Colonel Jonathan Eddy

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Jonathan Eddy

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Taunton, MA, United States
Death: circa August 1804 (69-86)
Eddington, ME, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Eleazer Eddy, of Taunton and Elizabeth Eddy
Husband of Mary Eddy
Father of Lt. William Eddy; Elias Eddy and Ibrook Eddy
Brother of Obadiah Eddy and Oliver Eddy
Half brother of John Samuel Eddy; Caleb Eddy; Hannah Millard; Elizabeth Penny; Charity Baker and 2 others

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Immediate Family

About Colonel Jonathan Eddy

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Eddy

Jonathan Eddy (c. 1726–1804) served for the British in the French and Indian War and for the American Patriots in the American Revolution. After the French and Indian War he settled in Nova Scotia as a New England Planter, becoming a member of the General Assembly of Nova Scotia. During the American Revolutionary War, he was strongly supportive of the rebel cause. He encouraged the residents of Nova Scotia to join their American brothers in open revolt against King George III and England. He led a failed attempt to capture Fort Cumberland in 1776 and was forced to return to Massachusetts, the place of his birth. The following year he led the defense of Machias, Maine during the Battle of Machias (1777). After the war he established the community now known as Eddington, Maine in 1784, where he died.

French and Indian War

Jonathan Eddy was born in Norton, Massachusetts in 1726 or 1727. In 1755 he enlisted in the Massachusetts militia and participated in Robert Monckton's successful capture of Fort Beauséjour on the Isthmus of Chignecto in the French and Indian War. He received a militia captain's commission in 1758, when he apparently saw no action, and again in 1759, when his company was garrisoned at Fort Cumberland (the name Fort Beauséjour was given after its capture). After the war, Eddy returned home to Norton, only to return to Cumberland as a New England Planter in 1763. From 1770 to 1775 he served in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly.

American Revolution

When the American Revolutionary War began in Massachusetts in 1775 he openly supported the rebellion. Following Governor Francis Legge's crackdown on seditious persons and seeing an opportunity, Jonathan Eddy fled to his riding in Cumberland. He made frequent excursions to see Samuel Adams and the General Court of Massachusetts as well as to General George Washington. Here he was met with varying degrees of support for his proposed rebellion. Adams pledged full support, troops, weapons, ammunition, and more, while Washington basically said not to expect any support at all. He was eventually able to convince the Massachusetts legislature to provide logistical support in the form of small arms (muskets) and other military supplies.

In the summer of 1776, Mariot Arbuthnot, the new governor of Nova Scotia, ordered Colonel Joseph Goreham's Royal Fencible Americans to secure Fort Cumberland and keep watch for any signs of an American invasion of the province. Eddy, knowing he was being monitored by authorities loyal to the King, fled to Massachusetts where he was made a full colonel in the Continental Army and given authority to raise a regiment of his own with the sole purpose of invading Nova Scotia through Cumberland and Truro and then east into Halifax.

Siege of Fort Cumberland

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Fort_Cumberland

Shortly after General William Howe's army departed Nova Scotia to attack New York in 1776, Eddy made his move. His force of 180 American militiamen, Natives, and Nova Scotians marched on Fort Cumberland. They attempted to storm the fort on November 13, 1776 and were repulsed. Two more attempts were made on the 22nd and 23 November, but on the 28th the HMS Vulture arrived at the head of the Bay of Fundy with British Royal Marines aboard and relieved the fort in a joint operation with the RFA garrison. Eddy and his militia force were scattered, eventually regrouping near the Saint John River. Eddy and many of his supporters who had lived near the fort had their properties destroyed in retaliation.

Eddy spent the remainder of the war managing the defense of Machias in the District of Maine (then a part of Massachusetts), and was awarded a tract of land in the Ohio Country in 1801 for his role in the war. He moved to Stoughtonham( Now Sharon,Massachusetts) after the war, where he served in the Massachusetts legislature. In 1784 he established a settlement on the eastern bank of the Penobscot River that grew to become Eddington, Maine, where he died in 1804.

abundant land grants 1801: https://books.google.com/books?id=hL8-AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA70&lpg=PA70&dq=...

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Colonel Jonathan Eddy's Timeline

1726
1726
Taunton, MA, United States
1752
August 16, 1752
Mansfield, Bristol County, Province of Massachusetts
1754
January 9, 1754
1757
November 30, 1757
1804
August 1804
Age 78
Eddington, ME, United States