
[click image to enlarge]
Sometime around
1799, a family register was made to
record the births, marriages, and deaths
in Samuel Colton's family.
This printed and hand-colored
register was almost certainly created by
Richard Brunton (1750-1832), a notorious
engraver, counterfeiter and
British
deserter.
Born in 1750 in Birmingham,
England, he apprenticed with an engraver
before enlisting in the British Army
Grenadiers. He served from 1774-1779 in
America during the Revolution, and saw
heavy action, including the Battle of
Bunker Hill, the Battle of Brandywine,
and the British retreat from
Philadelphia before deserting in New
York in 1779. His career in engraving
included counterfeiting currency, which
landed him in prison on more than one
occasion, including a two-year sentence
at hard labor served at Connecticut's
New-Gate prison, where he earned money
to repay the costs of his prosecution as
well as better living conditions by
painting portraits of the warden and his
family and by creating engravings.
In 1807, Brunton was arrested
again, this time in Massachusetts, and
was given a life sentence.
Four years later, the state
granted his petition for release due to
ill health.
In exchange for the early
release, he promised to return to his
native England, but instead went to live
in Groton, Massachusetts, where he died
in the poorhouse in 1832.
One of Brunton's
legitimate,
and perhaps more lucrative creations,
were family registers--documents with
decorative borders that often included
depictions of Faith, Hope, Charity, and
Peace, and left room for the recording
of the family births, deaths and
marriages.

[click image to enlarge]

[click image to enlarge]
These pre-printed
family registers are considered some of
the earliest American examples. The
Colton register includes Samuel and
Flavia Colton's marriage, the births
(and deaths) of their children, his
second marriage to Lucy Colton and their
family.
These types of family registers
were considered proof for official
documentation.
Samuel Colton
(1727-1784) was a well-known wealthy
Longmeadow merchant, earning him the
nickname, "Marchant" Colton.
His impressive large home, built
circa 1754, stood on a rise just south
of the Longmeadow town green. When the
house was demolished in the early 20th
century, parts of the house were
salvaged as souvenirs, including the
very imposing "Connecticut River God"
front doorway, which now resides in a
place of honor in the Museum of Fine
Arts, Boston.


Al McKee at
the Boston Museum of Fine Arts
In 1776, a kind of
local "tea party" took place at Samuel
Colton's shop. Unhappy with
Colton's prices for the West India goods
he imported (essentials such as rum),
townspeople, including his
brother-in-law, dressed up as Native
Americans and raided his shop.
They removed the disputed goods,
calculated what they felt to be fair
prices and left that sum in exchange.
Colton's suit for legal redress failed,
and he is said to have remained bitter
for the rest of this life about the
"theft".
To learn more
about Richard Brunton's fascinating
life, see Deborah Child's book,
Soldier, Engraver,
Forger: Richard Brunton's Life on the
Fringe in America's New Republic.
For more information about Samuel
Colton, see Barbara Smith's book,
After the
Revolution.
|