Benjamin Alexander Putnam (1801 or 1803 - January 25, 1869) was a lawyer, state legislator, state surveyor, officer in the military during the Seminole Wars, judge, and president of the Florida Historical Society.[1][2]
Benjamin attended Harvard and then studied law privately in Saint Augustine where he established a law practice. He served in the Seminole Wars from 1835 until 1842, leading a company of militia named the Mosquito Roarers and eventually rising in rank from major to adjutant general.[4]
The University of Florida Libraries have a view of his home from St. George Street. The home was torn down in 1886.[5]
His daughter married into the Calhoun family. Benjamin Putnam Calhoun was his grandson.[6] A collection of Putnam-Calhoun papers is listed on WorldCat.[7]