Joshua Loring

Joshua Loring (3 August 1716 – September 1781[1]) was an 18th-century colonial American naval officer in British service. During the French and Indian War, he served as a commodore in the Great Lakes region and was active during much of the Ontario and Quebec campaigns.

Joshua Loring
Born1716
Boston, Massachusetts Bay Colony
DiedSeptember 1781
Highgate, England, Great Britain
Allegiance Great Britain
Service/branch Royal Navy
Years of servicec. 1736-1760
RankCommodore
Battles/warsKing George's War
French and Indian War
RelationsJoshua Loring, Jr., son
Henry Lloyd Loring, son
Sir John Wentworth Loring, grandson
Other workmember of the Massachusetts Governor's Council under colonial Governor Thomas Gage

Biography

Born in Boston, Massachusetts to parents Joshua and Hannah (Jackson) Loring, and a great great grandson to colonist Thomas Loring,[2] he was apprenticed as a tanner but instead chose to enlist in the Royal Navy as a young man. He rose to command a privateer during King George's War, however he was captured by the French in 1744. Held as a prisoner in Louisbourg, Nova Scotia for several months, he was eventually released and was made a captain on 19 December 1757 [1] on HMS Squirrel.

Seven Years War

During the French and Indian War, he was involved in naval operations on Lake George and Lake Champlain in 1759 and served under General James Wolfe at the capture of Quebec later that year. Transferred to Lake Ontario, he commanded the advance guard at the Battle of the Thousand Islands while accompanying Field Marshal Jeffrey Amherst to Montreal in August 1760. In the final months of the war, Loring was seriously wounded at an engagement on Lake Ontario and retired at half-pay due to his injuries.[3]

Later life

Later known as the Loring-Greenough House, the home Loring abandoned to join the Loyalist cause

Loring settled in Jamaica Plain and lived at Loring-Greenough House for over a decade. He was appointed as a member of the governor's council by Governor Thomas Gage,[1] a position which made him so unpopular that he was attacked by mobs. A popular story recounts that, asked by an old friend what he would do when faced by a choice between remaining loyal and supporting the popular spirit of revolt, Loring replied "I have always eaten the King's bread, and always intend to."

However the Loring Genealogy suggests this was not a decision made lightly nor in advance: "He decided after serious consideration and consultation with friends, "the whole night through." In the morning he took his horse, rode to Boston and joined the English commander."[1]

Loring was forced to flee, with his family, to the safety of the British Army's garrison in Boston in August 1774. He was denounced by the Massachusetts Provincial Congress as "an implacable enemy to their country" on 30 March 1775. The Lorings remained in Boston until 17 March 1776, when the British Army left Boston for Halifax, evacuating as it went those Loyalists who had sought refuge in the city. The Lorings traveled on from Halifax to England, having been named in the Massachusetts Banishment Act of 1778. Their home and property in Jamaica Plain, used as a hospital by the rebels during the siege of Boston, were confiscated by the state in 1779 and sold at auction. Loring received a royal pension until his death[1] at Highgate, England in 1781.[4]

Family

Loring's eldest son, Joshua Loring, Jr., served as high-sheriff in Suffolk County, Massachusetts [5] and was Commissary General of American prisoners-of-war in New York from 1777 until 1783. Together with William Cunningham, he was held responsible for the deaths from starvation and disease of thousands of Americans held prisoner on ships moored in New York Harbor. "[B]ut it is not easy to ascertain the truth, or to determine his personal responsibility in the treatment of prisoners."[6] He was discharged from his office on the grounds of corruption and departed for England, where he died in 1789.[7] Joshua Loring, Jr's son, John Wentworth Loring, served in the Royal Navy and rose to the rank of admiral.

Henry Lloyd Loring, another son of Joshua Loring, Jr., also had a successful career in the service of Britain, becoming an archdeacon of Calcutta.[8][9]

gollark: I would accept a democracy where I have the vote.
gollark: Democracy is bad because it sometimes results in outcomes I disagree with.
gollark: So what is your threshold of "probability of resulting in a baby" where it becomes morally relevant?
gollark: Merely.
gollark: I'm actually not you. Probably.

References

  1. Charles Henry Pope, Loring Genealogy (Cambridge, Mass., 1917), pp. 78-79 accessed at https://archive.org/details/loringgenealogy00pope
  2. Charles Henry Pope, Loring Genealogy, (1917), p.46
  3. Roberts, Oliver Ayer. History of the Military Company of the Massachusetts, Now Called the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts, 1637-1888. Vol. II. Boston: Alfred Mudge & Son Printers, 1897. (pg. 157-158)
  4. Boyd, Eva Phillips. "Commodore Joshua Loring, Jamaica Plain by Way of London" in Old-Time New England , April–June 1959 . Retrieved from http://www.jphs.org/people/2005/4/14/commodore-joshua-loring-jamaica-plain-by-way-of-london.html
  5. Losing, Benson J. Harpers' Popular Cyclopedia of United States History from the Aboriginal Period Containing Brief Sketches of Important Events and Conspicuous Actors. Vol. II. New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1893. (pg. 810)
  6. Lorenzo Sabine, Biographical Sketches of Loyalists of the American Revolution: With an Historical Essay, (Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1864), vol. 2, pp. 27-8 accessed 24 June 2015
  7. Fish, Hamilton. "Martyrdom of thirteen thousand American Patriots aboard the monstrous Jersey and other British prison ships in New York Harbor", Originally appearing in New York State—The Battleground of the Revolutionary War Vantage Press, 1976. retrieved from http://longislandgenealogy.com/prison.html
  8. Drake, Francis S. Dictionary of American Biography, Including Men of the Time. Boston: James R. Osgood & Co., 1872. (pg. 563)
  9. Pope, Charles Henry Loring Genealogy. Cambridge, MA: Murray and Emery Co., 1917. (pg. 226)
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