Philip Alston (counterfeiter)

Philip Alston
BornFebruary 18, 1740 or 1741
DiedAfter 1799 but before 1807 (aged 59-67?)
NationalityAmerican, Spanish
Other namesPhelipe Alston, Alston, Alston the Counterfeiter, Ruffles, Gentleman Counterfeiter
Occupation(s)counterfeiter, river pirate, criminal gang leader, planter, thief, land speculator, soldier, politician, tavern keeper, salt maker, fur trader, banker, businessman, teacher, preacher, farmer, empresario
Employer(s)Spanish government, self-employed
Known forCounterfeiting coins in the Carolinas, Virginia, Natchez, West Florida and at Cave-in-Rock, along the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers, as an associate of John Duff, being one of the first settlers, bankers, and businessmen, of Russelville, Kentucky, and empresario in New Madrid, Spanish Louisiana Territory
TitleEmpresario of Mexico
MovementNatchez Revolt of 1781, Cumberland Compact of 1780, Yazoo Land Scandal of 1795
Spouses
  • Temperance Smith,
  • Mary Molly Temple,
  • Mildred McCoy
ChildrenPeter Alston
Military career
Allegiance Kingdom of Great Britain British West Florida
Service/branch British Army Loyalist local volunteer corps
Years of service1781
UnitNatchez Volunteers
Battles/warsAmerican Revolutionary War
  • Natchez Revolt (1781)

Philip Alston (Feb. 18, 1740 or 1741 – after 1799) was an 18th-century Spanish-American counterfeiter, both before and after the American Revolution. He operated in Virginia and the Carolinas before the war, and in Kentucky and Illinois afterward. He was associated with Cave-in-Rock and his son, outlaw Peter Alston, and counterfeiter John Duff. He was an early American settler in Natchez, as well as in the Cumberland and Red River valleys in Kentucky and Tennessee.