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John Dagworthy

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Buried at
  
Dagsboro, Delaware

Died
  
1784

Name
  
John Dagworthy


Rank
  
Brigadier general

Allegiance
  
United States

Commands held
  
Fort Cumberland

Place of burial
  
Dagsboro, Delaware, United States

John Dagworthy (1721–1784) was a brigadier general who commanded the Sussex County (Delaware) militia during the American Revolutionary War. The town of Dagsboro, Delaware and the Dagsboro Hundred both take their names from General Dagworthy.

While assigned to Fort Cumberland during the French and Indian War as a captain in the British Army, Dagworthy disputed the authority of George Washington. At that time, Washington was a major in the Virginia militia, a rank that Dagworthy considered inferior to his own Royal commission as a captain. The fort was built at the confluence of Wills Creek and the Potomac River, by troops of the Maryland militia under Dagworthy's command, in the fall of 1754.

His remains are buried in the cemetery of Prince George's Chapel, located near Dagsboro.

References

John Dagworthy Wikipedia