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Johann Jacob Carlow (abt. 1725 - abt. 1790)

Johann Jacob Carlow
Born about in Germanymap [uncertain]
Ancestors ancestors
Son of and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of — married [date unknown] [location unknown]
Descendants descendants
Died about at about age 65 in Maine, United Statesmap
Problems/Questions Profile manager: Julia Howard private message [send private message]
Profile last modified | Created 6 Jun 2013
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Contents

Biography

Sources

Notes

(Research):Re: Carlow {Carlo} Immigration 1751 Priscilla
Posted by: Carol Shiels (ID *****0778) Date: December 01, 2010 at 08:59:22
In Reply to: Re: Carlow {Carlo} Immigration 1751 Priscilla by Patti W I of 122
Hi Patti,
I have just discovered and started to research my Carlow roots.
I have a Jacob Carlow b 1776 - d 2/22/1863 Digdeguash, New Brunswick, Canada. He was a son of John C Carlow and his wife Mary/Margaret Unk. John C was born in 1752 during the immigration voyage of the ship PRISCILLA. His parents were immigrants from Germany, Johann "Jacob" Carlow and his wife Elizabeth Unk. They arrived at Broad Bay Plantation (now Waldoboro, Maine)in 1752, though probably removed to Pownalborough, (now Dresden, Maine)soon afterwards. The Carlow family is not included as descendants of Old Broad Bay. In the 1766 Census, the Carlow family was living in Pownalborough and also there in 1790.
At the time of the Revolutionary War, the community was deeply divided between Loyalists - supportive of the British Crown - and the Rebels/Patriots. The loyalists, probably including Jacob & Elizabeth Carlow and their family, removed to the fort at Bagaduce (now Castine, Maine)for protection. Their sons John and Martin were carpenters and helped to build the Bagaduce Fort, having lived previously in Nova Scotia. They were later given an island of the coast of Maine as reward for their Loyalist service. Today that island is called Campabello and became a summer residence of US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
I am sorry that I can not offer answers to your family connections.
Certainly I would agree that Carlow Lilly might be a descendant, as it was not uncommon for a child to be given the mother's maiden name as a given name.
As for the connection to the Lilly family you might try the United Empire Loyalist site to see if a Mr Lilly was a known Loyalist.
Children of known loyalists were known to spread out in Canada and some even returned to the northern states in America, Maine and New York included.
I have too much history to place here, so I will send what I have to your e-mail address.
Also from Carol Shiels:
Many of the passengers indentured themselves out to work for a specified time, to pay off their debts of the passage. Some went to Kennebec {Dresden} and some to the glassworks at Germantown, Braintree, MA. some did not join their families in Broad Bay until 8 years later. But most went to Broad Bay (Waldoboro) the following spring with Waldo, where they settled on Dutch Neck, on the west side of the Medomak River.
On pg 55-60 is the reconstructed passenger list of the 1751 PRISCILLA, based on 2 petitions found in the German and French Archives. Most of the passengers were German, though the list was originaly written in both German and French and published in 1752 to encourage further emigration. The ship, after several delays, landed in Boston, MA, after which the passengers disembarked 11/1751
for the winter stay in Boston.
On page 57 appears the name Jacob Carlo {Carlor?} with wife Elizabeth and son John, born at sea 10/17/1751. No other info specific to this family is included. [This leads me to believe that they did not stay at Broad Bay]
_________________________________________-
Early Carlow History
By
Thomas W. Bentum, IV
January 2007
The Carlows are a fascinating family with their pre-Revolutionary beginnings in America, choosing sides during and just after the American Revolution, and deciding to either stay east or move west like the rest of America. These decisions in the midst of major historical events have left the family divided for generations.
Where did the Carlows originate? Growing up I was told that they came from Ireland. That is an easy assumption to make since there is a Carlow County and a Carlow Castle and they are all currently spelled the same as the Carlows in this family currently spell their name. But spelling is of very little importance, especially in the early years in America. Sound is what matters. Often times the early records spell the name "Carlo". The sound of the name could easily be German or even French (like in Monte Carlo).
The earliest Carlows, Jacob and Elizabeth, arrived in Pownalborough, Maine (now Dresden) in the spring of 1752. Charles Allen writes in The History of Dresden, Maine that the people who came that year were both French Huguenots and German. He is not sure which nationality the Carlows were, but notes that the Anglican pastor serving Pownalborough, Rev. Jacob Bailey, lists them as German.1 Most telling is the fact that those Carlows that were living in Canada in 1851 indicated that their ethnicity was German on the census. The evidence points to the Carlow name being of German origin, not Irish or French.
The Carlows were part of a plan by the government of the Bay Colony to recruit poor Germans to settle the frontiers. At that time the frontier was places like Dresden and Waldoboro, Maine, which was the target of this particular settling of people. It was risky business since there was much hostility between the colonists and the Native Americans. The Germans would help populate the area and provide a buffer between the sometimes hostile native population and the English. Lucky Germans!
The Carlows came on the ship Priscilla and Jasper Stahl in History of Old Broad Bay has pieced together its voyage. It began in Rotterdam in May 1751 where it picked up the French and German immigrants brought by transports from the mouth of the Ruhr River. Because of difficult negotiations the ship did not sail until June when it headed for Cowes, England. Again there was trouble and it did not sail until the end of July for New England. All of this delay used up the immigrants' provisions so that when the ship was well out to sea provisions were stopped. The passengers now had to purchase food from the ship's stores. They were poor and had no money so the immigrants were forced to go into debt and sell themselves as indentured servants upon arriving in America. Stahl believes this may have been part of the plan to get the immigrants to be under their control after landing. To make matters worse, the ship faced head winds and did not land in Boston until October 28. Winter of course was at hand and they could not continue to the frontier settlements. Instead they stayed in the Boston area working under forced labor to pay off their debts and living in other people's homes. In the spring of 1752 the majority of the immigrants were settled by General Samuel Waldo in Dresden and Waldoboro areas. Some stayed and worked at the New Germantown Glassworks Company in Braintree, rejoining their families eight years later2.
The trip to America must have been particularly difficult for Jacob and Elizabeth Carlow because their first son, John, was born on board ship on 17 October 1751. That means that Elizabeth was probably four months pregnant when she boarded ship in May of that year. I am sure her hope was that she would give birth to her child in her new home in America and not at sea.
Just a side note, I discovered in doing my family history that my grandfather, Norman Carlow, is a descendant of three other of these German immigrant families through his mother Alice Simpson. The three families, Hilt, Ludwig and Reed were settled in Waldoboro. The Reed family came on the same ship as the Carlows and possibly the Hilts too.
Jacob and Elizabeth had at least 4 more children that lived to adulthood, probably all born in Pownalborough: Margaret (born 17 February 1756), Martin (born 11 October 1757), Catherine (born 14 February 1761) and Thankful (born 14 March 1764) .3 In a local census taken in 1766, the Carlows were living in a one story log home with a single fireplace and the house had four windows with glass. It did not have a brick chimney or stone cellar.4 Contained in The History of Dresden is a map that shows where the original Carlow lot was. It was roughly located on the east side of the Kennebec River north of where the Eastern River joins the Kennebec. Their religious preference is recorded as Lutheran.5 Jacob and Elizabeth lived in Pownalborough at least until 1790 where they are recorded in the census as living there. No record has been found after that.
Jacob took on some leadership responsibilities in the town of Pownalborough. At the town meetings of 9 March 1762 and 26 March 1782 he was elected as a tythingman.6 A tythingman acted like a policeman over a group of families in the community reporting misconduct or crime. Historically a tythingman covered ten families, in other words a tythe of families. In 1783 he was a warden and in 1790 he was a surveyor of highways. They were all probably voluntary position and like most town positions, many people took turns doing them.
The coming of the Revolution to Pownalborough was devastating to the community. It split the town into those loyal to England and those opposed and it caused extreme economic hardship. The Loyalists were lead by the Anglican pastor Rev. Jacob Bailey whose congregation was made up mainly of the ethnic groups in town who were poor and English was their second language. Bailey was a strong supporter of the king and refused to read the Declaration of Independence to his congregation as well as speaking out in other ways. Needless to say this got Bailey in trouble as well as those in his congregation, which included the Carlows. In a letter dated 10 July 1779 from Bailey to British General McLean he includes Jacob Carlow as a loyal British subject to be counted on.
In 1776 when the colonies declared their independence, Jacob was about 51 years old, Elizabeth aged about 46, John aged 24, Martin aged 23, Catherine aged 15 and Thankful aged 12. It is presumed that they all went to the British fort in Bagaduce (now Castine, Maine) by 1779 for protection during the war. John and John Martin were active in the war helping to build the fort at Bagaduce. Lorenzo Sabine records in Biographical Sketches of the American Revolution, "[John and Martin Carlow] set out to travel by land in 1778 and, after enlisting with the 'Rebels' to avoid detection, and various other adventures, they arrived in Nova Scotia. The year following, Martin was in Lunenburg, in that Colony, and John at the British post at the mouth of the Penobscot, [Castine]. In 1782 Martin had 'gone to live at home in peace."7
The largest naval battle of the Revolution took place in the bay outside the fort in August 1779. Thirty-seven vessels brought twenty-six hundred troops to lay siege to the fort. However, a British fleet appeared under Sir George Collier and destroyed the American fleet and ended the siege. I find it interesting that Martin's son James married Clarrissa Fickett whose father, Zebulon Fickett was on the American side during the siege. It is but one of many examples of how quickly the people in Maine intermarried with once opposing families and settled down to creating a home in an often harsh land.
The British intended to hold Bagaduce and have it become the capital of a new colony called New Ireland. Its western border would be the Penobscot River. However, The Treaty of Paris made the St. Croix River the boundary for the United States and the British quietly gave up their town and fort. The Loyalists were compensated for their losses and were given land to resettle in St. Andrews, New Brunswick. The Penobscot Association was formed, which included John and Martin Carlow, and the people of Bagaduce were moved to St. Andrews between October 1783 and January 1784. Each family was given a house lot in town and one hundred acres to develop outside of town.8
As indicated above, Jacob and Elizabeth moved back to their home in Pownalborough. Son John appears to have lived in St. Andrews for a time and then moved on to St. John, New Brunswick. Son Martin moved back to Maine for about 20 years and then came back to St. Andrews until around the War of 1812. Some of his descendants stayed in St. Andrews. I do not know what became of daughters Catherine and Margaret except that Margaret married a Moses White. Thankful married Peter Fisher and moved to Wayne, Maine and started a family.
End Notes
1. Allen, Charles Edwin. History of Dresden, Maine (Augusta, Maine: Kennebec Journal Print Shop, 1931), p. 153.
2. Stahl, Jasper Jacob. History of Old Broad Bay and Waldoboro. Portland, Maine: Bond Wheelwright Co. 1956. Vol. 1, pp. 165-170.
3. Allen, p. 153.
4. Allen, p. 209.
5. Allen, p. 349.
6. Allen, pp 261 and 329.
7. Lorenzo Sabine, Biographical Sketches of Loyalists of the American Revolution (Port Washington, N.Y., Kennikat Press, 1966), p. 297
8. Theodore C. Holmes, Loyalists to Canada: the 1783 settlement of Quakers and others at Passamaquoddy (Camden, Maine: Picton Press, c1992), pp. 151-155.


Acknowledgments

  • Thank you to Julie Baldwin for creating WikiTree profile Carlow-26 through the import of Jhoward.ged on May 31, 2013. Click to the Changes page for the details of edits by Julie and others.






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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Johann Jacob by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA. However, there are no known yDNA or mtDNA test-takers in his direct paternal or maternal line. It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Johann Jacob:

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