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John Duff (counterfeiter)

John Duff, born John McElduff, or John Michael McElduff, because early court records referred to him as John Michael Duff (September 1759 or August 1760 – June 4, 1799 or 1805), was a counterfeiter, criminal gang leader, horse thief, cattle thief, hog thief, salt maker, longhunter, scout, and soldier who assisted in George Rogers Clark's campaign to capture the Illinois country for the American rebel side during the Revolutionary War.

John Duff
Born
John Michael McElduff

September 1759 – August 1760
DiedJune 4, 1799 or 1805 (aged 38-45)
Cause of deathgunshot wound
Resting placeunknown
Other namesJohn McDuff, Jean Duff, Jean Michel Duff, John Michael Duff, Michael Duff
Occupation(s)frontiersman, hunter, horse thief, cattle thief, hog thief, soldier, salt maker, criminal gang leader, counterfeiter
Spouses
Children1
Military career
Allegiance Virginia,  United States
Service/branchVirginia State Forces
Years of service1778–1780s
Rankprivate, sergeant
UnitCaptain John Williams' Company (Kaskaskia) and Captain Richard McCarty's Company (Cahokia), Illinois Regiment
Battles/warsAmerican Revolutionary War
Signature
Private John Duff served in the, ranks of, George Rogers Clark's Illinois Regiment, walking through chest-high, icy water, on the march to Vincennes, January 1779, in a painting, by Frederick Coffay Yohn
In the 1790s, John Duff and his criminal associate, Philip Alston, carried out their counterfeiting operation, in the relative seclusion of the wilderness, at Cave-in-Rock

Early life and family history edit

John Michael McElduff was born sometime between September 1759 and August 1760 in the British Province of South Carolina, according to his court testimony in August 1781, where he claimed to be 21 years old. John's father may have been the Thomas McElduff murdered by Philip McElduff, a brother, of Thomas, some time prior to November 1761. His mother later remarried, and his stepfather moved the family to the Natchez District, Mississippi region of the colony of British West Florida, on the Mississippi River, prior to the start of the American Revolutionary War. McElduff is believed to be a grandson of a Thomas McElduff, Sr., who received two land grants for military service in the French and Indian War on the south side of the Tyger River, in Union County, South Carolina on February 7, 1754.

American Revolutionary War service and life in the Illinois Country edit

Around 1778, Duff was living in the Illinois Country, later referred to as the "American Bottom." While leading a group of longhunters returning to Kaskaskia, John Duff, John Saunders, and the rest of the hunting party were intercepted by Colonel George Rogers Clark's soldiers and his Virginia frontiersmen soldiers, near the ruins of Fort Massac. Suspected of being British spies, they immediately took an American oath of allegiance, where Duff and his men joined Clark's Illinois Regiment, Virginia State Forces. Duff enlisted into Captain John Williams' Company in Cahokia and rose to the rank of sergeant in the Illinois Regiment.

In 1780, while Duff was posted with the garrison in Cahokia, a British force attacked St. Louis, which was under colonial Spanish rule, and American-held Cahokia in 1780, with a motley army of British Loyalists composed of French-Canadiens, fur traders, and their Indian allies. McElduff and other soldiers were on reconnaissance, for General Clark, observing the British movements, near the Mississippi River. The group was attacked by an Indian war party, barely escaping with their lives. The combined American, French, and Spanish forces successfully repelled the enemy assaults. In the George Rogers Clark Papers and Illinois court records, Duff was referred to both as "John McElduff" and "John McDuff."

In the mid-late 1780s, Duff was living in Kaskaskia, Illinois and was in business with two brothers of the captain of the Ohio County, Virginia Militia and Revolutionary War Patriot, Samuel Mason who later became the notorious river pirate. According to the French Kaskaskia records, the Duff name was recorded as, "Jean Michel Duff" and "John Michael Duff." In 1786, John, Daniel, and another son of Thomas McElduff sold land tracts for two different property deeds. There was a Daniel McElduff and McDuff who was also at Kaskaskia in the 1780s and was likely the brother of John Duff. When the McElduffs first arrived, the pre-American Revolution, British-controlled, French-speaking settlement of Kaskaskia was not recorded. Daniel McDuff owned slaves while residing in Kaskaskia, as was the custom of transplanted Southerners and the French creole population in the Illinois Country. After the departure of the bandit John Dodge, who lived in the area from 1784 to 1790, John McElduff was elected, in 1790, as one of six judges, to the Kaskaskia town court. According to the French records, on February 6, 1794, John McElduff and Seddy, his wife, sold a dwelling and grounds in Kaskaskia Village, to J.R. Jones for $200; (~$4,107 in 2023) this Jones may have been John Rice Jones, a politician and Illinois Regiment veteran.

Counterfeiting at Cave-In-Rock, Northwest Territory and in Kentucky edit

After 1790, John Duff was associated with the South Carolina counterfeiter, Philip Alston, the Virginia river pirate, Samuel Mason, and the North Carolina serial killers the Harpe brothers, at Cave-in-Rock, in the U.S. Northwest Territory, where he learned the illicit business of counterfeiting, known as "coining", where he could make a lot money in criminal pursuits. By this time, he had left the historical record and from this point on, he was referred to in folklore as, just Duff or "Duff the Counterfeiter." Even as a counterfeiter, John Duff was not a violent man by nature, and he was never known to have killed anyone. Whether or not John McElduff and his wife left Kaskaskia permanently after 1794 is not known, but folklore mentioned John Duff, as owning a slave named Pompey and tales of his miraculously avoiding numerous attempts at capture and death from local regulator vigilantes and the U.S. Army.

Death edit

For nearly a decade, Duff had become a scourge along the lower Ohio River region. On June 4, 1799, a group of three Shawnee Indians and a French courier du bois were hired by U.S. Army officer, Captain Zebulon Pike, Sr., father of the explorer Zebulon Pike, who was the commandant at the frontier outpost Fort Massac, now Metropolis, Illinois. This mercenary party was given orders to kill John Duff, which they did at his house, which was located either at Battery Rock, according to the newspaper account, on the Illinois side of the Ohio River or across the river at what would later become Caseyville, Kentucky on the Tradewater River as, recalled in the History of Union County, Kentucky. According to Revolutionary Soldiers Buried in Illinois, Duff was killed in 1805 on Ripple Island, on the Saline River, in Gallatin County, Illinois and buried near the local salt springs.

 
Fort Massac, down river, from Cave-in-Rock, where, in 1799, the U.S. Army commandant, Captain Zebulon Pike, Sr., father of the explorer, hired three Shawnee Indians and a French courier du bois, to hunt down and kill John Duff.

See also edit

References edit

  • Alvord, Clarence Walworth. The Illinois Country, 1673-1818, Volume 1. Springfield, Ill.: Illinois Centennial Commission, 1920.
  • Alvord, Clarence Walworth, editor. Kaskaskia Records, 1778-1790, Collections of the Illinois State Historical Library, Illinois State Historical Library. Springfield, Ill.: Trustees of the Illinois State Historical Library, 1909.
  • Bateman, Newton and Paul Selby, editors. Biographical and Memorial Edition of the Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois, Volume 1. Munsell Publishing Company, 1915.
  • Glaser, Lynn. Counterfeiting in America: the history of an American way to wealth. C.N. Potter, 1968.
  • Reynolds, Governor John. Reynolds' History of Illinois: My Own Times: Embracing Also the History of My Life. Chicago, IL: Chicago Historical Society, 1879.
  • Reynolds, Governor John. The Pioneer History of Illinois: Containing the Discovery, in 1673, and the History of the Country to the Year 1818, when the State Government was Organized. Chicago, IL: Fergus Print Company, 1887.
  • Rothert, Otto A. The Outlaws of Cave-In-Rock. Cleveland: 1924; rpt. 1996 ISBN 0-8093-2034-7
  • Seineke, Kathrine Wagner Seineke. The George Rogers Clark adventure in the Illinois: and selected documents of the American Revolution at the frontier posts. New York: Polyanthos, 1981.
  • Underwood, Lt. Thomas T. "The journal, 1792-1800, of Thomas T. Underwood, lieutenant in the United States Army, life at Fort Massac (Illinois) under Zebulon M. Pike's command (1795-1798)," Draper Manuscripts: Frontier Wars Papers, 1754-1885 (Volume 16). Wisconsin Historical Society, Library-Archives Division.
  • Walker, Mrs. Harriett J. Revolutionary Soldiers Buried in Illinois. Standard Printing Company, 1918.
  • Wellman, Paul I. Spawn of evil: the invisible empire of soulless men which for a generation held the Nation in a spell of terror. New York: Doubleday, 1964.
  • Willson, Richard Eugene, Indexing, Donald E. Gradeless, Ph.D., Editor. 1998. Index to the George Rogers Clark Papers: The Illinois Regiment. Based on the Microfilmed George Rogers Clark Papers at the Virginia State Library and Archives. Chicago: Society of Colonial Wars in the State of Illinois.
  • Chester Co (South Carolina) Misc Record Book LL, reprieve granted Philip McElduff convicted of murder of Thomas McElduff till Wed the 2nd of Dec 1761, p.417
  • History of Union County, Kentucky. Chicago: Goodspeed Publishing Co., 1886.
  • New Bern District (North Carolina) Court Records 1770-1774.
  • Papers of the U.S. War Department 1784-1800 2015-06-19 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Raymond H. Hammes Collection. English Summaries. Illinois State Archives. 81:2:27:1.
  • "Some Irish Protestant Immigrants to South Carolina 1753 and 1754," The South Carolina Magazine of Ancestral Research, Vol. 17, No. 1 (Winter 1989):25-29. FHL Book 975.7 B2sc v.

External links edit

  • Sturdivant Gang and Ford's Ferry Gang Rogue's Gallery (with mention of John Duff criminal associates)

john, duff, counterfeiter, john, duff, born, john, mcelduff, john, michael, mcelduff, because, early, court, records, referred, john, michael, duff, september, 1759, august, 1760, june, 1799, 1805, counterfeiter, criminal, gang, leader, horse, thief, cattle, t. John Duff born John McElduff or John Michael McElduff because early court records referred to him as John Michael Duff September 1759 or August 1760 June 4 1799 or 1805 was a counterfeiter criminal gang leader horse thief cattle thief hog thief salt maker longhunter scout and soldier who assisted in George Rogers Clark s campaign to capture the Illinois country for the American rebel side during the Revolutionary War John DuffBornJohn Michael McElduffSeptember 1759 August 1760South Carolina British AmericaDiedJune 4 1799 or 1805 aged 38 45 Battery Rock Illinois Country Northwest Territory U S orSaline River Salt Springs Illinois Country Northwest Territory U S orCaseyville Livingston County Kentucky U S Cause of deathgunshot woundResting placeunknownOther namesJohn McDuff Jean Duff Jean Michel Duff John Michael Duff Michael DuffOccupation s frontiersman hunter horse thief cattle thief hog thief soldier salt maker criminal gang leader counterfeiterSpousesLetticia Letty or Seddy SmithNative American woman name unknownChildren1Military careerAllegiance Virginia United StatesService wbr branchVirginia State ForcesYears of service1778 1780sRankprivate sergeantUnitCaptain John Williams Company Kaskaskia and Captain Richard McCarty s Company Cahokia Illinois RegimentBattles warsAmerican Revolutionary War Illinois Campaign 1778 1779 Capture of Kaskaskia and Cahokia 1778 Siege of Fort Vincennes 1779 Battle of St Louis 1780 Signature Private John Duff served in the ranks of George Rogers Clark s Illinois Regiment walking through chest high icy water on the march to Vincennes January 1779 in a painting by Frederick Coffay Yohn In the 1790s John Duff and his criminal associate Philip Alston carried out their counterfeiting operation in the relative seclusion of the wilderness at Cave in Rock Contents 1 Early life and family history 2 American Revolutionary War service and life in the Illinois Country 3 Counterfeiting at Cave In Rock Northwest Territory and in Kentucky 4 Death 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and family history editJohn Michael McElduff was born sometime between September 1759 and August 1760 in the British Province of South Carolina according to his court testimony in August 1781 where he claimed to be 21 years old John s father may have been the Thomas McElduff murdered by Philip McElduff a brother of Thomas some time prior to November 1761 His mother later remarried and his stepfather moved the family to the Natchez District Mississippi region of the colony of British West Florida on the Mississippi River prior to the start of the American Revolutionary War McElduff is believed to be a grandson of a Thomas McElduff Sr who received two land grants for military service in the French and Indian War on the south side of the Tyger River in Union County South Carolina on February 7 1754 American Revolutionary War service and life in the Illinois Country editSee also Illinois campaign Siege of Fort Vincennes Battle of St Louis and Western theater of the American Revolutionary War Around 1778 Duff was living in the Illinois Country later referred to as the American Bottom While leading a group of longhunters returning to Kaskaskia John Duff John Saunders and the rest of the hunting party were intercepted by Colonel George Rogers Clark s soldiers and his Virginia frontiersmen soldiers near the ruins of Fort Massac Suspected of being British spies they immediately took an American oath of allegiance where Duff and his men joined Clark s Illinois Regiment Virginia State Forces Duff enlisted into Captain John Williams Company in Cahokia and rose to the rank of sergeant in the Illinois Regiment In 1780 while Duff was posted with the garrison in Cahokia a British force attacked St Louis which was under colonial Spanish rule and American held Cahokia in 1780 with a motley army of British Loyalists composed of French Canadiens fur traders and their Indian allies McElduff and other soldiers were on reconnaissance for General Clark observing the British movements near the Mississippi River The group was attacked by an Indian war party barely escaping with their lives The combined American French and Spanish forces successfully repelled the enemy assaults In the George Rogers Clark Papers and Illinois court records Duff was referred to both as John McElduff and John McDuff In the mid late 1780s Duff was living in Kaskaskia Illinois and was in business with two brothers of the captain of the Ohio County Virginia Militia and Revolutionary War Patriot Samuel Mason who later became the notorious river pirate According to the French Kaskaskia records the Duff name was recorded as Jean Michel Duff and John Michael Duff In 1786 John Daniel and another son of Thomas McElduff sold land tracts for two different property deeds There was a Daniel McElduff and McDuff who was also at Kaskaskia in the 1780s and was likely the brother of John Duff When the McElduffs first arrived the pre American Revolution British controlled French speaking settlement of Kaskaskia was not recorded Daniel McDuff owned slaves while residing in Kaskaskia as was the custom of transplanted Southerners and the French creole population in the Illinois Country After the departure of the bandit John Dodge who lived in the area from 1784 to 1790 John McElduff was elected in 1790 as one of six judges to the Kaskaskia town court According to the French records on February 6 1794 John McElduff and Seddy his wife sold a dwelling and grounds in Kaskaskia Village to J R Jones for 200 4 107 in 2023 this Jones may have been John Rice Jones a politician and Illinois Regiment veteran Counterfeiting at Cave In Rock Northwest Territory and in Kentucky editAfter 1790 John Duff was associated with the South Carolina counterfeiter Philip Alston the Virginia river pirate Samuel Mason and the North Carolina serial killers the Harpe brothers at Cave in Rock in the U S Northwest Territory where he learned the illicit business of counterfeiting known as coining where he could make a lot money in criminal pursuits By this time he had left the historical record and from this point on he was referred to in folklore as just Duff or Duff the Counterfeiter Even as a counterfeiter John Duff was not a violent man by nature and he was never known to have killed anyone Whether or not John McElduff and his wife left Kaskaskia permanently after 1794 is not known but folklore mentioned John Duff as owning a slave named Pompey and tales of his miraculously avoiding numerous attempts at capture and death from local regulator vigilantes and the U S Army Death editFor nearly a decade Duff had become a scourge along the lower Ohio River region On June 4 1799 a group of three Shawnee Indians and a French courier du bois were hired by U S Army officer Captain Zebulon Pike Sr father of the explorer Zebulon Pike who was the commandant at the frontier outpost Fort Massac now Metropolis Illinois This mercenary party was given orders to kill John Duff which they did at his house which was located either at Battery Rock according to the newspaper account on the Illinois side of the Ohio River or across the river at what would later become Caseyville Kentucky on the Tradewater River as recalled in the History of Union County Kentucky According to Revolutionary Soldiers Buried in Illinois Duff was killed in 1805 on Ripple Island on the Saline River in Gallatin County Illinois and buried near the local salt springs nbsp Fort Massac down river from Cave in Rock where in 1799 the U S Army commandant Captain Zebulon Pike Sr father of the explorer hired three Shawnee Indians and a French courier du bois to hunt down and kill John Duff See also editPeter Alston Edward Bonney Abel Buell Mary Butterworth Sile Doty David Farnsworth James Ford Catherine Murphy John Murrell Sturdivant Gang Samuel C UphamReferences editAlvord Clarence Walworth The Illinois Country 1673 1818 Volume 1 Springfield Ill Illinois Centennial Commission 1920 Alvord Clarence Walworth editor Kaskaskia Records 1778 1790 Collections of the Illinois State Historical Library Illinois State Historical Library Springfield Ill Trustees of the Illinois State Historical Library 1909 Bateman Newton and Paul Selby editors Biographical and Memorial Edition of the Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois Volume 1 Munsell Publishing Company 1915 Glaser Lynn Counterfeiting in America the history of an American way to wealth C N Potter 1968 Reynolds Governor John Reynolds History of Illinois My Own Times Embracing Also the History of My Life Chicago IL Chicago Historical Society 1879 Reynolds Governor John The Pioneer History of Illinois Containing the Discovery in 1673 and the History of the Country to the Year 1818 when the State Government was Organized Chicago IL Fergus Print Company 1887 Rothert Otto A The Outlaws of Cave In Rock Cleveland 1924 rpt 1996 ISBN 0 8093 2034 7 Seineke Kathrine Wagner Seineke The George Rogers Clark adventure in the Illinois and selected documents of the American Revolution at the frontier posts New York Polyanthos 1981 Underwood Lt Thomas T The journal 1792 1800 of Thomas T Underwood lieutenant in the United States Army life at Fort Massac Illinois under Zebulon M Pike s command 1795 1798 Draper Manuscripts Frontier Wars Papers 1754 1885 Volume 16 Wisconsin Historical Society Library Archives Division Walker Mrs Harriett J Revolutionary Soldiers Buried in Illinois Standard Printing Company 1918 Wellman Paul I Spawn of evil the invisible empire of soulless men which for a generation held the Nation in a spell of terror New York Doubleday 1964 Willson Richard Eugene Indexing Donald E Gradeless Ph D Editor 1998 Index to the George Rogers Clark Papers The Illinois Regiment Based on the MicrofilmedGeorge Rogers Clark Papers at the Virginia State Library and Archives Chicago Society of Colonial Wars in the State of Illinois Chester Co South Carolina Misc Record Book LL reprieve granted Philip McElduff convicted of murder of Thomas McElduff till Wed the 2nd of Dec 1761 p 417 History of Union County Kentucky Chicago Goodspeed Publishing Co 1886 New Bern District North Carolina Court Records 1770 1774 Papers of the U S War Department 1784 1800 Archived 2015 06 19 at the Wayback Machine Raymond H Hammes Collection English Summaries Illinois State Archives 81 2 27 1 Some Irish Protestant Immigrants to South Carolina 1753 and 1754 The South Carolina Magazine of Ancestral Research Vol 17 No 1 Winter 1989 25 29 FHL Book 975 7 B2sc v External links editSturdivant Gang and Ford s Ferry Gang Rogue s Gallery with mention of John Duff criminal associates Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Duff counterfeiter amp oldid 1195920993, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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