Raid on Chester, Nova Scotia

{{infobox military conflict |

|conflict =Raid on Chester

|partof =the American Revolution

|image = File:Jonathan Prescott, Chester, Nova Scotia.png

|caption = Captain Jonathan Prescott

|date =June 30, 1782

|place =Chester, Nova Scotia

|coordinates =

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|result =British victory

|status =

|combatant1 ={{flag|Kingdom of Great Britain}}

|combatant2 ={{flag|United States of America|1777}}

|commander1 = Jonathan Prescott
Captain Jacob Millett

|commander2 =Noah Stoddard
George Wait Babcock
Herbert Woodbury
[https://web.archive.org/web/20160625162955/http://www.awiatsea.com/Privateers/S/Swallow%20New%20Hampshire%20Cutter%20%5bTibbets%5d.html Capt. John Tibbets (1748–1786)]

|units1 =

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|strength1 =Unknown

|strength2 =5 vessels
170 crew members

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|casualties1 =No casualties

|casualties2 =1 dead

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|notes =

|campaignbox =

{{Campaignbox American Revolutionary War: Nova Scotia theatre}}

}}

The Raid on Chester occurred during the American Revolution when the US privateer, Captain Noah Stoddard of Fairhaven, Massachusetts, and four other privateer vessels attacked the British settlement at Chester, Nova Scotia on 30 June 1782.{{sfn|Eastman|1928|pp=21-23}} The town was defended by Captain Jonathan Prescott.{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/cihm_08452/page/n10 | isbn=9780665084522 | title=History and genealogy of the Houghton family [microform] | year=1896 |page=6}}

Background

During the American Revolution, Nova Scotia was invaded regularly by American Revolutionary forces by land and sea. Throughout the war, American privateers devastated the maritime economy by raiding many of the coastal communities. There were constant attacks by privateers,Benjamin Franklin also engaged France in the war, which meant that many of the privateers were also from France. which began seven years earlier with the raid on St. John and included raids on all the major outposts in Nova Scotia.Raids happened at Liverpool: October 1776, March 1777, September 1777, May 1778, and September 1780; and on Annapolis Royal in 1781. Roger Marsters (2004). Bold Privateers: Terror, Plunder and Profit on Canada's Atlantic Coast, pp. 87–89 {{ISBN|0887806449}} The first raid on Chester occurred in 1779 and the second three years later.

Raid on Chester

File:Wisteria Cottage House (former Blockhouse), Chester, Nova Scotia.jpg

On June 30, the day before the raid on Lunenburg, Stoddard and two other privateers descended on Chester, Nova Scotia firing cannon from their vessels. Captain of the militia Jonathan Prescott fired cannon from the blockhouse. (The cannon Prescott used are now located on the grounds of the Chester Legion.){{cite web | url=http://www.newscotland1398.net/lunenco/cheslgn.html | title=Chester Legion Cannons | access-date=2018-10-05 | archive-date=2018-02-01 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180201192911/http://www.newscotland1398.net/lunenco/cheslgn.html | url-status=dead }} Prescott's cannon fire struck one of the privateers. As a result, the privateers retreated behind Nass' Point. The crews went ashore and requested of Prescott to bury their dead. Prescott indicated that if they disarmed themselves, they would be assisted. Eventually, Prescott invited Stoddard and the two other captains to tea. Realizing the community was still vulnerable to attack, Prescott and his son lied to the privateers that Commander Creighton at Lunenburg had sent 100 soldiers to be billeted at Chester that evening. Upon the privateers' retreat to their vessels, Captain Jacob Millett led women and children marching in red colours, pretending to be British soldiers from Lunenburg. The privateers left Chester to raid Lunenburg the following day.{{sfn|DesBrisay|1895|pp=270–271}}

Aftermath

File:Chester Cannons, Chester, Nova Scotia.jpg

File:Street Banner, Raid on Chester, Chester, Nova Scotia.jpg

The day after the raid on Chester, the American privateers redirected their attack on Lunenburg, presumably believing the Lunenburg militia had left the town to defend Chester.

Jonathan Prescott was suspected of being an American Patriot sympathizer given that, after the initial hostile engagement, he reportedly allowed Captain Noah Stoddard to bury his dead and then had tea with him the day before Stoddard orchestrated the raid on Lunenburg. People were also suspicious of Prescott's allegiance, because a number of Dr. Prescott's family were Patriots in the American Revolution; his nephew Samuel had ridden with Paul Revere. Samuel eventually was taken prisoner to Halifax where he is reported to have died during the war. Jonathan named one of his sons after Samuel and he is buried at the Old Burying Ground in Halifax.{{sfn|Prescott|1870|p=86}} Jonathan's son Joseph joined the Continental Army, fought at Fort Ticonderoga, and was a founding member of the Society of the Cincinnati.{{sfn|Prescott|1870|p=85}} Another of Dr. Prescott's sons John fought in the Battle of Lexington. His other son was Charles Ramage Prescott.

After the war, Jonathan Prescott was given the blockhouse, the modern-day Wisteria Cottage House, and used it as his home.{{sfn|DesBrisay|1895|p=263}}

See also

Notes and references

{{reflist|30em}}

Bibliography

  • {{cite book |last=Allen |first=Gardner W. |date=1913 |title=A Naval History of the American Revolution |volume=II |location=Boston |publisher=Houghton Mifflin |url=https://archive.org/stream/navalhistoryrevo02allerich#page/595/mode/1up/ |ref=none}}
  • {{cite book |last=DesBrisay |first=Mather Byles |date=1895 |title=History of the County of Lunenburg |location=Toronto |publisher=William Briggs |url=https://archive.org/stream/historycountylu00desbgoog#page/n68/mode/1up/search/hirtle}}
  • {{cite book |last=Eastman |first=Ralph M. |date=1928 |chapter=Captain Noah Stoddard |chapter-url=https://archive.org/stream/somefamousprivat00east#page/60/mode/2up |title=Some Famous Privateers of New England |location=Boston |publisher=State Street Trust |pages=61–63}}
  • Gwyn, Julian (2003). [https://books.google.com/books?id=xzV49UC6mnkC Frigates and Foremasts: The North American Squadron in Nova Scotia Waters, 1745–1815], University of British Columbia Press. {{ISBN|0774809116}}.
  • MacMechan, Archibald (1923), "The Sack of Lunenburg" in Sagas of the Sea. The Temple Press, pp. 57–72.
  • {{cite book |last=Prescott |first=William |date=1870 |title=The Prescott Memorial: or a Genealogical Memoir of the Prescott Families in America |location=Boston |publisher=Henry W. Dutton & Son |url=https://archive.org/stream/prescottmemorial00pres#page/86/mode/1up/ }}
  • [https://archive.org/stream/historyofamerica017401mbp#page/n270/mode/1up/search/babcock A History of American Privateers]
  • [https://archive.org/stream/massachusettshis77mass#page/175/mode/1up/search/waith Massachusetts Privateers, p. 176]
  • [https://archive.org/stream/acadiensisquarte05jackuoft#page/385/mode/1up Agnes Creighton, "An Unforeclosed Mortgage," Acadiensis, October, 1905]

; Primary documents

  • The Boston Gazette, and the Country Journal, Monday, July 15, 1782.
  • The Massachusetts Spy: Or, American Oracle of Liberty [Worcester], Thursday, July 25, 1782.
  • The Continental Journal, Boston, Thursday, July 18, 1782.
  • [https://archive.org/stream/historycountylu00desbgoog#page/n70/mode/2up Joseph Pernette to Franklin, letter, dated at LaHave, July 3, 1782, reprinted in DesBrisay, Mather Byles, History of the County of Lunenburg, Toronto: Wesley Briggs, 1895, pp. 65–67.]
  • [https://archive.org/stream/acadieacadians00rothuoft#page/330/mode/2up Leonard Rudolf's account in Invasion of Lunenburg in Acadie and the Acadians]

Further reading

  • Howe, Octavius Thorndike (1922). Beverly Privateers in the Revolution, p. 361.
  • Bell, Winthrop Pickard (1961). The "Foreign Protestants" and the Settlement of Nova Scotia.
  • Faibisy, John Dewar [http://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2321&context=dissertations_1 Privateering and piracy: the effects of New England raiding upon Nova Scotia during the American Revolution, 1775–1783].