The service is cited for Richard Douglas (b. 1750, d. 1816) ref. p. 149-150, Douglas, Charles Henry James, Douglas Family Records (1879), and not the subject of this article.(Provided by the
Society of the Cincinnati) Douglas, Richard (Conn). Private in the
Lexington Alarm, April 1775; Ensign and Regimental Quartermaster in Selden's Connecticut State Regiment, 20 June to 25 December 1776; 2nd Lieutenant 1st Connecticut, 1 January, 1777; 1st Lieutenant, 1 January 1778; Captain Lieutenant, 11 August, 1780; Captain, 22 August 1780; transferred to 5th onnecticut, 1 January 1781, transferred to 3d Connecticut, 1 January 1783; transferred to Swift's Consolidated Connecticut Regiment, June, 1783, and served to 3d November, 1783. (Died 1828.) There is some confusion as to which Richard Douglass served whereas both served during the war. Richard Douglass, with two "s" in his name, is listed throughout the historical documents in the national and state archives. Richard Douglas, with one "s" is also listed, and in some cases, they served in the same units. The second Douglas (one "s") is also listed as "2nd" or second as they were four years younger than the senior two "s" Douglass. At the end of the war, with New London nearly burned to the ground and its economy in shambles, it appears Richard Douglass's business began to rebound slowly. Just a few years after the war ended, he purchased land from Timothy Green at the corners of the new Golden Street and Cross Street (now Green's Alley) to build a house. At nearly 40 years of age, he moved from Bradley Street, which was known as "Widows Row" from the British attack on New London to a new street even closer to the wharves on Bank Street. He conducted his cooperage at 102 Golden Street for some time, and eventually purchased the plot at 77–79 Green Street (immediately next door) for $117 on June 30, 1801. Douglass purchased the property from Timothy Green, then living in Fredericksburg, Virginia, to manage his family business interests. The house was built a short time after and is one of the few homes of its type remaining in New London. Richard Douglass house, New London.jpg|Richard Douglass House At the close of the American Revolution in 1783, Richard became one of the founding officers of the Society of the Cincinnati and it is noted in Bryce Metcalf's
Original Members and Other Officers Eligible to the Society of the Cincinnati (1938) that he served until November 3, 1783. Richard Douglass was a member of the Connecticut Society. == Family ==