I represent Robert Ross. I was a resident of Pensacola during the British period. I was a merchant born in Aberdeen, and I was the brother of David Ross. I was elected to represent Pensacola in the House of Commons for the provincial General Assembly in 1767 and 1771. I supplied wine to the Indian Congress at Pensacola in 1771, and got the coveted, Crown-subsidized contract to provision the Huguenot settlers at Campbelltown (though that settlement ended badly). I acquired land in Mississippi in 1772 and began a plantation there. When the American rebel James Willing and his raiders came down the Mississippi in 1778, plundering British plantations as they went, my property was a loss. Looking for justice and compensation, I became a thorn in the side of the Spanish until they threw me in prison. By February 1780 I was back in Pensacola, as I appear on a list of inhabitants of the town there.
Sources: 7, 12, 17, 29, 65, 6