History is for Everyone

1743–1831

Samuel Freeman

Falmouth Town ClerkPatriot Committee MemberJudge

Biography

Samuel Freeman established himself as one of Falmouth's most trusted civic figures in the decades before the Revolution, serving as the town's clerk and keeping the meticulous records that formed the backbone of local governance. Educated and articulate, he moved comfortably among both the merchant class and the broader community of tradesmen and fishermen who depended on the town's harbor for their livelihoods. By 1775, as political tensions with Britain sharpened into open conflict, Freeman had become a natural choice for the Patriot committee tasked with managing the town's response to British naval pressure.

On the night of October 17, 1775, Freeman took on the most consequential assignment of his life when he was sent to negotiate with Captain Henry Mowat, whose squadron of Royal Navy vessels lay at anchor in Falmouth's harbor with orders to destroy the town. Through the long and desperate overnight standoff, Freeman carried messages between the frightened townspeople and the unyielding naval officer, seeking terms, extensions, and any delay that might allow more residents to flee with their belongings. His account of those exchanges, set down in careful detail afterward, captured both Mowat's cold determination and the town's mounting anguish as evacuation proceeded under threat of bombardment. When the shelling began on the morning of October 18 and fire consumed most of Falmouth's buildings, Freeman's documentation of the negotiations became an essential piece of evidence that Patriots circulated widely to indict British conduct.

Freeman's written record of the Falmouth bombardment proved to be among the most cited firsthand accounts of British punitive warfare against American civilians in the early months of the conflict. Colonial newspapers reprinted his testimony, and Patriot leaders used it to argue that Britain had forfeited any claim to colonial loyalty. Freeman continued in public service after the war, his reputation enhanced by the role he had played in preserving Falmouth's story when the town itself lay in ashes. His careful stewardship of civic records, even amid crisis, exemplified the administrative commitment that helped small New England communities rebuild and press forward through years of war.

In Portland

  1. Oct

    1775

    Mowat Issues Ultimatum to Falmouth

    Role: Falmouth Town Clerk

    # Mowat Issues Ultimatum to Falmouth By the autumn of 1775, the American colonies and Great Britain had already crossed the threshold from political dispute into open warfare. The battles at Lexington and Concord the previous April had ignited armed conflict, and the brutal engagement at Bunker Hill in June had demonstrated that colonial militias were willing to stand and fight against professional soldiers. Along the Atlantic seaboard, the Royal Navy remained Britain's most powerful instrument of force, and colonial port towns lived in a state of anxious vulnerability. It was within this charged atmosphere that Lieutenant Henry Mowat of the Royal Navy sailed a small squadron into the harbor of Falmouth, in what is now Portland, Maine, on October 17, 1775, carrying orders that would turn the prosperous coastal town into a symbol of British aggression and American resolve. Mowat was no stranger to Falmouth. Earlier that spring, he had been briefly captured by a group of local patriots led by Colonel Samuel Thompson while on a surveying mission in the harbor. The humiliating episode left Mowat embittered, and when Vice Admiral Samuel Graves, commander of the North American squadron based in Boston, decided to punish rebellious coastal towns by burning them, Mowat was a willing instrument of that policy. Graves believed that destroying colonial seaports would cripple the local economies that sustained the rebellion and send a terrifying message to communities considering resistance. Mowat set out with a flotilla of armed vessels — the sixteen-gun sloop HMS Canceaux among them — along with incendiary supplies and a determination to carry out his mission. When the squadron dropped anchor in Falmouth's harbor on the morning of October 17, Mowat sent a written notice ashore that stunned the townspeople. The ultimatum declared that the town had two hours to surrender all small arms, ammunition, and military stores, and to deliver prominent citizens as hostages. If these demands were not met, Mowat warned, his ships would commence a devastating bombardment. The notice was delivered with cold formality, leaving little room for ambiguity about the consequences of noncompliance. The people of Falmouth scrambled to respond. A delegation of town leaders, among them Samuel Freeman, the town clerk, rowed out to negotiate with Mowat directly. Freeman and his companions made their case with urgency and reason, arguing that Falmouth was essentially a commercial and fishing community, not a military stronghold. They stressed that the town posed no strategic threat and that punishing its civilian population would be an act of cruelty rather than military necessity. The negotiations stretched through the evening hours, with the delegates pressing for additional time and Mowat weighing his orders against the pleas before him. Ultimately, Mowat granted a postponement, extending his deadline until the following morning, but he gave no assurance that the town would be spared. The people of Falmouth used the reprieve wisely. Through the long October night, families gathered what belongings they could carry and fled into the surrounding countryside. Women, children, and the elderly were moved first, while men loaded carts with furniture, provisions, and valuables. The town emptied steadily as darkness deepened, its residents becoming refugees in a matter of hours. When morning came on October 18, Mowat made good on his threat. His ships opened fire, raining cannonballs, incendiary shells, and carcasses — hollow projectiles filled with flammable material — onto the town. Landing parties went ashore to spread the destruction further. By the time the bombardment ended, most of Falmouth lay in ruins. Hundreds of buildings were destroyed, including homes, warehouses, the church, and the town's library. The economic and personal losses were staggering, leaving more than a thousand people without shelter as winter approached. The burning of Falmouth reverberated far beyond Maine. Rather than intimidating the colonies into submission, the attack galvanized American opinion against the Crown. News of the destruction spread rapidly through newspapers and pamphlets, fueling outrage and strengthening the argument that reconciliation with Britain was impossible. The event contributed directly to the Continental Congress's decision to authorize the creation of an American naval force, recognizing that coastal communities could not be left defenseless against such assaults. In this way, the devastation of Falmouth became not merely a local tragedy but a turning point that helped shape the military strategy and political will of the emerging nation.

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