Monument at the site of Gen. Clinton's dam at the source of the Susquehanna River on Otsego Lake in Cooperstown, New York
James Clinton (August 9,1733 – September 22 1812) was an American Revolutionary War soldier who obtained the rank of major general.
He was born in Ulster County in the colony of New
York, in a location now part of Orange County, New York. He was the
brother of George Clinton, who was governor of New York from 1777 to 1795 and U.S. Vice President from 1805 to 1812. James Clinton's wife was Mary DeWitt, daughter of an old Dutch family,
and his second son was DeWitt Clinton, later Governor of New York.
James Clinton served in the New York militia during the French and Indian War. In 1758 he participated (along with his
father Lt. Colonel Charles Clinton) in Lt. Col. John
Bradstreet’s capture of Fort Frontenac (now Kingston, Ontario).
During the American Revolution, Clinton commanded a New York regiment, which took part in Brig. Gen. Richard Montgomery’s unsuccessful expedition to
Quebec in 1775. In March of 1776, Clinton was commissioned as
a colonel in the 2nd New York Regiment and was
promoted to brigadier general in the Continental
Army in August of that same year.
He served most of the war in the Northern Department, along the New York frontier. During
the Saratoga Campaign in 1777, he commanded
Fort Montgomery in the Hudson Highlands. He participated in a successful effort to
prevent British General Sir Henry Clinton from rescuing General
John Burgoyne at Saratoga, but he and his troops were unable to hold Forts Clinton and
Montgomery.
Plaque on the Monument at the site of Gen. Clinton's dam
In 1779 Clinton led an expedition down the Susquehanna
River after making the upper portion navigable by damming up the river's source at Otsego
Lake, allowing the lake's level to rise, and then destroying the dam and flooding the river for miles downstream. This
event is described by James Fenimore Cooper in the introduction to his popular
novel The Pioneers. At Tioga, New York,
Clinton met up with General John Sullivan's forces, who had marched from Easton, Pennsylvania. Together on August 29, they defeated the
Tories and Indians at the
Battle of Newtown (near today's city of Elmira, New
York). This became known as the "Sullivan-Clinton Campaign" or the "Sullivan
Expedition."
In 1780, Clinton temporarily commanded the Northern Department. By October 1781, his brigade had
joined George Washington's army in the siege of
Yorktown.
After the war, as a civilian, he served on the commission defining the New York-Pennsylvania boundary and as a delegate to the
New York state convention than approved the U.S. Constitution. Clinton died
in Little Britain, New York, on December
22, 1812, the same year as his brother George.
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