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Cotton, Talitha

Cotton, Talitha

Female 1829 - 1919  (~ 90 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Cotton, Talitha was born in Feb 1829 in Austintown, Mahoning Co., OH (daughter of Cotton, John and Parkhurst, Catherine); died in Jul 1919 in DeWitt, Clinton Co., IA.

    Talitha married Pascal, George W. on 11 Mar 1851. George was born on 01 May 1829 in Metz, France; died in 1894 in DeWitt, Clinton Co., IA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Cotton, John was born on 31 Dec 1791 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA (son of Cotton, John and Little, Lucy Tyler); died in 1870 in DeWitt, Clinton Co., IA.

    John married Parkhurst, Catherine on 12 Feb 1825. Catherine was born in 1791; died in 1829 in Austintown, Mahoning Co., OH. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Parkhurst, Catherine was born in 1791; died in 1829 in Austintown, Mahoning Co., OH.
    Children:
    1. 1. Cotton, Talitha was born in Feb 1829 in Austintown, Mahoning Co., OH; died in Jul 1919 in DeWitt, Clinton Co., IA.
    2. Cotton, Aylett Rains was born in 1826; died in 1912.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Cotton, JohnCotton, John was born on 10 Jan 1746 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA (son of Cotton, Theophilus and Sanders, Martha); died on 01 Feb 1831 in Austintown, Trumbull Co., OH; was buried in Austintown, Mahoning Co., OH.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Military: Revolutionary War Veteran
    • Tombstone Photo: Austintown, Mahoning Co., OH; Cotton Family Cemetery

    Notes:

    Revolutionary War Service; Served as a Quartermaster, Ensign, and Lieutenant in MA
    1776 - 8 Months (Quartermaster) Col. Theophilus Cotton's Rgmt Marched to Roxbury
    ? (Ensign) Capt. Elijah Crocker's Co., Col. John Bailey's Rgmt Appointed as soon as the previous campaign ended
    Thru 1778 (Lieutenant) Capt. Job Whipple's Co., Col. Rufus Putnam's Rgmt. Rank of Lieutenant was conferred on May 10, 1780, beginning on Jan 1, 1777. He was at the takiing of Gen. Burgoyne in 1778.
    Thru Oct 3, 1780 (Quartermaster) Gen. John Nixon's Brigade Received Honorable Discharge

    John married Little, Lucy Tyler on 29 Jun 1780. Lucy was born on 23 Sep 1757 in Marshfield, Plymouth Co., MA; died on 09 Oct 1837 in Austintown, Mahoning Co., OH; was buried in Austintown, Mahoning Co., OH. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Little, Lucy Tyler was born on 23 Sep 1757 in Marshfield, Plymouth Co., MA; died on 09 Oct 1837 in Austintown, Mahoning Co., OH; was buried in Austintown, Mahoning Co., OH.

    Notes:

    From FindAGrave: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GScid=2280907&GRid=31053457&
    Aged 80 years, 17 days, widow of John Cotton, who is described as a Revolutionary War Veteran. Source: Oct. 31, 1837 edition of Western Reserve Chronicle.

    Married to John Cotton 6-29-1780. She was born 9-22-1757 at Marshfield, Mass., a daughter of Nathaniel Little, Sr., a Revolutionary Soldier, of Marshfield, Mass., and Belpre, Washington County, Ohio, and her mother, Nathaniel's second wife, Mrs. Keziah (Atwood) Adams both of whom died at Belpre, Washington County, Ohio. Keziah names Lucy Cotton in her will recorded in Washington County, Ohio. Lucy died at Austintown, Ohio, 10-9-1837. Children of John and Lucy (Little) Cotton: Theophilus m. 9-4-1808 to Hannah Rush of Youngstown; Joshua Thomas b. 1-3-1785, m. 12-18-1810 Betsey Williamson, also Captain in War of 1812, commanding Capt. Joshua T. Cotton's Co., 8-26 to 11-8-1812; John m. 2-26-1815 to Cynthia Parkhurst; and Lucy.

    Note: Birthdate is provided in Baldwin's Inscriptions, Vol. 40, p. 138.

    Children:
    1. 2. Cotton, John was born on 31 Dec 1791 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA; died in 1870 in DeWitt, Clinton Co., IA.
    2. Cotton, Theophilus was born on 16 May 1781; died on 19 Nov 1841; was buried in Austintown, Mahoning Co., OH.
    3. Cotton, Joshua Thomas was born on 03 Dec 1785 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA; died on 03 Dec 1861 in Ossian, Wells Co., IN.
    4. Cotton, Katherine was born on 25 Dec 1798; died on 04 Mar 1829.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Cotton, TheophilusCotton, Theophilus was born on 31 Mar 1716 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA (son of Cotton, Josiah and Sturtevant, Hannah); died on 18 Feb 1782 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA; was buried in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Military: Revolutionary War Veteran
    • Tombstone Photo: Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA; Burial Hill Cemetery

    Notes:

    From: Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution, 17 Vols.
    Cotton, Theophilus, Plymouth. Colonel; return of provisions delivered said Cotton for his regt., dated Roxbury, June 5 1775; also, general order dated Headquarters, Cambridge, July 22, 1775; said Cotton's regiment assigned to a brigade to be commanded by Brig. Gen. Thomas and form part of right wing of army under Maj. Gen. Ward, and to be stationed at Roxbury; also, muster roll of field and staff officers; engaged April 23, 1775; service to Aug. 1, 1775, 3 mos. 16 days; also, return of field and staff officers dated Camp Roxbury Oct. 7, 1775; also, official record of a ballot by the House of Representatives dated Jan. 31, 1777; said Cotton chosen Colonel of 1st Plymouth Co. regt.; appointment concurred in by Council Jan. 31, 1777; reported commissioned Feb. 1, 1777; also, Colonel, Brig. Gen. Palmer's brigade; return of officers who marched on “a late expedition” to Rhode Island, dated Germantown, Dec. 11, 1777; also, Colonel, 1st Plymouth Co. regt., Brig. Gen. Joseph Cushing's brigade; general return of officers dated July 5, 1779; also, Colonel; appointed March 3, 1781; served until March 31, 1781; [p.13] service, 29 days, at Newport, R. I., by order of His Excellency John Hancock; roll sworn to in Plymouth Co.

    From the Pilgrim Hall Museum web site (http://www.pilgrimhall.org/Rock.htm
    "1774. - The inhabitants of the town [Plymouth], animated by the glorious spirit of liberty which pervaded the Province, and mindful of the precious relic of our forefathers, resolved to consecrate the rock on which they landed to the shrine of liberty. Col. Theophilus Cotton, and a large number of the inhabitants assembled, with about 20 yoke of oxen, for the purpose of its removal. The rock was elevated from its bed by means of large screws; and in attempting to mount it on the carriage, it split asunder, without any violence. As no one had observed a flaw, the circumstance occasioned some surprise. It is not strange that some of the patriots of the day should be disposed to indulge a little in superstition, when in favor of their good cause. The separation of the rock was construed to be ominous of a division of the British Empire. The question was now to be decided whether both parts should be removed, and being decided in the negative, the bottom part was dropped again into its original bed, where it still remains, a few inches above the surface of the earth, at the head of the wharf. The upper portion, weighing many tons, was conveyed to the liberty pole square, front of the meeting-house, where, we believe, waved over it a flag with the far-famed motto, ‘Liberty or death.’ This part of the rock was, on the 4th of July, 1834, removed to Pilgrim Hall, and placed in front of that edifice under the charge of the Pilgrim Society."
    From History of the Town of Plymouth by James Thacher, 1835

    The Almost-Battle of Marshfield
    By Patrick Browne

    An 1885 depiction of the action along "Battle Road," April 19, 1775 from "A Brief History of the United States"
    I have been writing quite a bit lately (separately from this blog) about the start of the Revolution…a long term project which I hope to publish…well, in this lifetime would be ideal. As one researches the provincial militia and minuteman companies that were engaged in the Battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775 it is striking just how many communities responded. Men had been preparing and drilling for this day for months, and when the word came, they were ready. Companies engaged that day came from as far as Dracut on the New Hampshire border and Marblehead on the North Shore. And there were companies en route from all over New England that did not arrive in time to see action.
    However, only a few Plymouth County companies marched for Lexington that day. On the South Shore of Massachusetts, the minutemen had Redcoats of their own to deal with. This is one of those curious episodes in history that emphasizes how confusing must have been those first days of revolution.
    Marshfield, Massachusetts, about 30 miles south of Boston, was a highly unusual community in 1775 in that loyalists were dominant there. The town's leading men were for the King. Fearing for their safety amidst so many patriots in neighboring towns, the gentlemen of Marshfield actually petitioned General Gage in Boston, requesting a detachment of the King's troops be stationed in their town.
    Gage was only too happy to grant their request, pleased that someone in Massachusetts had, for a change, asked for his help. He sent a detachment of 100 men from the 4th Regiment of Foot under the command of Captain Nesbit Balfour. They brought with them two artillery pieces and 300 muskets to be used by the gentlemen of Marshfield against the rebels.
    On January 23, 1775 the redcoats landed at the North River and marched unhindered through town to the estate of Marshfield's leading Tory, merchant Nathaniel Ray Thomas. They set up barracks and prepared for a long stay. Gage wrote the citizens of Marshfield, "I feel great satisfaction in having contributed to the safety and protection of a people so eminent for their Loyalty to their King."
    Over the ensuing months, the soldiers made their presence felt in towns surrounding Marshfield. They seem to have kept their marching and drills confined to the safety of that Tory town, however the soldiers and officers, in small groups, visited taverns and homes of loyalists in Duxbury, Kingston, Plymouth and elsewhere.
    In the shiretown of Plymouth, the presence of British officers raised particular furor. Balfour, during a visit there, was warned by a Plymouth Tory not to bring his men there as the people were in "a great state of excitement and alarm." In one case, a British officer accused of threatening an inhabitant of Plymouth was chased into a Tory's shop by a small mob. He was not allowed to emerge until he had surrendered his sword which was promptly broken into many pieces.
    So, with tensions rising, the men of Plymouth County knew what their objective would be whenever violence finally erupted. They would march on Marshfield and deal with Balfour's Redcoats.
    The news of shots fired at Lexington and Concord reached Plymouth at some point in the afternoon of April 19. Even if the Plymouth County regiment had marched for Boston that day, they would not have arrived in time to participate in the running fight along the "Battle Road." Instead the various militia and minuteman companies formed up and began to gather in the vicinity of Plymouth. It seems, from vague early sources, that the companies from Plymouth, Kingston and Duxbury were gathered together within a few hours. But they did not march to Marshfield.
    The man in charge of the Plymouth County regiment was Colonel Theophilus Cotton of Plymouth. He was an ardent patriot but also, apparently, a cautious man. He allowed the night of April 19 to pass without action. Then, on the morning of April 20, he held a council of war with his subaltern, Lt. Col. Briggs Alden and other officers at Alden's house in Duxbury (still standing and known as the John Alden House). There is no record of their discussion but the result was another day of inaction. One must presume that Cotton was either waiting for reinforcements to arrive or hoping that the British would simply go back to Boston.

    Nathaniel Ray Thomas House, Marshfield, aka the Daniel Webster Estate. A 1909 postcard depicting the estate as it appeared in 1859. In 1775 there were no croquet players here, but encamped Redcoats.
    Finally on the morning of April 21, around 7 am, Cotton marched his regiment to Marshfield, taking up a position around Anthony Thomas's farm, about a mile from the British garrison. By now, new companies had arrived from Rochester and Plympton. Plus, the crews of many fishing vessels from these seafaring towns, eager for a fight, had followed along. By noon, Cotton had about 500 men to Balfour's 100.
    But Cotton did not attack. Around 3 pm, the commander of the Kingston Company, Capt. Peleg Wadsworth, grew so impatient with the delay that, without orders, he advanced his company to within firing range of the British position. It finally looked as though something might happen.
    Unbeknownst to Wadsworth, Capt. Balfour had arranged his escape. Two British vessels had arrived off the shore of Marshfield and Balfour immediately began loading his troops. Balfour later reported that, if he had been attacked, he would have surrendered without firing a shot.
    It is a peculiar episode. Blood had been shed in Lexington, Concord, Lincoln, Menotomy and Cambridge. The day for which the patriots planned was at hand. Cotton's objective was self-evident. He could have captured or obliterated the entire British detachment. But, when his moment came, Cotton chose to do nothing.
    And I don't blame him one bit. I think this episode is indicative of the sense of shock and disbelief generated by the events of April 19, 1775. My guess is that Cotton probably had some trouble grasping the notion that Revolution was finally at hand. And he was probably aware that the small garrison would flee if he gave them enough time.
    Balfour was seriously wounded at the Battle of Bunker Hill but eventually went on to become a trusted aide to Gen. Charles Cornwallis, ended his military career at the rank of Major General and became a Member of Parliament. A bright career that might have come to an early end had a less prudent man than Theophilus Cotton been in command on April 19, 1775.
    [Sources: Justin Winsor, History of Duxbury (1849), p. 120; Cynthia Krussel, Of Tea and Tories (1976); James Thacher, History of Plymouth (1832), p. 210]

    Theophilus married Sanders, Martha on 29 Oct 1742 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA. Martha was born in 1716 in Sandwich, Barnstable Co., MA; died in 10 1796 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Sanders, Martha was born in 1716 in Sandwich, Barnstable Co., MA; died in 10 1796 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA.
    Children:
    1. Cotton, Edward was born on 17 Apr 1759 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA.
    2. Cotton, Josiah was born on 07 Nov 1753 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA; died on 07 Mar 1829 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA.
    3. Cotton, William Crowe was born on 14 Dec 1751 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA; died in 1813.
    4. Cotton, Bethia was born on 11 Feb 1750 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA; died on 08 Jun 1837 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA.
    5. Cotton, Rowland was born on 30 Apr 1748 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA; died on 17 Aug 1759 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA.
    6. 4. Cotton, John was born on 10 Jan 1746 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA; died on 01 Feb 1831 in Austintown, Trumbull Co., OH; was buried in Austintown, Mahoning Co., OH.
    7. Cotton, Theophilus was born on 11 Jul 1744 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA; died in 1776.