The Coffins of America are descended
from Tristram Coffin of England and Nantucket.
Charles Carleton Coffin was born of Revolutionary
sires. He first saw light in the southwest corner
room of a house which stood on Water Street, in Boscawen,
N. H., which his grandfather, Captain Peter Coffin,
had built in 1766.
This ancestor, “an energetic,
plucky, good-natured, genial man,” married Rebecca
Hazeltine, of Chester, N. H. When the frame of the
house was up and the corner room partitioned off, the
bride and groom began housekeeping. Her wedding
outfit was a feather bed, a frying-pan, a dinner-pot,
and some wooden and pewter plates. She was just
the kind of a woman to be the mother of patriots and
to make the Revolution a success. The couple
had been married nine years, when the news of the
marching of the British upon Lexington reached Boscawen,
on the afternoon of the 20th of April, 1775. Captain
Coffin mounted his horse and rode to Exeter, to take
part in the Provincial Assembly, which gathered the
next day. Two years later, he served in the campaign
against Burgoyne. When the militia was called
to march to Bennington, in July, 1777, one soldier
could not go because he had no shirt. Mrs. Coffin
had a web of tow cloth in the loom. She at once
cut out the woven part, sat up all night, and made
the required garment, so that he could take his place
in the ranks the next morning. One month after
the making of this shirt, the father of Charles Carleton
Coffin was born, July 15.
When the news of Stark’s victory
at Bennington came, the call was for every able-bodied
man to turn out, in order to defeat Burgoyne.
Every well man went, including Carleton’s two
grandfathers, Captain Peter Coffin, who had been out
in June, though not in Stark’s command, and
Eliphalet Kilborn. The women and children were
left to gather in the crops. The wheat was ripe
for the sickle, but there was not a man or boy to
cut it. With her baby, one month old, in her arms,
Mrs. Peter Coffin mounted the horse, leaving her other
children in care of the oldest, who was but seven
years old. The heroine made her way six miles
through the woods, fording Black Water River to the
log cabin of Enoch Little, on Little Hill, in the
present town of Webster. Here were several sons,
but the two eldest had gone to Bennington. Enoch,
Jr., fourteen years old, could be spared to reap the
ripened grain, but he was without shoes, coat, or
hat, and his trousers of tow cloth were out at the
knee.
“Enoch can go and help you,
but he has no coat,” said Mrs. Little.
“I can make him a coat,” said Mrs. Coffin.
The boy sprang on the horse behind
the heroic woman, who, between the baby and the boy,
rode upon the horse back to the farm. Enoch took
the sickle and went to the wheat field, while Mrs.
Coffin made him a coat. She had no cloth, but
taking a meal-bag, she cut a hole in the bottom for
his head, and two other holes for his arms. Then
cutting off the legs of a pair of her stockings, she
sewed them on for sleeves, thus completing the garment.
Going into the wheat field, she laid her baby, the
father of Charles Carleton Coffin, in the shade of
a tree, and bound up the cut grain into sheaves.
In 1789, when the youngest child of
this Revolutionary heroine was four months old, she
was left a widow, with five children. Three were
daughters, the eldest being sixteen; and two were sons,
the elder being twelve. With rigid economy, thrift,
and hard work, she reared her family. In working
out the road tax she was allowed four pence halfpenny
for every cart-load of stones dumped into miry places
on the highway. She helped the boys fill the
cart with stones. While the boy who became Carleton’s
father managed the steers, hauled and dumped the load,
she went on with her knitting.
Of such a daughter of the Revolution
and of a Revolutionary sire was Carleton’s father
born. When he grew to manhood he was “tall
in stature, kind-hearted, genial, public-spirited,
benevolent, ever ready to relieve suffering and to
help on every good cause. He was an intense lover
of liberty and was always true to his convictions.”
He fell in love with Hannah, the daughter of Deacon
Eliphalet Kilborn, of Boscawen, and the couple lived
in the old house built by his father. There,
after other children had been born, Charles Carleton
Coffin, her youngest child, entered this world at 9
A. M., July 26, 1823. From this time forward,
the mother never had a well day. After ten years
of ill health and suffering, she died from too much
calomel and from slow starvation, being able to take
but little food on account of canker in her mouth
and throat. Carleton, her pet, was very much
with her during his child-life, so that his recollections
of his mother were ever very clear, very tender, and
profoundly influential for good.
The first event whose isolation grew
defined in the mind of “the baby new to earth
and sky,” was an incident of 1825, when he was
twenty-three months old. His maternal grandfather
had shot a hawk, breaking its wing, and bringing it
to the house alive. The boy baby standing in
the doorway, all the family being in the yard, always
remembered looking at what he called “a hen with
a crooked bill.” Carleton’s recollection
of the freshet of August, 1826, when the great slide
occurred at the White Mountains, causing the death
of the Willey family, was more detailed. This
event has been thrillingly described by Thomas Starr
King. The irrepressible small boy wanted to “go
to meeting” on Sunday. Being told that he
could not, he cried himself to sleep. When he
awoke he mounted his “horse,” a
broomstick, and cantered up the road for
a half mile. Captured by a lady, he resisted
vigorously, while she pointed to the waters running
in white streams down the hills through the flooded
meadows and telling him he would be drowned.
Meanwhile the hired man at home was
poling the well under the sweep and “the old
oaken bucket,” thinking the little fellow might
have leaned over the curb and tumbled in. Shortly
afterwards he came near disappearing altogether from
this world by tumbling into the water-trough, being
fished out by his sister Mary.
In the old kitchen, a pair of deer’s
horns fastened into the wall held the long-barrelled
musket which his grandfather had carried in the campaign
of 1777. A round beaver hat, bullet, button, and
spoon moulds, and home-made pewter spoons and buttons,
were among other things which impressed themselves
upon the sensitive films of the child’s memory.
Following out the usual small boy’s instinct of destruction,
he once sallied out down to the “karsey” (causeway) to spear frogs with a weapon
made by his brother. It was a sharpened nail in the end of a broomstick.
Stepping on a log and making a stab at a “pull paddock,” he slipped and fell
head foremost into the mud and slime. Scrambling out, he hied homeward, and
entering the parlor, filled with company, he was greeted with shouts of
laughter. Even worse was it to be dubbed by his brother and the hired man a “mud
lark.”
Carleton’s first and greatest
teachers were his mother and father. After these,
came formal instruction by means of letters and books,
classes and schools. Carleton’s religious
and dogmatic education began with the New England
Primer, and progressed with the hymns of that famous
Congregationalist, Doctor Watts. When five years
old, at the foot of a long line of boys and girls,
he toed the mark, a crack in the kitchen
floor, and recited verses from the Bible.
Sunday-school instruction was then in its beginning
at Boscawen. The first hymn he learned was:
“Life is the time to serve the Lord.”
After mastering
“In
Adam’s fall
We
sinned all,”
the infantile ganglions
got tangled up between the “sleigh” in
the carriage-house, and the act of pussy in mauling
the poor little mouse, unmentioned, but of importance,
in the couplet:
“The
cat doth play,
And after slay.”
Having heard of and seen the sleigh
before learning the synonym for “kill,”
the little New Hampshire boy was as much bothered as
a Chinese child who first hears one sound which has
many meanings, and only gradually clears up the mystery
as the ideographs are mastered.
From the very first, the boy had an ear sensitive to music.
The playing of Enoch Little, his first school-teacher, and afterwards his
brother-in-law, upon the bass viol, was very sweet. Napoleon was never prouder
of his victories at Austerlitz than was little Carleton of his first reward of
merit. This was a bit of white paper two inches square, bordered with yellow
from the paint-box of a beautiful young lady who had written in the middle, “To
a good little boy.”
The first social event of importance
was the marriage of his sister Apphia to Enoch Little,
No, 1829, when a room-full of cousins, uncles,
and aunts gathered together. After a chapter read
from the Bible, and a long address by the clergyman,
the marital ceremony was performed, followed by a
hymn read and sung, and a prayer. Although this
healthy small boy, Carleton, had been given a big slice
of wedding cake with white frosting on the top, he
felt himself injured, and was hotly jealous of his
brother Enoch, who had secured a slice with a big
red sugar strawberry on the frosting. After eating
voraciously, he hid the remainder of his cake in the
mortise of a beam beside the back chamber stairs.
On visiting it next morning for secret indulgence,
he found that the rats had enjoyed the wedding feast,
too. Nothing was left. His first toy watch
was to him an event of vast significance, and he slept
with it under his pillow. When also he had donned
his first pair of trousers, he strutted like a turkey
cock and said, “I look just like a grand sir.” Children in those days
often spoke of men advanced in years as “grand sirs.”
The boy was ten years old when President
Andrew Jackson visited Concord. Everybody went
to see “Old Hickory.” In the yellow-bottomed
chaise, paterfamilias Coffin took his boy Carleton
and his daughter Elvira, the former having four pence
ha’penny to spend. Federal currency was
not plentiful in those days, and the people still used
the old nomenclature, of pounds, shillings, and pence,
which was Teutonic even before it was English or American.
Rejoicing in his orange, his stick of candy, and his
supply of seed cakes, young Carleton, from the window
of the old North Meeting House, saw the military parade
and the hero of New Orleans. With thin features
and white hair, Jackson sat superbly on a white horse,
bowing right and left to the multitude. Martin
Van Buren was one of the party.
Another event, long to be remembered
by a child who had never before been out late at night,
was when, with a party of boys seven or eight in number,
he went a-spearing on Great Pond. In the calm
darkness they walked around the pond down the brook
to the falls. With a bright jack-light, made
of pitch-pine-knots, everything seemed strange and
exciting to the boy who was making his first acquaintance
of the wilderness world by night. His brother
Enoch speared an eel that weighed four pounds, and
a pickerel of the same weight. The party did
not get home till 2 A. M., but the expedition was a
glorious one and long talked over. The only sad
feature in this rich experience was in his mother’s
worrying while her youngest child was away.
This was in April. On the 20th
of August, just after sunset, in the calm summer night,
little Carleton looked into his mother’s eyes
for the last time, and saw the heaving breast gradually
become still. It was the first great sorrow of
his life.