Sunday, April 30, 2023

The Peculiar Case of Dr. Blank, Part Two ©

 

 


Author’s note – for more on Dr. Blank’s adventure, read “A Ranger’s Story, 1756 ©”, HERE and “The Peculiar Case of Dr. Blank, Part One©”, HERE.

 

An excerpt from the biography of Dr. John Manning Jr., the son of Dr. John Manning.


Earlier, we discovered that “Dr. Blank” was none other than Dr. John Manning, a man who lived a long, full, adventurous, and rather eccentric life!  As the “New Contributor” wrote “The old man was, as usual, in his private sanctum ... It was a long narrow room, ... On one side was a little counter, with a pair of rusty scales hung over it, and behind a number of shelves of dusty vials and gallipots ... Over head hung bunches of parching-corn, and various natural curiosities, while some antediluvian pictures garnished the walls”. 

 


I believe that we have proved that Dr. John Manning was the mysterious “Dr. Blank”, but questions remain, such as, did he serve with Colonel Ephraim Williams’ Third Massachusetts Regiment of Provincials “that in 1755 essayed to take Crown Point from the French” and fight at the Battle of Lake George, and later enlist with “Rogers' company of Rangers”?  This remains to be seen.  What can we use to prove, or disprove Dr. Manning’s tale, and discover if it is true, or simply a good piece of historical fiction, a tall tale, foisted upon “New Contributor”.

 


But did he serve?  Direct evidence...

 

According to the “New Contributor”, we know that the hero of our adventure...

 

At nineteen years of age, he joined the army of the provinces, that
in 1755
essayed to take Crown Point from the French
.

 

...marched to the lakes with Colonel Ephraim Williams... The
doctor fought under his command at Lake George, on the memorable eighth of September

 

The next year he joined Rogers' company of Rangers, and was
stationed with a party of them at Fort Ann
, not far from where Whitehall now stands. 

 

Assuming we correctly identified “Dr. Blank” as Doctor John Manning, let’s take these claims one by one, and see if there is any direct written evidence to support them.

 

“At nineteen years of age, he joined the army of the provinces...”

 


The “Beating Orders” for the enlistment of Massachusetts Provincials, required recruits to be between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five at the time of enlistment, only those who born before 1737 and after 1720, would have been able to enlist.  Since our hero claimed to be 19 years of age in 1755, the John Manning we are looking for would have had to be born around 1736. 

 

According to James Thatcher M.D.’s,  American Medical Biography,
published in 1828, Dr. John Manning was born in November of 1737.  However, William Henry Manning wrote in the Genealogical and Biographical History of the Manning Families, 1902, that he was baptized on November 12, 1738.  The dates are inconsistent and confusing, but if the oldest reference is used in preference to the latest1, then Dr. John Manning would have been 17 years and 7 months old in the spring of 1755 if he enlisted for the campaign against Crown Point.  While nineteen is not the same as almost eighteen, it is possible that he lied about his age to enlist, in any case, his age in 1755, was in the right range for him to have been the hero of our story.

 

“...marched to the lakes with Colonel Ephraim Williams... The doctor fought under his command...”

 


Colonel Ephraim Williams raised and commanded the ten companies of the Third Massachusetts Regiment of Provincials, who were recruited from the western parts of Massachusetts; while Colonel Moses Titcomb commanded the Second Massachusetts, raised from the eastern parts of the Colony, and Colonel Timothy Ruggles, the First Massachusetts, which was recruited from south and central Massachusetts.  Additionally, Col. Williams was second in command of the entire expedition against Crown Point, subordinate to General William Johnson, and commanded Burke's and Rogers' Rangers, as well as his own regiment, according to Author Wyllis Wright.2

 

Thomas Jefferys, “A map of the most inhabited part of New England”, 1774, showing the locations of Ipswich, MA and Newmarket, NH 


Our hero claimed to have “marched to the lakes with Colonel Ephraim Williams...” and “fought under his command”.  This is a rather ambiguous statement, since it could mean he was in the company directly commanded by Col. Williams, or in one of the other eleven companies that the Colonel was in command of, or even perhaps, just that he was a part of the 1755 Expedition against Crown Point!

 

We know, according to the American Medical Biography, that Dr. John Manning was born and grew up in Ipswich, Massachusetts, where his father Dr. Joseph Manning had a successful practice.  At the age of 22, he “commenced practice at Newmarket, New Hampshire, in 17593  However, “He returned to Ipswich in 1760”, to continue his practice of medicine.

 

To date, I have not been able to find any written records that showed
that Doctor John Manning lived anywhere other than Ipswich, before 1759, when he moved to Newmarket, so it will have to be assumed that he resided in Ipswich until then.  If he was part of the regiment commanded by Col. Williams, then it is likely that he would have been part of Colonel Moses Titcomb’s Second Massachusetts
Regiment of Provincials, since they were raised from the eastern parts of Massachusetts.

 

Again unfortunately, I have not been able to find any direct written evidence for the enlistment of John Manning from Ipswich, in the muster records of the companies in either the First, Second or Third  Massachusetts Regiment of Provincials4.  Also, to date I have been unable to locate a muster roll for Captain John Burke’s company of Rangers.  So, it appears that the door of direct evidence along this line of reasoning has been closed.

 

“The next year he joined Rogers' company of Rangers...”

 


During the summer and fall of 1755, the New Hampshire Provincials, among others, had acted as scouts for the Colonial Army, as the year ended the New Hampshire men were at the end of their enlistments and wanted to return home.  Because of this Captain Rogers was given permission “to inlist at Large & that such Inlistments should be amounted as part of their Quota & the Genl. was desired to detach the rest out of their men”.

 

This is confirmed by Seth Pomeroy’s journal entry for October 6th, 1755, where he wrote “...Except Capt. Simes [William Simes] & Capt. Rogers which are to Stay here at ye fort [Fort Edward] all Winter with each of them a company of volentiers yt they think they Can raise for that purpose...  Captain Rogers, himself noted the same thing on December 19, 1755, when he wrote that “It was adjudged, both by Gen. Johnson and these Commissioners, that it would be of great use to leave one company of woodsmen or rangers under my command, to make excursions towards the enemies forts during the winter”.5 

 

I believe that James Minot’s phrase “to inlist at Large” meant that
Rogers, and most likely Captain Simes as well, were allowed to enlist volunteers from the other colonies’ soldiers whose enlistments had or were ending.  If so, it is possible that “Dr. Blank” could have enlisted in Captain Rogers’ Rangers during the winter of 1755/56.  But I have been unable to find a record of anyone named John Manning in Burt G. Loescher’s, Rogers Rangers Pvts. Roster, 1755-1761, so again the door of direct evidence has been slammed shut in our face!

 

In the end, we are left with one hit and two misses for direct evidence.  Doctor John Manning was in the correct age bracket to enlist and was about 19 years of age in 1755, but there is unfortunately no written evidence to show that he did.  Assuming that we have correctly identified Doctor John Manning as “Dr. Blank”, we are left with several questions, such as were the original records lost or scattered by the winds of time, did he enlist using a false name and if so, what was it and why, OR did he simply lie and tell a tall tale to “New Contributor”, which changes this from a case of a missing identity to a case of stolen valor!

 

Personally, I found the details in “The Ranger’s Adventure”, for the most part, compelling and consistent with what I know of the wilderness battlefields of the Lake George area during the French & Indian War, and personally I would like to believe that it is a true forgotten tale from a time long ago, so don’t forget to come back next week and read “The Peculiar Case of Dr. Blank, Part Three ©”, where we will talk about circumstantial evidence, inconsistencies, and things that ring true in “The Ranger’s Adventure”.

 


I hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me on YouTube at BandanaMan Productions for other related videos, HERE.  Don’t forget to follow me on both The Woodsman’s Journal Online, HERE, and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube.  If you have questions, as always, feel free to leave a comment on either site.  I announce new articles on Facebook at Eric Reynolds, on Instagram at bandanamanaproductions, and on VK at Eric Reynolds, so watch for me.

 

That is all for now, and as always, until next time, Happy Trails!

 

 

Notes

 

1 There were several mathematical errors in William Henry Manning’s biography of the Manning family and because of this and because James Thatcher was writing at a time closer to Dr. John Manning’s life, I am going to assume his dates are correct.

 

2 From Colonel Ephraim Williams, A Documentary Life, by Wyllis Wright, (1970).  Berkshire County Historical Society, Pittsfield, MA, page 4

 

3 Newmarket, New Hampshire, was a small town on the Lamprey River, about 30 miles (48 km) northwest of Ipswich, near the New Hampshire, Maine border. 

 

4 I did find an instance of a John Manning who was the correct age and for whom we did have direct written evidence that he served, and that would be John Manning of Lancaster, Massachusetts, who enlisted in

 

Because this John Manning was from Lancaster and because, according to the History of the Town of Lancaster Massachusetts, by Rev. Abijah P. Marvin, on page 253, that the Lancaster men, including John Manning, “...returned home by Albany in the early winter of 1756” we know that this is not our hero who enlisted in Roger’s Rangers in early 1756.

 

5 The Annotated and Illustrated Journals of Major Robert Rogers, Timothy J. Todish

 

 

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