Henry Knox

91

Henry Knox : biography

July 25, 1750 – October 25, 1806

Notes

Death

In 1806 while visiting a friend Knox swallowed a chicken bone, which lodged in his throat and became infected.Callahan (1958), p. 380 He died at home three days later, on October 25, 1806, and was buried on his estate in Thomaston with full military honors.Puls (2008), pp. 246–247

Lucy died in 1824, having sold off more portions of the family properties to pay the creditors of Knox’s insolvent estate.Taylor, p. 213 The couple had 13 children although only one son, Henry Jackson Knox, survived to adulthood, and he was known for his drinking and scandalous behavior.Taylor, p. 47 Repenting and "impressed with a deep sense of his own unworthiness,’ upon his death in 1832 the wastrel son Henry requested that his remains not be interred with his honored relatives but deposited in a common burial ground "with no stone to tell where."Eaton,pg. 355

Montpelier remained in the family until it was demolished in 1871Puls (2008), pp. 248–249 to make way for the Brunswick-Rockland railroad line. The only surviving structure is an outbuilding that currently houses the Thomaston Historical Society. The current Montpelier Museum is a 20th-century reconstruction not far from the original’s site.

Early life and marriage

The parents of Henry Knox (William Knox and Mary (née Campbell)) were of Scotch-Irish origin.Stark’s antiqve views of ye towne of Boston. 1901. His father was a ship builder who, due to financial reverses, left the family for St Eustatius in the West Indies where he died in 1759 of unknown causes.Puls (2008), pp. 1–4

Henry was admitted to the Boston Latin School, where he studied Greek, Latin, arithmetic, and European history.Puls (2008), p. 3 Since he was the oldest son still at home when his father died, he left school at the age of 12 and became a clerk in a bookstore to support his mother. The shop’s owner, Nicholas Bowes, became a surrogate father figure for the boy.Puls (2008), pp. 1, 3 However, Knox was also involved in Boston’s street gangs, becoming one of the toughest fighters in his neighborhood. Impressed by a militiary demonstration, he joined a local artillery company called The Train at 18.Callahan (1958), p. 19

On March 5, 1770 Knox was a witness to the Boston massacre. According to his affidavit, he attempted to defuse the situation, trying to convince the British soldiers to return to their quarters.Puls (2008), pp. 8–10 He also testified at the trials of the soldiers, in which all but two were acquitted.Puls (2008), p. 12 In 1771 he opened his own bookshop, the London Book Store, in Boston "opposite William’s Court in Cornhill."Boston News Letter, August 15, 1771Puls (2008), p. 13 Largely self-educated, he stocked books on military science, and also questioned soldiers who frequented his shop in military matters. In 1772 he cofounded the Boston Grenadier Corps as an offshoot of The Train, and served as its second in command. Shortly before his 23rd birthday Knox accidentally discharged a shotgun, shooting two fingers off his left hand. He managed to bind the wound up and reach a doctor, who sewed the wound up.Puls (2008), p. 14

Knox supported the Sons of Liberty, an organization of agitators against what they considered repressive British colonial policies. It is unknown if he participated in the 1773 Boston Tea Party, but he did serve on guard duty before the incident to make sure no tea was unloaded from the Dartmouth, one of the ships involved.Puls (2008), p. 16 The next year he refused a consignment of tea sent to him by James Rivington, a Loyalist in New York.N. Brooks, p. 15

Henry married Lucy Flucker (1756–1824), the daughter of Boston Loyalists, on June 16, 1774, despite opposition from her father that was due to their differing political views.Puls (2008), p. 18 Lucy’s brother served in the British Army, and her family attempted to lure Knox to service there.N. Brooks, p. 25 Despite long separations due to his military service, the couple were devoted to one another for the rest of his life, and carried on an extensive correspondence. Since the couple fled Boston in 1775, she remained essentially homeless until the British evacuated the city in March 1776. Even afterward, she often traveled to visit Knox in the field. Her parents left, never to return, with the British during their withdrawal from Boston after the Continental Army fortified Dorchester Heights, a success that ironically hinged upon Knox’s Ticonderoga expedition.Puls (2008), p. 45