Edmund Fanning
Edmund
Fanning (April 24, 1739 – February 28, 1818) first gained fame for his
role in the War of the Regulation, but later had a distinguished career as a
colonial governor and British general.
Edmund Fanning was born in the Town of Southold on Long
Island in the colony of New York, the son of Colonel Phineas Fanning. He was
graduated from Yale in 1757 and studied law in New York. He then moved to North
Carolina in 1761 and settled in Hillsborough. He held several local political
posts and became a protégé of colonial governor William Tryon. Fanning came
into conflict with the leaders of the Regulator movement. He, along with lawyer
Francis Nash, was charged with extorting money from the local residents, but
was fined only a small fine. After several riots, the movement was crushed by
the an army of North Carolina militia led by Tryon at the Battle of Alamance on
May 16, 1771.
Fanning followed Tryon to New York as his personal
secretary. At the start of the American Revolution, revolutionaries drove
Fanning from his home, forcing him to seek refuge aboard the HMS Asia in
the New York harbor. After being commissioned a colonel by General William Howe,
Fanning later raised a regiment of Loyalists named the King's American Regiment.
He was wounded twice during the war and was credited with saving Yale College
from destruction by British forces. He was later appointed to the office of
surveyor general, which he retained until he fled, with other Loyalists, to Nova
Scotia in 1783.
Fanning became lieutenant-governor of Nova Scotia in that
same year, and on November 30, 1785 he married Phebe Maria Burns. In 1786, he
was appointed governor of St. John's Island (which was later renamed Prince
Edward Island) by the Home Secretary, Thomas Townshend, 1st Viscount Sydney,
a post which he held for almost 19 years. He was appointed General of the British
Army in 1808. He retired to London and died there in 1818.
Despite having several children, Fanning had no
grandchildren. He had two daughters, Lady Wood, who lived near London with her
mother; the other daughter married a Captain Bentwick Cumberland, a nephew of Lord
Bentwick, and lived in Charlotte’s Town, New Brunswick. He also had several
prominent nephews, including the like-named explorer Edmund Fanning, the war
hero Nathaniel Fanning, and the celebrated attorney John Wickham.