The remainder of this short bio. was written prior to the renovation.
Col. Joshua Chandler was a 1747 graduate of Yale College and a member of the Connecticut Legislature. President John Adams taught at a two-room schoolhouse built in 1752 by James Putnam and John Chandler, Col. Chandler's cousin [Changed to cousin from brother on May 13, 2008.], from 1755 until 1758. Joshua Chandler was loyal to the Crown and fled into exile, settling with his family at Annapolis, N.S.. His New Haven property was confiscated and in March 1787 he was travelling with Elizabeth and William, his son and daughter to St. John, as it was known then, to meet commissioners appointed to adjust the claims of the Loyalists. Tragically, they were ship-wrecked at Musquash Head on March 9, just 20 miles west of Saint John. According to a history of Sackville, New Brunswick, William, hoping to secure the vessel, fastened a rope around his body and jumped overboard to swim to land, but he was immediately crushed between the vessel and rocks and was drowned. Col. Chandler and his daughter died from exposure, allegedly two days later, after they had reached the shore. I spent two summers in Musquash as a student at Point Lepreau Nuclear Generating Station, walking in the woods and along the beach during my lunch break. The woods, often foggy and foreboding, edge frigid Bay of Fundy waters, even at the height of summer. It is hard to imagine two ship-wrecked souls surviving in the woods for two days in the summer, let alone in late winter. The Chandler family was initially buried in the old burying ground, now known as the Loyalist Burial Ground, at the head of King Street. According to a history of Sackville New Brunswick by W.C. Milner, 1934, years later, their remains were reinterred in the lot of Amos Botsford, Esq., in Fernhill Cemetery, formerly known as the Rural Cemetery. In the event that the captions for the photos do not appear, the first photograph is of the Loyalist Burial Ground. The second photograph is the tombstone of Col. Chandler's great-grandson, Amos Botsford. The third photograph is of the Botsford family tombstone, behind Amos' tombstone. There is an anchor in front of Amos Botsford's tombstone. To the right of Amos Botsford's tombstone is a marker for Thomas Murray, the first husband of Col. Chandler's granddaughter.
The remainder of this short bio. was written prior to the renovation.
Col. Joshua Chandler was a 1747 graduate of Yale College and a member of the Connecticut Legislature. President John Adams taught at a two-room schoolhouse built in 1752 by James Putnam and John Chandler, Col. Chandler's cousin [Changed to cousin from brother on May 13, 2008.], from 1755 until 1758. Joshua Chandler was loyal to the Crown and fled into exile, settling with his family at Annapolis, N.S.. His New Haven property was confiscated and in March 1787 he was travelling with Elizabeth and William, his son and daughter to St. John, as it was known then, to meet commissioners appointed to adjust the claims of the Loyalists. Tragically, they were ship-wrecked at Musquash Head on March 9, just 20 miles west of Saint John. According to a history of Sackville, New Brunswick, William, hoping to secure the vessel, fastened a rope around his body and jumped overboard to swim to land, but he was immediately crushed between the vessel and rocks and was drowned. Col. Chandler and his daughter died from exposure, allegedly two days later, after they had reached the shore. I spent two summers in Musquash as a student at Point Lepreau Nuclear Generating Station, walking in the woods and along the beach during my lunch break. The woods, often foggy and foreboding, edge frigid Bay of Fundy waters, even at the height of summer. It is hard to imagine two ship-wrecked souls surviving in the woods for two days in the summer, let alone in late winter. The Chandler family was initially buried in the old burying ground, now known as the Loyalist Burial Ground, at the head of King Street. According to a history of Sackville New Brunswick by W.C. Milner, 1934, years later, their remains were reinterred in the lot of Amos Botsford, Esq., in Fernhill Cemetery, formerly known as the Rural Cemetery. In the event that the captions for the photos do not appear, the first photograph is of the Loyalist Burial Ground. The second photograph is the tombstone of Col. Chandler's great-grandson, Amos Botsford. The third photograph is of the Botsford family tombstone, behind Amos' tombstone. There is an anchor in front of Amos Botsford's tombstone. To the right of Amos Botsford's tombstone is a marker for Thomas Murray, the first husband of Col. Chandler's granddaughter.
Inscription
Here lyeth the Bodies of Col.
Joshua Chandler, Aged 61 years
and William Chandler His
Son Aged 29 years, who were
Ship wreck'd on their passaged
from Digby to St. John on the
night of the 9th day of March
1787 & perished in the Woods
on the 11th of said Month.
Here lyeth the Bodies of Mrs.
Sarah Grant Aged 38
Years Widow
of the late Major Alex
Grant;
& Miss Elizabeth
Chandler aged
27 years, who were Shipwreck'd on
their passaged from Digby
to St. John on the Night of
the 9th day
of March 1787 and
Perished in the
Woods on the 11th of said Month
Family Members
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