(Redirected from Sir John Johnson):''For other men with the same name, see
John Johnson (disambiguation).''
'Sir John Johnson, 2nd Baronet' (
5 November 1741 –
4 January 1830) was a
loyalist leader during the
American Revolution. He was the son of the Superintendent of Indian Affairs
Sir William Johnson, 1st Baronet, who had promoted the
British settlement of the
Mohawk Valley and founded the community of
Johnstown in
Tryon County in the
Province of New York.

Sir John Johnson
In 1774, John Johnson inherited his father's title and estates, making him a wealthy landowner. When the
American Revolutionary War erupted in 1775, Sir John's loyalty to the
King cost him his home in Johnstown and extensive property in the Mohawk Valley. He and his family were arrested early in the war, but he broke
parole and fled to
Canada. He led a large group of his tenants and allies among the
Iroquois Confederacy to
Montreal, Quebec. He and his followers formed the core of the British military regiment known as the
King's Royal Regiment of New York, which saw substantial action under his command throughout the war. Johnson was promoted to the rank of
brigadier general in 1782.
In 1783 when the
Treaty of Paris was signed, establishing the independence of the
American Colonies, Johnson and thousands of other loyalists found themselves in permanent
exile in
Canada. In 1784, Johnson was assigned by the British government to distribute crown lands along the
St. Lawrence River and the north shore of
Lake Ontario to the loyalists who had come to Canada during the Revolution and to help them settle on these lands. Johnson estimated that he had arranged the settlement of 3,776 loyalists during that year. In 1796, he moved back to Montreal and served in the
Legislative Council of Lower Canada and as head of the Indian Department for
Lower Canada. He held extensive land holdings in
Upper and Lower Canada, including the
seigneuries of Monnoir and
Argenteuil.
Johnson married Mary Watts (daughter of John Watts of New York) on
30 June 1773 and the couple had eight sons, all of whom served in the British army and navy, and three daughters. He died in Montreal in 1830 and was succeeded by his eldest son, William. His last surviving child, an unmarried daughter, died in London on
1 January 1868.
The Sir John Johnson House in
Williamstown was declared a Canadian National Historic Site.
Family Tree
Johnson Baronets of New York (incomplete)
Sir William Johnson, 1st Baronet, c.1715-1774.
+Catherine Weisenberg
|
|
Sir John Johnson, 1741-January 1830; 2nd Baronet
=Mary Watts of New York (m. 30 June 1773)
|
|________________________________________________________________________
| | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | |
William Sir Abaci, 3rd Bart. Adam & 4 other sons & 3 daughters
=Susan de Lancey d.1843 =?
no issue? |
|
|
Sir William George Johnson, 4th Baronet; alive 1887.
=?
|
|
5th Baronet
=?
|
|
Sir John Paley Johnson, 1907-76; 6th Baronet
=Carol Haas (m.1929) =Jasmine Bligh (m.1940) =Rosemary Cohen (m.1949)
|
|
Sir Peter Colpoys Paley Johnson, 1930-2003; 7th Baronet
=Clare Bruce (m.1956) = Caroline Hodsoll (m.1973)
| |
|_________________________________ |
| | | a second son
| | |
Sir Guy (Colpys Guy Johnson & two daughters
b.1965, 8th Baronet of New York.
=Lady Johnson
|
|
issue
Sources
★ "White Savage: William Johnson and the Invention of America",
Fintan O'Toole, 2005.
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
★
Virtual American Biographies: ''Sir William Johnson''
★ , by
Harold Frederic, 1877
★
Sir John Johnson Burial vault (for reference only)