Adam Stephen
{{Short description|American doctor and military officer (c. 1718 – 1791)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2018}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| honorific-prefix =
| name = Adam Stephen
| honorific-suffix =
| image =
| state_delegate1 = Virginia
| district1 = Berkeley County, Virginia
| term_start1 = May 1, 1780
| term_end1 = October 16, 1785
| preceded1 = Thomas Hite
|alongside1=Moses Hunter
Dolphin Drew
| succeeded1 = Philip Pendleton
| birth_date = circa 1718
| birth_place = Scotland
| death_date = July 16, 1791
| death_place = Martinsburg, Virginia
| party =
| spouse =
| children =
| residence =
| alma_mater = King's College, Aberdeen
| profession = doctor
| committees =
| allegiance = {{Flag|Kingdom of Great Britain}}
{{Flag|United States|1777-Ross}}
| branch = {{navy|Kingdom of Great Britain}}
{{flagicon image|Red Ensign of Great Britain (1707-1800).svg}} Virginia Provincial Forces
{{Flagicon image|Betsy Ross flag.svg}} Continental Army
| serviceyears = 1746-1748
1754-1763
1775-1777
| rank = Lieutenant (Great Britain)
Lieutenant Colonel - (Virginia Colony)
Major general (United States)
| unit =
| commands = Virginia Provincial Forces
Continental Army
| battles =
- Raid on Lorient
- Battle of Jumonville Glen
- Battle of Fort Necessity
- Braddock Expedition
- Timberlake Expedition
- Battle of Bushy Run
- New York and New Jersey campaigns
- Philadelphia campaign
- Battle of Germantown
| awards =
}}
File:Adam Stephen monument Martinsburg WV 2022-08-06 11-02-21.jpg
Adam Stephen ({{circa|1718}} – 16 July 1791) was a Scottish-born American doctor and military officer who helped found what became Martinsburg, West Virginia. He emigrated to North America, where he served in the Province of Virginia's militia under George Washington during the French and Indian War. He served under Washington again in the American Revolutionary War, rising to lead a division of the Continental Army. After a friendly fire incident during the Battle of Germantown, Stephen was cashiered out of the army but continued as a prominent citizen of western Virginia, including terms in the Virginia General Assembly representing Berkeley County.{{Cite book|last=Tyler|first=Lyon Gardiner|title=Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography|year=1915|location=New York|pages=136}}
Early and family life
Stephen was born in Scotland.Although the Encyclopedia of Virginia biography gives his birth year as 1730 and a Virginia birthplace. He earned a degree at King's College in Aberdeen, and studied medicine in Edinburgh. Stephen later married and had one child, Ann.
Naval doctor and emigrant
Stephen entered Royal Navy as a surgeon (with possible rank of Lieutenant) after completing medical studies in 1746 and served on a hospital ship during the Siege of Lorient before emigrating to the British colony of Virginia in 1748.{{cite web | url=https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/adam-stephen-ca-1721-1791 | title=Adam Stephen (Ca. 1721-1791) | George Washington's Mount Vernon }} There he established a medical practice in Fredericksburg.
Soldier and pioneer
Stephen joined the provincial troops in 1754 and became lieutenant colonel of the Virginia Regiment under George Washington. The unit was based at Winchester (east of the Appalachian Mountains), then explored westward across the Appalachians. The unit was involved in battles at Jumonville Glen and Fort Necessity (both in 1754 and which some consider the opening engagements of the French and Indian War). The following year, Washington, Stephen and the Virginia militia participated in the disastrous Braddock Expedition.Lengel, Edward G.; General George Washington: A Military Life; pp. xxxiii–xxxiv; ?; ? In 1756, Stephen led Virginia militiamen against the Creeks to relieve colonists from South Carolina.Virginia Biography By 1759, Stephen was in command at Fort Bedford (on the west side of the Appalachian range near the South Branch of the Potomac River) and begged for cattle to be delivered to Fort Pitt (the future Pittsburgh).{{Cite book|last=MacMaster|first=Richard|title=The History of Hardy County: 1786-1986|publisher=Hardy Company Public Library|year=1986|isbn=978-0-317-54414-5|pages=49}}
In 1761, Stephen had received cattle and other goods necessary to organize and fund the Timberlake Expedition, which attempted to reconcile British and Cherokee interests following the Anglo-Cherokee War (part of the much broader French and Indian War).Timberlake, Henry; Memoirs, 1756–1765; Williams, Samuel (ed.); Marietta, Georgia: Continental Book Co.; (1948); pp.38–39. In the summer of 1763, settlers complained of raids by Delaware and Shawnees on South Branch settlements so that many inhabitants of Hampshire County had abandoned their homes, so in August the governor authorized Stephen to draft 500 men from the militias of Hampshire, Culpeper, Fauquier, Loudoun and Frederick counties and the next month told them to continue guarding the posts on the South Branch and Patterson Creek, lest the Native Americans retaliate for their loss that summer at Bushy Run.MacMaster pp. 52-54 While Captain Charles Lewis escorted 60 former settler prisoners back to Fort Pitt in 1764, Stephen had assumed command of the Virginia Regiment from Washington and traveled westward to assist in putting down Pontiac's Rebellion.
When the American Revolutionary War broke out, Stephen offered his services to the Continental Army, again serving under Washington. He was with the army during the New York and New Jersey campaigns of 1776 and early 1777, and as a major general he was given command of a division in Washington's army during the defense of Philadelphia. In the October 1777 Battle of Germantown, Stephen's men fought in the fog with troops led by General Anthony Wayne.Virginia biography Stephen was accused of being drunk during the battle, and after being convicted in a court martial, he was stripped of his command and cashiered out of the army, making him the only Continental Army general court-martialed and immediately dismissed from the service during the war.{{cite book |last1=Taaffe |first1=Stephen R. |title=Washington's Revolutionary War Generals |date=2019 |publisher=University of Oklahoma Press |location=Norman}}
Politician
Stephen had lived in western Virginia before the war broke out, and voters from Berkeley County (created in 1772) had elected him as one of their two delegates (alongside Robert Rutherford) to the Second Virginia Revolutionary Convention, which was held at St. John's Episcopal Church in Richmond between March 20 and March 27, 1775. When the war ended, he returned to Berkeley County. In 1778 Stephen laid out the plan for Martinsburg and named the town after his friend, Colonel Thomas Bryan Martin. Stephen became sheriff of Berkeley County, with Martinsburg as the county seat. Generals Horatio Gates and Charles Lee purchased property in the county and lived nearby. In 1780, Berkeley County voters elected Stephen as one of their (part-time) representatives in the Virginia House of Delegates.{{Cite book|last=Leonard|first=Cynthia Miller|title=Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978|publisher=Virginia State Library|year=1978|location=Richmond|pages=112, 137, 141, 145, 149, 153, 172}} In 1788, he was elected to the Virginia Ratifying Convention, where he spoke (and voted) in favor of ratification of the Constitution of the United States. Despite opposition by political heavyweights such as Patrick Henry and George Mason, Virginia ratified the Constitution 89 to 79, in large part because western Virginia delegates (including Stephen) supported it 15 to 1.{{Cite web|url=http://civilwarscholars.com/2011/10/jefferson-county-pulled-along-the-tear-pt-1/|title=2 Virginias: The Awaited Comet – Pt. 1 | Civil War Scholars: The Powerful Experience of the War-Torn, Northern Shenandoah Valley|first=Jim|last=Surkamp|accessdate=12 August 2020|archive-date=10 July 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190710014747/http://civilwarscholars.com/2011/10/jefferson-county-pulled-along-the-tear-pt-1/|url-status=dead}}
Legacy
Stephen died in Martinsburg in 1791 and is buried beneath a monument erected in his honor. The Adam Stephen House in Martinsburg and The Bower near Shepherdstown survive today and are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.{{NRISref|version=2009a}}
References
{{Portal|Biography}}
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.britishbattles.com/germantown.htm An Account of the Battle of Germantown]
- [http://americanhistory.si.edu/militaryhistory/collection/object.asp?ID=808 A picture] of the waistcoat and gorget Adam Stephen wore during the French and Indian War
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Stephen, Adam}}
Category:Year of birth uncertain
Category:Alumni of the University of Aberdeen
Category:Alumni of the University of Edinburgh
Category:American city founders
Category:Physicians from Virginia
Category:British emigrants to the Thirteen Colonies
Category:British America army officers
Category:British military medical officers
Category:Delegates to the Virginia Ratifying Convention
Category:18th-century Royal Navy personnel
Category:18th-century Scottish medical doctors
Category:18th-century members of the Virginia General Assembly
Category:18th-century American physicians
Category:Military personnel from Fredericksburg, Virginia
Category:People from Jefferson County, West Virginia
Category:Military personnel from Martinsburg, West Virginia
Category:People of Virginia in the French and Indian War
Category:Politicians from Martinsburg, West Virginia