Archives of Maryland
(Biographical Series)

William Hiscox
MSA SC 3520-17762

Biography:

William Hiscox (or possibly Hitchcock) enlisted as a private in the Eighth Company of the First Maryland Regiment on February 3, 1776. The regiment was Maryland's first contingent of full-time, professional soldiers raised to be part of the Continental Army. The Eighth Company, commanded by Captain Samuel Smith, formed in Baltimore in early 1776, and it trained there that spring and summer. Two other companies from the regiment were located in Baltimore as well, while the rest were stationed in Annapolis. In July, the regiment was ordered to march north to New York, to protect the city from invasion by the British. The Eighth Company lost four men who deserted along the march, a problem which plagued the regiment that summer. [1]

On August 27, 1776, the Americans faced the British Army at the Battle of Brooklyn (sometimes called the Battle of Long Island), the first full-scale engagement of the war. The battle was a rout: the British were able to sneak around the American lines, and the outflanked Americans fled in disarray. As the Maryland troops fought their way towards the American fortifications, they were forced to stop at the swampy Gowanus Creek. Half the regiment, including the Eighth, was able to cross the creek and escape the battle. However, the rest were unable to do so before they were attacked by the British. Facing down a much larger, better-trained force, this group of soldiers, today called the "Maryland 400," mounted a series of daring charges. They held the British at bay long enough for the rest of the Continental Army to escape, at the cost of many lives. The Marylanders lost a total of 256 men killed or captured. Because the Eighth was able to escape the battle early, it lost only about six men. [2]

Whether Hiscox survived the battle, or the rest of the 1776 campaign, is not clear. Army records do not give any information about his fate. There were multiple people in Maryland with the same (or similar) name during and after the Revolutionary War, including several from areas where the Eighth Company was recruited from, but not enough is known about their lives to differentiate between them. [3]

Owen Lourie, 2018

Notes:

[1] Compiled Service Records of Soldiers Who Served in the American Army During the Revolutionary War, NARA M881, from Fold3.com; "Eight Pounds Reward." Philadelphia Evening Post, 10 August 1776; William Sands to John and Ann Sands, 14 August 1776, Maryland State Archives, Special Collections, Dowsett Collection of Sands Family Papers [MSA SC 2095-1-18, 00/20/05/28].

[2] Mark Andrew Tacyn, “’To the End:’ The First Maryland Regiment and the American Revolution” (PhD diss., University of Maryland College Park, 1999), 48-73; Return of the Maryland troops, 13 September 1776, Revolutionary War Rolls, NARA M246, folder 35, p. 85, from Fold3.com. For more on the experience of the Marylanders at the Battle of Brooklyn, see "In Their Own Words," on the Maryland State Archives research blog, Finding the Maryland 400.

[3] For William Hitchcock of Harford County, see S. Eugene Clements and F. Edward Wright, The Maryland Militia in the Revolutionary War (Silver Spring, Maryland: Family Line Publications, 1987), 174; Governor and Council, Oaths of Fidelity, 1778, Harford County, Return of Robert T. Amoss, p. 7, MdHR 4647-48 [MSA S963-48, 1/1/4/31]. For William Hitchcock of Cecil County, see Cecil County Court, Oaths of Fidelity, 1778, [MSA C639-1, 1/11/12/30]. Both Harford and Cecil counties were within the Eighth Company's recruitment area.

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