After Henry W. Longfellow’s 1860 poem made Paul Revere an American icon, authors look for more information about his fellow riders, including Prescott.
Or at least confirmation of what Shattuck wrote.
Anything, really.
And almost nothing came to light.
As I said earlier this month in answering a question at an online presentation, we knew little about Prescott. Since Shattuck’s writing, only two additional sources had surfaced, and they both bring a lot of questions.
One is an entry in Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors of the Revolutionary War, a monumental state-funded listing of all the names in surviving records, extracted from the original documents and alphabetized. The pertinent entry is:
PRESCOT, “SALL.” Lists of men appearing under the heading “Hartwell Brook the first Everidge;” said Prescot appears among men in service at Ticonderoga in 1776; name preceded by “Dr.”Was “Dr. Sall Prescot” also the alarm rider Dr. Samuel Prescott?
Searching those volumes for the phrase “Hartwell Brook the first Everidge” shows that document (or documents?) listed many other men who served in many places and times. Those listings rarely include the usual helpful information about commanding officers, dates of service, and so on.
Which Hartwell Brook does this document refer to? What does “the first Everidge” mean? Dr. Samuel Johnson’s dictionary offers this first definition of “average”: “In law, that duty or service which the tenant is to pay to the king, or other lord, by his beasts and carriages.” Was “the first Everidge” thus a record of how men had served their duty to the state of Massachusetts?
In this case, it seems likely “Dr. Sall. Prescot” was among some short-term Massachusetts troops sent out to Fort Ticonderoga to hold that position in 1776. (Not, as some writers assumed, part of Henry Knox’s mission there, which actually started in 1775.) Then he could have returned to eastern Massachusetts and enlisted on a privateer. If in fact this was Dr. Samuel Prescott.
Another tantalizing statement appears in D. Michael Ryan’s Concord and the Dawn of Revolution in 2007. Ryan wrote:
Among family papers of a Jacob Winter (Windrow) of Ashburnham, Massachusetts, was found a letter claiming that he had been a prison mate of a Dr. Prescott from Concord who apparently died in miserable conditions in 1777.Alas, there’s no other information: who wrote this letter, when, where it is now, and what exactly it says. (A slightly different statement appeared in Ryan’s original magazine article from 2001, but no additional citation.)
Ezra S. Stearns’s 1887 history of Ashburnham lists Jacob Winter among that town’s casualties in the Revolutionary War, saying he died a prisoner at Halifax in the fall of 1777. So it’s conceivable Winter overlapped with Dr. Prescott there and wrote home about it. But other scenarios are all too conceivable as well.
Joseph Ross’s Continental Navy site offers a primary source mentioning Jacob Winter. His name appears on a list apparently compiled by Dr. Samuel Curtis as he treated fellow prisoners from the Continental Navy’s frigate Hancock. That document even gives an exact date for Jacob Winter’s demise: 29 Aug 1777.
Fortunately, following Jacob Winter’s trail led me to a new, and contemporaneous, source about Prescott.
TOMORROW: Where and when the doctor died.
Thanks for this series of posts. As someone who did some low-level research into the local history of Concord back in the 1990s, I find this series absolutely fascinating.
ReplyDeleteI believe D. Michael Ryan is still around, and he might have further information about that letter. He has a Facebook page, and lists himself on LinkedIn as an Interpretive Ranger at Minuteman NHP. Also, you've probably already done this, but seems like an inquiry to the staff at Special Collections at the Concord Free Public Library might be worth the effort -- it's a long shot, but I remember them as having a wide range of knowledge about original sources.
For what it is worth, a keyword search of the 12 volume series, Naval Documents of the American Revolution, published by the U.S. Government Printing Office, turns up no mention of a Samuel Prescott (even with variations of the name). These volumes contain both British and American documents relating to prisoners of war at Halifax, although the collection may not be exhaustive.
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