The Glen surname is attached to a couple different places around New York. Glenville in Schenectady County is named after Alexander Lindsay Glen and Scotia was named by Alexander after his home country Scotland. The Glen Sanders Mansion in Scotia was originally built by Alexander, and expanded by his son John Glen. Its name comes from the marriage of Alexander’s great-granddaughter Debra Glen to John Sanders. Glens Falls is named after John Glen Jr., confusingly not the son of John Glen, but of John's son Jacob. Like many of the Glens before them, John Jr. and his brother Henry were quite prominent throughout Schenectady. The brothers were also held in high esteem with many with many people of national historic significance and were acquainted with the likes of William Johnson, Governor George Clinton of New York, Alexander Hamilton and George Washington.
Furniture from the Glen Sanders Mansion is on display at the Schenectady County Historical Society. Courtesy of the Grems-Doolittle Library photo collection. |
Both Henry and John
started off as merchants in Albany. According to the website “The People of
Colonial Albany,” John may have been a business partner with the venerable fur
trader Hendrick Bleecker as he was identified with Glen as the occupants of a
second ward house in a 1767 tax list. Starting in the 1760s, John started
buying land in Schenectady, Fort Edward, and what would become Glens Falls. The
acquisition of this land by John Glen is suspect to local legend and he
acquired it either through a debt that was owed to him, by a card game, or in
exchange for hosting a party for mutual friends. Henry also became interested
in real estate and owned houses in Albany and Schenectady.
The brothers were also heavily involved in military affairs and the family’s affiliation with William Johnson
during the French and Indian War resulted in John being appointed quartermaster
general with Henry as his assistant. John was also the captain of the Second
Battalion of Militia of Schenectady which included Jacob Schermerhorn as 1st
Lieutenant, John’s brother Henry as 2nd Lieutenant, and other
prominent Schenectady residents.
During the American
Revolution, Henry continued to serve in the army as Assistant Deputy Quartermaster
for the northern department of the army where his role was to gather and
facilitate the distribution of military supplies for northeastern New York. He
supplied provisions and transportation for the five forts in the Mohawk Valley
and also managed the construction of new barracks in Schenectady, where he was
stationed. Often funding these projects and buying supplies with his own money
as was the case in the spring of 1781. The frontier towns were desperately in
need of supplies, troops were deserting, and it was feared that Schenectady
might be attacked. Boats were being built in Schenectady to transport materiel
to Fort Stanwix and Henry Glen used his own credit to build 16 bateaux for the
military. Henry was extremely devoted to the cause of the Revolution, but
disheartened that his fellow countrymen did not feel similarly in a letter to
Colonel Hugh Hughes Henry Glen writes that “…no man longs more to make an end
of the War than I do by carrying it on with Vigour, I am and always was willing
to pledge my Life and little Property for the support of the war but am sorry
to find the Virtue and Exertions of the People are lost throughout the whole
Country.” In addition to his duties as quartermaster, Henry was the captain of
the local militia.
There wasn’t much mentioned about John Glen during or after the Revolutionary War. Some sources mention that he was also a quartermaster during the Revolution, but I haven’t been able to accurately verify this. He was a friend of George Washington and may have even hosted Washington at his house at 58 Washington Avenue in Schenectady’s Stockade on Washington’s first visit to Schenectady in 1775. John Glen was listed on the roster of the 2nd Albany Militia, and on July 25, 1778 he was also called to appear before the Commissioners of Conspiracies on July 25, 1778 and signed an oath of allegiance four years later in 1782. Unfortunately, significant debt forced John from his home in 1810 and he was supported by friends until his death in 1828 at the age of ninety-three.
There wasn’t much mentioned about John Glen during or after the Revolutionary War. Some sources mention that he was also a quartermaster during the Revolution, but I haven’t been able to accurately verify this. He was a friend of George Washington and may have even hosted Washington at his house at 58 Washington Avenue in Schenectady’s Stockade on Washington’s first visit to Schenectady in 1775. John Glen was listed on the roster of the 2nd Albany Militia, and on July 25, 1778 he was also called to appear before the Commissioners of Conspiracies on July 25, 1778 and signed an oath of allegiance four years later in 1782. Unfortunately, significant debt forced John from his home in 1810 and he was supported by friends until his death in 1828 at the age of ninety-three.
For Henry Glen, the end of the Revolutionary War brought about a continuation of the public service that he started as clerk of Schenectady County in 1767. He served as a state assembly member from 1786-1787, then as a representative in the U.S. Congress from 1793-1801. He also continued his position as deputy quartermaster and was involved with the movement of supplies and troops throughout New York State. Shortly after the war Henry fell into debt which was caused partially by his personal expense during the war. This debt stayed with him for most of his life and he was met with much difficulty in trying to recover payment from the government for the multiple positions he served in during and after the war. Henry’s fortunes were never completely recovered, and as Chris Hunter states in his paper A Slave to the Army: Henry Glen and Public Service in the Early Republic, “he died January 6 1814, ending his adulthood as he had begun it, in the service of the government.”
For Henry Glen, the end of the Revolutionary War brought about a continuation of the public service that he started as clerk of Schenectady County in 1767. He served as a state assembly member from 1786-1787, then as a representative in the U.S. Congress from 1793-1801. He also continued his position as deputy quartermaster and was involved with the movement of supplies and troops throughout New York State. Shortly after the war Henry fell into debt which was caused partially by his personal expense during the war. This debt stayed with him for most of his life and he was met with much difficulty in trying to recover payment from the government for the multiple positions he served in during and after the war. Henry’s fortunes were never completely recovered, and as Chris Hunter states in his paper A Slave to the Army: Henry Glen and Public Service in the Early Republic, “he died January 6 1814, ending his adulthood as he had begun it, in the service of the government.”
The Grems-Doolittle
Library at the Schenectady County Historical Society holds the Glen Family
Letters follow this link for an index to the letters: http://schenectadyhistorical.org/admin/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/Historic-Manuscripts-Collection-Glen-Letters.pdf.
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