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| Call Number: | MIC-Loyalist FC LFR .B3F3P3 |
| Name: | Bates Family. |
| Title: | Papers : 1789-1859, 1895. |
| Description: | 1 microfilm reel of textual records ; 35 mm. |
| Background Information: |
The Bates family, represented in these papers by John, Lucretia, Henry, William,
Walter, Augustus, Elizabeth and Jonathan, resided in the Clinton-Catskill area of New
York at the time of the American Revolution. After the Revolution several members of
the family moved to Kingston, New Brunswick, and Trafalgar and Wellington Squarein Upper Canada. Henry moved to Darien, Connecticut. Augustus Bates (1764-
)
was involved in business in New York State and became a businessman and post
master at Wellington Square. Walter Bates (1760-1842) was born in Stamford,
Connecticut, and after the Revolution came as a Loyalist to Kingston where he became
High Sheriff of Kings County, New Brunswick, and held this office for over 20 years.
He is the author of the well known work, Kingston and the Loyalists of the Spring
Fleet of A.D. 1783 with Reminiscences of Early Days in Connecticut: A Narrative. |
| Contents: |
The reel contains papers of the Bates family for the dates 1789-1795, 1800-1838,
1841-1846, 1850-1859, and one letter from 1895 from a young man who had gone to
Montana. The papers are mainly those of businessman and post master Augustus Bates
(1764- ), concerning commerce, the post office, and family matters. A number of
papers are those of Walter Bates (1764-1842), who became High Sheriff of Kings
County, New Brunswick. The papers relate primarily to the attempts of certain Kings
County residents to have him dismissed from the position of Sheriff, and to his
interest
in an inmate of a Toronto jail, whom he believed to be Henry Moore Smith, an "escape
artist" on whom he had written a book. The correspondence relates information on
religion, farming and politics in New Brunswick, the growth of Saint John, and family
news. There are a number of letters from other family members, especially Henry
(1756- ), whose son Theodore came to Upper Canada in the 1830s. Several of the
letters are concerned with the efforts of Rachel Dunlop (née Blauw), whose sister
married Augustus Bates, to obtain compensation for her father's estate which was confiscated during the American Revolution.
|
| Originals: | The original records were loaned for microfilming to the Archives of Ontario by Mr. Asahel Bates of Freelton, Ontario. |
| Other Numbers: | AO MS 302. |
| Finding Aids: |
An inventory description is found at the beginning of the reel.
The inventory description is available in print. |
| Notes: |
Darien, Connecticut, is spelled incorrectly in the inventory description on the microfilm. |
| 411 |
The Loyalist Collection is located within the Microforms Department at the Harriet Irving Library.
Last update: 2012/12