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Joseph Bucklin the 5th, the fifth in a line of Joseph Bucklins, was the
18 year old Gaspee Raider that fired the shot that some call the first deliberate shot at an
English military person in the American Revolution. The severely wounded
English captain surrendered the ship, which was then burned and sunk by
the attackers. When Bucklin and his
fellow raiders went without punishment, war was inevitable. |
So if your name is Bucklin, you can feel a real connection with the events
and sacrifices that formed the American Revolution.
History will always record the famous shot of Joseph Bucklin. But
history still does not record much about the man who was the Joseph Bucklin who
did the shooting. We do not know much about the life of Joseph Bucklin 5th
outside his actions on the night of June 9, 1772.
With a 1000 English pound reward posted for his capture (and almost certain
execution if caught) it is little wonder that nothing was known about him during
the American Revolutionary War. When the English army occupied Newport,
Rhode Island, his family must have feared greatly for his safety. His
death at sea before the end of the Revolutionary War erased what might have been
a noted career as distinguished as the Joseph Bucklins that were is forbearers.
The few documented events of his life are listed below.
Joseph Bucklin 5th was born 2 Mar 1954, the son of
Joseph Bucklin the 4th.
(Joseph Bucklin 4th was a wealthy ship captain and merchant in Providence. both
because of the Bucklin family's long and significant history in the area and
because of the considerable merchant activities of Joseph Bucklin 4th, there is
a great deal of information available about Joseph Bucklin 4th.
Click here for some of the information is available
regarding Joseph 4th.)
Joseph 4th and Joseph 5th, in 1772, lived in Providence, Rhode Island, about
3 houses west of the Great Bridge over the Providence River. The
location itself is significant, for those who moved here in a deliberate attempt
to remove from the dominant religious and social authorities intended that this
west side of the river would be liberal in thought.
When Joseph 5th was 14 years old he lived in a location where his father sold
supplies and labor for ship repair activities, as well as merchant sales.
In that year, 1768, his father was master of the brigantine Providence (owned by
his father and two other prominent merchants of Providence) when it was
confiscated for being involved in smuggling, by an English navy ship acting much
as the Gaspee was acting in 1772. So Joseph 5th grew up knowing ships and
knowing the effect of the English customs taxes.
Joseph 5th was physically described 1772 by the Midshipman of the Gaspee, as
follows:
"appeared to be about eighteen years of age, very much marked with the
small pox, light brown hair tied behind, about five feet, five or six inches
high".
Joseph's place in Revolutionary War history is assured because of his shot in
the attack of the Gaspee in 1772.
" * * * Joseph Bucklin, who was
standing on the main thwart by my right side, said to me, 'Ephe, reach me your
gun and I can kill that fellow.'
I reached it to him accordingly,
when, during Capt. Whipple’s replying, Bucklin fired and Dudingston fell, and
Bucklin exclaimed, 'I have killed the rascal.'. * * * "
After Dudingston fell back on the deck of the Gaspee, thinking himself
mortally wounded, Dudingston surrendered the ship to the attacking Rhode Island
men. It is this shot which Rhode Island celebrates each year, in their
Gaspee Days Celebration, as the "First Shot of the Revolutionary War"
Joseph 5th died, lost at sea, in 1781. His death is documented in the
handwritten record (shown above) in the family bible of Joseph Bucklin 4th.
[Original page is preserved in Manuscript room of the Rhode Island Historical
Society.] Joseph 5th is not named in his father's will of 1789, confirming Joseph 5th's
earlier death.
Read why
Joseph Bucklin 5th was probably the Bucklin that
fired the important shot in the capture of the Gaspee (and not Joseph Bucklin
4th).
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