Richard Lippincott (Loyalist)

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Richard Lippincott
Born(1745-01-02)January 2, 1745
Shrewsbury, New Jersey
DiedMay 14, 1826(1826-05-14) (aged 81)
Buried
Weston, Ontario
Allegiance Great Britain
Service/branchMilitia
RankCaptain
UnitNew Jersey Volunteers

Captain Richard Lippincott, U.E. (January 2, 1745 – May 14, 1826) was an American-born Loyalist who served in the British Army during the American War of Independence. He is best known for his part in the Asgill Affair in which he hanged an enemy officer, Joshua Huddy, in revenge for similar murders of Loyalists, provoking an international incident.

Lippincott was born in Shrewsbury, New Jersey, a member of an old colonial family. He married on March 4, 1770, , daughter of Jeremiah and Esther Borden, of Bordentown, New Jersey. On the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War, he sided with the Crown. Captured early in the war and confined in the jail at Burlington, New Jersey, he escaped in 1776 and made his way to the British Army at Staten Island.[citation needed] He fought with the New Jersey Volunteers, which described as an irregular group that fought guerilla warfare behind American lines.[1]

In 1782, Lippincott's brother-in-law, , was seized from his home by Americans, who made him run a gauntlet.[1] When his body was found, he appeared to have been subjected to further torture and his body mutilated: his legs had been broken, one of his eyes had been gouged out, and one of his arms was missing.

Lippincott was assigned to exchange three captured Americans for some British prisoners, but he hanged one of them, Captain Joshua Huddy, and pinned a note to his body that stated that the hanging was in retaliation for White's death.[1] Huddy was a partisan officer of some repute in New Jersey.[citation needed] Huddy's execution attracted a great deal of attention both in Europe and America.[1] Patriot Commander-in-Chief George Washington demanded his British opposite Sir Henry Clinton court-martial Lippincott. Lippincott's defence successfully argued that as an irregular, he was technically a civilian, subject to civilian, not military, law. Chief Justice William Smith ruled that he did not have jurisdiction to try Lippincott since the incident occurred in an area outside effective British control. Lippincott was not convicted, but according to Gagan, "Clinton was forced to hold Lippincott in custody for the duration of the war to prevent Washington from exacting his revenge on an officer in Lord Cornwallis' captive army." After conferring with his officers, Washington determined a course of retaliation was called for. On his orders, British Captain Charles Asgill, who had been taken prisoner at the surrender at Yorktown, was selected by lot to be killed in retaliation for the death of Huddy.[2] Washington relented and spared Asgill only after pressure was applied on the Americans by the French government.

At the Evacuation of New York at the end of the war, Lippincott removed first to Nova Scotia and later to Upper Canada.[1] He received a grant of 3,000 acres (1,200 hectares) in . In 1806 he went to live with his newly married daughter, Esther, and his son-in-law George Taylor Denison in York (now Toronto). , in Toronto's Harbord Village, is named after him. He is buried in Weston, Ontario.[3]

Sources[]

  • Humphreys, David (1859). The conduct of General Washington : respecting the confinement of Capt. Asgill, placed in its true point of light. New York: Printed for the Holland Club; Collection Library_of_Congress.
  • "Memorial Tiles: Capt. Richard Lippincott". The United Empire Loyalists Association of Canada. Retrieved June 5, 2019.

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e David Gagan (1973). The Denison Family of Toronto: 1792–1925. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9781487597368. George Taylor Denison 1783 OR 1853.
  2. ^ Humphreys, 1859, p. vi
  3. ^ United Empire Loyalists Memorial

External links[]

This book incorporates text taken directly from The Loyalists of America and Their Times: from 1620 to 1816, a text in public domain.

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