Colonel William Douglas

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Colonel William Douglas

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Plainfield, Windham County, Connecticut, Colonial America
Death: May 28, 1777 (35)
Northford, New Haven County, Connecticut, United States (Died from wounds sustained at the Battle of Harlem Plains)
Place of Burial: Northford, New Haven County, Connecticut, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Lt. Colonel John Douglas and Olive Douglas
Husband of Hannah Douglas
Father of Olive Fowler; William Douglas; Hanna Dutton; John Douglas and Olive Fowler
Brother of Brigadier General John Douglas; Sarah Perkins; Olive Perkins and Benjamin Douglas

Occupation: Colonel
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Colonel William Douglas

Colonel William Douglas

A Patriot of the American Revolution for CONNECTICUT with the rank of COLONEL. DAR Ancestor #: A033849

Colonel Douglas was an American military officer who led regiments from Connecticut during the American Revolutionary War.

The son of John Douglas (1703-1766) and Olive Spaulding (1709-1752), he was born in Plainfield, Connecticut, Douglas began his military career as a soldier in the French and Indian War, rising to the rank of sergeant. Following the war, he became a shipmaster and worked in the maritime trades until the beginning of the American Revolutionary War, when he raised the 6th Company of the 1st Connecticut Regiment and became its captain.

Douglas took part in military campaigns along Lake George and Lake Champlain commanding ships in upstate New York and was stationed in Montreal. In 1776, he was promoted twice, first to major and then on June 20 as colonel of the Connecticut State Regiment, also known as the "Connecticut 5th battalion".

Douglas privately acknowledged in letters to his wife that his troops were often ill-equipped for battle, writing at one point that they “give me much fatigue and trouble.” During the landing of British troops at Kips Bay in New York City on September 15, 1776, Douglas’ troops retreated wildly in the face of the British attack. General George Washington, encountering the retreating troops, reacted angrily by flogging some of Douglas’ troops with his riding cane and declaring: “Are these the men with whom I am to defend America?”

Douglas and his regiment also participated in the Battle of White Plains on October 28, 1776. On January 1, 1777, he was commissioned as a colonel of the Connecticut 6th Regiment. However, his health deteriorated during the course of the war and he was forced to return to his home at Northfield, Connecticut, where he died on May 28, 1777.

Col Douglas married, 5th July 1767, Hannah, daughter of Stephen Mansfield, of New Haven, where she was born 17th Nov 1747, dying in Northford, 22 May 1825.

His daughter Olive Douglas married Solomon Fowler and had daughter Charlotte Fowler (1805–1873), who married missionary Dwight Baldwin (1798–1886), and had several other notable descendants.

Douglas' grandson Benjamin Douglas was a manufacturer, Mayor of Middletown, Connecticut, and lieutenant governor of Connecticut in 1861-62.

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Colonel William Douglas's Timeline

1742
January 17, 1742
Plainfield, Windham County, Connecticut, Colonial America
1768
November 25, 1768
New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut, Colonial America
November 25, 1768
New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut, Colonial America
1770
February 23, 1770
1772
April 12, 1772
New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut, United States
1777
May 28, 1777
Age 35
Northford, New Haven County, Connecticut, United States
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Northford Old Cemetery, Northford, New Haven County, Connecticut, United States