Hannah Arnold
Born
Hannah Waterman

c.~1705/6?
DiedAugust 15, 1758 (aged 52)
Norwich, Connecticut, British America
Burial placeOld Uptown Burying Ground,
Norwich, Connecticut
41°32′58.2″N 72°05′32.1″W / 41.549500°N 72.092250°W / 41.549500; -72.092250
Spouse
Captain Benedict Arnold
(m. 1733)
ChildrenBrigadier General Benedict Arnold (son)
Parents
  • John Waterman
  • Elizabeth Waterman

Hannah Arnold (née Waterman; c. 1705/06? – August 15, 1758) was the mother of American-born British Brigadier General Benedict Arnold (1741–1801).

Early life and marriages

Hannah Arnold was born in Norwich, Connecticut, to John and Elizabeth Waterman. Her first husband, Absalom King, was a wealthy merchant who had settled in the area. The couple had a daughter, also named Hannah. Not long after, however, King died at sea from the smallpox. Hannah married again, this time to Captain Benedict Arnold, the descendant of Rhode Island governor Benedict Arnold. The Arnolds had six children. As was not unusual at the time, most of the couple's children died young, many within months of one another due to a yellow fever outbreak, including an older son, Benedict. A younger son, also named Benedict, was born in 1741. Shortly thereafter, market downturns caused hardships in the family finances.[1]

Hannah Arnold's gravestone

Later life and death

Hannah Arnold died on August 15, 1758, and was buried in the Old Uptown Burying Ground, Norwich, Connecticut. Hannah's death fell hard on her widowed husband, Captain Benedict Arnold, who lingered some time and suffered with alcoholism and depression. He died in 1761.[1]

Historical reputation and legacy

Hannah Arnold is remembered in Norwich as a worthy woman and a model of "piety, patience, and virtue."[2] Her gravestone is still visible in Norwichtown Burying Grounds, yet no one knows who paid for it.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 Randall, Willard Sterne (1990). Benedict Arnold: patriot and traitor. New York, N.Y: Morrow. ISBN 978-1-55710-034-4.
  2. Caulkins, Frances Manwaring (1845). History of Norwich, Connecticut: from its settlement in 1660, to January 1845. T. Robinson. pp. 254.
  3. "Admirer adorns grave of Benedict Arnold's mother". www.norwichbulletin.com. March 29, 2011. Retrieved March 29, 2011.

Further reading

  • Genealogical and family history of the state of Maine By George Thomas Little, Henry Sweetser Burrage, Albert Roscoe Stubbs
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