Walter St. John
102nd Regiment of Foot

This application is sponsored by the Border Historical Society, Eastport, Maine.

Walter St. John was commissioned as an Ensign in the 64th Regiment of Foot on 24 December 1804.  The regiment was serving in Barbados.  When the 64th was transferred to Surinam in mid-1805, St. John remained in Barbados and joined the 46th (South Devonshire) Regiment of Foot that was part of the garrison there.  He was promoted to Captain in 1806.  The 46th participated in the capture of the French islands of Martinique in 1809 and Guadeloupe in 1810.  St. John most likely participated in these attacks.  The 46th returned to England in late 1811.  Following garrison duty there, the 46th was ordered to Australia in August 1813.  St. John again changed regiments and joined the 102nd Regiment of Foot in July 1813.

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Allen Sweet
2nd Regiment Leeds Militia

Allen Sweet was born in 1790 in Oswego, New York and came to Upper Canada about 1806 where his family settled in Leeds County. At the age of 22 he was a corporal in the Flank Company 2nd Regiment Leeds Militia commanded by Captain John Struthers and was called to duty at Gananoque in July 1812 where he served until the spring of 1813.

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2nd Regiment Leeds Militia

John Godfrey Lloyd
Unknown

John Godfrey Lloyd was born in Kingston in 1784, the son of a Hessian soldier. When still a child his family moved to a lot west of Gananoque in Leeds County where Lloyd spent the rest of his life. As a young man John Lloyd was employed at Joel Stone’s mill in Gananoque. On the early morning of September 21, 1812 the men in the settlement were roused with the news that an American force had landed at Lindsay’s Point.

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Unknown