“Bonus” Traitor Thursday ~ Celebration 250 Years of the United States as a Separate Nation: Roger Sherman, Signer of the Articles of Association, Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the U. S. Constitution

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Roger Sherman was 55 years of age when he signed the Declaration of Independence. A lawyer by profession, Sherman was married twice and was the father of 15 children. He died at the age 0f 72 in 1793.

In 1723, when Sherman was 2 years of age, his family relocated from his Newton, MA, birthplace to Dorchester (present Stoughton). As a boy, Roger read widely in his spare time to supplement his minimal education at a common school. Sherman received his early education from his father’s private library (not formal school), later attending grammar school. Sherman was a gifted learner, and Harvard educated Rev. Samuel Dunbar took him on as a study. But he spent most of his waking hours helping his father with farming chores and learning the cobbler’s trade from him. In 1743, 2 years after his father’s death, Sherman joined an elder brother who had settled in New Milford, CT.

In 1743, Sherman moved, together with his siblings and his mother, to New Milford (a 175 mile trek) for his father’s death in 1741 left the family destitute. His elder brother had already established himself in New Milford, and so the family had no other options. Not long after the move, he had business in a neighboring town. A short time before, a neighbor had told Roger of a pending legal difficulty. As there was an attorney practicing in the town that Roger intended to visit, he agreed to visit the attorney on his friend’s behalf, convey the points in the dispute, and obtain some legal advice.

roger_shermanBecause the subject was complex, Roger had written some fairly detailed notes to assist his memory. When he arrived at the attorney’s office, he stated the case while referring to the notes he had written. The attorney was impressed with the clarity and style of Roger’s manuscript, and said that, with just a few minor changes, it would be equal to any statement of the case he could write himself. The attorney then encouraged young Roger to seriously consider becoming an attorney. At about that time, Roger began a personal study of the law, though he was still very much occupied with the responsibilities of caring for his mother and younger siblings. Not long after, he thought it advisable to leave the shoemaking trade and enter into a business partnership with his older brother, who ran a general store, the first store in the town. Sherman quickly became one of the town’s leading citizens after introducing himself to both civil and religious affairs. Eventually, he became New Milford’s clerk. In 1745, he became a surveyor due to his excellent mathematical skills. At the age of 24 he was appointed to the position of county surveyor for Litchfield county.  As an avid astronomer, he made astronomical calculations for an almanac that was published in New York.In 1748, he was a provider of astronomical calculations for almanacs of the day.

urlA local lawyer urged Sherman to read for the bar exam even though he did not have any formal training. Sherman was later admitted to the Litchfield bar in 1754 and acted as a representative of New Milford in the General assembly of Connecticut between 1755 and 1758 and again from 1760 to 1761. Sherman was elected to the Upper House of the Connecticut General Assembly and served there until 1785.

In 1762, Sherman received an appointment to serve in the Court of Common Pleas as a justice of the peace, moving on to become a Judge in 1765. Eventually, he left the court for the Congress of the United States in 1789. He also served as a treasurer in Yale College where he received an honorary Masters in Arts degree. He was appointed together with Richard Law to participate in revising Connecticut statutes. After succeeding in these revisions, Sherman was elected as a New Haven’s mayor in 1784. He held this position until his death.

Purchasing a store, becoming a county surveyor, and winning a variety of town offices, Sherman prospered and assumed leadership in the community. In 1749 he married Elizabeth Hartwell, by whom he had seven children (two died in infancy). Without benefit of a formal legal education, he was admitted to the bar in 1754 and embarked upon a distinguished judicial and political career. In the period 1755-61, except for a brief interval, he served as a representative in the colonial legislature and held the offices of justice of the peace and county judge. Somehow he also eked out time to publish an essay on monetary theory and a series of almanacs incorporating his own astronomical observations and verse.

In 1761, Sherman abandoned his law practice, and moved to New Haven, CT. There, he managed two stores, one that catered to Yale students, and another in nearby Wallingford. He also became a friend and benefactor of Yale College, and served for many years as its treasurer. In 1763, or 3 years after the death of his first wife, he wed Rebecca Prescott, who bore him eight children.

Meanwhile, Sherman’s political career had blossomed. One such post was serving as the first mayor for New Haven. He rose from justice of the peace and county judge to an associate judge of the Connecticut Superior Court and to representative in both houses of the colonial assembly. Although opposed to extremism, he promptly joined the fight against Britain. He supported non-importation measures and headed the New Haven committee of correspondence.

Sherman was a longtime and influential member of the Continental Congress (1774-81 and 1783-84). He also served on the Five Committee that was responsible for drafting the Declaration of Independence and aided in the Articles of Confederation, as well as those concerned with Indian affairs, national finances, and military matters. To solve economic problems, at both national and state levels, he advocated high taxes rather than excessive borrowing or the issuance of paper currency. In addition, he served as a new republic’s senator and representative. 

While in Congress, Sherman remained active in state and local politics, continuing to hold the office of judge of the Connecticut Superior Court, as well as membership on the council of safety (1777-79). In 1783 he helped codify Connecticut’s statutory laws. The next year, he was elected mayor of New Haven (1784-86).

Although on the edge of insolvency, mainly because of wartime losses, Sherman could not resist the lure of national service. In 1787 he represented his state at the Constitutional Convention, and attended practically every session. Not only did he sit on the Committee on Postponed Matters, but he also probably helped draft the New Jersey Plan and was a prime mover behind the Connecticut, or Great Compromise, which broke the deadlock between the large and small states over representation. He was, in addition, instrumental in Connecticut’s ratification of the Constitution.

Roger Sherman and Robert Morris were the only two Founding Fathers to have signed all four of the great papers in the United States. These are the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the Articles of Confederation and the Articles of Association.

Sherman concluded his career by serving in the U.S. House of Representatives (1789-91) and Senate (1791-93), where he espoused the Federalist cause. He died at New Haven in 1793 at the age of 72 and is buried in the Grove Street Cemetery.

Much of the text and details above comes from these wonderful Resources: 

“A Biography of Roger Sherman,” American History from Revolution to Reconstruction and Beyond.

“Roger Sherman, Connecticut,” Constitution Day.

“Roger Sherman,” Teaching American History.

“Roger Sherman,” The Roger Sherman Society.

Posted in America, American History, British history, history, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Septs of Clans Duncan, Cunningham and Graham + the Upcoming Release of “Lyon on the Inside” from Dragonblade Publishing, Arriving 17 June 2026

Unlike many Regency romances, this series from Dragonblade Publishing features three prominent Scottish clans: Duncan, Cunningham, and Graham.

From The Tartans of the Clans and Septs of Scotland: With the Arms of Chiefs we have the following defintition: “A Highland Clan, ” writes President Forbes of Culloden, “is a set of men all bearing the same surname, and believing themselves to be related the one to the other, and to be descended from the same stock. In each Clan are several subaltern tribes, who own dependence on their own immediate chief, but all agree in owning allegiance to the supreme chief of the Clan or kindred, and look upon it to be their duty to support him in all adventures.”

“This concise definition of a Clan may be supplemented by what Dr Skene writes : While the Clan, viewed as a single community, consisted of the chief, with his kinsmen, to a certain limited degree of relationship; the community who were of the same blood, who all bore the same name, and his dependents, consisting of subordinate septs of native men, who did not claim to be of the blood of the chief, but who were either probably descended from the more ancient occupier of the soil, or were broken men from other clans who had taken protection from him. …

Clan Duncan: Clan Duncan (also known as Clann Donnachaidh) is historically linked with Clan Robertson, with many associated names stemming from the Perthshire-based clan. Common septs and associated surnames include Donachie, Donnachie, Donnelson, Duncanson, Dunkeson, Dunnachie, Inches, MacConachie, MacDonnichie, MacDonachie, Maninroy, MacIver, MacIvor, MacRob, MacRobb, MacRobbie, MacRobie, MacRobert, MacWilliam, Reid, Robb, Robbie, Roberts, Robertson, Robinson, Robson, Roy, Stark, and Tannoch. While often associated with the Robertsons, Clan Duncan exists in its own right, with historical ties to the areas of Perthshire, Angus, and Fife. While often linked as a branch of Clan Robertson (descended from Donnachadh Reamhar, or “Stout Duncan”), the Duncans are a significant force with their own history. The name Duncan itself is derived from the Gaelic Donnchadh, meaning “brown warrior”. 

Clan Cunningham: Clan Cunningham, a Lowland Scottish clan with roots in Ayrshire, has several associated septs and name variations linked through history and kinship. Key septs include Boyd, Chancellor, Coon, Cooney, Dunlop, Duncap, Flack, George, Giffen, Gunion, Hackney, Hair, Hemphill, Paisley, Powers, Stair, Starret, Stirrat, Winchester and Woodburn.  The clan originates from the district of Cunningham in North Ayrshire, with the first of the name likely being Warnebald, who received lands in the 12th century. The clan motto is “Over fork over“. According to legend, the motto stems from a time when Malcom, Prince of Scotland, was escaping from Macbeth, and he was hidden by a peasant under a pitchfork full of hay. Notable branches that served as foundational families for the clan include the Cunninghams of Kilmaurs, Caprington, Cunninghamhead, Aiket, Robertland, and Corsehill. 

“Forget Not” – Clan Graham

Clan Graham: Clan Graham, a prominent Scottish clan with roots in the Anglo-Scottish border and a historic seat at Mugdock Castle, has numerous associated septs and branches. Key septs include Airth, Allardice/Allardyce, Auchinloick, Ballewen, Blair, Bonar/Bonnar/Bonner, Bontein/Bontine/ Buntain/ Bunten/Buntine, Buntyn, Buchlyrie, Bunting, Conyers, Drumaquhassle, Duchray, Dugalston, Esbank, Glenny, Graeme/Grahame, Grim/Grimes, Hadden/Haddon/Haldane, Howe/Howie, Kilpatrich, Lingo, Longstaff, MacGibbon, MacGilvern/MacGilvernock/MacIlvern, MacShille, Menteith/Monteith, Monzie, Mugdock, Pitcairn, Pyatt/Pye/Pyott, Rednock, Sirowan, Sterling. 



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Traitor Tuesday ~ Celebrating 250 Years of the United States as a Separate Nation: James Smith, Signer of the Declaration of Independence and Congressional “Cut-Up”

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James Smith was another of the signers who was not born in the British colonies. He was a 57 years old father of five and lawyer when he signed the Declaration of Independence. He died at the age of 87 in 1806.

James Smith was born in northern Ireland, in the Province of Ulster as the second son of a well-to-do farmer, John Smith in or around 1716 – 1719. He emigrated to Cheshire County Pennsylvania with his family when he but a youth.The family settled on the west side of the Susquehanna. The elder Smith died in the year 1761. His father was a successful farmer, and James benefited from a good, simple, classical education, first from a local clergy. He attended the Philadelphia Academy (later to become the University of Pennsylvania) from the distinguished Dr. Allison, provost of the college of Philadelphia. His attainments in classical literature were respectable. In the art of surveying, which at that early period of the country was of great importance, he is said to have excelled. After finishing his education, he applied himself to the study of law, in the office of Thomas Cookson, of Lancaster.

He continued his study of law at the office of his older brother George, in Lancaster. Smith was admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar at age twenty-six, and set up an office in Cumberland County, near Shippensburg. This was a frontier area at the time, so he spent much of his time engaged in surveying, only practicing law when such work was available. After four or five years he moved back to more populated York, where he might practice law exclusively.

James Smith, at 41 years of age married Eleanor Armor, daughter of John Armour in New Castle, Delaware in 1760. They had five children, before she died on 13 July 1818. Of these five children, only one, Mary Smith, born 20 April 1763, the second child, survived into adulthood, married, and had issue. All four of the other children died unmarried or without issue.

As James Smith’s legal business grew, his surveying activities decreased, but it was an excellent background for understanding land record descriptions, and the transfer of real property from one owner to another. About the early 1760’s Smith began an iron foundry, but the business did not prosper, not because there was no market for iron—there certainly was; but he had placed the enterprise in the hands of two partners, who were, as Smith reported, “… one of who was a knave, and the other a fool.” So, James Smith lost a good bit of money on this venture.

During the 1760s, Smith became a leader in the area. He attended a provincial assembly in 1774 where he offered a paper he had written, called “Essay on the Constitutional Power of Great Britain over the Colonies in America.” In the essay, he offered a boycott of British goods, and a General Congress of the Colonies, as measures in defense of colonial rights. Later that year he organized a volunteer militia company in York, which elected him Captain. This was the first volunteer corps raised in Pennsylvania. His company grew to be a battalion. He was appointed colonel of that regiment; a title, however, which in respect to him was honorary, since he never assumed the actual command. Later, he deferred leadership to younger men. During the rising tension with Great Britain, Smith, in his military capacity, caused two regiments of Pennsylvania militia to repair to the Flying Camp, set up near Perth Amboy, New Jersey to deter possible British incursions in early 1776.

But this was only one side of James Smith. According to Denise Kiernan and Joseph D’Agnest’s Signing Their Lives Away: The Fame and Misfortune of the Men Who Signed the Declaration of Independence (Quirk Books, ©2009), Smith was a Congressional cut-up. His wit, storytelling prowess, and Irish brogue always entertained the congressmen. Smith milked his own debacle [of losing his business and £5000] for a quip. There was, however two things that Smith never joked about: religion and George Washington. And for some reason, like some vain Broadway diva, he eccentrically refused to tell anyone his age.”

 james-smith-sigIn January, 1775, the convention for the province of Pennsylvania was assembled. Of this convention, Mr. Smith was a member, and concurred in the spirited declaration made by that convention, that “if the British administration should determine by force to effect a submission to the late arbitrary acts of the British parliament, in such a situation, we hold it our indispensable duty to resist such force, and at every hazard to defend the rights and liberties of America.” Notwithstanding this declaration by the convention, a great proportion of the Pennsylvanians, particularly the numerous body of Quakers, were strongly opposed, not only to war, but even to a declaration of independence.

He was appointed to the provincial convention in Philadelphia in 1775, the state constitutional convention in 1776, and was elected to the Continental Congress the same year. He remained in Congress only two years, and as Congress was meeting in Philadelphia in those days, provided his office for meetings of the Board of War.

James Smith, accompanied by Captain Francis Wade and Dr. Young rode off to York on the evening of 6 July 1776 with a printed broadside copy of the Declaration to read to the public in the town square. Smith continued to serve on in Congress, and in his state assembly though 1778. He was elected a Brigadier General of the state Militia in 1781, and resumed his practice of Law York as the wasr ended and kept at it until 1800, when he retired at age 81.

smithjames22James Smith retired from the Congress in 1777, and served in few public offices after: one term in the State assembly, a few months as a judge of the state High Court of Appeals, etc. He was reelected to Congress in 1785, but declined to attend due to advancing age. James Smith died in York, Pennsylvania, on 11 July 1806, and is interred in the First Presbyterian Churchyard there. Little is known about his work, because a fire destroyed his office and papers shortly before he died. Most experts believe he was 86 or 87 years of age when he passed, but his grave marker lists him as 93 years of age, making him one of the top three oldest of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. smithjames2

Sources: 

Find a Grave 

Goodrich, Charles A. (Reverend), Lives of the Signers to the Declaration of Independence. New York: William Reed & Co., 1856. Pages 291-296.

Pennsylvania Center for the Book

Revolutionary War

Society for the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence 

U. S. History: Signers of the Declaration of Independence

Wikipedia 

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Coaching Inns Between London and Kent + the Upcoming Release of “Lyon on the Inside” from Dragonblade Publishing, Arriving 17 June 2026


In this last installment of my Lyon’s Den Connected World seires, Lady Freya Cunningham decides she will visit with her Aunt and Uncle Turner in Kent, while her friends are all at Thom Manor, a mere two miles away. To travel there, she must take a public coach, quite the experience for the daughter of a Scottish earl, who is unfamiliar with the roads. For example, The George in Southwark is a coaching inn where Freya first stops before switching to another to take her nearer to Rochester (just across the river) or slightly further out on the main routes like the London-Dover Road (now known as A2/A20), with potential sstops in places like Deptford, Greenwich, or Blackheath, as these were busy stopping points for coaches heading to Kent. Coaching inns were placed roughly 8-12 miles apart, depending on the road’s difficulty and coach speed, offering fresh horses, food, and rest for passengers. Southwark was the immediate gateway, while Deptford, Greenwich, and Blackheath marked the start of the journey into Kent proper. 

During the Regency era, key coaching inns connecting London to Kent, particularly along the routes to Dover and Hastings, included the Green Dragon, Kings Arms, and Crown in Croydon, which served as vital stops. Other important, well-known, or substantial staging posts along this route and in Kent included the Royal Oak in Sevenoaks, George in Tonbridge, and The Bull in Rochester.  

Prominent Kent & South-East Route Inns

Croydon was a major hub where up to 50 coaches passed daily, notably the Green DragonKing’s Arms, and Crown. Tonbridge was a primary stop for coaches heading to Hastings and Rye, featuring the George. Sevenoaks was a key stopover on the route to the coast, featuring the Royal Oak. Rochester was served by The Bull. The Dover Road had key locations which often included the George in Dartford and various inns in Sittingbourne

Key Features of Regency Coaching Inns

  • Functions: These establishments operated as indispensable, multi-purpose hubs for travelers, offering food, accommodation, and secure stables, and often acting as local mail depots.
  • Traffic: By 1819, London alone had 120 coaching inns, with substantial traffic moving through the Borough toward Kent.
  • Facilities: Inns provided fresh teams of horses, with some featuring specialized services like blacksmiths, farriers, or wheelwrights for carriage repairs.
  • Social Scene: They acted as bustling social centers for passengers waiting for connections or overnight stays

Other Resources:

Susana’s Parlour – Susana Ellis has an extensive list of coaching inns available for readers.

Heather Moll – explains how the coaching system worked and key points of traveling in the Regency

Historical Hussies – history of post houses = posting inns = pubs

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What Might Be Served in a Regency Era Tearoom? + the Upcoming Release of “Lyon on the Inside” from Dragonblade Publishing, Arriving 17 June 2026

Lady Freya Cunningham, the heroine of book 5 in this series, “accidentally” encounters Lady Emma Orson (Richard’s wife), Miss Victoria Whitchurch (Benjamin Thompson’s betrothed), and Lady Annalise Beaufort (Navan’s wife) leaving Madame Emmeline’s modiste. The ladies ask Freya to accompany them to a nearby tearoom. Freya is hoping to enlist the ladies in assisting her in drawing Lord Aaran Graham’s attention. But what would they be served?

A Regency-era (1811–1820) tearoom in England likely served Chinese green and black teas, often accompanied by thin bread and butter, toast, muffins, crumpets, Sally Lunn buns, or seed cake. Sweet options included biscuits (macaroons), fruit-filled jellies, and gingerbread, while lighter, elegant refreshments like lemon ices were also popular. 

Key Refreshments Served:

  • Tea: Commonly imported black and green teas from China, served with milk or lemon.
  • Breads & Spreads: Thinly sliced white or brown bread, Sally Lunn buns/bread, toast, and crumpets, often with fresh butter, jam, or marmalade.
  • Sweets & Cakes: Seed cake, Queen cakes, gingerbread, sponge cake, macarons, and biscuits.
  • Other Delicacies: Lemon ices, jellies, potted meats or fish (salmon), and fruit.
  • Savouries: Sandwiches or bites (though the formal, multi-tiered afternoon tea service was actually a later Victorian invention, light bites were common). 

These items were often served as a social, light, mid-afternoon meal designed to bridge the gap between luncheon and a late dinner. 

While they discuss other things, they make plans to escort Lady Freya to the Lyon’s Den and permit Mrs. Dove-Lyon to arrange a marriage between Freya and Aaran. This is a transition scene to where we bring Mrs. Dove-Lyon back into the tale.

Posted in aristocracy, book release, British history, buildings and structures, Dragonblade Publishers, eBooks, food and drink, Georgian England, Georgian Era, hero, heroines, historical fiction, history, Living in the Regency, mystery, publishing, Regency romance, research, romance, series, suspense, tea, writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Book of Common Prayer and a Regency Wedding Ceremony + the Upcoming Release of “Lyon on the Inside” from Dragonblade Publishing, Arriving 17 June 2026

All of you have likely read a marriage scene in a Regency era novel where the script is taken from the Book of Common Prayer, part of the Church of England’s traditions.

Regency-era marriages (1811–1820) were deeply formal, binding, and strictly governed by the 1662 Book of Common Prayer, typically taking place in a parish church between 8 a.m. and noon. The ceremony focused on solemn vows, the “giving away” of the bride, exchange of rings, and mandatory registry signing. 

Key Aspects of the Ceremony:

  • The Book of Common Prayer: The liturgy for “The Solemnization of Matrimony” was mandatory and uniform across England.
  • Vows: Couples pledged to have and to hold from that day forward, “for better for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health,” to love, cherish, and obey.
  • Requirements: A clergyman, a parish clerk, and at least two witnesses were required.
  • Restrictions: Weddings could not take place during certain holy days (like Lent).
  • No Kiss/No Hug: Contrary to modern tradition, the 1662 service did not include a kiss, a public introduction of the couple, or a sermon.
  • The Ring: A single, plain gold ring was given by the groom, who said, “With this Ring I thee wed, and with all my worldly goods I thee endow”. 

Marriage Logistics:

  • Banns: Unless a license was obtained, the banns (intention to marry) had to be read in church for three consecutive Sundays.
  • Licenses: A “common license” allowed for a quicker, quieter, but more expensive (10 shillings) ceremony.
  • Special Licenses: These were rare, expensive (£4-£5), and only for the aristocracy, allowing weddings to be held at home.
  • Post-Ceremony: Following the service, the couple signed the parish register, and a wedding breakfast, involving cake, was customary. 

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First the Banns of all that are to be married together must be published in the Church three several Sundays, during the time of Morning Service, or of Evening Service, (if there be no Morning Service,) immediately after the second Lesson; the Curate saying after the accustomed manner,

I PUBLISH the Banns of Marriage between M. of _____ and N. of _____. If any of you know cause, or just impediment, why these two persons should not be joined together in holy Matrimony, ye are to declare it. This is the first [second, or third] time of asking.

And if the persons that are to be married dwell in divers Parishes, the Banns must be asked in both Parishes; and the Curate of the one Parish shall not solemnize Matrimony betwixt them, without a Certificate of the Banns being thrice asked, from the Curate of the other Parish.

At the day and time appointed for solemnization of Matrimony, the persons to be married shall come into the body of the Church with their friends and neighbours: and there standing together, the Man on the right hand, and the Woman on the left, the Priest shall say,

DEARLY beloved, we are gathered together here in the sight of God, and in the face of this congregation, to join together this Man and this Woman in holy Matrimony; which is an honourable estate, instituted of God in the time of man’s innocency, signifying unto us the mystical union that is betwixt Christ and his Church; which holy estate Christ adorned and beautified with his presence, and first miracle that he wrought, in Cana of Galilee; and is commended of Saint Paul to be honourable among all men: and therefore is not by any to be enterprised, nor taken in hand, unadvisedly, lightly, or wantonly, to satisfy men’s carnal lusts and appetites, like brute beasts that have no understanding; but reverently, discreetly, advisedly, soberly, and in the fear of God; duly considering the causes for which Matrimony was ordained.

First, It was ordained for the procreation of children, to be brought up in the fear and nurture of the Lord, and to the praise of his holy Name.

Secondly, It was ordained for a remedy against sin, and to avoid fornication; that such persons as have not the gift of continency might marry, and keep themselves undefiled members of Christ’s body.

Thirdly, It was ordained for the mutual society, help, and comfort, that the one ought to have of the other, both in prosperity and adversity. Into which holy estate these two persons present come now to be joined. Therefore if any man can shew any just cause, why they may not lawfully be joined together, let him now speak, or else hereafter for ever hold his peace.

And also, speaking unto the persons that shall be married, he shall say,

I REQUIRE and charge you both, as ye will answer at the dreadful day of judgement when the secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed, that if either of you know any impediment, why ye may not be lawfully joined together in Matrimony, ye do now confess it. For be ye well assured, that so many as are coupled together otherwise than God’s Word doth allow are not joined together by God; neither is their Matrimony lawful.

At which day of Marriage, if any man do alledge and declare any impediment, why they may not be coupled together in Matrimony, by God’s Law, or the Laws of this Realm; and will be bound, and sufficient sureties with him, to the parties; or else put in a Caution (to the full value of such charges as the persons to be married do thereby sustain) to prove his allegation: then the solemnization must be deferred, until such time as the truth be tried.

If no impediment be alledged, then shall the Curate say unto the Man,

M. WILT thou have this Woman to thy wedded Wife, to live together after God’s ordinance in the holy estate of Matrimony? Wilt thou love her, comfort her, honour, and keep her in sickness and in health; and, forsaking all other, keep thee only unto her, so long as ye both shall live?

The Man shall answer, I will.

Then shall the Priest say unto the Woman,

N. WILT thou have this Man to thy wedded Husband, to live together after God’s ordinance in the holy estate of Matrimony? Wilt thou obey him, and serve him, love, honour, and keep him in sickness and in health; and, forsaking all other, keep thee only unto him, so long as ye both shall live?

The Woman shall answer, I will.

Other Sources:

Sharon Lathan

Solemnization of Matrimony

Weddings During the Regency

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Traitor Tuesday ~ Celebrating 250 Years of the United States as a Separate Nation: George Taylor, From Indentured Servant to Signer of the Declaration of Independence

George Taylor

George Taylor was one of two Irish born signers of the Declaration of Independence. He was a 60 years old merchant by trade and father of two when he signed the document. He died at the age of 65 in 1781.

Born in northern Ireland in 1716, Taylor arrived on American shores in 1736 as an indentured servant to an ironmaster in Coventry Forge, near Philadelphia. Originally, Taylor was a “filler” for the iron furnaces, but because he had some formal education, he was appointed a counting room clerk by his employer Samuel Nutt. Nutt died soon after, in 1737, and in accordance with his will, left his iron and furnace properties to Samuel Savage, Jr., and Savage’s mother, Anna Rutter Savage Nutt. Mrs. Nutt and her sons from her first marriage founded Warwick Furnace, and George performed the role of clerk for the new establishment. Samuel Savage, Jr., died in 1741, and George Taylor married Savage’s widow the following year. Under his control, the Warwick Furnace prospered. Taylor and his wife had two children, James and Ann (who died in childhood).

In 1747, Taylor joined a militia group organized by Benjamin Franklin. When Samuel Savage III became of age, Warwick Furnace was turned over to him (according to the original will). In 1753, Taylor and Samuel Flower leased the Durham Iron Works. The Taylors moved into the mansion house on the property. The iron works produced ammunition for the Provincial Pennsylvania government during the French and Indian War.

When the lease on the iron works ended, Taylor he bought a small stone house in Easton, PA at a sheriff’s sale on December 23, 1761 for £117, 15 s, 10d. Taylor often served as a justice of the peace and he helped in the construction of the new courthouse in Easton.

George_Taylor_Delegate“In March 1767, Taylor purchased a 331 acre tract known as the ‘Manor of Chawton’ located approximately 15 miles west of Easton. There he built an impressive two-story Georgian stone house on a bluff overlooking the Lehigh River. He hired carpenters from Philadelphia to erect the home in 1768. This home still stands, identified as the George Taylor Mansion. Tragically, his wife Ann died that year. It is not known where she was buried. Among the possibilities suggested by historians are the new property, in Easton, and the Gallows Hill Cemetery. Taylor leased most of the property out in 1771 and in 1772 appears to have been living with his son, James, who had moved to what is now Allentown, PA.

“Taylor returned to Durham in 1774, having entered into a five-year lease with Joseph Galloway, the owner of the Durham Iron Works, leasing mines, quarries, forges, and blast furnaces in PA and NJ. At the time Galloway was a prominent Philadelphia attorney and speaker of the Pennsylvania Assembly. The production of the Iron Works included pig iron and bar iron made at the forges in New Jersey, castings, and stoves, including Franklin stoves. In August 1775 Taylor secured a contract from the Pennsylvania Committee of Safety for cannonballs. From 1775 to 1778 Durham Furnace produced grape shot, cannon balls, bar shot and cannon for the Continental Army. Taylor received limited compensation for his contribution to the war effort, and his wealth diminished as a result. At the July 1775 meeting of the Assembly, a month after the Battle of Bunker Hill, Taylor was commissioned as a Colonel of the 3rd battalion of Militia. This meeting represented the first step in the county arming for conflict with England. He reportedly took part in drilling and in the organization of the battalion.” (The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence)

176“In 1775, he was part of the Pennsylvania delegation. Originally, the delegations were instructed to vote against separation. “When several delegates, including John Dickinson, chose not to vote in favor of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, the Assembly chose five replacements on July 20. They were George Taylor, George Ross, George Clymer, Dr. Benjamin Rush and James Smith, all of whom joined Congress and subsequently signed the Declaration of Independence when the engrossed copy of the document was ready for signatures on August 2, 1776.

“Taylor’s lease of the Durham Iron Works continued through 1779. The property was then seized because Joseph Galloway, the owner, had been attainted of treason for siding with the British. An attempt was made to evict Taylor but the Supreme Executive Council allowed him to remain until the end of the first 5-year term of the lease. The Durham property was then sold by the Commissioners of Forfeited Estates and purchased by four colonels: George Taylor, Richard Backhouse, Isaac Sidman and Robert Hooper Jr. Backhouse took over management of the Works, and Taylor moved to Greenwich Township, NJ to lease and operate the Greenwich Forge in Warren County, New Jersey.

“In early 1780, Taylor moved back to Easton, PA. He had sold his estate along the Lehigh River in February 1776 and his house and stable on Northampton Street in Easton in 1779. He leased a stone house at the corner of Fourth and Ferry Streets.

“George Taylor died in February 1781, His estate included two slaves, Tom, who was sold for 280 bushels of wheat valued at £77 and crippled Sam who fetch £15, one horse and three cows, and a 24-hour eight day clock with a walnut case valued at £24. After bequests to his executors and housekeeper he left in his will dated January 1781 half of his estate to his five grandchildren, George, Thomas, James, Ann and Mary, his son James having died in 1775. The second half of his estate was left to the five children Taylor fathered with his housekeeper, Naomi Smith: Sarah Smith, Rebecca Smith, Naomi Smith, Elizabeth Smith and Edward Smith. “(The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence)

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Banyans, A Gentleman’s Dressing Gown + the Upcoming Release of “Lyon on the Inside” from Dragonblade Publishing, Arriving 17 June 2026

In 2011, the Brighton Pavillion had a display of Regency fashion as part of their annual Jane Austen celebration. It was magnificent. One of the items on display was a quilted chintz banyan, what a gentleman might wear in the evening hours before going to bed.

The word comes through Portuguese banian and Arabic بنيان, banyān, from the Gujarati વાણિયો, vāṇiyo, meaning “merchant”.

European women wore banyans in the 18th century as dressing gowns in the morning, before robing for the day, or in the evening before bed over undergarments, as described by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, England. Despite the name “nightgown”, the banyan was not worn for sleeping. [“Banyan – Victoria & Albert Museum – Search the Collections”]

Also called a morning gownwrapperrobe de chambre or nightgown, the banyan was a loose, T-shaped gown or kimono-like garment, made of cotton, linen, or silk and worn at home as a sort of dressing gown or informal coat over the shirt and breeches. The typical banyan was cut en chemise, with the sleeves and body cut as one piece. It was usually paired with a soft, turban-like cap worn in place of the formal periwig. An alternative style of banyan was cut like a coat, fitted, with set-in sleeves, and was closed with buttons and buttonholes. [Waugh, Norah (1987). The Cut of Men’s Clothes, 1600–1900. New York: Routledge.]

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Newgate, Marshalsea, Coldbath Fields and Fleet, Prisons in the Regency + the Upcoming Release of “Lyon on the Inside” from Dragonblade Publishing, Arriving 17 June 2026

The hero of Lyon on the Inside has a leg that has been twisted out of place and a scar on his face. For those of you new to the series, Lord Aaran Graham’s mother dropped him when he was just a toddler. She was trying to escape Scotland for American, and he was squirming in her arms for she was handing him off to a young couple who had “bought” him to assist on their tenant farm. She rushes away and leaves him crying for her return. Her actions cause him more pain than does the injuries. Aaran has learned to live with a slight limp and ignore the scar on his cheek and lip, but he cannot forget his mother’s betrayal. Her actions defines him.

The injuries, though, provide him a way to serve Lord Macdonald Duncan, the man who saved him. Aaran is unassuming enough to be the one who is “arrested” and placed in the various prisons to learn more about what the Luddites plan, something of those forging fake bank notes, etc. He spends a week or two in the prisons, charged with the crime of pickpocketing, etc., and long enough for others to see him in the prisons or the poor house regularly and to trust him with their secrets. What were the prisons like for him and the others?

Regency era (1811–1820) prisons in England were often filthy, overcrowded, and unregulated, serving primarily as holding centers for those awaiting trial, punishment (hanging/transportation), or debtors rather than rehabilitation. Conditions were desperate, with diseases like “jail fever” (typhus) common, while inmates had to pay “garnish” fees for food, bedding, and to avoid being chained. 

Key Characteristics and Types of Prisons

  • Conditions: Cells were dark, damp, and vermin-infested, with minimal ventilation or sanitation. Prisoners often slept on straw on stone floors, frequently packed together regardless of gender or crime.
  • Debtors’ Prisons: Institutions like the Fleet, Marshalsea, and King’s Bench held those who could not pay debts, often allowing families to live with them if they could afford to pay the warden for rooms.
  • Prison Hulks: Overcrowded, decommissioned warships (hulks) were used as floating prisons, particularly for those awaiting transportation to Australia.
  • Emerging Reforms: Following earlier efforts by John Howard, reformers began pushing for cleaner, more secure, and organized facilities, culminating in the first major, 7 national penitentiary at Millbank (opened 1816).
  • Management: Many jails were managed for private profit by wardens who extorted fees for necessities.
  • Punishment: Hard labor was common, such as “coir” picking (teasing apart tarred rope) or using the treadmill, even before modern prison sentences became standard. 

Notable London Prisons

  • Newgate Prison: The primary, infamous city jail, known for extreme overcrowding.
  • Fleet Prison & Marshalsea: The most well-known debtors’ prisons.
  • Coldbath Fields: A “House of Correction” for petty criminals. 

While the era is often remembered for elegance, the prison system was archaic, with reform only just beginning to take hold towards the end of the period, paving the way for the Victorian prison model. 

If you have ever seen the miniseries of Charles Dickens’s Little Dorrit, you have an image of the conditions in the debtors’ prison. Though written in serial form in the mid 1850s, not the Regency, the book and series give a person a view into the horrible conditions found in London. Moreover, it stars the ever-fabulous Matthew Macfadyen, and those of you who follow this blog with any regularity know how much I adore the actor. The story features Amy Dorrit, youngest child of her family, born and raised in the Marshalsea prison for debt in London. Arthur Clennam encounters her after returning home from a 20-year absence, ready to begin his life anew.

The novel satirises some shortcomings of British society and government at the time, including the institution of debtors’ prisons, where debtors were imprisoned, unable to work and yet incarcerated until they had repaid their debts. The prison in this case is the Marshalsea, where Dickens’s own father had been imprisoned. Dickens is also critical of the inert bureaucracy of the British government, in this novel in the form of the fictional “Circumlocution Office”. In addition, Dickens satirises the stratification of society that results from the British class system.

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“Leda and the Swan,” a Painting Often Mentioned as Part of the Lyon’s Den’s Decor + the Upcoming Release of “Lyon on the Inside” from Dragonblade Publishing, Arriving 17 June 2026

Many of the authors of books in either the Lyon’s Den books or the Lyon’s Den Connected World books mention the somewhat shocking, especially to young ladies, artwork on the walls of the Lyon’s Den. More than one of us have mentioned “Leda and the Swan,” originally by a painter in Leonardo da Vinci’s circle. If you are a fan of Aidan Turner, as am I, you will recall the number of “clinger ons” who followed Da Vinci about. [See “Leonardo” a 2021 series – Aidan Turner portrays Leonardo da Vinci in the historical drama series titled Leonardo, which explores the life, genius, and personal struggles of the Renaissance master, weaving in fictional elements like a murder mystery to frame the narrative. The show, produced by Lux Vide and Sony Pictures Television, follows his artistic journey, from his apprenticeship to creating masterpieces like The Last Supper, while dealing with perfectionism and intense observation.] 

I do not know the inspiration for the others to choose “Leda and the Swan” by name, but I used it because it would likely be shocking to a young lady seeking out Mrs. Dove-Lyon to find her a suitor and because I knew the original had been destroyed LONG before the Regency era and that there was a number of “replicas” available.

In fact, “Leda and the Swan” refers to a painting depicting the Greek myth where Zeus, disguised as a swan, seduces Leda, leading to the birth of Helen of Troy; famous versions exist by Leonardo da Vinci (lost original, known through copies like Uffizi & Wilton House), Correggio, Cézanne, and Cy Twombly, and exploring themes of desire, transformation, and violence, with significant interpretations across Renaissance, Baroque, and Modern art. 

Public Domain

Leda and the Swan is a c.1505-1507 oil and resin on panel painting by a painter in the circle of Leonardo da Vinci. It may have originated in the Gualtieri Collection in L’Aquila and passed through various others before being acquired from the Spiridon Collection in 1989 by its present owner, the Uffizi. [Gloria Fossi, Uffizi, Giunti, Firenze 2004.]

“It and the versions in the Galleria Borghese and Wilton House are considered the three closest copies after Leonardo’s own lost work on the same subject. Bernard Berenson even argued the Uffizi work was an autograph work by Leonardo himself, but this is rejected by modern art historians in favour of one of Leonardo’s students, possibly Francesco Melzi [Hoogewerff, 1952] with some assistance on the landscape background from Joos van Cleve. It is usually dated to the end of Melzi’s stay in Milan before leaving for France with Leonardo. Other suggestions include Cesare da Sesto or Fernando Yáñez de la Almedina – the latter assisted Leonardo in 1505 on The Battle of Anghiari.”

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