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John Annable

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Kirk Ireton, , Derbyshire, England
Death: July 04, 1814 (62)
Moulinette, Stormont, Ontario, Canada
Immediate Family:

Son of John Lewis Annable and Catherine Annable
Husband of Mary Annable
Ex-husband of Ann Annable
Father of John Annable; Catherine Fletcher; Mary Rowley; George Annable; Joshua Annable and 5 others
Brother of Sarah Mary Annable; Thomas Annable; George Annable; Elizabeth Annable; Joshua Annable and 2 others

Managed by: Aneesa Badu
Last Updated:

About John Annable

John Annable, was born in Derbyshire, England and baptized in the village of Kirk Ireton on 28 July 1751.1 His parents were John Lewis Annable and Catherine Clark. In 1774 John sailed to America at age 23.

A few years prior to John’s arrival in the colonial Province of New York in 1774, a group of men had petitioned the provincial government to create a new county to be named after Gov. William Tryon. Many of these men of Tryon County were Loyalists during the Revolutionary War.3 John Annable and a partner, James Massie, leased a farm near the Mohawk River in Tryon County from John Turnecliffe and built a house. The following year, for a sum of £50, they purchased two hundred acres of woodlands on the Antigo River from a Mr. Wells. To this land they added 19 head of cattle and 7 horses.

Governor Tryon reported that the population of Tryon County in 1775 was comprised of ten thousand white inhabitants and two thousand Indian warriors. New York had long been the home of the Mohawks and related tribes that had aligned themselves with the British during the years of European occupancy.5 The Johnson family was particularly dominant in the concerns of the county. Sir William Johnson was His Brittanic Majesty’s Superintendent General of Indian affairs in North America, Colonel of the Six Nations, a Major General in the British service, and was married to a Mohawk princess, Molly Brandt.

Molly’s father, known as Joseph Brandt, was a chief of the Mohawks and aide to Sir William. Sir William died in 1774, and his son, Sir John Johnson, became heir to his estate. This Johnson led the Loyalists of Tryon County to Canada, and to wage battle against their former home and neighbors. Details of these bloody episodes can be found in the book Annals of Tryon County; or The Border Warfare of New-York, During the Revolution by William W. Campbell, published in 1831.

In 1775, a county Committee endeavored to have all the citizens sign an association with the revolutionary colonials.7 It’s doubtful that John Annable would have complied with the request. Probably as a consequence, he and Massie were arrested in May 1776, the same month that Sir John Johnson broke his parole and fled to Canada. Annable and Massie were transported to Albany and confined for three weeks.

Somehow they managed to escaped and joined Johnson’s forces in the Niagara region of Canada. For the remainder of the war, Annable served in Captain Anderson’s first battalion of Sir John’s regiment, part of the group known as Butler’s Rangers.

As for Tryon County, according to a 1932 history: “Of the ten thousand white inhabitants, one-third had espoused the royal cause and fled to Canada, one-third had been driven from their homes or slain in battle, and of the remaining third, three hundred were widows and two thousand were orphan children.”11 After the war, the county name was changed to Montgomery.

Though Loyalists were permitted to return to the (now) United States without fear of prosecution, John Annable decided to remain in Canada. He was probably aware that hostilities between the two nations would continue for years. As a “United Empire Loyalist,” he received an allotment of 200 acres in the vicinity of Cornwall, Ontario, near the town of Moulinette (it was still part of Quebec at the time).

In 1783 or 1784, John married Ann Pescod, the daughter of John and Mary Pescod. They had four sons and four daughters together. Ann died in 1799 at the age of 32. John remarried the next year, to a woman named Mary Sheets, and had three more children. The family was part of the Methodist Church in Moulinette.

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John Annable's Timeline

1751
July 28, 1751
Kirk Ireton, , Derbyshire, England
1785
1785
1787
1787
1790
April 6, 1790
1791
September 7, 1791
Cornwall Twp., Stormont County, Ontario, Canada
1796
1796
St. Andrew's Presbyterian, Williamstown, Glengarry, Ontario, Canada
1805
February 7, 1805
1806
May 13, 1806
1814
July 4, 1814
Age 62
Moulinette, Stormont, Ontario, Canada
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