John Houston McIntosh
John Houstoun McIntosh
Born(1773-05-01)May 1, 1773
Died(1836-02-09)February 9, 1836
Occupation(s)Planter, Filibuster
Known forLeader of American filibusters during the Patriot War (Florida)
Spouse
Eliza Bayard
(m. 1792)
Children3
RelativesDuncan Lamont Clinch (Son-in-Law)

John Houston McIntosh, also sometimes spelled John Houstoun McIntosh, (1773-1836) was a wealthy planter in Georgia who helped lead a rebel group during the Patriot War in Florida.

Early life and family

John H. McIntosh was born on May 1, 1773, in what is now McIntosh County, Georgia.[1][2] John was the only son of George McIntosh and Ann Priscilla Houstoun. In 1792 John married Eliza Bayard, a woman from a prominent New York family,[3] and they had 3 children, Catherine Ann McIntosh, John Houston McIntosh Jr., and Eliza Bayard McIntosh.[4][5] Eliza would eventually marry Duncan L. Clinch, who would go on to serve as an officer in the U.S. army during the Second Seminole War.[6]

Politician and landowner

In 1798, John Houston served on the Georgia constitutional convention. He would then become a justice of the inferior court of Camden County, Georgia. At some point, John began growing rice and cotton at his plantation, called Refuge, on the Satilla River in Camden County.[7]

In 1803, he purchased land in Florida and, despite living mostly in Georgia, he took an oath of allegiance to the Spanish crown and was deemed a "colonial subject of Spanish Florida."[8]

The Patriot War of Florida

By around 1811, McIntosh was residing at Fort George Island where he grew cotton and operated a sawmill. It was there that he met with George Mathews. Mathews was looking for influential Floridians who could help to overthrow Spanish rule and bring the Florida territory into the U.S.[9]

On March 16, 1812, the Patriot group elected McIntosh as the leader of their group. The group was composed mostly of militia men from Georgia but also had a contingent of U.S. troops from Point Peter, a garrison near the Florida-Georgia border. A day after McIntosh was elected leader, the group marched into and captured the town of Fernandina with the support of 5 Navy gunboats.[10]

After the successful capture Fernandina, the Patriots established an interim government with the intention that they'd eventually join the United States. On July 17, 1812, a constitution was drafted and 14 members of the Patriot group signed the document including McIntosh, who served as President.[11]

Later life

Following the Patriot War, McIntosh returned to Georgia. Believing that the government owed him for financial losses incurred during the war, McIntosh sued the United States government for around $125,000 (or over $3 million in 2020), an amount of which was eventually awarded to his heirs.[12][13] Because of the failure of and destruction resulting from the Patriot War, McIntosh, like other leaders in the rebellion, had his reputation tarnished. He fought hard to exonerate his name, both with politicians and the public. For example, in 1823 he submitted an article to the National Intelligencer, in which he argued that he was being unfairly slandered for having caused the war.[14]

During the 1820's, he built the McIntosh Sugarworks.

McIntosh died in 1836.[15]

References

  1. Patrick, Rembert (1954). Florida Fiasco: Rampant Rebels on the Georgia-Florida Border 1810-1815. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press. p. 56.
  2. "Tabby Sugar Works of John Houston Mcintosh". Georgia Historical Society.
  3. Florida Memory. "On the Border, Part I". Florida Memory. Retrieved 27 May 2022.
  4. Pearcy, Matthew; Humphreys, Andrew Atkinson (2006). "Andrew Atkinson Humphreys' Seminole War Field Journal". The Florida Historical Quarterly. 85 (2): 213. JSTOR 30150704. Retrieved 7 May 2022.
  5. Bulloch, Joseph. A History and Genealogy of the Families of Bayard, Houstoun of Georgia. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin. p. 15. Retrieved 7 May 2022.
  6. Rembert, Patrick W. (2016). Aristocrat in Uniform: General Duncan L. Clinch. Carlisle, MA: Applewood Books. p. 46. ISBN 9781429093842.
  7. Florida Memory. "On the Border, Part I". Florida Memory. Retrieved 16 May 2022.
  8. Patrick, p. 56
  9. Kruse, Paul (1952). "A Secret Agent in East Florida: General George Mathews and the Patriot War". The Journal of Southern History. 18 (2): 200. doi:10.2307/2954272. JSTOR 2954272. Retrieved 7 May 2022.
  10. Kruse 1952, pp. 209.
  11. ""Patriot Constitution" of the Republic of East Florida, 1812". Florida Memory. Florida Department of State. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  12. "Value of $100,000 from 1820 to 2022". CPI Inflation Calculator. Retrieved 5 September 2022.
  13. Patrick, p. 302
  14. Cusick, James G. (2007). The other War of 1812 : the Patriot War and the American invasion of Spanish East Florida. Athens: University of Georgia Press. p. 307. ISBN 9780820329215.
  15. Cusick 2007, p. 308.
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