Everything about Claudius Smith totally explained
Claudius Smith (1736 –
January 22,
1779) was a notorious
Loyalist guerrilla leader during the
American Revolution. He led a band of irregulars who were known locally as the 'cowboys'.
Claudius was the eldest son of David Smith (1701–1787), a respected
tailor,
cattleman,
miller,
constable,
clergyman, and finally judge in
Brookhaven, New York. His mother was Meriam (Williams) Carle, a daughter of Samuel Williams of
Hempstead, New York. David Smith was the son of a Samuel Smith, but the identity of this Samuel isn't certain.
Claudius as a guerrilla leader
During the Revolutionary War, Claudius, along with several members of his family, including three of his four sons (William, Richard, and James), allegedly terrorized the New York countryside in an area formerly known as
Smith's Clove (presently
Monroe),
Orange County, New York, where David Smith and his family had moved about 1741 from Brookhaven.
Accounts differ on Claudius Smith's size and stature. A 1762
French and Indian War muster roll lists him as 5'9". However, a 1778 wanted poster for his arrest claims he stood nearly an unbelievable seven feet tall!
All accounts agree that Claudius was a
Loyalist and took part in Tory raids alongside the
Mohawk Indian Chief,
Joseph Brant.
Though he gained a fearsome reputation among the Patriots, Claudius isn't actually known to have killed anyone. He was even viewed by some as sort of a
Robin Hood, helping to defend the Loyalists in the area. At one point, Smith even ended up in jail with a close relative of
Capt John Brown
(1728–1776), the grandfather of
John Brown the abolitionist.
However, when one of Smith's men did apparently rob and kill a Patriot leader,
Major Nathaniel Strong, on
October 6,
1778, New York Governor
George Clinton posted a reward of $1,200 for Smith's arrest. Claudius was soon captured and was hanged on
January 22,
1779 in the town of
Goshen,
Orange County, New York. Two of his sons, William and James (the latter captured in February of 1779 by an Abner Thorpe, according to: Erastus C. Knight's
New York in the Revolution (1901, Supp.), p. 165 [theAccounts of Governor Clinton]) would suffer the same fate.
Richard Smith remained at large at least through 1781, when his name appears in a letter addressed to Governor Clinton from Gen
George Washington warns Clinton that he was the target of a planned kidnapping by the remaining members of the Smith Gang.
Claudius Smith in fiction
Richard Smith is a character in
Elizabeth Oakes (Prince) Smith's 1867 novel
Bald Eagle; or, The Last of the Ramapaughs, which portrays Claudius's son as seeking vengeance on the people of Orange County for the killing of his father.
Endnotes
- He may have been a Samuel Smith Jr. of Barbados, who is conjectured to have a direct relationship since a David Smith of Long Island, New York who married another Elizabeth Lewis in 1703, and many inhabitants of the New York area at this time traveled back and forth between the West Indies and northern coastal areas. Most genealogists, on the other hand, feel as though David was in fact descended somehow from an Arthur Smith, as is partially "proven" in the manner in which he originally signed his name: with an "A".
Further Information
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