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Reuben Doty

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Reuben Doty Veteran

Birth
Wareham, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
22 Feb 1819 (aged 74)
Pike, Wyoming County, New York, USA
Burial
Pike, Wyoming County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Ensign Reuben Doty is the son of Captain Samuel Doty and Zeruiah Lovell.

Descendant of Edward Doty, Mayflower passenger.


Doty married Hannah Delano on November 14, 1765 in Amenia, Dutchess County, New York. The couple came to Pike by 1810 and were pioneers in the Doty Hill area of the township.


Fought in Revolutionary War.


Ensign Doty was an officer in the Continental army, beginning in 1777, a Lieutenant in Colonel Humphrey's New York Regiment. His grandson, Reuben M. Doty, reports, on the authority of Ichabod Murray and Daniel Murray, that when the Revolutionary army was lying before Saratoga, a call was made for one hundred volunteers for a dangerous service, Lieutenant Reuben Doty commanded and Ichabod Murray was one of the party. They marched by a circuitous route to the rear of Burgoyne's army, where, the second morning after leaving their camp, just before daylight, they burned his stores and mills. They then made the circuit of the British Army and brought into their own camp twenty-one prisoners of whom six were officers, besides twenty-one horses and twenty cows. Source: The Doty-Doten Family in America, published 1897, page 666.

Ensign Reuben Doty is the son of Captain Samuel Doty and Zeruiah Lovell.

Descendant of Edward Doty, Mayflower passenger.


Doty married Hannah Delano on November 14, 1765 in Amenia, Dutchess County, New York. The couple came to Pike by 1810 and were pioneers in the Doty Hill area of the township.


Fought in Revolutionary War.


Ensign Doty was an officer in the Continental army, beginning in 1777, a Lieutenant in Colonel Humphrey's New York Regiment. His grandson, Reuben M. Doty, reports, on the authority of Ichabod Murray and Daniel Murray, that when the Revolutionary army was lying before Saratoga, a call was made for one hundred volunteers for a dangerous service, Lieutenant Reuben Doty commanded and Ichabod Murray was one of the party. They marched by a circuitous route to the rear of Burgoyne's army, where, the second morning after leaving their camp, just before daylight, they burned his stores and mills. They then made the circuit of the British Army and brought into their own camp twenty-one prisoners of whom six were officers, besides twenty-one horses and twenty cows. Source: The Doty-Doten Family in America, published 1897, page 666.



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