Thomas Cumming
88th Regiment of Foot

Thomas Cumming joined His Majesty’s Army and served in the 88th Regiment of Foot as a Private.  He returned to Canada after the War and settled in the Glen Morris area along with his bride Ellen who was also born in County Down Ireland.  During a search for surviving pensioners by the Royal Hospital Chelsea it is noted that Cumming had died in 1858.

James Bennet
Flank Company
2nd Regiment Lincoln Militia

James Bennet was born in New York State and came to Canada as a young man and registered as a United Empire Loyalist.  Bennet fought in the War of 1812 and served as a Private in the Flank Company 2nd Regiment Lincoln Militia.  After the war, Bennet was awarded a land grant and raised his family there.  His wife’s name was Jerusha Van Etten (Vanatter) who was also born in the US and together they had 10 children, seven sons and three daughters.

William Gammon
18th Regiment Dragoon Guards

William Gammon joined the British Regiment and was assigned to the 18th Regiment Dragoon Guards.  He served part of his time in the War of 1812 and later returned to England.  Gammon married his wife Sarah in England and returned to Canada, settling in the Mount Pleasant area where he farmed.  William and Sarah had at least one son George who was living with them along with his wife Annie and their children as recorded during the 1871 census.

Alexander Murchison
104th Regiment of Foot

Alexander Mercherson was a native of the parish of Kilmere on the Isle of Skye.  He was born about 1766.  When the New Brunswick Regiment of Fencible Infantry (later the 104th (New Brunswick) Regiment of Foot) was raised in 1803, one of the recruiting parties was sent to the Highlands of Scotland.  Mercherson (also spelled Murcherson and Murchison) was one of those recruited there.  He joined the regiment in October 1804, probably at Inverness, at the age of 38.  He may have been married at the time.  His wife was Barbara Macketche, a native of Inverness.  The Scottish recruits arrived in Fredericton on 20 September 1805 accompanied by seventeen women and forty-eight children.  Mercherson served as a private soldier for all of his career.

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William Brown Bradley
104th Regiment of Foot

William Brown Bradley and his twin brother Lewis Turner
Bradley  were born in Savannah, Georgia c1771. Their father, Richard Bradley, died c1780-81. During the Revolutionary War he was employed by the  Commissariat, a non-uniformed civilian body. Their mother was Sarah Turner, daughter of Lewis and Jeston Turner of Whitemarsh Island, Georgia.

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104th Regiment of Foot

Henry Merritt
98th Regiment of Foot

Henry Merritt, born c 1794 in Stanton Parish, Wiltshire, England joined the 98th Regiment of Foot on 30 January 1812 in Newbury, Birkshire, England.  He came to North America with his regiment for the War of 1812, arriving in 1814. He may have been part of the very successful British invasion of the Penobscot River as far as Bangor, Maine in 1814, by 700 British in selected companies from several regiments including the 98th Regiment.  However, the Muster Rolls and Pay Lists reviewed by Yelland do not show Merritt between 1814-15.

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