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General John Stark NH75 Print E-mail
Marker Image
Picture Courtesy of Jim Kuntz

Marker Image
Picture Courtesy of Jim Kuntz

Marker Image
Picture Courtesy of Jim Kuntz

Marker Image
Picture Courtesy of Jim Kuntz

Marker Image
Picture Courtesy of Jim Kuntz

Marker Image
Picture Courtesy of Jim Kuntz

Maj. Gen. John Stark
Born in Londonderry, N.H.
Aug. 28, 1728
Died in Manchester, N.H.
May 8, 1822.

BUNKER HILL

BENNINGTON


"There they are boys, We beat them today or Molly Stark sleeps a widow tonight."
John Stark.

[Early life:
John Stark was born in Londonderry, New Hampshire (now part of Derry, New Hampshire), in 1728. When he was eight years old, he and his family moved to Derryfield (now part of Manchester), where he lived for the rest of his long life. Stark was married to Elizabeth "Molly" Page, with whom he had 11 children including his eldest son Caleb Stark.

On April 28, 1752, while on a hunting and trapping trip along the Baker River, a tributary of the Pemigewasset River, he was captured by Abenaki warriors and brought back to Quebec but not before warning his brother William Stark to paddle away in his canoe, though David Stinson was killed. While a prisoner of the Abenaki, he and his fellow prisoner Amos Eastman were made to run a gauntlet of warriors armed with sticks. Stark grabbed the stick from the first warrior's hands and proceeded to attack him, taking the rest of the warriors by surprise. The chief was so impressed by this heroic act that Stark was adopted into the tribe, where he spent the winter. Alternatively, in The Invasion Within, Axtell describes how colonists were often abducted by Indians and inducted into their tribes as members through such a ceremony of running the gauntlet.

The following spring a government agent sent from Massachusetts to work on the exchange of prisoners paid his ransom of $103 Spanish dollars and $60 for Amos Eastman. Stark and Eastman then returned to New Hampshire.]


Erected by the State of New Hampshire, AD 1890.

N. Main St. (US-202/NH-9) & Capitol Dr., courthouse lawn, Concord, Merrimack County New Hampshire

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