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African
Americans in the American Revolution
Thousands
of African Americans served in various capacities throughout the American
Revolution. They served as cooks, teamsters, construction workers,
seamstresses and laundresses, and even soldiers and sailors. Some joined the
Patriot cause and others joined the British Crown.
Each who enlisted was
promised a variety of incentives such as freedom, property, and bounties.
Unfortunately, most never saw these promises come to reality.
Sadly, for their loyalty
and sacrifice they were simply placed back into slavery where they remained
for the rest of their lives. However, there were certain individuals who
gained their freedom and even were given land, but this was the exception.
William Taburn (Taborn)
Battle of Cowan’s Ford,
Huntersville, North Carolina
February 1, 1781
Born in
North Carolina
circa 1758 in Northampton County, North Carolina, Taburn was a “man of
colour” and was son of William Taburn (born in c. 1730) and Judy Allen. On
January 2, 1778 he married Nelly Evans, and John Watson signed their
marriage bond.
“William Tabor, age 19,
planter” Taburn who on
25 May 1778, enlisted as
a private in Capt. Thomas Satterwhite’s company of the Granville County
Militia Regiment “raised under the present Act of Assembly”. While residing
in Granville
County,
North Carolina
Taburn was drafted to serve, along with Drury Taburn (q.v.), as a private in
the Granville County Militia Regiment under Captain James Saunders and
Colonel William Taylor. His team of horses and wagon were requisitioned to
serve the unit. He then entered service in the North Carolina Continental
Line under Captain Saunders and Colonel Taylor for a 30-month tour.
Taburn
later served under Colonel Archibald Lytle and was in the Battle of Briar
Creek, Georgia,
on March 3, 1779. He served in another unit with Thomas Jordan and was under
Brigadier General William Lee Davidson at the Battle of Cowan’s Ford when
the British crossed the river Davidson was killed (February 1, 1781). Taburn
was near enough to Davidson to hear his final words. That same day Taburn
was at Widow Torrance’s Tavern when the British cavalry routed the
Americans. He rode all day and all night to find that he was twelve miles
from the site of the tavern and had been riding in a circle. He then rode
toward Salisbury but as he neared the town he learned the British were
already there.
This prompted him to
ride northward and cross the
Yadkin River, and from
there he passed through the Moravian town of
Salem.
At that point he became ill and failed to cross the
Dan River. William
Taburn was listed in a North Carolina State Census in the 1780’s as a “free
Negro”. He was issued a comptroller’s office certificate for his army pay by
the Board of Auditors for Wilmington District between 16 July 1783 and 19
March 1784.
On
10 August 1832, while
residing in Granville County, he applied for a Federal pension. At that time
he was blind and an inmate of the County Poor House, and was unable to state
the year in which he was born. He appeared as “William Taburn Sen’r.,” a
North Carolina Revolutionary War pensioner, under the Acts of 1818 and 1832
as reported by the Secretary of State to Congress in 1835, and was listed as
“William Taburn Sr.” an invalid pensioner in Granville County, North
Carolina, on the 1835 U.S. War Department Report on Pensions. By 1835 he had
received a total of $103.32 in benefits. Taburn died 4 February 1835, and on
26 May 1845
his widow applied for a pension while residing in Warren County, North
Carolina. At that time she was 85 years old and referred to her husband as
“William Taburn Sr.”
Sources:
(FPA W18115: N.A. M804: Clark North Carolina State Records, XXII:88: Heinegg,
A-A, NC/VA/SC, II:857-858: NC Soldiers, 434, 586, 600; Act of 1818; Act of
1832; Report 1835; Crow, 102; Greene, Black Courage, 32,43,82; MMS-NC, 8;
White, Abstracts III:2666, 3412)
African American
Patriots in the Southern Campaigns of the American Revolution
By Bobby G. Moss and Michael Scoggins
Published 2004
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