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Colonel Edward Buncombe, Fifth North Carolina Continental Regiment / His Life, Military Careeer, and Death While a Wounded Prisoner in Philadelphia During the War of the Revolution cover

Colonel Edward Buncombe, Fifth North Carolina Continental Regiment / His Life, Military Careeer, and Death While a Wounded Prisoner in Philadelphia During the War of the Revolution

Chapter 3: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

The address recounts the life and service of Colonel Edward Buncombe, born in 1742 on St. Kitts, who settled in North Carolina in the late 1760s. It traces his family origins, the building and hospitality of Buncombe Hall, civic duties as a county magistrate, and his leadership of the Fifth North Carolina Continental Regiment during the Revolution. The narrative describes his capture and death while a wounded prisoner in Philadelphia, offers contemporary letters and local reminiscences, and notes the geographic and familial legacy that preserved his name.

FOOTNOTES:

[A] Memoir of the Life of Josiah Quincey, Jun., by his son Josiah Quincey, pp. 120, 121.

[B] Colonial Records of North Carolina, Vol. IX., p. 60.

[C] These portraits were afterwards destroyed in a fire when the residence of Dr. Edward H. Goelet, of Goldsborough, N. C. was burned—M. DeL. H.

[D] Mrs. Ann Booth Pollock Cox is interred in the old burial ground of St. Paul’s Church, Edenton, N. C. On her monument is an elaborate inscription relative to the military record of her grandfather Colonel Buncombe.

[E] Colonial Records of N. C., Vol. VIII, pp. 705, 707.

[F] Defence of North Carolina, by Jo. Seawell Jones, p. 314.

[G] Defence of North Carolina, by Jo. Seawell Jones, p. 124.

[H] Vol. I., p. 163.

[I] Colonial Records of N. C., Vol. IX., p. 1041.

[J] For full text of preamble and resolutions, see Colonial Records of N. C., Vol. X., p. 512; Defence of North Carolina, by Jo. Seawell Jones, p. 251.

[K] Colonial Records of N. C., Vol. X., p. 205.

[L] Colonial Records of N. C., Vol. X., p. 520.

[M] American Archives (4th Series), Vol. V., p. 1698.

[N] This account of the movements of Nash’s brigade is partly from narrative of Hugh McDonald in old series of North Carolina University Magazine (1853-’56, II., 466-470; IV., 158-162; V., 28-31, 208-211, 360-363), and partly from State Records.

[O] State Records of N. C., Vol. XI., p. 733.

[P] State Records of N. C., Vol. XI., pp. 562, 750.

[Q] State Records of N. C., Vol. XI. page 621.

[R] Moore’s History (I., 248, NOTE) states upon the authority of my father, the late Dr. Richard B. Haywood, that Col. William Polk said that Gen. Nash received his mortal wound from a shot through the eyes. That Col. Polk also made this statement to persons other than Dr. Haywood appears in Dr. W. M. Polk’s biography of Bishop Polk (I. 27), which quotes Col. Polk as saying Nash “was blind,” and almost in syncope from loss of blood. Yet, strange as it may seem, though official records show he was himself present and severely wounded at Germantown, Col. Polk was mistaken in this, as will now be shown. John Penn, writing from near the battlefield (on Oct. 10th) only three days after Nash’s death, says: “Poor General Nash was killed by a cannon ball, with his horse.” An obituary published in the North Carolina Gazette, less than a month later (Oct. 31st), states: “The winged Messenger of Death, a cannon ball, * * * * struck him on the thigh, tore his body in a most dreadful manner, and killed his horse under him.” In the legislative proceedings in honor of Gen. Nash (Nov. 19th), less than six weeks after his death, it appears that he “received a wound from a cannon ball; and, after languishing some days * * * * closed his useful life.” See State Records of North Carolina, Vol. XI., pp. 649, 789; Ibid., Vol. XII., p. 279. Pennsylvania accounts also say Nash was killed by a cannon ball which struck him on the thigh. The statement by Col. Polk was made when he was a very old man, fifty years or more after the battle; hence his mistake may have been caused by confusing Gen. Nash with some other wounded officer at Germantown who may have been shot through the eyes. Col. Polk’s second wife was a sister of Dr. Haywood’s mother.


TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE:

Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.