Parshall Terry, II

Parshall Terry, II[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46]

Male 1756 - 1808  (52 years)


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  • Name Parshall Terry  [1, 2, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46
    Suffix II 
    Birth 22 Feb 1756  Mattituck, Suffolk, New York Colony, British Colonial America Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 42
    Christening 22 Feb 1756  Southold, Suffolk, New York Colony, British Colonial America Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Burial Jul 1808  York, Home District, Upper Canada, British North America Find all individuals with events at this location  [42
    Death 23 Jul 1808  York, Home District, Upper Canada, British North America Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2, 42
    Person ID I312684224339  Oswald Genealogy
    Last Modified 15 Jun 2025 

    Father Parshall Terry, I,   b. 08 Aug 1734, Southold, Suffolk, New York Colony, British Colonial America Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 15 May 1811, East Palmyra, Wayne, New York, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 76 years) 
    Relationship unknown 
    Mother Deborah Clark,   b. 22 Jun 1736, Mattituck, Suffolk, New York Colony, British Colonial America Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 27 Jul 1778, Stroudsburg, Monroe, Pennsylvania, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 42 years) 
    Relationship unknown 
    Family ID F2104  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 Rhoda Skinner,   b. Abt. 16 Jun 1775, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 01 Sep 1834, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 59 years) 
    Marriage 1794  Upper Canada, British Colonial America Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. Amy Terry,   b. Abt. 1795, Upper Canada Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1870, LaPorte, Indiana, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 75 years)  [Mother: unknown]
     2. Sarah Maria Terry,   b. 22 Dec 1796, Toronto, York, Upper Canada, British Colonial America Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1827 (Age 30 years)  [Mother: unknown]
     3. Deborah Augusta Terry,   b. 22 Dec 1796, York, York, Home District, Upper Canada, British North America Find all individuals with events at this location  [Mother: unknown]
     4. Timothy Terry,   b. 23 Sep 1798, Toronto, York, Upper Canada, British Colonial America Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 12 Jun 1886, Rock Creek Township, Hancock, Illinois, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 87 years)  [Mother: unknown]
     5. John Terry,   b. 1800, York, York, Home District, Upper Canada, British North America Find all individuals with events at this location  [Father: unknown]  [Mother: unknown]
     6. Agnes "Nancy" Terry,   b. Abt. 1801, of Toronto,, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location
     7. Anne Terry,   b. 18 Aug 1802, Toronto, York, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 21 Dec 1874, LaPorte, Indiana, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 72 years)
     8. Lucy Terry,   b. Abt. 1803, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location  [Father: unknown]  [Mother: unknown]
     9. Nancy Terry,   b. Abt. 1804, York, York, Home District, Upper Canada, British North America Find all individuals with events at this location  [Mother: unknown]
     10. Lydia Lois Terry,   b. 1806, York, York, Home District, Upper Canada, British North America Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 28 Apr 1844, Scarborough, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 38 years)  [Mother: unknown]
     11. Eliza Terry,   b. Abt. 1806, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 15 Apr 1848, Whitby, York, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 42 years)  [Mother: unknown]
    Family ID F2029  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 15 Jun 2025 

    Family 2 Amy Stevens,   b. 20 Apr 1758, Plainfield, Windham, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Dec 1792, Fort Niagara, Niagara, New York, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 34 years) 
    Children 
     1. Parshall Terry, III,   b. 30 Sep 1778, Youngstown, Niagara, New York, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 08 Oct 1861, Draper, Salt Lake, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 83 years)  [Father: unknown]  [Mother: unknown]
     2. Submission Terry,   b. 1782, Fort Niagara, Youngstown, Niagara, New York, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 05 Apr 1852, Lima Township, LaGrange, Indiana, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 70 years)  [Father: unknown]  [Mother: unknown]
     3. Martha Terry,   b. 1783, New York, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  [Father: unknown]  [Mother: unknown]
     4. Dr William Terry,   b. 1786, Port Gibson, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this locationd. United States Find all individuals with events at this location
     5. Joshua Terry,   b. 1789, Gibson Township, Muskoka, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1842, Michigan, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 53 years)  [Father: unknown]  [Mother: unknown]
     6. Simcoe Terry,   b. Abt. 1791, Toronto, York, Ontario Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1874 (Age 83 years)  [Father: unknown]  [Mother: unknown]
     7. Elizabeth Terry,   b. 24 Oct 1792, Niagara, Upper Canada, British North America Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 17 Apr 1861, Henryville, Clarke County, Indiana, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 68 years)  [Father: unknown]  [Mother: unknown]
    Family ID F2025  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 15 Jun 2025 

  • Notes 
    • From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Parshall Terry, U.E., (February 22, 1756 – July 20, 1808) was a political figure in Upper Canada.
      Parshall Terry was born in Matticuck, Province of New York, British America in 1756 and during the American Revolution served on the British Loyalist side with Butler's Rangers. In the aftermath of the Battle of Wyoming, a sensationalist and widely distributed newspaper account of the "Wyoming Massacre" falsely claimed that Terry “murdered his father, mother, brother and sisters, stripped off their scalps, and cut off his father’s head.[1] Although a retraction was published a few weeks later, this unfounded accusation would reappear in early published histories of the United States.[2]

      After the war, he settled in Bertie Township near Fort Erie but later moved to York (now Toronto).[1] He was elected to the 1st Parliament of Upper Canada in the riding of 4th Lincoln and Norfolk. With his father-in-law, Timothy Skinner, and his two brothers-in-law, Isaah and Timothy Jr, he built and operated a large sawmill on the Don River north of York.[3] He drowned in 1808 while attempting to cross the Don River.[4]

      Family
      Terry married twice. His first wife, Melia Stevens, died in 1789. Four years later he married Rhoda Skinner, daughter of Timothy Skinner. Terry had five children with Melia and seven children with Rhoda.[3]

      His son William later represented Lincoln in the Legislative Assembly. Other offspring opened a pottery warehouse and store — Terry & Sons — catering to train passengers that stopped at the Don Station in Todmorden Mills and giving a name to the winding road that snakes through the property - Pottery Road. That factory is now an art gallery. The only known descendants bearing the Terry surname who continue to live in the Toronto area are great-great-great grandson Mark Terry, a professor at Toronto's York University; his daughter, Mary Anne Resendes (née Terry); his son Herb Terry and his wife, Melissa Terry, son Nico Terry, and daughter Melina Terry.

      A portion of Terry's home has been preserved as part of the Todmorden Mills Heritage Museum near the former site of the mill.



      Deputy commissioner


      THE SAGA OF PARSHALL TERRY AND HIS COLON
      THE SAGA OF PARSHALL TERRY AND HIS COLONIAL SHOELACE
      by Clifton Jolley - Deseret News - Friday, October 5, 1984
      When Parshall Terry Jr., was conscripted into the colonial army, he went willingly enough. And he would have served willingly enough, had it not been for a shoelace that made him a Canadian.
      The tie that binds.
      Vern Hall sits in a straight chair, leaning slightly forward, and turning the blue genealogical binder gingerly as he speaks, telling the story of Parshall Terry again, speaking of the trials and tribulations that preceded the birth of the baby about whom the book is written, Parshall Terry III, from whom Vern is descended.
      “I got started late in my interest,” Vern says, brushing the top of his bald head with his hand. "I'm 20 . . . and some months,” he smiles. Enough months to make him 84. I’ve been working on putting this story together for 40 years. Finally it's done.”
      And worth doing. Not because Parshall Terry and his son were important historical figures, but because they were people. . . people important to the people descended from them.
      "Parshall Jr. had settled down along the banks of the Susquehanna when he was enlisted in Washington's army. They were marching along and Parshall stopped to tie his shoe, and an officer thought he was malingering and kicked him. Well, Parshall wasn't going to put up with that, so he up and hit the officer, which made him less than popular with the army, which he deserted. Well, when his family found out he'd deserted the army, they deserted him. So, he went to Canada.”
      Two centuries later, another generation of unwilling conscripts would find similar refuge. But for Parshall Terry, the refuge was brief and the result not much different from the circumstances he had escaped.
      "You see,” Vern continues, "the colonists had stretched a great chain across the Hudson to keep the British boats from going up and down. Floating it out on wooden rafts, a chain big around as your arm. And Parshall's up in Canada and hears about a plan to attack the colonies from the western frontier. Well, Parshall knows his family is going to figure into the attack, so he joins the British army so as to go along and watch out for his own.
      "The colonists had built a fort on the Susquehanna called Forty Fort. That's where the British struck, and the colonists might have given them a fight, if it hadn't been for the guards and soldiers drinking too much of that old "lifegiver" . . . you know, rum. They were all drunk and they saw the British coming and they went out to meet them and were badly slaughtered, leaving the fort defenseless. And there was Parshall, in the army that took the fort against his own people.”
      The tie that binds is not so easy a thread as patriotism, nor so certain as allegiance. The tie that binds can turn brother against brother, father against son . . . And bring them home again.
      When the British army took Forty Fort, Parshall Terry found Billy there, his wife, Amie's, younger brother. And when it came time for an exchange of prisoners, Parshall put Billy on a horse and saw him safely home 150 miles to the Hudson River.
      But Parshall Terry Jr. - who had wanted nothing more than tightly laced shoes - was no longer safe among his "Yankee kin.” So, he bundled up Amie and their few belongings and set out to join the British forces near Lake Ontario, where it was thought he was a Loyalist rather than merely a man worried about his family . . . And his shoes.
      And there near Lake Ontario, Parshall Terry III was born, who grew up to marry Hannah and have children and grandchildren, all of whom were patriotic Americans . . . who's ancestor, Vern Hall, calls “The Canadian” . . . to keep from calling him other things.
      Vern turns the blue book that is the life of a man in his hands. "Forty years it took me. Genealogies and outlines of the people's lives. But now I got it done,” he smiles.
      And after he has risen from the straight-backed chair, closed the blue binder and gone, you wish you could had checked to see whether the laces on his shoes were tied.


      !ALSO BAPTIZED 4 AUG 1869 ENDOWED 21 MAY
      !ALSO BAPTIZED 4 AUG 1869 ENDOWED 21 MAY 1888 ALT BIRTH PLACE NEW JERSEY. FAMILY RECORDS OF DESC. LISSA GLASSFORD, TORONTO, CANADA PARSHALL TERRY FAMILY SAGA P. 120 BY EDITH HOLMES PHILLIPS, 1957. AMY STEVENS IS FIRST WIFE, RHODA SKINNER IS THE SECOND. CHECK ORDINANCE DATES FOR AMY STEVENS CHILDREN MRIN 45. PARSHALL DROWNED IN DAWN RIVER PER SIMCOE PAPERS. RICHARD TERRY, THE IMMIGRANT BY WILLIAM Z. TERRY. DESERTED WASHINGTON 11 JAN 1777. WENT TO TIOGA POINT AND SHESHEGUIN. LATER JOINED BRITISH ARMY BECOMING FIRST LT. IN BUTLER'S RANGERS, ROYAL GREENS. WAS WITH THE BRITISH AND INDIANS IN THE BATTLE OF WYOMING, OR THE WYOMING MASSACRE, IN JULY 1778. HIS FATHER AND BROTHERS WERE ON THE COLONIAL SIDE IN THIS BATTLE. IN 1783 AT THE CLOSE OF THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR, MOVED TO UPPER CANADA, NOW ONTARIO, AND WAS GIVEN LARGE HOLDINGS BY THE CROWN. IN 1792 MOVED TO YORK, NOW TORONTO, THEN A WILDERNESS. SON PARSHALL JR. BAPTIZED 22 FEB 1756 PER WILLIAM Z. TERRY.

      [QUILICI.FBK.FTW] [v10t1751.FTW] Taken
      [QUILICI.FBK.FTW] [v10t1751.FTW] Taken from a history written by Elisizabeth Terry Heward.

      Parshall Terry Jr., said to have been
      Parshall Terry Jr., said to have been a member of the First Westmoreland Independent Company in 1776 and served with Washington's army for some time. The story, as it goes is, he stopped to tie his shoe and was reprimanded by an officer. He was struck with a sword by the officer and as a result knocked the officer down and fled. It was noted he deserted January 11, 1777. Joined the British, and fought against his family at the Forty Fort battle, the Wyoming Massacre. After the War, he moved to Canada where he was a highly respected citizen, judge, member of parliament, exporter of lumber, holder of extensive land grants. Drowned in the Don or Credit River, Canada.

      Parshall Terry Jr. (RIN 389), born 8 Aug 1756
      Parshall Terry Jr. (RIN 389), born 8 Aug 1756 and Joshua Terry (RIN 391), born 1764 are brothers. Their own family line runs consecutive, but Joshua married Elizabeth Parshall, which makes another branch. Parshall Jr. married Amy Stevens, which makes another branch.

      Parshall Jr. was a Sargent in Butler’s Rangers
      Parshall Jr. was a Sargent in Butler’s Rangers
      Great Britain Library Additional Manuscripts, No. 21765 folios 56-57

      1. Ancestral File.
      1. Ancestral File.

      During the Revolutionary War Parshall 2n
      During the Revolutionary War, Parshall, Jr. became a member of the First Westmoreland Independent Company in 1776 and served in Washington"s Army for some time. He deserted January 11, 1777. As to the incident which led to his desertion: On a march, he stopped to tie his shoe. Being reprimanded for this, a quarrel ensued. The officer struck him with his sword. Thereupon, Parshall knocked the officer down and fled. Receiving no sympathy from members of his family, he joined other deserters and went to Tioga Point and Shesheguin in Canada. Later he joined the British Army, becoming a First Lieutenant in Butler's Rangers, Royal Greens. In 1783 at the close of the Revolutionary War, he moved to Upper Canada, now Ontario, where he was given some large holdings by the Crown. In 1792 , he moved to York (now Toronto), then a wilderness, and built a sawmill on the banks of the Don River. He drowned in the river near his mill, 23 Jul 1808. PARSHALL TERRY JR. DROWNED IN A RIVER IN ONTARIO, CANADA.

      During the Revolutionary War, Parshall Te
      During the Revolutionary War, Parshall Terry Jr. became a member of the First Westmoreland Independent Company in 1776 and served in Washington’s Army for some time. He deserted January 11, 1777. As to the incident which led to his desertion - on a march, he stopped to tie his shoe. Being reprimanded for this, a quarrel ensued. The officer struck him with his sword, thereupon Parshall knocked the officer down and fled. Receiving no sympathy from members of his family, he joined other deserters and went to Tioga Point and Shesheguin in Canada. Later he joined the British Army, becoming a First Lieutenant in Butler's Rangers, RoyalGreens. [The dates in this story conflict with Parshall Terry's name found on a 1775 Loyalist Victualizing List from Fort Erie.] In 1783 at the close of the Revolutionary War, he moved to Upper Canada, now Ontario, where he was given some large holdings by the Crown. In 1792 he moved to York (now Toronto), then a wilderness, and built a sawmill on the banks of the Don River. He drowned in the river near his mill, 23 Jul 1808. [Note: This death date is in conflict with the marriage license date of 18 May 1808 for his widow Rhoda Terry and William Cornell.] [Source: Internet site http://users.legacyfamilytree.com/Dunn-Terry/f234.htm#f2242]

      Parshall Terry Jr., Son of Parshall Terry an
      Parshall Terry Jr., Son of Parshall Terry and Deborah Clark.

      During the revolutionary war, he became a member of the 1st Westmoreland Independent Co. in 1776 and served in Washington's Army for some time.

      He deserted 1/11/1776. The incident which led to his desertion is related that he was on a march, he stopped to tie his shoe. Being reprimanded for this, a quarrel ensued. The officer struck him with his sword.

      Thereupon, Parshall knocked the officer down and fled. Receiving no sympathy from the members of his family, who were staundy Whigs, he joined other deserters and went to reside at Tioga Point and Shesheguin, NY.

      Later he joined the British Army, becoming a 1st Lt. in Buler's Rangers, the Royal Greens.

      It is a little hard for us to understand why there should have been some among the colonists who were honestly on the side of the British, during the struggle, but there seems to have been many such.

      In fact, he was so loyal to the British Crown that he refused to live in the Colonies after they declared their independence and removed to Canada.

      Drowned in the River Don.

      page 12-13, Parshall Terry Family History

      9/17/1776, General Washington's Army, Durkee's Company, RevolutionaryWar.

      1777-1781, British Army, "The King's Rangers," under the command of Major John Butler.

      Parshall was in Washington's Army, dese
      Parshall was in Washington's Army, deserted and joined the British. After the close of the Revolutionary War, he moved to Canada, where he was a highly respected citizen, judge, member of parliament, exporter of lumber, holder of extensive land grants. Married 1. Amy Stevens of Wyoming Valley, PA. Married 2. Rhoda Skinner of Ontario, Canada.

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