Posted in Coni Dubois

Joseph & James Nocakes in Revolutionary War


Joseph Nocake’s enlisted on 16 Mar 1777 and by the records he died during the war – James Nocake’s enlisted on March 6, 1780 unknown of what happened to James (still searching)

They were both in  the 2nd Rhode Island Regiment which later became 11th Continental Regiment

Note from Coni: My research has lead me to believe that Joseph & James Nocake’s are the descendants of Samuell Shawgum/Chagum whom I believe is son of  Great James Shawgum/Chagum (many have tried to link James of Barkhamsted to Samuell as father – I believe this to be incorrect and believe James of Barkhamsted is indeed brother to Samuel – both sons of Great Jame Shawgum/Chagum) – after Samuell stole the canoe on Block Island to try to escape he finally did and once on the main land changed his name to Nocake’s which later become the Noka’s of the Narragansett lines. I have a couple of documents that state the Noka name was once Chagum to back this up~

The Continental Army was formed after the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War by the colonies that became the United States of America. Established by a resolution of the Continental Congress on June 14, 1775, it was created to coordinate the military efforts of the Thirteen Colonies in their revolt against the rule of Great Britain. The Continental Army was supplemented by local militias and other troops that remained under control of the individual states. General George Washington was the Commander-in-Chief of the army throughout the war. Most of the Continental Army was disbanded in 1783 after the Treaty of Paris ended the war. The 1st and 2nd Regiments went on to form the nucleus of the Legion of the United States in 1792 under General Anthony Wayne. This became the foundation of the United States Army in 1796. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continental_Army
Rhode Island Line: 3 regiments. These regiments were commanded by
Colonels Varnum, Hitchcock, and Church
6th (Greene’s) Brigade (Brigadier General Nathanael Greene)
Varnum’s Regiment (Rhode Island). Colonel James Mitchell Varnum. (Designated the 9th Continental Regiment in 1776).
Hitchcock’s Regiment (Rhode Island). Colonel Daniel Hitchcock. (Designated the 11th Continental Regiment in 1776).
Church’s Regiment (Rhode Island). Colonel Thomas Church. (Disbanded December 31, 1775).
Sources:
^ Wright, Continental Army, 25.
^ Wright, Continental Army, 71.
^ Fitzpatrick, Writings, III:302-304.
^ Wright, Continental Army, 82.
Wright, Robert K. The Continental Army. Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, 1983.
http://www.history.army.mil/books/RevWar/ContArmy/CA-fm.htm

2nd Rhode Island Regiment – From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2nd Rhode Island Regiment which later became 11th Continental Regiment
Active: 1775-1781 Allegiance: Continental Congress of the United States Type: Infantry
Part of: Rhode Island Line
Engagements: Siege of Boston
New York and New Jersey Campaign
Battle of the Assunpink Creek
Battle of Princeton
Battle of Red Bank
Siege of Fort Mifflin
Battle of Monmouth
Battle of Rhode Island
Battle of Springfield
Commanders Notable – commanders :Colonel Daniel Hitchcock
Colonel Israel Angell
Boston campaign, 1775-1776
American Revolutionary War units of the United States
The 2nd Rhode Island Regiment also known as Hitchcock’s Regiment was authorized on 6 May 1775 under Colonel Daniel Hitchcock in the Rhode Island Army of Observation and was organized on 8 May 1775 as eight companies of volunteers from Providence County of the colony of Rhode Island. As part of a brigade organized under Nathanael Greene, the unit participated in the Siege of Boston during the remainder of 1775. Some elements accompanied Benedict Arnold’s expedition to Quebec late in the year. The unit was renamed the 11th Continental Regiment on the first day 1776.
In its new designation, the regiment fought in the New York and New Jersey campaign starting in August 1776. After retreating across New Jersey, the unit was renamed the 2nd Rhode Island Regiment and fought at Assunpink Creek and Princeton in early January. Hitchcock died soon after and the 2nd Regiment was ordered away to defend the Hudson River valley. In September 1777 the regiment, now under Colonel Israel Angell, was recalled to the main army for the Philadelphia Campaign. With the 1st Rhode Island, it won a victory at Red Bank in October 1777. Portions of the unit defended Fort Mifflin where the 2nd Regiment’s Major Simeon Thayer assumed command of the fort near the end of the siege.
In 1778 the regiment fought at the battles of Monmouth and Rhode Island. In June of the following year it was in the thick of action at Springfield in New Jersey. On 1 January 1781, the regiment was consolidated with the 1st Regiment and the new unit was renamed the Rhode Island Regiment. For the unit’s subsequent history, see the 1st Rhode Island Regiment.
History:
The regiment was adopted into the Continental Army on 14 June 1775. The regiment was re-organized to ten companies on 28 June 1775 and assigned to Greene’s Brigade on 22 July 1775. The regiment was re-organized as the 11th Continental Regiment on 1 January 1776. The regiment would see action at Roxbury, Massachusetts during the Battle of Bunker Hill. The regiment was re-organized as the 2nd Rhode Island Regiment after the death of Colonel Daniel Hitchcock on 13 January 1777. In late 1777 it fought at the Battle of Red Bank and Major Simeon Thayer of the 2nd led the defenders during the latter part of the Siege of Fort Mifflin. The 2nd Rhode Island Regiment served to February 1781, having distinguished itself at the Battles of Monmouth, Rhode Island, and Springfield with several other skirmishes and minor engagements. In February 1781, the 2nd Rhode Island Regiment was combined with the remnants of the 1st Rhode Island Regiment to form the Rhode Island Regiment (1781-1783).
Service record
Designation[1]     Date     Brigade     Department
Hitchcock’s Regiment     8 May 1775     none                   none
Hitchcock’s Regiment     22 July 1775     Greene’s               Main Army
11th Continental Regiment     1 January 1776     Greene’s                  Main Army
11th Continental Regiment     12 August 1776     Nixon’s                  Main Army
11th Continental Regiment     22 December 1776     Hitchcock’s           Main Army
2nd Rhode Island Regiment     1 January 1777     Hitchcock’s           Main Army
2nd Rhode Island Regiment     13 January 1777     none                      Main Army
2nd Rhode Island Regiment     12 March 1777     none                   Highlands
2nd Rhode Island Regiment     10 July 1777     Rhode Island          Highlands
2nd Rhode Island Regiment     14 September 1777 Rhode Island     Main Army
2nd Rhode Island Regiment     19 July 1778     1st Massachusetts     Main Army
2nd Rhode Island Regiment     21 July 1778     Rhode Island     Eastern
2nd Rhode Island Regiment     17 November 1779     Stark’s                     Main Army
2nd Rhode Island Regiment     1 January 1781     Stark’s                     consolidated
Notes:    ^ Wright, 229
References
Archambault, Alan H. “The Second Rhode Island Regiment of the Continental Line 1775-1777.” Military Collector and Historian, 28 (Fall 1976), p. 133.
Archambault, Alan H. and Marko Zlatich. “Rhode Island Regiment, 1781-1783.” Military Collector and Historian, 36 (Summer 1984), p. 77.
Boyle, Joseph Lee “Death Seem’d to Stare”: The New Hampshire And Rhode Island Regiments at Valley Forge Clearfield Co, 1995 ISBN 0-8063-5267-1
Brown, Anne S. K. “Rhode Island Uniforms in the Revolution.” Military Collector and Historian, 10 (Spring 1958), pp. 1-10.
Gardiner, Asa B. The Rhode Island Line in the Continental Army and Its Society of Cincinnati. Providence: Providence Press Co., 1878.
Hitchcock, Dan. “So Few the Brave (The Second Rhode Island 1777-1781).” Military Collector and Historian, 30 (Spring 1978), pp. 18-22.
Lovell, Louise Lewis and Eben Putnam. Israel Angell, colonel of the 2nd Rhode Island regiment. [New York: The Knickerbocker press (G.P. Putnam’s sons), 1921.
McGuire, Thomas J. (2007). The Philadelphia Campaign, Volume II. Mechanicsburg, Penn.: Stackpole Books. ISBN 0-8117-0206-5.
Walker, Anthony. So Few The Brave (Rhode Island Continentals 1775-1783). Newport: Seafield Press, 1981.
Wright, Richard K. (1983). “Lineage”. The Continental Army. Washington, D.C.: United States Army Center of Military History. CMH Pub 60-4. Retrieved 26 June 2006.
External links
2nd Rhode Island Regiment Interview (video)
Bibliography of the Continental Army in Rhode Island compiled by the United States Army Center of Military History
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd_Rhode_Island_Regiment

Major Thomas Hughes of Centreville, Warwick, RI
Born: 30 May 1752, son of Joseph & Mary Hughes
Died: Centreville, Warwick, RI, 10 December 1821, age 69 years
Buried: Greenwood Cemetery #59, Fairview Ave., Phoenix, Coventry, RI
Married: Providence, RI, 27 February 1782, Welthian Greene, daughter of Col. Christopher Greene, KIA 1781, the Hero of Redbank
Revolutionary War Service1
June 1775 – November 1783
Ten Battle Stars
June 1775 Ensign, age 23
Thomas Church´s 3rd Rhode Island Regiment, Nathanael Greene´s Brigade
Siege of Boston, June-December 1776
January 1776 Lieutenant, age 24
Daniel Hitchcock´s 11th Continental Line Regiment, Nathanael Greene´s Brigade
Siege of Boston, January-March 1776
Battle of Long Island, 27 August 1776, Wounded in Action
Battle of White Plains, 28 Oct 1776
Second Battle of Trenton, 2 January 1777
Battle of Princeton, 3 January 1777
January 1777 Lieutenant, age 25, promoted Captain, November 1777, age 26
Israel Angell´s 2nd Rhode Island Continental Line, James Mitchell Varnum´s Brigade
Battle of Red Bank (Fort Mercer), 22 October 1777
Battle of Monmouth, 28 June 1778
Battle of Rhode Island, 29 August 1778
Battle of Springfield, 23 June 1780,
January 1781 Captain, age 29, promoted Brevet Major, 30 September 1783, age 31
Jeremiah Olney´s Consolidated 1st Rhode Island Continental Line
Yorktown Campaign, May-October, 1781,
November 1783 Retired, age 31
Major Thomas Hughes was a charter member of the Society of the Cincinnati. His hereditary membership in the society is not represented today, and he may not have living descendants.
1 So Few The Brave, Anthony Walker (1981), pp. 103, 115-117, 136-138, 158;
2. Historical Register of the Officers of the Continental Army, Francis B. Heitman (1914), p. 307
http://rhodeislandsar.org/pdf/Maj_Thomas_Hughes.pdf

Joseph & James Nocake

Author:

I’ve been a family Genealogist/Native American Researcher for over 30+ years and have traced over 65,000+ people for my research - My main area of research is in MI, IN, CT, NY, RI, PA, MA, VA, VT, NJ, OH, KY, Block Island & Long Island areas - dealing with many of the colonial people & tribes in these locations.

5 thoughts on “Joseph & James Nocakes in Revolutionary War

  1. I think there could be answers about Abiather Rodman is in Plainfield Connecticut…18101820’s time frame Rodman, William, son of Hazzard & June, died Sept. 15, 1841, age 12 yrs
    Union Cemetery” at Plainfield, Ct., located in Moosup
    Thinking this is a son of J C Hazard Rodman and Jane Andrews

    Hazard Rodman m. Jane (Sally) Andrews, b. of Plainfield, Apr. 20, 1824, by Rev. Nathaniel Cole according to Canadian Contact Eva Slocum Rodmans grandaughter that sent me a Family tree This Hazard Rodman went by J C Rodman

    we question where your Christopher Green Rodamn got his middle name……It could be that this J C Hazard Rodman Im thinking he wasa son of Abiather Rodman….Why I think this is Because in 1817 Abiather Rodman was in Plainfield…..I have that in notes somewhere from a old newspaper report…

    Well J C Hazard Rodman’s wife Jane (Sally) parents were a ??? Andrews I cannot read the fathers name on the sheet and Jane GREEN of Coventry Rhode island….Funny because listed in the Coventry Cemetery book under lost cemeteries…There is a ….John Hazard Rodman buried in Coventry his grave is mentioned in a lost grave of Coventry RI cemetery book……..I think he is the same person out of Plainfield and I think he could possibly be a son of Abiather…

    Like

  2. Naomi and Pat Morey also have thought that the Nocakes name is a longer version of the Noka name….also Noka goes to Rodman…..Abiathar Rodman (Indian) French and Indian war)

    Like

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