John Newton (soldier)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sgt. John Newton was a fictionalized soldier of the American Revolutionary War, serving under Brigadier General Francis Marion, the "Swamp Fox". He was born in 1755, and died in 1780. Although he appears today to have been unimportant, place names across the United States attest to his renown in the early 19th Century, one of the popular fictionalized heroic enlisted men of the Revolution, as if there were not enough actual heroes to honor.
Parson Weems's fictional Sgt. Newton saved a group of American prisoners from execution by capturing their British guards at the Siege of Savannah in 1779, in which the Americans recaptured Savannah, Georgia. According to Lieutenant Colonel Peter Horry however, "Newton was a Thief & a Villain."[1]
Sgt. Newton's story is similar to that of Sgt. William Jasper. Several states have a Newton and Jasper county adjacent to each other, as though these two were remembered as a pair. Counties and towns claimed to be named for these men would more accurately be said to be named for Parson Weems' romantic "carved and mutilated" historical fiction.[2]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Lou Ann Everett (1958). "Myth on the Map". American Heritage 10 (1): 62-64.
- ^ Lou Ann Everett (1958). "Myth on the Map". American Heritage 10 (1): 62-64.
[edit] Place Names
- Newton County, Georgia
- Newton County, Indiana
- Newton County, Missouri
- Newton County, Mississippi (maybe)
- Newton County, Texas and the city of Newton, Texas
[edit] External references
This biographical article related to the United States military is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |