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Adam Helmer

Adam F. Helmer
Adam Helmer Grave NY-DOT Sign.jpg
Marker at the burial site of Helmer and his wife on the north side of Cottle Road in the Town of Brutus, New York. Their grave stones were moved to the Weedsport Rural Cemetery.
Born c.1754
German Flatts, New York
Died April 9, 1830 (1830-04-10)
Brutus, Cayuga County, New York
Resting place Grave stone in Weedsport Rural Cemetery
Nationality United States of America
Citizenship United States of America
Occupation Farmer
Known for Revolutionary War Hero
Weight 150 lb (68 kg).
Title Lieutenant in the Provincial Militia and Scout in Captain John Breadbake's company
Spouse(s) Anna Bellinger (m. 1757–1841)
Children Frederick (1777)
Margaret (1778)
Anna (1781)
Adam (1783)
Peter (1786)
Elizabeth (1788)
Catharine (1790)
David (179?)
Maria Barbara (1795)
Eve (1800)
Parent(s) George Friederich Helmer
Maria Barbara Kast

Adam F. Helmer (c.1754 – April 9, 1830), also known as John Adam Helmer and Hans Adam Helmer, was an American Revolutionary War hero among those of the Mohawk Valley and surrounding regions of New York State. He was made nationally famous by Walter D. Edmonds' popular 1936 novel Drums Along the Mohawk with its depiction of "Adam Helmer's Run" of September 16, 1778 to warn the people of German Flatts of the approach of Joseph Brant and his company of Indians and Tories.

Adam Helmer was born in German Flatts, New York to Maria Barbara Kast, and George Friederich Helmer, who was born on June 9, 1706 in Neustadt an der Weinstrasse a city in the Rhineland-Palatinate region in southwestern Germany. G.F. Helmer emigrated to America sometime before 1710 and eventually settled in one of the numerous Palatine farming communities on the south side of the Mohawk River in central New York.

As late as 1774, this Palatine district and others in the area widely supported British control, but with the death of the powerful loyalist Mohawk Valley landowner Sir William Johnson and news of the Declaration of Rights by the Continental Congress, anti-British sentiments began to surface and a Tryon County Committee of Safety was organized. This and the news of Continental Army resistance at the Battle of Lexington and Concord encouraged the remaining Johnson family and other loyalists to fortify their properties and to recruit Iroquois to side with the British. This in turn prompted the colonists in 1775 to organize a militia under the command of Colonel Nicholas Herkimer. Early the next year, Herkimer aided General Philip Schuyler who was sent by Congress to disarm the Loyalists. Many of the loyalists and sympathizing Iroquois led by William Johnson's son Sir John Johnson escaped to Canada where they began to organize to take back their Mohawk Valley holdings.


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