Declaration of American
Independence—The Signatories— Robert Livingston—-Birth and Removal to
Holland — Emigrates—Settles in Albany—Marriage—Appointments— Indian
Raids and Negotiations—Lords of Trade—With Earl of Bellomont fits out
Adventure Galley—William Kidd—The American Landowner—“Livingston” on the
Hudson—Kidd turns Pirate—A Desperate Career—Livingston’s Estates
Confiscated—Captured—Again in London—Regains Position— Colonial
Speakership—Death.
The Declaration of
American Independence was signed at Philadelphia on the 4th July, 1776.
The subscribers were Thomas Jefferson of Virginia; John Adams, Benjamin
Franklin, Roger Sherman of Connecticut, and Robert Livingston of New
York. Everything pertaining to the lives and careers of these several
gentlemen is, as may well be imagined, of intense interest to the people
of the United States. The ancestry and achievements of all the
signatories have been subjected to the closest literary sifting. The
result has been the concentration of attention on the extraordinary and
romantic career of Robert Livingston, that ancestor of the last
subscriber, who first came from Scotland, and settled at Albany, and
finally, purchasing a vast estate on the Hudson, became one of the
founders of America, and the progenitor of one of its leading families.
Robert Livingston was the
youngest son and fourteenth child of the Rev. John Livingston, of whom
account has just been given. Robert was born at Ancrum, Roxburghshire,
where his father was minister, on the 13th December, 1654. His mother
took him with her to Rotterdam in 1663, when she went to join her
husband in banishment. Thus early removed to Holland, the boy attained
to a complete knowledge and mastery of the Dutch language. It was his
ability to speak English and Dutch with equal fluency which led to his
subsequent promotion. At the age of eighteen, and upon the death of his
father, the young man found himself thrown upon his own resources. Many
different reasons in serious crises of their fortunes have tempted men
to turn their eyes to America. Twice his venerable father had attempted
to reach that country, that he might escape persecution, and worship God
after a manner pleasing to his own conscience. Robert Livingston looked
towards the land of the West, in the hope that it might provide him a
field where he could earn for himself an honest livelihood, or afford
him opportunities of embarking in a career that might possibly carry him
forward to fame and fortune. Full of that enthusiasm which distinguished
him in all the events of his life, having buried his father, he returned
with his mother to Scotland, and on the 28th April, 1673, he took ship
at Greenock for New England. Landed in the West, and finding that New
York was on the point of being transferred from the Dutch to the
English, he made his way with all haste to that State, and with
considerable prescience sailed up the Hudson and took up his quarters in
the town of Albany, after New York then the next important city in the.
State. Albany being near the Indian frontier, and the centre of a
lucrative trade with the Indian trappers, his knowledge of Dutch and
English stood him in excellent stead. The people being largely
Hollanders, and the government British, he was the kind of man in demand
from the very nature of the circumstances. He was at once appointed
secretary to the Commissaries who superintended the officers of the
Albany district. Discharging his duties with energy, the solitary,
friendless young Scot rapidly rose in favour. In a short time he was
appointed town-clerk, collector and receiver of customs, and secretary
for Indian affairs. His position was strong, but he strengthened it
still more by marrying, in 1679, Alida Schuyler, a bright young widow,
in close connection with the best Dutch families, and only a year older
than himself. Albany was his home until he transferred his residence to
his house on his own lordly manor. Under Providence, Livingston’s
success may be attributed to his fortunate settlement in Albany, his
knowledge of Dutch, and his marrying Alida Schuyler. Albany being a
frontier town, and in close proximity to the hunting grounds of that
powerful Indian federation—the Iroquois or the Five Nations—the
authorities of the city required to exercise in their dealings with the
Indians the very greatest circumspection. This was all the more
necessary as the Iroquois were being continually worked upon by the
French, who were then the holders of Canada. Being determined to gain
the Indians to their own side, they were perpetually intriguing amongst
them, and inflaming them against the English. Their swift wild raids
kept the colonists in a state of perpetual trepidation. When*
consequently they were not engaged in fortifying themselves against
their attacks, they were equally busy in carrying on with them peaceful
negotiations. A raid in which the French and the Indians pounced upon an
Albanian village, massacred the inhabitants, and carried off a number of
prisoners, brought matters to a head. Leisler, the Governor of New York
State, was furious, laid the blame on Livingston, and determined upon
his arrest. The threat was never carried out. Livingston pointed out
that matters would never be right until an attack was made upon the
Canadian French. At a meeting held with the Iroquois chiefs at Albany,
largely through the instrumentality of Livingston, the Indians were
conciliated, and agreed to stand by the English in the proposed
struggle. In the circumstances in which he was placed, Livingston had
advanced a large sum for the security of Albany, where he held his
various official positions. The Governor of New York State being an
enemy of Livingston, and refusing to give him any interest on his
advances, he had no alternative but to sail for London, and lay his case
before a Committee of the Lords of Trade. When his cause was tried there
was one William Kidd, the master of a brigantine, who appeared as a
witness in Livingston’s favour. The result of the deliberations of the
Lords of Trade was that Livingston got all he asked, and something more.
He received £3000, and in acknowledgment of his services was ordered to
receive a pension of £100 a year, to be paid from the funds of the New
York State.
To Livingston an idle
existence was insufferable, and, while his case was dragging its slow
length along before the Committee, he planned in London a scheme for the
suppression of the numerous pirates that then preyed on our colonial
merchantmen. There being a French war, none of the vessels of the navy
could be procured for the undertaking. Along with Richard Coote, Earl of
Bellomont, the Adventure Galley was fitted out as a privateer, and
William Kidd was appointed captain. Kidd had done a bold stroke of
seamanship when New York was threatened by the pirates, and had received
from the State for that service an honorarium of £150.
Kidd was fairly well
known to Livingston, and probably the latter may have been prepossessed
in his favour from the fact that Kidd was a Scotchman, and had been born
in Greenock. Bellomont fitted out the vessel, and, in the case of the
project proving unsuccessful, he received from Livingston a bond of
^10,000 and from Kidd another bond of ^20,000. Kidd’s commission was to
fight with pirates wherever he could find them, despoil them of their
goods, and bring them to justice. Kidd had chosen his crew, but the
press-gangs boarding his ship forced the very best of them into the
King’s direct service. This being so, he had eventually to take such
seamen as he could get. There can be no doubt his crew was composed for
the most part of desperate men—men of ruined reputation, and eager for
any chance, however questionable, of establishing their broken fortunes.
Kidd sailed from Plymouth in the month of April, 1696. He steered his
course for New York. Arrived there, Governor Fletcher allowed Kidd to
beat up for volunteers, with the result that he got a contingent of men
of a still lower grade than even those he had embarked at Plymouth. When
Kidd found himself afloat it is more than probable that such a company
of rascals and cut-throats never before, and certainly never since,
sailed under the British flag to prosecute a cause receiving the direct
sanction of the Sovereign.
About the time Kidd left
Plymouth, Livingston sailed for New York. A keen man of business, and
living with his eyes open, Livingston had been engaged in a far more
magnificent enterprise than the fitting out of the Adventure Galley, an
enterprise which was now coming to fruition. At that time land with a
frontage to the Hudson was in great demand, and the position of the
land-owner was such as well to make it an object of ambition. The
land-owner was endowed with baronial honours, and held courts whose
judgments were final. His tenants rendered him military service. He had
the power of a feudal chieftain, and was the autocrat of his territory.
Such a positionI Kingston was anxious to secure, that he might lay the
double foundation-stones of influence and fortune. On his frequent
journeys between Albany and New York, Livingston had noticed that there
was only one valuable tract of land with extensive river frontage still
unheld by any white man. It was forty miles south of Albany, on the east
side of Hudson River, and near Catskill. The Indians being willing to
sell, on the 12th July, 1683, an estate of 3000 acres passed into his
hands. After Livingston got a footing his estate rapidly increased in
size, till finally, in 1715, the river frontage was 12 miles long, the
extent equal to 160,000 acres, and the boundaries running 19 miles
inland right up to the Massachusetts territory. Not for a while was it
all plain sailing with our eager and speculative Scotchman, but still,
thus by one of our own countrymen was founded on the Hudson the famous
American manor of Livingston. The Earl of Bellomont was appointed
Governor of New York, Massachusetts Bay, and New Hampshire, in 1697,
with strict instructions for the suppression of piracy. Fletcher, the
former governor, having refused to carry out the instructions of the
Lords of Trade regarding Livingston, one of Bellomont’s first acts was
to see justice done by his friend. He had, however, scarcely assumed the
reins of office when ugly rumours began to be circulated about the
doings of Kidd, of whom little had been heard for the past three years.
Bellomont and Livingston were shocked when they found the rumours prove
true. Kidd having been unable to come up with the pirates, his crew, who
were to have been paid out of the prize money, became insubordinate.
Resisting them as long as he dared, he hoisted the black flag, and
became pirate on his own account. He snapped up traders and merchantmen
wherever he could find them; he respected neither flag nor nationality.
He put in his sickle, and reaped the illicit harvest of the ocean. Bent
on large spoils, he set sail for the East India coasts. At the entrance
of the Red Sea he attacked a fleet of Mocha merchantmen, but was beaten
off by their Dutch and English convoy. Some days after he took the
Quedah Merchant, a rich, fine vessel of 400 tons. Burning the Adventure
Galley, he embarked in his prize, and his lucrative but perilous game
still went on. Kidd gathered an enormous treasure of ill-gotten gain.
His success was his ruin. He became so well known that he began to have
great difficulty in finding supplies. Seeing the game was nearly up, he
resolved on a bold move. Leaving the Quedah Merchant and his great
accumulation of treasure in Hispaniola in the West Indies, he sailed for
New York, and communicated with Bellomont. When he landed, to make
matters secure, the Governor had him arrested. Kidd’s move was to be
tried in New York, where there was a large contraband traffic, and where
he would have been certain of getting a lenient sentence and a certain
amount of sympathy. The earl suspected his intention and sent him to
England. Before this step had been taken Kidd besought the Governor to
allow him to visit the West Indies under guard, and bring home his
treasure from the place where he had it concealed. The request was
refused, and at the Old Bailey, on the 8th and 9th May, 1701, Kidd was
tried on the charge of piracy and murder, and condemned and hung. In
fitting out the Adventure Galley, Bellomont had been assisted by some of
the leading statesmen of his party. In Britain the Tories, taking
advantage of the great popular excitement, got up a wonderful
hue-and-cry over the affair of Kidd; and on the other side of the
Atlantic the enemies of Livingston made themselves equally busy. Both
parties were entirely unsuccessful in their attempts to inculpate their
political or personal enemies with the piracies of the notorious
buccaneer. The amplest investigation only made clearer—although the
adventure had turned out badly—the zeal of Bellomont and Livingston in
the King’s service. Kidd’s treasure is acknowledged on all hands to have
been vast. Though often sought after, it has not been found to this day.
Poe’s “Gold Beetle” is the most notable example of that extensive
literature to which Kidd’s extraordinary career has given birth.
Livingston having been
acquitted of complicity with Kidd, was engaged in pressing upon the Home
Government the necessity of establishing Christian missions among the
Indians when his friend, the Earl of Bellomont, died. This was both a
grief and a misfortune. Livingston’s enemies getting a majority in the
State Council, took steps to crush him. Carried away by a fierce hatred
and a baseless political rancour, they called him to account for his
intromission with the State funds. Livingston promised to do so, but
wished first to have time to take copies of his accounts before letting
them out of his hands. Deeming his demand for time but a frivolous
excuse, they at once confiscated his estate, loaded it with an indemnity
of ^17,000, and hurled him in disgrace from his public offices. All
these things were embodied in an Act of the State Assembly! And so, in
1701, Livingston, at the end of thirty years of incessant toil of brain,
and hand, and foot, found himself stripped, at one fell swoop, of the
whole of his property, and cast upon the world in a worse position than
when he first set foot in America. His native resolution at this
juncture stood him in splendid stead. He refused to be crushed, and
resolved again to visit Britain, and lay his case before the Lords of
Trade, When he was nearing our shores he was captured in the Bristol
Channel by a French privateer. An English frigate coming in sight, the
Frenchman abandoned his prize, but not until he had plundered her of
everything he could carry away. Amongst the other things stolen were
Livingston’s records and papers. This threw a tremendous difficulty in
the way of establishing his complaints. After, however, a prolonged
examination, in 1705 Livingston succeeded in getting all his claims
acknowledged, and an order for reinstatement in his estates. Again he
beguiled the tedium of waiting on the law by pressing on the Government
the necessity of attacking Canada. When he returned to America his
position was too strong to be further resisted, and he soon found
himself in the midst of his manor exercising a princely hospitality. In
1715 he became a member of the Colonial Assembly, and four years later
he was elevated to the distinguished position of Speaker to that body.
He filled the chair of the House with great credit to himself and much
advantage to the colony till the infirmities of increasing years
compelled him, in *725> to tender his resignation. He had now become, as
it were, a part of the State, and on his vacating the Speakership the
Assembly paid to his character and labours a touching tribute. But the
duties of life were more to him than life itself. Inability to work
meant really to him inability to live. Two years after resigning the
Speakership, his life, so full of startling incident and adventure, came
to a quiet close, His wife bore him nine children, and he named his
eldest son John after his own Covenanting father, who had played by the
Garrel, chased butterflies on the High Craigends, and bird-nested in the
Barrwood. |