inventory of his estate did not list any slaves.[13]

Siege of Louisburg edit

France and Great Britain declared war in 1744 in what was known as King George's War in the American Colonies. The colonies in New France, in what is now Canada were protected by the Fortress of Louisburg. The Fortress also served as a base of attack against British colonial interests, especially Gibson's shipping interests in the Atlantic and his property in Maine. With the British and French fleets engaged with one another in the Caribbean, William Shirley, the Governor of Massachusetts, had proposed that the Colony raise its own militia and fleet and take Louisburg by surprise. Gibson notes that when Shirley first presented his proposal to the General Court in Boston, it was rejected. However, the Governor knew Gibson "to be a man of weighty character, as well as weighty purse" and visited him in his "counting room, and abruptly said, 'Gibson, do you feel like giving up the expedition to Louisburg?'"[14] Gibson offered his signature to a new petition, along with the promise to hire and lead three hundred soldiers and provide transport with his own expense. This new petition was approved.

The siege lasted for forty-eight days, and Gibson provides a detailed account of the battle in his journal, which was presented to the King, George II of Great Britain, and published in London's Gentleman's Magazine under the title A Journal of the Late Siege by the Troops from North America against the French at Cape Breton, the City of Louisburg and the Territories Thereunto Belonging: Surrendered to the English on 17 June 1745 After a Siege of Forty-Eight Days. The American colonists were successful in capturing the fortress, although it would be given back to France as part of the treaty negotiations to end the war. On 1 April 1746, the Parliament of Great Britain resolved to reimburse the American Colonies of Massachusetts Bay, New Hampshire, Connecticut and Rhode Island for their expenses incurred in the siege, as well as to reimburse Gibson personally, the only individual named in the resolution. The resolution was to reimburse James Gibson, Esquire, for 548 Pounds and 15 Shillings. However, when the ship arrived in Boston carrying the payment from the Crown, only the payment to the Colonial treasuries was on board, not Gibson's.[15]

Death edit

In the fall of 1752 Gibson was losing substantial income from the mismanagement of his Jamaica plantation, and so he left Boston and sailed to Jamaica to confront the overseer. On the day that he was scheduled to depart, his overseer invited him to dinner and "promised a satisfactory adjustment". After dinner he set sail for Boston but after three hours died in great agony, and the crew suspected that he had been poisoned.[16] His widow Thomazin died in Boston weeks after having been informed of his death, on 13 November 1752, leaving their fifteen-year-old daughter Mary an orphan.

Lost Estate edit

With the sudden death of both parents, Mary Duesbury Gibson was left an orphan. The court assigned Samuel Butler as executor of the estate,[17] but he was "corrupt and fraudulent" and the only part of her father's estate and landholdings that remained when she became an adult was the land in Maine. The Estate Papers filed by Samuel Butler valued James' estate at 140 pounds, with the Beacon Hill mansion being worth 100 pounds, and does not list any other property in Boston, in Jamaica, or in what is now Maine. It described the estate as insolvent, as debts were valued at more than 200 pounds.[18] She married Caleb Hayden in 1756 at age 18, but he died soon after. Five years later, she married Nehemiah Blanchard, a descendant of John Alden. In 1767, Nehemiah traveled to Maine to view the property she inherited from her father and drowned in the Kennebec River. About the same time, Parliament published a notice in Boston for the heirs of the James Gibson estate regarding the payment due. Mary contracted the services of an attorney to travel to London to collect the sum. He eloped and was never heard from again by Mary or her descendants. With her father's estate now lost to her, she gave up any further efforts to claim lost property.[19]

References edit

  1. ^ Johnson Memorial, 131.
  2. ^ Boston Births
  3. ^ Thwing, 137
  4. ^ Thwing Collection, 8962
  5. ^ Gibson, 2.
  6. ^ Sanders, Barbados Marriages
  7. ^ Boston Births
  8. ^ Johnson Memorial, 23.
  9. ^ Twing Collection, 9056-7
  10. ^ Sanders, Barbados Wills
  11. ^ Twing Collection, 9059
  12. ^ Drake, 115
  13. ^ Probate Papers
  14. ^ Johnson Memorial, 129.
  15. ^ Johnson Memorial, 150.
  16. ^ Johnson Memorial, 150.
  17. ^ Lorenzo Johnson, 97.
  18. ^ Probate Papers
  19. ^ Johnson Memorial, 23.
  • A Report of the Record Commissioners of the City of Boston, Containing Boston Births from A.D. 1700 to A.D. 1800. Boston: Rockwell and Churchhill, 1894.
  • Boston, MA: Inhabitants and Estates of the Town of Boston, 1630-1822 (Thwing Collection). Inhabitants and Estates of the Town of Boston, 1630–1800 and The Crooked and Narrow Streets of Boston, 1630–1822. CD-ROM. Boston, Mass.: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2001. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2014.)
  • Gibson, James. "A Journal of the Late Siege by the Troops from North America against the French at Cape Breton, the City of Louisburg, and the Territories Thereunto Belonging: Surrendered to the English on 17 June 1745 after a Siege of Forty-Eight Days." London: J. Newbury, 1745.
  • Drake, Samuel Adams. "Old Boston Taverns and Tavern Clubs" Boston: W.A. Butterfield, 1917.
  • Johnson, James Bowen. "The Johnson Memorial". Washington, D.C.: Howard University Print, 1895.
  • Johnson, Lorenzo Dow. "A Boston Merchant of 1745, or, Incidents in the Life of James Gibson, a Gentleman Volunteer at the Expedition to Louisburg". Boston: Redding and Co., 1847.
  • Johnson, Thomazin Blanchard. "Memoir of Mrs. Thomazin Johnson, of Braintree, Mass., With an Account of Her Pious Lineage from John Alden, the First Pilgrim Father Who Placed Foot on Plymouth Rock." Boston: J. Loring, 1835.
  • Sanders, Joanne McRee. Barbados Records: Marriages, 1643–1800. Vols. 1–2. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1982.
  • Sanders, Joanne McRee. Barbados Records: Wills, 1639–1725. Vols. 1–3. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1979–1981.
  • Suffolk County, MA: Probate File Papers.Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2017-2019. "James Gibson, 1752" (From records supplied by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Archives. Digitized images provided by FamilySearch.org)
  • Thwing, Annie Haven. "The Crooked and Narrow Streets of the Town of Boston, 1630-1822." Boston: Marshall Jones Company, 1920.

james, gibson, seaman, james, gibson, 1706, 1752, merchant, british, colonies, jamaica, province, massachusetts, during, king, george, 1744, 1748, william, shirley, governor, massachusetts, debated, whether, siege, capture, french, fortress, louisburg, cape, b. James Gibson 1706 1752 was a merchant in the British colonies of Jamaica and the Province of Massachusetts Bay During King George s War 1744 1748 William Shirley the Governor of Massachusetts debated whether to siege and capture the French fortress of Louisburg on Cape Breton Island Nova Scotia According to Gibson s journal he convinced Governor Shirley that the siege would be successful and used his personal wealth to provide 300 soldiers for the campaign 1 Gibson wrote an account of the Siege of Louisburg and it was published in London in late 1745 Contents 1 Early life 2 Merchant and Ship Captain 3 Siege of Louisburg 4 Death 5 Lost Estate 6 ReferencesEarly life editJames was born on April 1 1706 in Boston Massachusetts to James and Mary Gibson 2 His father was a mariner and purchased a tavern called Marlborough Arms in 1711 located at the corner of Kilby and State streets adjacent to Bunch of Grapes 3 His mother Mary was licensed to sell strong drink in the tavern on June 30 1712 4 In 1722 Mary deeded the tavern to her three children Mary James and John According to his journal he served in the Royal Regiment of Foot Guards in the British Army 5 and was ordered to the island of Barbados While serving in Barbados he met a widow named Thomazin Duesbury Barton the daughter of James and Rebecca Duesbury James and Thomazin were married in the parish of Saint Michael Barbados on 24 October 1730 6 The Gibsons moved to Boston prior to 1735 and their only child Mary Duesbury Gibson was born there on December 27 1737 7 Merchant and Ship Captain editAccording to his great grandson Lorenzo Dow Johnson 1805 1867 Gibson was a prosperous merchant who owned a plantation on the island of Jamaica owned a mansion in the neighbourhood of Beacon Hill Boston was a ship captain was a shareholder in Long Wharf and owned land in what is now Maine both near the village of Stroudwater now a neighbourhood of Portland Maine and beyond the Kennebec River 8 Boston land records record several purchases that he made between 1722 and 1745 including the Marlborough Arms tavern and the land in the west side of Beacon Hill and refer to him as Gentleman and Esquire 9 His father in law did own a plantation in Barbados but Thomazin did not inherit it when her father died in 1717 10 There was a lucrative triangular trade between New England the West Indies and Africa and Boston s Long Wharf was known to be the busiest port in Colonial America In 1722 his mother deeded one third of the Marlborough Arms tavern to him which was located just a few blocks from Long Wharf on State Street In 1735 younger brother John deeded his interest in the tavern to James provided that their mother Mary receive rent for six years 11 James sold the Marlborough Arms to Roger Passmore in 1741 12 Several of his descendants who published biographies on him were active Methodists and chose not to speculate whether Gibson s trading included either slaves or rum The inventory of his estate did not list any slaves 13 Siege of Louisburg editFrance and Great Britain declared war in 1744 in what was known as King George s War in the American Colonies The colonies in New France in what is now Canada were protected by the Fortress of Louisburg The Fortress also served as a base of attack against British colonial interests especially Gibson s shipping interests in the Atlantic and his property in Maine With the British and French fleets engaged with one another in the Caribbean William Shirley the Governor of Massachusetts had proposed that the Colony raise its own militia and fleet and take Louisburg by surprise Gibson notes that when Shirley first presented his proposal to the General Court in Boston it was rejected However the Governor knew Gibson to be a man of weighty character as well as weighty purse and visited him in his counting room and abruptly said Gibson do you feel like giving up the expedition to Louisburg 14 Gibson offered his signature to a new petition along with the promise to hire and lead three hundred soldiers and provide transport with his own expense This new petition was approved The siege lasted for forty eight days and Gibson provides a detailed account of the battle in his journal which was presented to the King George II of Great Britain and published in London s Gentleman s Magazine under the title A Journal of the Late Siege by the Troops from North America against the French at Cape Breton the City of Louisburg and the Territories Thereunto Belonging Surrendered to the English on 17 June 1745 After a Siege of Forty Eight Days The American colonists were successful in capturing the fortress although it would be given back to France as part of the treaty negotiations to end the war On 1 April 1746 the Parliament of Great Britain resolved to reimburse the American Colonies of Massachusetts Bay New Hampshire Connecticut and Rhode Island for their expenses incurred in the siege as well as to reimburse Gibson personally the only individual named in the resolution The resolution was to reimburse James Gibson Esquire for 548 Pounds and 15 Shillings However when the ship arrived in Boston carrying the payment from the Crown only the payment to the Colonial treasuries was on board not Gibson s 15 Death editIn the fall of 1752 Gibson was losing substantial income from the mismanagement of his Jamaica plantation and so he left Boston and sailed to Jamaica to confront the overseer On the day that he was scheduled to depart his overseer invited him to dinner and promised a satisfactory adjustment After dinner he set sail for Boston but after three hours died in great agony and the crew suspected that he had been poisoned 16 His widow Thomazin died in Boston weeks after having been informed of his death on 13 November 1752 leaving their fifteen year old daughter Mary an orphan Lost Estate editWith the sudden death of both parents Mary Duesbury Gibson was left an orphan The court assigned Samuel Butler as executor of the estate 17 but he was corrupt and fraudulent and the only part of her father s estate and landholdings that remained when she became an adult was the land in Maine The Estate Papers filed by Samuel Butler valued James estate at 140 pounds with the Beacon Hill mansion being worth 100 pounds and does not list any other property in Boston in Jamaica or in what is now Maine It described the estate as insolvent as debts were valued at more than 200 pounds 18 She married Caleb Hayden in 1756 at age 18 but he died soon after Five years later she married Nehemiah Blanchard a descendant of John Alden In 1767 Nehemiah traveled to Maine to view the property she inherited from her father and drowned in the Kennebec River About the same time Parliament published a notice in Boston for the heirs of the James Gibson estate regarding the payment due Mary contracted the services of an attorney to travel to London to collect the sum He eloped and was never heard from again by Mary or her descendants With her father s estate now lost to her she gave up any further efforts to claim lost property 19 References edit Johnson Memorial 131 Boston Births Thwing 137 Thwing Collection 8962 Gibson 2 Sanders Barbados Marriages Boston Births Johnson Memorial 23 Twing Collection 9056 7 Sanders Barbados Wills Twing Collection 9059 Drake 115 Probate Papers Johnson Memorial 129 Johnson Memorial 150 Johnson Memorial 150 Lorenzo Johnson 97 Probate Papers Johnson Memorial 23 A Report of the Record Commissioners of the City of Boston Containing Boston Births from A D 1700 to A D 1800 Boston Rockwell and Churchhill 1894 Boston MA Inhabitants and Estates of the Town of Boston 1630 1822 Thwing Collection Inhabitants and Estates of the Town of Boston 1630 1800 and The Crooked and Narrow Streets of Boston 1630 1822 CD ROM Boston Mass New England Historic Genealogical Society 2001 Online database AmericanAncestors org New England Historic Genealogical Society 2014 Gibson James A Journal of the Late Siege by the Troops from North America against the French at Cape Breton the City of Louisburg and the Territories Thereunto Belonging Surrendered to the English on 17 June 1745 after a Siege of Forty Eight Days London J Newbury 1745 Drake Samuel Adams Old Boston Taverns and Tavern Clubs Boston W A Butterfield 1917 Johnson James Bowen The Johnson Memorial Washington D C Howard University Print 1895 Johnson Lorenzo Dow A Boston Merchant of 1745 or Incidents in the Life of James Gibson a Gentleman Volunteer at the Expedition to Louisburg Boston Redding and Co 1847 Johnson Thomazin Blanchard Memoir of Mrs Thomazin Johnson of Braintree Mass With an Account of Her Pious Lineage from John Alden the First Pilgrim Father Who Placed Foot on Plymouth Rock Boston J Loring 1835 Sanders Joanne McRee Barbados Records Marriages 1643 1800 Vols 1 2 Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Co 1982 Sanders Joanne McRee Barbados Records Wills 1639 1725 Vols 1 3 Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Co 1979 1981 Suffolk County MA Probate File Papers Online database AmericanAncestors org New England Historic Genealogical Society 2017 2019 James Gibson 1752 From records supplied by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Archives Digitized images provided by FamilySearch org Thwing Annie Haven The Crooked and Narrow Streets of the Town of Boston 1630 1822 Boston Marshall Jones Company 1920 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Gibson seaman amp oldid 1054010725, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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