Ebenezer Cole 1715 – 1798

Ebenezer Cole is recognized by the Daughters of the American Revolution as a “patriot,” meaning he provided patriotic service to support the Revolution.  He is Marion “Bud” Renschler’s 5th great-grandfather.

Ebenezer Cole, son of Ebenezer and Mehitable (Luther) Cole, was born on October 27, 1715, in Swansea, Bristol County, Massachusetts.  Swansea, located about 40 miles south of Boston, was founded in 1662.  Ebenezer’s grandfather, Hugh Cole, was among the town founders and also involved in King Philip’s War with the local Indians.  The entire village was burned during that war.

Ebenezer married Prudence Millard on January 9, 1737, at Barrington, Bristol County, Massachusetts.  They had twelve known children, including Edward, born on October 25, 1751, at Warren, Bristol County, Rhode Island.

The town of Warren, Rhode Island, is in red at the top. In New England, a “town” is the equivalent of our township.

Warren was ceded to Rhode Island from Massachusetts in 1747.  In May 1758, Ebenezer was appointed to the office of Justice of the Peace for the town. He also served as a deputy from Warren, Rhode Island, to the Rhode Island General Assembly in 1760, 1762, and in 1770.

The Warren, Rhode Island, Preservation Society states this house was built by Ebenezer Cole in the 1740s.

The following was taken from the book The Descendants of James Cole of Plymouth 1633. “In 1762, Ebenezer Cole purchased a tract of land in the heart of the town of Warren and built a house for hotel purposes.  This house afterwards became one of the famous hotels of New England.  It was kept by the Cole family, Ebenezer, Benjamin, and George Cole, for over one hundred and twenty-five years.  In 1778, General Lafayette assumed command of the ports about the island of Rhode Island and, for a time, was encamped in Warren.  He was a frequent guest at Cole’s Hotel.  Ebenezer Cole died in 1799,[sic] and was succeeded in business by his son Benjamin, or as he was commonly known, Colonel Cole.  There were two large brick ovens.  The size of them may be judged when it is stated that at a large dinner, twenty pigs were roasted in the ovens.”

Ebenezer was one of the founders of the First Baptist Church of Warren. In 1763, he began framing the building.    It was about 44 feet square with a four-sided hip roof surmounted with a small belfry, in which was placed a ship bell, with the rope hanging directly down in the center of the middle aisle.  A weather vane was mounted atop the belfry.  There was no porch, and the building was never painted.  The communion table, used bimonthly, was brought to the church from Cole’s Hotel.   Ebenezer was elected one of the first deacons of the church in 1764 and served until his death.

On May 25, 1778, the church, along with its parsonage and college building, was burned by the British.  After the fire, Deacon Cole found the weather vane in the ashes and took it to the attic of his hotel, where it remained for many years.

By the time of the Revolution, Warren, Rhode Island, was a prosperous maritime community.  There was a shipyard, and Warren sailors were engaged in coastal transport, the West Indies trade, the slave trade, and some whaling.  The revolution nearly ruined the town; there was chaos and near starvation.  Business was destroyed, twenty-three vessels were lost, shipyards were empty, farms were neglected, and the population was destitute.  In May 1778, the British and Hessians raided the town, burned buildings, destroyed ships, looted and vandalized homes and businesses.  About 60 people were taken captive.  The young men were sent aboard the notorious prison ship Jersey, where some died.  Of course, these tactics only inflamed the populace and furthered revolutionary zeal.

In 1778, General Lafayette assumed command of the ports of Rhode Island and, for a time, was encamped in Warren.  He was a frequent guest of the Cole Hotel.  From The History of Warren, Rhode Island, the following was taken: “The gallant French officer Lafayette was very popular with the townspeople.  Tradition states that he was extremely partial to the old-fashioned Rhode Island johnny-cakes baked on a board at the hostelry of Ebenezer Cole, famous throughout the colonies for its good cheer.”  Johnny-cake is a flat cornbread now baked in a cast-iron skillet.

Ebenezer, too old to serve in the army, was a member of the local militia company, which served when called upon, similar to the National Guard.  He enlisted on August 3, 1780, in a militia company that answered an alarm to defend Trenton and other Massachusetts towns.  He served for only a few days until the alarm was over.  He was 65 years old at the time.   He probably served at other times when called, but many records of the local militias are lost.  Two of his sons, Ebenezer and Benjamin, served the American cause during the Revolution.

A British vessel sunk in Newport’s harbor was raised by local men, and Ebenezer Cole purchased a portion of the wreckage.  He built a barn from some of the timbers and was very fond of pointing out the landmark to guests at his hotel.

When Ebenezer died, his son Benjamin took over the hotel.  It remained in the family for 125 years.  In March 1893, the Hotel was partially destroyed by fire and later demolished.

It is known that Ebenezer owned slaves, which was common in Warren.  The 1774 census of Rhode Island lists Ebenezer owning one slave. Shamefully, he also owned a slaver (a ship used in the slave trade).   Interesting how people who were willing to fight for their own freedom denied it to others.

Ebenezer Cole’s tombstone in the North Burial Grounds, Warren, RI.

Ebenezer died July 9, 1798, at the age of 83 years.  He was survived by ten children, 53 grandchildren, 36 great-grandchildren, and one great, great-grandchild.  He was buried in the North Burial Ground at Warren, Rhode Island.

Abraham Kimball 1742 – 1828

In honor of the United States 250th anniversary, I will write biographies of each of my children’s Revolutionary War ancestors.  Abraham Kimball is Maxine Wymore Renschler’s 4th great-grandfather.  

Abraham Kimball, son of Aaron and Susannah Smith Kimball, was born April 18, 1742.  He was the first white child born in Hopkinton, Hillsborough County, New Hampshire, and consequently received a grant of five hundred acres of pine forest from the proprietors.  His father, Aaron, had built one of the first forts in the area to shelter people from the Indians.  Kimball’s fort was about two miles east of the burying ground on the road to Rumford (now Concord).  Lieut. Aaron Kimball’s marker is the oldest memorial in that cemetery.  He also erected the first frame house in Hopkinton township.  Aaron and Susannah were among the organizers of the Congregational church, the first church in Hopkinton.  

Abraham and another boy, Samuel Putney, were captured by the Indians during the French and Indian War.  On the morning of April 13, 1753, as Abraham was driving his father’s cow from Putney’s fort to Kimball’s fort, about two miles distant, he was waylaid by two Indians and was taken prisoner.  The third day after the boy’s capture, the Indians were surprised by local men and, while escaping, left Putney behind.  Abraham was rescued by a trained fighting dog owned by one of the rescue party.  The dog seized an Indian by the neck who was in the act of drawing his tomahawk to kill Abraham. 

He married Phoebe Runnells in Hopkinton about 1760.  They were the parents of at least 7 sons and 4 daughters. His son Isaac, our ancestor, was born March 7, 1774, at Hopkinton, Hillsborough County, New Hampshire. 

Early in Hopkinton’s history, Abraham Kimball built a mill on Dolloff’s brook, where the remains of the structure could still be seen in 1890.  To accommodate the mill hands, a dugout was constructed close by.   

Abraham registered for military service in 1775. It is said he was a private in Captain Gorden Hutchins’ Company at the Battle of Bunker Hill.

He was wounded above the right knee by a musket ball passing through his thigh on August 16, 1777, at the Battle of Bennington, at Walloomsac, New York.  The battle was a major strategic success for the American cause and is considered one of the turning points of the war; it reduced Burgoyne’s army in size by almost 1,000 men, led his Native American allies to largely abandon him, and deprived him of much-needed supplies. 

The following data was taken from Abraham’s pension file S-20017, which can be found in the National Archives or at Fold3.com.  

“Abraham Kimball’s account, Bennington, Aug. 28, 1777.
Hired a horse to come to Hopkinton, 130 Miles £9. 0.0
To expenses on my way home 1.14.6
To a horse 2 journes from Hopkinton to Andover 5.10.6
To nursing while at Andover 1.16.0
Expenses going to and coming from Andover 4. 5.6
Paid Dr. John Clement 12.6
Dr. Thomas Kitteridge 4.16.0
Total £27.14.6
Loss of time about six months occasioned by said wound. A true account, errors excepted,” Signed Abraham Kimball

“To the Honorable Council and house of representatives. These may certify that Abraham Kimball of Hopkinton in the County of Hillsborough was a soldier in Capt. Bailies Company, in Col. Stickney’s Regt. in the late expedition to Bennington. Being wounded at said Bennington in the Battle there.
Attest Thomas Stickney Col.  Nov 13, 1778.”

State of New Hampshire
Nov. 14, 1778.
To John T. Gilman, Officer Appointed to register wounded soldiers &c.
Pursuant to a vote of Council and Assembly, you are to register Abraham Kimball, a soldier in Capt. Bailey’s Co. Col Stickney’s Rgt, who was wounded in the battle of Bennington, and allow him half pay (Agreeable to the Resolves of Congress) two years commencing the 18th of Sept. A.D. 1777.
M. Weare Prest.”
His bill for the Doctors, nursing, etc of £27.14s.6d was allowed. On November 18, 1779, he received £10.”

Abraham signed a January 6, 1790, petition from the inhabitants of Hopkinton to the General Court of New Hampshire requesting permission to raise $1.000 by means of a lottery to build a free school.  The local inhabitants were to erect the building and maintain it. 

The Kimball family lived in Hopkinton in 1790, when Abraham, along with seven other household members, was listed on the first United States census. Abraham appeared as an invalid pensioner on a report returned by the district court of New Hampshire on December 14, 1792.  He appears on the 1800 census of Hopkinton with one woman (his wife) aged 45 or older and one male aged 26 to 44. 

In August 1805, Abraham purchased 60 acres at Peacham, Caledonia County, Vermont, from his son Isaac Kimball.  In August 1810, he and his wife, both aged over 45, appear on the census.  They are also listed on the Peacham census in August 1820. 

On February 23, 1827, at Peacham, Vermont, he applied for an increase of his pension from $3.83 to $4.16 a month.  He stated the reason for the move to Peacham was “for the purpose of living with or near his children.” 

Abraham died on May 5, 1828, in Peacham, at the age of 86, and was buried in the Peacham East Cemetery.  His wife, Phoebe, survived him and died at Peacham in 1830. 

Anecdotes of Abraham’s life were found in Life and Times in Hopkinton, N.H., 1890, by Charles Chase Lord.