James Trousdale (Dec 16, 1736 - Dec 24, 1818) was a captain in the American Revolution [1] and father of William Trousdale, Governor of Tennessee. [2] He was the son of John and Elizabeth (Carraway) Trousdale, who were born in Ulster Province, (now Northern) Ireland. [3] With his second wife and children, he accompanied his parents from Pennsylvania to Orange County, North Carolina, settling on the Haw River. [4] Trousdale's first recorded grant of land was by the State, 200 acres on the waters of Haw Creek, south of Hawfields, 3 Sep 1779. [5]
James Trousdale was a soldier in the Revolutionary War. [6] He was a captain in the North Carolina Militia, 1780–1781. [7] He commanded a company under General Francis Marion (The Swamp Fox) of North Carolina patriots; marched to Charleston, SC and built breastworks, etc., discharged on March 24, 1780, before the town surrendered. [8] He was severely wounded, and until his death, carried a lightning scar made by a saber in the hands of one of Banastre Tarleton's men at the Battle of Guilford Court House, March 15, 1781. [9] He was captured during the Battle of Hillsborough, 12 Sep 1781.; [10] He and his company were with George Washington at the Siege of Yorktown for the surrender of Cornwallis, 19 Oct 1781. [11] [12] [13]
In the Revolution, he began his active military service as a captain in 1779 and commanded at least three companies. [14]
It is believed that Trousdale was an unnamed member of the ill-fated rebels at the Battle of Alamance on 16 May 1771. In February 1781, under Nathaniel Green, he was sent to oppose Cornwallis' army in the Battle of Guilford Court House. Following Green's withdrawal the North Carolina Council Extraordinary, in a questionable manner, sentenced "all those who had fled from Guilford to 12 months service as Continentals." [15] On recovery from his wound Trousdale was probably given command of one of those reformed "Continental" units. [16] Part of this service includes "six months guarding the jail at Hillsboro". [17]
For his services during the American Revolution, Trousdale obtained from North Carolina, a grant for 640 acres of land situated in what was then Davidson County, now Sumner County, Tennessee. [18] This land was paid for in scrip or certificates issued by North Carolina. Trousdale moved from North Carolina and settled on this tract of land in 1796. The land was then covered by a dense forest. Here he cleared the land and began to cultivate the soil. But, on the 6th of November, 1801, the Legislature of Tennessee appointed commissioners to select and purchase land upon which to lay out a town to be named Gallatin, which was to be the county seat of Sumner County. The commissioners selected the farm of Trousdale, and the town of Gallatin, TN now stands upon the old Trousdale farm. [19] [20] In 1802 the land for the county seat was purchased from Trousdale. [21]
To honor the Trousdale military history, a monument was placed on the front lawn of Trousdale Place, a home built c. 1813 on the original property owned by Trousdale. The home is on the National List of Historic Places. [22]
He married first Elizabeth Ferguson by whom he had five children: John, Alexander, Ann, Mary and Elizabeth. She died in 1774. He married his second wife, Elizabeth Dobbins, a member of a prominent family in North Carolina, in 1775. [23] They had 10 children: James who married Malinda May; Robert who married first Sidney Wynham and second Abigail Robbins; Jonathan who married first Sally Josey, second Elizabeth Young; Catherine who married Matthew Cowan; Agnes; Sarah who married Matthew Neal; William Trousdale, who became the governor of Tennessee; Bryson who married first Susan Hicks and second Maria Smith; Jesse and Nancy. He died in 1818 in Gallatin, TN. [24] In his will he left the majority of his estate to his wife Elizabeth and sons William and Bryson including 4 slaves: Bill, Penny, Lo and Delia. September 1818, copy on file at the Wisconsin Historical Society Library in Madison, WI. In a codicil, however, James is called "my beloved son" and was given the "House Bible".
Francis Nash was a slave owner and brigadier general in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. Prior to the war, he was a lawyer, public official, and politician in Hillsborough, North Carolina, and was heavily involved in opposing the Regulator movement, an uprising of settlers in the North Carolina piedmont between 1765 and 1771. Nash was also involved in North Carolina politics, representing Hillsborough on several occasions in the colonial North Carolina General Assembly.
Benjamin Williams was the 11th and 14th Governor of the U.S. state of North Carolina, from 1799 to 1802 and from 1807 to 1808. He was the first of two North Carolina Governors since the American Revolution to serve nonconsecutive terms.
William Trousdale was an American soldier and politician. He served as the 13th governor of Tennessee from 1849 to 1851, and was United States Minister to Brazil from 1853 to 1857. He fought under Andrew Jackson in the Creek War, the War of 1812 and the Second Seminole War, and commanded the U.S. Fourteenth Infantry in the Mexican–American War. His military exploits earned him the nickname, "War Horse of Sumner County."
Colonel John Hogan was an American planter and soldier from Orange County, North Carolina. He was a member of the North Carolina state senate in 1779.
James Glasgow served as the first North Carolina Secretary of State, from 1777 to 1798.
Trousdale Place is a historic mansion in Gallatin, Sumner County, Tennessee. It was the home of John H. Bowen, local attorney and member of the United States House of Representatives, and of governor of Tennessee William Trousdale.
Joseph Hardin Sr. was an Assemblyman for the Province of North Carolina, and was a signatory of the Tryon Resolves. Early in the War for Independence, as a member of the militia from Tryon County, Hardin fought the Cherokee allies of Britain along the western frontier. Later in the war, having taken his family over the Appalachian Mountains to the Washington District for safety against the advance of the Red Coats out of South Carolina, Hardin joined the Overmountain Men. He saw action at the Battle of Ramsour's Mill and the decisive Battle of Kings Mountain. Following the peace with Britain, Hardin was a co-founder and second Speaker of the House for the State of Franklin; and an Assemblyman in the Southwest Territory before its statehood as Tennessee.
Duncan Stewart was a veteran of the American Revolutionary War, slave owner, frontiersman, and politician. He holds the very rare distinction of having served three separate states state legislatures over his life, in North Carolina, Tennessee, and Mississippi.
Thomas Parker (1609–1683) was one of the founders of Reading, Massachusetts, and a deacon and one of the founders of the 12th Congregational Church in Massachusetts.
William "Bloody Bill" Cunningham (1756–1787) was an American loyalist infamous for perpetrating a series of bloody massacres in South Carolina's backcountry in the fall of 1781 as commander of a Tory militia regiment in the Revolutionary War. Though his family were loyal to the British crown, Cunningham initially enlisted in the Continental Army as part of the State of South Carolina's 3rd regiment in 1775. His tenure in the rebel army was an unhappy one and Cunningham changed sides to fight for the British in 1778. He earned the nickname "Bloody Bill" for the violent, ruthless nature of his raids on rebels and patriot civilians.
Anthony Bledsoe was an American surveyor, politician and military colonel. He served in the French and Indian War and the American Revolutionary War.
The Wilmington District Brigade was an administrative division of the North Carolina militia during the American Revolutionary War (1776–1783). This unit was established by the North Carolina Provincial Congress on May 4, 1776, and disbanded at the end of the war.
Benjamin Herndon (1749–1819) was a colonel in the Wilkes County Regiment, a Patriot unit of the North Carolina militia in the American Revolution. After the war, he was elected to represent Wilkes County, North Carolina in the state legislature: twice as a senator and twice as a member of the house. After 1790, he moved with his family to Newberry County, South Carolina where he built a plantation called "Mollihon".
Thomas Gillespie was a large plantation owner in mid-to-late 18th-century North Carolina and served as commissary of the Rowan County Regiment in the North Carolina militia during the American Revolution. He spent his early life in Augusta County, Virginia before migrating to Anson County, North Carolina in about 1750, where he lived most of his life on Sills Creek in the area that became Rowan County, North Carolina in 1753. He and his wife and son were the first white settlers west of the Yadkin River. He owned a plantation of over 1,000 acres on Sills Creek in Rowan County, as well as 6,000 acres in the area of western North Carolina that became part of the state of Tennessee in 1796. He was an early elder in the Thyatira Presbyterian Church in Rowan County, which had been established by 1750. Thomas was the great-grandfather of U.S. President James K. Polk through the lineage of his daughter Lydia, who married Captain James Knox and gave birth to Jane Gracey Knox, mother of the President.
Cornelia Deaderick Glenn was an American society hostess and temperance activist who, as the wife of Robert Broadnax Glenn, served as First Lady of North Carolina from 1905 to 1909. She was involved in the temperance movement and avidly supported her husband's 1908 Prohibition campaign that banned liquor statewide. A devout Presbyterian, she was the founder of one of Winston-Salem's first benevolent societies.
William T. Caho was a lawyer, public official, and state legislator in North Carolina.
The Battle of Raft Swamp was fought near Red Springs, North Carolina in Robeson County, on October 15, 1781 during the American War of Independence. Raft Swamp was well known for being a refuge for Loyalists during the American Revolution. On October 15, 1781, in the course of Gen. Griffith Rutherford's expedition against Wilmington, the Patriot cavalry vanguard commanded by Maj. Joseph Graham briefly engaged with some mounted Loyalists of Col. Hector "One-Eyed Hector" McNeill on Rockfish Creek. Major Graham's calvary charged and broke the Loyalist cavalry and led to fierce combat on the narrow causeway, as well as another clash on a second causeway. A series of charges and confused engagements resulted in the Loyalist forces scattering when darkness brought the action to a conclusion with the Patriots occupying the area. This would be the last battle fought in North Carolina.Today, a state historic marker entitled with the name of the swamp denotes the site of the engagement. It reads as follows: "After the Tory victory at McPhaul's Mill, the Whigs routed the Tories near here on Oct. 15, 1781 and broke their resistance in the area."