Tag Archives: 1st Regt Middlesex Militia

Regiment

Daniel Rapalje
1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

Captain Daniel Rapalje, 1st Regiment of Middlesex Militia

Born 8 Nov 1774 Long Island City, Queens, NY to George Rapelje and Aletta Lent appears on the 1790 Census for Newtown Twp., Queens, NY , apparently a wealthy landowner.

Married Elizabeth Vandervoort 24 Sep 1795 at Long Island City,  Queens, NY.  She was born 1776 Queens, NY and died 27 Feb 1865 at St. Thomas, Elgin

By 1799 they had migrated to Erie, NY, moving on to to Woodhouse Twp, Norfolk County, Upper Canada (Long Point Settlement) by 1802.

Rapelje later received 200 acres of land on the south side of the Talbot Road at Kettle Creek.

1810 family had moved to south side of Talbot Road at Kettle Creek in Elgin County, UC

Daniel Rapalje  was a miller, establishing a log grist mill, eventually dividing a portion of his land into town lots.

Founder of what is now St. Thomas, Ontario.

Children:

  • George James
  • Elsie
  • Aletta
  • Catherine,
  • Lambert
  • Jeronimus
  • Margaret
  • John
  • Daniel
  • Elizabeth
  • Hiram
  • Henry
  • Mary

War 1812-15 Military Service 

Joined 1st Regiment, Middlesex Militia becoming a Captain

He is a veteran of Lundy’s Lane and numerous other battles

Ambush at Reservoir Hill, London 
On 30 Aug 1814, Captain Rapalje learned of a contingent of 70 mounted American Rangers led by the ‘turncoat’ former Delaware resident Andrew Westbrook, who were returning to Amherstburg with captured militia officers, after a raid on what is now Ingersoll, Ontario.

Capt Rapalje quickly assembled and led a company of 1st Regt Middlesex Militia to the ravine at Hungerford Hill (now known as Reservoir Hill), along the return route of the Americans.

His men set up a barricade across the road in the ravine.

When the surprise ambush was sprung, the US Rangers scattered, leaving many casualties on the field.

All the prisoners escaped except Captain John Carroll of the Oxford Militia who was killed during the ambush.

Reservoir Hill Plaque commemorating Capt Rapalje's 30th Aug 1814 Ambush of 70 US Rangers
Reservoir Hill Plaque commemorating Capt Rapalje’s 30th Aug 1814 Ambush of 70 US Rangers

There is a City of London historic plaque,  located at the entrance of Reservoir Park (864 Commissioners Rd W) commemorating Capt Rapalje’s ambush.

Daniel Rapalje  was a miller, and in 1814 he establishing a log grist mill, eventually dividing a portion of his land into town lots.

According to Rev’d Canon Nick Wells, Daniel Rapalje donated the land for the Old St. Thomas Church and graveyard.

The settlement that Rapelje established formed the nucleus of the city of St. Thomas.

Founder of what is now St. Thomas, Ontario.

He died 1 Oct 1828.

Citation:  Ermatinger, Charles Oakes, The Talbot Regime, or, the First Half Century of the Talbot Settlement, St. Thomas:  The Municipal World, 1904.

Supporting documents:                                                                                               (1) Col Thomas Talbot’s Roll of Service of War 1812 1st Regt Middlesex Militia combatants                                                                                 (2) photo of Reservoir Hill Ambush plaque

 

Henry Mandeville
Flank Company
1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

Born 12 Dec 1797 Schenectady, NY to David Mandeviel and Dinah Vanderhoof.

Served Flank Company 1st Regiment Middlesex Militia.

Received land for this service.

Married Frances Oswell b 1807 South Kortright, NY in 1831.

Frances and Henry had a son Charles in 1832 and Frances died soon after. Frances, the first wife is buried with Henry at Old St. Thomas Churchyard.

Henry remarried 20 June 1834 to Nancy Ann Thayer.  Nancy Ann Thayer was born 21 Sep 1813 at Port Talbot.  She died in 1861 in St. Thomas.

Henry died 9 Feb 1837.

Nancy Ann had a son, Sylvester Mandeville on 13 Sep 1837.

James Nevills
1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

Major James Nevills, 1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

Born in either 1789 in Stamford Twp., Lincoln County Upper Canada to Major Thomas James Nevills and  Eve Anne DeShired from New Jersey served in 1st Regiment Middlesex Militia as the Adjutant. The adjutant was an officer usually with the rank of Captain.

At the end of the War, he married Elizabeth Mann in 1815 (born 1792 in UC and died at St. Thomas in 1885)

Rose to rank of Major during the 1837-1838  Rebellion / Patriot Wars.

Known Children:

  • Matilda
  • Elizabeth
  • Thomas
  • Charles

Died 7 Jun 1861, St. Thomas, Yarmouth Twp, Elgin County.

Supporting Documents: 
(1) Service Rolls of 1st Regt Middlesex Militia , compiled by Col Thomas Talbot.

(2) Regimental Order issued 7th Jan 1839  from Commanding Officer Col Mahlon Burwell reviewing the performance of officers of 2nd Regt Middlesex Militia  during the 1837 Rebellion / Patriot Wars. Capt. James Nevills’ conduct was commended (as well as several other 2nd Middlesex officers),  while gathering and leading militiamen to attack the ‘banditti’ (rebels) who had formed at Oakland.

Capt. James Nevills was promoted to rank of Major at the end of the 1837-1838 Upper Canada Rebellion / Patriot Wars.
In 1830’s James Nevills, a farmer near Port Stanley held several Yarmouth Twp offices including Town Clerk in 1830 and 1833. In his latter years he was also appointed magistrate.

Jarvis Thayer
Flank Company
1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

Jarvis ThayerJarvis Thayer, son of Silas Thayer and Perley Pond, was born 24 Nov  1770 in Mendon, Worchester, Massachusetts. In the 1790s he came to Canada, settling in Gainsborough Twp., Lincoln County. In 1796 or 1797 he married Susannah Parker, daughter of UE Loyalist John Parker, Sr. and his wife Nancy Watson. Susannah was born in Pennsylvania c1779.

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Flank Company
1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

Jesse Page
1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

Jesse Page
Unveiling of Private Jesse Page’s plaque by members of St Mark’s Masonic Lodge #94: L to R Bro. John Skidmore, Historian, Bro. Donald Cousins and Worshipful Master Robert Kenney. Jesse Page’s gravestone bears the insignia of the Freemasons, however lodge records only go back to the 1860s so no history on Jesse Page’s membership exists.

Jesse Page was born the 30 August 1771 in Goochland,  Virginia, the son of Joseph Page and Mary Robbins.  He was the eldest son, but second of five children born to Joseph and Mary.  At some point, Jesse emigrated to Wainfleet  Twp.,  Welland County where he met and married  Elizabeth Parker on the 20 February 1810.  Elizabeth was born the 2 Jan 1776 in  Northumberland County, Pennsylvania.  Jesse and Elizabeth were members of the Society of Friends and became one of the original families who followed Jonathan Doan to Yarmouth  Twp., Elgin County when the Quaker  colony was being established there.

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Seth Preffer
1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

Seth PrefferSeth Preffer was born the 9 July 1795, likely in Wainfleet Twp., Lincoln County, Upper Canada to Jacob Preffer and Elizabeth (Betsey) Parker, who had come into this Province in 1805.   The Preffers lived in the Sugarloaf area, west of Port Colborne  and were members of the Pelham  Black Creek Meeting.  Jacob was a blacksmith by trade.

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1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

Walter Storey
Flank Company
1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

Very little is available about Walter Story. He was 29 at the beginning of the War of 1812. Born in Ireland about 1783, he moved to Pennsylvania in 1800 and then to Upper Canada in 1809 with his extended family, settling in the Talbot Settlement on Lake Erie. He farmed and remained single. He died the 12th of February, 1831, and was buried in St. Peter’s Cemetery, Dunwich Township.

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Flank Company
1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

Thomas Talbot
1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

Colonel the Honourable Thomas Talbot was born into an Anglo-Irish aristocratic family, on ancestral lands in Malahide, Republic of Ireland, which the Talbots had owned since the 12th century. He was born on July 19, 1771, the fourth of twelve children. At the age of 11, he was commissioned ensign in the 66th Regiment of Foot, British Army. In February, 1792, at 20 years of age, he was in Montreal with the 24th Foot when he was named private secretary to John Graves Simcoe, the first lieutenant governor of the new province of Upper Canada. With Simcoe, and later on Simcoe’s behalf, Talbot traveled extensively between York and Detroit, bounded by the Thames River and the Lake Erie shoreline.

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1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

John Pearce
1st Regiment Middlesex Militia

John Pearce was born in 1777 in Rhode Island. He moved to Erie Pennsylvania sometime before 1800 and married Frances Patterson. In 1808, he and his brother-in-law Leslie Patterson made an trip to Upper Canada when they learned that tracts of land were opening for settlement. They found the Talbot Settlement on the shore of Lake Erie to be to their liking and Thomas Talbot gave them lots. They brought their families the next year. A worker for Colonel Talbot had already begun to grow crops on Pearce’s land prior to their arrival.

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1st Regiment Middlesex Militia