
Facts suggesting Abial Brown as a Gaspee Raider.
It is logical to identify Abial Brown, (aka Abiel) born 24 Apr 1755, as a Gaspee raider. The
probability is based on the
limited historical facts that obituaries, in the 1930's, of his
descendents consistently reference a family tradition, going back to persons who
would have known Gaspee raiders, that their Brown ancestor
had been one of those involved in the raid on the Gaspee. For example:
Providence Journal, August 30,
1926 --- ELIZABETH BROWN IS
BURIED TO-DAY FROM OLD HOME --- Granddaughter of Pioneer, Whipple Brown, One
of Burners of Gaspee, Dead at Age of 90.--Had Letters from Many Presidents.
Funeral services for Elizabeth W.
Brown, granddaughter of Whipple Brown of Gaspee-burning fame,
were held this afternoon from her home, 17 Planet Street. Miss Brown, who
would have been 90 on Sept. 24, was the daughter of William Whipple Brown.
Her grandfather, listed in the first Providence city directory issued in
1824 as a mariner, was one of the "conspirators" who burned the
schooner....Three granddaughters of the Revolutionary character have
occupied the old homestead their lives long, until death has one by one
removed them. Maria Brown is the only one left of the three.
This reporter for this newspaper obituary for Abial's great-granddaughter
reports the family tradition of the family ancestor being one of the persons who
burned the Gaspee and attributes the Gaspee event to this 90 year old lady's "grandfather", Whipple Brown. Whipple
Brown was born in 1791, too late to have been involved in the Gaspee burning.
Yet is unlikely for a prominent ladies of society
(as the Abial Brown descendents were, to have made up a false story about
their grandfather. So it is most
likely that the newspaper reporter received inaccurate information from some
surviving friend who told the reporter Elizabeth Brown telling told stories of
her
"grandfather" [instead of her "great-grandfather"].
Whipple Brown's father Abial was, in 1772, the right age for the
revolutionary events, to wit: about 18 years old. Eighteen years old was
the age category of known raider Bowen and most of his "youthful friends", as
Bowen described them, who boarded the boats to attack the Gaspee.
Abial Brown and Joseph Bucklin 5th were both about the same age and were
cousins. See relationship chart. The Joseph Bucklin family and the Abial Brown family were both early
inhabitants of Rehoboth, went back several generations of living in the same
Rehoboth / Attleboro area, and the two families had intermarried. genealogical information and
Abial's pedigree chart.
These facts are suggestive of similar activities by Abial and Joseph
Bucklin 5th and of some likelihood that if Joseph was on the Gaspee attack, Abial was also.
Known real estate records do not show where Abial Brown Sr. and Jr. lived in
1772. At least by 1816 the Brown homestead was at 17 Planet Street in
Providence. This was next door to Sabin's Tavern, from whence the raiding
crew set forth to capture the Gaspee. The Brown family decedents possessed
a family-owned gavel reportedly made from one of the floor joists of the old
Sabin Tavern when it was torn down in 1891. The Brown family were
obviously aware and proud of the significance of the Sabin Tavern as the meeting
site for the Gaspee raiding party.
Abial Jr. was alive on July 4th, 1827 and paraded on that date.
[Providence Journal, 4 July 1827.] William Whipple Brown reported
that Abial was paraded in an "open barouche" (a formal elegant carriage).
Inasmuch as there were plenty of Revolutionary War soldiers still around, and
known Gaspee raiders were paraded in open barouches in the Bristol 4th of July
parades, it again suggests Gaspee involvement by Abiel.
Genealogical Information regarding Abial Brown, Jr.
Abial was a second cousin of Joseph Bucklin 5th, who fired the shot that caused
the immediate surrender of the Gaspee.
See that relationship in graph form.
Indeed, Abial, on both his fathers, and mother's side, was a direct
descendent of William Bucklin who settled in the Rehoboth area of Rhode Island
in about 1645. See that
relationship in graph form. The Bucklins and Browns, from the
1600's had lived in the same area and had intermarried. Not only was
Abial's mother a Bucklin, when she died Abial's father then married the
((Bucklin) sister of
the deceased. Interesting genealogical facts regarding Abial and his
immediate relatives are recited in a genealogical appendix regarding Abial
Brown, Jr. E.g., one of Abial's Bucklin uncles was Captain of a Rehoboth Minute Man
company that seized English arms and ammunition 10 days before the English
marched on a like mission to seize colonist arms and ammunition in Lexington.)
Military History of Abial Brown, Jr.
Abial Brown, Jr. was active in the Revolutionary War, but without any special
rank or distinguishing adventures except that of a loyal and hardworking soldier living through difficult times,
hunger, bad weather, long marches, and noteworthy battles. The Revolutionary War Pension record #S21659 of Abial (aka Abiel) Brown
(Jr.) shows that he enlisted from Attleborough in May 1775 into Captain Moses Richardson's Company of
Colonel Timothy Walker's Regiment, and was
stationed for eight months near Boston until his release date in December 31,
1775. In January 1776 he re-enlisted as a Sergeant in Captain David Dexter's
Company of Colonel Christopher Lippitt's Regiment of Rhode Island Troops where
he served out his time stationed in Rhode Island, New York, and New Jersey. In
New Jersey, General Washington personally appealed to his regiment to re-enlist
for an extra month, which he did, resulting in a total of 13 months service
under Lippitt. A few months later, in October 1777, he was
commissioned as an Adjutant to Colonel Chad Brown, commanding the Regiment of
Rhode Island Troops, serving but one month in that capacity. In 1779 / 1780
he was living back in Attleborough, MA and was drafted as a private into Captain
Robinson's Company of Colonel Tyler's Regiment of Massachusetts Troops
which were stationed for two months at Bristol, RI. Abial's total service time was 24
months. The application for the pension, by his widow Lucy went to the US
Department of the Interior, Bureau of Pensions, which, in assessing Lucy's claim
noted that Abial Brown fought in the Battles of White Plains, Trenton, and
Princeton.
Robert Perkins Brown (1850-1921), the son of William Whipple Brown, wrote the following
statement and gave it to his family to preserve what his father had
told him about Abial's military service..
"Abial Brown went to Boston with the Rhode Island Militia,
and participated in the battle of Bunker Hill, handling a musket in the
skirmish. He afterwards enlisted as 3rd Sergeant in the Seventh (7th) Capt.
David Dexter's Company of Christopher Lippitt's Regiment, which was ordered
enlisted by the General Assembly of Rhode Island for one year, from 18th
January 1776. In September, 1773, the Regiment marched westward after the
disastrous action on Long Island, and joined Gen. Washington's troops in New
Jersey. On the 31st of December, 1775, at Crosswicks, New Jersey, the
Regiment at solicitation of Gen. Washington through Gen. Mifflin,
volunteered. another months service beyond the 18th January, 1777, when
their enlistment expired and participated in defense of bridge at Trenton,
which successful defense, together with captures made Princeton, turned the
tide of war in favor of the colonies.
As proof that Abial Brown served through the campaign the
pension stands as evidence, which Judge Benjamin Cowell obtained for him
sometime subsequent to 1830; and every 4th of July he was paraded in the
procession in an open barouche so long as health permitted. He lived at 17
Planet St. in the house now owned and occupied by myself, where he died
April 11th, 1839.
The following is a memorandum of the authority for the
above statement. William Whipple Brown (my father) and Judge Benjamin
Cowell's "Spirit of '76 in Rhode Island". Page 35, and Appendix B.
--Robert Perkins Brown "