Shadrach Walton Explained

Shadrach Walton
Birth Date:1658
Birth Place:New Castle, New Hampshire, British America
Death Date:October 3,
Death Place:Portsmouth, New Hampshire, British America
Spouse:Mary Nutter [1]
Known For:Commanding a regiment during the siege of Port Royal 1710

Shadrach Walton (1658 3 October 1741) was a British colonial administrator and soldier in the Province of New Hampshire.

Military and administrative career

Walton commanded Fort William and Mary before 1684, and again from 1697 to 1708. He was appointed ensign in 1690, when New Hampshire and Massachusetts were reunited. He was a selectman of Portsmouth town from 1688 to 1692. He served as a judge of the Court of Common Pleas from 1695-1698, and again 1716-1733. He commanded the New Hampshire provincial troops during the siege of Port Royal 1710, and commanded a combined regiment of New Hampshire and Rhode Island troops during the Quebec Expedition 1711. He was appointed by mandamus a member of the provincial council in 1716, on which he served until 1733.[2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]

Biography

In 1682 Walton's property and his father's inn were the victims of a "stone-throwing devil" that harassed them in a series of poltergeist-like events. Lithobolia, a narrative of the case, was published 1698 in London.[9]

In 1685 Walton's father deeded him two houses, a brewery, livestock, and 200 acres of land.[10]

During King William's War, Walton led an expedition in 1690 to relieve Fort Loyal, Maine under siege from a French and Wabanaki force, but arrived too late to save the inhabitants from the massacre of Falmouth.[11]

In 1697, Walton appeared before the Board of Trade in London where he claimed that since Massachusetts was not able to defend New Hampshire, and New Hampshire men were better forest fighters, there was no advantage for New Hampshire to be joined with Massachusetts.[12]

After the fall of Port Royal in 1710, Walton led a force from New Hampshire on a search and destroy mission against hostiles along the coast of Maine, and managed to kill a small number of Native Americans.[13] In 1711 he led two companies in a similar operation against the Western Abenaki of today's Vermont, but failed to make contact with them.[14]

During Dummer's War Walton commanded a two hundred men force, sent to the frontier in Maine.[15] He then participated in the 1726 peace negotiations with the Penobscot and their allies.[16]

References

Cited literature

Notes and References

  1. https://www.geni.com/people/Col-Shadrack-Walton/6000000020025928127 "Shadrack Walton." Geni.
  2. M'Crie 1825, p. 252.
  3. Belknap 1831, p. 174.
  4. Whiton 1834, p. 61.
  5. Potter 1866, pp. 15, 29, 29.
  6. Anonymous 1905, p. 101.
  7. Lyons 2010, p. 202, note 156.
  8. http://www.1713treatyofportsmouth.com/signers.cfm Portsmouth Peace Treaty of 1713.
  9. Baker 2007, p. 9, and passim.
  10. https://babbunabridged.com/2014/07/12/george-walton-the-stone-throwing-devil/ "George Walton & “The Stone Throwing Devil”." The Official Blog of the Babb Family Association.
  11. http://blog.lyonshistory.org/content/captain-joseph-ring-1664-1705 "Captain Joseph Ring 1664-1705." Lyons History Blog.
  12. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-state-papers/colonial/america-west-indies/vol15/pp367-379 "America and West Indies: February 1697, 16-20." Calendar of State Papers Colonial, America and West Indies.
  13. Drake 1897, p. 265.
  14. Calloway 1990. p. 108.
  15. Eames 2011, p. 85.
  16. http://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/evans/N05687.0001.001/1:3.1.1?rgn=div3;view=fulltext "The Conference with the Eastern Indians, at the ratification of the peace, held at Falmouth in Casco-Bay, in July and August, 1726." Evans Early American Imprint Collection.