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CAPT. SAMUEL DRAPER'S DESCENDANTS.
(Excerpt from "Drapers in America" published
1892)
"IN SPITE of long continued search and active enquiry in many directions, the
mystery which surrounds Capt.Samuel Draper is far from being satisfactorily
solved.
Miss Adelaid H. Draper, of Boston, has devoted many weeks of hard work
and extensive correspondence in the effort to try and clear up this branch of
the Draper family. The author has also endeavored to do so, but has not met with
any more success than his efficient assistant, Miss Draper.
This is probably, in a large measure, due from, first, the utterly
incomprehensible silence with which some of Capt. Draper's descendants, living
in the State of New York, have seen fit to observe relative to the
subject-presumably because they were trying to recover an alleged English
estate, and thought probably that other Drapers might have designs upon it,
although assured to the contrary, and this history would probably have aided
them in their search had they been willing to assist with the facts.
Secondly, Capt. Samuel Draper led so exceedingly roving a life, and sailed to
so many ports of the world, that he left few or no records of himself.
The following information about Samuel Draper is largely conjectural. He is
supposed to have been the wild son of a Church of England clergyman, one
Thomas Draper, of Halifax, Yorkshire, England. The young man ran away to
sea, and never there-after returned home. There is a vague tradition that he had
a brother (uncle? James the Puritan?) in Roxbury, Mass.
In course of time Samuel Draper became a captain of a ship, which it is more
than probable was on buccaneering intent. Whilst in some port of the kingdom of
Spain he carried off a Spanish girl, and it is presumed made her his wife. She
there-after always sailed with him.They had children, and it was the custom of
the Captain to name his sons after the port in which they were born, or to which
the ship was bound. We have, therefore, 3.
Boston Draper, 4.Newburyport Draper, 5. New York
Draper, and, an exception, 6. James Draper. Legend gives us the names of New
York and Newburyport Draper, but we have only authenticated, through old
documents which have been available to us, the names of Boston and James.
Until a few years ago there existed some few relics of Capt. Samuel Draper,
amongst which was a coat, probably an officer's uniform, as with it was a sword
or sabre, and a military hat of the Continental style, but importance seems to
have been attached only to the coat. It was given by Capt. Samuel to his son
Boston, with directions to preserve carefully, as evidence, in case a fortune
should be left to him or his posterity. The silver buttons on this coat bore a
device, which was a ship, at the stern of which was a man's arm holding a
cutlass. This device was probably one of the Captain's own devising. Another
description of these buttons says they had a stag's head on them. Still a third
account says that the inscription on these said buttons was REx. A. D." and also
the letters ,C. K. S." and perhaps "R. I." Later, these buttons were taken from
the coat and strung upon a string, and have presumably been lost.
Some twenty years ago (1872) an English lawyer came to Boston and informed the
descendants of Capt. Samuel Draper that, if they could
prove the marriage of the Spanish woman to the sea captain, a large estate was
theirs in England. This they were unable to do, and it is this same
estate that the New York descendants are groping for. All the information that
it has been possible to collect has been welded together in these pages of the
sea captain's descendants, and it would have been much more complete if those
most nearly connected could have seen fit to take a little trouble to aid
Miss Adelaid Draper and the author."
Samuel DRAPER and his wife had the following children:
2
i.
Newburyport DRAPER.
3
ii.
New York DRAPER.
+4
iii.
Boston DRAPER.
+5
iv.
James DRAPER.
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