Bristol Johnson
by
Stefan Bielinski


Connecticut native Bristol Johnson was an Afro-Albanian skipper and a veteran of the American Revolution.

He was born into slavery in Middletown, Connecticut about 1755. He served as a private in the first regiment of the Connecticut Line in the American Revolutionary army. A pension application later described his service.

In January 1781, he was emancipated (freed) by Joseph Taylor of Colchester, Connecticut. Shortly thereafter, he married Elvira (Vera) Skinner in Colchester and began to raise a family.

About 1795, he left Elvira and four children in Colchester and moved in with another woman in Middletown. About 1798, he left her behind and moved to Albany.

Bristol Johnson's residence in 1818In May 1810, he purchased a parcel on the north side of Bassett Street in the heart of an emerging neighborhood of newcomers called the South End! His residence near the corner of South Pearl Street was noted in city directories for the next two decades. He was among a number of Afro-Albanian river people including Captain Samuel Schuyler who lived near that intersection. Skipper John Johnson, who lived with Bristol, may have been his son or brother!

In 1813, he appeared before the Albany court where witnesses testified that the fifty-eight-year-old Johnson was a free man and a freeholder within the county of Albany. First identified as a "waterman," he was subsequently referred to as a "skipper."

Bristol Johnson died in Albany in April 1830!

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notes

the people of colonial Albany Sources: The life of Bristol/Brister/Brisker/Bristow Johnson is CAP biography number 1053. This profile is derived chiefly from family and community-based resources.

In 1852, Vera Johnson was ninety-two-years-old and applied for a pension as the widow of a Revolutionary war veteran. The application detailed Bristol Johnson's service. In 1853, a pension of $36.77 was allowed retroactive to 1831.

Detail from the city directory for 1815 listing the Albany Johnsons.




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first posted: 1/20/03