- Gold Selleck Silliman
Gold Selleck Silliman (1732–1790) was born in
Fairfield, Connecticut , graduated fromYale University and practiced law and served as a crown attorney before theAmerican Revolution . He became a militia General during theAmerican War for Independence .Biography
Silliman was appointed as a Colonel of the Fourth Regiment Connecticut
militia in May, 1775 and becameBrigadier General in 1776. He patrolled the southwestern border ofConnecticut , where the loyalists of Westchester County, New York caused constant irritation and concern for patriot towns and farms along the Connecticut coast. He also fought with the main army during theNew York Campaign of 1776 and opposed the British raid on Danbury in 1777. At the beginning of Tryon’s raid onDanbury, Connecticut , the General was at his home in Fairfield. As soon as he heard word of the British landing on the coast, he sent out expresses to alarm the nearby towns and to collect the militia. By Noon the next day he arrived inRedding, Connecticut with five hundred men and was joined byMajor General David Wooster and Brigadier GeneralBenedict Arnold in theBattle of Ridgefield .One night in May 1779, nine tories crossed the sound in a whale boat from Lloyd’s Neck. One of the tories had been previously employed by Silliman as a carpenter, so he knew the house well. Eight of the men forced their way into the house at midnight and took the general and his son. They were taken to Oyster Bay, New York and finally to Flatbush.
The Americans had no prisoner of equal rank to exchange for General Silliman, so they captured one. The Honorable Thomas Jones, a highly reputed loyalist, was captured in November 1779 by U.S. Naval Captain
David Hawley and brought back to Connecticut. Silliman and Jones were exchanged in May 1780, with the General’s son being exchanged as well. These heroic events were accurately depicted in the 1994 TV movie Mary Silliman's War by Heritage Films based on the 1984 biography by Richard & Joy Buel. General Silliman died in 1790.Family
The General's son
Benjamin Silliman was born in atavern , originally the home of EbenezerHawley inTrumbull, Connecticut , after his mother fled Fairfield ahead of the invading British troops. Benjamin Silliman was the first professor of science atYale University and the first to distill petroleum.References
*Lossing, Pictorial Field-Book of The Revolution, New York, 1860
*Who Was Who in the American Revolution, 1993
*Herbert Thoms, "Yale Men and Landmarks in Old Connecticut", Yale University Press, New Haven, 1967
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.