John Gorham | |
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Born | 12 December 1709 Yarmouth, Massachusetts Bay |
Died | December, 1751 (aged 41–42) London, Great Britain |
Allegiance | Massachusetts Bay |
Service | Ranger |
Rank | captain (of Independent Company in the British army); lieutenant-colonel (in Massachusetts provincial forces) |
Commands | Gorham's Rangers 1744–1751, and 7th Massachusetts Provincial Infantry Regiment--second in command (1745), acting commander (1746) |
Battles / wars | King George's War
|
Other work | representative |
John Gorham (Goreham, Gorum) (12 December 1709-December 1751) was a New England Ranger and was the first significant British military presence on the frontier of Nova Scotia and Acadia to remain in the region for a substantial period after the Conquest of Acadia (1710). He established the famous "Gorham's Rangers". He also commissioned two armed vessels: the Anson (Captain John Beare) and the Warren (70 tons, Captain Jonathan Davis), who patrolled off Nova Scotia.[1]
Gorham was first commissioned captain of a provincial auxiliary company in June 1744, and was promoted to lieutenant-colonel in the 7th Massachusetts provincial Infantry Regiment in February 1745. Two years later, in 1747, he was commissioned captain of an independent company in the British Army when his unit was adopted into the regular army. He is sometimes confused with his father, Shubael Gorham (born in Barnstable, Massachusetts, 2 September 1686; died at Louisbourg, Nova Scotia, 20 February 1746),[2] a provincial colonel during King George's War. He was the one of only a handful of American rangers - including, Gorham, his younger brother Joseph Gorham, Benoni Danks, and later Robert Rogers - to earn commissions in the British Army.[3] John Gorham was active during King George's War and Father Le Loutre’s War.