Robert Land

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Robert Land (1736 - 1818) was an adventurous, loyal frontiersman who served with the 79th Gordon Highlanders of the British Army. He fought with General James Wolfe on the Plains of Abraham and saw action in the Battles of Louisbourg and Fort Detroit. In 1763, Robert, his wife Phoebe and their nine children settled in the outlying village of Cushatunk. Here, the Land family had immediate contact with the local native peoples and, while hunting, found a wounded aboriginal and carried him home to be nursed to health. This kindness was to serve him well when he came to rely heavily on his native friends as a British Agent and spy during the American Revolution.

Land remained loyal to the Crown when the American Revolution broke out. He was saved from a fiery death when a native companion warned him of danger only hours before the rebel militia razed his home with the intent of taking him and his family hostage. The Land family fled to New York. Robert Land continued in dangerous missions for the British, leading troops through unmapped, otherwise hostile native Indian territory to attack rebel strongholds.

At the end of hostilities, then-Captain Robert Land crossed the Niagara River. It was here, after so many hardships, that the Land family settled under the British flag in Upper Canada and were the first settlers of what is now the City of Hamilton.[1]

Robert Land died in 1818 at the age of 82.

Scott G. Bowman, the founder and Headmaster of Robert Land Academy (the Academy was named in Land's honour), is a direct descendant of Robert and Phoebe Land.

[edit] Source

This biography was taken from the Robert Land Academy's Parents' Handbook, located at http://www.robertlandacademy.com/handbook.htm

[edit] References

  1. ^ Bailey, Thomas Melville (1981). Dictionary of Hamilton Biography (Vol I, 1791-1875). W.L. Griffin Ltd.