Jacob Milborne

Jacob Milborne (c. 1648-16 May 1691) was an English born clerk living in the Province of New York who was an ally, secretary and son-in-law of the rebel Jacob Leisler, served briefly as Attorney General of the province, and was executed for his part in Leisler's Rebellion. [1]

Milborne worked as a clerk and bookkeeper for a leading New York merchant. As a fervent Puritan his religious and political views brought him into conflict with Edmund Andros, the Governor of the Province of New York, who fined and gaoled him. Milborne returned to England and successfully sued the Governor for false imprisonment.

He formed a close association with Jacob Leisler, a rich German-born businessman of rabidly anti-Catholic, staunchly Calvinist views and the leader of a populist political faction known as Leislerians. When Governor Andros, now Governor of the unpopular New England Dominion, was imprisoned in Boston in 1689 for maladministration, the Leislerians took possession of Fort James in south Manhattan. The lieutenant Governor left for England and some members of the provincial council fled to Albany. With Leisler now the de facto Governor of the province, Milborne was appointed Clerk to the Council, Attorney General and Advocate General, as well as being Leisler's Secretary and, from 1691, his son-in-law. [2] [3] Leisler and Milbourne instituted a highly autocratic regime under which property was confiscated, mail was opened, homes searched and people were jailed without warrant or trial, and anyone who criticized them was accused of being secretly Catholic or "popishly affected." Wanting to strike a blow at Catholic France, they mounted an unsuccessful invasion of Canada. It was a strange regime in that its proclaimed purposes were (a) to prevent a Catholic takeover, yet there was no real threat of this given how few Catholics were in New York at the time, and (b) to hold power for the new Protestant king and queen of England, William of Orange and his wife Mary, pending their consolidation of power and sending of instructions and representatives to the colony, yet when the new king and queen sent troops and a new governor, Leisler and Milbourne were initially resistant to accepting them.

When a new Governor Henry Sloughter arrived with the resources to put down the rebellion, Leisler and Milborne surrendered to him, but not before shots were fired and lives were lost in a standoff at the fort. They were arrested and tried for murder and treason by a somewhat biased bench. Originally sentenced to be hanged, drawn and quartered and their estates forfeited to the crown, the two men were in the event simply hanged (Hanged, but then cut down prior to death and then beheaded in front of a large crowd.) and their estates later restored to their heirs. In 1698, largely thanks to the sympathetic efforts of the then Governor, Earl of Bellomont, the bodies of the two men were disinterred and reburied at the Dutch church. [2]

References

  1. "Jacob Milborne". Historical Society of the New York Courts. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
  2. 1 2 "The Jacob Leisler Treason Trial (Leisler-Milborne Treason Trial)". Historical Society of the New York Courts. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
  3. "Marriage of Jacob Milborne and Mary Leisler 1691 Part I". History Box.com. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
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