Benjamin Walllis, My Paternal 3rd Great Grandfather
52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks
Week 22
Prompt: A Name With Meaning
Before I ever became interested in genealogy, I knew one thing about the Wallis name: nobody could spell it correctly. I spent my life spelling it for teachers, doctors, receptionists, and anyone else who needed to write it down. Even within the family, the name appeared in records as WALLIS, WALLACE, and sometimes WALLAS.
| Image created by ChatGPT. |
The name came from my paternal 3rd great grandfather, Benjamin Wallis, a Revolutionary War veteran born January 12, 1758, in Orange County (later Caswell County), North Carolina, the son of Irish immigrant James Wallace. Benjamin married Sarah “Sally” Sargent on June 5, 1782, and together they raised ten children — four sons and six daughters. I descend from their son James Wallace/Wallis.
Revolutionary War Patriot
Benjamin is recognized as a Revolutionary War Patriot by both the DAR (Ancestor A107109) and the SAR, which placed a grave marker at his burial site in Indiana in 1963. Ironically, even that marker reflects the family’s long-running spelling confusion: although paperwork for the stone was later corrected by hand from WALLACE to WALLIS, the grave marker itself was installed as BENJAMIN WALLACE.
The source of Benjamin’s Revolutionary War service is his pension file, S32571. More than fifty years after the Revolution, the aging North Carolina militiaman gave a remarkably detailed account of his wartime experiences. It follows here:
Pension Statement
Benjamin Wallis recalled that during the Siege of Charleston, his militia company marched to the mouth of the Cooper River, about six miles from Charleston, where part of the regiment was ordered onto the water under the command of Col. Ball. Their mission was to proceed up the river toward Moncks Corner, sinking empty vessels to prevent the British from using them and seizing those containing property in order to bring the goods safely to Red Bank. As they moved upriver, they could hear the cannonade at Charleston “distinctly” continuing for many days. Before reaching Moncks Corner, however, the firing suddenly ceased, leading the men to believe Charleston had surrendered. They turned back downriver with the vessels they had already secured and anchored for the night near Charleston. The following morning, Captain Adam Sanders, contrary to Col. Ball’s orders, raised anchor and attempted to sail for Red Bank. That decision likely saved their lives. The remaining vessels stayed behind and were captured by the British.
As Sanders’ company approached Red Bank, a man on shore warned them that Tarleton and his cavalry were waiting there to intercept them. The company quickly landed above the banks, abandoned the vessel, and fled toward nearby swamps. Benjamin recalled that Tarleton’s men came within about 150 yards of them before the militia escaped into the swamp. The company, consisting of twenty-four men besides Captain Sanders, remained hidden there for several days surviving on nothing but whortleberry buds.
They also found in the swamp two enslaved Black men, whom they persuaded to guide them safely out. From the swamp they traveled by a little-used road, managing to get ahead of Tarleton and his cavalry before joining General Buford’s army, which was then moving toward Charleston. When Buford learned that Tarleton was pursuing the militia company to which Benjamin belonged, the army retreated. Near Hanging Rock, Benjamin’s company separated from Buford’s regular troops and proceeded toward Fayetteville in company with the other militia units. Buford and his regulars continued toward Hanging Rock and were soon overtaken and defeated by the British.
After reaching Fayetteville and learning of Buford’s defeat, Benjamin’s company attempted to move across the country to intercept the British. By this time the men had suffered greatly from exhaustion, hunger, and constant retreat. Captain Adam Sanders informed his commander that his men’s term of service had expired and that they were no longer able to continue. At first the request was denied, but after inspection the men were finally discharged from further duty. Captain Sanders then marched them to General Butler’s command, where they received their discharges and returned home. Benjamin stated that this first term of service lasted “not less than six months” and occurred in 1780.
Benjamin further declared that he again entered service in 1781 as a volunteer under Captain William Wilson in a regiment commanded by Colonel William Moore. From Caswell County the company marched once more to Hillsborough, the general rendezvous point, where they awaited troops arriving from other counties. From there they marched to the Waxhaws and joined the main army under Generals Morgan and Smallwood. At that point, General Davidson assumed command.
Benjamin recalled that at the Waxhaws the army was stationed to observe the movements of the British forces under Lord Cornwallis, who were camped across the Catawba River. During this period the British made no direct attack. After the expiration of the three months for which the men had volunteered, and with conditions remaining dangerous, Colonel William Moore marched the regiment to his own home where the men were discharged and allowed to return home. Benjamin stated that this second tour lasted three months.
He further declared that later in 1781 he again volunteered for service, this time under Captain John McMullin, commander of a company of Rangers. Benjamin furnished his own horse and arms. The Rangers operated along the right flank of the British army as Cornwallis marched toward Yorktown. Their purpose was to prevent British foraging parties from obtaining supplies, to protect civilians from plunder, and to keep local Tories from “doing mischief.” Benjamin said the Rangers moved through Caswell County while the British were stationed at the Red House called Dabney’s, then ranged through Orange County, Granville County, and several other counties whose names he could no longer remember.
The company eventually crossed the Dan River into Virginia, where they joined the main American army under Generals Morgan, Greene, and Smallwood. Once there, the Rangers applied to the quartermaster for provisions but were refused. The following morning Captain McMullin marched the company back into Caswell County, where the men were dismissed from service. Benjamin noted that they did not receive written discharges.
Benjamin further stated that later in 1781 he again volunteered for service under Captain Sargent, commander of another company of Rangers operating in Caswell County. During this tour the Rangers attempted a nighttime infiltration of the British camp while the enemy was stationed at Robins, but the company was surrounded. Benjamin recalled that they narrowly escaped “without any loss.” During the same night operation, the Rangers captured a British dragoon who was later hanged by order of General Butler. Benjamin remembered this final term of service as lasting about two months, although he received no written discharge.
Because of age and failing memory, Benjamin explained that he could no longer swear positively to the exact length of each tour, but to the best of his recollection he had served no less than fourteen months in total during the Revolutionary War. He stated that after the Revolution he lived in both North Carolina and Virginia and was residing in Lee County, Virginia, at the time of his application. Benjamin explained that he had filed his declaration in neighboring Hawkins County, Tennessee, because it was more convenient to reach a magistrate there, adding that he had suffered from “fits” for five years and was unable to travel far without risking his life. He further stated that he had never held a commission and that although he once possessed written discharges from his periods of service, one had been lost with his pocketbook during the war and the others had disappeared because, as he admitted, “he took no care of them.”
Benjamin concluded his declaration by stating that there was no one still living who could directly prove his Revolutionary War service. He further explained that there was no clergyman living in his neighborhood who could testify on his behalf. However, he stated that he was well known to Samuel Marion and John Fritts, residents of his community, who could attest to his character for truthfulness and to the general belief that he had served in the Revolution. Benjamin formally relinquished all other claims to any pension or annuity except the present application and declared that his name was not on the pension rolls of any other state agency, except possibly North Carolina. He signed the declaration on 23 April 1834 with his mark before Justice of the Peace William Babb.
Samuel Marion and John Fritts then submitted a supporting statement declaring that they were personally acquainted with Benjamin Wallis, believed him to be about seventy-six years old, and that he was generally reputed in the neighborhood to have been a soldier of the Revolution. They also confirmed that Benjamin had long suffered from “fits,” which left him unable to travel to court in person. Both men signed the certification before William Babb, with Samuel Marion likewise signing by mark.
Pension Summary
Benjamin Wallis was approved for a Revolutionary War pension under the Act of June 7, 1832, based on approximately eleven months of service as a private in the North Carolina militia under Captain Sanders and Major Taylor. His pension certificate was issued on May 23, 1834. Benjamin had applied for the pension a month earlier, on 23 April 1834, in Hawkins County, Tennessee, although he stated in his declaration that he was then residing just across the state line in Lee County, Virginia. He explained that Hawkins County was more convenient because his age and longstanding “fits” made travel difficult. Benjamin was placed on the pension roll at the rate of $36.66 per year, with payments made retroactive to 4 March 1831, the date established by Congress for eligible veterans under the act. His initial payment included both back pay and a semi-annual allowance, totaling $128.33.
After all those marches, swamps, pursuits by Tarleton, and fourteen months of remembered service…he finally received recognition more than fifty years after the Revolution.
Migration from Lee County, Virginia to Delaware County, Indiana
Benjamin later moved west to Rush County, Indiana, to be close to his children. Records there indicate he again appeared before officials on 1 September 1837 in order to continue or transfer his pension payments to his new place of residence.
Personal property tax records in Lee County, Virginia, from 1830, 1833, and 1836, together with his appearance on the 1835 Hawkins County, Tennessee pension list, help document the final years of his migration from Virginia to Indiana.
Benjamin and his wife Sarah lived in Indiana for only about a year before their deaths. According to the remembrances of a grandson published in The Star Press of Muncie, Indiana, Benjamin and Sarah lived with their daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Newhouse, near Bethel in Delaware County, Indiana. Benjamin died there on August 24, 1838, and was buried near a walnut tree in Miller Cemetery. Sarah passed away within the same year and was buried beside her husband.
Wallis or Wallace?
There has always been a question about the spelling of our surname. Is it WALLIS or WALLACE? Benjamin’s pension file uses the WALLIS spelling. His marriage record has been interpreted as WALLAS, which does little to settle the matter. Census and marriage records for his children more often use the WALLACE spelling, while Benjamin’s father’s probate file also uses WALLACE.
In 1963, the Sons of the American Revolution erected a new grave marker recognizing Benjamin’s Revolutionary War service. I have a copy of the order form for the stone. The name was originally typed as “WALLACE, BENJAMIN.” Someone later drew a line through WALLACE and hand-corrected it to WALLIS. Despite the handwritten correction, the marker was delivered and installed as BENJAMIN WALLACE. Like many early American families, the spelling seems to have shifted from one generation to another — and sometimes from one record to the next.
| SAR Ordered the new marker for Benjamin Wallis, but it arrived as Benjamin Wallace. |
“After spending my entire life spelling Wallis for people, I happily became a Russell when Bud and I married. ‘Russell is easier to spell,’ I told him at the courthouse. Of course, people still ask if Russell has two l’s.”
| Benjamin Wallace's Grave Marker, Miller Cemetery, near Bethel, Delaware County, Indiana |