John Deseronto

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Captain John Deseronto UE (c1740's - 1811) was a prominent Mohawk war chief during the American Revolutionary War.

He was born in the 1740's likely in the Mohawk valley. He was educated in a white school and had acculturated to their customs. In 1759, during the French and Indian War, he was at the Battle of Fort Niagara, and the following year he was at the Battle of Quebec. In the summer of 1764, he accompanied John Bradstreet when he went to Fort Detroit at the end of Pontiac's Rebellion.

He lived at Fort Hunter where he owned a handsome house and eight-two acres of rich flat land. He had a wagon, plough, harrow, and ten beaver traps.[1]

Contents

[edit] American Revolution

When the American Revolution started he was a chief of the Mohawks at Fort Hunter, during this war he sided with the British. He sided with the British and the Johnson family and he accompanied Guy Johnson went he left for Canada in the summer of 1775. He went back to the Mohawk valley the following year and meet with Sir John Johnson. In May 1776, he again meet with John Johnson and helped him escape to Montreal.

In July 1777, he was the leader of a party which assessed the defences of Fort Stanwix. On July 14, they surprised and attacked Ensign John Spoor's work detail as it was outside the fort cutting sod. Deseronto passed the information that the fort was strongly garrisoned back to Daniel Claus. Barry St. Leger decided to proceed without adequate artillery regardless. He took part in the siege and the Battle of Oriskany. After St. Leger had retreated, Deseronto stayed behind to enjoy a meal at St. Leger's table. A scouting party from the fort found Deseronto in St. Leger's tent and shot him with buck and ball in the left arm and breast.[2] Deseronto was seriously wounded and almost lost his arm. He continued to Fort Hunter where set about preparing the village for a mass departure. On September 4, he arrived at Burgoyne's camp with the Fort Hunter families and several prominent loyalists, totalling about 150 persons. The villages had abandoned their homes after hearing about the sacking of the Upper Castle. The party had to fight through the 3rd New Hampshire Regiment to reach Burgoyne's' camp. They killed seven of the Americans and Deseronto was freshly wounded. They settled at La Chine, near Montreal and were supplied by the British in exchange for the war service.

In 1779 he led two scouting parties up the Richelieu valley. In 1780, he took part in Sir John Johnson's raid on the Mohawk valley and he was at the Battle of Klock's Field. In 1781 he led multiple raids into the Mohawk valley destroying mills and cattle and taking prisoners. In the spring of 1782, Deseronto and Captain Isaac Hill destroyed the mill at Little Falls on the Mohawk and took some prisoners.[3]

[edit] After War Years

After the war, he and Joseph Brant meet with Frederick Haldimand to discuss the loss of their land in New York. Haldimand promised to resettle the Mohawks near the Bay of Quite. Brant decided that he preferred to settle on the Grand River. Brant and Johnson ridiculed Deseronto's decision to stay at the Bay of Quite. Haldimand purchased and granted the Mohawks a tract 12 by 13 miles on the Bay of Quite. About 200 Mohawks settled with him at what is now called the Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory, Ontario. The Mohawks of the Lower Castle primarily settled at the Bay of Quinte, while those of the Upper Castle settled on the Grand River. Deseronto was personally granted a lump sum payment of about eight hundred pounds for his losses, three thousand acres of land, and an annual pension of forty five pounds.

In 1797, Deseronto and Joseph Brant went to New York where they, in exchanged for a small sum, they agreed to extinguish Mohawk land claims within New York.

He died January 7, 1811 at the Mohawk settlement on the Bay of Quinte in Upper Canada.

[edit] Legacy

The town of Deseronto, Ontario is named in his honour.

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Watt, pg. 273
  2. ^ Watt, pg. 253
  3. ^ Graymont, pg. 254

[edit] References