Saturday, July 04, 2009

An American Revolutionary War Story


Here's my 4th of July story having to do with the Revolutionary War...

My mother was Canadian and she told me how two of her ancestors were American. One was Charles Roux, who turned out to be French, then moved to Fort Wayne, Indiana as a boy, and the other was Pennyslvania Dutch, George Washington Cramer. But I couldn't find any George Washington Cramer in records in America. So I switched back to Canadian records in Kingston, Ontario where he married his wife. And discovered he had been born in Canada and never set foot in America. So why in the world did he have the name George Washington???
My mother was sure that if I dug far enough, I'd find her American roots and could claim we were Daughters of the American Revolution.
Here is the story of the American Revolution as it pertains to my mother's ancestor. Lorenz Kraemer was born in Essenheim, Hessen, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany, and had family in New York, who had come over earlier to the States. As a young man, he had no funds to travel from Germany to America. When a Hessen prince was recruiting men to fight in the war against the Americans as mercernaries hired by the British, Lorenz joined up, and they were shipped to Quebec in 1776. But he wasn't interested in fighting the Americans. He thought their cause noble, and deserted as a member of 3rd Company, under the command of Col. Joh. Christoph Lenz. Johannes Ranau, his companion, and he disappeared on a march between Nobelton and Barrington in western Mass in 1777.
He then made his way to NY where he married a German woman and attended the Reformed Dutch Church Called Christs Church, Ghent, Columbia, New York. So that's where the "Pennsylvania Dutch" notion came into play. His son, Abraham, was born in NY. So there's my mother's American connection. :)
Lorenz moved with his children to Quebec after his wife died, married a French woman, and was part of the Militia there, so he wasn't afraid of fighting, just didn't want to fight as a mercenary against the Americans. He thought so much of George Washington, he praised his efforts to his sons and told of the war and how he would not fight the Americans and when Abraham Cramer's second son was born, he named him George Washington Cramer. George also named one of his sons George Washington.
But I'm afraid we can't be included in the Daughters of the American Revolution. And so that's my American Revolution story on my mother's side. Her father was Welsh, married into an Irish family and they came over from Ireland and ended up in Quebec, so no American roots there either. And most of the rest of her family were Highland Scots who settled in Prince Edward Island.
But, as I was digging through my dad's history, I discovered Henry Temple Sr on his mother's side gave supplies to the Revolutionary Troops on June 1780 and 20 Apr 1781, proving his patrotism--"For sundreies furnished and cash paid the milita of NC, VA and SC" Re bo luntionery Army Accounts of SC, Book C, page 52 and 119.
:)
So I guess we do have some patriotic bones, not just the fighting sort, in the early family tree. :)
My dad made up for it though. His grandfather broke horses for the cavalry in WWI, and Dad went in as a 16 year old to fight during WWII, wanting to ride in the cavalry with a saber raised. Only when he arrived, the horses had been moved out to the Burma Campaign and he was stuck mucking out stalls. Sooo, he put in for a transfer and became a tail gunner, was shot down on his 13th mission and after surviving 16 months in a German prisoner of war camp, was freed by Patton's troops and continued to serve a life of adventure in the Air Force.
Happy 4th, Everyone!!!

7 comments:

Nicole North said...

Wow!! Awesome true stories, Terry! You have a very patriotic family!

Terry Spear/Terry Lee Wilde said...

Thanks, Nicole! Even my mother's father was a doctor in the Canadian forces during WWI, and her French grandfather Roux, was in Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders, although he didn't see any battle time either. :) Her mother had a picture of him in uniform with a rifle, but it was lost in time.

Carol Ericson said...

Wow, Terry, interesting history. How'd you discover all of that? I can find very little about my relatives - both sets of grandparents immigrated from Italy and Sweden in the early 1900's - I have found most of them on the ship mainfests on the Ellis Island website. My husband is 1/8 Cherokee, which makes my kids 1/16 and I believe eligible to be tribe members. I'm thinking of hiring one of the genealogical searchers to get the proof. Anyway, happy 4th and thanks for the patriotic story.

Carly Carson said...

That's a very interesting history, Terry. I know someone in my family has done that kind of research, but I can't even remember who. (I'm from a very large family.) But the Scots side of me also emigrated to Canada and some of them settled in PEI, so they must know your relatives. Small place. I would love to revisit there some day.

Carly

Terry Spear/Terry Lee Wilde said...

Hi Carol! What I did was did a search of LDS microfilm for some of it, but also I was on Ancestry.com. Plus if you know where people came in, you can often search local areas, like in Fort Wayne, IN, they actually have people who will look up obits and whatnot. That's how I found out that my mother's grandfather Roux had moved in with his dad, and that his dad had been born in Selencourt. When I researched LDS records for Selencourt online, I found tons of Rouxs. And all of them were related. But to really see the connection, I ordered the microfilm. On my dad's German side, Wilde, I couldn't find the connection, but found the wife had come over on a ship's manifest from Germany. And then she and his grandfather had married in NY. From there, I located where he'd worked in Chicago, and finally in Washington. These were in phone book registers. :) Libraries have genealogy records also. Ancestry.com is great for doing census records searches. I was trying to find where some of my MacNeills had gone and they had ended up from Manitoba, during terrible flooding, to Michigan, but then returned to Manitoba. Also, Rootsweb...post searches in the areas you're looking for and by name searches. I was trying fo find my MacNeills from PEI and the story of the Duke of Argyle's daughter who ran off with a commoner MacNeill. Just a little oral history. A fellow distant cousin sent me a copy of my mother's great grandfather's letter written about the saga in 1905. So there's a lot you can actually do online to make connections! :) My family tree grew from a few to thousands. :)

Terry Spear/Terry Lee Wilde said...

Carly, what was your family's name in PEI? I have never been there, but my mother and I wanted to go before she died. It's small like you said so we may even be related. lol, never know!

Carly Carson said...

Terry,

Both of my grandmothers had the maiden name of MacDonald. In fact, my parents had to do some geneological research to prove they weren't related within the 3rd degree in order to get married. (The Catholic Church has stricter requirements than the state.)

I think there's a bridge to PEI now from what my relatives say. It was a boat ride only back in the day. You should go if you can.

Carly