HISTORICAL REGISTER OF OFFICERS OF CONTINENTAL ARMY OF THE REVOLUTION BY FRANCIS B. HEITMAN GENEALOGICAL PUBLISHING CO [1967]:PG.549: Troup, Robert (NY) 1st lieutenant of Lasher's Regiment NY Militia May 1776; taken prisoner at Long Island 27 August 1776; exchanged 9 December 1776; Major Aide de Camp to General Gates February 1777; Lieutenant Colonel Aide de Camp to General Gates 4 October 1777; Secretary to Board of Treasury 29 May 1779; resigned 8 Febuary 1780. (died 14 Jan 1832)
Surrender Of General Burgoyne At Saratoga (painting) United States Capitol, Washington, D.C - Troup appears in right background
History of Troupsburg, New York; in honor of the bicentennial celebration of our nations birth, 1776 through 1976; published 1976; Westfield Penn Dollar Saver - 814-367-2622; pg.2: The town of Troupsburgh was formed from Addison (then known as Middletown), and Canisteo on February 12, 1808. As originally formed, the town contained a vast area, eighteen miles long, east and west, and about ten miles wide. The name was given in honor of Robert Troup, Esq., of New York, who secceeded Col. Williamson as agent for the Pulteney estate, in 1802. Agent for Sir William Pulteney, and his heirs, of Great Britain developing many square miles in western New York, and having business centers at Bath and Geneva.
HISTORICAL REGISTER OF OFFICERS OF CONTINENTAL ARMY OF THE REVOLUTION BY FRANCIS B. HEITMAN GENEALOGICAL PUBLISHING CO [1967]:PG.549: Troup, Robert (NY) 1st lieutenant of Lasher's Regiment NY Militia May 1776; taken prisoner at Long Island 27 August 1776; exchanged 9 December 1776; Major Aide de Camp to General Gates February 1777; Lieutenant Colonel Aide de Camp to General Gates 4 October 1777; Secretary to Board of Treasury 29 May 1779; resigned 8 Febuary 1780. (died 14 Jan 1832)
Surrender Of General Burgoyne At Saratoga (painting) United States Capitol, Washington, D.C - Troup appears in right background
History of Troupsburg, New York; in honor of the bicentennial celebration of our nations birth, 1776 through 1976; published 1976; Westfield Penn Dollar Saver - 814-367-2622; pg.2: The town of Troupsburgh was formed from Addison (then known as Middletown), and Canisteo on February 12, 1808. As originally formed, the town contained a vast area, eighteen miles long, east and west, and about ten miles wide. The name was given in honor of Robert Troup, Esq., of New York, who secceeded Col. Williamson as agent for the Pulteney estate, in 1802. Agent for Sir William Pulteney, and his heirs, of Great Britain developing many square miles in western New York, and having business centers at Bath and Geneva.
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