Especially in these days when the teaching of History is
often neglected, even those who have some understanding of the Revolutionary
War may have a simplified view that it was a conflict between the “Americans”
(i.e. those living in the British Colonies in what is now part of the United
States) and the British. In this simplified view, everyone living here in the Colonies
was opposed to what the British were doing (levying taxes, etc.) and we were
fighting the British soldiers and trying to kick them out.
I’ve noted in a prior blog (*1), that this was not a simple
process and that the war had its beginnings in the mid-1760s and was not
finally completed until 26 years later. But it was also complicated by the fact
that not everyone in the colonies wanted to cut ties to Britain. As I noted in
(*2), when the British invaded New Haven, CT, in July 1779, they decided not to
burn the town as there were still many Tories living there and they did not
want to destroy the houses of their friends.
This blog is about one of the Tories – my wife’s great*5
grandfather, Ruloff Van Der Kerr, who participated in the war on the side of
the British.
The Van Der Kerr Family
I have not managed to find when the first member of this
family came to New York (then New Netherlands), but it was some time in the
early-mid-1600s (*3). It is not known if any of the family were impacted by the
Pequot War in 1636-1638, but certainly that was part of the dynamic of the
Dutch colonists as the Pequots had been aligned with them (*4). But when King
Philip’s War took place about 40 years later, the Dutch would have been among
those who sent Metacomet back to New England when he tried to escape to New
York (*5).
The family did not have the Van Der Kerr surname originally,
but were using the Dutch patronymic naming convention. But when the Dutch
turned over their holdings to the British in 1662, they needed to use the
surname convention and began using the Van Der Kerr / Van Der Karre / Van Der
Kar name.
By the mid-1700s, the family had grown considerably and were
spread all over the upper Hudson River valley – Albany, Greene, Columbia,
Ulster, and Dutchess Counties. It’s pretty certain that family members had
interaction with the few Indians (Native Americans) who were still in the area.
As I had noted in (*6), the Mahican Indians at Shekomeko had been ministered to
by some Moravian missionaries from Bethlehem, PA and when they were chased out
of their homes in 1746 some of them went to a mission station in Schaghticoke.
One of Ruloff’s cousins, Abraham Van Der Kerr, lived there not long after.
Ruloff was born in Loonenburg, now Athens, in Greene County,
in 1745. He was the tenth of eleven children in his family. His father,
Solomon, was one of thirteen children himself, so Ruloff had a large number of
siblings and cousins.
Ruloff Van Der Kerr
Nothing much is known of Ruloff’s (also known as Ralph) early
life, but rather than farming (which would have been a very common occupation
at the time), he became a tanner and shoemaker. When the Revolutionary War
broke out, first in the Boston area, then quickly spreading to other cities
along the coast, those living in the upper Hudson Valley would have been
insulated initially. But it would not be too long before it spread there as
well – and everyone would have had to choose sides.
As best as I have been able to find out, all of Ruloff’s male
siblings and cousins chose to be on the side of the Revolutionaries. I have
found records of several of them in the muster lists for various units from
Albany. But for some reason, which one can only speculate about, Ruloff decided
to support the British. And not only did he support them, but he did so as a “secret
agent” – working to enlist others in the cause.
Jessup’s Rangers
One of the loyalist groups with which Ruloff was associated was
known as Jessup’s Rangers. This group was founded by Edward Jessup (*7, *8). Edward
was born in Stamford, CT in 1735. He had moved with his family to Dutchess
County, NY in 1744 and in 1759 served with a unit of British soldiers in the
French and Indian War. After the war he moved to Albany County where he
received a large land grant (500,000 acres) from the British Crown in
recognition of his services. He later purchased an additional 1,150,000 acres.
Having associated with the British and been awarded because of his service, it
is easy to see why he continued to support them when the Revolutionary War
began.
Edward and his brother Ebenezer formed their own corps,
known as the King’s Loyal Americans. They fought with General Burgoyne at the
battle of Saratoga, were taken prisoner, then paroled and went to Canada. There
they formed a new regiment known as Jessup’s Rangers (*9) which took part in
raids into New York.
Ruloff became associated with the Jessup brothers fairly
early on as he was named in some court proceedings as early as June 1777 (*10).
In these proceedings, Ruloff (identified therein as Rulph) is noted as being
the head of a company of men who were commissioning others into service for the
British under Colonel Hueston.
We also know that Ruloff was captured at least once, was
jailed, and then likely paroled.
After the War
When the war ended, Ruloff found himself on the losing side.
He fled and escaped up the [Hudson] River. He applied to the British government
in 1788 for recompense for all that he had lost while in their service. A
listing of what he applied for included:
·
Tanner and business tools
·
Wearing apparel
·
Money expended in Albany Gaol [Jail]
·
Money when being wounded and taken prisoner
[i.e. medical costs]
·
Money expended in Secret Services
·
64 sides of leather taken when prisoner
·
Bank Account
·
Labor in Grade
The total of all of these was 360 pounds, 16 shillings, 3
pence.
[Expenses]
Meanwhile, Ruloff finally married in 1787, at the age of 42.
He and his wife, Sarah Reynolds, who was only 20 at the time, went on to have
eight children. It does not appear that he ever returned to NY to visit his
American relatives. Only in 1830, following his death, did one of his
grandchildren, my wife’s great*3 grandfather, move from Canada to Michigan.
Notes:
*10 – Calendar of Historical Manuscripts Relating to the War
of the American Revolution in the office of the Secretary of State, Albany, NY,
Vol II; printed by Weed, Parsons and Company, 1868
Thanks for the great research on Ruloff Van der Kerr. Forgive me if you know this already, but DNA shows that descendants of Van der Kerr (and similar spellings) have Scottish origins in the border family Kerr (Kerre, Carr). Apparently, in the late 1500s or early 1600s one or more of them fled to the Netherlands. One of them (likely Dirk van der Kerr) joined the Dutch East India Company and settled in the Hudson Valley.
ReplyDeleteRegards,
Dan