Alexander Hamilton Willard
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| Alexander Hamilton Willard | |
Alexander and Eleanor
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| Born | July 1777 Condor Corner, Town of Charlestown, New Hampshire |
|---|---|
| Died | 6 March 1865 Franklin Township, Sacramento County, California |
| Occupation | Blacksmith |
| Known for | Lewis and Clark Expedition |
| Political party | Corps of Discovery |
| Spouse | Eleanor Mcdonald |
Alexander Hamilton Willard (1777–1865) was a blacksmith who joined the Lewis and Clark Expedition.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
[edit] Origin
Alexander Hamilton Willard Sr. was born in July 1777 in the town of Charlestown, New Hampshire, he was the oldest son of Lt Jonathan Willard and the only child of Betty Caswell. [1] Alexander was the 6th generation Willard born in America from Major Simon Willard's line.
[edit] Expedition
Alexander enlisted in an artillery company in 1800. During an unsuccessful search for Baker Bay, Willard and George Shannon were ordered to camp out and wait for the main party. While sleeping on the beach a group of Native Americans gathered their guns leaving them unarmed, The main party returned in such a timely manner as to startle the Native Americans into returning the guns. Although Willard had redeemed himself since this point he still received the harshest punishment distributed to a member of the Corps of Discovery; "Court Martial on the Trail". The punishment was issued on July 12, 1804, and consisted of a hundred lashes.[2]
During a portage around the Missouri River Falls in July of 1805, Alexander Willard was attacked by a "White Bear", Clark gathered three men and chased the bear off. The island nearby later became known as White Bear Island in memory of that event.[3]
In 1806 during his stay at Fort Clatsop, both Willard and William E. Bratton fell ill, although Willard recovered Bratton did not.
With the Corps of Discovery he assisted John Shields as a blacksmith. In 1808, Meriwether Lewis hired him as government blacksmith for the Sauk and Fox Indians; the following year he was appointed to the same position for the Delawares and Shawnees. He later served in the War of 1812.
[edit] Marriage
Half a year after the completion of the expedition, February 14th 1807 Alexander married Eleanor Mcdonald. They gave birth to twelve children.
- Austin James Willard
- George Clark Willard
- Alexander Hamilton Willard Jr
- Eliza Martha Willard
- Roland Rudolph Willard
- Christiana D. Willard
- Joel Willard
- Nancy Adeline Willard
- Narcissa C. Willard
- Eleanor C. Willard
- Lewis Augustus Willard
- Willis Willard
[edit] Death
Alexander Hamilton Willard Sr. died in March 1865, he was recorded as the last survivor known in California of the "Lewis and Clark Expedition". He is buried in Franklin Cemetery in Franklin, California, in Sacramento County. [4]
[edit] References
- ^ Charles Henry Pope, editor, Willard Genealogy; Sequel to Willard Memoir (Boston: Willard Family Association, 1915), p. 133 gives unsubstantiated b.d. of 24 August 1778.
- ^ Clark William. Dear Brother: letters of William Clark to Jonathan Clark. 2003. Yale University Press. 230-240.
- ^ Meriwether Lewis. 2004 Lewis and Clark Journals: An American Epic of Discovery. U of Nebraska Press.400-405. ISBN 0803280394
- ^ Family Bible of Mary Ann Wakefield Willard, 1857 Present owner is L. Spencer Leister, of Long Beach, California, Newspaper clipping tucked into the Bible.

