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JOHN DOWNS 14745-1819
by Joseph B.
Barnes, Esq.
John Downs
was a weaver, school teacher, and a member of the militia who fought with
Connecticut forces on Long Island (Battle of Brooklyn Heights), Harlem Heights,
New Haven and Fairfield and served as a Milford Minuteman (a form of home
guard). His biggest claim to fame is
that he kept a diary for 47 years, from 1763 to 1810, recording weather
observations every day and telling, in very few words, what he did that day. The diary provides picture of life in Milford during and after the
American Revolution.
John Downs
was born in Milford in June 1745, and he died
in Milford on 19 February 1819, at age 74, and is buried
in Milford Cemetery. He was the son of John Downs and Ann
Hine. He married Hannah Stone on 14 December 1769. She was
born in 1752 and died 27 December 1819 at age 67 and is buried
next to her husband.
John and
Hannah had 7 children, 6 of whom survived to adulthood.
In Families of Early Milford, Conn., Susan
Woodruff Abbott, Downs’ great great great great granddaughter, describes the
diary as follows (p. 230): “This diary
is contained in one book, possibly done in sections and sewed together with
linen thread, about 7 by 5 inches. The
pages are carefully and neatly ruled and written in excellent hand and shows
little degeneration in his later years.
A line done every day, includes always the weather, his attendance at
church every Sunday and his activities in the town which were many.”
The diary was
passed down through the generations and is now at the library of the University of New Mexico at Albuquerque. This is because the woman who inherited the
diary moved there and decided to present it to the University for safe
keeping. A microfilm copy of the diary
is in the Milford Public Library.
A typical
entry when he was weaving would include, after a brief description of the
weather, what kind of cloth he wove that day, for whom, and how much. The entry for 5
October 1775, for instance, reads, “rain most all Day, I wove Lieut Isaac Treats
Lin[en] 8:0:0. The three numbers at the end of the line
indicate yards, els (1/4 yard) and nails (about 2 inches).
Some entries
could be poignant. During September
1773, we find the following entries:
16 Clear & pleasant, I Spooled & warp &
Sized Got the Doctor
17 Clear & warm, I tended my Dear Son John with
the Canker [scarlet fever]
18 Clear & pleasant, I help tend John & he
very Sick
C Clear & good weather. I at home my Son John Died
20 Clear & warm, I prepared and Buried my Son
(Note: Downs’s son John was 2 1/2 years
old. The letter “C” for the 19th is a
Dominical letter used in almanacs for Sundays which Downs used consistently
throughout his diary.)
At times Downs could be maddeningly terse
with his comments on the news of the day.
Three days after the fighting at Lexington and Concord in April 1775, his comment
was, “a Sorrowful Alarm.” And, two days
after this, “News from Boston.”
He frequently
mentions training with the local militia, and finally he sees action. On 13 August
1776
he and the Milford men board Capt. Pond’s
sloop for New York. He then tells of watching for the enemy, and
being on fatigue duty. Then, on the 27th
the unit goes over to Long Island. On the 30th was the Battle of Long Island or Brooklyn Heights, at which the Americans
were badly defeated. He says, “we quit
our station & flee to New York.” But on the 16th of September, at Harlem Heights, “I join our Reg.t at the
line & a Smart fight, we beat them back.”
Downs was discharged from the
army on the 25th and returned to Milford on foot, marching 6 miles
the first day. On the 26th he walked 33
miles almost to Norwalk, and reached home the
following day and found all well. The
next day he went out “a-squirreling & got 3 squirrels & 1 pigeon.”
Downs makes
no mention of one of Milford’s most historic events, the last day in December
1776 that 200 American soldiers were cast on the shores of Milford by the
British, about a quarter of whom were suffering from smallpox. But in March he journeyed to Salem, New York, to be inoculated for small
pox. This gave him a severe case of the
disease from which he almost died. There
is a ten day period when he made no diary entries because of “the small pox
which was heavy upon me.” Having
contracted and recovered from the disease he acquired an immunity which allowed him to later go to New Haven to tend sufferers during an
epidemic.
His comment
on the British raid at Pond Point on 25 August 1777, for which Abigail Merwin
would be a Milford Hall of Fame 2011 co-inductee, again was terse: “Cloudy & rain, I at the farm, Alarm
& Training at Town.”
In other
military actions, Downs witnessed the British raid on New Haven in 1779 and then the
burning of Fairfield.
The end of
the Revolutionary War did provide cause for Downs to be more specific about
the news. When word of Yorktown reached Milford, he wrote “rejoyce for
Victory [over] Cornwallis.” And then,
with word of the Treaty of Paris in 1783 ending the war, on 31 March, “went to
rejoice for peace.”
In addition
to his weaving and militia duties, Downs was a part time school
teacher. In those days teaching duty was
passed among various people on a rotating schedule. For instance, starting on 4 February 1784, “I begin School at Bryan Farm.” Bryans Farm would be North Milford or present-day Orange. Every day from then until 27 March, the day’s
entry except Sunday’s includes “I keep school.”
As this appears to have been a rather lengthy commute, Downs tells of boarding with
different families every few days.
John Downs’
house still stands at 139 North Street, having been saved from
“demolition by neglect.” There is some
uncertainty about when the house was built.
The framing of the house is consistent with the techniques in use about
1750, but Downs tells of dismantling his old house and building a new one on his
property during the 1790s.
There is much
in the diary of everyday life in Milford during this period. Downs frequently tells of
farming, “killing hogs,” haying, hoeing corn and helping his father-in-law,
Samuel Stone, whom he refers to as “Father Stone.” Downs regularly attended the
Second Congregational Church or “Plymouth” Church and usually tells
who preached each Sunday. As was the
Puritan custom, he did not observe Christmas.
He would mention what day it was but then tell of a normal work
day.
Those who
would like to know what life in Milford was like over 200 years ago
can get a vivid idea from reading Downs’ diary.
Is the only way to read the diary now, aside from the original, the microfilm copy at the Milford Library?
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