McAlpin's Corps, the "American Volunteers", first mustered in on August 1, 1777. Daniel McAlpin was a retired, elderly British army captain of the 60th Royal American Regiment who had become a major landholder, in Stillwater, Province of New York. After 1775, Daniel McAlpin was actively persecuted by rebels for his loyalty. In September 1776, he received a warrant from Sir William Howe to raise a Loyalist corps and secretly begin recruiting men. McAlpin was arrested, but later escaped and went into hiding. When the British Army, under General John Burgoyne, marched south, towards Albany, McAlpin joined, at Fort Edward.
Campaigns
The corps numbered some 184 men and officers and was engaged largely in the "batteau service" and defending supply lines, during the Saratoga Campaign. Following the Battle of Freeman's Farm, a portion of Daniel McAlpin's men were drafted into British regiments to help offset heavy casualties. After the defeat at the battle of Bemis Heights, Burgoyne allowed loyalist troops to quietly escape before his surrender. Men of the American Volunteers were entrusted with transporting Burgoyne's military pay chest back to Canada to prevent its capture. Fifty of these men were taken prisoner on the retreat, but the chest was safely delivered. The Loyalist units, of Burgoyne's army, returned to British Canada seriously mauled and badly under-strength. The Corps was loosely assembled, into a battalion, initially under Sir John Johnson, of the King's Royal Regiment. In May, 1779, the unit was turned over to McAlpin, who was made Major-Commandant. The troops were primarily engaged, in garrison duty and building fortifications, to secure Province of Quebec, against Patriot American invasion. In late 1779, Daniel McAlpin became seriously ill. Despite his condition, he continued in his duties until his death in July, 1780. McAlpin was replaced by Major John Nairne, of the 84th Regiment of Foot or "Royal Highland Emigrants", who was ordered to form the rather loose collection of men into formal companies. Even so, the unit was often referred to as McAlpin's Corps. In November, 1781, the American Volunteers, King's Loyal Americans and most of the Queens Loyal Rangers were incorporated into a new provincial regiment, the Loyal Rangers, under the command of Major Edward Jessup. The former Corps also, became a part of the, King's American Regiment.