Provincial troops in the French and Indian Wars
Provincial troops were raised by the colonial governors and legislatures for extended operations during the French and Indian Wars. The provincial troops differed from the militia, in that they were a full-time military organization conducting extended operations. They differed from the regular British Army, in that they were recruited only for one campaign season at the time. These forces were often recruited through a quota system applied to the militia. Officers were appointed by the provincial governments. During the eighteenth century militia service was increasingly seen as a prerogative of the social and economic well-established, while provincial troops came to be recruited from different and less deep-rooted members of the community.
The first provincial forces in British North America were organized in the 1670s. The major operations during King William's War were conducted by provincial troops from Massachusetts Bay. During Queen Anne's War provincial troops from Massachusetts Bay, Connecticut, and New Hampshire made up the bulk of the English forces. During King George's War the land forces that took Louisbourg were entirely supplied by Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island. During the French and Indian War the imperial government in London took an increasingly more leading part, relegating the provincial troops to a non-combat role, largely as pioneers and transportation troops, while the bulk of the fighting was done by the regular British Army. However the contributions of Connecticut, Massachusetts Bay, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island were essential.
Organization
During the French and Indian Wars, provincial troops separate of the militia were raised by the colonial governors and legislatures for extended operations. These forces were often recruited through a quota system applied to the militia; drafts would only be used when enough volunteers didn't sign up. Bounties were used to boast volunteer enlistment. The officers were appointed by the provincial governments; the field officers were mostly men of political importance and members of the legislatures with many years service in the militia, while the junior officers were efficient and popular militia officers. The provincial troops were enlisted for specific campaign seasons, and organized anew each spring, yet most of the officers served year after year. The colonial governments also appointed persons in charge of logistics, often prominent merchants who had the business acumen and knowledge to run the extensive logistic operations required. The distinction between the militia and the provincial troops was not always understood in contemporary Britain, and Benjamin Franklin tried to explain the differences in a 1756 letter to his English friend Peter Collinson. The men serving on the frontier, Franklin clarified, were not militia but full-time soldiers enlisted to fight for a specific period of time, and paid by the colonial governments. In contrast, the militia were men following their normal business, mustering on specific days to train, and ready to fight only in case of an emergency. Massachusetts Bay was the colony that made the largest contribution to the war effort during the French and Indian Wars. In the seventeenth century provincial forces were first raised for offensive operations through volunteers from the militia regiments. After King William's War, the colonial legislature enacted new laws that embodied the basic principles that would govern the colony's military forces during a century of warfare. The militia's role was relegated from a prospective combat force, to "a combination of home guard, draft-board, and supply network," forming the base from which the provincial troops were recruited and supplied.Recruitment and social composition
During the eighteenth century militia service was increasingly seen as a prerogative of the social and economic well-established, while provincial troops came to be recruited from different and less deep-rooted members of the community. Legislation often excluded several categories of men from the militia that the colonial governments were perfectly willing to enlist as provincial troops, such as settled Indians, free persons of color, servants, and vagrants. The provincial troops were recruited from the elements of the population that were easiest to do without; young men without property, with no stake in the society. In order to fill the quotas assigned to them by the imperial government, the several colonies used bounties as carrots, and draft as a stick. Offering money induced propertyless men to enlist, while the draft often was directed at the elements of society that the colonial governments saw as problematic, such as vagrants or disorderly young men. Drafted men could hire substitutes, and they were most often belonging to the least well-established groups. Those who were recruited to the provincial troops in Connecticut and Virginia were men that had been outside the organized militia and hence lacking the social status suggested by militia membership. In Massachusetts, however, the provincial soldiers came from segments of the population more reflective of the society at large, although research done only covers the first year of the French and Indian War and it's possible that the social composition changed over time.Comparison between militia, associators, provincial troops, and regulars
Source:King William's War
The first provincial forces in British North America were organized in the 1670s, when several colonial governments raised ranger companies for one year's paid service to protect their borders.Port Royal 1690
in French Acadia was taken in 1690, by one provincial regiment of foot from Massachusetts under William Phips. The regiment was organized in seven companies and contained 446 officers and men at the time of the French surrender, although it had a strength of about 700 when leaving Boston.Quebec 1690
The land forces of the Quebec Expedition 1690 were entirely composed of provincial troops from Massachusetts under William Phipps. The 2,300 foot soldiers were organized in four regiments and one Indian company:- Essex Regiment
- Middlesex Regiment
- Suffolk Regiment
- Plymouth Regiment
Queen Anne's War
Carolina and Florida
Most combat operations of the province of Carolina during Queen Anne's War were conducted by Indian allies, such as the Yamasee and the Creeks, although Carolinians participated in the St. Augustine expedition 1702 and defense of Charles Town 1706. The militia, which in war time included armed slaves, was supplemented by a small provincial full-time force of garrison troops and rangers.Port Royal 1707
The expeditions to Port Royal in 1707 were made up entirely of provincial troops from Massachusetts Bay, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island:- The First or Red Regiment, twelve companies in red uniforms, under Colonel Francis Wainwright of Ipswich, Massachusetts.
- The Second or Blue Regiment, eleven regiments in blue uniforms, under Winthrop Hilton of Exeter, New Hampshire.
Port Royal 1710
- Hobby's Regiment, a Boston regiment under Colonel Sir Charles Hobby of Boston, Massachusetts.
- Tailer's Regiment, under Colonel William Tailer of Dorchester, Massachusetts.
- Whiting's Regiment, under Colonel William Whiting of Hartford, Connecticut.
- Walton's Regiment, under Colonel Shadrach Walton of New Castle, New Hampshire.
Quebec 1711
- Vetch's Regiment, under Colonel Samuel Vetch of Boston, Massachusetts.
- Walton's Regiment, under Colonel Shadrach Walton of Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
War of Jenkins' Ear
King George's War
The land forces of the Louisbourg expedition in 1745 were entirely a colonial affair, with Massachusetts contributing 3,000 provincial soldiers, Connecticut 500, New Hampshire 500, and Rhode Island 300. Pennsylvania had refused to raise any soldiers, but after the fall of the French fortress the province appropriated moneys for the maintenance of an occupying force. For the ultimately aborted intercolonial operation against Canada in 1746, Massachusetts would mobilize 3,500 provincial troops, New York 1,600, Connecticut 1,000, New Hampshire 500, New Jersey 500, Pennsylvania 400, Rhode Island 300, Maryland 300, and Virginia 100.The province of New Hampshire kept paid ranger units or scouts in provincial service during the whole war, as well as raising five hundred provincial soldiers for the Louisbourg expedition; two hundred of whom served as part of a Massachusetts regiment, while the rest formed a regiment of seven companies:
- Moore's Regiment, under Colonel Samuel Moore of Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
- First Massachusetts Regiment, under Colonel William Pepperell of Kittery Point, Maine.
- Second Massachusetts Regiment, under Colonel Samuel Waldo of Boston.
- Third Massachusetts Regiment, under Colonel Jeremiah Moulton of York, Maine.
- Fourth Massachusetts Regiment, under Colonel Samuel Willard of Lancaster, Massachusetts.
- Fifth Massachusetts Regiment, under Colonel Robert Hale of Beverly, Massachusetts.
- Sixth Massachusetts Regiment, under Colonel Sylvester Richmond of Dighton, Massachusetts.
- Seventh Massachusetts Regiment, under Colonel Shubael Gorham of Barnstable, Massachusetts.
Connecticut participated in the Louisbourg expedition with one regiment:
- Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Andrew Burr of Fairfield, Connecticut.
French and Indian War
In 1757 and again in 1758 Prime Minister Pitt requested the northern colonies in British North America to furnish 20,000 men for the coming campaign seasons, and the southern colonies for large, but unspecified numbers. The response to this call was met with varied enthusiasm; Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New York were as always willing to do their share and more. The northern colonies furnished about 17,000 men for 1758 and the following years; the southern colonies much fewer. There were no provincial forces participating in the sieges of Louisbourg in 1758 or the Quebec in 1759. The British army that operated against Fort Carillon in 1758 contained, however, a majority of provincial troops, although most of the fighting was done by the regulars. On the other hand, the capture of Fort Frontenac in 1758, was done by a force dominantly provincial. The main task of the provincials during this war was as a non-combat element, largely as pioneers and transportation troops.Connecticut
s expedition to Lake George took place in 1755. Phineas Lyman of Suffield, Connecticut appointed major-general, and second-in-command. The Province of Connecticut voted 2,200 men, in two regiments, for the expedition:- First Connecticut Regiment, under Major-General Lyman.
- Second Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Elizur Goodrich, Senior.
- Third Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Eliphalet Dyer.
- Fourth Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Elihu Chauncey.
- First Connecticut Regiment, under Major-General Lyman.
- Second Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel David Wooster.
- Third Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Nathan Whiting.
- Fourth Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Andrew Ward, Junior.
- Col. Lyman's Regiment, under Colonel Phineas Lyman.
- First Connecticut Regiment, under Major-General Lyman.
- Second Connecticut Regiment, Colonel Nathan Whiting.
- Third Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Eleazar Fitch.
- Fourth Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel David Wooster.
- First Connecticut Regiment, under Major-General Phineas Lyman.
- Second Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Nathan Whiting.
- Third Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel David Wooster.
- Fourth Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Eleazar Fitch.
- First Connecticut Regiment, under Major-General Phineas Lyman.
- Second Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Nathan Whiting.
- Third Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel David Wooster.
- Fourth Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Eleazar Fitch.
- First Connecticut Regiment, under Major-General Phineas Lyman.
- Second Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Nathan Whiting.
- Capt. Fitch's Independent Company, under Captain Azel Fitch.
- Capt. Ledlie's Independent Company, under Captain Hugh Ledlie.
- First Connecticut Regiment, under Major-General Phineas Lyman.
- Second Connecticut Regiment, under Colonel Nathan Whiting
- Capt. Pearce's Independent Company, under Captain Thomas Pearce.
- Capt. Hait's Independent Company, under Captain Joseph Hait.
- Lieut.-Colonel Putnam's Battalion, under Lieutenant-Colonel Israel Putnam.
Delaware
- The Lower County Provincials, French Battell, Captain.
Georgia
At the beginning of the hostilities, the Province of Georgia had a population of less than seven thousand free inhabitants, and an organized militia of 750 men in eight companies. Governor John Reynolds argued that the province could only be defended with the help of fortified places. Two hundred rangers were needed to hold the line of communications open. In addition regular troops in peacetime, supported by militia and friendly Indians in wartime, were needed to hold the required forts. This plan was rejected by the Board of Trade, and nothing came out of it. Yet, Governor Reynolds organized a company of 40 rangers under Captain John Milledge. The rangers were supplemented by a mounted troop of volunteer militia, the First Troop of Horse Militia, consisting of men of substance who could equip and mount the troop at their own expense. Reynolds successor, Henry Ellis raised another ranger company under William Francis, but lack of appropriations forced him to pay the rangers out of his own pocket.Maryland
The Province of Maryland built Fort Cumberland in 1754 and a ranger company protected its borders at the beginning of the war. That company participated in the Braddock Expedition, and its place as frontier guards were taken by paid volunteers from the militia:- Maryland Ranger Company, under Captain John Dagworthy.
- Maryland Garrison Battalion, under Lieutenant-Colonel John Dagworthy.
- Cresap's Rangers, under Captain Thomas Cresap.
Massachusetts
In 1755, the province first voted 1,200 provincial soldiers for William Johnson's expedition against Fort Saint-Frédéric, who participated in the Battle of Lake George. Then another 2,000 to serve for two months, but a full year if necessary, for the Bay of Fundy Campaign, under John Winslow.
The soldiers from Johnson's expedition returned in the fall of 1755, except 600 men posted at Fort William Henry and Fort Edward over the winter. In 1756 the General Court voted 3,000 men to dislodge the French from Crown Point, and the commander-in-chief, governor William Shirley appointed John Winslow to command the force. The capture of Fort Oswego, and the bad feelings between the new British commander-in-chief, Lord Loudon, and the provincial officers, led to the ultimate failure of this expedition without any serious fighting.
Lord Loudon's attitudes toward the provincial soldiers, seeing them as subordinate auxiliaries instead of brothers-in-arms, created political dissent in Massachusetts, and the General Court voted only 1,800 soldiers for the campaign season of 1757. The Massachusetts provincials served at Fort William Henry and Fort Edward, under British superior officers, fed by the British commissary, and subject to the Articles of War. About 800 Massachusetts provincial were part of the garrison of Fort William Henry and suffered the siege and massacre in the summer of 1757.
When William Pitt became prime minister in 1757, the attitudes toward the war made a remarkable change in the colonies, and in 1758, the Massachusetts General Court voted to raise 7,000 provincial soldiers to serve until November unless released earlier. The Massachusetts provincials participated in Abercrombie's expedition against Ticonderoga. The failed attack on Fort Carillon stalled further advances, and the provincials spent the rest of the summer at Lake George, building Fort George as a replacement for William Henry.
The good feelings continued in the colonies, and for the campaign season 1759 Massachusetts voted 7,000 and Connecticut 5,000 soldiers. The Massachusetts troops were used to garrison Louisbourg and other Atlantic forts; freeing regular soldiers for field operations. But the provincials also participated in Wolfe's expedition against Quebec, and Amherst's against Ticonderoga and Crown Point.
The fall of Quebec did not lessen the zeal of Massachusetts, and the province voted 5,000 men for 1760, and reenlisted as many as possible of the provincial garrison troops in the Atlantic forts. The Massachusetts soldiers in the field belonged mainly to Haviland's expedition over Lake Champlain to Montreal. The following year 3,000 Massachusetts provincials saw service, mainly as garrison troops. In 1762 3,220 garrison troops were voted, but 2,637 actually raised. A Massachusetts regiment fought at the Battle of Signal Hill.
New Hampshire
As a response to the attack and abduction of a family of settlers by hostile Indians in 1754, the province of New Hampshire hastily raised a company of provincial soldiers pursuing the perpetrators, but to no avail. Under royal command the province also garrisoned the provincial forts in the Connecticut River valley from the summer of 1754, to the spring of 1755, when the Crown took control of them. Further depredations by hostiles in 1754, was met with mobilization of detachments from the companies and regiments of the organized militia. Temporary ranger companies were also raised for short-term emergencies.In 1755, New Hampshire voted 600 provincial soldiers for William Johnson's expedition against Fort Saint-Frédéric, who participated in the Battle of Lake George. After that battle, another regiment of 300 men were raised by the province. In the fall, a ranger company was raised for two months, protecting the frontier. Another company was later the same year raised, as New Hampshire's quota for garrisoning forts Edward and William Henry over the winter:
- New Hampshire Provincial Regiment, under Colonel Joseph Blanchard of Dunstable, New Hampshire.
- Second New Hampshire Regiment, under Colonel Peter Gilman of Exeter, New Hampshire.
- Ranger Company, under Captain James Neall.
- Garrison Company under Captain Robert Rogers.
- New Hampshire Provincial Regiment, under Colonel Nathaniel Meserve of Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
- New Hampshire Provincial Regiment, under Colonel Nathaniel Meserve of Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
- New Hampshire Provincial Battalion, under Major Thomas Tash.
- Garrison Company at Fort William and Mary, under Captain Thomas Bell.
- New Hampshire Provincial Regiment, under Colonel John Hart of Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
- New Hampshire Provincial Regiment, under Colonel Zaccheus Lovewell of Dunstable, New Hampshire.
- New Hampshire Provincial Regiment, under Colonel John Goffe of Derryfield, New Hampshire.
New Jersey
- New Jersey Provincial Battalion, under Colonel Peter Schuyler.
- New Jersey Frontier Guard, under Colonel John Anderson.
- New Jersey Provincial Regiment, under Colonel Schuyler; after his capture, Colonel John Parker.
- New Jersey Frontier Guards, under Colonel Jacob DeHart of Elizabeth, New Jersey.
- New Jersey Provincial Regiment, under Colonel John Parker.
- New Jersey Ranger Company, under Captain Gardiner.
- New Jersey Provincial Regiment
- New Jersey Garrison Company
New York
- New York Regiment of Foot, under Colonel William Cockcroft.
- New York Forces, under Colonel Beamsley Glazier.
In 1759 and again in 1760, the Assembly voted to raise 2,680 men for the campaign season, under the same conditions as in 1758; although the bounty was increased to 20 pounds. In 1761 the Assembly voted to raise two-thirds of the previous levies, 1,787 men for that season. The government in London requested in 1762 a levy of 479 men for the regular army, for operations in the West Indies. The Assembly, not wanting to establish a dangerous precedent, instead voted a large sum of money in support. It again voted 1,787 men, although with the proviso that they would not serve outside the continent, and actually raised 1,547 men.
- New York Regiment, Colonel John Johnston 1759.
- First New York Regiment, Colonel Bartholomew Le Roux 1760; Colonel Michael Thodey 1761.
- Second New York Regiment, Colonel Isaac Corsa 1760; Colonel George Brewerton 1761.
- Third New York Regiment, Colonel Nathaniel Woodhull 1760.
North Carolina
- North Carolina Regiment, under Colonel James Innes.
- North Carolina Provincial Company, under Captain Brice Dobbs, the son of governor Arthur Dobbs.
- Frontier Company, under Captain Hugh Waddell.
- North Carolina Battalion, under Major Brice Dobbs.
Two companies of 50 men each were formed for service on the western frontier of the colony. One, under Hugh Waddell garrisoned Fort Dobbs. The other, under Captain Bailey was sent to build a fort for the Catawba Indians. When the fort for the Catawba was abandoned, Bailey’s Company was sent to Fort Dobbs:
- Company under Major Hugh Waddell.
- Company under Captain Andrew Bailey.
- North Carolina Battalion, under Major Hugh Waddell.
- Garrison Company at Fort Johnston, under Captain James Moore.
- Garrison Company at Fort Granville, under Captain Charles McNair.
- 30-man company under Major Hugh Waddell
- 30-man company under Capt Andrew Bailey
- 30-man company under Colonel Waddell and Captain Bailey.
- North Carina Provincial Regiment under Colonel Hugh Waddell.
Pennsylvania
The pacifist nature of the Assembly did not prevent Pennsylvania from raising provincial troops. The Deputy Governor and the Provincial Commissioners organized a provincial force of 25 companies and 1,400 men in the province's pay. Armstrong's battalion being the force of the Kittanning Expedition 1756.
- First Battalion, Pennsylvania Regiment, under Lieutenant Colonel Conrad Weiser.
- Second Battalion, Pennsylvania Regiment, under Lieutenant Colonel John Armstrong.
- Augusta Regiment or Third Battalion at Fort Augusta, under Lieutenant Colonel William Clapham.
In 1757 the Assembly allowed bounties for the recruitment of 200 extra provincial soldiers, to be sent to South Carolina. After the fall of Fort William Henry, the Assembly also authorized the Deputy Governor to raise 1,000 soldiers, or draw them from the frontier garrisons, for the impending operations against the French in the Lake Champlain area. If the garrisons were used, their place should be filled by locally recruited garrison and ranger companies. In 1758 the Assembly approved the raising of 700 soldiers, soon raised to 1,000, of which 700 would be serving with the British forces operating against the French, and 300 be kept in the province. A provincial frigate was also commissioned for the defense of the Delaware Bay. Encouraged by the new prime minister, William Pitt, the Assembly resolved to put 2,700 men under British command for the Forbes Expedition of 1758, including the 1,000 provincial soldiers already serving.
- Provincial ship Pennsylvania, Captain John Sibbald.
- Pennsylvania Regiment, Deputy Governor William Denny, Colonel.
- Pennsylvania Regiment, Conrad Weiser, Lieutenant Colonel.
- Pennsylvania Regiment, James Burd, Major.
- Pennsylvania Regiment, Hugh Mercer, Major.
- Pennsylvania Regiment, Deputy Governor William Denny, Colonel.
- Pennsylvania Regiment, First Battalion, John Armstrong, Colonel Commandant.
- Pennsylvania Regiment, Second Battalion, James Burd, Colonel Commandant.
- Pennsylvania Regiment, Third Battalion, Hugh Mercer, Colonel Commandant.
- The New Levies, William Clapham, Colonel.
Rhode Island
- Rhode Island Regiment, Christopher Harris, Colonel.
- Rhode Island Regiment, Christopher Harris, Colonel.
- Second Rhode Island Regiment, Governor Stephen Hopkins, Colonel.
- Rhode Island Regiment, Samuel Angel, Colonel.
- Second Rhode Island Regiment John Andrews, Colonel.
- Ranger Company
- "Readiness Battalion"
- Rhode Island Regiment, Godfrey Malbone, Colonel; Henry Babcock, Colonel.
- Rhode Island Regiment, Henry Babcock, Colonel.
- Rhode Island Regiment, Christopher Harris, Colonel.
- Rhode Island Regiment, John Whiting, Colonel.
- Rhode Island Regiment, Samuel Rose, Colonel.
- "Cuba Detachment", Christopher Hargil, Lieutenant Colonel.
South Carolina
- South Carolina Mounted Rangers
- South Carolina Regiment, Colonel Probart Howarth 1758.
- South Carolina Regiment, Colonel Thomas Middleton 1760.
- Additional South Carolina Regiment, Colonel Richard Richardson.
Virginia
- Virginia Regiment, Colonel Joshua Fry; Colonel George Washington.
After Braddock's defeat, the Virginia regiment was immediately reformed, and the Assembly voted in 1755 to raise it to 1,500 men in 16 companies. In 1756 its actual strength was 1,400 men, while in 1757 it was reduced to 1,000 men.
- Virginia Regiment, Colonel George Washington.
- First Virginia Regiment, Colonel George Washington.
- Second Virginia Regiment, Colonel William Byrd III.
- Virginia Regiment, Colonel William Byrd III.
- Additional force of 500 men.
- Virginia Regiment, Colonel William Byrd III; Lieutenant Colonel Adam Stephen.
- Virginia Regiment, Colonel Adam Stephen.
Successors
Citations
Cited literature
- Anderson, Fred. A People's Army. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press.
- Anonymous. "Officers of the South Carolina Regiment in the Cherokee War, 1760–61." The South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 4: 202–206.
- Arnold, Samuel Greene. History of the State of Rhode Island. Volume II. Providence, R.I.: Preston & Rounds.
- Ashe, Samuel A'Court. History of North Carolina. Volume I. Greensboro, N.C.: Charles L. Van Noppen.
- Baker, Raymond F.. A Campaign of Amateurs. The Siege of Louisbourg 1745. Ottawa: Parks Canada.
- Barry, John Stetson. The History of Massachusetts: The Provincial Period. Boston: Henry Barry.
- Bates, Albert C., ed.. Rolls of Connecticut men in the French and Indian war, 1755–1762. Connecticut Historical Society.
- Beer, George Louis. British Colonial Policy 1754–1765. New York: The Macmillan Company.
- Brumwell, Stephen. Redcoats: The British Soldier and War in the Americas, 1755–1763. Cambridge University Press.
- Bruce, Philip Alexander. History of Virginia. Vol. I. Chicago: The American Historical Society.
- Burbank, Dale W.. Want of Proper Spirit and Energy. M.A. Thesis. Fort Leavenworth: US Army Command and General Staff College.
- Carpenter, W. H. & Arthur, T.S. History of New Jersey. Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Co.
- Chapin, Howard M.. A List of Rhode Island Soldiers & Sailors in the Old French & Indian War 1755–1762. Providence: Society of Colonial Wars in the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.
- Chartrand, René. Monongahela 1754–55. Oxford: Osprey Publishing.
- Clarke, William P.. Official History of the Militia and National Guard of Pennsylvania. Charles J. Handler.
- Coakley, Robert W. & Conn, Stetson. The War of the American Revolution. Washington, DC: Center of Military History, United States Army.
- Connor, R.D.W.. History of North Carolina: The Colonial and Revolutionary Periods. Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company.
- Cox, Caroline. A Proper Sense of Honor. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press.
- Crozier, William Armstrong. Virginia Colonial Militia. Baltimore: Southern Book Co.
- Dalton, Charles. English Army Lists and Commissions Registers, 1661–1714. Vol. VI. 1707–1714. London: Eyre and Spotswoode.
- Drake, Samuel Adam. The Border Wars of New England. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
- Duncan, A. McC.. Roll of Officers and Members of the Georgia Hussars. Savannah: The Morning News.
- Eckenrode, Hamilton James. List of the Colonial Soldiers of Virginia. Clearfield.
- Franklin Waters, Thomas, Goodhue, Sarah & Wise, John. Ipswich in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Ipswich: The Ipswich Historical Society.
- Gallay, Alan. Colonial Wars of North America, 1512–1763. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc.
- Gordon, Thomas F.. History of New Jersey. Trenton: Daniel Fenton.
- Gordon, Thomas F. The History of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: Carey, Lea & Carey.
- Higginbotham, Don. "The Early American Way of War." William and Mary Quarterly 44: 230–273.
- Ivers, Larry E.. This Torrent of Indians. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
- Johnson, James M.. Militiamen, Rangers, and Redcoats. Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press.
- Jones, Charles C.. History of Georgia. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Company.
- Larned, J. N.. History for Ready Reference. Springfield, Mass.: C. A. Nichols Co.
- Lyons, Adams James. The 1711 Expedition to Quebec. Dissertation. University of Birmingham.
- Maas, John R.. The French & Indian War in North Carolina. Charleston, SC: The History Press.
- McConnell, Michael N.. Army & Empire. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
- McCrady, Edward. The History of South Carolina under the Royal Government 1719–1776. New York: The Macmillan Company.
- McSherry, James. History of Maryland. Baltimore: The Baltimore Book Co.
- Montgomery, Thomas Lynch. "Officers and Soldiers in the Service of the Province of Pennsylvania, 1744–1765." Pennsylvania Archives. Fifth Series. Volume One. Harrisburg: Harrisburg Publishing Company.
- "Muster Rolls of New York Provincial Troops, 1755–1764." Collections of the New-York Historical Society for the Year 1891. New York: New York Historical Society.
- Newland, Samuel J.. The Pennsylvania Militia: Defending the Commonwealth and the nation, 1669–1870. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Dept. of Military and Veterans Affairs.
- Nichols, Franklin Thayer. "The Organization of Braddock's Army", The William and Mary Quarterly 4: 125–147.
- Parkman, Francis. France and England in North America. Vol. II. New York: Literary Classics of America, Inc.
- Encyclopaedia of contemporary biography of Pennsylvania. Volume III. New York: Atlantic Publishing and Engraving Company, 1989.
- Plank, Geoffrey. "A Medieval Response to Wilderness Needs." Gallup-Diaz, A., Shankman, A. & Silverman, D.J. Anglicizing America. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press: 109–124.
- Potter, C. E.. Military History of the State of New Hampshire. Concord: McFarland & Jenks.
- Preston, David L.. Braddock's Defeat. Oxford University Press.
- Price, Jr., William S. "Edward Brice Dobbs." Dictionary of North Carolina Biography. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, vol. 2:86–87.
- Rogers, Greg. Rhode Island Wars. Master's Thesis. San Luis Obispo: California Polytechnic State University.
- Scharf, J. Thomas. History of Delaware 1609–1888. Philadelphia: J. Richards & Co.
- Shrader, Charles Reginald. Reference Guide to United States Military History 1607–1815. New York: Sachem Publishing.
- Smith, William. History of the late Province of New York. Volume II. New York: New-York Historical Society.
- South, Stanley. Historical Perspective at Ninety Six with a Summary of Exploratory Excavation at Holmes' Fort and the Town Blockhouse. Columbia: University of South Carolina - Columbia.
- Stacey, C. P.. "The British Forces in North America during the Seven Year's War." Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, vol. 3: xxiv-xxx.
- Sypher, J.R. & Apgar, E.A.. History of New Jersey. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co.
- The Penny Cyclopedia. London: Charles Knight and Co., 1843.
- Trumbull, Benjamin. A Complete History of Connecticut, Civil and Ecclesiastical. New Haven: Maltby, Goldsmith and Co. & Samuel Wadsworth.
- Tortora, Daniel J.. Carolina in Crisis. The University of North Carolina Press.
- Watkins, Walter Kendall. Soldiers in the Expedition to Canada in 1690.'' Boston: Society of Colonial Wars in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.