Difference between revisions of "Alexander Ramsey Thompson"

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[[File:Okeechobee 3009.jpg|thumb|300px|Memorial to the battle and A.R. Thompson, Okeechobee, Florida, 2015, dff.]]
 
[[File:Okeechobee 3009.jpg|thumb|300px|Memorial to the battle and A.R. Thompson, Okeechobee, Florida, 2015, dff.]]
  
'''Alexander Ramsay Thompson, b. 19 February, 1793, New York to [[Alexander Thompson]] and Abigail DeHart.  
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'''Alexander Ramsay Thompson,''' b. 19 February, 1793, New York to [[Alexander Thompson]] and Abigail DeHart.  
  
 
He died at the [[Battle of Lake Okeechobee|battle of Okeechobee,]] Okeechobee county, Florida, 25 December, 1837.  
 
He died at the [[Battle of Lake Okeechobee|battle of Okeechobee,]] Okeechobee county, Florida, 25 December, 1837.  
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Over the next 20 years, Thompson rose to the rank of colonel and served at forts in New York, Michigan, Kansas, Louisiana, and Florida. He was killed in the Battle of Okeechobee during the Seminole War in 1837.
 
Over the next 20 years, Thompson rose to the rank of colonel and served at forts in New York, Michigan, Kansas, Louisiana, and Florida. He was killed in the Battle of Okeechobee during the Seminole War in 1837.
  
==Their nephew, Rev. Alexander Ramsey Thompson==
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===Cullum's Register, Vol. I, p.10375===
'''Reverend Alexander Ramsey Thompson''' (1822-1895) was born to Janette Nexsen and William Robert Thompson, brother of Colonel Alexander R. Thompson. He graduated from New York University in 1842 and soon after entered the seminary at Princeton. In 1846, he was ordained a Presbyterian minister, and later that year married Mary Carpenter. They had eight children. For the next 15 years, Thompson preached at various churches in New York and New Jersey before settling in Bridgeport, Connecticut. During the Civil War, Thompson served as chaplain of the 17th Regiment of Connecticut Volunteers. In 1862 he moved his family to New York City and took up a ministry at the 21st Street Dutch Reformed Church. There, he devoted much of his energies to supporting the New England Soldiers' Relief Association. At the end of the war, Thompson was awarded a Doctorate of Divinity from New York University, and in 1871 became the chaplain of the Roosevelt Hospital in New York City. Thompson died in 1895.
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 +
'''Alexander R. Thompson'''
 +
 
 +
Alexander Ramsay Thompson: Born New York, Feb. 10, 1793. Class of 1812, applied 1812.
 +
 
 +
====Military History====
 +
Cadet of the Military Academy, Nov. 21, 1810, to Jan. 3, 1812, when he was graduated and promoted in the Army to
 +
 
 +
First Lieut., 6th Infantry, Jan. 3, 1812.
 +
 
 +
Served: in the War of 1812‑15 with Great Britain, on the Northern Frontier, 1812, — in General Wilkinson's Descent of the St. Lawrence River, 1813, — and in the Campaign of 1813‑14, on the Lake Champlain line of operations, being engaged in the Battle of Plattsburg, N.Y.,
 +
 
 +
(Captain, 6th Infantry, May 1, 1814)
 +
 
 +
Sep. 11, 1814; in garrison at Ft. Niagara, N. Y., 1815‑16; on Recruiting
 +
 
 +
(Captain, 2d Infantry, on Reduction of Army, May 17, 1815)
 +
 
 +
service, 1818‑19; in garrison at [[Sackett's Harbor, N. Y.,]] 1819‑1821, — Greenbush, N.Y., 1821, — and Ft. Brady, Mich., 1821‑23; on Recruiting
 +
 
 +
(Bvt. Major, May 1, 1824, for Faithful Service Ten Years in one Grade)
 +
 
 +
service, 1824‑25; on frontier duty at Ft. Niagara, N. Y., 1825‑26, — Ft. Howard, Wis., 1826, — Ft. Mackinac, Mich., 1826‑28, and Ft. Gratiot, Mich., 1828‑31, 1831‑32; on "Black Hawk Expedition," but
 +
 
 +
(Major, 6th Infantry, Apr. 4, 1832)
 +
 
 +
not at the seat of war, 1832;a on frontier duty at Ft. Mackinac, Mich., 1832‑33, — Ft. Leavenworth, Kan., 1833, 1834, — and Jefferson Barracks, Mo., 1834; on Recruiting service, 1835‑36; on frontier duty at Ft. Jesup, La., 1836, — Camp Sabine, La., 1836, — and Ft. Jesup, La., 1836; and in the Florida War, 1837, being engaged against the Seminole Indians
  
*https://quod.lib.umich.edu/c/clementsead/umich-wcl-M-4024tho?id=navbarbrowselink;view=text
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(Lieut.‑Colonel, 6th Infantry, Sep. 6, 1837)
  
==Alexander Thompson==
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at the Battle of Okee-cho‑bee, where, at the head of his regiment, in a desperate charge, he was
'''Alexander Thompson,''' RWPA #W18128/BLWt #2191-200-Lieut.
 
He married in the home of William DeHart in Morristown, New Jersey on March 4, 1784, Amelia DeHart, a sister of Colonel William DeHart and [[Jesse Baldwin|Jesse (DeHart) Baldwin.]] He died at [[United States Military Academy at West Point|West Point in Orange County,]] New York in September of 1809.
 
  
===Career===
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Killed, 2 Dec. 25, 1837: Aged 44.
He was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Second Regiment of New York Artillery [Colonel John Lamb’s Regiment of Artilleryman] on May 31, 1779, & in 1793, was re-commissioned as a captain in the United States Army and was still in serving within the Army at the time of his death. He fought in the Battles of Springfield, Brandywine, and Yorktown, and took part in Lieutenant Colonel Marinus Willett’s failed [[Oswego Expedition]] of February, 1783. His widow states that both of his feet were frozen in Willet’s Expedition... and were near being amputated, but were finally saved there from by the kind attention of an Indian __.  
 
  
In the spring of 1783, he carried news of the Cessation of Hostilities to Fort Oswego and presented the news to Major [[John Ross]]. A detailed account of his encounter with Major Ross and his travels to and from Fort Oswego are found within the Library of the Society of the Cincinnati in Washington, D.C. and which he states that he had been placed in charge of the artillery units at Fort Plank, Rensselaer, and others.  
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Buried, West Point Cemetery, West Point, NY.
Hereafter follows Thompson's statement on Lieutenant Colonel Marinus Wilett's failed Oswego Expedition
 
  
===Fort Rensselaer on Mohawk River,''' January, [sic: February] 24th 1783===
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===The Author's Notes [Cullum]:===
 +
#Was the son of Captain Alexander Thompson, of the regiment of Artillerists and Engineers, in 1794.
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#Thayer's Note: On p16 of ''The Ancestry and Descendants of John Alexander Thompson Nexsen'' "Compiled and Arranged by Samuel Emory Rogers", 1925, we read:
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<blockquote>Colonel Thompson was the son of Captain Alexander Thompson, (1759‑1809), who enlisted for the American Revolutionary struggle at the age of eighteen in the Artillery Regiment of Colonel John Lamb. He was soon promoted to Captain of Artillery and later served as Captain of Engineers. He drew the plans for the siege of York town, which plans hang under his portrait in the United States Military Academy at West Point. He entered New York with the victorious American troops and was selected by General Washington to bear the dispatches to the frontier forts at Oswego, Niagara, and Detroit, ordering cessation of hostilities. At the close of the Revolution his company was the only company of the American army not disbanded. On October 1, 1787, Captain Alexander Thompson was promoted to First Major in Lieutenant-Colonel Sebastian Baum's Artillery. He resigned his commission as Major on October 9, 1793 in order to accept appointment as Commissary of Ordnance at West Point at the foundation of the Military Academy, which post he held until his death. He is buried at the Military Academy at West Point.</blockquote>
 +
#"Although," in the language of the official despatch, "he received two balls from the fire of the enemy early in the action, which wounded him severely, yet he appeared to disregard them, and continued to give his orders with the same coolness that he would have done had his regiment been under review, or any other parade duty. Advancing, he received a third ball, which at once deprived him of life: his last words were, 'Keep steady, men; charge the hammock — remember the regiment to which you belong.'"
  
My Dear Brother—The day after I wrote you by Mr. Lee, a wounded officer, I left Albany for my station on this river, which I assure you far exceeds my expectation. The idea I entertained of the country, was here & there at some very considerable distance, to find a little cleared land & a small log house; to be destitute of all society & entirely confined to the walls of the garrison, but to my satisfaction my expectations are exceeded. This fort is situated on a height about half a mile from the river, which affords a beautiful prospect of the country around & showes you at one view as far as the eye will carry, fine fields like those of Bottle Hill [now known as Madison, New Jersey] and likewise of the ruins of buildings and improvements you would little expect, to find in this supposed hidden country, which has been destroyed by the fury of the savages -- all the settlements from Caughnawaga twenty miles below this place, until yon get to old Fort Stanwix, fifty miles above are destroyed except a few houses which the inhabitants by their great exertions have secured with stockades, and cut loop holes through the walls to prevent their coming near to set fire -- Six & seven families are crouded in one of these houses, it would really cause a tender feeling from you to visit & see tine sufferings of these unhappy people, among the whole you will find but three or four men to help them through their difficulties—The savages made it an invariable rule to put every man to death they took which they lave exercised to a great amount. -- The widow and daughter to stop the cries of the Hungry infants have taken up the fatigues of the farm. You will see the poor creatures cutting of wood, thrashing of grain, and performing the other laborious kinds of work. The people of this country are of the High Dutch all together, which affords us but little society among them -- they seem so much attached to their own language that few of them will speak to you in any offer. The produce of this country has been very great, and I am induced to believe this country will soon flourish again if the savages remain quiet. On the morning of the 8th inst. just before the sable curtain was drawn, I left this post with a detachment of four hundred troops, in one hundred & twenty sleighs, on an expedition against Oswego a British Garrison about one hundred and eighty miles north west from this place, which we intended to surprise. We passed by Old Fort Stanwix and arrived at the Onieda Lake, the evening of the twelfth, and for fear of being discovered we crossed the same night on the ice, which is abort thirty miles over -- We left our sleighs at the lake and marched along the Onieda river for Oswego. After we got below Oswego falls we took the ice but were frequently obliged to take the land for fear of being discovered by the enemies Indians that were out on hunting parties -- We found but one track during the march, which was of one Indian who had killed a deer a little in front of us, he left the skin on the snow which was warm when we came to the spat -- When we got within nine miles of the enemy we halted & made our ladders to execute our business -- We carried them with us, & when within three mies of the garrison our guide took a circuit in the woods with an intention he said of advancing on the works the lake side, we were led on over hill and through swamps to a considerable distance from our object, until the day began to break which advanced so fast as to make it impossible to arrive at the works before broad day light—our guide confessed he was Lost -- & Here the glorious persuite was given over : the orders we had from the Commander in chief were positive, that if we did not attack before day to return -- Colonel Willet was under the necessity of ordering us to the right about. You may be assured we are sensibly mortified at the disappointment to be within three miles of the important object entirely undiscovered, and then to be led a most tedious way by an Indian -- On our return we immediately took the ice, because the marching was better.
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==Their nephew, Rev. Alexander Ramsey Thompson==
 +
'''Reverend Alexander Ramsey Thompson''' (1822-1895) was born to Janette Nexsen and William Robert Thompson, brother of Colonel Alexander R. Thompson. He graduated from New York University in 1842 and soon after entered the seminary at Princeton. In 1846, he was ordained a Presbyterian minister, and later that year married Mary Carpenter. They had eight children. For the next 15 years, Thompson preached at various churches in New York and New Jersey before settling in Bridgeport, Connecticut. During the Civil War, Thompson served as chaplain of the 17th Regiment of Connecticut Volunteers. In 1862 he moved his family to New York City and took up a ministry at the 21st Street Dutch Reformed Church. There, he devoted much of his energies to supporting the New England Soldiers' Relief Association. At the end of the war, Thompson was awarded a Doctorate of Divinity from New York University, and in 1871 became the chaplain of the Roosevelt Hospital in New York City. Thompson died in 1895.
  
I am fully persuaded the enemy were not apprized of our approach, when we got within two miles of Oswego Falls -- On our return, we discovered a party of Indians on the other shore -- three of them came immediately to us -- supposing we were their own troops going down the country to commit depredations -- When they found they were among other troops they appeared a good deal alarmed -- we told them we intended to surprise the Garrison, but losing our way -- were on our return -- that we did not want to hurt them -that they where at liberty -- which last expression altered their countenance much -- they left us with a seeming satisfaction, and I believe this treatment prevented their harassing our rear, which we momently expected -- The Garrison consisted of three hundred regular troops & two hundred Indians. The snow was very deep and we found much difficulty breaking the road -- We had two days a most severe storm, and the whole of the time exceeding cold weather -- we had three men perish before we could return to the lake—and we dare not make fire for fear of being discovered when advancing -- we had one hundred and thirty bit with the frost, some very dangerously—I am myself one of the unfortunate number, but by the frequent applications I have made, my feet are much better, and I flatter myself will soon be well—I have not heard from you since by Mr ____ think of me often -- I long to hear from you—I must conclude, with my love to each of the family your affectionate brother
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==Sources==
<br>'''Alexander Thompson'''
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*Alexander Thompson papers (1793-1932) Collection processed and finding aid created by Philip Heslip, May 2011. Manuscripts Division, William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan. William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan, 909 S. University Ave., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1190. Phone: 734-764-2347. Web Site: www.clements.umich.edu
 +
*Creator: Ricca, Richard F.
 +
*Abstract: The Alexander Thompson papers consist of the papers of three generations of Thompsons: Captain Alexander Thompson (1759-1809), Colonel Alexander Ramsey Thompson (1793-1837), and Reverend Alexander Ramsey Thompson (1822-1895). These papers document the military service of Captain Thompson in United States army (1793-1809); Colonel Thompson's military service (1819-1837); attempts by Colonel Thompson's widow Mary Thompson to secure a military pension (1838-1849); and the career of Reverend Thompson, a Union Army chaplain and Presbyterian minister, along with his family letters (1850-1932).
 +
*Preferred Citation "Alexander Thompson Papers, William L. Clements Library, The University of Michigan"
 +
*Biographical/Historical Note
 +
'''Captain Alexander Thompson''' (1759-1809) was born in New York City to James Thompson and Margaret Ramsay. Alexander married Abigail Amelia DeHart in 1784, and they had six children. Thompson fought in the American Revolution, first in a militia company commanded by Silvanus Seely (1777), and later as a lieutenant in John Lamb's artillery (1779-1783). In 1786, Thompson became a captain in the New York Militia Regiment of Artillery, and in 1794, President George Washington commissioned him to the Corps of Artillerists and Engineers stationed at Governor's Island (1795). His next posts were at Fort Niagara (1798) in New York, and Fort Lernoult in Michigan Territory (1800). He returned to New York City in 1802, and in 1806 became the military storekeeper at West Point, where he aided in the construction of the military academy there. He died at West Point on September 28, 1809.
 +
<br>'''Colonel Alexander Ramsay Thompson''' (1793-1837) was born in New York and was the youngest son of Captain Alexander Thompson and Abigail DeHart. He graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1812, and was commissioned 1st lieutenant in the 6th Infantry. During the War of 1812, Thompson fought in Canada under General James Wilkinson, and participated in the Battle of Plattsburg. After the war, Thompson served as captain at Fort Niagara, and in 1816 he married Mary Waldron Nexsen (1790-1858). They had one son who died in infancy. Over the next 20 years, Thompson rose to the rank of colonel and served at forts in New York, Michigan, Kansas, Louisiana, and Florida. He was killed in the Battle of Okeechobee during the Seminole War in 1837.
 +
<br>'''Reverend Alexander Ramsey Thompson''' (1822-1895) was born to Janette Nexsen and William Robert Thompson, brother of Colonel Alexander R. Thompson. He graduated from New York University in 1842 and soon after entered the seminary at Princeton. In 1846, he was ordained a Presbyterian minister, and later that year married Mary Carpenter. They had eight children. For the next 15 years, Thompson preached at various churches in New York and New Jersey before settling in Bridgeport, Connecticut. During the Civil War, Thompson served as chaplain of the 17th Regiment of Connecticut Volunteers. In 1862 he moved his family to New York City and took up a ministry at the 21st Street Dutch Reformed Church. There, he devoted much of his energies to supporting the New England Soldiers' Relief Association. At the end of the war, Thompson was awarded a Doctorate of Divinity from New York University, and in 1871 became the chaplain of the Roosevelt Hospital in New York City. Thompson died in 1895.
  
*Transcribed from a transcript in "THE HISTORICAL MAGAZINE, AND NOTES AND QUERIES CONCERNING THE ANTIQUITIES, HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY OF AMERICA. VOL. III." NEW YORK: CHARLES B. RICHARDSON. LONDON: TURNER & CO. 1859. By Fort Plank Historian Ken D. Johnson on December 8, 2009. The original manuscript is now located with the collections of "Washington Headquarters State Historical Site in New burgh, New York. Multiple requests have been made to obtain a photocopy of the original manuscript have gone unanswered to date. The site's curator has assured this transcription of the authenticity of this letter and its presence within their vault.
+
*https://quod.lib.umich.edu/c/clementsead/umich-wcl-M-4024tho?id=navbarbrowselink;view=text
**We are indebted for this letter to Thomas J. Buckley, Esq., of Brooklyn, who married a granddaughter of Capt. Thompson.
 

Latest revision as of 17:51, 12 December 2021

Memorial to the battle and A.R. Thompson, Okeechobee, Florida, 2015, dff.

Alexander Ramsay Thompson, b. 19 February, 1793, New York to Alexander Thompson and Abigail DeHart.

He died at the battle of Okeechobee, Okeechobee county, Florida, 25 December, 1837.

He married at New York City, 29 Apr 1816, Maria Waldron Nexsen (1790–1858) daughter of ___

Biography

Colonel Alexander Ramsay Thompson (1793-1837) was born in New York and was the youngest son of Captain Alexander Thompson and Abigail DeHart. He graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1812, and was commissioned 1st lieutenant in the 6th Infantry. During the War of 1812, Thompson fought in Canada under General James Wilkinson, and participated in the Battle of Plattsburg. After the war, Thompson served as captain at Fort Niagara, and in 1816 he married Mary Waldron Nexsen (1790-1858). They had one son who died in infancy.

Over the next 20 years, Thompson rose to the rank of colonel and served at forts in New York, Michigan, Kansas, Louisiana, and Florida. He was killed in the Battle of Okeechobee during the Seminole War in 1837.

Cullum's Register, Vol. I, p.10375

Alexander R. Thompson

Alexander Ramsay Thompson: Born New York, Feb. 10, 1793. Class of 1812, applied 1812.

Military History

Cadet of the Military Academy, Nov. 21, 1810, to Jan. 3, 1812, when he was graduated and promoted in the Army to

First Lieut., 6th Infantry, Jan. 3, 1812.

Served: in the War of 1812‑15 with Great Britain, on the Northern Frontier, 1812, — in General Wilkinson's Descent of the St. Lawrence River, 1813, — and in the Campaign of 1813‑14, on the Lake Champlain line of operations, being engaged in the Battle of Plattsburg, N.Y.,

(Captain, 6th Infantry, May 1, 1814)

Sep. 11, 1814; in garrison at Ft. Niagara, N. Y., 1815‑16; on Recruiting

(Captain, 2d Infantry, on Reduction of Army, May 17, 1815)

service, 1818‑19; in garrison at Sackett's Harbor, N. Y., 1819‑1821, — Greenbush, N.Y., 1821, — and Ft. Brady, Mich., 1821‑23; on Recruiting

(Bvt. Major, May 1, 1824, for Faithful Service Ten Years in one Grade)

service, 1824‑25; on frontier duty at Ft. Niagara, N. Y., 1825‑26, — Ft. Howard, Wis., 1826, — Ft. Mackinac, Mich., 1826‑28, and Ft. Gratiot, Mich., 1828‑31, 1831‑32; on "Black Hawk Expedition," but

(Major, 6th Infantry, Apr. 4, 1832)

not at the seat of war, 1832;a on frontier duty at Ft. Mackinac, Mich., 1832‑33, — Ft. Leavenworth, Kan., 1833, 1834, — and Jefferson Barracks, Mo., 1834; on Recruiting service, 1835‑36; on frontier duty at Ft. Jesup, La., 1836, — Camp Sabine, La., 1836, — and Ft. Jesup, La., 1836; and in the Florida War, 1837, being engaged against the Seminole Indians

(Lieut.‑Colonel, 6th Infantry, Sep. 6, 1837)

at the Battle of Okee-cho‑bee, where, at the head of his regiment, in a desperate charge, he was

Killed, 2 Dec. 25, 1837: Aged 44.

Buried, West Point Cemetery, West Point, NY.

The Author's Notes [Cullum]:

  1. Was the son of Captain Alexander Thompson, of the regiment of Artillerists and Engineers, in 1794.
  2. Thayer's Note: On p16 of The Ancestry and Descendants of John Alexander Thompson Nexsen "Compiled and Arranged by Samuel Emory Rogers", 1925, we read:

Colonel Thompson was the son of Captain Alexander Thompson, (1759‑1809), who enlisted for the American Revolutionary struggle at the age of eighteen in the Artillery Regiment of Colonel John Lamb. He was soon promoted to Captain of Artillery and later served as Captain of Engineers. He drew the plans for the siege of York town, which plans hang under his portrait in the United States Military Academy at West Point. He entered New York with the victorious American troops and was selected by General Washington to bear the dispatches to the frontier forts at Oswego, Niagara, and Detroit, ordering cessation of hostilities. At the close of the Revolution his company was the only company of the American army not disbanded. On October 1, 1787, Captain Alexander Thompson was promoted to First Major in Lieutenant-Colonel Sebastian Baum's Artillery. He resigned his commission as Major on October 9, 1793 in order to accept appointment as Commissary of Ordnance at West Point at the foundation of the Military Academy, which post he held until his death. He is buried at the Military Academy at West Point.

  1. "Although," in the language of the official despatch, "he received two balls from the fire of the enemy early in the action, which wounded him severely, yet he appeared to disregard them, and continued to give his orders with the same coolness that he would have done had his regiment been under review, or any other parade duty. Advancing, he received a third ball, which at once deprived him of life: his last words were, 'Keep steady, men; charge the hammock — remember the regiment to which you belong.'"

Their nephew, Rev. Alexander Ramsey Thompson

Reverend Alexander Ramsey Thompson (1822-1895) was born to Janette Nexsen and William Robert Thompson, brother of Colonel Alexander R. Thompson. He graduated from New York University in 1842 and soon after entered the seminary at Princeton. In 1846, he was ordained a Presbyterian minister, and later that year married Mary Carpenter. They had eight children. For the next 15 years, Thompson preached at various churches in New York and New Jersey before settling in Bridgeport, Connecticut. During the Civil War, Thompson served as chaplain of the 17th Regiment of Connecticut Volunteers. In 1862 he moved his family to New York City and took up a ministry at the 21st Street Dutch Reformed Church. There, he devoted much of his energies to supporting the New England Soldiers' Relief Association. At the end of the war, Thompson was awarded a Doctorate of Divinity from New York University, and in 1871 became the chaplain of the Roosevelt Hospital in New York City. Thompson died in 1895.

Sources

  • Alexander Thompson papers (1793-1932) Collection processed and finding aid created by Philip Heslip, May 2011. Manuscripts Division, William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan. William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan, 909 S. University Ave., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1190. Phone: 734-764-2347. Web Site: www.clements.umich.edu
  • Creator: Ricca, Richard F.
  • Abstract: The Alexander Thompson papers consist of the papers of three generations of Thompsons: Captain Alexander Thompson (1759-1809), Colonel Alexander Ramsey Thompson (1793-1837), and Reverend Alexander Ramsey Thompson (1822-1895). These papers document the military service of Captain Thompson in United States army (1793-1809); Colonel Thompson's military service (1819-1837); attempts by Colonel Thompson's widow Mary Thompson to secure a military pension (1838-1849); and the career of Reverend Thompson, a Union Army chaplain and Presbyterian minister, along with his family letters (1850-1932).
  • Preferred Citation "Alexander Thompson Papers, William L. Clements Library, The University of Michigan"
  • Biographical/Historical Note

Captain Alexander Thompson (1759-1809) was born in New York City to James Thompson and Margaret Ramsay. Alexander married Abigail Amelia DeHart in 1784, and they had six children. Thompson fought in the American Revolution, first in a militia company commanded by Silvanus Seely (1777), and later as a lieutenant in John Lamb's artillery (1779-1783). In 1786, Thompson became a captain in the New York Militia Regiment of Artillery, and in 1794, President George Washington commissioned him to the Corps of Artillerists and Engineers stationed at Governor's Island (1795). His next posts were at Fort Niagara (1798) in New York, and Fort Lernoult in Michigan Territory (1800). He returned to New York City in 1802, and in 1806 became the military storekeeper at West Point, where he aided in the construction of the military academy there. He died at West Point on September 28, 1809.
Colonel Alexander Ramsay Thompson (1793-1837) was born in New York and was the youngest son of Captain Alexander Thompson and Abigail DeHart. He graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1812, and was commissioned 1st lieutenant in the 6th Infantry. During the War of 1812, Thompson fought in Canada under General James Wilkinson, and participated in the Battle of Plattsburg. After the war, Thompson served as captain at Fort Niagara, and in 1816 he married Mary Waldron Nexsen (1790-1858). They had one son who died in infancy. Over the next 20 years, Thompson rose to the rank of colonel and served at forts in New York, Michigan, Kansas, Louisiana, and Florida. He was killed in the Battle of Okeechobee during the Seminole War in 1837.
Reverend Alexander Ramsey Thompson (1822-1895) was born to Janette Nexsen and William Robert Thompson, brother of Colonel Alexander R. Thompson. He graduated from New York University in 1842 and soon after entered the seminary at Princeton. In 1846, he was ordained a Presbyterian minister, and later that year married Mary Carpenter. They had eight children. For the next 15 years, Thompson preached at various churches in New York and New Jersey before settling in Bridgeport, Connecticut. During the Civil War, Thompson served as chaplain of the 17th Regiment of Connecticut Volunteers. In 1862 he moved his family to New York City and took up a ministry at the 21st Street Dutch Reformed Church. There, he devoted much of his energies to supporting the New England Soldiers' Relief Association. At the end of the war, Thompson was awarded a Doctorate of Divinity from New York University, and in 1871 became the chaplain of the Roosevelt Hospital in New York City. Thompson died in 1895.