Charles Frost (military officer)


Major Charles Frost was born in Tiverton, Devon, England. He married Mary Bolles in 1660 who gave birth to a daughter, Sarah Frost, in 1666.
Frost was stationed in Kittery, Maine and was the highest-ranking military leader in Maine during King William's War until he was killed by Indians along with a number of other local residents at Ambush Rock. He was reportedly killed for his role in Richard Waldron's subterfuge against several hundred Indians during King Philips War.
Aggrieved natives never forgot. According to Everett Stackpole's "Old Kittery and Her Families":

"The night after Frost's burial the Indians opened his grave, took out the body, carried it to the top of Frost's hill and suspended it upon a stake. His resting place was marked some years later with a flat stone, on which is a rudely chiseled inscription, "Here lyeth intrrd ye body of Mj. Charles Frost ager 65 years Decd July ye 4th 1697." The spot where he was slain is near a large boulder, on which is a suitable inscription. It is known as Ambush Rock."

On 4 July 1897, the newly formed Eliot Historical Society held a commemoration ceremony to mark the 200th anniversary of the natives murder of Frost as their first public event.
Charles Frost was the 5th Great Grandfather of American Poet Robert Frost.

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