Despite his Caesar-like name, my three times great grand
uncle, Tyrannus Augustus Wright, does not appear to have been any kind of a
despot. He was the son of Captain Charles and Ruth Wright, and with his brother,
Charles Jr., was the first of the family to go the Black River country of
upstate New York to scout out a new lands to settle. He is significant to me in
my genealogy research because his relationship with my three times great
grandfather, Stephen Hart, in Pinckney, New York, described in History of Lewis County, New York by
Hough, helped me to make the connection between the Wright family and the
Harts. That is, this helped me to ascertain that it was his niece, Sally Wright
Merriam, a.k.a. Sarah, who had married Stephen Hart’s son, John Hart. Tyrannus
had his own “firsts” in Lewis County, and was also the father of a couple of
sons who had claims to fame, albeit tragic ones. He was a pioneer, a teacher, a
farmer, militia man, hotel proprietor, Justice of the Peace, Town Supervisor,
and clergyman during his life.
Tyrannus Augustus Wright was born on February 6, 1779 in
Winchester, Litchfield, Connecticut, the sixth child in a family of twelve. He
was named after an older brother who had died in infancy. As mentioned
previously, he came to what is now Lewis county with his brother in 1801, and
then settled in the area with his extended family in 1802. He first lived in
Denmark village with the rest of the family, and then in 1810 moved to the closeby
town of Pinckney. He taught the first school in Copenhagen, New York around
1810, and was also a lieutenant in the local militia. He married Mary C. Fitch,
likely after the move to New York state, and had probably eleven children:
Amanda, Chester, Ella, Emeline, John, Lucius, Elijah Tracy, Stephen Smith “Sylvanus”,
Mary Irene, Augustus Tyrannus, and Solon (not necessarily in this order). I
originally could only identify two of Tyrannus’s children, Lucius and Sylvanus,
and only by reading Hough’s book, as it was not until 1850 that family members
were listed in the census, and I had no other source which included his
children. I knew that he had several children, but was stymied in identifying
them. The “Augustus Wright” mentioned by Hough, was a suspect due to his name,
and I was able to confirm that he was a son of Tyrannus through connecting him
with a sister, Mary Irene, in a newspaper account, and then connecting the
sister with Tyrannus through the sister’s husband’s family genealogy. So, I now
had four of his children. I was then fortunate enough to receive an article
from the Lewis County Historical Society which listed most of Tyrannus’s children:
Pinckney
Corners--its Settlement, Settlers, Where They Made Their Homes—Recollections by
L.F. Wright, in Copenhagen, New York: An American Bicentennial History, 1976.
In Pinckney,
Tyrannus built a hotel with his “brother” (likely Nathan), which was the first
in the town. He appears to have been a “private” in the militia in Carter’s
regiment during the War of 1812. In 1813, he was appointed Justice of the
Peace, along with his brother Charles Jr. and Stephen Hart. In 1816, he was
elected Supervisor of the Town of Pinckney, and again in 1836, but was not
permitted to serve this term due to “ordination”, which means that he became a minister
of the church in the intervening time. His son Stephen (Sylvanus) refers to him
as a “clergyman” in an account written in 1844 of his own captivity in Canada in
1838 after a failed invasion attempt. It appears that Rev. Tyrannus could be
effective in his work:
About
this time I received a visit from my dear father—he was the second person
permitted to see the prisoners since our capture—and sweet was that interview.
The sheriff refused my father the privilege of praying with any of the
prisoners, and that (without regard to his age or occupation as a clergyman) in
a most insulting manner; he however permitted him to leave me a New Testament.
During his stay, he exhorted the Helper of the weak to look down in mercy upon
us amid our sore afflictions; he told us of Paul and Silas in the cell at
Philipi, and of Peter, whom the angel of the Lord liberated from prison; and
though every description of persons were gathered together—the licentious, the
profligate, the vile and the profane, all came around and listened to him as
one from the dead, (for the world was in truth dead to us), and he was a
messenger from the bright earth and blue sky, and our hearts were cheered in
this dark hour of our affliction, expecting daily our trials and death, as we
had no hope of any other fate reserved for us. And now he departed, and all was
gloom and dark forebodings of the future. The interview seemed not over ten
minutes, though it lasted a full hour, and we were many in our misery and
desolation, incarcerated in the leprous dungeons of Fort Henry.
The Rev.
Tyrannus Wright’s other accomplishments included being one of the commissioners
for the completion of a state road in 1820; founding the first Methodist
Episcopal Society in Pinckney along with Stephen Hart, Nathan Wright and others
in 1831; and becoming a trustee of the Methodist Episcopal Society of Deer
River in 1852. He died on July 21, 1863 in Denmark, New York. It is not known
where he is buried.
2 comments:
Tyrannus A. Wright is buried in swinburne cemetery in Denmark, Lewis County. I couldn't find him using his name on find a grave so I decided to check each cemetery in the Town of Denmark. I started at the bottom of the list which was Swinburne and there he was. Also his Stephen S. Wright in Minnesota was listed.
I've been researching him as I'm in interested in the Patriot War. I had trouble as there are two Stephens with the same name and then Sylvanus was used by Hough but not the other sources; except the Crawford files.
Charlotte Beagle, town of Lowville Historian
Thanks, Charlotte.
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