Muster Roll of
Captain Charles Polk's Company
Among the interesting Revolutionary records of
Mecklenburg county, which have been preserved, is the "Muster Roll"
of Captain Charles Polk's Company of "Light Horse," with the time of
service and pay of each member thereof, as follows:
"Dr. The Public of North Carolina,
"To Captain Charles Polk, for services done by him and his Company
of Light Horse, who entered the 12th of March, 1776.
Put Search Here
Remarks.--The whole expense of Captain Polk's
company in this campaign for sixty-five days, including the hire of
three wagons at 16s. each per day, and two thousand and five
rations, at 8d. each, amounted to £683 9s. 8d. The account was
proven, according to law, before Colonel Adam Alexander, one of the
magistrates of the county, and audited and countersigned by Ephraim
Alexander, George Mitchell and James Jack, the bearer of the
Mecklenburg Declaration to Congress. The pay of a Captain was then
10s. per day; of a 1st and 2nd Lieutenant, 7s. each; of a first
Sergeant, 6s. 6d.; of a 2nd Sergeant, 5s. 6d.; of the Clerk and "Shurgeon,"
6s. 6d.; and of each private, 5s.
James Hall, one of the privates in this expedition, afterward became
a distinguished Presbyterian minister of the gospel, and was elected
on two occasions by his own congregation, in pressing emergencies,
to the captaincy of a company, and acted as chaplain of the forces
with which he was associated. The late Rev. John Robinson, of Poplar
Tent Church, in Cabarrus county, in speaking of him, said, "when a
boy at school in Charlotte (Queen's Museum), I saw James Hall pass
through the town, with his three-cornered hat, the captain of a
company and chaplain of the regiment." In Captain Polk's manuscript
journal of his march, under Gen. Rutherford, through the mountains
of North Carolina, then the unconquered haunts of wild beasts and
savage Indians, he says: "On September 15th, 1776, Mr. Hall preached
a sermon," prompted, as it appears, by the death of one of Captain
Irwin's men on the day before.
This was probably the first sermon ever heard in these secluded
mountainous valleys, now busy with the hum of civilized life. (See
sketch of his services under "Iredell County.")
Humphrey Hunter, first a private and afterward lieutenant in Captain
Robert Mebane's company in this expedition, also became an eminent
minister of the gospel, and presided at the "semi-centennial"
celebration of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence, on the
20th of May, 1825. (See sketch of his services under Gaston county.)
William Shields was the gallant soldier of General Sumter's command,
who discovered a bag of gold in the camp of the routed enemy after
the battle of Hanging Rock. Not less generous than brave, steady on
the march, and true on the field, he voluntarily carried the gold to
his commanding general, and requested him to use it in the purchase
of clothing and shoes for his ragged and suffering fellow-soldiers.
It is needless to say that this brave and meritorious officer
faithfully applied it according to the request of the honest and
generous soldier.
Thomas Shelby, a relative of Colonel Isaac Shelby, of King's
Mountain fame, James Alexander, Charles Polk, Jun., Robert Harris,
William Ramsey, John Foard (one of the Mecklenburg signers), John
Lemmond, John Montgomery, William Rea, and others on the list, will
awaken in the minds of their descendants emotions of veneration for
their patriotic ancestors, who, one hundred years ago--at the very
dawn of the Revolution, and before a "hesitating" Congress,
proclaimed our National declaration, pledged their lives, fortunes
and sacred honor in the cause of American freedom.
Mecklenburg County
|
|
|
|
Mecklenburg County |
|
|
|
North Carolina
Counties |
|
|
|
Genealogy Records |
|
|
|
Other Genealogy Records |
|
|
Contribute to North
Carolina Genealogy
If you have information you would
like contribute to the website or pages you would
like us to include, please use our
comment form!! If you find a broken link please let
us know!
|
| |
|