Adam Bingaman | |
|---|---|
| Some land holdings of Adam Bingaman, Mississippi Territory, 1810 | |
| Died | September 27, 1819 Mississippi, United States |
Adam Bingaman (died September 27, 1819), often referred to as Major Bingaman, [1] was an plantation owner and public official in colonial Mississippi and Mississippi Territory in North America.
Christian Bingaman I was the son of John Bingaman, who was from a family of Protestants from the German Palatinate who probably moved first to the colony of Pennsylvania and then to the New River valley of Virginia in roughly 1750. [2] According to the "Preston Register" of people killed, wounded, or taken prisoner in the French and Indian War in Augusta County, Virginia, John Bingaman I and his wife, and their son, Christian Bingaman I's brother Adam Bingaman, were killed by the Shawnee (Šaawanwaki) on July 3, 1755. [3] Christian Bingaman I and his brother John Bingaman II both fought with the British in the French and Indian War. [4] Christian Bingaman I married Charity Hollowell in 1764. [5] They moved to the Natchez District of Mississippi, then British West Florida. [5] Their children included Adam Bingaman, Christian Bingaman II, and possibly a daughter named Catherine Bingaman. [5] One of the Christians Bingaman was awarded a 600-acre land grant by the British government on October 11, 1777. [6] Christian Bingaman I died in 1778 in West Feliciana in the present-day state of Louisiana, just down stream on the Mississippi from Natchez. [5]
The Adam Bingaman who was in Mississippi Territory political offices is believed to have been the brother of Catherine Brashears and Christian Bingaman II, who are said to have first settled near Gibsonsport on Bayou Pierre in 1777. [7] They may have lived in the Ohio Country first before coming down the river. [7]
Christian Bingaman II, along with Anthony Hutchins, Thaddeus Lyman, Thomas Lyman, Jacob Blomart, Philip Alston, John Alston, and Jacob Winfrey, was involved in a failed attempt to prevent Spanish takeover of West Florida in 1781. [8] He and allies were part of the rebel force that fled "to the Cumberland settlements in Tennessee". [9] He was later pardoned and permitted to return to the Natchez District. [9] When Spanish loyalists seized the property of one John Blommart, who had been a part of the conspiracy, an Adam Bingaman bought "his home in the town of Natchez at public auction and then sold it to merchant Alexander Moore for $600". [10]
The Bingamans eventually had a plantation near St. Catherine's Creek in Adams County called Fatherland. [7] This plantation was located on the site of what had once been the Grand Village of the Natchez. [11] The Bingamans possibly lived for a time at Bayou Sara in Louisiana. [12] However, according to a descendant, Christian Bingaman II "saw greater opportunities for farming in old Feliciana Parish, La. He made his last move to this area. Christian Bingaman bought a plantation near St. Francisville where he built a home called 'Retreat'." [7]
In November 1782, Adam Bingaman married Anne Shield McIntosh, the widow of trader Alexander McIntosh. [13] In 1784, he bought a plantation from John Woods. [14] In the 1785 organizing act for Bourbon County, Georgia, the following settlers were named justices of the peace: Tacitus Gaillard, Thomas Green, Sutton Banks, Nicolas Long, William Davenport, Nathaniel Christmas, William McIntosh Jr., Benjamin Farar, Cato West, Thomas Marston Green, William Anderson, Adam Bingaman, and John Ellis. [15] Also in 1785 Francisco Bouligny recommended to Spanish governor Esteban Rodríguez Miró "Don Adam Bingaman, lieutenant of militia" to be captain or commissary "in the bayou of St. Catherine," and Christian Bingaman as one among secondary options. [16]
In 1789, along with members of the Green family, Stephen Minor, Manuel Fescada, William Dunbar, Abraham Ellis, and Ebenezer Rees, he joined a militia company organized by Governor Gayoso called Compañía Real Carlos. [17] In the 18th century his plantation land and enslaved labor force produced predominantly tobacco. [17] In 1789 Bingaman's operation yielded 40,000 lb (18,000 kg) of tobacco. [18] Perhaps in the early 1790s he married second Charlotte Catherine Surget, the fourth of 11 children born to Pierre Surget and Catherine Hubbard. [19] The Surgets had arrived in Natchez around 1785. [19]
Bingaman was a trustee of the Natchez Hospital that was organized by George Cochran around 1800. [20] He was appointed to the first Mississippi territorial legislative council, in company with John Ellis, by John Adams. [21] [22] He declined a second appointment by Thomas Jefferson in 1802. [23]
Bingaman died September 27, 1819, at his home in Mississippi. [24] His widow, C. C. Bingaman, died in 1841. [25] Among their children was Adam Lewis Bingaman. [26]
Between 1837 and 1844, pioneering American antiquarian-archaeologist Montroville Wilson Dickeson excavated burial mounds and caches found on the Bingaman plantation. [27] After A. L. Bingaman's death, ownership passed to his cousin James Surget. [28] The main house at Fatherland burned down in 1875. [29]
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