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1 Military service  





2 Timeline  





3 Family life  





4 Genealogical Society  





5 Marker Locations  





6 References  














Jude Hall







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Jude Hall memorial stone

Jude (Judas) Hall was an African-American soldier in the American Revolutionary War. He served from 1775 to 1783, thus earning his freedom from slavery. After the war, he married and settled in Exeter, New Hampshire, where his homestead is still known as Jude's Pond. Three of his children were kidnapped and sold into slavery, and two of his grandsons fought in the American Civil War.

Military service

[edit]

Jude Hall, of Exeter, New Hampshire, enlisted in May 1775 in the 3rd New Hampshire militia regiment under General Enoch Poor , he later re-enlisted in the 2nd NH. Jude was one of the longest serving soldiers and fought in the Revolutionary War for eight years, earning his freedom from slavery.[1] He was profiled in William C. Nell's book Colored Patriots of New Hampshire, with Sketches of Several Distinguished Colored Persons in 1855, which states: "He was a great soldier and was known in NH to the day of his death by the name Old Rock."[2][3] Hall was possibly the most famous New Hampshire African-American patriot.[4] He was one of the longest serving soldiers, either Black or white. [5]

Timeline

[edit]

After his eight years of service, he received compensation in October 1786.

Family life

[edit]
Jude's Pond sign on Drinkwater Rd, Exeter NH, near water's edge

Hall lived his entire life in the Exeter area. "Jude's Pond", located on 70 Drinkwater Road in Exeter, New Hampshire, was his homestead as a free man and still bears his name.[9][10] The location is quite near to the Blake farm (now Yorkfield Stables), where he was possibly born, and was once enslaved with others. The area where Jude raised his family is still quite wooded and lonely, and the two room home no longer stands.

Jude married Rhoda (Paul), sister of Reverend Thomas Paul, in 1785 and they had a large family on Drinkwater Road.[11] Three of their sons (James, Aaron, and William) were stolen into slavery.[12] His eldest daughter Dorothy married Robert Roberts, butler to Massachusetts Senator Christopher Gore and author of House Servants Directory (published in 1827). Roberts gave affidavit testimony regarding 18-year-old James' abduction in 1819 from his home on Drinkwater Road by an Exeter citizen, (as described in the House Servant's Directory's 2015 edition "introduction xi" by Graham Russell Hodges). Conflicting stories show that Rhoda Hall also sent an affidavit into The Liberator Newspaper, which was printed on March 8, 1834, saying James sailed on the ship "Wallace" out of Newburyport, MA., under command of Capt. Isaac Stone. and was sold into slavery at the port of Alexandria, VA.[13] Ship manifests show him on the "Ship Superb" sailing from Baltimore to New Orleans on April 6, 1819, to be sold by Hector McClean & Co to Dr. John Towle of Kentucky. Of their sons, only George remained to carry on the family name.

Three of Jude and Rhoda's grandsons, Moses, Aaron and Luke Hall served in the Civil War.[14] Jude and Rhoda's nephew was the Exeter-born abolitionist poet James Monroe Whitfield, via Rhoda's sister, Nancy Paul.

In his history of the town of Exeter, published in 1888, Charles Henry Bell penned a memorable description of Jude Hall as "a man of powerful physique...it is said that the parts of his ribs which are usually cartilaginous were of solid bone, so that his vital organs were enclosed in a sort of osseous case." and also "a powerful man who could lift a barrel of cider and drink from it."[15] According to Bell, Hall was the chief witness of the government in the trial of John Blaisdell for the 1822 homicide of another Exeter resident, John Wadleigh. Both were neighbors of Hall.

Artwork depicting Jude Hall, owned by the American Independence Museum, Exeter NH

Hall died in 1827, and his actual gravesite is unknown although old articles describe his grave as being in the Winter Street Cemetery "near to the old crypt." In 2000, Ed Wall, a descendant of Hall's enslaver erected a memorial stone in his honor in the Winter Street Cemetery in Exeter, in the section where other Black patriots still have stones.[16][17] Widow Rhoda moved to Belfast, Maine, to live with her daughters Rhoda Ann and Mary Jane Cook. Rhoda died February 21, 1844, in Belfast, her obelisk is in the Grove Cemetery.[18]

Genealogical Society

[edit]

In 2021, the "Jude & Rhoda Hall Society" Facebook page was created, with a downloadable tree.[19] Descendants and researchers have the ability to interact. Updates to the tree are housed at the Exeter Historical Society.

On October 31, 2023, the Daughters of the American Revolution assigned Jude Hall an official Patriot Ancestor number (217131), through his only remaining son, George Washington Hall (b.1789). A woman in California was the first to claim Jude in her line.

Wreath laying ceremony 2022 via the Daughters of the American Revolution, Exeter Chapter, NH

Marker Locations

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Pruitt, Sarah (Jan 8, 2019). "He Fought for His Freedom in the Revolution. Then His Sons Were Sold Into Slavery". History Channel. 209 A&E Television Networks. Retrieved 3 April 2019.
  • ^ Nell, William C. (1855). "The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution, with Sketches of Several Distinguished Colored Persons. Electronic Edition 1999". University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. p. 119. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  • ^ Kaplan, Sidney & Emma (1989). The Black Presence in the Era of the American Revolution (The book is a revised and expanded edition of the authors' classic catalog that accompanied a pioneering exhibition mounted in 1973 by the National Portrait Gallery. ed.). Univ of Massachusetts Press. pp. 60–61.
  • ^ Dixon, David T. (Spring 2007). "Freedom Earned, Equality Denied". Historical New Hampshire. 61 (1). NH Historical Society: 28–47.
  • ^ <ref>Knoblock, Glenn (2003). Strong and Brave Fellows. North Carolina: McFarland and Company Inc. p. 119. ISBN 0-7864-1548-7.
  • ^ Thorenz, Matt (24 February 2013). "African Americans at New Windsor: Private Jude Hall, 2nd New Hampshire Regiment". Teaching the Hudson Valley. Archived from the original on 29 March 2019. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  • ^ "Roster of New Hampshire Soldiers in the Battle of Bunker's Hill June 17, 1775" (PDF). National Park Service, Dept of Interior. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  • ^ "Patriots of Color at the Battle of Bunker Hill" (PDF). National Park Service. This curriculum-based lesson plan is one of a thematic set on the American Revolution using lessons from other Massachusetts National Parks. "Boston National Historical Park" Jude Hall. p. 15. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  • ^ "PEA Walking Trail Map showing Jude's Pond" (PDF). Town of Exeter NH.
  • ^ "town map". google maps.
  • ^ Knowlton, Deborah (23 February 2018). "Jude Hall". NH Black Heritage Trail. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  • ^ Rimkunas, Barbara (27 February 2014). "Jude Hall and His Family". Exeter Historical Society. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  • ^ Hall, Rhoda (8 March 1834). "Affidavit of Mrs. Rhoda Hall, widow of Jude Hall". Liberator. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  • ^ Rimkunas, Barbara. "Jude Hall" (video). Exeter Historical Society.
  • ^ Bell, Charles Henry (1888). History of the Town of Exeter, New Hampshire. Press of J. E. Farwell & Company, Boston. jude hall osseous.Boston: J.E. Farwell & Co., 1888
  • ^ Thorenz, Matt (24 February 2013). "African Americans at New Windsor: Private Jude Hall, 2nd New Hampshire Regiment". Teaching the Hudson Valley. Archived from the original on 29 March 2019. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  • ^ Rimkunas, Barbara (24 September 2018). "Exeter History Minute - Jude Hall". Exeter Historical Society "History Minute" video series.
  • ^ Pinette, Megan (February 2000). "Black Families of Belfast". The Waldo Independent newspaper. No. A Ramble Through Time series.
  • ^ "Jude and Rhoda Hall Society". Facebook. Retrieved 2022-05-25.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jude_Hall&oldid=1219278964"

    Categories: 
    1827 deaths
    New Hampshire militiamen in the American Revolution
    Black Patriots
    People from Exeter, New Hampshire
    Paul family of New England
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
     



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