Jump to content

James Moody (loyalist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Moody (1744–1809), New Jersey Volunteers

James Moody (c. 1744 – April 6, 1809) was a loyalist volunteer during the American Revolution who became a farmer and political figure in Nova Scotia. He represented Annapolis County in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly from 1793 to 1806.[1] He wrote one of the most important loyalist memoires of the war.

Career

[edit]
Lieutenant Moody who distinguish'd himself as one of the most gallant partizans in the British service, made himself the terror of the rebels, here freeing a British soldier held prisoner by the Americans.

He was born in Little Egg Harbor, New Jersey, on January 1, 1744, the son of John Moody. His first wife was Elizabeth Brittain (1748–1782). James and Elizabeth had three children including a son John born March 6, 1768, and a daughter Maria born on February 28, 1775. Records for the other child have been lost. His father-in-law William Brittain (1725–1804) was an outspoken Loyalist, though only the three youngest of his six sons were also Loyalists.[2]

By 1777, James and his family were living on a 500-acre farm owned in his father's name, but for James' use. On Sunday, March 28, 1777, a Patriot militia came to his house to arrest him because he refused to give up his allegiance to Britain and swear loyalty to the United States. Shots were fired, but he managed to escape. In April 1777, he joined the New Jersey Volunteers under the command of General Cortlandt Skinner.[2] On 22 August 1777, his battalion fought in the Battle of Staten Island, losing 30 men.[3] In 1780, Moody led several men to free eight Loyalist prisoners held in the Sussex County Courthouse in Newton, Sussex County, New Jersey. Moody freed the men and fled with them. Despite a pursuit lasting several days, Revolutionary forces failed to capture them.[4]

He was captured in 1780 but managed to escape to New York City. After that, for a time, he was put into service intercepting rebel correspondence. A measure of his success was that George Washington, whose dispatches he successfully intercepted, referred to him as "that villain Moody".[5] Following a betrayed attempt to steal the papers of Congress, Moody escaped, but his younger brother John was captured on November 8, 1781 (along with Laurence Marr) and hanged for espionage on November 13. He was only 23.[6] In late February 1782, Moody's wife Elizabeth was thrown by a horse and killed. He married his second wife, Jane Lynson, on March 21, 1782. He went to England that same year.

Also that year, he published an account of his experiences during the American Revolution.[6] This paints a unique and gritty picture of how what was effectively the first American civil war played out at the personal level.

While Moody described himself as reluctantly becoming a soldier, a 20th-century American study of spies and saboteurs on both sides of the conflict credited him with being the most remarkable agent of the war.[7]

He went to Nova Scotia in 1782 and settled at Sissaboo (later Weymouth). Moody built ships there and also constructed mills. He served as a captain in the Royal Nova Scotia Regiment, a colonel in the local militia and road commissioner. He died in Sissaboo.

Publication

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Sutherland, Stuart R J (1983), James Moody in Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online. Retrieved 2008-12-10.
  2. ^ a b Shenstone, Susan Burgess (2000), So Obstinately Loyal, James Moody, 1744-1809, (McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal).
  3. ^ "Loyalist Institute: A History of the 5th Battalion, New Jersey Volunteers".
  4. ^ Newton, NJ - The Sussex Court House
  5. ^ Fitzpatrick, John J. The Writings of George Washington, vol 23, p. 444
  6. ^ a b Moody, James (1783) Lieut. James Moody’s narrative of his exertions and sufferings in the cause of government, since the year 1776 (London).
  7. ^ Bakeless, John (1998), Turncoats, Traitors and Heroes ( New York, NY : Da Capo Press)