Description:

Revolutionary War
Carlisle, MA, September 3, 1789
Generals, Surgeons and More List of Massachusetts and Connecticut Revolutionary War Veterans, 1789
ADS
This list of 42 land warrants provides the number of the warrant, the date of the warrant, the date of the entry, the name of the veteran, his rank, his unit in line or corps, and the number of acres he received. The veterans were from Massachusetts and Connecticut regiments with one from Hazen's Regiment. They received from 100 acres for privates to 850 acres for a brigadier general with lieutenants receiving 200 acres, captains 300 acres, and majors and surgeons 400 acres.

Among the veterans whose names appear on this list are:
- Brigadier General John Paterson (1744-1808), who graduated from Yale College in 1762, studied law, and represented Lenox, Massachusetts in the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1774-1775). Initially a colonel of the 1st Massachusetts Regiment, he fought with them at the Battles of Bunker Hill, Trenton, and Princeton. Promoted to brigadier general in 1777, he commanded a brigade in the Sarasota Campaign of 1777 and the Battle of Monmouth in 1778. He received a promotion to major general in September 1783 and was discharged in December.
- Captain Simon Larned (1753-1817) was born in Connecticut and served as a captain in Colonel William Shepard's regiment from 1777 to 1780. He represented Massachusetts in the U.S. House of Representatives for a partial term in 1804-1805.
- Captain Enos Stone (1743-1815) of Lenox, Massachusetts, commanded a company in the Massachusetts Line in the Northern Army at Ticonderoga in 1777. He was captured and taken as a prisoner to Quebec.
- Captain Ebenezer Smith (1745-1816) commanded a company in the Massachusetts Line and was discharged with the 6th Massachusetts Regiment in June 1783 after eight years of service. The regiment served at the Battles of Bunker Hill, Trenton, Princeton, and Saratoga, and during the New York Campaign.
- Major Moses Ashley (1749-1791) of Westfield, Massachusetts, graduated from Yale College in 1767. He served as a lieutenant during the Lexington Alarm in 1775 and was commissioned a captain in John Fellows's Massachusetts Regiment. In 1777, he transferred to the 1st Massachusetts and subsequently became major of the 5th Massachusetts before transferring to the 6th Massachusetts shortly before the end of the war. He drowned at the dam of his forge.
- Captain William Satterlee (1740-1798) of Connecticut served as a captain in Moses Hazen's Regiment during the Revolutionary War. He died in Herkimer County, New York.

[REVOLUTIONARY WAR.] Samuel Alexander for Surveyor William Alexander, Autograph Document Signed, List of Military Land Warrants Received from Robert Walker, September 3, 1789, Carlisle, [Massachusetts]. 2 pp., 8" x 12.5" Expected folds; separations on some folds; general toning; some soiling.

Excerpt
"Carlisle 25th March 1797 Then Received of William Alexander All the Within Named Land warrants amounting to forty Two. Except Simon Larned and Joshua Danforth, Already Delivered to their Order I say received by me Ebenr Paine"

Historical Background
On September 16, 1776, the Continental Congress passed a resolution that granted public land to officers and soldiers who served in the military until the end of the war. Heirs of those who died in the service were also entitled to land. The resolution specified that each noncommissioned officer and soldier would receive 100 acres, an ensign 150 acres, each lieutenant 200 acres, and other officers in proportionate amounts of land up to 500 acres for a colonel. A resolution of August 12, 1780, extended the 1776 resolution to include generals—850 acres for a brigadier general and 1,100 acres for a major general. The 1776 resolution was the basic law under which Revolutionary War veterans received bounty-land warrants from the Federal Government until 1855, although Congress passed numerous acts in the interval to provide claimants with additional time to apply for or locate warrants.

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  • Dimensions: 8" x 12.5"
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