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Rhoda Carver Barton

(1751 - 1841)

Rhoda Carver Barton was born on October 9, 1751 in Bridgewater, Massachusetts to Joseph John Carver III and Sarah Hartwell. She married General William Barton on April 26, 1771. General Barton fought at the Battle of Bunker Hill in 1775 but is most famous for capturing British General Richard Prescott during the Revolutionary War. Rhoda Barton was twenty years old and apparently pregnant on her wedding day in 1771. She became the mother of nine children that she bore over 20 years. She lived a life similar to a single parent’s because her husband was very rarely home during the war years and later spent fourteen years in prison. She did however have a slave to help with her tasks and the additional ones she had to take on during her husband’s absence. Her husband only returned to her from prison very late in life and passed away soon afterward, in 1831. Rhoda Barton lived an exceptionally long life. She was born a British subject during the reign of King George II and died an American citizen during the administration of John Tyler, who was the tenth president of the United States. In that time span she saw Rhode Island change from a seaside colony to a rapidly industrializing state. She saw the nation gain its independence and then begin to split apart during the antebellum period. Rhoda Barton passed away at the age of 91 on December 12, 1841 and is buried at the North Burial Ground with her husband.

 

                                                                                     Anne Ledbetter, Student at Rhode Island College

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Rhoda Carver Barton (1751 - 1841)

Rhoda Carver Barton was born on October 9, 1751 in Bridgewater, Massachusetts to Joseph John Carver III and Sarah Hartwell. She would live an exceptionally long life, all of it within thirty miles of her birthplace. She married William Barton on April 26th 1771. She had nine children with Barton: William, Benjamin, George Washington, Daniel, Henry, Robert, John, Anna, and Sarah. She had her first child at the age of twenty and her last at the age of thirty-nine. Based on the relevant dates, she would have been nineteen and pregnant with her first child on her wedding day. Almost all of her children survived childhood; she lost one of her sons, Daniel, at the age of eight, for unknown reasons.

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The Battle of Rhode Island and The Capture of General Prescott at Warwick Neck:

Her husband enlisted in the Continental Army in 1775 and fought in the Battle of Bunker Hill as a corporal. During the war years he spent quite a lot of time away from their home in Warren but would often visit. He made one of his stopovers before his greatest wartime exploit, the capture of British General Richard Prescott. Barton, who was then serving as a major in the Rhode Island Militia, surprised Prescott by sailing silently across Narragansett Bay from Warwick Neck to Portsmouth under cover of darkness. He led thirty-eight men in five whaleboats past three British frigates and then managed to break down Prescott’s door and hurry him out before most of the garrison knew what was happening. The Continental Congress recognized his bravery with a resolution and a sword, which they delivered to Barton nine years later.

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Rhoda Barton’s wartime life must have resembled that of many other soldiers’ wives who stayed behind to look after their homes and family. She would be alone for long periods, acting almost as a single parent to her many children. With her husband often absent, she also had to take care of many of his responsibilities along with her motherly duties. These tasks included managing land and business. Much like other families in this time, the Barton family were slave owners. The slaves typically were in the house for help with chores and taking care of the children. After the war, Rhoda and her children stayed in Rhode Island while her husband spent time in Barton, Vermont resolving a land dispute that ultimately went against him. Refusing to pay the $272 assessment that he felt unjust, he chose instead to spend fourteen years in jail. Only after the Marquis de Lafayette paid his debt for him in 1824 did Barton return to Rhode Island to be with his family. He died six years after his return home.

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Rhoda Barton was born a British subject during the reign of King George II and died an American citizen during President John Tyler’s administration. In her ninety-one years she witnessed many significant developments, including the war for independence with which she was intimately involved. She also lived long enough into the antebellum period to see the growing sectional divide between north and south that eventually led to the Civil War. Rhoda Barton was a child born in a rural corner of the British Empire, an adult in revolutionary Rhode Island, and an elderly woman in the rapidly industrializing United States of the 1830s. She passed away ten years after her husband, on December 12, 1841, and is buried with him in the North Burial Ground.

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                                                                                                      Anne Ledbetter, Student at Rhode Island College

Further Reading:

Williams, C. R. "The Life of General Barton." Biography of Revolutionary Heroes; Containing the Life of Brigadier Gen. William Barton, and Also, of Captain Stephen Olney. Providence: 1839.

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©2018 by North Burial Ground Project. 

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