Henry Toomer

 


AMERICA THE GREAT MELTING POT

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Henry Toomer
  Quartermaster in American Revolution
see Family Tree

 Born: Abt. 1738 Charleston, SC

Married: 1st to Mary Nesbit or Mary Vanderhorst b, Abt. 1742 SC

               2nd to Mary Grainger

               3rd. to Mary Magdalene De Rosset  m. Abt. 1780 in Wilmington, NC

Will Proved:  19 Mar 1799 Wilmington, New Hanover Co., NC
pg 1 of Will
pg 2 of Will
pg 3 of Will

FATHER

Joshua Toomer

MOTHER

Mary Bonneau

CHILDREN with Mary Nesbit or Mary Vanderhorst

1. Anthony Bonneau Toomer   

            m. Mary Harnett Holt

CHILDREN with Mary Grainger

1. Mary Jane Toomer

                m. James H. Walker

CHILDREN with Magdalene Mary De Rosset

1. Elizabeth Ann Toomer b. 1786

2. Lewis Henry Toomer b. 1780

3. Honorable John DeRosset Toomer

4. Mary Fullerton Toomer

            m. 1st  John Bradley Lord

            m 2nd William Freeman Tredwell

Henry Toomer was one of the largest property owners of his time in Wilmington, NC.  Toomer's Alley between Market and Princess and running from Front to Second was named for this family having been formed from a portion of Henry Toomer's large lot.

Source: Dictionary of North Carolina Biography by William S. Powell, 1996
"Toomer, Henry (7 Aug. 1738 - <between 22 Dec. 1798 and 19 Mar> 1799) Wilmington Safety Committee member, army commissary, financier and bail bondsman, and merchant, was born in Charleston, S. C., the second son of Joshua and Mary Bonneau Toomer.  Following his wife's death Joshua moved in 1747 with his son Henry to Wilmington.  There Henry Toomer achieved considerable financial success; in 1790 he owned fifty-one slaves.
In 1752 Toomer was a member of George Merrick's militia company.  His first appearance in court was as a juror in 1761.  He posted his first security bonds in the court in December 1765 and posted at least another thirty-three by the time of his last recorded action in August 1793.  His activities in the real estate market were first documented in 1765; by 1798 the records show at least thirty-five such transactions, many of which were for land that he held for only a few years. In 1766 Toomer was among those who signed letters relating to the Stamp Act rejection by the citizens of Wilmington, and he was a signer of the letter to Governor William Tryon in July 1766.
Named inspector for Wilmington in 1767, Toomer was reappointed in 1768, 1772, 1773, and 1785.  He ran unsuccessfully for sheriff in 1774.  On 3 July 1775 he was elected to the Wilmington Safety committee, of which he remained a member through its last recorded meeting on 9 Feb. 1776.  He also served on the committee to take a census of all white male and free mulatto inhabitants of the town of Wilmington between the ages of sixteen and sixty.
His first recorded action as a commissary during the Revolutionary War was in August 1775, when he furnished beef.  By January 1776 Toomer was responsible for providing a barracks for regulars to use as a hospital as well as the nurses for the hospital.  In March 1776 the Provincial Council officially designated him a commissioner for the district of Wilmington, and in June the Council of Safety appointed him commissary to the detachment of militia from the Halifax Brigade.  During this time he was also a captain in command of militia companies. In April 1777 the senate named him a marshal for the Port of Brunswick. 
That July he was selected one of the commissioners to take possession of estates of those opposing the Revolution, but in May 1780 he joined other Wilmington merchants in protesting to the Assembly that the canceling of debts owed to the English would lead to the loss of future credit to North Carolina merchants. In August 1777 Toomer was named a commissioner for the ship Washington, and later that year he was appointed with William Hooper to sell the ship.  The next year he was assigned to the commission to regulate the pilot fees at Cape Fear bar.  In May 1779 he was designated deputy quartermaster by the senate.  His final recorded commissary action was in April 1780.
In 1784 Toomer was named both to a committee to purchase land for a jail in Wilmington and to a commission to lay out a town adjoining Fort Johnston on the Cape Fear River. From 1786 until his death he apparently served as coroner in Wilmington, a post his father had filled soon after his arrival.  He also provided funds for other traders when money was scarce or unavailable from other sources.
Toomer married three times.  His first wife was Mary Vanderhorst, of Charleston, S.C., by whom he had a son, Anthony B.  He next wed Mary Grainger, of Wilmington, and they had a daughter, Mary J.  He and his third wife, Magdalene Mary De Rosett (b. 2 Feb. 1762) of Wilmington, were the parents of Eliza, Anthony, John De Rossett, Lewis D. and Mary Fullerton."

 

Source; State Records of North Carolina Vol XI
Letter from Francis Brice to Gov. Caswell from Executive Letter Book, Wilmington, July 25, 1777
"Sir: In the death of Mr. John Forster the public have lost a warm friend to American liberty, and the privateer Gen'l Washington is left without any one to procure the necessary articles for the ship's use, except the Captain who must purchase every material at a much larger price than a person particularly appointed for that purpose, as, if one was nominated, he might get a quantity of necessaries together, which would come much more reasonable than buying out of the retail shops.

I was at a loss who to mention to your Excellency as a proper person for the undertaking, 'till I recollected Mr. Robert Ellis, to whom I mentioned the circumstance, and he will readily accept the appointment, should your Excellency and the Council confer it on him. Mr. Ellis has been accustomed to the sea from his youth, & consequently pretty well acquainted with maritime affairs.  I could wish your Excellency could order whoever is appointed, to replace the money advanced by Mr. Forster since his settlement at Newbern: if you should, I shall take care to have the acc'ts properly attested: The warrant your Excellency sent him by me I have in my possession. 
I am your Excellency's h'ble servant, Francis Brice
P. S.
 I am told Mr. Toomer will also act as Commissioner for the Washington, provided he was appointed.  Mr. Toomer is a very active stirring man, he also knows something of shipping, and I make no doubt but he would fill that vacancy with much credit to himself and benefit to the public.  I don't presume to recommend either of those Gent. to your Excellency, I only mention them as the only two who would undertake the business.  Your Excellency's H'ble servant, F. Brice.

 

Letter 21 Aug 1777 from Henry Toomer to Gov. Caswell accepting the appointment as commissioner

State Records of NC Volume 9 pg 582

Wilmington  21 August, 1777
Sr.  By Gen. John Ashe I have received your appointment as commissioner: which I am much obliged to you for.  Mr. Ashe told me his had no orders to supply any money, and the men is complaining much for want of their pay.  If any bond is required, one will be given to Gen. Ashe.
Sr. I am your very hum'l Ser't
Henry Toomer    Rich Caswell, Esq.

   
North-Carolina Gazette  December 26, 1777

 

Source: Wilmington-New Hanover Safety Committee Minutes 1774-1776
"Toomer, Henry: Safety Committee 1775, 1776: commissary for various North Carolina units during the Revolution; came from South Carolina with his father Joshua Toomer 1747; inspector for Wilmington 1761-1768; coroner for New Hanover County 1786; died 1799 leaving a large estate including the 'mansion' and other property on Toomer's Alley, Barn and Meadow plantations, Dorsey's Hotel which was the Tavern where President Washington is said to have dined 1794."

Source: The Wilmington Town Book 1743-1778 edited by Donald R. Lennon and Ida Brooks Kellam 1973
"Henry Toomer came from South Carolina in 1747 with his father, Joshua.  He was an inspector for Wilmington (1761-1786), a member of the Wilmington Committee of Safety (1775-1776), the commissary for various North Carolina units during the American Revolution, and coroner for New Hanover County (1786).  In 1777 when the position of commissioner for the armed brigantine Washington became vacant, William Hooper wrote to Governor Caswell recommending Toomer for the position. 'His character in point of industry and integrity is unsullied, and his capacity in the common affairs of life good; he is not a seaman by profession, but upon the whole with his other good qualities, has the best pretension, to it of any I know here who will accept the charge.' (Clark, State Records, XI, 528). Upon his death in 1799, Toomer left a large estate, including the 'mansion' and other property on Toomer's Alley in Wilmington, the Barn and Meadow plantations, between forty and fifty slaves, Dorsey's Hotel - the tavern where President Washington dined in 1794 - and a variety of other properties.."

 

 

 

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