John Sargent (Loyalist): Difference between revisions
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[[Category:Loyalists in the American Revolution]] |
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Revision as of 23:47, 24 May 2008
John Sargent (December 24 1750, Salem - January 24 1824) was an American Loyalist during American Revolution.
A Methodist merchant from Salem, Massachusetts, he was the second son of Colonel Epes Sargent, by his second wife, the widow Catharine Browne (she was a Winthrop and a descendant of Governor John Winthrop). He is the very first signatory among the Salem Addressers of Governor Thomas Gage on his arrival in Salem in 1774, and thus after the war he was proscribed and exiled in the Banishment Act of the State of Massachusetts in 1778. He went to Barrington, Nova Scotia, where he had three sons and a daughter (having married the widow Margaret Barnard in Boston in 1784) and attended the 8th, 9th and 10th General Assemblies of Nova Scotia.