翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Christopher Bentley
・ Christopher Bernau
・ Christopher Berneck
・ Christopher Bernevall
・ Christopher Bernido
・ Christopher Bertolini
・ Christopher Besoldus
・ Christopher Bethell
・ Christopher Bethell-Codrington
・ Christopher Bevan
・ Christopher Bevins
・ Christopher Bieber
・ Christopher Biggins
・ Christopher Bigsby
・ Christopher Bill
Christopher Billop
・ Christopher Billopp (Royal Navy officer)
・ Christopher Bingham
・ Christopher Binnie
・ Christopher Birdwood, 2nd Baron Birdwood
・ Christopher Bishop
・ Christopher Black
・ Christopher Blackett
・ Christopher Blackett (politician)
・ Christopher Blagden
・ Christopher Blair
・ Christopher Blake
・ Christopher Blanchett
・ Christopher Bland
・ Christopher Blauvelt


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Christopher Billop : ウィキペディア英語版
Christopher Billop

Christopher Billopp (1738March 29, 1827) was a British loyalist during the American Revolution who commanded a Tory detachment during the war, earning him the sobriquet, "Tory Colonel". After the American Revolution he emigrated to New Brunswick, Canada along with other United Empire Loyalists and became a politician. He represented Saint John in the 1st New Brunswick Legislative Assembly.
==History==

He was born on Staten Island in New York, the eldest of eight children born to Thomas and Sarah Farmar Billopp. His father Thomas was the son of Anne Billopp who married Colonel Thomas Farmar in 1705. Anne Billopp and her sister Mary were the daughters of British sea captain Christopher Billopp who was awarded of land on the southern tip of Staten Island, where he built a stone manor house he called "Bentley Manor". Billopp served as a colonel in the loyalist forces during the American Revolution.
Col. Billopp’s brother, Thomas Farmar (he reassumed the family name Farmar) fought as a private against the British Crown.
Billopp was captured twice by American patriots, one occasion occurred on June 23, 1779, when they rowed across the Arthur Kill from Perth Amboy, New Jersey. He was held as a P.O.W. in the Burlington County, New Jersey jail, where he was chained down to the floor and fed a diet of bread and water by order of Elias Boudinot, appointed by Congress as Commissary General of Prisoners. He was informed that his harsh treatment was in retaliation for the suffering of John Leshler and Captain Nathaniel Fitz Randolph of Woodbridge, New Jersey, being held by the British. Fitz Randolph would later be killed in the Battle of Springfield.
''To the Keeper of the Common Jail for the county of Burlington. Greeting.''
''"You are hereby commanded to receive into your custody, the body of Col. Christopher Billop, prisoner of war, herewith delivered to you, and having put irons on his hands and feet, you are to chain him down to the floor in a close room, in the said jail; and there so detain him, giving him bread and water only for his food, until you receive further orders from me, or the commissary of Prisoners for the State of New Jersey, for the time being. Given under my hand at Elizabeth Town, this 6th day of Nov. 1779.''
''"ELIAS BOUDINOT, Com. Pris. New Jersey."''
''"Sir, Sorry I am that I have been put under the disagreeable necessity of a treatment towards your person that will prove so irksome to you; but retaliation is directed, and it will, I most sincerely hope, be in your power to relieve yourself from the situation by writing to New York, to procure the relaxation of the sufferings of John Leshler, and Capt. Nathaniel Randolph. It seems, nothing short of retaliation will teach Britons to act like men of humanity.''
''"I am, sir, your most humble servant,
"ELIAS BOUDINOT, Com. S. Pris.''
''"Elizabeth Town, Nov. 6, 1779.''
Another prisoner being held in the Burlington jail at the same time was John Graves Simcoe of the Queen's Rangers, who led the massacre of patriots in the Wiliam Hancock house in Salem, New Jersey, and embarked on a raid into New Jersey, dubbed "Simcoes Raid", from "Billop's point", as Christopher Billop's land was known. It was upon this raid he was captured and imprisoned with Billop.
Portion of letter to George Washington from John Simcoe;
''I was allowed my parole, was taken from it the 9th, and have ever since been confined a close prisoner in Burlington gaol, with Col. Billop, who is in irons and chained to the floor, to retaliate for F. Randolph and Leshier, the latter of whom is (said to be) confined in the same manner in New-York: my mittimus hath not expressed what I am imprisoned for; but, by the tenor of Governor Livingston's letters, I suppose it is to retaliate for the former of those citizens, whom he allows to be a private soldier, and who is simply confined as such.''
It was not until after Christmas that Billopp was released in a prisoner exchange.
When the war ended he left the newly formed United States of America for New Brunswick in the British colony of Canada.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Christopher Billop」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.