Isaac SWAYZE

Male Abt 1751 - 1828  (77 years)


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  • Name Isaac SWAYZE  [1
    Born Abt 1751 
    Gender Male 
    Died 23 Feb 1828 
    Person ID I2052  Michelle Walczak Dads Family Tree
    Last Modified 2 Aug 2020 

    Father Caleb SWAYZE
              b. 22 Mar 1722, Southold, Suffolk, New York Find all individuals with events at this location
              d. 18 Feb 1794, Mendham, New Jersey Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 71 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Mother Elizabeth PITNEY
              d. 6 Oct 1796, Hope, Warren, New Jersey Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Relationship natural 
    Married 1744  Roxbury, Morris, New Jersey Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F1566  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 Bethis LUSE
              b. 1756
              d. 1836  (Age 80 years) 
    Married 1775  Morris, Roxbury Twp, New Jersey Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Children 
     1. Joanna SWAYZE
              b. 20 Apr 1775, Chester, Morris, New Jersey Find all individuals with events at this location
              bur. Chester Congregational Cemetery, Chester, Morris, New Jersey Find all individuals with events at this location  [natural]
     2. Benjamin SWAYZE
              b. 1777, New Jersey Find all individuals with events at this location  [natural]
    Last Modified 2 Aug 2020 
    Family ID F855  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 2 Lena (Eleanor) FERRIS
              b. Abt 1777, New York Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Married 18 Sep 1806 
    Children 
     1. William Dickson SWAYZE
              b. 1817  [natural]
     2. Francis Gore SWAYZE
              b. Abt 1807, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location
              d. 1855, Iowa Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 48 years)  [natural]
     3. Eleanor SWAYZE  [natural]
     4. Maria SWAYZE  [natural]
    Last Modified 2 Aug 2020 
    Family ID F856  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 3 Sarah SECORD
              b. 1751
              bur. 18 Dec 1804  (Age ~ 53 years) 
    Married Niagara Township, Lincoln, Ontario Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. Catherine SWAYZE
              b. 13 Mar 1793  [natural]
     2. Isaac SWAYZE  [natural]
     3. Mary SWAYZE  [natural]
     4. Ellen SWAYZE  [natural]
    Last Modified 2 Aug 2020 
    Family ID F854  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Isaac served during the Revolutionary War with the British Army. For his
      services, he was granted 1200 acres of land in Pelham Township and Niagara
      Township. He lived in Queens ton, where he was Inspector of Customs for
      the Niagara District. He was also a member of the Legislature of Upper
      Canada from 1792-96, 1801-1808, and 1813-1820. He also served in the War of
      1812 in charge of Provincial Royal Artillery drivers. Afterwards, he was a
      Colonel in the First Lincoln Regiment.

      ISAAC SWAYZE
      [b.1751 - d.1828]

      History records the crimes, follies and misfortunes of humanity.

      Isaac Swayze, a noted British secret agent during the American Revolution, was elected member for the 3rd Riding of Lincoln in the Assembly in Upper Canada's first Legislature. According to Lord Dorchester, Swayze also served as a scout for the British army in New York and was known as "the pilot to the New York army."

      His services for the 'Tories' and the King made him a marked man in the rebellious colonies and he had many narrow escapes. On one occasion he was concealed in a cellar when Americans broke into the house. Failing to find him the frustrated rebels wounded his younger brother whose blood dripped down on Isaac secluded in the cellar below.

      Called a "spy" by his enemies of whom he had many, Swayze was badly wounded and twice made prisoner during the war. On the first occasion he was sentenced to death. While awaiting execution was visited by his wife. Tradition has it that he exchanged clothes with her and so escaped. He eluded his captors by slipping out a side door silent as a ghost except for the faint jingle of his spurs and fled with a $5,000 reward on his head. Swayze led a troubled life and suspicions of criminality swirled about the man for most of his existence. Described as a spry man with a swarthy, sandy complexion, Swayze was 5 ft. 8 or 9 in. tall and had a bullet scar on one temple. Prior to coming to Niagara he had been arrested on a robbery charge and was released on condition that he leave town immediately.

      The Swayze family emigrated from Germany in the early 17th century and eventually settled in Morris county, New Jersey, where Isaac was born in 1751. Isaac came to Niagara in 1784 and settled at St. Davids. After his house was destroyed by fire in the war of 1812, Swayze is thought to have lived for a time in Thorold on land which is now part of Brock University. Fellow settlers doubted his loyalty, but he successfully proved his allegiance and was granted land as a Loyalist. He was married three times to Bethia Luce, Sarah Secord and Lena Ferris.

      In the first Legislature Swayze had the reputation as something of a radical and was considered by the conservatives as a leader of the common people. He claimed to have the confidence of the "farmers and the general classes" because he had their interests at heart. When he was scorned and criticized by the Tories, he said it was because of his "integrity that shafts of malice were hurled at him by those who "ranked themselves high." Swayze led the popular fight against the wording of deeds which some people feared would prohibit the sale of their land.

      Times were tense in the exposed little colony because of fears of republicanism from both France and the United States. For this reason anyone at all critical of the government for any reason was suspected of subversive activity. For his rebellious behaviour, Swayze was charged and tried as "an Exciter of Sedition." He was convicted and fined 10 pounds and forced to find sureties for good behaviour for two years. His light penalty was probably indicative of the fact that Swayze's criticism of the government was thought to be due more to personal disgruntlement than traitorous thinking. Despite his conviction Swayze later received a commission as justice of the peace.

      Swayze was not elected to the second parliament, but campaigned in earnest for election in 1800 to the third. Prominent merchants led by Robert Hamilton of Queenston advocated financing extensive and costly improvements to the Niagara portage by levying higher charges for their goods. This caused widespread anger and opposition and Swayze emerged as leader of this group. He opposed the powerful commercial leaders of the province and won. He supported legislation favourable to small merchants, farmers, Loyalists and small office holders.

      During one election campaign, Swayze became the centre of a controversy when he was accused of having been a horse thief. In spite of this accusation, he was elected. Even after his election the allegations continued in the columns of the Niagara Herald. Swayze sued the paper and the accusations stopped. By the time he was elected for the riding of 2nd, 3rd, and 4th Lincoln in 1804, Swayze had become considerably more conservative. In fact, he had established a reputation as a rabid anti-republican. The reformer had suddenly become a conformist, and before long he found himself within the circles of power. However, his former allies discovered that his support had a price.

      Swayze still attracted trouble. When he was appointed inspector of 'shop, still and tavern licences' for the Niagara District, he reported that three men had broken into his house and stolen 500 pounds in licence fees. He petitioned the Assembly to be excused from restoring the money, but when his story of the theft was met with outright suspicion, he quickly withdrew his petition. Swayze's son repaid the licence money in four annual installments after his father's death.

      Swayze became a `hatchet' man and tackled with relish the dirty work of politics. He chaired a committee which found an opposing member's language "false, slanderous and highly derogatory" for which the member was jailed. In return the member pressed for Swayze's prosecution for circulating counterfeit bank notes. To ingratiate himself with the establishment, Swayze named his first son Francis Gore Swayze after the lieutenant-governor and his second son, William Dickson Swayze after an important personage in Upper Canada society.

      At the outbreak of the War of 1812 Swayze was appointed captain of a troop of men he raised called the Royal Artillery Drivers. The appointment of this famous or infamous individual appeared to be of great interest to the Americans, one of whom reported on it as he carefully observed British preparations for war taking place across the river. "The noted Isaac Swayze has received a captain's commission for the flying artillery of which they have a number of pieces." Despite resigning his command at a crucial moment during the war, he was cited as deserving of "the greatest credit for his indefatigable exertions." After the Battle of Queenston Heights, he was mentioned in dispatches for his daring. When Niagara was burned by retreating Americans in 1813, Swayze lost his house valued by him at 200 pounds. Many of his war claims were returned to him marked "Not Allowed" in red ink because there was a strong suspicion that Swayze, characteristically, was attempting to get more than his due.

      Following the war Swayze resumed his role as a dependable government gofer and hater of republicanism. When the Assembly moved to question Governor Gore about the disbursement of a 2,500 pound civil list, Swayze voted against calling him to account. He also opposed taxing "wild lands," a measure directed against absentee landlords, many of whom were government officials. Swayze was a stooge of the executive government and became the eyes and ears of civil authorities in the Niagara peninsula. He became a vocal opponent of reformer Robert Gourlay, an outspoken critic of the government, whose attempts to get information from settlers for an 'Immigrant Guidebook' were thought to be tantamount to treason. Swayze's allegations against Gourlay were carefully framed to fit the provisions of the Sedition Act. Swayze swore before the legislature that Gourlay was "an evil-minded and seditious person" and he promised the governor's secretary that Gourlay would soon be "in safe keeping or sent across the river." Swayze also informed on the editor of the Niagara Spectator for printing Gourlay's article titled, "Gagged, Gagged, by Jingo!"[See Below *]

      Swayze was quite prepared to perjure himself to please the circles of power into which he wished to be accepted. He became a fanatical anti-democrat who spent the rest of his life doing the unpleasant tasks of others.

      Swayze himself narrowly escaped prosecution for the murder of a man named William Morgan who had threatened to disclose the secrets of Freemasonry and then mysteriously disappeared. It was determined that Swayze, who was a Freemason, had nothing to do with the disappearance despite having boasted about it. Morgan's disappearance was never satisfactorily explained.

      Amazed that such a rascal could regularly be re-elected, Gourlay asked the question, "How could such a man as Isaac Swayze be elected and repeatedly elected?" He answered his own question. "Swayze covered all the stains upon his character with hypocrisy." Whatever his formula for electoral success, it failed to work in 1820 when Swayze, "the puppet of executive influence," was soundly defeated. It was his final political campaign. He retired from the fray after the election and spent the last years of his life quietly as a member of the Presbyterian church and proprietor of the Niagara Library. He died near Niagara in 1828.

      [*] When the Legislature passed a law "to prevent certain meetings within this province," Gourlay wrote an article of protest which he titled, 'Gagg'd, Gagg'd by Jingo.'
      "Dear sweet Canada! Thou art gagg'd at last,
      A babe of mighty Wellington, come o'er the sea,
      Has, with thy own foul fingers, gagg'd thee."

      http://www.uppercanadahistory.ca/ucfel/ucfel3.html viewed July 7, 2015

      Swayze, Isaac

      On 1 Sep 1797 The Crown granted a patent to Isaac Swayze for all 220 acres in Lots 38, 39 and Broken Lot 38 Thorold Twp.

      On 5 Apr 1818 (Reg 10 Feb 1819) Israel Swayze sold to John Darling 100 acres in Lot 79 Thorold Twp. (A110 #5534)

      https://sites.google.com/site/niagarasettlers2/thorold-3 viewed July 7, 2015

  • Sources 
    1. [S1055] New Jersey, Marriage Records, 1670-1965, Ancestry.com, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Lehi, UT, USA; Date: 2016;).
      Record for Isaac Swayze