Save the Date
In 1768, James A. Richardson, a native of Stonington, Connecticut, built his home, Harmony Hall, on a large tract of land granted by King George III for his service in the French and Indian War, twelve miles from Elizabethtown, North Carolina, and one mile from the Cape Fear River. An owner of a West Indies shipping line, he had earlier been shipwrecked off Cape Hatteras, and while waiting for the arrival of one of his ships, had explored the area. He liked the Cape Fear River bottom lands so much that he decided to settle and make his home there. About the same time, he met and married a widow, Elizabeth O’Neal Purdie.
Colonel Richardson served in the Revolutionary War, was captured and later paroled. After learning of many British soldiers breaking their parole, he, too, broke his, and re-enlisted in the Continental Army.
Richardson died in 1810, and is buried in the Purdie Family Cemetery.