Luke Knowlton

Luke Knowlton, political leader of early Vermont.

Luke Knowlton (November 4, 1738 – December 12, 1810) was a political leader of colonial Vermont, the Vermont Republic, and the state of Vermont. He served as a Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court, a member of the Governor’s Council, and a member of the Vermont House of Representatives.

Biography

Knowlton was born in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts on November 4, 1738, the son of Deacon Ezekiel Knowlton (1707-1774) and Susannah Morgan Knowlton (1708-1794). [1] He was educated locally and became a farmer. Knowlton served in the French and Indian War as a private in a Massachusetts militia regiment, and performed duty at Fort Crown Point and Fort Ticonderoga in New York, and Fort Number 4 in New Hampshire. [2]

In 1772 his family relocated to Newfane, Vermont, a new settlement which at the time contained fewer than 20 families, and he was soon appointed a justice of the peace.[3] He was chosen as Newfane's first town clerk when the town was organized in 1774, and he served from 1774 to 1783, and again from 1784 to 1789.[4]

Knowlton had been a Loyalist in the years leading up to the American Revolution, and had received from the British government a land grant in Sherbrooke, Quebec, but upon moving to Vermont he aligned himself with the Patriot cause.[5] In 1782 Knowlton was accused of Loyalist sympathies, and moved to Canada to avoid arrest, returning to Newfane a year later.

During Vermont's early years, the colonial governments of New Hampshire and New York disputed jurisdiction over Vermont, including the right to sell land grants. Vermont formed its own government, which recognized land titles previously purchased from New Hampshire. After the Revolution, Vermont's independent government worked to obtain statehood, while New York attempted to exert control over Vermont. Knowlton was sent to the Congress of the Confederation as an emissary of Vermont residents who held New York land grants, but became a convert to the cause of Vermont statehood.[6] In 1784 he was accused of being sympathetic to the government of Vermont, and southeastern Vermonters loyal to New York took him from his home by force. He was released in Massachusetts, and returned to Newfane just as a detachment of militia led by Stephen R. Bradley was preparing to pursue his abductors and free him.[7]

As a condition of Vermont's entry into the Union in 1791, Vermont paid New York $30,000 to settle claims by holders of land grants purchased from New York, and Knowlton received approximately $250 as compensation for the New York title to his Newfane land.[8]

Knowlton served in the Vermont House of Representatives in 1784, 1785, 1788, 1789, 1792, 1805, and 1806,[9] and was a member of Vermont's Governor's Council from 1789 to 1800.[10]

In 1786 Knowlton was appointed a Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court, but his position was eliminated later that year when the size of the court was reduced.[11] He served as Judge of the Windham County Court from 1787 to 1793.[12]

In 1786 Knowlton was one of the recipients of land grants and the charter for the town of Danville.[13] In 1791 Knowlton received from Vermont's government a 10,000 acre land grant (Knowlton's Gore) in Franklin County, which he later sold to Joseph Baker, who used it to found the town of Bakersfield.[14]

He continued to reside in Newfane until his death on December 12, 1810.[15] He was buried at Newfane Hill Cemetery in Newfane.[16]

Family

In 1760 he married Sarah Holland (1740-1797), also of Shrewsbury, Massachusetts. They were the parents of three sons and four daughters. [17]

Calvin Knowlton (1761-1800) graduated from Dartmouth College in 1783, studied law, was admitted to the bar, and practiced in Newfane.[18]

Patty Knowlton (1762-1814) married Daniel Warner, and was the mother of Willard Warner (1797-1847), and the grandmother of Willard Warner, an officer in the Union Army during the American Civil War, and a United States Senator from Alabama after the war.[19]

Silas Knowlton (1764-1844) married Lucinda Holbrook in Newfane on November 30, 1786, and died in Canada. Silas and Lucinda Knowlton were the parents of Paul Holland Knowlton, a prominent Canadian businessman and political figure.[20]

Sarah (or Sara) Knowlton was born on May 2, 1767. She married John Holbrook in Newfane on November 30, 1786. She died on March 22, 1851. They were the parents of Frederick Holbrook, who served as Governor of Vermont during the American Civil War.[21]

Alice (born July 22, 1769) married Dr. Nathan Stone on April 24, 1788. She died in Newfane on November 14, 1865.[22]

Lucinda was born on August 8, 1771 and married Samuel Willard. They lived in Sheldon, Vermont before moving to Canada. She died on May 4, 1800. and was buried at Sheldon Cemetery in Sheldon.[23][24]

Luke Knowlton, Jr., was born in Newfane on March 24, 1775. He was a graduate of Dartmouth College who became an attorney and served as a member of the Vermont House of Representatives and Assistant Judge of Windham County. He later moved to Canada, where he died on September 17, 1855.[25][26]

Legacy

Knowlton Pond in Island Pond, Vermont is named for Luke Knowlton, who helped survey and lay out the town in the 1780s.[27]

References

  1. Green, Joseph J.; Burnham, Charles; Merrifield, John H. (1877). Centennial Proceedings and Other Historical Facts and Incidents Relating to Newfane, the County Seat of Windham County, Vermont. Brattleboro, VT: D. Leonard, Steam Job Printer. p. 158.
  2. Hemenway, Abby Maria (1891). The Vermont Historical Gazetteer: The Towns of Windham County. V. Brandon, VT: Carrie Elizabeth Hemenway Page. pp. 463–464.
  3. Spofford, Ainsworth Rand; et al. (1898). The National Cyclopedia of American Biography. VIII. New York, NY: James T. White & Company. p. 477.
  4. Green, Joseph J.; Burnham, Charles; Merrifield, John H. (1877). Centennial Proceedings and Other Historical Facts and Incidents Relating to Newfane, the County Seat of Windham County, Vermont. Brattleboro, VT: D. Leonard, Steam Job Printer. p. 29.
  5. Hemenway, Abby Maria (1891). The Vermont Historical Gazetteer: The Towns of Windham County. V. Brandon, VT: Carrie Elizabeth Hemenway Page. pp. 463–464.
  6. Dodge, Prentiss Cutler (1912). Encyclopedia of Vermont Biography. Burlington, VT: Ullery Publishing Company. p. 19.
  7. Green, Joseph J.; Burnham, Charles; Merrifield, John H. (1877). Centennial Proceedings and Other Historical Facts and Incidents Relating to Newfane, the County Seat of Windham County, Vermont. Brattleboro, VT: D. Leonard, Steam Job Printer. pp. 95–97.
  8. Morgan, Christopher, New York Secretary of State (1851). Documentary History of the State of New York. 4. Albany, NY: Charles Van Benthuysen, Public Printer. p. 1024.
  9. Green, Joseph J.; Burnham, Charles; Merrifield, John H. (1877). Centennial Proceedings and Other Historical Facts and Incidents Relating to Newfane, the County Seat of Windham County, Vermont. Brattleboro, VT: D. Leonard, Steam Job Printer. p. 29.
  10. Taft, Russell S. (1894). "The Supreme Court of Vermont: Part II". The Green Bag. Boston, MA: Boston Book Company. VI.
  11. Chipman, Daniel (1824). Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of the State of Vermont. 1. Middlebury, VT: J. W. Copeland, printer. p. vi.
  12. Hall, Benjamin Homer (1865). History of Eastern Vermont. Albany, NY: J. Munsell. p. 675.
  13. Hemenway, Abby Maria (1867). The Vermont Historical Gazetteer. 1. Burlington, VT: A. M. Hemenway. p. 313.
  14. Denio, Herbert Williams (April 1, 1920). The New England Historical and Genealogical Register: Inscription in the Town Cemetery at the Village of Bakersfield, Vermont. Boston, MA: New England Historical and Genealogical Society. p. 150.
  15. Spofford, Ainsworth Rand; et al. (1898). The National Cyclopedia of American Biography. VIII. New York, NY: James T. White & Company. p. 477.
  16. Luke Knowlton at Find a Grave
  17. Green, Joseph J.; Burnham, Charles; Merrifield, John H. (1877). Centennial Proceedings and Other Historical Facts and Incidents Relating to Newfane, the County Seat of Windham County, Vermont. Brattleboro, VT: D. Leonard, Steam Job Printer. pp. 158–159.
  18. Chapman, George T. (1867). Sketches of the Alumni of Dartmouth College. Cambridge, MA: Riverside Press. p. 32.
  19. "More About Hon. Luke Knowlton, Sr.". Granby Leader-Mail. Granby, PQ. November 19, 1942. p. 7.
  20. "More About Hon. Luke Knowlton, Sr.". Granby Leader-Mail. Granby, PQ. November 19, 1942. p. 7.
  21. Carleton, Hiram (1903). Genealogical and Family History of the State of Vermont. 1. New York, NY: Lewis Publishing Company. p. 4-6.
  22. Anderson, George Baker (1897). Landmarks of Rensselaer County, New York. Syracuse, NY: D. Mason & Company, publisher. p. 751.
  23. Lucinda Knowlton Willard at Find a Grave
  24. Martyn, Charles (1925). The William Ward Genealogy. New York, NY: Artemas Ward. p. 154.
  25. Merrifield, John H. (July 4, 1874). Vermont Historical Magazine: Historical Address of the Hon. Charles K. Field, Delievered at the Centenniel Anniversary of the Organization of the Church and Town of Newfane. Burlington, VT: Abby Maria Hemenway. pp. 472–473.
  26. Luke Knowlton, Jr. at Find a Grave
  27. "Brighton Natural Resources Capital". Center for Rural Studies. University of Vermont. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
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