"^ ^ ."V) V ,\ >V. ^-> *-^^ o^^-'. °'^./^^'°^ ./.^^.. ^-> *-^" ./ '?^^. '^ .-^ - -P A^ - .'> ^ „ . ■)> .-A '^h II o ■"oo' xV "Ai. v^' -'• ,<^^- '' "-^ v^ ^. » > S>o^ ■r \' ■t: '^0^ r'^^ * -. N ' . V^ ''c^. \^ .0^ %4 V^ ,. ^ » , -> '. ^ ^ . % .p. -X X^^ o' - .>^"^ ^' ' >^ ■i, .^^ -^^^ -^. ■* ,0 o^ .^ -^^ .\^ ■'^>, » * , -A, * 'J N ^ > -0- ."■'■« -5^ * V? '<■ - .V .0- >. >^ vOo, A SOME FAMOUS CITIZENS OF HARRISON COUNTY. / Historical Collections OF Harrison County, IN THE ^'- ■ State of Ohio. WITH LISTS OF THE FIRST LAND-OWNERS, EARLY MARRIAGES (to 1841), WILL RECORDS (to 1861), BURIAL RECORDS OF THE EARLY SETTLEMENTS, AND NUMER- OUS GENEALOGIES. BY / CHARLES A. HANNA. NEW YORK PRIVATELY PRINTED 1900 I O WF COPY ReCEIV EP. {Library of Conarr-aa FEB 14 1901 Copyright entry | SECOND COPY 4^1 COPYRIGHT, 1900, BY CHAELES A. HANNA. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. THE SCOTCH-IRISH IN HARRISON COUNTY CHAPTER 11. THE FRIENDS, OR QUAKERS, IN HARRISON COUNTY CHAPTER III. THE GERMANS AND VIRGINIANS IN HARRISON COUNTY I CHAPTER IA\ THE FIRST SETTLERS IN EASTERN OHIO .... 43 CHAPTER V. : HARRISON COUNTY PIONEERS 54 CHAPTER YI. EARLY DAYS IN CADIZ 75 CHAPTER VII. BEECH SPRING CHURCH . 92 CHAPTER VIII. HARRISON COUNTY IN 1813 101 I viii. HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY CHAPTER IX. HARRISON COUNTY SETTLERS IN 1S13 116 CHAPTER X. CRABAPPLE AND UNITY CHURCHES 128 CHAPTER XI. THE EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 139 CHAPTER XII. THE EARLY CHURCHES OF Cx^DIZ— Continued . . . 156 CHAPTER XIII. NOTTINGHAM AND FREEPORT CHURCHES .... 166 CHAPTER XIV. DICKERSON, BETHEL, AND RANKIN CHURCHES ... 175 CHAPTER XY. THE RIDGE CHURCH 183 PART SECOND. FIRST LAND OWNERS OF HARRISON COUNTY ... 195 EARLY MARRIAGES IN HARRISON COUNTY— 1813-1840 . . 238 GRAVEYARD RECORDS OF HARRISON COUNTY . . . 313 WILL ABSTRACTS OF HARRISON COUNTY— 1813-1860 . . 401 t-:/ TYPICAL FIARRISOxN COUNTY CITIZENS. HMRISON COUNTY OHIO C A. HanhA I 900 PREFACE. The writer has long felt the need of a history of his native county, and in common with many citizens of that part of Ohio, has come to the conclusion that the lack of a suitable history has been due not so much to the dearth of in- teresting material as to the absence of a diligent collector sufficiently in- terested in the subject to gather the material up. While the present volume is concerned chiefly with the record of names and events connected with the first thirty years of the century, it will be found that the pioneer annals of Harrison county embrace by no means the least interesting portion of the county's history. So far as it goes, therefore, this book is offered as an at- tempt to supply a deficiency, the existence of which must be realized by all who have tried to learn something of the history of Harrison county. Two or three of the sketches given in these Collections were printed in an abbreviated form during the year 1898 in the Cadiz "Republican." These have since been re-written and largely added to, and a number of others have been prepared, with a view to giving the reader as extensive a record of early Harrison county history as may be contained within the limits of one volume. The second part of the book will be found to contain a very large amount of invaluable material for the student of the county's pioneer history, being made up of much of the county's land, marriage, burial, and will records. In the preparation of these records for printing, where such a vast number of names and dates have to be gone over, copied, re-copied, and arranged in order, it is very difficult to escape occasional errors in the spelling of a name or the transcribing of a date. While the utmost pains have been taken to prevent such errors. It is impossible to eliminate them all. Following is a list of the principal sources of information regarding the history of Harrison county and Eastern Ohio to which the writer has had access: Records of the Probate, Recorder's, Comissioners', Sheriff's, Clerk's, Auditor's, and Surveyor's offices of Harrison county. Records of the Ohio State Adjutant General's office. Records of the Presbytery of the Ohio. Records of Steubenville Presbytery. k iv. HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Records of the United States Interior Department. Annual volumes of the Ohio Archaeological and Historical Society. History of the County of Ayr, by James Patterson: Ayr, 1847. History of Belmont and Jefferson counties, by J. A. Caldwell: Wheeling, 1880. Hiot( rical Sketch of Bethel Methodist Episcopal Church, 1811-1894, by J. Fletcher Birney: Cadiz, 1894. Travels in Holland, the United Provinces, England, Scotland, and Ireland, by Sir William Brereton: The Chetham Society, 1844. Historical Sermon Preached in the First United Presbyterian Church of Cadiz, Ohio, August 26, 1876, by Rev. W. T. Meloy, Steubenille, 1876. Historical Sketch of the First Presbyterian Church of Cadiz, by Rev. W. P. Shrom: The Cadiz "Republican" for August 28, 1884. Memorial Dedication of Dickerson M. E. Church: Columbus, 1888. History of Dumfries and Galloway, by Sir Herbert Maxwell: Edinburgh, 1896. History of Fayette county, Penna., by Franklin Ellis: Philadelphia, 1882. Autobiography of Rev. James B. Finley: Cincinnati, 1853. Historical Address of Dr. Andrew Finley Ross at the Semi-Centennial Anni- versary of the Founding of Franklin College, New Athens, June 23, 1875. Lands and Their Owners in Galloway, by P. H. McKerlie: Edinburgh, 1877. The Hamilton Manuscripts: Belfast, 1867. Atlas of Harrison county, by J. A. CaldAvell: Condit, Ohio, 1875. Historical Sketches of Harrison County, by Rev. R. M. Coulter: The Cadiz "Re- publican," during 1898 and 1899. Biographical Record of Harrison and Carroll Counties: Chicago, 1891. A Brief History of Harrison County, by Dr. S. B. McGavran: Cadiz, 1894. The Pathfinders of Jefferson County, by W. H. Hunter: Columbus, 1899. Diary of David McClure: New York, 1899. The Diary of Richard Lee Mason: The Chicago "Daily Record" for January 1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th, 1897. The Montgomery Manuscripts: Belfast, 1869. Forty Years' Pastorate [at Nottingham Church] and Reminiscences, by Rev. T. R. Crawford, D. D.: Wheeling, 1887. Historical Collections of Ohio, by Henry Howe: Norwalk, 1896. History of the Backwoods; or, The Region of the Ohio, by A. W. Patterson: Pittsburg, 1843. Pennsylvania Archives: Philadelphia, 1852-55, Harrisburgh, 1874-1900, American Pioneer, vol. ii.: Cincinnati, 1843. Southern Quakers and Slavery, by Stephen B. Weeks: Baltimore, 1896. Red-Men's Roads, by Archer Butler Hulbert: Columbus, 1900. Old Redstone [Presbytery], by Joseph Smith, D. D. : Philadelphia, 1854, HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY v. Anniversarj^ Discourse Delivered in the Ridge Church by Rev. Robert Herron, D. D., Dec. 13, 1873: Uhrichsville, 1874. History of the Presbytery of St Clairsville, by T. R. Crawford and Robert Alex- ander: Washington, Pa., 1888. History of the Presbytery of Steubenville, 1819-1887: Wooster, 1888. The Scot in Ulster, by John Harrison: Edinburgh, 1888. The Scottish Nation, by William Anderson: Edinburgh, 1870. Annual volumes of the Scotch-Irish Society of America, 1889 to 1896. Historic Events in the Tuscarawas and Muskingum Valleys, by C. H. Mitch- ener: Dayton, 1876. Chronicles of Border Warfare, by Alexander S. Withers: Clarksburg, Va., 1831. History of Washington County, Penna., by Boyd Crumrine: Philadelphia, 1882. History of the Presbytery of Washington, by Rev. W. F. Hamilton and others: Philadelphia, 1889. Sketches of Western Adventure, by John A. McClung: Dayton, 1854. History of the Pan-Handle of Western Virginia, by J. H. Newton and J. A.. Caldwell: Wheeling, 1884. Notes on the Settlement and Indian Wars of the Western Parts of Virginia and Pennsylvania, by Rev. Joseph Doddridge: Wellsburg, Va., 1824. Indian Wars of Western Virginia, by Wills DeHass: Wheeling, 1851. History of Westmoreland County, Penna., by G. D. Albert, Philadelphia, 1882. History of York County. Penna., by John Gibson: Chicago, 1886. New York, July 1, 1900. HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY. CHAPTER I. THE SCOTCH-IRISH IN HARRISON COUNTS. There is, perhaps, no one subject taught in onr schools and institu- tions of learning to-day on which more misinformation has been im- parted to the students than that of A]nerican history; and probably there is no part of that subject concerning which American people are more in ignorance thaii the part relating to their own racial origin. Good Americans, generally, approved, of the spirit of Mark Twain's rejoinder to Max O'Eeli, when, in tlie course of a recent international exchange of comnliments between the French and the Missouri humor- ists, the latter, to the charge that the average American did not usually know the name of his own grandfather, allowed that such might be the truth; but tbought that Brother Jonathan was more apt to be sure of the name of his own father than were some others. The oft-repeated story of the observation made by a successful American gentleman travel- ing in Europe, who, when shown by an English lord the pictures of the latters illustrious ancestors for some hundreds of years back, admitted tliat he had nothing of the kind at his home in America, because he was an illustrious ancestor himself, — is a characteristic illustration of the spirit in Avhich, until quite recently, matters of race and family history have generally been regarded by the busy American workers of the pres- ent day. Nevertheless, there is one class of our fellow citizens which has never been negligent in preserving the traditions and histories of their fathers; and never backward in letting America and the world at large know all about their merits and accomplishments. These are the people of Xew England— a people who, from the time of their first settlement 2 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY in America, have preserved written records of most of their communities, and of almost every member living in and making a part ol: those com- munities; so that, as a consequence, there are few persons of New England descent living in the United States to-day, hut who can find pages and volumes of history and eulogy in print as perpetual monuments to the virtues of one or several of their more or less remote progenitors. Another and much more important consequence of this habit of committing to writing the history of men and communities in New Eng- land, is, that nearly all of our so-called histories of America have been written by New England men, are based chietly upon New England records and examples, and have necessarily had to pass over in silence, or in a cursory way, the history of those other portions of our country and our citizens, of whom none of these Avritten records have been pre- served. It is not strange, therefore, that in most of our schools to-day, and, I venture to say, in the public schools of Harrison county, American history is taught chiefly from books written by New England men, or their descendants; is viewed in these books from the conventional New England stand-point; and is based largely upon New England traditions, prejudices, and, in some cases, misrepresentations. The chief misrepresentation to which attention may be called at this time, is the one so repeatedly made in certain of the newspapers and re- views, and by certain orators, and after-dinner speakers, that all the progress made by America since it Avas first colonized, and all the glorious history of which Americans are so proud, has been made because its people are of the Anglo-Saxon race, and in their progress are only con- tinuing in the new world what their English forefathers had begun in the old. Now, as a matter of fact, no such thing is the case. And while there should be no just praise withheld from the descendants of Englishmen for what their forefathers have done for America, it would be as great a wrong to them if we were to say that they had done nothing whatever, as it is to other Americans, of non-English origin, for the descendants of Englishmen to claim that the English have done it all. How can these claims that the great men of American history are of exclusivelv English origin be considered in face of the fact that, of Wash- ington's hundred generals, more or less, not half of them were of English blood; or, that of the great generals of the civil war on both sides, but little more than one-third were of English extraction; or, that of our twen- THE SCOTCH-IRISH 3 ty-four presidents, less than half the nnmber have been of that stock; or, that of our great editors, three-fourths have been non-English in origin; or, that of our great judges, less than half have been English; or, that of American inventors of world-wide fame, about three out of every four have been of another race than English; or, that of the great leaders in the jSTational congress, not half of them have been English by descent; or, that in our population to-day, nearly one-half are of other races than English. Yet these facts are all capable of ready demonstration, and can be verified by any one who will take the trouble to consult any standard biographical and statistical dictionary. In the State of Ohio, for instance, if the English are to have the sole credit for all the good that has come to America, what would become of the fame of Arthur St. Clair, of Jeremiah Morrow, of Allen Trimble, of Duncan Mc Arthur, of Joseph Vance, of Wilson Shannon, of Mordecai Bartley, of Keuben Wood, of Kutherford B. Hayes, of Seabury Ford, of William Medill, of James E. Campbell, of Thomas L. Young, of Joseph B. Foraker, of Charles Foster, of William McKinley, and of some few. others who have been governors of the State? Or, of Presidents Grant, Hayes, Garfield, and McKinley? Or, of certain supreme court judges, such as Jacob Burnet, John McLean, Joseph R. Swan, John C. Wright, Thomas W. BarOey, W. B. Caldwell, William Kennon, Hocking H. Hunter, George W. Mcllvaine, W. J. Gilraore, Rufus P. Ranney, Josiah Scott, John Clark, W. W. Johnson, and John H. Doyle ? Or, of certain well-known journalists, such as Whitelaw Reid, W. L. Brown, John A. Cockerill. Joseph Medill, Samuel Medary, W. W. Armstrong, the Farans and McLeans, and Richard Smith? Or, of Bishop Simpson, of John A. Bingham, and of Salmon P. Chase? Or, of William Dean Howells and of John Q. A. Ward? Or, of Generals U. S. Grant, Phil Sheridan, Quincy A. Gilmore, James B. Steadman, Irvin McDowell, John Beatty, 0. M. Mitchell, James B. McPherson, Henry W. Lawton, and the fighting families of the JlcCooks? Xo, the truth of the matter is, that a vast proportion of American people, sometimes classed by the historians as British, have had their hard-earned laurels transferred to the brows of the so-called Anglo- Saxons, or English; and very much of the honor and glory which are so frequently claimed for the English in this country, really belong to the people of another, and a distinctly different race. These people are the Scotch-Irish, as they have come to be called, who have done vastly more in the settlement and development of the cen- 4 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY tral and southern portions of our country than the English, and yet a people who have been too busy making history to spare the time to write it; and one whose early annals, for this reason, have been, until recent years, so far neglected as to be well-nigh forgotten. This is the race to which belong, with the exception of those of Howells, Garfield, and Slieridan, probably all of the names given above; and to the same race, also, belong, it is safe to say, at least seventy-five per cent, of the sturdy farmers and substantial citizens of Harrison county. It is needless to ask in addition, therefore, what would become of the fair name and fame of Harrison county, if the English were the only people who have made America what it is to-day. Nevertheless, the Scotch-Irish communities and people of Harrison county, as a rule, have few traditions or remembered history back of the time when settlements were first begun there, in the early years of the present century. These people know in a general way that their re- spective fathers or grandfathers came from the East — from Pennsylvania usually — and in most cases from the territory originally included in the counties of Washington, Westmoreland, Cimiberland, York, or Chester. The majority of them know that they are of Scotch-Irish descent; without understanding clearly what that term, in its American sense, signifies, some having the impression that it means the descendants of a married couple, of whom one parent is Scotch, and the other Irish. It may be that this feeling of belonging to a mixed nationality deters them from making any inquiries as to what are the real sources of the Scotch- Irish blood. If the facts are ascertained, however, they will find that they have a race history than which no other nation or people can boast one more proud, whether it be English or German, Eoman or Castillian. Tlie Scotch-Irish are not, nor have they ever been, of Irish blood — using tlie latter word in its racial sense; but are purely Scottish. Their emi- grant ancestors in this country, to whom the name was first applied, were people of unmixed Scotch descent, who came to America from their Scottish communities in the Xorth of Ireland; and all the glor- ious history and ancestral traditions of their Scottish forefathers be- long to their descendants in Harrison county to-day, just as much as the history and ancestral traditions of the English belong to people of early New England stock. And, trul}', it is a noble heritage, and one that will not sufTer a whit by comparison with that of the English. It begins in the time of Agric- THE SCOTCH-IRISH 5 ola, the Eoman general, wlio, when he had conquered all the present territory of England, and carried his victorious banners north to the Grampian hills in Scotland, found there a foe who could effectually hinder his fiirther advance, and cause him for the first time to ac- knowledge that here was at last an unknown and unconquerable race beyond his own conquered ULTIMA THULE. It continues in the plundering forays and invasions of the Scots and Picts, who car- ried their dreaded arms from one end of the island to the other, im- checked; and, later, in the piratical incursions of the Vikings, who came Vvestward from their safe retreats within the ISTorwegian fiords, to fight, to plunder, to destroy, and eventually to settle, among the sea-girt islands and peninsulas of western Scotland. Its dark and bloody deeds are in- stanced by the tragic history of Macbeth; and its bright and chivalrous actions are shown by incidents like that of the Battle of Otterburn, so spiritedly set forth in the glowing pages of Froissart, who says of it, that "of all the battles that have been described in my history, great and small, this was the best fought, and the most severe." Scotland's early glory came in the days of William Wallace and Eobert Bruce, when its independence was won from the English by the sword; and continued through the two centuries following, because kept fresh by the blood of opposing Scots and English shed on more than two hundred battlefields. Its high ideal of freedom was realized first in the days of Knox and of Melville, when those men bid defiance to tyrants, and dared declare that rulers were amenable to law, and could be pimished by law; and was again vindicated in the days of their successors, the Scots clergy, who, "when the light grew dim, and flickered on the altar, . . . trimmed the lamp, and fed the sacred flame," and kept alive for themselves, for their children, and for all mankind, the precious heritage of human liberty. The Scotsman is of composite race. The forefathers of throe- fourths of the Scotch-Irish in Harrison county lived in the western Low- lands of Scotland, and their blood was of various strains, blended into what finally became that of the Scottish race. The basis of the race was the Romanized Briton (and from this line the Lowland Scot gets his Celtic blood, and not from Ireland), with more or less marked de- partures, occasioned by intermarriages, first with the Picts and Scots, tlien with the Angles, the Danes, and the Norsemen. From the last- named stock comes most of the Teutonic blood of the western Scot; while the Angles occupied and largely peopled the east coast. After (5 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY the eleventh century, tlie Xormans came into Scotland in large numbers, and occupied much of the land; so that many families can claim Norman descent. Long before the seventeenth century, when the emigration to Ireland began, the various race groups had become fused into one com- posite whole, having the attributes of the Celt, the Norse, the Angle, and the JSTorman; thus typifying many centuries ago the identical race which we are beginning to recognize here as the American — a combina- tion of the Teuton and the Celt. Let us hope the type may include all the virtues of both without the defects of either. The real history of the forefathers of that part of he American peo- ple who live in Harrison county, therefore — with a few individual ex- ceptions — is not to be found in the pages of the historians and writers of England; but of those of Scotland. Their lives and spirits have been not unworthily portrayed by the wizard hand of Scott, and their joys and sorrows have been divinely sung in the inspired notes of Burns. And it is in the heart-touching stories of MacLaren, and Barrie, and Steven- son, that we find the true prototypes and the doubles of ourselves and our friends in Harrison county. The history of Scotland as a country, and of Scottish men and insti- tutions, however, is as a sealed book to ninety-nine out of every hun- dred students in most of our high-schools and colleges; and it is partly because of the entire absence of any information to the contrary in the ordinary historical text-books, that the erroneous impression has gained ground in so many places outside of New England, that our Americaii colonies and American institutions are almost entirely of English origin. Now, to bring the matter nearer home to the readers of this history^ let us take a few of the family names that are so Avell known in Harrison county, and see how many of them are English, and how many are Scotch. In 1898, Mr. Orville Dewey contributed some interesting articles to the Cadiz Kepublican, giving an account of the early history of his own family, and from this we learn that the Deweys came from Connecticut. They were English, although there were many of the early Scotch-Irisli who settled in New England. The Hol_Ungsworths were originally Penn- sylvania Quakers, tracing back through the"l^orth of Ireland to England. The Browns were also English; likewise, the Scotts, Arnolds, Laceys, Hearns, Woods, and others. But the early representatives of nearly all of these families having intermarried with the Harrison county Scotch-Irish, their descendants living there to-day are more Scotch than English. Other originally English families from the North of Ireland may be mentioned, THE SCOTCH-IRISH 7 of whom were the Hammonds, the Phillipses, and the Haverfields; but their forefathers lived and intermarried amongst the Scotch for so long a time before coming to America that their descendants in Harrison county to-day can hardly be said to retain more than a trace of the English blood, or traits, or anything else English but the names. Tbe Cunningham family originated in the district of Cunningham, in Ayrshire; as did likewise the Carrick and Kyle families in the other two districts of that county. Other Ayrshire family names represented in Harrison county are those of Aiken, Ak'-inder, Allison, Anderson, Barclay, Blair, Boggs, Boyd, Caldwell, Cannon, Clark, Cochran, Collins, Coulter, Crawford^ Culbertson, Duulap, Ervin, Ferguson, Fullerton, Fulton, Hamilton, Hunter, Jackson, Jamison, Kennedy, Logan, McCready, Mitchell, Mont- gomery, Moore, Morrison, Patton, Porter, Rankin, Rea, Richey, Rogers, Simpson, Thompson, Vance, Wallace, Watson, Welch, Wiley, Wilson, and a great many more besides. The McFaddens are first mentioned in history in connection with their residence on the Island of Mull, off the coast of and belonging to Argyleshire. All the "Macs" living in Harrison county, it may be safely said, are of Scottish descent, and usually Celtic or Highland Scots. The prefix "■j\rac" (meaning "son of"), is of Celtic origin, and in early times it was rarelv found in connection with the names of the Lowland clans, except in the cases of McCulloch and McClellan, and a few other ancient Galloway families. Later in Scotland's history, however, the "Macs" were carried pretty much all over the country, and into Northern Ireland, as the clans continued to migrate and to intermarry with the Lowlanders. The name, McConnell, is corrupted from McDonald, or McDonnell, at one time the largest and most powerful of the Highland clans. From tlie counties of Wigtonshire and Kirkcudbrightshire (once forming the ancient principality of Galloway, and from Avhence come the Galloway cattle,) besides the McCullochs and the McClellans, come also the Agnews, Boyles', Douglasses, Carnahans, Carsons, Glendennings, Gor- dons, Hannas, Herrons, Kerrs, McCreas, McBrides, McMaths, Mc- Mychens, McMillans,^ Maxwells, Ramseys, Stewarts, and others. James Hogg, the " Ettrick Shepherd," and poet, was from Selkirk- shire, and the name also occurs in Porthsliire. From Fifeshire come the Bealls, the Hendersons, and also some of the Gillespie families. 8 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY From Dumbartonshire, just north of Ghisgow, come the Calhouns and the Macfarlands. From Elginshire come the Birnies. From Inverness, in the Highlands, come the McBeans, McKinleys, and Finlays, (all septs of the once powerful Clan Chattan, of whom the chiefs were Mclntoshes and McPhersons) ; also the Davidsons and Grants. From Lanarkshire, the Biggars. From Forfarshire, the Lyons and the Ogilvios. From Stirlingshire, the Buchanans, Forsythes, and Pattersons. From Edinburghshire, the Craigs, Kerrs, Gilmores, Eamseys, and Waddells. From Sutherland, in the northern Highlands, the McKays, McCoys, McKees, etc., many of whom are also found in Galloway. From Dumfriesshire, south of Glasgow, the Carothers', Elliotts, Dicksons (and, possibl}^, also the Dickersons), the Johnstons, and the Kirkpatricks. From Caithness, the most northern county of Scotland, the McEaes (and, possibly, also the Eaes, Eeas, or Eays, although many of this name lived in Galloway and Ayrshire). From ]lenfrewshire, the Knoxes. Nearly all the Scotch who settled in the North of Ireland at the time of the first plantation of Ulster (1G06 to 1G35), came from the western Lowland counties of Scotland, lying on the opposite coast and less than thirty miles distant from county Down. The greater part of them came from iiyrshire and Galloway, and those two districts in Scotland were the nesting-places of the early Scottish ancestors of the majority of the people living in Harrison county to-day. The scene of Scott's " Guy Mannering " is laid in Wigtonshire (the western half of Galloway), as is also that of much of S. E. Crockett's " Galloway Herd." All readers of Burns, and of Stevenson's "Master of Ballantrae," are familiar with Ayrshire. The places and people of these districts are also well known to those who have read of the persecutions and sufferings of the early Scot- tish Covenanters. The story of the Scottish emigration to Ulster may be outlined in a few paragraphs. It begins near the close of the year 1603, when Con Mc- Neale O'Neale, of Castlereagh, got into serious trouble, by reason of not having his Avine-casks full at the time when he had invited some of his rel- atives to have a "wee drop" with him. Con ruled the Upper Clannaboye, the north half of County Down; and happened to be holding high state in THE SCOTCH-IRISH 9 his hallp of Castlerefigh with his brothers, and cousins, and relatives of near dcijree. Thej were all "proper" men — to nse a Celtic term of re- spect — and quite naturally drank Con's cellar dry; whereupon he des- jiat^iitd retainers to Belfast, two miles distant, for a fresh supply of wine. There his servants had a quarrel with certain soldiers of Queen Eliza- beth, who were stationed at Belfast Castle, and they came hack to their master without the "drink." This naturally roused Con to fury, and he tbreatei ed dire vengeance on his clansmen if they did not return to the fight, punish the English, and recover the wine. The second encounter proved more serious than the first; an English soldier was killed, and the Irish Government took the matter up. Con was charged with "levy- ing war against the Queen," and thrown into the Castle as a prisoner, from whence he seemed likely to escape only by the loss of his head. In this extremity, Con's wife appealed for help to Hugh Montgomery, Laird of I'.raidstane, in Ayrshire, whose home lay on the Scottish coast, across the Irish channel. Montgomery, for a "consideration," agreed to help Con to escape; and to that purpose immediately sent his relative, Thomas Montgomery of Blackston, who was the owner of a trading-sloop, to Car- rickfergus Castle. Arriving there, the canny Thomas, without loss of time, proceeded to make love to the keeper's daughter; and to such good effect, that having been admitted to the Castle, he contrived to get the prison-guard to drink a very large quantity of what was possibly some of the same wine over which the fight had arisen. Con was then fur- nished with a rope, by which he let himself out of a window, found Thomas Jlontgomery's sloop waiting for him in the Lough, and was across to Braidstane and safety Avithin a few hours. Here, C021 entered into an agreement with Hugh Montgomery, by which he agreed to cede to him half his lands in Clannaboye (the proportion afterwards being increased to two-thirds), on condition that the latter should pro- cure him a free pardon from King James for all his offences, and get Con admitted to the King's presence, and allowed to kiss the King's hand. Through the assistance of Mr. James Plamilton, an influential courtier, this pardon was later obtained, and Con admitted to His Majesty's pres- ence; and two-thirds of Con's estates were in due time confirmed to Ham- ilton (who also required a "consideration") and Montgomery by the Crown. As soon as the patents were issued by the Irish Council, Con's benefi- ciaries crossed into Scotland again, to call upon their whole kith and kin 10 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY to aid them in the plantation of their estates, it having heen a condition imposed by the King, in confirming the grant, that the lands were to be ^■planted" with English and Scottish colonists; and to be granted only to those of English and Scottish blood, "and not to any of the mere Irish." To Hamilton fell the western portion of Xorth Down, to Montgomery, the eastern; and both seem to have added to their estates, as Con O'Neale was forced to sell the third which he had reserved for himself. Both were Ayrshire men, and both from the northern division of the county. Hamilton was of the Hamilton family of Dunlop; and Montgomery was from near Beith. The former founded the towns of Bangor and Killy- leagh, and raised churches in each of the six parishes embraced in his estate — Bangor, Killinchy, Holywood, Ballyhalbert, Dundonald, and Killyleagh. Montgomery's estate embraced the country around Newton and Donaghadee known as the Great Ards. He belonged to a family having numerous connections throughout North Aj^rshire and Eenfrew- shire, and to them he turned for assistance. His principal supporters were his kinsmen, Thomas Montgomery, his brother-in-law, John Shaw, son of the laird of Wester Greenock, and Colonel David Boyd, of the noble house of Kilmarnock. With their help he seems to have persuaded many others of high and low degree to join in trying their fortunes in Ireland, among them being the Montgomeries, Calderwoods, Agnews, Adairs, Cunninghams, Shaws, Muirs, Maxwells, Boyles, Harvies, and many others with good west-country surnames. The siiccess of this settlement made by Hamilton and Montgomery was immediate; for four years after the foundation of the colony — in IGIO — Montgomery alone was able to bring before "the King's muster- master a thousand able lighting men to serve, when out of them a militia should be raised." Four years after this time, in a letter written from North Down by the Earl of xVbercorn to John Murray, King James's secretary of state, he says, in referring to the same colonists : "They have above 2,000 habile Scottis men well armit heir, rady for his Majestie's service as thai sail be commandit." This muster of 2,000 men able to bear arms, represented an emigration of at least 10,000 persons. Meantime, across the river Lagan, in county Antrim, a plantation had been made by Sir Arthur Chichester, then Lord Deputy of Ireland. This, though not at first peculiarly Scottish, was soon to become so. In 1603, Chichester obtained a grant of the Castle of Belfast, and around this fortress a village soon sprang up. The Commissioners' Survey, taken in the 5^ear IGII, reports that "the town of Belfast is plotted out THE SCOTCH-IRISH 11 in a good forme, wherein are many famelyes of English, Scotch, and some IManksmen already inhabitinge, and ane inn with very good lodging." The Settlement Commissioners passed along the north shore of Belfast Lough, finding everywhere houses springing up, and in every part of the Lord Deputy's lauds, "many English famelies, some Scottes, and dyvers cyvill Irish planted." While South Antrim was thus "planted," mainly by English settlers, the northern half of the county was opened up for settlement, without the violent transference of land from Irish to Briton, which was carried out in other parts of Ulster. The northeast corner of Ireland had been long held by the MacDonnells (the Highland pronuncia- tion of this name is MacConnell), a clan which also peopled the island of Jura, and Cantyre on the mainland of Scotland. The chief of these Scoto-Irishmen, Eandall MacDonnell, after the Earl of Tyrone's rebel- lion, resolved to throw in his lot with the Government, and turn loyal subject. This he did, aud as reward received a grant of the northern half of county Antrim, from Ijarne to Portrush, and the honor of knighthood. He set himself to the improvement of his lands, letting out to the natives on the coast, and also to the Scottish settlers, such arable portions of his lands as had been depopulated by the war, for terms vary- ing from twenty-one to 301 years. These leases seem to have been largely taken advantage of by the Scottish settlers,who allowed the natives to keep the "Glynnes," or Glens, and themselves took possession of the rich land along the river Bann, from Lough Neagh to the town of Coleraine, near its mouth. Thus, in time, county Antrim, from north to south, became nearly as Scottish as the portion of county Down lying north of the Ifourne mountains. The plantations in counties Down and Antrim, however, were limited in scope in comparison with the "Great Plantation in Ulster," for which James I.'s reign will be forever remembered in Ireland. About the year 1607, O'lS^eill, Earl of Tyrone, and MacDonnell, Earl of Tyrconnel, with a number of the lesser Irish chiefs, having rebelled against the King and been proclaimed traitors, their lands were confis- cated by the Crown; and all of northern Ireland — Londonderry, Donegal, Tyrone, Cavan, Armagh, and Eermanagh — passed into the hands of the King. The plan adopted by James for the colonization of these six "es- cheated" counties, was to take possession of the finest portions of this great tract of country (amounting in all to nearly four millions of acres); to divide it into small estates, none larger than two thousand acres; and 12 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY to grant these to men of known wealth and substance. Those who ac- cepted grants were bound to live on their lands themselves, to bring with them Endish and Scottish settlers, and to build for themselves and for their tenants fortified places for defence, houses to live in, and churches in which to worship. The native Irish were assigned to the poorer lands and less accessible districts; while the allotments to the English and Scots were kept together, so that they might form communities, and not mix or intermarry with the Irish. The purpose was not only to transfer the ownership of the land from Irish to Briton, but to introduce a British population in place of an Irish one. James seems to have seen that the parts of Scotland nearest Ireland, and which had most intercourse with it, were most likely to yield proper colonists. He resolved, therefore, to enlist the assistance of the great families of the southwest, trusting that their feudal power would enable them to bring with them bodies of colonists. Thus, grants were made to Ludovick Stewart, Duke of Lennox, who had great power in Dumbarton- shire; to James Hamilton, Earl of Abercorn, and his brothers, who rep- resented the power of the Hamiltons in Eenfrewshire. North Ayrshire had been already largely drawn on by Hamilton and Montgomery, but one of the sons of Lord Kilmarnock, Sir Thomas Boyd, received a grant; while from South Ayrshire came the Cunninghams and Crawfords, and Andrew Stewart (Lord Ochiltree) and his son. But it was on Galloway men that the greatest grants were bestowed. Almost all the great houses of the time are represented — Sir Robert MacLellan, Laird Bomby, as he is called, who afterwards became Lord Kirkcudbright; John Murray of Broughton, one of the secretaries of state; Vans (Vance) of Barnbarroch; Sir Patrick McKie of Laerg; Dunbar of Mochrum; one of the Stewarts of Garlics, from whom .Newtown Stewart takes its name. With the re- cipient of 2,000 acres, the agreement was that he Avas to bring ''forty- eiffht able men of the age of eighteen or upwards, being born in England or the inward [i. e., southern] parts of Scotland." The progress of the colonies in the different counties is very accurately described in a series of reports by Government inspectors, at various periods between the 3'ears 1610 to 1620, and in the letters of Chichester himself, which are to be found in the Calendar of State Papers for Ireland, and in the Carew Papers (both published by the British Government). The most interesting of these reports are those regarding "under- takers" (as the grantees were called), who took possession in the year 1610, made up their minds to remain and to thrive in Ulster, and who THE SCOTCH-IRISH 13 founded families whose names were afterwards to be well known in Ire- land. In Donegal, on Lough Swilly, will be found on the map the names of two villages, ]\Ianor Cunningham and Kewtown Cunningham. The men who introduced so Scottish a name into so Irish a county are thus noticed in the report of 1611: "Sir James Cunningham, Knight, Laird Glangarnoth, 2,000 acres, took possession, but returned into Scotland. Three families of British residents preparing to build . . . John Cunningham of Cranfield, 1,000 acres, resident with one family of Brit- ish . . . Cuthbert Cunningham, 1,000 acres, resident with two fam- ilies of British ; built an Irish house of copies, and prepared materials to re-edify the Castle of Coole-McEtreen." In county Tyrone, "The Earl of Abercorn, chief undertaker in the precinct in the county of Tyrone, has taken possession, resident with lady and family, and built for the present near the town of Strabane some large timber houses . . . His followers and tenants have since May last built twenty-eight houses of fair copies, and before May by his tenants, who are all Scottish men, the number of thirty-two houses of like goodness." "The Lo. Uchelrie [Lord Ochiltree] 3,000 acres in the county of Tyrone, being stayed by con- trary winds in Scotland, arrived in Ireland at the time of our being in Ar- magh, upon our retiirn home, accompanied with thirty-two followers, gent, of sort, a minister, some tenants, freeholders, and artificers." In 1618, the Irish Government instructed Captain Nicholas Pynnar to inspect every allotment in the six "escheated" counties, and to report on each one, whether held by "natives" or "foreign pknters." Pynnar's report (published in the Irish State Papers), presents a very exact pic- lure of what had been done by the settlers in the counties inspected — • Londonderry, Donegal, Tyrone, Armagh, Cavan, and Fermanagh. He states that, " there are upon occasion 8,000 men of British birth and de- scent for defence, though a fourth part of the lands is not fully inhab- ited." Of these, fully three-fourths must have been Scots; and if there be added the great colonies in Down and Antrim, there must have been an immigration from Scotland of between 30,000 and 40,000 in these ten years. The only county in which the Scottish settlers failed to take firm root was Fermanagh, for there, in 1618, when Pynnar reported, a large number of the Scottish proportions had been sold, and were held by Eng- lishmen. The result is seen in the small number of Presbyterians in com- parison to Episcopalians to be found at the present day in county Fer- managh. 14 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY ■ The most exact account of the emigration to TTlster is contained in a hook of travels in Scotland and Irelanrl, hy Sir William Brereton, of Cheshire, England. He states that he came to Irvine, in AATshire, on July 1st, 1635^ and was hospitably entertained hy Mr. James Blair, and that his host informed him that "above ten thousand persons have witliin two years last past left this country wherein they lived, which was be- twixt Aberdine and Enuerness [Inverness], and are gone for Ireland; they have come hy one hundred in company through this town, and three hun- dred have gone hence together, shipped for Ireland at one tide. None of them can give a reason why they leave the country; only some of them who make a better use of God's hand upon them have acknowledged to mine host in these words, 'that it was a just judgment of God to spew them out of the land for their unthankf ulness.' One of them I met withal and discoursed with at large, who could give no good reason, but pre- tended the landlords increasing their rents; but their swarming in Ire- land is so much taken notice of and disliked, as that the Deputy has sent out a warrant to stay the landing of any of these Scotch that come with- out a certification." The closing sentence of the foregoing extract gives us a brief and characteristic description of Scottish motives and methods in the colon- ization and settlement of a new country, that^ma^ well..be applied to every one of their successive migrations, or "swarmings," from that day to this. It was the spirit of unrest, the thirst for adventure, and, chiefly, the de- sire to better their worldly condition, that led them into the Land of Promise in that day, and at numerous periods since. They came without regard to the jealous forebodings of the governing few, already on the ground, who feared they themselves would be outnumbered by thp strangers; they likewise paid no regard to the official restrictions by which the rulers of Ireland at that time, and the Councils of American colonies a century later, sought to prevent their entry. The emigration from Ireland to America of the grandchildren and great-grandchildren of these Scottish colonists of the sixteenth century began soon after 1700; and for more than three-quarters of a century af- terwards, Ulster poured into America a continuous stream, sometimes reaching the dimensions of a flood, of people of Scottish birth or de- scent. In 1718, several hundred of them came together from the Yalley of the Bann, south of the town of Coleraine, in county Londonderry, landing at Boston. Here, they were not permitted by the Puritans to re- main, but Averc obliged to go out to the frontiers, forming colonies along THE SCOTCH-IRISH 15 the coast of Ifaiiie, at Lonrlonrlorry, in New Hampshire, and at Worces- ter, in Massachusetts. In the latter place, they huilt a cliurch, and con- templated having Presbyterian services, after the manner of their fathers; but the bigoted Puritans, then in the majority, tore down the building in the night; forced them to abandon the project, and taxed them to support their own State Church. Many of these settlers were thus obliged to move further out towards the frontier, where they founded the towns of Pelham and Coleraine, in Massachusetts. A great many Scotch and Scotch-Irish also emigrated to JSTew York, to New Jerse}^ and to Maryland, Virginia, and the Carolinas. But it was to Pennsylvania, the Quaker Colony, that the great bulk of the Ulster mi- gration came. They began to reach there before 1710; and before 1720, thousands had come into the colony by way of Newcastle, Del. (then included in Pennsylvania). At first, they generally settled near the dis- puted Maryland boundary line. Before 1730, they had occupied much of the lower lands in the townships of East and West Nottingham, Cecil county, ]\Iaryland, and Mill Creek and White Clay Creek in Newcastle county, Delaware, In Pennsylvania they settled in the townships of Lon- don Britain, New Loudon, Londonderry, London Grove, East and West Nottingham, Upper and Lower Oxford, East and West Fallowfield, Sads- bury, East and West Cain, and the newer townships between, in Chester county; Little Britain, Colerain, Bart, Sadsbury, Salisbury, Drumore. Martic, and Donegal in Lancaster county ; and Derry, Paxtang, and Han- over, in Dauphin county. They had also gone into Bucks county in laro-e numbers, settling in Warwick and Warminster townships, along Nesham- iny creek; and in Northampton county, in Allen and Hanover town- ships. James Logan, then secretary of the province, and himself a Scotch- Irish Quaker, writing of them to the Penns in 1724, states that they had generally taken up the southern lands (towards the Maryland line), and as they rarely approached him Avith proposals of purchase, he calls them "bold and indigent strangers, saying as their excuse, when challenged for titles, that we had solicited for colonists and they had come accord- ingly." They were, however, understood to be a tolerated class, exempt from quit-rents by an ordinance of 1720, in consideration of their being a frontier people, and forming a cordon of defence about the non-fight- ing Quakers. They thus served to protect them, if need be — and the ne- cessity often arose — from the murderous incursions of the Indians, and IG HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY from Maryland and Virginia invaders who claimed part of the land as within the bounds of their own colonies. In 1729, Logan expresses himself as pleased to find that Parliament is about to take measures to prevent the too free emigration from Ulster to America. "It looks/' he writes, "as if Ireland is to send all its in- habitants hither, for last week not less than six ships arrived, and every day, two or three arrive also. The common fear is that if they thus con- tinue to come they will make themselves proprietors of the Province. It is strange that they thus crowd where they are not wanted. . . The In- dians themselves are alarmed at the swarms of strangers, and we are afraid of a breach between them — for the [Scotch-] Irish are very rough to them." In 1730, he writes and complains of the Irish as hav- ing in an "audacious and disorderly manner" possessed themselves about that time of the whole of Conestoga Manor, a tract of about 15,000 acres, which had been reserved by the Penns for themselves, as it contained some of the best land in the Province. In taking this land by force, he says, the}'' alleged that "it was against the laws of God and nature, that so much land should be idle while so many Christians wanted it to labor on, and to raise their bread." This same spirit on the part of the Scotch- Irish led them in after years (1745-50) to settle in the Tuscarora and Path Valleys, where their cabins were burned by the provincial authorities, and later (17G3-8), along Eedstone creek in what is now Fayette county, where they were warned off by the Quaker Assembly, "under pain of death;" and later still (1779 and 178-1-7) along and near Short creek, in what is now the territory of Jefferson, Belmont, and Harrison counties, Ohio, where they were repeatedly driven off by United States troops, their cabins burned, and their improvements destroyed; but to which lo- calities they as persistently returned and rebuilt, and remained on the land, improving it, until the Territory was thrown open for settlement. In another letter written by Logan, about the same time (1730), he says : "I must own, from my own experience in the land-office, tliat the settlement of five families from Ireland gives me more trouble than fifty of any other people. Before we were broke in upon, ancient Friends and first settlers lived happily; but now the case is quite altered." Logan's successor, Eichard Peters, had a somewhat similar experience with the Scotch-Irish emigrants of his day. In a letter written by him in 1743, he states that he went to the Manor of Maske, to warn off and dispossess the squatter settlers. This was another choice tract of upwards of 40,000 acres, located in the wilderness by the Penns as a THE SCOTCH-IRISH 17 reservation, lying on both sides of Marsh creek, then in Lancaster, now in Adams county, being the site of Gettysburg, and including the bottom lands southward to the Maryland line. On that occasion, the people who were settled there, to the number of about seventy, as- sembled and forbade Penn's surveyors to proceed. On the latter persist- ing, the settlers broke the surveyors' chain, and compelled them to retire. Peters had with him at the time a sheriff and a magistrate; and many of the settlers were afterwards indicted ; but a compromise was effected, by which the squatters were permitted to lease and purchase the Penn titles for a comparatively insignificant consideration; and they were left in possession. The reasons for the emigration of the Scotch from Ulster to Amer- ica are in part the same as those given to Brereton by the emigrant from Scotland to Ireland in 1635, which are noted above. But there was another and more cogent reason in addition. In Ireland, notwithstand- ing the fact that they had saved that country to Protestantism and to the Crown in the revolution of 1688, the Scots were grievously and un- justly discriminated against in the matter of their religion, which was, of course, generally of the Presbyterian form. These discriminations took the form of certain enactments by the Bishop's party in the Irish Parliament (which was then entirely ruled by the ecclesiastics of the Episcopal or State Church). These enactments deprived Presbyterians of the right to hold office in Ireland, required them to pay tithes in sup- port of the Episcopal clergy, prohibited marriages from being performed by any but a Bishop-ordained priest, eitlicr of the Roman or Episcopal Church; and annulled marriages theretofore performed by Presbyterian ministers, declaring illegitimate the children of such marriages. Adding to these the economic causes arising from a discriminating tariff levied against Irish woollens and linens, in favor of the English manufacturers, and the raising of rents by the landlords, to whom a great majority of the Ulster Scotch-Irish were but tenants, and we have a sufBcient explana- tion of the reasons for the exodus which took place from Ireland to Am- erica during the eighteenth century. Archbishop Boulter, Primate of Ireland, writing to the Bishop of London in 1728 concerning the emigra- tion to America, says; Dublin, March 13, 1728. My Lord — As we have had reports here that the Irish gentlemen in London would have the great burthen of tithes thought one of the 18 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY chief grievances that occasion such nnmbers of the people of the north going to America, I have for some time designed to write to your lordship on that subject. But a memorial lately delivered in here by the Dissenting ministers of this place, containing the causes of this desertion, as represented to them by the letters of their brethren in the north, (which memorial we have lately sent over to my lord lieutenant), mentioning the oppression of the ecclesiastical courts about tithes as one of their great grievances. I found myself under a necessity of troubling your lordship on this occa- sion with a true state of that affair, and of desiring your lordship to dis- course with the ministry about it. The gentlemen of this country have, ever since I came hither, been talking to others, and persuading their tenants, who complained of the excessiveness of their rents, that it w^as not the paying too much rent, but too much tithes that impoverished them; and the notion soon took among the Scotch Presbyterians, as a great part of the Protestants in the north are, who it may easily be supposed do not pay tithes with great cheerfulness. And indeed I make no doubt but the landlords in England mi2;ht with great ease raise a cry amongst their tenants of the great op- pression they lay under by paying tithes. What tlie gentlemen want to be at is, that they may go on raising their rents, and that the clergy should still receive their old payments for their tithes. But as things have happened otherwise, and they are very angry with the clergy, without considering that it could not happen otherwise than it has, since if a clergyman saw a farm raised in its rent, e. g., from 10 to 20 1. per annum, he might be sure his tithe was certainly worth double what he formerly took for it. Xot that I believe the clergy have made a proportionable advancement in their composition for their tithes to Avhat the gentlemen have made in their rents. And yet it is upon this rise of the value of the tithes that they would persuade the people to throw their distress. In a conference I had with the Dissenting ministers here some weeks ago, they mentioned the raising the value of the tithes beyond what had been formerly paid, that a proof that the people were oppressed in the article of tithes. To which I told them, that the value of tithes did not prove any oppression, except it were proved that that value was greater than theV were really worth, and that even then, the farmer had his remedy by letting the clergy take it in kind. And there is the less in this argument, because the fact is, that about the years 1694 and 1695, the lands here were almost waste and un- settled, and the clergy in the last distress for tenants for their tithes, when great numbersof them were glad to let their tithes at a very low value, and that during incumbency, for few would take them on other terms; and as the country lias since settled and improved, as those incum- bents have dropped off, "the tithe of those parties has been considerably advanced without the least oppression, but I believe your lordship will THE SCOTCH-IRISH 19 think not without some grnmhling. The same, no doubt, has happened where there have been careless or needy incumbents, and others of a dif- ferent character that have succeeded them. I need not mention to your lordship that I have been forced to talk to several here, that if a landlord takes too great a portion of the profits of a farm for his share by way of rent (as the tithe will light on the ten- ant's share), the tenant will be impoverished; but then it is not the tithe but the increased rent that nndoes the farmer. And indeed, in this coun- try, where I fear the tenant hardly ever has more than one-third of the profit he makes of his farm for his share, and too often but a fourth or perhaps a fifth part, as the tenant's share is charged with the tithe, his case is no doubt hard, but it is plain from what side the hardship arises. Another thing they complain of in their memorial is, the trouble that has been given them about their marriages and their school-masters. As to this I told them, that for some time they had not been molested about their marriages; and that aa to their school-masters, I was sure they had met with very little trouble on that head, since I had never heard any such grievance so much as mentioned till I saw it in their memorial. Another matter complained of is, the sacramental test, in relation to which I told them the laws were the same in England. As for other grievances they mention, such as raising the rents un- reasonably, the oppression of justices of the peace, seneschals, and other officers in the country, as they are of no ways of an ecclesiastical nature, I shall not trouble your lordship with an account of them, but must desire your lordship to talk with the ministry on the subject I have now wrote about, and endeavor to prevent their being prepossessed with an unjust opinion of the clergy, or being disposed, if any attempt should be made from hence, to suffer us to be stript of our just rights. The spirit of emigration — fostered no doubt by the accounts sent home by their countrymen who had preceded them — seized these people to such an extent that it threatened almjst a total depopulation. Such multitudes of husbandmen, laborers, and manufacturers flocked to the other side of the Atlantic, that the landlords began to be alarmed, and to present ways and means for preventing the growing evil. Scarce a ship sailed for the colonies that was not crowded with men, women, and children. It is stated by Proud, in his history of Pennsylvania, that by the year 1729, six thousand Scotch-Irish had come to that colony, and that before the middle of the century, nearly twelve thousand arrived annually for several years. In September, 173G, alone, one thousand fam- ilies sailed from Belfast, on account of the difficulty of renewing their leases. 20 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY The first extensive emigration took place from about the year 1718 to the middle of the century. A second emigration occurred from about 1771 to 1773, although there was a continuous current westward between these two periods. The cause of this second emigration was somewhat similar to the first. It is well known that a greater portion of the lands in Ireland are owned by a comparatively small number of proprietors, who rent them to the farming classes on long leases. In 1771, the leases on the estate of the Marquis of Donegal having expired, the rents were so largely ad- vanced that many of the tenants could not comply with the demands, and were deprived of the farms they had occupied. This roused a spirit of resentment to the oppression of the large landed proprietors, and an immediate and extensive emigration to America was the result. From 1771 to 1773, there sailed from the ports in the north of Ireland, nearly one hundred vessels, carrying upwards of 25,000 passengers, nearly all of whom were Presbyterians. This was shortly before the breaking out of the Eevolutionary War, and, as has been often remarked, these people, leaving the old world in such a temper, became a powerful contribution to the cause of liberty, and to the Independence of the colonies. The Scotch-Irish emigrants landed principally at Newcastle and Philadelphia, and thence found their way northward and westward into the eastern and middle counties of Pennsylvania. From thence, one stream followed the Cumberland and Virginia valleys into Virginia and North and South Carolina, and from these colonies, passed on into and settled Tennessee and Kentucky. Anether powerful body went into western Pennsylvania, and settling on the head waters of the Ohio, be- came famous, both in civil and ecclesiastical history. The Pennsylvania Scotch-Irish began to settle west of the Blue Ridge mountains before 1750, where up to that time the Indians held undisputed sway. Fear of an Indian outbreak led the Penns in that year to send the justices of Cumberland county over the mountains into the Tuscarora, Aughwick, and Path Valleys, where the settlers were dis- possessed, their cabins burned, and their bonds taken that they should return to the older settlements. Some of them did return for a brief period, but soon went back, while others hid themselves away in the woods, and after the justices had departed, built themselves new cabins, and continued to improve their "claims." Before 1760, small settlements were made by members of this hardy and adventurous race aroimd the the military posts of Forts Bedford, Eedstone, and Ligonier; and in 1768, THE SCOTCH-IRISH 21 Rev. John Steel and others were sent by the Provincial authorities to warn off the settlers at Eedstone (in Fayette county) and Turkey Foot (in Somerset county). In 1769, however, the land having been ceded by the Indians, all of southwestern Pennsylvania was thrown open to settle- ment, and within the next ten years more than 25,000 people were living in the territory now comprising the counties of Westmoreland, Allegheny. Fayette, and Washington. In 1790, the population of these four counties amounted to upwards of 63,000, Washington county alone containing nearly 24,000 inhabitants. In his "Introductory Memoir to the Journal of Braddock's Expe- dition," Winthrop Sargent gives an estimate of the character of the Scotch-Irish, which, although properly objected to by some as exagger- ated, is not an unfavorable description of many of the early pioneers of Pennsylvania : They were a hardy, brave, hot-headed race, excitable in temper, un- restrainable in passion, invincible in prejudice. Their hand opened as impetuously to a friend as it clinched against an enem^^ Thev loathed the Pope as sincerely as they venerated Calvin and Knox; and" they did not particularly respect the Quakers. If often rude and lawless it was partly the fault of their position. They hated the Indian while they des- pised him, and it does not seem, in their dealings with this race, as thouo'h there were any sentiments of honor or magnanimity in their bosoms that could hold way against the furious tide of passionate, blind resentment. Impatient of restraint, rebellious against everything that in their eves bore the semblance of injustice, we find these men readiest amono- the ready on the battle-fields of the Revolution. If they had faults, a lack of patriotism or of courage was not among the number. 22 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY CHAPTEE 11. THE FRIENDS, OR QUAKERS, IN HARRISON COUNTY. The founder of the society of Friends was George Fox, who was born at Drayton in the Clay, in Liecestershire, England, in July, 1624. His father was a Puritan weaver, and the son, originally intended for the church, was apprenticed to a shoemaker and dealer in wool. "In 1643," he says, "I left my relations, and broke ofE all familiarity with young or old." For the next few years, he was in spiritual darkness, and groped after the light. He dates the beginning of his Society from Liecester- shire, in 1644. The course of Quakerism was at first toward the north of England. It appeared in Warwickshire in 1645; in Nottinghamshire in 1646; in Derby in 1647; in the adjacent counties in 1648, 1649, and 1650. It reached Yorkshire in 1651; Lancaster and Westmoreland, 1653; Cum- berland, Durham, and IM orthumberland, 1653; London, and most other parts of England, Scotland, and Ireland, in 1654. In 1655, Friends went beyond sea, 'Svhere truth also spruug up," and in 1656 "it broke forth in America, and many other places." (Fox's Journal, IL, 442.) The Society of Friends was not organized by the establishment of meetings to insj)ect the affairs of the church until some years after Fox began preaching, and then a prominent part of the business of these meetings was to aid those Friends who were in prison, for persecution followed hard upon their increase in numbers. In 1661, 500 were in prison in London alone; there were 4,000 in jail in all England; and the Act of Indulgence liberated 1,200 Quakers in 1673. But Quakerism flourished under persecution. Tliey showed a firmness which has been seen nowhere else in the annals of religious history. Other Dissenters might temporize, plot against the Government, or hold meetings in THE FRIENDS, OR QUAKERS 23 secret; the Quakers, never. They scorned these things. They received the brutal violence of the Government in meekness ; they met openly, and in defiance of its orders; they wearied it by their very persistence. Nevertheless, the simplicity, the earnestness, the devotion, and the prac- tical nature of this system of theology, when contrasted with the dry husk of Episcopacy, and the jangling creeds of the Dissenters, won them adlierents by the thousands. They came mostly from the lower ranks of society, but from all sects. Quakerism is distinctively the creed of the seventeenth century. Seekers were in revolt against the established order. It gave these seekers what they were looking for. In theology, it was un-Puritan; but in cultus, modes, and forms, it was more than Puritan. The Quaker was the Puritan of the Puritans. He was an extremist, and this brought him into conflict with the establislied order. He believed that Quaker- ism was primitive Christianity revived. He recognized no distinction l)etween the clergy and the laity; he refused to swear, for Christ had said, swear not at all ; he refused to fight, for the religion of Christ is a religion of love, not of war; he would pay no tithes, for Christ had said, ye have freely received, freely give; he called no man master, for he thought the terms, Eabbi, Your Holiness, and Eight Eeverend con- noted the same idea. He rejected the dogmas of water baptism and the Puritan Sabbath, and in addition to these, claimed that inspiration is not limited to the writers of the Old and 'New Testaments, but is the gift of Jehovah to all men who will accept it, and to interpret the Scriptures, men must be guided l)y the Spirit that guided its authors. Here was the cardinal doctrine of their creed, and the point where they differed radi- cally from other Dissenters. Add to this the doctrine of the Inner Light, the heavenly guide given directly to inform or illuminate the in- dividual conscience, and we have the corner-stones of their system. In July, 1656, Ann Austin and Mary Fisher, the vanguard of a Quaker army, appeared in Boston from Barbadoes. They were the first Quakers to arrive in America. They were imprisoned and shipped back. In October of the same year, a law was passed, which provided a fine for the shipmaster wlio knowingly brought in Quakers, and obliged him to carry them out again. The Quaker was to be whipped, and committed to the house of correction. Any person importing books, "or writings concerning their devilish opinions," or defending their "heretical opinions," was to be fined, and, for the tliird offense, banished. ISTor was any person to revile the magistrates and ministry, "as is usual with the 24 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Quakers." The law of October, 1657, imposed a fine for entertaining a Quaker. If a Quaker returned after being sent away once, he was to lose one ear; if he returned the second time, the other ear; and the third offense was punished b}' boring the tongue. The law of October, 1658, bauished both resident and foreign Quakers, under pain of death. In Massachusetts, Quakers had their ears cut off; they were branded; they were tied to the cart-tail and whipped through the streets; women were shamefully exposed to public gaze; and in 1659-60, three men and one woman were hanged on Boston Common. Such was the welcome of the first Quakers to American soil. Pennsylvania, the Quaker Colony, was founded by William Penn, in 1681, under a patent granted by Charles II. on March 4th of that year. The first colouy left England in August, 1681, in three ships, the Johu and Sarah, from London, the Amity, from London, and the Factor, from Bristol. The John and Sarah is said to have landed first; the Amity was carried by a gale to the West Indies; and the Factor, having pro- ceeded up the Delaware as far as the present town of Chester, was, on December 11th, frozen up in the channel, and its passengers obliged to pass the winter there. William Penn had sent his cousin, Captain William Markham, with the colonists, as deputy governor, and did not emigrate himself until the month of August, 1G82, when he embarked on the Welcome. After a passage of some two months, during which smallpox broke out among the emigrants, and carried off one-third of their num- ber, Penn and his fellow colonists landed at Newcastle, Del., on October 27th. Of the history of Penn's colony, and of the Quaker government during the next ninety-three years, and until it was finally overthrown in 1776 by the Revolutionary Scotch-Irish, it is not necessary here to speak. Much of this is familiar history to every school-boy. But the influence of tke Quakers in the settlement and growth of the states south of Pennsyl- sylvania, has never been sufiiciently recognized; and as it was from these states that most of the Quaker emigrants to Harrison and adjoin- ino- counties came, it will be appropriate to inquire into the history of the Quaker in the South. "They appeared in Virginia," says Dr. Stephen B. Weeks (from whose work on Southern Quakers and Slavery much of this sketch is condensed), "soon after their organization; they were in the Carolinas almost with the first settlers; they were considera- ble in number and substance; they were well-behaved and law-abiding; they maintained friendly relations with the Indians; they were indus- trious and friifrnl; they were zealous missionaries; and through their THE FRIENDS, OR QUAKERS 25 earnest and faithful preaching became, toward the close of the seven- teenth century, the largest and only organized body of Dissenters in these colonies. "They have always been zealous supporters of religious freedom. They bore witness to their faith under bodily persecution in Virginia; under disfranchisement and tithes in the Carolinas and Georgia. By reason of their organization and numbers, they were bold and aggressive in North Carolina, in the struggle against the Established Church. They took the lead in tliis struggle for religious freedom in the first half of the eighteenth century, as the Presbyterians did in the latter half. They continued an important element in the life of these states until about 1800, when their protest against slavery took the form of migra- tion. They left their old homes in the South by thousands, and removed to the free aSTorthwest, particularly Ohio and Indiana. These emigrant'^ composed the middle and lower ranks of society, who had few or no slaves, and who could not come into economic competition with slavery. They were accompanied by many who were not Quakers, but who were driven to emigration by the same economic cause, and so great was this emigration that in 1850, one-third of the population of Indiana is said to have been made up of native North Carolinians and their children. "Soon after 1800, Quakers disappeared entirely from the political and religious life of South Carolina and Georgia. They now number only a few hundred in Virginia. They are now relatively less important in North Carolina than in colonial days, but are still an important factor in the making of that state." Under the Ordinance of 1787, passed by Congress for the govern- ment of the Northwest Territory, neither slavery nor involuntary servi- tude, except for crime, was to be allowed in any part of this territory; and with a legal guarantee in the organic law of the territory, it became a fit home for men who found themselves driven to migration by the institu- tion of slavery in the South. When we come to study these Quaker migrations in detail, there is little to differentiate those of one state from those of another. They went in substantially the same way, but owing to difference in location, pursued different routes. At first, North Carolina Quakers went very largely to Tennessee, while Virginia Quakers, being nearer, went directly to Ohio. In this way, Virginia Quakers took possession of Ohio, while North Carolina Quakers pressed on to Indiana. The first settlers going West, after the opening of the Northwest 26 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Territory to settlement, stopped naturally in Ohio. As there were then no Friends' meetings in that territory, Quaker emigrants left their cer- tificates at Bedstone (in Fayette county) and Westland (in Washington county), Pennsylvania. The first certificate to Westland meeting is dated June 24, 1785. Most of the certificates to Westland and Kedstone came from Virginia meetings. The migrations of Carolina Friends to this part of the West were few, until after the establishment of the Ohio meetings. After 1785, certificates from Virginia monthly meetings to Redstone and Westland became numerous; about half of them represent; families, some of them being young couples who turned to the West for their fortunes. Those Friends who took certificates to Eedstone and Westland were but the advance guard of the western migration which set in about the year 1800. They continued to go to these meetings for a year or two longer; thus South Kiver sent twelve to Westland in 1801, and the southern Goose Creek sent fifteen in 1801 and 1802, of which thirteen were families, besides a considerable number sent before the be- ginning of the present century. Meetings were soon established within the Northwest Territory, and then Westland soon disappears as a stop- ping-place. Thus, in- 1803, we find certificates from South Eiver to "Concord Monthly Meeting, ISTorthAvest Tei'ritory;" but this name almost immediately gives place to "Concord ]\lonthly Meeting, State of Ohio," and the migrations at once become very numerous. Mr. Williams' very full account of the emigration of his own family from North Carolina to Concord settlement (in Colerain township, Belmont county) will be found in the Chapter on Harrison County Pioneers. During the first ten years of the century, most of the emigrants from Virginia went from Crooked Run, Hopewell, South River, and the two Goose Creek Monthly Meetings; during the second decade they went from Hopewell, South River, and the southern Goose Creek Monthly Meetings. The migration from the northern Goose Creek and Hopewell became active again about 1825, and continued so until 1836. The meetings in Virginia which belonged to Baltimore Yearly Meeting were the first to send out settlers, for they were nearer the western countr}^, and had less to hold them in the way of local associations. From 1812-16, there was a considerable migration from the lower meetings of the Virginia Yearly Meeting. Of the meetings belonging to this Yearly Meeting, South River furnished the greater number of emigrants. From this meeting there went eighty-six families, and forty-three single persons, their re- moval covering the forty years from 1801 to 1810. In the same way. THE FRIENDS, OR QUAKERS 27 migrations from the southern Goose Creek began with the century, were to Westland first, and then to Ohio. These removals sapped the life of the Meeting, and it was laid down in 181-1. In 1811, the movement began among all the lower meetings. Emigrants from Virginia went largely to Ohio. Those who took certificates to the Indiana meetings belong to the later period. The first migration from North Carolina to the West was made directly over the Allegheny mountains, by the adventurers wlio laid the foundations of Tennessee. The first considerable movement of Friends from jSTorth Carolina to the jSTorthwest was made from the Contentnea Quarter. It was emphatic and sweeping in its character. It was liter- ally a migration. A letter written from Concord, Belmont county, Ohio, (the Quaker settlement a few miles southeast of JSTew Athens), by Borden Stanton, one of the leaders of this migration, to Friends at Wri^^hts- borough, Ga., who were also thinking of going West, and who did so at a later date, has fortunately been preserved. It reveals to us the mo- tives, the troubles, and the trials of these modern pilgrims to an unknown land. It is dated 25th of 5th month, 1802, and reads as follows: Dear Friends — Having understood by William Patten and William Hogan, from your parts, that a number among you have had some thoughts and turnings of mind respecting a removal to this country; and ... as it has been the lot of a number of us to undertake the work a little before you, I thouglit a true statement (for your information) of some of our strugglings and reasonings concerning the propriety of our moving . . . I may begin thus, and say, that for several years Friends had some distant view of moving out of that oppressive part of the land, but did not know where, until the year 1799, when we had an aceptable visit from some traveling Friends of the western part of Pennsylvania. They thought proper to propose to Friends for consi»deration, whether it would not be agreeable to best wisdom for us unitedly to remove northwest to the Ohio river, — to a p\ce where there were no slaves held, being a free country. This proposal made a deep impression on our minds . Nevertheless, although we had had a prospect of something of the kind, it was at first very crossing to my natural inclination; bemg well settled as to the outward. So I strove against the thoughts of moving for some time ... as it seemed likely to break up our Monthly Meeting, which I had reason to believe was get up in the wisdom of Truth. Thu3, I was concerned many times to weigh the matter as in the balance of th3 sanctuary; till at length, I considered that there was no prospect of our number being increased by convincement, on account of the oppression that abounded in that land . . . 2S HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Under a view of these things, I -was made sensible, heyond doubting, that it was in the ordering of wisdom for us to remove; and that the Lord was opening a way for our enlargement, if found worthy. Friends gen- erally feeling something of the same, there were three of them who went to view the country, and one worthy public Friend. They traveled on till they came to this part of the western country, where they were stopped in their minds, believing it was the place for Friends to settle. So they returned back, and informed us of the same in a solemn meeting ; in which dear Joseph Dew, the public Friend, intimated that he saw the seed of God sown in abundance, which extended far northwestward. This information, in the way it was delivered to us, much tendered our spirits, and strengthened us in the belief that it was right. So we under- took the work, and found the Lord to be a present helper in every needful time, as he was sought unto; yea, to be as "a pillar of cloud by day and the pillar of fire by night;" and thus we were led safely along until we arrived here. The story of their departure from their old homes can be given substantially in their own words (records of Contentnea Quarterly Meet- ing): It appears by a copy of the minutes of a monthy meeting on Trent river, in Jones county, N. C. held in the ninth and tenth months, 1799, that the weighty subject of the members thereof being about to remove unitedly to the territory northwestward of the Ohio river, was and had been before that time deliberately under their consideration. And the same proposal was solemnly laid before their Quarterly Meeting, held at Contentnea on the ninth of the tenth month; which, on weighing the matter and its circumstances, concluded to leave said Friends at their liberty to proceed therein, as way might be opened for them; yet the subject was continued till their next Quarter. And they having (before the said Monthly Meeting ceased) agreed that certificates be signed therein for the members, to convey their rights respectively to the Monthly Meet- ing nearest to the place of their intended settlement, showing them to bo members whilst they resided there ; such certificates for each other mutu- ally were signed in their last Monthly Meeting, held at Trent aforesaid, in the first month, 1800; which was then solemnly and finally adjourned and concluded, and their privilege of holding it, together with the records of it, were delivered up to their Quarterly Meeting, held the 18th of the same month, 1800. They stopped first at the settlements of Friends on the Monongahela river, in Fayette and Washington counties, Penna., to prepare for their new settlement over the Ohio. They brought their certificates with them, laid their circumstances, with extracts from the minutes of their THE FRIENDS, OR QUAKERS 29 former monthly and quarterly meetings in Carolina, before Redstone Quarterly meeting, and received the advice and assistance of Friends there. Thus they proceeded, and made their settlement in the year 1800; and were remarkably favored with an opportunity to be accommodated with a quantity of valuable land at the place which was chosen for their settlement by the Friends who went to view the country, before the office was opened for granting lands in that territory. Borden Stanton continues (Friends' Miscellany, XII., 216-223) : The first of us moved west of the Ohio in the ninth month, 1800; and none of us had a house at our command, to meet in, to worship the Almighty Being. So we met in the woods, until houses were built, which was but a short time. In less than one year. Friends so increased that two preparative meetings were settled; and in last twelfth month a monthly meeting, called Concord, also was opened, which is now large. Another preparative meeting is requested, and, also, another first and week-day meeting. Four are already granted in the territory, and three meeting-houses are built. Way appears to be opening for another Monthly Meeting; and, I think, a Quarterly Meeting. . . . I may say that as to the outward [i. e., worldly possessions], we have been sufficiently provided for, though in a new country. Friends are settling fast, and seem, I hope, likely to do well. This seems to have been the first considerable migration from North Carolina to the West. It seems also to have been the only case on record where a whole meeting went in a body. But it was not the only case of removal from Contentnea Quarter. Removals from this Quarter either to the West, or to upper meetings of the same Quarter, continued until Carteret, Beaufort, Hyde, Craven, and Jones counties were depopulated of Quakers, and the meetings there laid down. Friends in these coun- ties now reported to Core Sound Monthly Meeting, in Carteret county. Migration from Core Sound began in 1799, when Ilorton Howard, secre- tary of the monthly meeting, took a certificate to Westland, Josiah Bundy and Joseph Bishop also removed to Westland that year. In 1802, ten parties asked for certificates; no destination was given, but we are justified in assuming that it was Westland or Concord. In 1802-0-4, the movement was to Concord, Northwest Territory. There was then no more emigration from there until 1831. Migrations began from Con- tentnea Monthly Meeting in 1800. Between 1800 and 1815, we find thirty-six certificates issued. Two were to Redstone, one to Indiana, and all the rest to Ohio, most of them to Concord. 30 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY In the folloAving list^ an attempt has been made to give the names of those families which were the leaders in the westward migration, or which furnished the most recruits to it, from the various monthly meet- ings in the East. The names of the meetings to which the joarticular families went have also been given, with an approximation of the date: Hopewell Monthl}'- Meeting, Ya., sent to Concord (1803-05), mem- bers of the families of Lupton, Piggot, Jenkins, Pickering, Miller, Ellis, Steer, Bevin; to various other monthly meetings in Ohio (1804- ): Mc- Pherson, George, Walter, Wickersham, White, Walton, Wilson, Allen, Adams, Branson, Cope, Crampton, Faucett, Hackney, Janney, Lloyd, Little, Lupton, Pickering, Steer, Smith, Swayne, Townsend, Taylor. Fairfax Monthly Meeting, Va. — To Short Creek, Harrison county (1803-22): Lacy, Ball, Hague, Rattekir, Wood, Schuley; to other Ohio meetings (1807-44): Wright, Richardson, Connard, Wilkinson, Wood, Swayne, Janney, John, Myers, Wilson, Goose Creek (northern) Monthly Meeting, Va. — To Concord (1805- 08): Evans, Pancoast, Sinclair, Spencer, Gregg, White, Whiteacre, Can- by, Dillon, Smith; to other meetings, nearly all in Ohio (1820-54): Tal- bott, Buchanan, Rose, Hampton, Hughes, Nichols, Bradfield, Trehern, Mead, Wilson, Birds all, Brown, Shoemaker, Taylor; to Salem, Colum- biana county (1806-07): Craig, Smith, Canby, Janney, Gilbert. Crooked Run Monthly Meeting, Va.— To c'oncbrd (1803-06): Fau- cett, Pickering, Wright, Lupton, Piggott, Holloway, Branson, Como, Smith, Wright, Sharp. Goose Creek (southern) Monthly Meeting, Va. — To Concord (1802- 06): McPherson, Bond, Coffee, Broomhall, Pidgeon. South River Monthly Meeting, Va.— To Concord (1802-05): Pid- geon, Gregg, Bloxom, Wildman; to Salem, (1805-07): Stanton, Carle, Macy, Gurrell, Fisher; to other meetings, mostly in Ohio: Redder, Mil- liner, Holloway, Fisher, Ferrell, Early, Moorman, Stratton, Johnson, Preston, Burgess, Ballard, Terrell, Lea, Cox, Cadwalader, Butler, Mor- gan, Bailey, I /ynch . Cedar Creek Monthly Meeting, Va.— To Salem (1812-23): Stanley, Blackburn; to Short Creek (1813-41): Moorman, Terrell, Maddox, Har- grave. Creek. White Oak Swamp Monthly Meeting, Va. — To Ohio meetings, not specified (1811-36): Ratcliff, Crew, Ladd, Harrison, Bates, Hockaday, Hargrave, Terrill, Andrews, Binford, Johnson, Ricks. Most of these went to Short Creek. THE FRIENDS, OR QUAKERS 31 Western Branch Monthly Meeting, Va.— To Concord (1 805-33) • Bond, Morlan, Curl, Johnson, Anthony, Lewis, Larow, Moorland, Perdue, Howell, Powell, Butler, Stanton, James, Draper, Eicks, Chapel, Hunni- cutt. Trotter, Lawrence. Mount Pleasant Monthly Meeting, Va. — To Concord (1805): Vimon. Davis, Bundy, Woods; to other Ohio meetings (1801-2^1:): Thomas, Lundy, Bond, Ballard, Sumner, Beek, Pierce, Stalker, Scooly, Green, Gray, Williams, Kobinson, Pierson, Wildman, Ward, Johnson, Pike, Lewis, Cary, Hunt, Anthony, Hiatt, Betts, Bund}', Jones, Chew, Davis. Piney Grove Monthly Meeting, S. C— To Ohio meetings (1805-12): Stafford, Mendenhall, Beauchamp, Thomas, Marine, Moorman, Harris, Morris, Lingagar, Almond. Piney Woods Monthly Meeting, ¥. C— To Ohio (1806-28): Good- win, Smith, Harrel, Bamb, Elliott, Thornton, Bogue, Moore, Newby. Eich Square Monthly Meeting, N. C— To Short Creek (1805-11): Patterson, Maremoon (or Moreman), Taylor; to other Ohio meetings (1805-12): Patterson, Maremoon, Hicks, Crew, Eeams. Contentnea Monthly Meeting, N. C— To Concord (1802-05) : Hall, Edgerton, Outland, Doudna, Albertson, Dodd, Bailey, Morris; to other meetings in Ohio (1805-34) : Copetand, Bundy, Collier, Cox, Price, Hollo- well, Hobson, Spivy, Thomas, Peele, Hall, Jinnett. Bush Eiver Monthly Meeting, S. C. — To Ohio meetings, not speci- fied (1805- ): Galbreath, Marmaduke, Mendenhall. Wrightsborough Monthly ]\Ieeting, Ga. — To Ohio meetings, not specified: Butler, Hollingsworth, Moore, Jay, Pearson, Killey, Hender- son, Williams, Brooks. Gravelly Eun Monthly ileeting, Va. — To meetings chiefly in Ohio (1822-30): Butler, Thomas, Peebles, Binford, Wrenn, Johnson, Hunni- cutt, Sems, Watkins. Core Sound Monthly Meeting, X. C— To Concord (1802-04) : Harris, Thomas, Scott, Williams, Mace. Cane Creek Monthly Meeting, IST. C. — To Ohio meetings, not specified (1805-09): Stanton, Haydock, Cox, Hadly, Baker, Clark, Hussey, Hasket, Moffit, Hale, Eatclifi". i^ew Garden Monthly Meeting, N". C. — To Ohio meetings, not speci- fied (1803-31): Hines, Hodgson, Perkins, Starbuck, Williams, Thorn- burgh, Planner, Maoy, Bunker, Low, Brown, McMuir, James, Jenkins, Russell, Knight, Swain, Blizzard, Jessop, Coffin, Hunt. Springfield Monthly Meeting, IST. C. — To Ohio meetings, not speci- 22 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY fied (1803-32) : Pidgeon, Eeece, Newby, Kersey, Bundy, Tomlinson, Men- denliall, Wright, Kellum, Beard, Harlan, Millikau, Spears, Spencer, Hog- gatt. Deep Eiver ]\Ionthly Meeting, N. C. — To Ohio meetings, not speci- fied (LSll-37): Pike, Pegg, Cook, Jones, Stafford, Hubbard. Many of the first comers to Concord and Short Creek, Ohio, emigrat- ing before those meetings were definitely established, left their certifi- cates with the nearest meetings in Pennsylvania, being those of Westland, in Washington count}^ and Redstone, in Fayette county. The following families came to one or both of these places: Prom Hopewell, Va. (1786-1803): Faulkner, Perviance, ToAvnsend, Sidwell, Berry, Mills, Blackburn, Branson, Hodge, Lewis, Brock, White, Bailey, Smith, Eoberts, /Wells, Morris, Finch, Antrim. From Fairfax, Va. (1785-1833): Smith, n/ Stokes, Wharton, Davis, Hough, Ward, Mitchner, Plumber, Shine. From Crooked Run, Va. (1787-1803): Cadwalader, Reyley, Hank, Russel, Berry, ^-.^ -Wright, Hunt, Richards, Mullen, Updegraff, Lupton,Wood, Evans, Cleaver, Yarnell, Painter, Dillhorn, Taylor, Holloway, Penrose, Miller. From Goose Creek (southern), Va. (1801-03): Olipliant, Erwin, Lewis, Morlan, Richards, Whitaker, Pidgeon, Schooley^ Wright, Parsons, Sinclair. From South River, Va. (1801-02) : James, Hanna, Baugham, Harris, Holloway, Terrell, Stratton, Ferrall, Carle, Via, Tellus. From Core Sound, N". C. (1799-1802): Howard, Bundy, Bishop, Dew, Ward, Mace, Stanton, Will- iams. From Contentnea, S. C. (1800) : Thomas Arnold. From Mt. Pleas- ant, Va. (1802): Bradford. From Bush River, S. C. (1802-03): Pugh, Jay, Kelly, O'Neal, Mills, Peaty, Horner, Wright. The locations of the various monthly meetiugs named in the fore- going list are as follows: Bush River. — Xewberry county, S. C, eight miles northwest from IN'ewberry. Cane Creek. — Alamance county, N. C, fourteen miles south from Graham. Cedar Creek. — Hanover county, Va. Contentnea. — Wayne county, N. C, fifteen miles north from Golds- boro. Core Sound — Carteret county, N. C, six miles north from Beaufort. Crooked Run. — Warren county, Va., nine miles south from Win- chester. Deep River, — Guilford county, X. C, twelve miles southwest from Greensboro. . , THE FRIENDS, OR QUAKERS 33 Fairfax. — Lc idoun county, Va., seven miles west of north from Leesburg. Goose Creek (northern). — Lincoln, Loudoun county, Va. Goose Creek (southern). — Bedford county, Va., ten miles southeast from Bedford City. Gravelly Eun. — Dinwiddie county, Va., about four miles east from Dinwiddie. Hopewell. — Frederick countj^, Va., six miles north from Winchester. Mount Pleasant. — Frederick county, Va., nine miles southwest from Winchester. New Garden. — Guilford county, N". C. Piney Grove — Marlborough county, S. C, nine miles north from Bennettsville, Piney Woods. — Davidson county, N. C, twelve miles north of east from Lexington. Eich Square. — Northampton county, N. C. South Eiver. — Campbell county, Va., near Lynchburg (?). \ Springfield. Guilford countj^ N. C, near High Point. Western Branch. — Isle of Wight county, Va., seven miles, nearly southeast from isle of Wight Court House. Wliite Oak S\ramp. — Henrico county, Va, Wrightsborough.— McDuffie county, Ga., thirty-six miles northwest froTn Augusta. 34 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY CHAPTER III. THE GERMANS AND THE VIRGINIANS IN HARRISON COUNTY. That industrious, thrifty, patriotic, and generally intelligent por- tion of the population of Harrison county, familiarly known as the PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH, but more properly the Germans, are descendants of those hardy pioneer settlers who immigrated to Pennsylvania and Maryland from various German states, commencing as early, at least, os the year 1683. Perhaps there is no people who were more frequently the subject of remark in the early history of Pennsylvania, and during the last century, than these Germans, whose numerous descendants are now to be found in every State west and south of Pennsylvania. Though more than twenty-five thousand names of German immi- grants are recorded in the Pennsylvania Archives from 1725 to 1775. few of those are recorded who arrived in Pennsylvania prior to 1700. In volume seventeen of the Archives, Second Series, may be found the names of all who took the oath of allegiance between 1727 and 1775, comprising about thirty thousand names, with the names of the vessels in which they came to America, ports from which they sailed, and elates of departure. Probably four-fifths of the Germans living in Har- rison county to-dav can find the names and dates of arrival of their emi- grant ancestors in that volume. Jn 1683, some Germans arrived in Pennsylvania, and commenced a settlement at what is now Germantown. Among these, were Pastorious, Hartsfelder, Schietz, Spehagel, A^andewall, ITl)erfeld, Strauss, Lorentz, Tellner, and others. About the year 1684 or 1685, a land company was THE GERMANS AND VIRGINIANS 35 formed at Frankfort-on-the-Main, which bought 25,000 acres from Wil- liam Penn. Those ^vho left their Fatherland from 1700 to 1720, the Pala- tines, so-called, because they came principally from the Palatinate States, along the Eliine, whither many had been forced to flee from their homes in France, and other parts of Europe, endured many privations before they reached the Western Continent. In 1708 and 1709, upwards of 10,000, many of them very poor, ar- rived in England, and were there for some time, in a starving, miserable condition, lodged in warehouses, with no subsistence beyond what they got by begging on the streets; until some sort of provision was made for them by Queen Anne. In 1709, 3,000 of them were sent to Ireland, but of this number many returned to England, on account of insufficient pro- vision having been made for them by the Eoyal Commissary. In the summer of 1710, several thousand of these Palatinates, who had been maintained at the Queen's expense in England (and for sometime after- wards in America), were shipped to ISTew York ; and of these, many came to Pennsylvania. Among these German emigrants were Mennonites, Dunkards, German Reformed, and Lutherans. Their number was so great, that James Logan, Secretary of the Province of Pennsylvania, wrote in 1717, "We have, of late, a great number of Palatines poured in upon us without any recommendation or notice, which gives the country some uneasiness, for foreigners do not so well among us as our own English people." Those who arrived between 1700 and 1720, settled in the lower parts of Montgomery, Bucks, Berks, and Lancaster counties. In 1719, Jonathan Dickinson wrote, "We are daily expecting ships from London, which bring over Palatines, in number about six or seven thousand. We had a parcel who came out about five years ago, w^ho purchased land about sixty miles west of Philadelphia [the Pequea settlement, in Lancaster county], and prove quiet and industrious. Some few came from Ireland latel}^, and more are expected thence." From 1720 to 1730, several thousand landed at Philadelphia, and others came by land, from the province of New York. The latter settled in Tulpehocken, having left 'New York because they had been ill-treated by the authorities of that province. The influx now became so great as to cause some alarm. It was feared by some that the numbers from Ger- many, at the rate they were coming in during the last three years of this decade, would soon produce a German colony here, and perhaps such a one as Britain once received from Saxon-land, in the fifth century. Jona- 3G HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY than Dickinson went so far as to state, that it was apprehended Sir William Keith, a former governor, with two of his fri-nds, had sinister projects of forming an independent province in the West, towards the Ohio, to be peopled by his friends among the Palatines. In 1727, six vessels arrived at Philadelphia with Germans; three in 1728; three in 1729 ; and three in 1730. From 1730 to 1740, about sixt^^-five vessels, filled with Germans, ar- rived at Philadelphia, bringing with them ministers and schoolmasters to instruct their children. A large number of these remained in Philadel- phia; others removed seventy to eighty miles from that city — some settling in Lebanon county, and others west of the Susquehanna, in York county. From 1740 to 1755, upwards of one hundred vessels arrived with Ger- mans; in some of them, though small ships, there were from 500 to 600 passengers. In the summer and fall of 1749, not less than twenty vessels, with German passengers to the number of twelve thousand, arrived. At first, the immigration of Germans into Pennsylvania was con- fined to the Sectaries, the Quietists, and the other religious denomina- tions, who, on account of their extremity in doctrines and practice, found it difficult to get along with their more conservative Protestant brethren. The Labadists, for instance, were followed by the Mennonites, who took up much land, and formed many communities in the counties of York, Lancaster, and Adams; by the Seventh Day Baptists, the followers of Spener, who established their monastery at Ephrata ; by the Voltists, and the Cocceians; and by the hundred other sects of the day. But after these Sectaries came the Deluge. The Germans had found out that there was a land of peace on the other side of the Atlantic; and they knew by sad experience that their own country was a land of war. A man was de- l)rived, practically, not only of the enjoyment of his own religion; but he was also robbed incessantly of the fruits of his labor. This was a state of things which he naturally rebelled against, and emigration afi^orded him the only relief. The religious fanaticism of Louis XIV., which so long def'olated the low countries, and which, when he revoked the edict of Nantes, de- prived that monarch of his best and most thrifty subjects, broke in upon the Palatine in the shape of one of the most desolating wars of which there is any record in history. Turrenne, Saxe, Vendome, Villars, Vil- leroy, Taillard, Marsin, Berwick, ISToailles, and Luxembourg, each in his turn, helped to desolate the Palatine, and to contribute immigrants to THE GERMANS AND VIRGINIANS 37 llie colonies. The homeless and ravished peoples of Germany sought and found homes in the new land of peace and plenty. At one time the im- migration of German Palatines into Pennsylvania and Maryland was in excess of all other immigration. Many hundreds thus came into Mary- land, many thousands into Pennsylvania. They came chiefly from the luirried Palatinate, hut also from Alsace, Suabia, Saxony, and Switzerland. There were Wittenbergers, and people from Darmstadt, Nassau, Hesse, Eisenberg, Franconia, Hamburg, Mannheim — all classed as "Palatines." In 1700, there were nearly 145,000 Germans in Pennsylvania, the to- tal population then not exceeding 435,000. These included the Sectaries above referred to, the Dunkards, and the Hessian soldiers, who had been taken prisoners by Washington's army, and preferred not to be exchanged after the Revolution. A great proportion of this latter class settled in Somerset county, Pennsylvania, from whence many have come into Har- rison county. These German subsidiary troops were bought in Bruns- wick, Hanau, Anspach, Waldeck, Hesse-Cassel, Hesse-Darmstadt, Brand- enberg, etc., in large numbers. They cost George III. the sum of $8.- 100,000, and 11,000 of them died, or perished in battle. The other immi- grants were German Calvinists, Moravians, Schwenkenfelders, Omishites, Dunkards, Mennonites, and Separatists (or Seventh Day Baptists). Up to about 1760, the Germans in Maryland were supplied from these plentiful sources, by way of Pennsylvania. A good many Palatines came in by direct consignment to Chesapeake Bay, but the great majority of the Germans drifted down from York and Lancaster counties, Penn- sylvania, and occupied the land along Antietam creek, and about Hagers- town and Frederick in Maryland, and the lower Shenandoah Valley in Virginia. THE VIRGINIANS. The first settlers of the Virginia Panhandle were mainly of the Cava- lier class, many of them coming from the northern and eastern counties east of the mountains, and a few from the Virginia valley, the latter usually being of Scotch-Irish descent. In later years, when the Scotch- Irish occupied Washington county, many of them crossed the line and settled in Ohio (now Brooke) county, Virginia, in the vicinity of Wells- l)urg. Some of the early settlers in Harrison county were from that section ; and not a few were of the old tide-water, horse-racing, gambling, and cock-fighting class, which before the middle of the century, formed the aristocracy and much of the middle-class population of Virginia. Dr. 3S HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Joseph Doddridge, although himself born in Bedford county, Penna., be- longed to this latter class, his father, originally from Maryland, having settled near West Middletown, in Washington county, about 1773, The son became first a Methodist, and later, an Episcopalian clergyman, and settled at Wellsburg, where he died in 182G. Two years before his death, he wrote a book, called "Notes on the Settlement and Indian Wars of the Western Parts of Virginia and Pennsylvania, from 1763 to 1783," which contains the best written account we have of the early customs, habits of life, and occupations of those pioneers, many of whom were the fore- fathers of Harrison county citizens of the present day. In reading Dodd- ridge's account, it must be borne in mind that he wrote of two very dif- ferent classes of settlers, tbat class amongst which he spent his life being for the most part of the cavalier type — the jolly, rollicking, careless, law- less, and often shiftless character so long associated with the develop- ment of the slave-holding South. The other class was the Scotch-Irish — sometimes erroneously called the Puritans of the South, sober-minded, God-fearing, Psalm-singing Presbyterians, for the most part, whose only relaxation after a week of hard toil in the forest or field was to ride or walk from one to fifteen miles to meeting of a Sabbath, there to listen to a series of dry theological dissertations, lasting from morning until night, with but a brief intermission for lunch. Some unfriendly and un- truthful writers about the Scotch-Irish, have sought to apply Doddridge's description of the least law-abiding of his fellow pioneers as a general condemnation of this race; maliciously misrepresenting the facts as to the class about whom the description was written. A direct testimonial as to the character of the two classes, given by an eye-witness more than a century ago, has but recently come to light, being an extract from the Diary of Eev. David MeClure, published in 1899. David McClure was the first Presbyterian minister to labor in the settlements west of the Alle- ghenies, having come out as a missionary in 1772, traveled among the Indians of Ohio as far west as Coshocton, and ministered to the scat- tered settlers of Western Pennsylvania for a period of six months or more. Under date of December 17, 1772, Mr. McClure writes: Attended a marriage, where the guests were all Virginians. It was a scene of wild and confused merriment. The log-house, which was large, was filled. They were dancing to the music of a fiddle. They took little or no notice of me, on my entrance. After setting awhile at the fire, I arose and desired the music and dancing to cease, and re- quested the bride and bridegroom to come forward. They came snicker- THE GERMANS AND VIRGINIANS 39 ing and very merry. I desired the company, who still appeared to be mirthful and noisy, to attend with becoming seriousness, the solemnity. As soon as the ceremony was over, the music struck up, and the dancing was renewed. While I sat wondering at their wild merriment, the lady of a Mr. Stevenson sent her husband to me, with her compli- ments, requesting me to dance a minuet with her. My declining the honor, on the principle that I was unacquainted with it, was scarcely accepted. He still politely urged, until I totally refused. After supper, I rode about three miles, to the house of a friend. The manners of the people of Virginia, who have removed into these parts [Fayette county, Penn.], are different from those of the Presby- terians and Germans. They are much addicted to drinking parties, gam- bling, horse-race, and fighting. They are hospitable and prodigal. Sev- eral of them have run through their property in the old settlements, and have sought an asylum in this wilderness. Doddridge states that the first settlements along the Monongahela were commenced in 1772. In 1773, they extended to the Ohio. The first settlers came mostly from Maryland and Virginia, and generally traveled by way of Braddock's route. Some from Pennsylvania came by the military road, passing through Bedford and Ligonier. Their re- movals were generally on horses Avith pack-saddles. Settlement entitled the settler to 400 acres of land, free. Their claims were usually located b\ means of the tomahawk, with which they blazed the trees marking their boundary lines. Hence, such claims came to be called "Tomahawk Rights." They usually chose ground in a hollow or depression, for their houses and barns; so that whatever came to the house might come down hill. Generally, the male members of the prospective settler's family came over the mountains in the spring, and after clearing a plot of ground, planting a small patch of corn, and sometimes erecting a rough log cabin, they went back for their families, and brought them out in the fall. They depended much upon lean venison, wild turkeys, and the flesh of the bear at times, for food. They awaited with much anxiety for the first growth of the potatoes, pumpkins, corn, etc., and when the young corn came, it was made a time of jubilee, and the green ears were roasted for a feast. "When the corn hardened and was gathered in the fall, it was customary to provide meal for the family Johnny-cake ("journey- cake," it was then called) by grating the ears on a tin-grater. The original settlers were usually their own mechanics, and each man made everything needed by himself, that could not be conveniently 40 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY brought along from the older settlements. The hominy-block and hand- mills were found in most of their houses. The block was hollowed out at the top by burning, and the play of the pestle ground the corn. Some- times a sixteen-foot sweep was used to lessen the toil, in pounding corn into meal for mush or cakes. The hand-mill was another and a better contrivance, made of two circular stones, the under being the bed-stone, and the upper, the runner. These were enclosed in a wide hoop, or band, haAdng a spout to discharge the meal. The "runner" was moved by a long staff, or pole, passing through an upright fixed in the stone. Such mills are still used in the Holy Land, as they were in the time of Christ. Their water-mills were tub-mills, readily made, and at small expense. This mill consisted of an upright shaft, at the lower end of which a water- ■wheel, four or five feet in diameter was attached, the upper end of the shaft passing through the bed-stone, and carrying the runner, secured to its top. Sifters were used in lieu of bolting cloths, made of deer-skin parchment, stretched over a hoop, and pierced with small holes, by means of a hot wire. The material for their clothing, aside from deer-skins, was spun by the women of the household. Almost every pioneer woman could weave linsey-woolsey cloth, and make the family clothing. Every family tanned its own leather. The tan-vat was a large trough, sunk in the ground; bark was shaved and pounded; wood-ashes were used in lieu of lime, for removing the hair; bear's grease, hog's lard, and tallow served for dress- ing the leather, instead of fish-oil; the currying was done with a drawing- knife; the blacking made of hog's lard and soot. Most families contained their own tailors and shoemakers. Those who could not make shoes, easily learned to make shoe-packs, which were made, like moccasins, of a single piece of leather, fitted to and removed from the foot by means of a cord gathering. In cold weather, these moccasins were stuffed with dried grass, deer's hair, or dried leaves, to keep the feet warm. Plows were made of wood; harrows, with wooden teeth; and cooper- ware of staves. rights were of frequent occurrence among the younger male mem- bers of the community; and the method of fighting was very dangerous to the participants. Although no weapons were used, fists, teeth, and feet were employed at will; and the favorite mode of disabling an antagonist was to gouge ovit one of his eyes. The furniture for the tables, for several years after the settlement of the country, consisted of a few pewter dishes, plates, and spoons, but ebip.fly of wooden bowls, trenchers, and noggins. If these last were scarce, THE GERMANS AND VIRGINIANS 41 gourds and hard-shelled squashes made up the deficiency. The iron pots, knives, and forks, were brought from east of the mountains, with the salt and iron, on pack-horses. For a long time after the first settlement of the country, the in- habitants married young. There was no distinction of rank, and very little of fortune; on this account, first love usually resulted in marriage; and a family establishment cost but a little labor, and nothing more. Marriages were celebrated at the house of the bride, and the announce- ment of a prospective wedding created a general sensation; it was looked upon by young and old as an occasion for frolic, feasting, and fun; and was more efficacious in gathering a crowd of people together than even a log-rolling, house-raising, or hunting expedition. The groom usually started early from his fathers house so as to reach the home of the bride by noon, the hour generally set for the ceremon}^ — as it was always fol- lowed by a bountiful dinner. The assembled company were all pioneers, and there being no store, tailor, or dress-maker within a hundred miles of the trans- Allegheny settlements, they all came dressed in home-made garments. The men wore shoe-packs or moccasins, leather breeches, usu- ally made of buck-skin, linsey hunting shirts, and leggins. The women dressed in linsey petticoats, and linsey or linen bed-gowns, coarse shoes, stockings, kerchiefs, and buckskin gloves, if any. The horses were capar- isoned with old saddles, old bridles or halters, and pack-saddles, with a bag or blanket thrown over them ; a rope or cord formed the usual girth. The wedding procession, on such occasions, marched in double file, where the horse-paths permitted — for they had no roads. Such paths were sometimes barred by fallen trees, and sometimes barred with mischief aforethought, by interlocking grapevines and saplings, to intercept the progress of the procession. Sometimes a party of neighbors would wait in ambush, and when the procession came up, fire a blank charge from their rifles, which covered the party with clouds of smoke, created sur- prise and shrieks amongst the ladies, and chivalrous bluster on the part of their escorts. As the procession neared the house of the bride, it some- times occurred that two or more young men would start for the domicile on horseback, full tilt, to win the bottle of whiskey, which it was pre- viously understood would be hung out from the entrance to the cabin as a prize for the first arrival. The start of the race was announced by an Indian-like yell; and the more the route was encumbered by fallen logs, brush, and muddy hollows, the better opportunity it gave the rival swains to show their horsemanship. The bottle gained, the winner returned to 42 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY the party, first handing it to the groom, and thence it went from one rider to another, in the manner of a loving cup, each taking a draught, the ladies included. For the wedding dinner, the table, made of a large slab of timber, hewn out with a broad ax and set on four sticks, was spread with beef, pork, fowl, and sometimes deer and bear steak. Sometimes, there were a few old pewter dishes and plates, but the majority of the guests ate from wooden bowls and trenchers. A few pewter spoons were generally t"> be seen, but the most of them were made of horn. If knives were scarce, the men used their scalping-knives, or hunting knives, which they always carried in the belts of their hunting-shirts. After dinner was over, dancing commenced, and it usually lasted until the following morning. The figures danced were reels, quadrilles, and jigs. The dance always commenced with a quadrille, which was fol- lowed by a jig: none were allowed to steal away for sleep and if the girls became tired, they were expected (as chairs were very scarce) to sit upon the knees of the gentlemen. About nine or ten o'clock at night, some of the young ladies would steal away with the bride, and see her safely tucked in bed. The bridal chamber was frequently a loft or attic, above the dancers, to which access was gained by climbing a ladder, and such a chamber was floored with clap-boards, lying loose, and without nails. Some of the young men, in the meantime, would lead away the groom, and send him up the ladder to join his bride; followed later in the evening by refreshments, of which the chief constituent was a huge flash of whiskey, called by the frolickers, "Black Betty." These entertainments sometimes lasted for several days, none desist- ing until the party was thoroughly fagged out. If any of the bride's neighbors felt themselves slighted by not being bidden to the festivities, it sometimes occurred that they would show their resentment by cutting ofF the manes, foretops, and even tails of the horses belonging to the wedding-party. FIRST SETTLERS IN OHIO 43 CHAPTEE IV. THE FIRST SETTLERS IN EASTERN OHIO. In 1888, there was held in the city of Marietta a Centennial celebra- tion, to commemorate what was said to be the first settlement of the terri- tory northwest of the Ohio. Properly speaking, it was the first settle- ment only in the sense of being the first authorized by the United States Government. This settlement was made in 1788 by a colony of New England families from Connecticut and Massachusetts, mostly officers or participants in the War of the Revolution; and no colony in America was ever planted by a more liberal and estimable body of men and women than were these Marietta colonists. They included the Meigs', the Putnams, the Cutlers, the Danas, the Sproats, the Whipples, and many other famous New England families. Their purchase embraced about 1,500,- 000 acres of land lying along the Ohio River from Marietta, west, and in- cluding Meigs, much of Athens, and portions of Washington and Gallia counties. The first settlements in the territory west of the Ohio river were made by families from Pennsylvania and Virginia, nearly ten years be- fore 1788; and there were more white settlers living in eastern Ohio as early as 1785 than the whole number comprised in the Marietta colony of 1788. These pioneer settlers had established two or more towns, and set up courts of justice before 1785, and, although some of them were oc- casionally driven off their lands by soldiers sent out by Congress for that purpose, the majority seem to have continued as permanent settlers, and in some instances their descendants are living in the same localities to- day. In 1902-3 it is proposed to hold another Centennial in Ohio, in com- 44 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY memoration of the admission of the State into the Union; and the year 190-i will witness the hundreth anniversary of the laying out of the town of Cadiz. The Centennial of the settlement of Harrison county would nominally be about 1900, — 1800 being the year !n which the land office was opened at Steubenville for the sale of lands in the territory now included in Harrison. The records of that office dur'ng the five years followiug that date show, among others, entries of land titles in what is now Harrison county by the following named settlers: James Arnold, Arthur Barrett, Thomas Barrett, James Black, Itob- ert Braden, George Brown, George Carnahan, John Carnahan, Samuel Carnahan, Joseph Clark, Eobert Cochran, John Craig, Thomas Dickerson, Samuel Dunlap, James Finne}^, Samuel Gilmore, Eleazer Huff, John Huff, Joseph Huff, William Huff, James Hannn, James Haverfield, Thomas Hitchcock, Joseph Holmes, William Ingles, John Jamison, Joel Johnson, Joseph Johnson, William Johnson, Absalom Kent, George Layport, John Love, John Lyons, William Mc- Clary, John McConnell, Kobert McCullough, William McCullough, John McFadden, Joseph McFadden, Samuel McFadden, John Maholm, Samuel Maholm, Robert Maxwell, Thomas Maxwell, William Moore, Samuel Os- burn, Baldwin Parsons, John Pugh, Eev. John Eea, John Eoss, Jacob Shepler, Samuel Smith, Martin Snyder, John Taggart, Thomas Taylor, Hugh Teas, Eobert Vincent, Thomas Vincent, John^ Wallace, Michael Waxier, Daniel Welch, James Wilkin, Thomas Wilson. Of these, it is known that the McFaddens, Craigs, Jamisons, Gil- mores, Hannas, Eeas, Welches, Moores, and Lyons' came from Washing- ton count}^, Pennsylvania; the Arnolds, Dunlaps, Dickersons, and Ma- holms, from Fayette county; and most of the others were without doubt from the same districts. The probability is that many of these settlers were in Harrison county before 1800; as the date of their recorded title is not necessarily the date of their first settlement on the land; and it was the custom of that day, as it is in the western states to-day, to make im- provements, and to reside on pre-empted land for some months or years before acquiring title from the Government. It is reasonably certain that Alexander Henderson occupied the land near Cadiz, until recently known as the Walter Jamison farm, as early as April, 1799; having removed from Washington county, Pennsylvania, with his family, about that time; and that Daniel Peterson then resided with his family at the forks of Short creek. In an article printed in the Cadiz Eepublican, Oct. 31st, 1895, Eev, FIRST SETTLERS IN OHIO 45 R. M. Coulter stated that the first white child born within the present limits of Harrison county was Jesse DeLong, born in what is now Short Creek township, about 177G; he died at the age of 106, leaving descend- ants who are still residents of Tuscarawas count3^ .The following letter, from one of these descendants, will be found interesting in this connection : Midvale, Ohio, May 20, 1898. Charles A. Hanna, Chicago: Dear Sir — I am in receipt of your letter sent to me at Station Fif- teen, Ohio. I have moved from Harrison county, April 1st, 1897. In regard to the DeLongs as early pioneers of that county, I will give you all the information I am in the knowledge of, which is not very much; but am willing to state the facts as far as I know. Solomon DeLong, the father of Jesse, comes ol French descent, hav- ing emigrated from France to Maryland, near Baltimore, from thence to Pennsylvania, near Philadelphia; from there they went to West Virginia, before Wheeling was built, there being nothing there but a block-house where Wheeling now stands. They crossed the Ohio river and built their cabin on Short creek, where Bridgeport now stands. At that time, there being no other white families on the Ohio side of the Ohio river, they were quite frequently driven back to the block-house for refuge from the hostile Indians. His wife's maiden name was Lamasters. To their union quite a family was born, the exact number is not known, but Jesse was the fifth child in order of birth. The DeLong family have always been noted as warriors. Solomon and his brothers, as well as his older sons, took part in the Revolutionary War, and also the War of 1813. He settled at Bridgeport, on Short creek, about the year 1775. His son, Jesse, was born there the first of May, 1776. The length of time they lived there is not exactly known. From there they came to Little Stillwater about two miles east of Den- nison, and entered a tract of land of 160 acres — that, at the present time, is owned by Mr. Kinsey— -that being the place of his death; the date I do not know. After his death, the widow went back into Harrison county to live, near Franklin, or Tappan. Their pioneer life in Harrison county was before the counties were divided as they now are. Jesse DeLong was a pioneer of Tuscarawas county, being one of its first settlers. He entered the land east of Den- nison, now Tliornwood Park. He was accidentally shot in a bear hunt by Dan Her, in Harrison county, on the land now owned by William Mc- Cauley, near Station Fifteen. By that, he was crippled for life, became quite an invalid in his old days, dying May 8, 1882, at the age of 106 years. His mother also lived to near the age of 100 years. The DeLong family in politics were Whigs, and Republicans of the staunchest kind, and were also strong believers in Methodism. He was united in marriage with 46 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Nancy "Wagner. To them twelve children were horn, and of that num- her there are but two now living. One son, Jesse- William, of Oreana, Macon county. 111., and Espy, who was a resident of Harrison county for twenty-five years. I purchased a farm and moved on it the first of April, 1872, and left April 1, 1897, and have lived in Midvale since that time. I believe that the DeLong family would be termed pioneers of Tus- carawas, more than of Harrison county, I have given about all I can think of at present. Hope this will be Batisfactory, and of some good to you in your work. Yours, ESPY DELOKG. From this letter, it would appear that Jesse DeLong was not born in Harrison county at all. It may also be remarked, that, if he was born on Short creek, he could not, as his son states, have been born at the site of Bridgeport, in Belmont county; for Short creek runs through Warren township, Jefferson county, and enters the Ohio at Warrentown. If he was born as early as 1776, it would seem very improbable that he could have been born in Ohio at all, unless it was during the temporary sojourn of his parents west of the river. Two or three years later than 1776, however, a number of settlements had been made in Ohio. There are traditions in Harrison county of early settlements along Stillwater creek; but whether these have ever been verified or not, the writer does not know. However, there are good reasons for believ- ing that in the territory now composing the counties of Mahoning, Co- lumbiana, Jefferson, Stark, Carroll, Harrison, Belmont, Guernsey, and Monroe, were scattered cabins of pioneer settlers as early as the Revolu- tionary War. What these reasons are may here be presented: To the Salt Springs in the present county of Trumbull, white hunters had resorted as early as 1754, and salt was made there by Pennsylvanians some twenty years later. From the old settlement of Wheeling and its vicinity a number of adventurers crossed the river from time to time and erected cabins. A number who came oiit with General Mcintosh to Fort Laurens in 1778, as axemen, scouts, hunters, etc., are supposed to have remained and built homes on several of the branches of the Ohio and the Muskingum. The first attempt to drive out the squatters northwest of the Ohio was made in October, 1779, when Captain Clark, of a Pennsylvania regi- ment, with sixty soldiers, was sent to Wheeling by Colonel Brodhead, then in command of Fort Pitt, with orders to cross the river and appre- hend some of the principal trespassers, and destroy their huts. Captain Clark did. not succeed in finding any of the trespassers, but destroyed sev- FIRST SETTLERS IN OHIO 47 eral huts, and reported that many improvements had been made along the Ohio from the mouth of the Muskingum to Fort Mcintosh (Beaver, Pa.) and thirty miles up some of its branches. General Brodhead's report of this expedition will be found in two of his letters printed in volume twelve of the Pennsylvania Archives (First Series), pp. 17G-1T7, which read as follows: Pittsburgh, Oct. 26th, 1779. To His Excellency, John Jay, Esq.: Sir — Since I did myself the honor to address you by a former letter, some of the inhabitants from Youghagenia and Ohio counties [the west- ern portion of Washington county, Pennsylvania, and the Panhandle of West Virginia], have been hardy enough to cross the Ohio river, and make small improvements on the Indian lands, from the river Muskin- gum to Fort Mcintosh, and thirty miles up some of the branches of the Ohio river. As soon as I received information of the trespass I detached a party of sixty men under command of Captain Clarke, to apprehend the trespassers and destroy their huts, which they have in a great measure effected, and likewise dispatched a runner to the chiefs of the Delawares, at Cooshocking, to prevent their attacking the innocent inhabitants, but as yet have received no answer from them. Capt. Clarke informs me that the trespassers had returned, and that the trespass appeared to have been committed upAvards of a month ago. It is hard to determine what effect this imprudent conduct may have on the minds of the Delaware chiefs and warriors, but I hope a favorable answer to the speech I sent them. I presume a line from your Excellency to the Governor and Council of Virginia, will tend to prevent a further trespass and the murder of many innocent families on this frontier. I have the honor to be, with perfect respect, your Excellency's most obed't and most humble servant, D. BRODIIEAD, Col. Commanding. Pittsburgh, Oct. 26th, 1779. To His Excellency, General Washington: Dear Gen'l — Immediately after I had closed my last (of the 9th of this instant), I received a letter from Colonel Shepherd, Lieutenant of Ohio county, informing me that a certain Decker, Cox, and Company, with Indians, had crossed the Ohio river, and committed trespasses on the Indians' lands; wherefore, I ordered sixty rank and file to be equipped, and Capt. Clark, of the 8th Pennsylvania Regiment, proceeded witli this party to Wheeling, with orders to cross the river at that part, and to ap- prehend some of the principal trespassers and destroy the huts. He re- 48 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY turned without finding any of the trespassers, but destroyed some huts. He informs me some of the inhabitants have made small improvements, all the way from the Muskingum river to Fort Mcintosh, and thirty miles y^p some of the branches. I sent a runner to the Delaware Council at V^ Coochoching, to inform them of the trespass, and assure them it was com- mitted by some foolish people, and requested them to rely on my doing them justice, and punishing the offenders, but as yet have not received an answer. I have the honor to be, with perfect regard and esteem, your Ex- cellency's most Obed't Humble Servant, D. BRODHEAD. After the treaty of Fort Mcintosh, it was feared that there would be such a rush of squatters into that portion of the territory bordering on Pennsylvania and Virginia, that evil results would ensue, and, accord- ingly, means were taken both to drive out the intruders already there and » prevent the entrance of others. June 15, 1785, Congress ordered the fol- lowing proclamation published and circulated in the territory: Whereas, it has been represented to the United States, in Congress assembled, that several disorderly persons have crossed the Ohio, and set- tled upon the unappropriated lands; and, whereas, it is their intention, as soon as it shall be surveyed, to open offices for the sale of a considera- ble part thereof, in such proportions and under such regulations as may suit the convenience of all the citizens of the United States, and others who may wish to become purchasers of the same; and, as such conduct tends to defeat the object they have in view, is in direct opposition to the ordinances and resolutions of Congress, and is highly disrespectful to the federal authority, they have heretofore thought lit, and do hereby issue this proclamation, forbidding all such iinwarrantable intrusions, and enjoining all those who have settled thereon to depart with their families and effects, without loss of time, as they shall answer the same at their peril. The intrusion was confined principally to the territory now forming the counties of Columbiana, Jefferson, Stark, Carroll, Harrison, Belmont, Guernsey, and Monroe, and the names of the intruders in 1785, were as follows: George Atchison, Jonas Amspoker, Albertus Bailey, William Bailey, John Buchanan, Henry Cassil, Walter Cain, Jacob Clark, James Clark, John Castleman, Charles Chambers, William Carpenter, ilenry Conrad, John Custer, Thomas__Dawson, i?icholas Decker, /Solomon DeLong, Daniel Duff, Zepaniah Dunn, Hanamet Davis, Jesse Edgerton, John Fitzpatrick, Henry Froggs, John Goddard, Joseph Goddard, Archibald Harbson, Robert Hill, Adam House, Wiland Hoagland, Thomas Johnson, William Kerr, Frederick Lamb, FIRST SETTLERS IN OHIO 49 Jacob Light, John McDonald, Thomas McDonald, William McjSTees, WiJliam Mann, Jonathan Mapins, Daniel Menser, Daniel Matthews, John Xixon, John Xowles, John Noyes, James Paul, Haines Pilcy, Jesse Parre- more, Nathaniel Parremore, John Piatt, Michael Rawlins, Joseph Re- burn, Benjamin Reed, George Reno, John Rigdon, Joseph Ross, William Shiff, John Tilton, Thomas Tilton, William Wallace, Charles Ward, James Watson, James Williams. In March, 1785, Colonel Harmar, commandant at Fort Mcintosh, had sent out troops to dispossess the squatter settlers whose names are given above. The squatters actually banded together to resist the United States troops; but a compromise was effected, whereby they were allowed to prepare temporary houses on the Virginia side before leaving their homes in the Xorthwest Territory. Some of them retired from the Ohio country, temporarily, but subsequently most of them returned, and their descendants are now numerous in Eastern Ohio and in the valleys of the Tuscarawas and the Muskingum. The extent and location of these settlements at that early period within the limits of what was then Jefferson county (including Belmont) are shown by the report of Ensign Armstrong, who was sent by Colonel Harmar down the Ohio river from Fort Mcintosh, with a detachment of soldiers, for the purpose of enforcing the Government's orders ; and, also, by the Journal of General Richard Butler, one of the Commissioners ap- pointed by Congress to treat with the western Indians. Ensign Arm- strong's report is as follows : Fort Mcintosh, 12th April, 1785. Sir: — Agreeable to your orders, I proceeded with my party, on the 31st of March, down the river. On the first instant we crossed Little Beaver, and dispossessed a family. Four miles from there, we found three families living in sheds, but, they having no rafts to transport their effects, I thought it proper to give them until the 31st inst., at which time they promised to demolish their sheds and remove to the east side of the river. At Yellow creek [south of the site of Wells ville], I dispossessed two families and destroyed their building. The 2d inst., being stormy, nothing was done. The 3d, we dis])0ssessed eight families. The 4th we arrived at Mingo Bottom, or Old Town [Mingo, Jefferson county]. I read my instructions to the prisoner, [Joseph] Ross, who declared they never came from Congress, for he had late accounts from that honorable body, who, he was convinced, gave no such instructions to the Commis- sioners. Neither did he care from whom they came, for he was de- 50 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY termined to hold possession, and if I destroyed his house he would build six more within a week. He also cast many reflections on the honorable the Congress, the Commissioners, and the commanding oihcer. I con- ceived him to be a dangerous man, and sent him under guard to Wheel- ing. Finding that most of the settlers at this place were tenants under the prisoner, I gave them a few days, at which time they promised to move to the east side of the Ohio river, and to demolish their buildings. On the evening of the 4th, Charles Norris, with a party of armed men, came to my quarters in a hostile manner, and demanded my instructions. After conversing with them some time, and showing my instruc- tions, the warmth with which they first expressed themselves began to abate, and for some motive lodged their arms with me till morning. I learned from the conversation of the party that at Norris' Town (by them so called), eleven miles farther down the river, [probably the site of the present village of Warrentown, at the mouth of Short creek], a party of seventy or eighty men were assembled with a determination to oppose me. Finding Xorris to be a man of influence in that country, I conceived it to my interest to make use of him as an instrument, which I effected by informing him it was my intention to treat any armed parties I met as enemies of my country, and would fire on them if they did not disperse. On the 5tli, when I arrived within two miles of the town, or place where I expected to meet with opposition, I ordered my men to load their arms in the presence of JSTorris, and then desired him to go to the party and inform them of my intentions. I then proceeded on with caution, but had not gone far when paper No. 1 was handed me by one of the party, to which I replied, that I would treat with no party, but intended to execute my orders. When I arrived at the town there were about forty men assembled, who had deposited their arms. After I had read to them my instructions, they agreed to move off by the 19th inst. This in- dulgence I thought proper to grant, the weather being too severe to turn them out of doors. The 6th I proceeded to Hoglin's, or Mercer's Town [Martin's Ferry], where I was presented with paper jSTo. 2, and, from the humble disposition of the people, and the impossibility of their moving, I gave them to the 19th, and I believe they generally left the settlement at that time. At that place I was informed that Charles Norris and John Carpenter had been elected Justices of the Peace ; that they had, I found, precepts, and had decided thereon. I then proceeded on till op- posite Wheeling, where I dispossessed one family and destroyed their buildings. I hope, sir, that the indulgences granted some of the in- habitants will meet your approbation. The paper No. 3 is a copy of an advertisement, which is posted up in almost every settlement on the west- ern side of the Ohio. Three of my party being landed, 1 left them about forty miles from this place under care of a corporal. The remainder I have ordered to their respective companies, and the prisoner I have de- livered to the prison guard. I am, sir, with great respect, your obedient servant, JOHN ARMSTRONG, Ensign. FIRST SETTLERS IN OHIO 51 This record shows that a nnmher of white settlements existed on the west side of the Ohio river in 1785; that some of them were quite popu- lous, over sixty names of the principal settlers of Mercertown alone beino- given; and that they had so far advanced in setting up a civil government as to have elected two Justices of the Peace, who had already decided cases tried before them. Armstrong failed to break up the settlement, and met wi'th such bitter opposition that he compromised with them giving them a certain length of time, at the end of which they agreed to leave, if the Government did not rescind the order. Few of them left, however. The Journal of General Richard Butler, who was appointed bv Congress, in 1785, as one of the Commissioners to treat with the Indians, shows the subsequent action of the Government and the settlers in the matter. General Butler started on his mission in the fall of 1785. He left Fort Pitt September 26, 1785, accompanied by General Samuel H. Par- sons, Colonel James j\Ionroe (afterwards President of the United States), and others. He arrived at Fort Mcintosh, at the mouth of Beaver creek, where Colonel Harmar still commanded, and where a detachment of troops was furnished to accompany the Commissioners. The party set off in boats from Fort Mcintosh on September 30th, and General Butler kept a diary of the events of the expedition, from which it will be seen that a portion of his diities was to warn off the settlers that were located on the west bank of the Ohio river. In his Journal, under date of Sep- tember 30th, he speaks of meeting the United States surveyors at the Pennsylvania state line, who were then just making a beginnino- for the survey of the first seven ranges of land within the Northwest Territorv. The following extracts are from his entires for the succeeding days: October 1st. — Passed Yellow creek and found several improvements on both sides of the river. Put in at one Jesse Penniman's, on the north side, five miles below Yellow creek; warned him off. Called on one, Pry who I warned off, also; this appears to be a shrewd, sensible man.' He' assured me that he would go off; that he would go to Kentucky. . . . He seemed not well pleased, though he promised submission. At this Pry's house, we met one William IMcCullum, from the Illi- nois; he says he passed General Clark at the Falls. . . . Passed on to the Mingo towns, where we found a number of people, among whom one Ross [the ram.e who had been made a prisoner, and carried to Fort Mcintosh by Ensign Armstrong six months before] ; seems to be the principal man on the north [west] side of that place. I conversed with him and warned him and the others away. He said he and his neighbors were misrepre- 52 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY sented to Congress; that lie was going to Congress to inform tlieni that himself and neighbors were determined to be obedient tc their ordinances. Passed on to near Cross Creek, eight miles below .he Mingo towns. Cross Creek, Sunday, October 3d. — Capt. O'Hara had a fine cow killed for the troops, who arrived at nine o'clock; had the men served with provisions, who were set to cooking, while some loaded flour and corn for the use of the troops and cattle, and all was got ready and started at one o'clock. The people of this country appear to be much imposed upon by a religious sect called Methodists, and are become great fanatics. They say they have paid taxes which were too heavy. Called at the settlement of Charles iSTorris, whose house has been pulled down, and he has rebuilt it. At this place found one Walter Kean, who seems but a middling character, and rather of the dissentious cast. Warned all these off, and requested they would inform their neighbors, which they promised to do. . . . Called at the settlement of one Capt. Hoglan, whom we also warned off. His house had also been torn down and rebuilt. We informed him of the impropriety of his conduct, which he acknowledged, and seemed very submissive, and promised to remove, and to warn his neighbors off, also. Come on very well to Wheeling, where we stayed all night. This is a fine settlement, and belongs to one Zane. These records are sufficient to show, therefore, that the first white settlements in Ohio were not made at Marietta, in Washington county, but were made in the present townships of Steubenville, Wells, and War- ren, in Jefferson county, and Pease, in Belmont county; and, as Mr. William H. Hunter, in his admirable history of the Pathfinders of Jeffer- son County, points out, "These people were real settlers, in the sense that they had built cabins and block-houses, and cultivated crops for sub- sistence. They possessed horses; for we know that John Carpenter, after making a clearing in 1781, on the site of Portland [in Jefferson county], took two horses to Fort Pitt, with which to convey salt; we know that a son of John Tilton's was killed by Indians while up Short creek after his father's cows. We know they had houses. . . . They were a religious people, ... so religious, in fact, were these set- tlers on the bottom lands of Jefferson county — Mingo Bottoms, extend- ing from what is now Mingo Junction, to the present southern line of the county — that Colonel Butler reported that they were great fanatics. We know, also, that Eev. George Callahan held the first Methodist Episcopal services in the Northwest Territory, in 1787, at Carpenter's Fort." Carpenter's Fort was located on Short creek, not far above its mouth, and near the present Portland station, on the Cleveland and Pittsburgh rail- FIRST SETTLERS IN OHIO 53 -way. See an article on "The Holmes Family," in the Lancaster (Ohio) Gazette, July 15, 1899. We get another glimpse of the N'orristown (now Warrentown) set- tlement as it was in the summer of 1787, during the progress of the sur- vey of the Seven Eanges, by referring to the diary of John Mathews, a nephew of General Putnam, who came out from Massachusetts to assist in the survey. On August 5th, 1787, he was at Esquire McMahan's house, a few jniles south of Mingo Island, on the Virginia side of the Ohio river, whence his Journal proceeds as follows: 6th. At 9 o'clock A. M. embarked on board of a boat for Muskin- gum, in company of Captain Mills, Lieutenant Spear, and Doctor Scott. Twelve o'clock, stopped one mile above Short creek, on the northwest side of the river [Warrenton]. At this place are about ten families collected, and are determined to stand it out against all opposition, either from the Indians or the troops. After a drink of good punch, proceeded on our way. At six, arrived at Wheeling, and tarried all night. Interesting as it is to trace the footsteps of these early pioneers, however, we can find but little information of them on the records during the next ten years; and it was not until after the year 1800 that exten- sive settlements began to be made in Harrison county. Settlers had come into the county in considerable numbers before 1805, and taken up much of the choicest lands along the streams. The best means we have of de- termining their centres of settlement is to examine the history of the early churches of the county. It was characteristic of that race of peo- ]7le which chiefly settled Harrison county that its pioneers usually estab- lished a church or preaching station, even if it were no more than a " tent," as soon as they became seated with their families in a new coun- try. We find, accordingly, that two of these stations were erected to ac- commodate the worshippers who lived in what is now Harrison county, as early as 1803, one at Daniel Welch's (Beech Spring, or Unionvale), and the other a short distance south of the present village of New Athens, (Crabapple). The next year, occasional preaching services began to be held on the site of the present town of Cadiz. 54 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY CHAPTER V. Harrison county pioneers. The first white settlers in Harrison county came here before any roads were built, and it is reasonable to suppose, before it was possible to bring with them any wheeled vehicles. Their household furnishings,, salt, md flour or meal, were broaght by pack-horses; and the first ave- nues of travel in the county were probably old Indian trails or paths, following the courses of the streams,. or piercing the seemingly endless forest along the tops of the high ridges, or "divides." The first to come were the Indian fighters, scouts, and hunters, of whom a number lived alojig the Ohio river frontier, contemporaries and neighbors of the Wet- zel brothers, of Adam and Andrew Poe, of Captain Samuel Brady, and of Major McCulloch. Among these, Jacob Holmes, Eobert Maxwell, and Joseph and William Hufi: settled along Indian Short creek, as it was then called, the HufEs locating near the site of Georgetown. In a letter from Curtis Wilkin, a relative of Joseph Huff, published by Mr. Hunter in his history of the Pathfinders of Jefi'erson County, the writer states that Joseph Huff did not settle on Short creek before 1796; and that his house was the frontier house in that vicinity for upwards of three years. William Hiiif shot an Indian near where Georgetown now stands, about the year 1800, because he had boasted in Hufi's presence of the num- ber of white men's scalps he had taken. Of Jacob Holmes, Mr. Curtis Wilkin, of Kencon, Ohio, in a letter to the Steubenville Gazette, written Unrr'h G, 1899, says: Jacob Holmes M'as my grandfather, and my information is derived from Jacob Holmes himself, from his wife, and from my mother.^ John HufE, my grandmother's brother, married Sallie Johnson, a sister of HARRISON COUNTY PIONEERS 55 John and Henry Johnson, who were captured by the Indians [in Warren township, Jefferson county, in 1793], killed their captors, and returned home. John Huff settled at Columbia, on the Ohio river, a few miles above Cincinnati, at about the close of the last century, and lived to be an aged man, dying there something over fifty years ago. Besides his sister (my grandmotlier), he had a brother, Eleazer Huff, and a son in the vicinity of my father's farm in Highland county. Jacob Holmes was born December 8, 1768, in Kockingham county, Va. While Jacob was a small boy, his father moved to Bedford county, Pa., and a few years later to Washington county. Pa., near Catfish, now Washington ; then a few years later to what is now Brooke county, W. Va., and settled on Buffalo creek, not far from the Ohio river. Here our subject grew to manhood, and in 1791 was married to Elizabeth, daugh- ter of Michael and Hannah Doddridge Huff. Shortly after his marriage he was employed by the United States Government as an Indian scout, and, in company with his brother-in-law, Kinsey Dickerson, and a man named Washburn, was thus employed for three years. For his services he received a tract of land on Short creek, a few miles north of where Mt. Pleasant now stands. To this place he moved his family in the spring of 1796, my mother being but six months old. He resided on this farm some twenty-five years, when he sold to a man named Comley, and rernoved to the northern part of Harrison county. The farm on which he then located is now in Carroll county. He resided here until 1832, Avhen he again sold out and removed to Fairfield township. Highland county. In the summer of 1838, he again sold out, and bought a farm one mile north of Kenton, Hardin county, to which he moved in the spring of 1839, and there he died October 14, 18-11. In another letter Mr. Wilkin writes: ' • Joseph Ilufl' was the brother of ray grandmother, the wife of Jacob Holmes. My graiidfather, Michael Huff, had the following sons: Michael, who was killed by the Indians on the Mississippi river, in the early settlement of Illinois; Joseph, Avho I tliink died in Harrison county many years ago, not far from whore his father settled in Jefferson (now Harrison) county, and near Georgetown; William, who died near the same place; John, who died at CoUiml)ia, a short distance above Cincin- nati, about 1843; Samuel, who died in Highland county al:)0ut 1846; Eleazer, who died in Highland county about 1833. The old Huff Bible, that contains the record of all the Huff family, is now in possession of David C. Holmes, of Kenton, a grandson of Jacob Holmes. Henry Howe, in his history of Ohio, written in 1847, states that in April, 1799, Alexander Henderson and family, from Washington county, Pennsylvania, "squatted" on the southwest corner of the section of land on which Cadiz stands ; and at this time Daniel Peterson resided 56 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY at the forks of Sliort creek, with his family, the only one within the present limits of Harrison comity. If this statement be true, then Joseph Huff could not have settled in Harrison county much before 1800. Major Erkuries Beatty, father of the late Dr. Charles C. Beatty of Stci-'aenville, who was paymaster of the western arm}^, came to the Ohio country in 1786 and 1787, in the discharge of his official duties, and kept a diary of his tours and transactions. On the 31st of July, 1786, Major Efal^y set out from Pittsburgh to descend the Ohio river. On the second day afterwards, he made the following entry in his diary: August. 3. Started early, stopped opposite the mouth of Little Beaver and breakfasted with the surveyor, who is waiting for troops. Arrived at Mingo Bottom 3 o'clock, where Capt. Hamtramck's, Mc- Curdy's, and Mercer's companies encamped, and had just been mustered and inspected by Major North. Showers of rain to-day. The troops en- camped on the bank of the river opposite the lower end of a small island. August 3. Waiting for Major North, Avho is going with me to ]\Ius- kingum. About 8 o'clock two detachments from Capt. Mercer's company, one commanded by Lt. Kersy, the other by Ensign Rigart, marched to destroy some improvements on the river ten or fifteen miles up Short creek. '•'Ten or iifteen miles \\-p Short creek" would locate this settlement which the soldiers were about to destroy, at somewhere between Adena and Georgetown, and if Major Beatty's information was exact, it would indicate that some of the hardy pioneers of that day had penetrated the wilderness and made improvements in Short Creek township as early as 1786. The first survey of the public lands northwest of the Ohio river was that of the Seven Ranges, made in pursuance of an act of Congress of ]\ray 20, 1785. In July, 1786, the surveyors, under the direction of Thomas Hatehins, Avho had been appointed geographer of the United States, assembled at Pittsburgh. John Mathews, a nephew of General Rufus Putnam, one of the surveyors, came on from Massachusetts to as- sist in the surve}', arriving at Pittsburgh July 26, 1786. His diary, kept during the progress of tlie survey, has been published. He spent the early part of September, 1787, at the house of Esquire McMahan, in Ohio (now Brooke) county, West Virginia. On the 20t]i, a small party pro- posed to cross the Ohio and go out into the woods for a few days to dig ginseng. In those early times, when the plant was plentiful, it was a source of profit to the frontier inhabitants, who had few articles to give HARRISON COUNTY PIONEERS 57 in exchange for money, or the more valuable articles of merchandice brought out by the traders. This proved to be rather a hazardous trip, a3 the Indians were hostile, and killed all the white men they found cn- croaching on their hunting grounds. Mathews' journal proceeds: September 20th, 1787. A little before sunset the Squire and myself crossed the Ohio, and went about two miles, and tarried all night at ^ house which was left by the inhal)itunts [who had probably lied, from fear of the hostile Indians then in the vicinity] . September 21st. — Four men Joined us, and we set off by Williamson's Trail a little before sunset. We encamped half a mile beyond the B»g Lick, on the head waters of Short creek, in the ninth township of the fourth range. The ninth township of the fourth range comprises the north half of the present township of Short Creek and the south half of Green, in Har- ison county; and the '' Big Lick " may have been the spring near whicli some twelve or thirteen years later Daniel Welch established his horse- mill — in his day known as Beech Spring, from which the first church erected in Ilai'rison county took its name. The ginseng diggers proceeded westAvard along the ridge dividing the waters of Short creek and the Stillwater, and dug ginseng four days. Mathews says: "It grew here in great abundance. Men accustomed to the work could dig from forty to sixty pounds a day." September 28. Collected our horses and prepared to start for the river. At 1 o'clock completed their loading. At sunset, encamped within about sixteen miles of the Ohio. 29th. Arrived at the river about three o'clock P. M. We were much surprised to hear that three men had been killed and one taken prisoner by the Indians, about ten miles up Cross creek, who were out after ginseng on Sunday last. Two of the party made their escape. They had also killed a family the week following, up Wheeling creek, and done considerable other damage. While we were out we were very careless and came on their trail, but very fortunate they did not fall in with us. I feel very ha])py tbat I have reached my old quarters, and will give them liberty to take my scalp if they find me out after ginseng again this year. Octo])er 12th. This evening McMahan returned from over the river, where he had been with a party of men in pursuit of some Indians, who yesterday morning killed an old man near Fort Steuben. He did not discover them, but by the signs thought them to be seven or eight in number. 58 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Nov. 30th. A part of this month I have been on the west side of the Ohio, with Mr. Simpson and Colonel Martin, assisting them iu the survey of the lands they bought at public sales in New York. Dr. Thomas E. Crawford, for forty years pastor of Nottingham Church, in his book of " Keminiscences," published at Wheeling in 1887. gives the following account of an Indian light which took place within the present boundaries of Harrison county more than a hundred years ago: The earliest visit of white men of which we have any account, into the territory of which this county was ultimately formed, was in the fall of 1793, when Capt. William Boggs, Kobert JMaxwell, Joseph Daniels, Johnson, and Miller were sent out from the old blockhouse [Fort Henry], located on the ground afterwards occupied by the city of Wheeling, West Va. These men were Indian scouts and spies. They made their excursion from the mouth of Wheeling creek up to the divid- ing ridge, and crossed over on the evening of the second day after they left the river, to the headwaters of Stillwater, venturing rather far into the interior with so small a force. This little band of daring men struck up a fire and camped at a spring on the banks of a stream, near to the place where the old Crawford brick house now stands. The party pre- pared and ate their supper, and being much fatigued with the journey of two days through an unbroken wilderness, they lay down to rest around the burning embers of a camp fire, not expecting an enemy near, for they had seen no recent traces of the red man from the time they left the Fort. Soon they were wrapped in sleep, only to be awakened and startled by the hideous yell of Indians, followed by the report of fire- arms. A ball took effect in the knee of Captain Boggs, which so crippled him that he was unable to flee. He called to his companions, " ]\Iake your escape, if possible, and leave me to my fate," which they did, leav- ing their brave leader to perish at the hands of a terrif)le and cruel foe. Three out of the four that fled arrived safely at the block-house, and re- ported the disaster that befell their expedition. Measures were immedi- ately taken, and a company of men was sent out in a short time to seek for the remains of Mr. Boggs. After much precaution in travel, the party found the place where the spies had encamped on that fatal night, and soon discovered the mutilated body of their captain ; took up the re- mains and buried them a few rods northeast from the above-named spring, on one of the tributary streams of Big Stillwater, which ever after has been called "Boggs' Fork," from the name of this adventuring but imf ortunate man. It is to be regretted that all traces of the grave of this brave and trustworthy soldier have disappeared. Some knowledge of the hardships and privations of the early settlers of Harrison county may be gathered from a biographical account, pub- HARRISON COUNTY PIONEERS 59 lished in 1891, of Eobert Cochran, M^ho was born in what is now Dauphin county, Pennsylvania, in 17T1. He came to Allegheny county with his father's family, when eighteen years of age. Shortly after the year 1803, he emigrated to Ohio, and bought eighty acres of land in what is now Harrison county, paying $200 for the same. Here he built himself a cabin of poles, daubed inside and out with mad, having a stick chimne}', puncheon floor, clap-board roof, and clap-board door. Here, in winter seasons, he was joined by John Maholni, an old friend from Pennsylvania, and together they lived in ]\Ir. Maholm's cabin, eating supper and break- fast in company, and each working on his own " clearing " during the day. During the fall and winter of 180-1-5, Mr. Cochran secured the ser- vices of a man to do his cooking, hired a mill-wright and several axemen, and erected a two-story grist-mill, worked by horse-power. No iron was used in its construction, except some strengthening bands around the trundle head and spindle; wheels and parts were all made of wood, and all hand-made, as saw-mills were unknown in the county at that day. The mill-stones were brought down the Ohio to Steubenville and hauled across the country, the trip occupying four days. Unwieldy as it was, the mill was kept constantly going, day and night, Sundays excepted, the farmers coming for miles around to have their grinding done. It was a common sight to see men occupyii^g the time, while waiting their turn for grinding, in throwing the tomahawk at marks attached to trees. As time passed on, this mill was superseded by water-mills, but in dry sea- sons, when water failed, the neighbors were obliged to return again to Cochran's horse-mill. It was the first mill erected west of that of Daniel Welch, at Beech Spring, and in early days was of great benefit to the pioneers. The land on which Mr. Cochran settled lies about half a mile north of Cadiz, and is now occupied by his descendants. The early pioneers came to Harrison county from Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Maryland, but chiefly from Washington county, Pennsyl- vania. Tbe journeys from localities east of the mountains were some- times long and full of danger. The paths across the mountains were rough and difficult. Pack-horses were at first the only means of transportation; on some, the pioneers packed the stores and rude agri- cultural implements, and on others, the furniture, bedding, and cooking utensils, and again, on others, their wives and children. Horses which carried small children were each provided with a pack-saddle and two large creels made of hickory withes, in the fashion of a crate, one over each side, in which were stowed clothes and bedding. In the center of 60 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY each wovvld sometimes be tucked a child or two, the top heing well secured by laciug, so as to keep the youngsters in their places. The roads, fre- quently, were barely passable; sometimes lying along the brink of precipices; frequently overflown in places by sv.ollen streams, all of which had to be forded; horses slipping, falling, and carried away, both women and children were often in great danger. The creels would sometimes break and send the children rolling over the ground in great confusion. It was no uncommon thing for mother and child to be separated from each other for hours whilst on the journey to their new homes, in a wild forest, amidst beasts, and exposed to at- tacks by the Indians. When the pioneer reached his destination, he usually pat up a brush shelter, until he could build his cabin. The lat- ter was made of rough logs, without nail, board, or window-pane. He then turned his attention to clearing a small plot of ground on which to raise such food as was needed for the su|)port of his family. The food question was the all-important one with the settlers. Their hard labor resulted in giving them keen appetites, and much account was taken of the feasts, merry-making parties, and public gatherings. The quality of the food was not so much regarded as the quantity. Times were when the providential appearance of a deer averted starvation, and the fortunate catching of a fish, or .the trapping of game, eked out a scanty subsistence. Journeys of many miles were made for a few pounds of flour or meal. Their cabins contained little or no furniture; beds with no mat- tresses, springs, or even bed-cords — the couches being spread upon the floor, and sleeping apartments separated by hanging blankets. About the fireplace were found hooks and trammel, the bake-pan and the kettle. Sometimes chairs were represented by sections of a tree of the recjuircd height. Upon the shelves were spoons of pewter, blue-edged plates, cups and saucers, and the black earthen tea-pot; and later, perhaps, one corner of the room was occupied by a tall clock, while in another corner stood an old-fashioned, high-post, corded bedstead, covered with an " Irish chain " quilt — a marvel of patchwork ingenuity and laborious sewing. The following extracts from a letter written by Eobert Van Horn in 1895, furnish an interesting account of the incidents of an early trip over the Allegheny mountains, made by one of the pioneer families in Harrison county. Mr. Van Horn was born at New Athens in 1813, the son of Edward and Margaret Hamilton Van Horn. He writes: to HARRISON COUNTY PIONEERS 61 My grandmother's maiden name was Martha McMillan, and she had a sister, Jane, married to John Perry. My first certain knowledge of them finds Grandmother living in N"ottingham township, Chester connty, Pennsyvania, and Uncle John Perry near by, on the Susqnehanna river, running a herring fishery. The country, though near Philadelphia, was new, and covered largely with pine forests, and the ground was strewed with the resinous knots of decayed trees, like the hones of dead animals. These knots were gathered by the poor, and laid by, to burn in the winter, instead of candles, and many an armful my mother carried home to her humble dwelling. Part of my mother's time, Avhen a girl, was spent in the family of her uncle, John Perry, and part of her occupation was to hunt the cows in the woods, morning and evening. Eising early, she would stick a herring in the hot ashes to roast, and when done she would take it for a morning lunch, and hie away to the woods, as blithe and merry as a lark, her ears alert for the tinkling of the cow-bell. How long the families remained there, I do not know; but Uncle Perry resolved to seek a better country, if not a heavenly one; and, like Abraham of old, he gathered up his substance, and, with his family, which was quite numerous, and my grandmother and her family, making togetlier quite a respectable caravan, he started for the far West, a dis- tance of some three hundred miles. Their goods seem to have been drawn by a single train, of four or six horses. There may have been more, biit tradition does not say so. Perhaps the children, if not the mothers, " walked afoot." The only incident of the journey which I can recall was as follows: On reaching the top of one of the mountains, they found the western slope, which was quite long and steep, covered with a solid sheet of ice from top to bottom, making the descent extremely perilous. A consul- tation was held, and, as on'all similar occasions, advice was plenty, and my grandmother contributed her share in true womanly style. She wanted him to cut down a great big sapling, and tie it to the hind end of the wagon, TO HOLD IT BACK ! And old Uncle Perry, in true masculine style, after listening to this and other suggestions equally wise, went and did just as he had a mind to. He did not cut down the sapling, nor anything of the kind; but by rough-locking and careful driving, reached the foot of the perilous descen. in safety. On reaching the bottom of the hill, he stopped the team, took off his hat, and, wiping his brow, said that he had had that hill on his mind ever since he left home. On reaching their destination, they located in the extreme western part of Washington county, near West Middletown. Just how long they remained there, I do not know, but it must have been a number of years, for there several of the Hamilton children married and three of them died. j\rv father and mother removed to Harrison county in 1807, with 62 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY thoir three oldest children. And some years hefore, the Perrys, Gastons, Alexander Morrison, and Grandmother Hamilton, had all settled near Morristown, in Belmont county. On Saturday, May 5th, 1900, the writer paid a visit to a native of Plarrison county, who was horn near Cadiz, Novemher 5, 1800, nearly one hundred years ago. This was Thomas West, who lives on a farm near Lafayette, in Coshocton county, Ohio. He was horn a few miles north of Cadiz, the son of William and Sarah Boyd West, and grandson of Morris West. His parents came to Harrison county hefore 1800, and settled on the farm where he was born. There they died in 1830. He was married to Eliza Tipton, of Cadiz, niece of Eev. William Tipton, in 1831; and they removed to Coshocton county about 1844. Thomas West stated that his father went from Steubenville into what was then the backwoods of Jefferson (now Harrison) county, and built himself a log-cabin, afterwards returning for his father (Morris West), who accompanied the family to their frontier home. At that time, and for some years afterwards, there were no roads in the county, and the settlers found their way from place to place by means of blazed trees, or trees from which a small portion of the bark had been chopped off, so as to leave a mark. Thomas West had as a schoolmate one Philip Kail, and some of his neighbors were Samuel Maholm, JSTathan and Lemuel Green, and James Forbes. He went three miles to school, mak- ing his Avay through the forest by means of the blazings, and could not remain for the afternoon sessions, as he had to return home before even- ings in order to avoid the wolves. The United States spelling book was the principal book used in his school days. The school-houses which he attended were all log buildings, and the light was let in by means of a square hole cut out between two logs, the opening being covered with greased paper. The boys were warned by the teacher against pimching holes through the windows with their quill pens, and suffered severe punishment if caught in such an act. The first religious meetings were held in private houses, traveling circuit riders occasionally visiting the settlement and preaching for them. When a log church was afterwards erected (now Bethel church), the services were attended by many in the neighborhood, but the attend- ants usually wore their everj'^-day suits and dresses, as few of the pioneers possessed clothing that could be called "Sunday best." Man and wife usually rode to meeting together, on the back of the same horse. Clothing was generally made of coarse linen. For winter wear, it HARRISON COUNTY PIONEERS 63 was customary to weave the cloth with two "shots" of wool alternating M-ith every two "shots" of tow thread. The pioneers had plenty to eat and live on,, though it was a rough diet. After the first few years, they had plenty of meat and potatoes, turnips, milk, and hutter — "hog and hominy, milk and hutter," as Mr. West expressed it. When a small boy, his principal occupation was to pick up brush, following the men, whose labor for many years after settlement was chiefly devoted to making clearings here and there in the forest, upon which they might plant crops. One of Mr. West's earliest recollections was that of an adventure the family had with a bear. When still a small boy, his father had cleared sufficient of his land to give him a space for two fields, and had con- structed a fence between, which ran from the cabin to the timber line. While this fence was building, one day when the men had come in for their supper, an occasion arose for using the family ax, and it was found that it had been left out in the clearing, at the end of the fence. Thomas was sent out to fetch it, and ran down the field alongside the fence to where it lay. As he ran, he noticed that the family pig was running down the field on the other side of the fence, as if expecting to receive some food from the hands of the boy, as was its wont. As Thomas reached the ax, and stooped down to pick it up, he heard the pig set up a terrific squealing, and saw it held tightly between the forelegs of a large black animal, which stood up on its hind legs, and seemed to have conceived a wonderful affection for Tommie's pet piggie. At the same time, his father began to shout and to clap his hands vigorously, and bv so doing succeeded in starting the bear back to the woods, where it dropped the hog betAveen the forked limbs of a low tree, and then de- parted. The men got down a gun, and started into the woods, but failed to find the bear. They brought back the hog, however, but its life had been crushed out, and its back broken in three places by the bear's tio-ht squeeze. Pork was the chief animal food of the Harrison county pioneer. In the early days, the salted meat was packed in a trough, which was set deep in the ground near the front of the cabin door, and a clap-board top staked down over the trough, to keep wolves and other beasts from get- ting at its contents. Mr. West said that when he had grown to be a man, he bought salted pork from Edward Healey, a neighbor, who told him that he hadn't seen the bottom of his meat hogshead for seven years, "and it was as good meat as ever went into a man's mouth," said Mr. Wo't. "Salt was salt in those days. It is not so good now. ard it is 64 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY difficult to get it of sufficient strength to keep the meat from souring." "The ploughs were all made of wood," he proceeded, "excepting a coulter to split the ground, and a small share-point. Threshing was done with a flail. I have whipped out hundreds of bushels of wheat on the puncheon floor of a log-barn. Johnny-cake was a staple article of diet. It was baked by putting it on a smooth board and setting it before a fire, with a stone before it, to keep it from falling down. When one side was done, we turned it over, and baked the other side. Wheat bread was baked by making a hole in the earthen fire-hearth, into which the loaves were placed, the hole covered with a flat stone, and live coals heaped on the stone. Sometimes the wheat was so rank, that it made you sick to eat bread made from it, and even made the hogs sick. This may have come from poisonous herbs being ground up with the flour, but it was usually thought to be due to the wheat having too much shade while growing. In the early days, the crops were planted in small patches, wherever clearings had been made, and the patches were sur- rounded on all sides by the tall trees of the forest. I remember one day a distant female relative came to visit at our house at a time when the wheat was too rank to make wholesome bread. My mother had to serve corn-bread, or Johnny-cake, and explained the reason for doing so by saying that the wheat that year was unfit for bread. Our visitor was inclined to turn up her nose at Johnny-cake, and thought my mother had invented the excuse about the wheat bread, merely to hide her poverty; so she stated that she was very fond of bread made from wheat grown on new soil, and liked no other kind so well. This nettled my mother some, as she could see from the manner of her visitor that her own hos- pitality was questioned ; and she resolved to give her all that she desired. So my mother made up some of the new wheat flour into bread, and at the next meal let her visitor eat her fill. The result was, a very sick wo- man, and no doubt a. wiser one. We used to go two miles to the house of a neighbor to get our grinding done. He had a hand-mill, and some- times it was necessary to wait for hours before our turn would come to take the mill. Later, when Bower's mill was set up [at the site of Bowers- town], I often rode horseback through the woods to that mill, with a bag of corn or wheat behind, had it ground, and carried the meal or flour home. One afternoon, while returning from the mill, J noticed a number of wild animals, like large dogs, which followed the horse, and one of them, once or twice snapped at my feet. But I was a small boy then, and ray feet did not reach down very far ; so I did not become uneasy. When HARRISON COUNTY PIONEERS 65 I reached home, 1113^ parents told me that the animals which followed me were wolves, and they marvelled at my escape without injury. I had never seen wolves before, and when I found oiit what had chased me, became very much frightened at my experience. "In the early days in Harrison county, fist fights were of very fre- quent occurrence, and public gatherings of all kinds usually ended with a fight between one or more pairs of fighters. While I was still a little boy, my uncle, Augustus West, was forced into a fight with a bully, dur- ing the time of a camp-meeting which was held in the woods near our house. This occurred one day after the services had been held. My uncle was standing on the grounds, talking with some of his friends, when a big, swaggering fellow came along, elbowing people^ out of his way, and looking and walking very much like a big Brahma rooster that is spoiling for a fight. '1 am the best man that walks the road,' he said, when he reached the place where my uncle was standing with his friends. ISTow, my uncle was not naturally a fighting man, and I think if he had been choosing a place for a fight he would not have picked on the grounds of a camp-meeting. But he hated a bully, and when the fellow repeated his brag, my uncle said to him in a quiet tone, 'Stranger, untried.' This was enough to egg on the bully, and he struck my uncle. Then the fight began. Uncle Augustus was a short and heavy-set man, built like a Dutchman's horse, and he could parry the blows of his antagonist until he finally succeeded in 'cutting his wind.' Then he sailed into him, and very soon had him with his back on the ground. "General musters were often held at Cadiz, and in the country near there, and I attended many of these when a young man, although not my- self a member of the militia, on account of my defective hearing. One day, at muster, I saw two men fight for three-quarters of an hour. Their names were Salsman and Watson. Salsman stripped for the fight, and prepared himself for it better. Watson was dressed up, and as he was something of a dandy, would not take off his coat, nor even his stock and necktie. The kind of neckties they wore in those days were very larire and cumbersome, and I do not see how Watson could have fou2:ht as he did with that cloth wound around his neck. After the fight was over, Salsman had to keep his bed for three weeks. Watson was able to get around again in a few days; and probably would not have had a scratch if he had prepared himself for the fight as the other man did. "About the time I was married, wheat sold in Harrison county for forty cents a bushel. A day's wages for a reaper was fifty cents, or some- 5 66 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY times a bushel of wheat was given for a day's work. I hired out to work one summer for a bushel of wheat a day. In the fall, when pay-day came, the price of wheat had risen to $i;00. My employer then wanted to pay me in money on the basis of the value of wheat when I began working; but of course, I could not agree to that. "When I started for myself, the first sheep I bought cost me seventy- five cents each. At that time a good big four year old steer fetched ten dollars. Before that time, a farm laborer's Avages was generally not much over twenty-five cents per day. ]\Iy son-in-law has some men hired on this place where we are to-day, and pays them as much for a day's wage as men used to get for working a week and a day. "I used to go to Cadiz to do my trading, generally dealt with Kil- gore and Lyons, and knew the Olmsteads, the Pritchards, the Maholms, and McFaddens, most of whom were engaged in business in that town. One day a neighbor and myself went to Cadiz, and after doing our trad- ing, and getting what provisions we had come for, the store-keeper (I am not sure, but it may have been Mr. Kilgore), asked us if we were going back home without taking out new calico dresses for our wives. We told him that we had no money with which to buy calico dresses, that it took all our surplus earnings, beyond what went to improving our farms, to buy such necessaries as- we could not raise ourselves. He told us that we could buy the dresses without paying for them then, that he would trust us for the price, and we could pay for them at another time. This was my first experience in buying on credit, and it seemed so compli- mentary to my neighbor and myself that the store-keeper should trust us, that we both bought some of his calico, and our wives had fine new dresses. And we afterwards paid for them, too. Men were not trusted in those days unless it was pretty certain that they would pay. Credit then was not so free or general as it is to-day." John S. Williams, who edited the American Pioneer, published at Cincinnati in 1843, wrote a series of articles on his knowledge and ex- perience of pioneer life, Mdiich nre of especial interest to Harrison county readers, as he was an early settler in the Concord settlement in Colerain township, P>elmont county, south of Mt. Pleasant, and not far from the southeastern corner of Harrison county. lu the spring of 1800, with his mother, sister, and brother, he emigrated from Beaufort, jSTorth Carolina, to what was then a part of Jefferson county, in the Northwest Territory. Some of his pioneer experiences were recounted, as follows: . HARRISON COUNTY PIONEERS 67 In April, 1800, -we sailed from Beaufort for Alexandria (Va.), in company with seventy other emigrants, large and small, say twelve families. We had one storm, and were once becalmed in Core sound, and had to Avait about two weeks at Ciirritnc inlet for a wind to take us to sea. From thence to Alexandria we had a fine run, especially up the Potomac bay. At Alexandria we remained several days before we got wagons to bring us out. Here everything was weighed. My weight was just seventy-five pounds. We stopped near two weeks on what I think was called Goose creek, in Virginia, before we could be supplied with a wagon to cross the mountains, in place of the one we occupied, which belonged there. The mountain roads, (if roads they could be called, for pack-horses were still on them), were of the most dangerous and difficult character. I have heard an old mountain tavern-keeper say that, although the taverns were less than ten miles apart in years after we came, he had known many emigrant families that stopped a night at every tavern on the mountains. 1 recollect but few of our night stands distinctly — say, Dinah Besor's, Goose Creek, Old Crock's, near the South Branch; Tom- linson's, Beesontown [Uniontown], and Simpkins', and Merrittstown, Our company consisted of Joseph Dew, Levina Hall, and Jonas Small, with their families. [For a further account of these emigrants, see Chap- ter II., which relates to the emigration of Southern Quakers to Har- rison county.] After a tedious journey, we all arrived safely at Fredericktown, Washington county. Pa., where we stopped to await the opening of the land office at Steubenville, Ohio. Here, we found Horton Howard and family, who had come on the season previous. Here, also, the chil- dren had the whooping-cough. Those whom we left at Alexandria came to Eedstone Old Fort [Brownsville], ten miles below Frederick- town, where they sojourned for the same purpose; and although, as we thought, unfortunately detained, they were the first at their resting place. Jonas Small, Francis Mace, and several other families from Redstone returned to Carolina, dissatisfied with the hills, vales, and mud of the ]SJ"orthwest, little dreaming of the level and open plains of this valley. Horton Howard and family started first from Fredericktown; Joseph Dew, Levina Hall, and ourselves, made another start in September, or early in October. We started in the afternoon, and lay at Benjamin Townsend's on Fishpot Run; we lay also at the Blue Ball, near Washing- ton, at Rice's, on the Buffalo, and at Warren [at the mouth of Short creek], on the Ohio. These are all the night stands that I recollect, in fifty-five miles. We arrived safe at John Leaf's, in what is now called Concord settlement. From Warren, Joseph Dew and Mrs. Hall pro- ceeded up Little Short creek, and stopped near where Mt. Pleasant now is. In what is now called Concord settlement, four or five years previ- ously, five or six persons had squatted and made small improvements. The Friends, chiefly from Carolina, had taken the land at a clear sweep. 68 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Mr. Leaf lived on a tract bought hy Horton TTo-ward, since OAvned by Samnel Potts, and subsequently by Williym ilillhonse. Horton Howard had turned in on Mr. Leaf, and we turned in on both. If anyone has an idea of tlie appearance of the remnant of a town that has been nearly destroyed by fire, and the homeless inhabitants turned in upon those Avho were left, they can form some idea of the squatters' cabins that fall. It was a real harvest for them, however, for they received the rhino for the privileges granted and work done, as well in aid of the emigrants in getting cabins up as for their improvements. This settlement is in Belmont county, on Glenn's linn, about six miles northwest of Wheeling, and as much northeast of St. Clairsville. Emigrants poured in from different posts, cabins were put up in every direction, and women, children, and goods tumbled into them. The tide of emigration flowed like water through the breach in a milldam. Everything Avas bustle and confusion, and all at work that could work. In the midst of all this, the mumps, and perhaps one or two other dis- eases prevailed, and gave us a seasoning. Our cabin had been raised, covered, part of the cracks chinked, and part of the floor laid when we moved in, on Christmas day. There had not been a stick cut except in building the cabin. We had intended an inside chimney, for we thought the chimney ought to be in the house. We had a log put across the whole width of the cabin for a mantel, but when the floor was in Ave found it so loAV as not to ansAver, and removed it. Here Avas a great change for my mother and sister, as Avell as the rest, but particularly my mother. She Avas raised in the most delicate manner, in and near Lon- don, and lived most of the time in affluence, and alAA^ays comfortable. She was now in the wilderness, surrounded by Avild beasts, in a cabin Avith about half a floor, no door, no ceiling overhead, not even a tolerable sign for a fireplace; the light of day and the chilling aa^ucTs of night passing between every two logs, the cabin so high from the ground that a bear, wolf, panther, or any animal less in size than a coav, could enter AA'ithout even a squeeze. Such Avas our situation on Thursday and Thurs- day night, December 25th, 1800, and which was bettered but by very slow degrees. We got the rest of the floor laid in a fcAv days; the chinking of the cracks Avent on slowly, but the daubing could not proceed until the AA^eather was more suitable, Avhich happened in a few days; doorways were sawed out and steps made of the logs, and the back of the chimnev Avas raised up to the mantel, but the funnel of sticks and clay Avas delayed until spring. In building our cabin, it was set to front the north and south, my brother using my father's pocket compass on the occasion. We had no idea of living in a house that did not stand square Avith the earth itself. This argued our ignorance of the comforts and conveniences of a pioneer life. The position of the house, end to the hill, necessarily elevated the lower end, and the determination to have both a north and a roiith door added much to the airiness of the domicile, particularly after the green ash puncheons had shrunk so as to leave cracks in the floor and doors HARRISON COUNTY PIONEERS 69 from one to two inches. At both the doors we had hi(?h, imstead}^, and sometimes icy steps, made by pilins: ^^P the logs cut out of the wall. We had a window, if it could be called a window, when, perhaps, it was the largest spot in the top, bottom, or sides of the cabin at which the wind could not enter. It was -made by sawing out a log, placing sticks across, and then, by pasting an old newspaper over the holes, and apply- ing some hog's lard, we had a kind of a glazing which shed a most beauti- ful and mellow light across the cabin when the sun shone upon it. All other light entered at the doors, cracks, and chimney. Our cabin was twenty-four by eighteen. The west end was occupied by two beds, the center of each side by a door, and here our symmetry had to stop, for on the side opposite the window, made of clap-boards, supported by pins driven into the logs, were our shelves. Upon these, shelves ray sister displayed, in ample order, a host of pewter plates, basins, and dishes, and spoons, scoured and bright. It was none of your new-fangled pewter, made of lead, but the best of London pewter, which our father himself bought of Townsend, the manufacturer. These were the plates upon which you could hold your meat so as to cut it without slipping and without dulling your knife. But, alas! the days of pewter plates and sharp dinner knives have passed away, never to return. To return to our internal arrangements. A ladder of five rounds occupied the corner near the windov/. By this, when we got a floor above, we could ascend. Our chimney occupied most of the east end; pots and kettles opposite the window under tlie shelves, a gun on hooks over the north door, four split-bottom chairs, three three-legged stools, and a small eight by ten looking-glass sloped from the wall over a large towel and comb-case. These, with a clumsy shovel and a pair of tongs, made in Frederick, with one shank straight, as the best manufacturer of pinches and blood-blisters, completed our furniture, except a spinnino-- wheel, and such things as wej-e necessary to work with. It was abso- lutely necessary to have three-legged stools, as four legs of anythin-i- could not all touch the floor at the same time. The completion of our cabin went on slowly. The season was in- clement; we were weak-handed and weak-pocketed — in fact, laborers were not to be had. We got one chimney up breast-high as soon as we could, and got our cabin daubed as high as the joists outside. It never was daubed on the inside, for my sister, who was very nice, could not consent to " live right next to the mud." My impression now is, that the window was not constructed till spring, for until the sticks and clay were put on the chimney we could possibly have no need for a window; for the flood of light which always poured into the cabin from the fire- place woLihl have extinguished our window, and rendered it as useless as the moon at noon-day. We got a floor laid overhead as soon as possible, perhaps in a month; but, Avhen it was laid, the reader can readily con- ceive of its imperviousness to Avind or weather, when we mention that it v^as laid of loose clap-lxjards, split from a red-oak. That tree grew in 70 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY the niglit, and so twisting that each board laid on two diagonally op- posite corners, and a cat might have shook every board on our ceiling. It may be well to inform the unlearned reader that clap-boards are such lumber as pioneers split with a frow, and resemble barrel staves be- fore they are shaved, but are split longer, wider, and thinner; of such our roof and ceiling were composed. Puncheons were planks made by split- ting logs to about two and a half or three inches in thickness and hewing them on one or both sides Avith a broad-axe. Of such our floor, doors, tables, and stools were manufactured. The inonotony of the time for several of the first years was broken and enlivened by the howl of wild beasts. The wolves howling around us seemed to moan their inability to drive us from their long undis- puted domain. The bears, panthers, and deer seemingly got miffed at our approach, or the partiality of the hunters, and but seldom troubled us. We did not hunt for them. The wild-cat, raccoon, 'possum, hornet, yellow-jacket, rattlesnake, copperhead, nettle, and a host of small things, which seemed in part to balance the amount of pioneer happiness, held on to their rights until driven out gradually by the united efforts of the pioneers, who like a band of brothers usually aided each other in the great work. These things, as well as getting their bread, kept them too busy for law-suits, quarrels, crimes, and speculations, and made them happy. When spring was fully come, and our little patch of corn — three acres — put in among the beech roots, which at every step contended with the shovel-plough for the right of soil, and held it, too, we enlarged our stock of conveniences. As soon as bark would run (i. e., peel off), we could make ropes and bark boxes. These we stood in great need of, as such things as bureaus, stands, wardrobes, or even barrels, were not to be had. The manner of making ropes of linn-bark was to cut the bark in strips of convenient length, and water-rot it in the same manner as rotting flax or hemp. When this was done, the inside bark would peel off and split up so fine as to make a pretty considerably rough and good- for-but-little kind of a rope. Of this, however, we were very glad, and let no ship-owner with his grass ropes laugh at us. We made two kinds of boxes for furniture. One kind was of hickory bark, with the outside shaved off. 'J'his we would take oft' all around the tree, the size of which would determine the caliber of our box. Into one end we would place a flat piece of bark or puncheon, cut round to lit in the bark, which stood on end the same as when on the tree. There was little need of hooping, as the strength of the bark would keep that all right enough. Its shrink- age would make the top unsightly in a parlor now-a-days, but then they were considered quite an addition to the furniture. A much finer article was made of slippery-elm bark, shaved smooth, and with the inside out, bent round and sewed together where the ends of the hoop or main bark lapped over. The length of the bark was around the box, and inside out. A bottom was made of a piece of the same bark, dried flat, and a lid, like HARRISON COUNTY PIONEERS 71 that of a common band-box, made in the same way. This was the finest furniture in a lady's dressing-room, and then^ as now, with tlie finest furniture, the lapped or sewed side was turned to the wall, and the pret- tiest part to the spectator. They were easily made oval, and while the bark was green, were easily ornamented with drawings of birds, trees, &c., agreeably to the taste and skill of the fair manufacturer. As we be- longed to the Society of Friends, it may be fairly presumed that our band- boxes were not thus ornamented. To the above store of bark ropes and bark boxes must be added a few gums before the farmer considered himself comfortably fixed. It may be well to inform the unlearned reader that gums are hollow trees cut off, with puncheons pinned on, or fitted into one end, to answer in the place of barrels. The privations of a pioneer life contract the wants of man almost to total extinction, and allow him jneans of charity and benevolence. Sufferings ennoble his feelings, and the frequent necessity for united efforts at house-raisings, log-rollings, corn-huskings, &c., produced in him habitual charity, almost unknown in these days. We settled on beech land, which took much trouble to clear. We could do no other way than clear out the smaller stuff and burn the brush around the beeches, which, in spite of all the burning and gird- ling we could do to them, would leaf out the first year, and often a little the second. The land, however, was very rich, and would bring better corn than might be expected. We had to tend it principally with the hoe, that is, to chop down the nettles, the water- weed, and the touch- me-not. Grass, careless, lambs-quarter, and Spanish needles were re- served for the better prepared farmers. We cleared a small turnip patch, which we got in about the 10th of August. We sowed in timothy seed, which took well, and the next year we had a little hay besides. The tops and blades of the corn were also carefully saved for our horse, cow, and the sheep. The turnips were sweet and good, and in the fall we took care to gather walnuts and hickory nuts, which were very abundant. These, with the turnips, which we scraped, supplied the place of fruit. I have always been partial to scraped turnips, and could now beat any three dandies at scraping them. Johnny-cake, also, when we had meal to make it of, helped to make up our evening's repast. The Sunday morning biscuit had all evaporated, but the loss was partially supplied by the nuts and turnips. Our regular supper was mush and milk, and by the time we had shelled our corn, stemmed tobacco, and plaited straw to make hats, &c., &c., the mush and milk had seemingly decamped from the neighborhood of our ribs. To relieve this difficulty, my brother and I would make a thin Johnny-cake, part of which we would eat, and leave the rest until morning. At daylight we would eat the balance, as we walked from the house to work. To get grinding done was often a great difficulty, by reason of the scarcity of mills, the freezes in winter, and the droughts iu summer. We 72 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY had often to mamifacture meal (when we had corn) in any way we could get the corn to pieces. We soaked and pounded it, we shaved it, we planed it, and, at a proper season, we grated it. When one of our neigh- bors got a hand-mill, it was thought quite an acquisition to the neighbor- hood. In after years, when in time of freezing or drought, we could get srindina' bv waitina: for our turn no more than one day and a night at a horse-mill, we thought ourselves happy. To save meal we often made pumpkin bread, in which, when meal was scarce, the pumpkin would so predominate as to render it almost im- possible to tell our bread from that article, either by taste, looks, or the amount of nutriment it contained. To rise from the tabic with a good appetite is said to be healthy, and with some is said to be fashionable. What t]ien does it signify to be hungry for a month at a time, when it is not only healthy, but fashionable ? Besides all this, the sight of a bag of meal, when it was scarce, made the family feel more glad and thank- ful to Heaven then, than a whole boat-load would at the present time. S;tlt was five dollars per bushel, and we used none in our corn-bread, which we soon liked as well without it. What meat we had at first was fresh, and but little of that; for had we been hunters, we had no time to practice it. We had no candles, and cared little for them, .except for summer use. In Carolina we had the real fat light-wood — not merely pine- knots, but the fat, straight pine. This, from the brilliancy of our parlor of winter evenings, might be supposed to put not only candles, lamps, camphine, Greenough's chemical oil, but even gas itself to the blush. In the West we had not this, but my business was to ramble the woods every eveniug for seasoned sticks, or the bark of the shelly hickor}^, for light. ^Tis true that our light was not so good as even candles, but we got along without fretting, for we depended more upon the goodness of our eyes than we did upon the brilliancy of the light. One of my employments on winter evenings, after we raised flax, was the spinning of rope yarn, from the coarsest swingling tow, to make bed-cords for sale. " Swingling tow " is a corruption of " singling tow," as " swingle-tree " is of '" single-tree." The manner of spinning rope yarn was by means of a drujn, wliich turned on a horizontal shaft driven into a hole in one of the cabin logs near the fire. The yarn was hitched to a nail on one side of the circumference next to me. By taking an oblique direction, and keeping up a regular jerking, or pulling of the thread, the drum was kept in constant motion, and thus the twisting and pulling out went on regularly and simultaneously, until the length of the walk was taken up. Then, by winding the yarn first on my forearm, and from that on the drum, I was ready to spin another thread. The unlearned reader might inquire what we did with the finer kinds of tow. It is well enough to ajiprise him that next to rope yarn in fine- ness was filling for trousers and aprons; next finer, warp for the same, and filling for shirts and frocks; next finer, of tow thread, warp for sheets HARRISON COUNTY PIONEERS 73 and frocks, unless some of the higher grades of society would use flax thread. Linen shirts, especially seven hundred, was counted the very top of the pot, and he who v,'ore an eight hundred linen shirt was counted a dandy. He was not called a dandy, for the word was unknown, as well as the refined animal which bears that name. Pioneers found it to their advantage to wear tow linen and eat skim milk, and sell their flax, linen, and butter. Frocks were a short kind of shirt worn over the trousers. We saved our shirts by pulling them off in warm Aveather, and by wearing nothing in the day-time but our hats, made of straw, our frocks and our trousers. It will be thus perceived that these things took place before the days of suspenders, when everyone's trousers lacked about two inches of reaching up to where the waistcoat reached down. Suspenders soon be- came a part of the clothing, and were a real improvement in dress. The girls had forms without bustles, and rosy cheeks without paint. Those who are thin, lean, and colorless, from becoming slaves to idle- ness or fashion, are, to some extent, excusable for endeavoring to be arti- ficially what the pioneer girls were naturally; who, had they needed lac- ins,-, might have used tow strings, and if bran were used for bustles might have curtailed their suppers. Those circumstances which frequently occasioned the bran to be eaten after the flour was gone, laced tight enough without silk cord or bone-sets, and prevented that state of things which sometimes makes it necessary to eat both flour and bran together as a medicine, and requires bran or straw outside to make the shape re- spectable. N"ot only about the farm, but also to meeting, the younger part of the families, and even men went barefoot in summer. The young women carried their shoes and stockings, if they had them, in their hands, until they got in sight of the meeting-house, where, sitting on a log, they shod themselves for meeting, and at the same place, after meeting, they un- shod themselves for a walk home, perhaps one or two miles. Whether shoes, stockings, or even bonnets, were to be had or not, meeting must be attended. Turnips, walnuts, and hickory-nuts supplied the place of fruit till peaches were raised. In five or six years, millions of peaches rotted on the ground. Previous to our raising apples, we sometimes went to ]\[ar- tin's Ferr}', on the Ohio, to pick peaches for the owner, who had them distilled. We got a bushel of apples for each day's work in picking peaches. These were kept for particular eating, as if they had contained seeds of gold. Their extreme scarcity made them seem valuable, and stand next to the short biscuit that were so valued in times gone by. Paw-paws were eaten in tlieir season. When we got an abundance of ap- ples, they seemed to lose their flavor and relish. Pasturage was abundant in summer, being composed mostly of net- tles, waist higli, which made us fine greens, and tlius served for both the cow and her owner, and yet, like everything else on earth, seemed 74 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY to balance the account by stinging us at every turn. Even the good pas- turage of this new countr}^, considered as pasture, had its balancing prop- erties; for the same rich soil from which spring nettles and pasture in such abundance, brought forth also the ramps, or wild garlic, which, springing first,'was devoured by the cows. Cows could not be confined, for want of fences, nor dared we neglect milking, lest they might go dry; and so for two or three weeks cows were milked, in pails, and the milk thrown out and given to the hogs. We never milked on the ground, as it seemed a pity, and some said it was bad luck. Our axe-handies were straight and egg-shaped. Whether the oval form and the crooked bulbous ends of the present day is an improve- ment or not is inmiaterial here to inquire; but had we used the present form then, I shotdd at times have been fixed to the axe. The hand that holds this pen had, before it felt the cold of twelve winters, been so be- numbed by chopping in the cold as to have the fingers set to the handle, making it necessary to slip them off at the end, which could not have been done were they of the present shape. After the fingers were off, a little rubbing and stretching from the other hand would restore them, but would not dry up the blood nor heal the chaps with which they were cov- ered. These, and kindred things, are well calculated to make one, by con- trast, appreciate the blessings of leisure and ease; until they become too common, when we lose our relish of them, and the gratitude we ought to feel for time even to think. Note.— Morris West, grandfather of the centenarian, Thomas West, whose reminiscences appear in the foregoing claapter, seems to have settled in the southeastern corner of Archer township, about a mile and a half east of north from Cadiz. His name does not appear on the list of original grantees of land by the United States. Neither does that of his son, William West, the father of Thomas. On July 8, 1S09, Bazaleel Wells, the original pat- entee, deeded a portion of section 31, township 10, range 4, being the south- eastern section in Archer township, to Morris West. Some mention of Mor- ris West may also be found in the sketch of the history of Bethel Church. EARLY DAYS IN CADIZ 75 CHAPTEK VI. EARLY DAYS IN CADIZ. The land upon which Cadiz was built was granted to Zaccheus Beatty h}^ the United States Government, April 39, 1804, and was by him conveyed to Zaccheus Biggs, October 16, 1S05. Biggs was the first re- ceiver of the Land Office at Steubenville, having been appointed July 1, 1800. He was also one of the surveyors in 1805, of Short Creek Athens, and Moorefield townships; and doubtless in that way became ac- quainted with tl>3 resources and richness of soil of the country now in- cluded within the bounds of Harrison county. A portion of the site of Cadiz is said to have been occupied by one Garret Glazener, for a blacksmith shop, about tlie year 1800; but this statement rests mainly on tradition, and is open to confirmation. The first horse path, or trail, reaching this point from the East without doubt led to Wellsburg (or Charlestown, as it was first called), and probably entered the present limits of the county at a point nearly east of Beech Spring Church. Another path left the Ohio at Warrentown, and followed Short creek to its head-waters, and from thence to a connection with the Charlestown road. As soon as the land office was opened at Steubenville (1800), and probably before that date, a third route, following the old In- dian trails, was opened between the site of Cadiz and the river, later con- tinued on to what is now the town of Cambridge, in Guernsey countv and since then known as the Steubenville and Cambridge road. The opening of this road was no doubt occasioned by the fact that most of the emigrants into the ISTorthwest Territory, wherever they crossed the Ohio, had to proceed to Steubenville to make their filings in the land of- fice before taking up their lands; and many, whose destination was west 76 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY of tlie sources of Short creek, would naturally proceed by the shortest route to regain the main traveled road through this latitude, which led west from what is now Wellsburg, The intersection of these two roads was at the site of Cadiz. In Mr. Archer Butler Hulbert's monograph on "The Indian Thor- oughfares of Oh'o," published in the January (1900) Quarterly of the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society, and since issued in book form, the author defines the route of an earh Indian trail wliicli passed through Harrison county, and which he designates by the name of the Mingo Trail. This lead from the Mingo Bottoms (Steubenville), on the Ohio, to Will's Town (now Duncan's Falls, a short distance below Zanesville, in Muskingum county), on the Muskingum. If a straight line be drawn on the map of Ohio, connecting these two points, it will be found to pass through Harrison county a short distance south of Cadiz. Mr. Hulbert states that this Trail passed "across the highlands of Noble, Guernse}'', Harrison, and Jefferson counties. This route is identical with that denominated the "Federal Trail" in Dr. Eobertson's History of Morgan county, Ohio (p. 126). Undoubtedly, it is practically the route of the present Steubenville and Cambridge road, which was first known as the Steubenville and Zanesville road. In speaking of Indian trails, Mr. Hulbert says: "It is possible to believe, that in the earliest times, the Indians traveled only on rivers and lakes. AVhen they turned inland, we can be practically sure that they found, ready-made and deeply worn, the verj' routes of travel which have since born tlieir name. For the beginning of the history of road-making in this central west, we must go back two centuries, when the buffalo, urged by his need of change of climate, newer feeding grounds, and fresh salt-licks, first found his way through the forests. Even if the first thoroughfares were made by the mastodon and the mound-builder, they first came to white man's knowledge as buffalo "traces," and later became Indian trails. . . One wbo has any conception of the west as it was a century and a half ago, who can see the river valleys filled with the immemorial plunder of the river floods, can realize that tliere was but one practicable passage-way across the land for either beast or man, and that on the summit of the hills. Here on the hilltops, mount- ing on the lougest ascending ridges, lay the tawny paths of the buffalo and Indians. They were not only highways, they were the highest ways, and chosen for the best reasons: 1. The hilltops offered the driest EARLY DAYS IN CADIZ 77 courses. 2. The hilltops were windswept. 3. The hilltops were coigns of vanta2;e for outlook and sionallino;. . . . "An interesting proof of the use made of Indian trails by the white man is found in the blazed trees which line them. There is not an im- portant trail in Ohio which is not blazed, and it is well known that the red men were not in the habit of blazing their trails, . . . Upon the high summits of the long ranges of hills one may to-day see upon the aged tree trunks savage gashes made not less than a century ago, as the writer has ascertained by a study of the blazes made in Washington county on roads laid out by the surveyors of the Ohio Company, 1795- 1800." While there was no wagon road in Harrison county before 1800, it is reasonable to suppose that both the paths above referred to were wid- ened and made passable for vehicles soon after that date; for the emi- gration that followed the opening of the Steubenville land office poured in like a liugh wave. In fact, large numbers of people had come into the adjoining counties in I'ennsylvania and Virginia, months before the open- ing of the land office, to be on the ground and ready to get in early, and have their pick of the choicest land; just as a few years ago was the case in the Indian Territory, when Oklahoma was opened for settlement. It may be readily understood, therefore, that when the bars were first let down, the settlers came in with a rush; and during the next three or four years many of the best sections in the present townships of Green, Short Creek, Cadiz, and Athens had been pre-empted. The town of Cadiz was laid out by Zaccheus A. Beatty and Zaccheus Biggs, the plat being acknowledged by Z. A. Beatty, one of the pro- prietors, before Benjamin Hough, Justice of the Peace, October 39, 1804, and recorded the same day at Steubenville, Jefferson county. The lots wei-e numbered, 1 to 141. The streets were South, Warren, Market, Spring, North, Muskingum, Steubenville (now Main), Ohio, and Wheeling (now Buffalo). The first deed for a lot was made by Zaccheus Biggs and wife, Eliza Biggs, to John Finney, the consideration being $20. The date of the deed was February 28, 180G; recorded March 4, 180G; Lot No. 4. From that elate to the time of the organization of Harrison county (February 1, 1813), the following lots were sold, some of the deeds for the same ap- pearing on the records of Jefferson county only: John Finney, February 28, 1806, Lot 4; consideration, $20. Phineas Ash, March, ISOG, Lot 88; consideration, $44. 78 ' HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John Perry, March 23, 1806, Lot 22; consideration, $13. James McMillen, April 9, 180G, Lots 74 and 75; consideration, $36. John Pritchard, of Fayette county. Pa., April 9, 1806, Lot 87; con- sideration, $27. Martin Snyder, Aug. 11, 180G, Lot 86. Andrew McNeely, Aug. 12, 1806 Lots 112 and 129; consideration, $70. William Foster, before Dec. 31, 1806, Lot 13. Sarah Young, Dec. 31, 1806, Lot 13. John Maholm, October, 1806 (?), Lot 70; consideration, $30. Jacob Browne, of Brooke county, Va., Oct. 9, 1806, Lots 110 and 111; consideration, $137. Robert H. Johnson, Oct. 20, 1806, Lots 105 and 106. Samuel Boyd, Nov. 7, 1806, Lot 91. Joljn Pugh, of Frederick county, Va., Dec. 8, 1806, Lot 14; con- sideration, $30. Joseph Harris, Dec. 31, 1806, Lot 108. Jacob Arnold, June 17, 1806, Lot 109; consideration $65.75. Peter Wilson, June 25, 1807, Lot 31. John L. Baker, Aug. 17, 1807, Lot 130; consideration, $12. Zaccheus A. Beatty, Oct. 7, 1808, Lot 79. Rebecca Paul, of Philadelphia, Oct. 17, 1808, Lot 69; consideration, $30. Rudolph Ilines, July 24, 1809, Lot 82. John Ourant, of jSTew Lisbon, July 24, 1809, Lot 102; consideration, $30. John McGaughy, before Sept. 22, 1809, Lot 77. William Orr, before Nov. 14, 1809, Lot 89. John McCray, June 12, 1810, Lot 55; consideration, $40. William Grimes, March 26, 1810, Lot 99; consideration, $30. John Sherrard, Aug. 4, 1811, Lot 130. James Simpson, Dec. 5, 1810, Lot 100; consideration, $30. William Sherrard, Aug. 4, 1811, Lot 130; consideration, $14.56. ^saac Meek, Sept. 14, 1811, Lot 103. Adam Snyder, Dec. 18, 1811, Lot 144. Samuel Jackson, Jan. 13, 1812, Lot 145. Thomas Dickerson, Feb. 28, 1812, Lot 113; consideration, $50. Robert Stephens, of Fayette comity, I'a., Feb. 14, 1812, two a>jres rdjoining the northwest comer of Cadiz; consideration, $46. EARLY DAYS IN CADIZ 79 William Vaughn, March 7, 1812, Lot 149. John McClintock, April 16, 1813, Lot 117; consideration, $30. Easter Tingley, April 15, 1812, Lot 101. John Pugh, Jr., April 15, 1813, Lot 14. George McFadden, April 15, 1813, Lot 83. Charles Chapman, April 15, 1813, Lot 93. John McFadden, Samuel Carnahan, John Craig, William Hamilton, and John Jamison, "trustees, appointed by the Associate Eeformed Con- gregation of Cadiz," April 35, 1813, Lots 58, 59, and 60 (the site of the old Union church, now occupied as a residence by Mr. A. H. Carnahan); consideration, $30. Eohert Cochran, April 16, 1813, Lot 30. Nathan Adams, April 17, 1813, certain lands "on the waters of Short cl-eek, in the town of Cadiz, being Lots 133 and 138"; consideration, $75.50. Robert Kelly, April 18, 1812, Lot 4; consideration, $13. Job Gatchef, Oct. 7, 1813, Lot 54. John Baxter, before Oct. 7, 1813, Lot 54. Henry Pepper, Xov. 25, 1813, Lot 114. Henry Howe's description of Cadiz in 1807, published in his Histor- ical Collections in 1847-48, is no doubt familiar to most of the readers of this volume; and as it was taken by Mr. Howe from the lips of some of the original settlers, it gives us the most direct account we have of the es- tablishment of the village. While a comparison of this description with the foregoing list of lot-owners, shows that Mr. Howe's informants did not include all the first settlers in their account, the latter is especially valuable as giving us an idea of the business and occupation of many of the early fathers. Howe's description is as follows: Cadiz, the county seat, is a remarkably Avell-built and city-like town [this was in 1847], four miles southeasterly from the center of the county, 115 easterly from Columbus, twenty-four westerly from Steuben- ville, and twenty-four northerly from Wheeling. It contains (Tie Pres- byterian, one Methodist Episcopal, one Associate (Seceder), and one As- sociate Reformed church. It also contains two printing presses, twelve dry-goods, seven grocery, and two drug-stores, and had, in 1840, 1,038 inhabitants. Cadiz was laid out in 1803, or 1804, by Messrs Biggs and Beatty. Its site was then, like most of the surrounding country, a forest, and its location was induced by the junction there of the road from Pittsburg, by Steubenvillc, Avith the road from Washington, Pa., by Wellsburg, Va., from where the two united, passed by Cambridge to Zanesville; and 80 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY previous to the construction of the national road through Ohio [bnilt in 1825-'^7], was traveled, more, perhaps, than any other road northwest of the Ohio river. In April, 1807, it contained the follov.-ing named per- sons, with their families: Jacob Arnold, inn -keeper; Andrew McNeeley, hatter and justice of the peace; Joseph Harris, merchant; John Jamison, tanner; John McCrea, wheel-wright; Robert Wilkin, brick-maker; Cou- ncil Abdill, shoemaker; Jacob Myers, carpenter; John Pritchard, black- smith; Nathan Adams, tailor; James Simpson, reed-maker; William Tiniilov, school-teacher; and old Granny [Sarah] Young, midwife and baker, who was subsetiuently elected (by the citizens of the township in a fit of hilarity) to the office of justice of the peace; Jnit females not being eligible to otFice in Ohio, the old lady was obliged to forego the pleasure of serving her constituents. The first celebration of Independence in Cadiz was on the 4th of July, 1806, when the people generally, of the town and country for miles around, attended, and partook of a fine repast of venison, wild turkey, bear meat, and such vegetables as the country afforded; while for a drink, rye whiskey was used. There was much hilarity and good feeling. ]\rr. Howe's list contains the names of but thirteen families; but the list of first lot-owners shows the names of at least twenty persons who had purchased lots or were residents of Cadiz before 1808. It will be not without interest to locate these earliest lot-owners, so that we may be able to form some idea of the appearance of the village in 1807. It is not probable that all of the lots sold up to that time were built upon; and those on which houses stood were doubtless surrounded by forest trees, or the stumps of trees. The houses, of course, were of the rudest description, small log cabins, containing one, two, or three rooms, similar to those of which a few are still to be seen in parts of Harrison county, although by no means so well-made. Some of tliese log cabins are still standing in Cadiz, without a doubt, covered up and disguised by the • more modern weather-boarding, and with additions and extensions built on since the days of the pioneers, but with the same eighteen inch thick walls, of oak or walnut timber, as when their sites were first built upon. Beginning at what was then the eastern extremity of Market street, at the intersection of the present Buffalo street (then called Wheeling street, and forming the southeastern bovmdary of the village), and pro- ceeding thence to the northwest, we find the first corner lot on the right was OAvned by John Finney. The lots, it should be observed, were origin- ally all sixty-six feet wide; the most of them on the main streets have been since subdivided into narrower and more numerous lots. At that EARLY DAYS IN CADIZ 81 time, three lots constituted a quarter of a block (the lots being 198 feet in depth, or three times their width). The lot next to John Finney's was bought by John Pugh. Directly across the street (late the residence of John Eea) and the adjoining ground stood the domicile of Sarah Young, then, as in recent years, the site of a bakery. Adjoining her lot was that of John Perry, which extended to the alley (later occupied by the residence of Tunis Ililligas); across the alley, on the opposite side of the street, Peter Wilson bought; and there were no more houses be- tween his and Ohio street. Crossing Market street again, and proceeding further up the hill, we come to John Maholm's place (now occupied in part by the residence of Wilson Ilouser). On top of the hill, turning to the right, and into Steubenville (now Main) street, the second lot from the corner (now occupied in part by the post-office building), belonged to Martin Snyder; and next to him, reaching to the alley, was the lot on which stood John Pritchard's story and a half log-house.. Beyond him was Phineas Ash; while Eobert H. Johnson owned the two lots directly across Main street from Pritchard and Ash. Half a block down the street from Phineas Ash, on the further corner of Spring and Main streets, was the lot of Samuel Boyd. On the corner now occupied by the Farmers' and Mechanics' National Bank stood the house of Josepli Harris, his lot extending along Market street back to the alley (now oc- cupied by the Bank, Opera House, and the buildings between). Below him, in the middle of the next quarter-block, Andrew McNeely owned the second lot above Muskingum street, the street which -then formed the northwestern boundary of the village, being the lot recently occu- pied by the Smiley family. Directly opposite Andrew MclSTeely's was John Baker, who bought in 1807. Passing around the front of the Pub- lic Square, and down Main street towards Warren, the first house was Jacob Arnold's tavern, which stood on the site of F. J. Wagner's bakery. The remaining two lots in that quarter-block (now occupied by the old Music Hall and the Swan House) belonged to Jacob Brown. The lot since occupied by the United Presbyterian church then belonged to An- drew McNeely, and it is probable that his cabin stood on that spot; al- though, as stated above, he also owned the lot nearly opposite the Pres- byterian church, above the present residence of Dr. S. B. McGavran. The two lots on the opposite side of South Main street, between the Pres- byterian parsonage and the Hcarn residence, belonged to James McMillan. This completes the list of lot owners whose deeds bear dates prior to 1808, seventeen in all; l)ut in addition to the names of some of those 6 82 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY given above, Henry Howe mentions seven more, as living in Cadiz in 1807. Tliese seven did not olitain titles to lots until a later period; and in most cases there is no way of determining where they lived in the meantime. Perhaps some of them may have been inmates with some of the house-holders, and it is not unnatural to presume, that Mine Host Jacob Arnold, had permanent acommodations for at least a few "regular boarders,^^ until they could better provide for themselves. Again, some then classed as citizens of Cadiz may have had their homes on their farms outside of the village, as it is certain a number of those whose names appear as lot-owners were also extensive land-owners in the county. The nearest that can be done towards locating the remaining seven residents mentioned by Howe, is to give the location of the prop- erty first purchased by each one of them, which was as follows : Connel Abdill, in 1832, bought the lot on Market street noiv occupied in part by the K. W. Kinsey homestead. John Jamison lived on his farm near Cadiz. John McCrea, in 1810, bought the lot at the corner of Market and Ohio streets, since occupied in part by James Bullock's residence. Jacob Myers appears to have been a tenant. James Simpson, in 1810, bought the lot across the alley from and southwest of the home of Frederick J. Wagner; and the lot next to James Simpson's was purchased in 1812 by Easter Tingley, William Tingley not acquiring any titles until 1825. Eobert Wilkin, brick-maker, may have lived out of town, or bought his lot at second-hand. A complete list of the original owners of each lot in Cadiz, and additions thereto, is given herewith: Connel Abdii, before May 18, 1832, Lot 39, (see Thomas Lee). Nathnn Adams, Xov. 14, 1809, Lot 89, (deeded by William Orr); July 24, 1811, Lot 107; before March 20, 1815, Lot 93, (see Jacob Snedikcr); April 7, 1812, Lots 122 and 138, "on the waters of Short creek, in the town of Cadiz;" March 25, 1813, Lots 148 and 150, (deeded by Jacob Arnold; before Feb. 4, 1815, Lot 171, (see Benjamin Bennett); before Aug. 20, 1816, Lot 174, (see Jacob Holmes); before, Dec. 18, 1818, Lots 172 and 173, (see Hines Median and David McGyre); before Sep. 12, 1831, Lots 175 and 17G, (see James Knox); before Dec. 20, 1837, Lots 169 and 170, (see Daniel Morris). Isaac Allen, before Aug. 7, 1829, Lots 187, 188, 190, (see Eeuben Allen. James Allen, Aug. 3, 1836, Lot 195, (deeded by Philip Trine). \ EARLY DAYS IN CADIZ 83 Eeiiben Allen, Aug. 7, 1S29, Lots 187, 188, 190, (deerled by Isaac Allen). Jacob Arnold, July 17, 1806, Lot 109; before Dec. 18, 1811, Lot 144, (see Adam Snider); before Jan. 13, 1813, Lot 145, (see Samuel Jackson); before March 7, 1813, Lot 149, (see William A^aughn); before May 13, 1813, Lots 142 and 143, (see John Braden) ; March 6, 1813, Lot 31, (deed- ed by Francis Mitchell); before March 35, 1813, Lots 148 and 150, (see Nathan Adams). James Arnold, before jMarch 34, 1819, Lots 191 and 193, (see Thomas Bradford and John Mclntire); before March 39, 1819, Lot 193, (see James ]\[cElroy); before June 12, 1819, Lots 186 and 189, (see Eobert Clark and Zebedee Cox). Eezin Arnold, Mavdi 13, 1818, Lot 178, (deeded by Andrew Mc- iSTeely). Phineas Ash, March — , 1806, Lot 88. John L. Baker, Aug. 17, 1807, Lot 130. John Baxter, before Oct. 7, 1812, Lot 54, (see John Gatchel). Zaccheus A. Beatty, Oct. 7, 1808, Lot 79; Oct. 33, 1814, Lots 90 and 116; Oct. 24, 1814, Lot 63. Walter B. Beebe, May 24, 1813, Lots 145, 155, and 156; Dec. 6, 1819, Lots 159, 162, and 163. Benjamin Bennett, Feb. 4, 1815, Lot 171, (deeded by Xathan Adams). George Bohrer, before March 25, 1814, Lot 40, (see John Stoakes). Samuel Boyd, Xov. 7, 1806, Lot 91. John Braden, May 13, 1812, Lots 143 and 143, (deeded by Jacob Arnold). David Bradford, June 27, 1814, Lot 158. Thomas Bradford, March 24, 1819, Lot 191, (deeded by James Arnold). Jacob Brown, of Brooke county, Va., AjDril 9, 1806, Lot 111; July 19, 1806, Lot 110. Joseph Burnell, March 29, 1825, Lot 81, (deeded by William Hender- son). John Burns, May 27, 1815, Lot 160. Kins Cahill, before May 24, 1814, Lot 147, (see John Sullers). ; Samuel Carnahan, April 16, 1812, (see John McFadden). Charles Chapman, April 15, 1812, Lot 93; March 24, 1815, Lot 104, (deeded by Jobn Forney). 84 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Kobert Clark, June 12, 1819, Lot 189, (deeded by James Arnold). Eobert Cochran, April IG, 1812, Lot 30. Zebedee Cox, June 12, 1819, Lot 18G, (deeded b}^ James Arnold). John Craig, April 16, 1812, (see John McFadden). James Crossan, April 2, 1850, Lot 197, (deeded by William Knox). Eobert Croske}', June 18, 181-1, Lot 84, (deeded by Thomas Stoakes). Thomas Dickerson, Feb. 28, 1812, Lot 113. John Finne}^, Feb 12, ISOfJ, Lot 4, (the first lot sold in Cadiz; deeded again by Zaccheus Biggs to Eobert Kelly, April 18, 1812). John Forney, before March 24, 1815, Lot 104, (see Charles Chap- man). William Foster, before Dec. 31, 1806, Lot 13, (see Sarah Young). Job Gatchel, Oct. 7, 1812, Lot 54, (deeded by John Baxter). William Gilmore, before Feb. 29, 1848, Lot 153, (see James Mat- thews). William Grimes, March 26, 1810, Lot 99; Sept. 14, 1811, Lot 131; April 1, 1815, Lot 120, (deeded by Thomas Henderson). William Hamilton, April IG, 1812, (see John McFadden). A. F, Hanna, before July 1, 1837, Lot 199, (see School Directors). Jobn Hanna, April 21, 1814, Lots 161 and 164. Joseph Harris, Dec. 31, 1806, Lot 108. Thomas Henderson, before April 1, 1815, Lot 120, (see William Grimes). William Henderson, before March 29, 1825, Lot 81, (see Joseph Bur- nell). Eudolph Hines, July 24, 1809, Lot 82. Eleazer Huff, Feb. 15, 1814, Lots 45 and 115. William Huif, Oct. 8, 1814, Lot 46. Jacob Holmes, Aug. 20, 1816, Lot 174, (deeded by Nathan Adams). John Hover, Sr., before June 22, 1816, Lot 165, (see John Hover, Jr.). John Hover, Jr., June 22, 1816, Lot 165, (deeded by John Hover, Sr.). Samuel Jackson, Jan. 13, 1812, Lot 145, (deeded by Jacob Arnold), John Jamison, April 16, 1812, (see John McFadden). Eobert H. Johnson, Oct. 20, 1806, Lots 105 and 106. Eobert Johnson, May 5, 1814, Lot 112, (deeded by Andrew McNeely). Eobert Kelly, April 16, 1812, Lot 4, (see John Finney); May 14, 1814, Lot 70, (deeded by Samuel Williams). EARLY DAYS IN CADIZ 85 James Knox, Sq^t. 12, 1831, Lots 175 and 176, (deeded by Nathan Adams). William Knox, before Aug. 6, 1833, Lot 194, (see George White); before June 23, 1837, Lot 196, (see Samuel MeCormick); before Jan. 13, 1838, Lot 198, (see Robert McCullough); before April 2, 1850, Lot 197, (see James Crossan). Thomas Lee, May 18, 1832, Lot 39, (deeded by Connel Abdil). John McClintock, April 16, 1812, Lot 117. Samuel MeCormick, Jane 23, 1837, Lot 196, (deeded by William Knox). John McCray, March 12, 1810, Lot 55. Eobert McCullough, Jan. 13, 1838, Lot 198, (deeded by William Knox). James McElroy,' March 29, 1819, Lot 193, (deeded by James Arnold). George McFadden, April 15, 1812, Lot 83. John McFadden, Samuel Carnahan, John Craig, William Hamilton, and John Jamison, "trustees appointed by the Associate Reformed Con- gregation of Cadiz," April 16, 1812, Lots 58, 59, 60. James McC. Galbraith, May 2, 1815, Lot 181, (deeded by Andrew McjSTeely. John McGaughy, Sept. 22, 1809, Lot 77; before Feb. 21, 1814, Lot 76, (see John Marshall). David McGyre, Dec. 28, 1818, Lot 173, (deeded by Nathan Adams). John Mclntire, March 24, 1819, Lot 192, (deeded by James Arnold). Andrew McKee, June 30, 1819, Lot 185, (deeded by Andrew Mc- Xeely). James McMillan, April 9, 1806, Lots 74 and 75. Alexander McXary, May 24, 1814, Lot 157. Andrew McNeely, Aug. 12, 1806, Lot 129; before May 5, 1814, Lot 112, (see Robert Johnson); before May 2, 1815, Lots 181 and 182, (see James McC. Galbraith and Stephen Perry); before Sept. 11, 1816, Lot 184, (see James Moore); before March 13, 1818, Lot 178, (see Rezin Ar- nold); before Sept. 5, 1818, Lot 177, (see William R. Slemmons). John Maholm, Aug.-Oct., 1806, Lot 70, (see Robert Kelly and Samuel Williams; also, Pritchard, Maholm, and Harris). John Marshall, Feb. 21, 1814, Lot 76, (deeded by John McGaughy). James Matthews, Feb. 29, 1848, Lot 153, (deeded by William Gil- more). Hines Mechan, Dec. 28, 1818, Lot 172, (deeded by Nathan Adams). 86 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Isaac Meek, Sept. 14, 1811, Lot 103. Isaac Miller, June 1, 1813, Lots 166 and 167. Francis Mitchell, before March 6, 1813, Lot 21, (see Jacob Arnold). James Moore, Sept. 11, 1816, Lot 184, (deeded by Andrew McXeely). Daniel Morris, Dec. 20, 1837, Lots 109 and 170, (deeded by Nathan A.danis). William Orr, before Xov 14, 1809, Lot 89, (see Nathan Adams). Isaac Osburn, Sept. 17, 1814, Lot 53, (deeded by Eward Wood). Samuel Osburn, June 5, 1813, Lot 14G, (deeded by Jesse Sparks). John Ourant, July 24, 1809, Lot 102. Leonard Parrish, before Jan. 23, 1826, Lot 168, (see Mordecai Par- rish). Mordecai Parrish, Jan. 23, 1826, Lot 168, (deeded by Leonard Par- rish. Eebecca Paul, of Philadelphia, Oct. 17, 1808, Lot 69. Henry Pepper, Nov. 25, 1812, Lot 114; July 4, 1815, Lots 32, 38, 47. John Perry (or Parry), March 22, 1806, Lot 22. Stephen Perry May 2, 1815, Lot 182, (deeded by Andrew McNeely). John Pritchard, of Fayette county. Pa., April 9, 1806, Lot 87; Oct. 17, 1808, Lot 85; Dec. 5, 1810, 5.74 acres adjoining the plat of Cadiz, and the laud of Abraham Forney; July 13, 1815, Lots 65 and 68. John Pritchard, John Maholm, and Joseph Harris, April 16, 1812, Lots 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 34, 35, 36, 41, 42, 43, 44, 49, 50, 51, 56, 57, 60, 61, 62, 66, 67, 71, 72, 73, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 118, 119, 121, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 139, 140, 141. John Pugh, of Frederick county, Va., Dec. 8, 1806, Lot 14; April 14, 1808, Lots 64 and 74; Nov. 24, 1809, Lot 75 and 78. John Kankin and Samuel Kankin, June 5, 1813, Lots 33, 37, 48, 52, (deeded by Daniel Workman). School Directors, June 1, 1837, Lot 199, (deeded by A. F. Hanna). John Sherrard, Aug. 4, 1811, Lot 130, (originally deeded to John L.- Baker). William Sherrard, April 4, 1811, Lot 137. Short Creek School House, April 15, 1812, Lot 15. James Simpson, Dec. 5, 1810, Lot 100. Sarah Simpson, April 22, 1816, Lots 151 and 152. William E. Slemmons, Sept. 5, 1818, Lot 177, (deeded by Andrew McNeely). EARLY DAYS IN CADIZ 87 Jacob Siiediker, March 20, 1815, Lot 93. Adam Snider, Dec. 18, 1811, Lot 111, (deeded by Jacob Arnold). Martin Snyder, Aug. 11, 1806, Lot 8G. Jesse Sparks, before June 5, 1836, Lot 116, (see Samuel Osburn). Eobert Stephens, of Fayette comity. Pa., Feb. 4, 1812, two acres adioininff the northwest corner o£ Cadiz. o John Stoakes, March 25, 1811, Lot 34, (deeded by George Bohrer). Thomas Stoakes, before June 18, 1814, Lot 84, (see Eobert Croskey). Henry Stubbins, Oct. 30, 182?, Lot 179, (deeded by Andrew Mc- Xeely). John Sutlers, May 24, 1814, Lot 147, (deeded by Kins Cahill). Abraham Timmons, May 18, 1822, Lot 5. Benjamin Timmons, May 10, 1849, Lot 180, (deeded by William Tim- mons). William Timmons, before ]\Iay 10, 1849, Lot 180, (see Benjamin Timmons). Easter Tingley, April 15, 1812, Lot 101. Philip Trine, before Aug. 3, 1836, Lot 195, (see James Allen). William Vaughn, March 7, 1812, Lot 149, (deeded by Jacob Arnold). John Ward, Aug. 15, 1815, Lot 80, (deeded by Daniel Workman). George White, Aug. 6, 1833, Lot 194, (deeded by William Knox). Samuel Williams, before May 14, 1814, Lot 70, (see Robert Kelly and John Maholm). Peter Wilson, June 25, 1807, Lot 31. Edv/ard Wood, before Sept. 17, 1814, Lot 53, (see Isaac Osburn). 'Daniel Workman, before June 5, 1813, Lots 33, 37, 48, 52, (see John and Samuel Rankin); before Aug. 15, Lot 80, (see John Ward). Sarah Young, Dec. 31, 1806, Lot 13, (deeded by William Foster). In the foregoing list it will be observed that on April 16, 1812, all the lots remaining unsold in the original plat were conveyed to Pritchard, Maholm, and Harris. Joseph Flarris transferred his interest in these ■ lots to John Pritchard and John Maholm, who later conveyed them as follows: ■ John Burn.^, Lot 97, May 27, 1815. James McC. Galbraith, Lots 66 and 67, Sept. 3, 1817. William Grimes, Lot 136, May 24, 1814. John Hanna, Lots 125, 126, and 141, June 29, 1814. Conrad llilligas, Lots 28, 42, and 43, June 18, 1814. Phineas Inskeep, Lots 1, 2, 16, 17, 18, 19, June 10, 1814. 88 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY William Jamison, Lots 118, 133, and 134, July 25, 1814. Eobert Kelley, Lots 8, 10, 35, 26, 27, May 14, 1814. Jacob Kidwiler, Lot 50, April 4, 1817. Samuel McFadden, Lot 73, June 18, 1819. Andrew McNeely, Lots 119, 132, and 135, May 27, 1814. James Means, Lot 121, Aug. 17, 1816; Lots 94, 95, and 96, Aug. 29, 1818. Trustees Methodist Episcopal Church, Lot 3, April 20, 1810. John Pugh, Lots 57 and 61, Jan. 20, 1815. Zachariah Pumphrey, Lot 12, Jime 10, 1814; Lots 56 and 62, before Aug. 31, 183 6, (see Michael Swagler); Lot 71, Jan. 6, 1817; Lot 6, March 7, 1817; Lot 23, before March 27, 1817, (see Joseph White). John and Samuel Eankin, Lots 34, 35, 36, June 14, 1814. John Pea, Lots 29, 41, and 44, May 3, 1817. Philip Eiley, Lot 98, April 22, 1816. Thomas Shaw, Lot 72, July 25, 1814. Sarah Simpson, Lots 128 and 139, April 22, 1816. John Speer, Lot 51, Jan. 28, 1824. Michael Swagler, Lots 5() and 62, Aug. 31, 1816, (deeded by Zach- ariah Pumphrey). John Timmons, Lot 20, Jan. 31, 1824. Moses Frquehart, Lot 49, Jan. 27, 1824. William Waddle, Lots 124, 127, and 140, Feb. 23, 1814. Joseph White, Lot 23, March 27, 1817, (deeded by Zachariah Pum- phrey). The total number of lots in the original phit of Cadiz, as laid out by Biggs and Beatty in 1804, was 141. The firsi addition to the village was platted about 1812 by Jacob Arnold, who kept tavern in a log-cabin standing on the lot now occupied by Mr. F. J. Wagner. Arnold's addition consisted. of nine lots, numbered from 142 to 150. These are the lots on the southwest side of Market street ("Gimlet Hill"), lying between Buf- falo street and the alley opposite the old home of the Boggs family. The deed for the first one of these lots sold bore date May 13, 1812. A second addition was platted by Messrs. Pritchard and Maholm on May 24, 1813, containing seventeen lots, numbered from 151 to 167, forming the irregu- lar block lying between Market, Buffalo, and Spring streets, and the Cemetery avenue. A fourth addition was platted by Nathan Adams, containing nine lots, numbered from 168 to 176, from which the first lot was sold Feb. 4, 1815. These lots lie along the southwest side of Bing- EARLY DAYS IN CADIZ 89 ham avenue. Another addition, also containing nine lots, Tvas platted by Andrew McN"eely Ma}^ 1, 1815, the lots numbering from 177 to 185. These lie along the northeast side of Spring street, southeast of Buffalo. Another addition, comprising lots 186 to 193, laid out by James Arnold March, 15, 1815, extend along the southwest side of South street, be- tween Main and Ohio, now occupied in part by the residence of Mr. Gar- ret Shank. Lots 194 to 198 were platted by William Knox May 25, 1836, and extend from Muskingum street down the northeast side of Market, to the beginning of Lincoln avenue. Lot 199 was platted by Andrew P. Hanna June 1, 1837, when he deeded it to the school directors. It is now partly occupied by the residence of Melford J. Brown, Jr. Besides the above, Messrs. Pritchard and Maholm platted a second addition to Cadiz, which was filed May 24, 1813, consisting of a dozen lots, which were sold to the following purchasers: John Braden, Lot 13, May 8, 1818. Eowland Craig, Lot 12, July 4, 1816. John Hanna, Lot 5, Dec. 2, 1818. Thomas Hogg, Lot 11, May 8, 1846. John Maholm, Lots 7, 8, and 9, June 29, 1824. James Means, Lots 1, 2, 3, and 4, before June 2, 1825, (see William Tingley). Matthew Simpson, Lot 6, April 22, 1816. William Tingley, Lots 1, 2, 3, and 4, June 2, 1825, (deeded by James Means). Another addition to Cadiz, containing eight lots, was platted b^ Jacob Arnold, and the plat filed March 30, 1816, which was some two years after all the lots had been sold. The purchasers of these lots were as follows: Nathan Adams, Lot 7, March 25, 1813. Daniel Arnold, Lot 8, May 15, 1812. Benjamin Bennett, Lot 5, Sept. 18, 1813. James Boyd, Lots 2 and 3, Xov. 26, 1812. John Braden, Lot 1, Jan. 1, 1813. Phineas Inskeep, Lot 6, Nov. 28, 1812. Willianl Vaughn, Lot 4, March 7, 1812. In Brown's "Western Gazetteer, or Emigrant's Directory, published by Samuel R. Brown, at Auburn, N. Y., in 1817, may be found a brief description of the counties and towns of Ohio. Mr. Brown states that "Harrison county is settled chiefly by emigrants from Pennsylvania. 90 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Cadiz, a small village of twenty houses, is situated on a hill, twenty-six miles west of Steubenville, on the Zanesville road. This county has four or five other villages, mostly new and Bmall." The following extracts from the diary of Dr. Eichard Lee Mason Avill not be without interest in connection with the history of Harrison comity before 1820. In the fall of 1819, he emigrated from Maryland to Illinois. His diary is now in possession of his daughter, who resides in Jacksonville, 111.; and it was printed by the Chicago Kecord in the daily issues of that paper during the early part of January, 1897. Dr. Mason, with his friend, Dr Hall, left Philadelphia for the West on Monday, October 4, 1819. They reached Pittsburg on October 12th. From there, the journal proceeds: Oct. 15. Left Pittsburgh at seven o'clock. Traveled over a poor and hilly country for thirty-six miles. Passed a few travelers bound to Ohio. . . . Crossed the Ohio river after night at Steubenville. Stopped at Jenkinson's, an intelligent, gentlemanly, hospitable man. Visited the market. Beef, good, six and a quarter cents a pound. Oct. 16 Kainy day, fatigued by broken country, determined to spend this day in Steubenville, a busy little village on the bank of the Ohio. Purchased a plain Jersey wagon and harness for $60. Oct. 18. Myself and friend proceeded on our journey. We ar- at Siers' [Sears'], a distance of thirty miles, at dask, much relieved by the change from our horses to the wagon. The roads were muddy, the weather drizzly, and the country hilly. Buildings indifferent. The land was fertile and black. Trees uncommonly tall. Passed the little village of Cadiz. In this country, a store, a smith shop, and two or thice cabins make a town. Passed ten or fifteen travelers. Ojeat contrast between the quality of the land from Chambersburg to Pittsburg, and that which we have already traveled over from Steubenville, in Ohio. Oct. 19. Left Siers' at six o'clock a. m. The morning fair and cold. Roads extremely rough. Country fertile, but hilly. Log cabins, ugly women, and tall timber. Passed a little flourishing village called Free- port, settled by foreigners, Yankee Quakers, and mechanics. Remark- able, with two taverns in the village, there was nothing fit to drink, not even good water. The corn-fields in the woods, among dead trees, and the corn very fine. We arrived at Adair's, a distance of twenty-seven miles, at six o'clock p. m. Passed some peddlers and a few travelers. Value of land from Steubenville to Adair's, $2 to $30 per acre. Lots in Freeport, eighteen months old, from $30 to $100 Oct. 20. Left Adair's at six o'clock, a. m. The country extremely hilly, and not quite so fertile. Independent people, in log cabins. They make their own clothes, sugar, and salt; and paint their own signs. They picture a lioii like a dove, a cat like a terrapin, and General Washington EARLY DAYS IN CADIZ 91 V;.- like a bird's nest. Salt wells and sugar orchards are common in this country. Steep hills, frightful precipices, little or no water, and even a scarcit}' of new wliiskey. Eagged and ignorant children, and but little appearance of industry. Met a number of travelers, inclining to the East, and overtook a larger number than usual, bound to the Land of ProKiise. The evening being rainy, the roads soon became muddy. We arrived at Silver's Travelers' Eest, at six o'clock. Distance, twenty- nine miles. Passed a little village called Cambridge. If good Dr. Mason could return to Harrison county now, and ride again over the road between Steubenville and Cambridge, doubtless he would find the trees not so tall, and certainly the women not ugly; but it is to be feared that the happy days of old will never return again to Harrison county, when it can be said of it that water there is scarcer than new whiskey. 92 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY CHAPTER YII. BEECH SPRING CHURCH. While it becomes necessary, in outlining the history of the early settlement of Harrison county, to make frequent and extended refer- ences to the organizations of the Presbyterian and United Presbyterian churches in the county, it should be understood that such reference is made solely for the purpose of enabling us to gain what light we may from such occasional facts as are preserved upon their records; and, while these records are sadly lacking in detail and continuity, and at best give us but occasional glimpses of the real life and growth of the communi- ties with which they are concerned, they are practically all we now have left in the way of contemporary data; and constitute the chief source of information in regard to Harrison county during the time its territory was still a part of Jefferson. The most valuable and least appreciated of these early records are the old tomb-stonea in the church graveyards. Taken together, they afford a more nearly complete roll of the early membership of the church and the settlement than we can now obtain from any other source. ]\Iuc]i valuable information is also furnished by the sessional records of the churches, where such have been kept, and the books preserved. It is much to be regretted that the session book of the Presbyterian church at Cadiz, which had been in use for, perhaps, more than half a century, was lost or mislaid a few years ago, and has never been recovered. The writer is fortunate in being able to present to the reader of these sketches a brief account of the beginnings of the early churches in Harrison county, written by the man who founded them, thus being in the nature of a contemporary document. This consists of an outline BEECH SPRING CHURCH 93 sketch of the history of the congregations of Rev. John Rea, the pioneer preacher of Harrison county; and it was written as a part of his farewell sermon delivered to the Beech Spring congregation in January, 1851. Before presenting Mr. Eea's sketch, let us survey his field of labor, and the conditions under which he entered it. The first Presbytery organized west of the Allegheny moun- tains was that of Redstone, erected by the Synod of New York and Philadelphia in May, 1781. Its territory embraced the present counties of Westmoreland, Fayette, Armstrong, Indiana, Allegheny, Beaver, Washington, and Greene, in Pennsylvania, and adjacent ter- tory, including the Panhandle of western Virginia. Its member- ship at the time of organization consisted of but four ministers, viz.. Revs. James Power, John McMillan, Thaddeus Dodd, and Joseph Smith. Within the next three years Revs. James Dunlap, John Clark, and James Finley were added to the Presbytery ;" and this organization continued to provide for the spiritual needs of the greater portion of the population west of the mountains until 1793. In that year, the Presby- tery of Redstone was divided, and that of the Ohio formed, — those minis- ters whose charges were nearest the river being detached from the parent body, and erected into the new Presbytery. They were John McMillan, John Clark, Joseph Patterson, James Hughes, and John Brice. The bounds of the Ohio Presbytery first extended to the Scioto, or be- yond; and nearly all of these original members of the Presbytery made missionary tours into Jefferson county before any churches were organ- ized in what is now the county of Harrison. The first regularly installed minister to preach to congregations, composed, at least, in part, of Harri- son county people, was Rev. Joseph Anderson, who was also the first min- ister installed by the Ohio Presbytery in what is now the State of Ohio. He was licensed by the Presbytery on October 17, 1798, and engaged at once in missionary work in the Western Territory, where he succeeded in gathering congregations at several points. On August 20, 1800, he was installed as pastor of the three churches of Richland (now St. Clairs- ville. Short Creek (now Mount Pleasant), and Cross Roads (now Crab- apple). If this congregation of Crabapple was the same as that now known by the name, and it probably was, then the latter must claim priority in organization over that of Beech Spring; although the year of its erection is usually given as 1804. From the fact that Mr. Anderson gave up the charge of Crabapple in 1802, however, it is possible that the people there were not sufficiently strong numerically to sustain a 34 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY minister, even for one-third of his time, and that its permanent organiza- tion was accordingly deferred until after Mr. Rea was settled at Beech Spring. Eobert McCnllough represented Crabapple Church, as an elder, at a meeting of the Presbytery in 1801. Mr. Anderson was ordained by Eev. John McMillan, at Crabapple. but his principal congregation was that now known as Mount Pleasant; and there can be no reasonable doubt that many of the then residents of Short Creek township who were inclined to be church-going people were members of the congregation, and some of them communicants, of the church of Mount Pleasant. The first ruling elders of that church were Eichard McKibben, Thomas McCune, James Clark, and James Eagleson. It was not until the years 1803 and 1803 that the settlers began to come in large numbers to that part of the county now comprising the townships of Short Creek, Green, Cadiz, and Athens. A year later (1804), John Eea was licensed by the Presbytery of Ohio, and entered this field as a supply for the people of Beech Spring and Crabapple. Eev. John Eea was born in Tully, Ireland, in 1772, the son of Joseph and Isabel Eea. About the year 1790 he emigrated to America, and first resided in Philadelphia for a short time. He left there, on foot, and started for the west, traveling usually without company; and, after cross- ing the mountains, located in Washington county, where, in 1793, he married Elizabeth Christy. He made his home for a time in the house of James Dinsmore, then a ruling elder of Upper Buffalo church, by whom he was encouraged and assisted in his attempts to gain an educa- tion. A few years later, he entered Jefferson College, and was graduaiod in 1802, being one of the members of the first class graduated at that in- stitution. On August 22, 1805, having been duly called by the congre- gations which he had served as supply, Mr. Eea was ordained and in- stalled as pastor of Beech Spring and Crabapple. In April, 1810, he was released from Crabapple, and thenceforth gave all his time to Beech Spring, where he continued in active charge until 1848, although not finally severing his connection with that church until some three years later. He died February 12, 1855. The work of Dr. Eea has been summed up in a few words by Eev, W. F. Hamilton, in his History of the Presbytery of Washington, who says: Dr. Eea was in an eminent sense a pioneer minister. His early labors were largely evangelistic. Several churches now exist on the terri- tory once wholly occupied by him. It may safely be said that no man BEECH SPRING CHURCH 95 exerted a greater influence than did he in forming the religious character of the early inhabitants of a large section of Eastern Ohio. L In the words of Dr. Crawford, "the early history, not only of this vicinity [Nottingham], but of the Presbyterian Church in Eastern Ohio, is closely connected with the biography of Dr. Eea. In the early part of his public work he was remote from his clerical brethren. In the whole region that now embraces the territory of four Presbyteries, in the east- ern part of this state, there were but six Presbyterian ministers, where there are now [1888] over one hundred; and not more than twelve or fifteen churches, where there are now one hundred and eighty-five. Such . a man as Dr. Eea was destined to make and leave an impression behind him — an impression not easily erased from the minds of those multitudes acquainted with his early self-denial and successful labors." He is quoted by Dr. Crawford as saying near the close of his life: " My early toils and dreary travels were on horseback, through the bounds of your present charge, as also through a large district of country, mostly traversing paths through an unbroken wilderness; and wherever an early settler was found, and, more especially, wherever and whenever I heard of one in our communion, him I visited, by day and by night, at all seasons of the year." An examination of the records of the Presbytery of the Ohio, now in possession of Dr. W. J. Holland, of the Carnegie Museum at Pittsburo-h, shows an application for supplies for the people of Indian Short Creek to have been made on October 19th, 1802, the Presb3^tery then beino- in session at West Liberty. On Wednesday, October 20th, Mr. James Hughes was appointed to siipply "at Daniel Welsh's on Short Creek the third Sabbath of December, and Mr. [George M.] Scott on the first Sab- bath of x\pril." The Presbytery met at Washington, Pa., again in Janu- ary, 1803, and on Wednesday, the 19th, Jacob Lindley was appointed to supply at "Welch's, on Indian Short Creek, on the second Sabbath of March." In June, 1803, Presbytery met at Ten Mile, and on Wednesday the 29th, applications for supplies were received from the "heads of In- dian Wheelin [Crabapple] and Short Creek." Eev. Joseph Anderson was appointed to preach at head of Indian Wheeling creek on the first Sabbath in August; and Eev. James Snodgrass, at Welch's, on the second Sabbath of July. At Montour's, on Wednesday, Oct. 19, 1803, the Pres- bytery received an application for supplies from "Welsh's on Indian Short Creek," and Mr. Hughes was appointed for the first Sabbath in 96 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY April, 1804. At Ten Mile, on Wednesday, Dec. 14, 1803, Mr. Nicholas Pittinger was appointed to supply at "Crabapple on the third Sabbath of January, and at Beech Spring on the fourth Sabbath of January." This is the first time these two congregations appear on the records of Presbytery under the names by which they have since been known. On Tuesday, April 17th, 1804, Presbytery having met at Cross Eoads (in Washington county. Pa.), applications for supplies were again received from Crabapple and Beech Spring; and on the 19th, Bev. Samuel Eal- ston was directed to preach at Crabapple one Sabbath at discretion, and Eev. Joseph Anderson at Beech Spring on the third Sabbath of May, and at Crabapple one Sabbath at discretion. At the meeting of Presbytery held at Cross Creek, Washington county. Pa., on Wednesday, June 27th, 1804, John Eea, as the name appears on the records, was licensed to preach. On the following day, Mr. Eea was appointed to preach at Beech Spring on the first Sabbath in August, at Crabapple on the second Sabbath in August, at "Still- water" (this may have been ^Nottingham or Cadiz), on the fourth Sab- bath of September, and at Crabapple again on the fifth Sabbath of Sep- tember. On the same day, Eev. William McMillan (afterwards president of Franklin College), was appointed to supply at Beech Spring on the third Sabbath of September. At the meeting of Presbytery at Eaccoon, on October IG, 1804, applications for further supplies were received from Beech Spring and Crabapple. On Thursday, the 18th, Eev. Joseph Pat- terson and Eev. Elisha Macurdy were appointed to preach at Beech Spring on the second Sabbath of November, and to administer the Lord's Supper. Mr. Anderson was also appointed to preach there on the fourth Sabbath of November, and at Crabapple, on the first Sabbath of the fol- lowing April. Mr. John Brice was appointed to preach at Crabapple on the third Sabbath of November. "Mr. Eea, being appointed by Synod to itinerate as a missionary, no appointments are to be made him prior to next meeting of Presbytery." The next meeting was held at Cross Creek on Christmas Day, 1804, and Mr. Eea was appointed to supply at Beech Spring on the first and third Sabbaths of February, and at Crab- apple on the second and fourth Sabbaths of the same month. Presbytery met at West Liberty again in April, 1805, and on the 16th instant, "a call was presented for Mr. Eea from the united con- gregations of Crabapple and Beech Spring, which being read, was put into his hands for consideration." Mr. Eea having signified his accept- ance of the call, the Presbytery, on Thursday, April 18th, "agreed to BEECH SPRING CHURCH 97 proceed to the ordination of Mr. Rea in August next, provided the way be clear, and appointed him to prepare and deliver a sermon on Isaiah, Iv., 7, as part of trial. Mr. Brice was appointed to preach the ordination sermon, and Mr. Macurdy to preside and give the charge." The Pres- bytery met at Crabapple on Tuesday, August 20th, 1805, and on the 22d of the same month, "the Presbytery proceeded to the ordination of Mr. Rca, and did with fasting and prayer, and the laying on of the hands of ihe Presbytery, solemnly ordain him to the holy office of the Gospel ministry, and installed him. as pastor of the united congregations of Crabapple and Beech Spring. Mr. Brice preached on the occasion, and T\rr. Macurdy presided and gave the charge." The size of Mr. Eea's congregation at the time of his installation, and for some years thereafter, may be very closely approximated from the reports preserved in the records of Ohio Presbytery. On April 16th, 1806, less than eight months after the beginning of his pastorate, the Presbytery, having met at Upper Buffalo, "called on each member to re- port the number of existing communicants in the congregation, and the number of persons baptized." Mr. Rea reported that Beech Spring and Crabapple had 131 communicants, and that ten infants had been bap- tized by him since the beginning of his ministry. The next report, under date of Dec. 20th, 1808, shows but 109 members in communion, fxfteen having been added during the past year, and thirty-five infants baptized. On January 9th, 1810, the total communicants were 191, fourteen hav- ing been added during the past year, and twenty-five infants baptized. At this meeting of Presbytery, Mr. Rea reported that the congregation of Crabapple was in debt to him in the sum of sixty dollars, which became due on the 16th instant. On October 17th, of the same year, the report shows 146 communicants, fifteen having been added since last report, and eighteen infants baptized. On April 21st, 1812, there were 119 com- municants, twenty-seven having been added during the year, and one adult and twenty-nine infants baptized. April 19th, 1814, the number of communicants was 185, twenty-five having been added, and four adults and thirty-two infants baptized. April 18th, 1815, there were 201 mem- bers, sixteen having been added, and twenty-three infants baptized. On April 16th, 1816, the total number of members was 222, of whom thirtv- three had been added during the year, and fifty-five infants baptized. April 15th, 1817, the report showed a total communion of 239, thirty- three having been added during the year, and three adults and thirty- three infants having been baptized. 98 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY f The following is a part of the farewell sermon delivered by Rev. John Eea, at Beech Spring Church, in January, 1851: I have come here to-day, in somewhat feeble health, to discharge what I deem a solemn duty; to take my leave of, and bid a final adieu to a church that has been imder our care, and where we have lived and labored for nearly half a century — a church where we have lived to see one gener- ation pass all away, and another rise in its room. That justice, m some measure, may be done thereto, reference must be had to her early history, and to some of the changes that have shaped her destiny thus far. To prevent being tedious, we shall do little more than outline it. This church was organized some time in the fall of the year 1803, by two Rev. Fathers, Patterson and Macurdy, who are now no more. Three persons were chosen, and set apart at the time as ruling elders, and a communion followed. This appears to have been the beginning, the mornins; of the existence of what has since been called Beech Spring, a name said to have been given to it by Mr. [Daniel] Welch, and took its rise from a group of beech trees that enclosed a large spring of water on a lot of fiveacres he had generously donated for the use of the church, on the west corner of his section. The year following another young man and myself, of the first class of students that graduated at Jefferson College, having finished a course of Theoloo-ical studies under the direction of Rev. Dr. McMillan, were licensed to preach the Gospel by the Presbytery of Ohio, June, 1804. After a tour of three months through the interior of this State, and an- other up the Allegheny towards the Lakes, the winter following I supplied here, and at Crabapple, by order of Presbytery. In April, a joint call was prepared by these two congregations, then in union, and forwarded to Presbytery signed by the following persons, viz: John Miller, S. Dun- lap, W. Watt, Henry Ferguson, Jesse Edgington, D. Welch, Esq., and William Harvey. You will readily excuse me in the mentioning of these names, when it is remembered that these were the men who founded the Church of Beech Spring; these were the men who called me, who first gave me the hand of fellowship, and welcomed me to these woods; most of whom I remember with affection, and would gladly visit were they liv- ing; but they are no more; the last died the other day. This call being acce'pted, I was accordingly ordained and installed pastor of the united conoregation of Crabapple and Beech Spring by the Presbytery of Ohio, Au'nist' 1805. [The first elders of Crabapple were Robert McCullough, WiHiam McCullough, and David Merritt. ] The field covered by these two societies, at the time of our settle- ment, was very extensive, and the labor proportionably great. Crabap- ple claimed as being within her bounds, the whole extent of country be- tween the south fork of Short creek and the farthermost part of Notting- ham. Beech Spring was equally, if not still more extensive, including BEECH SPRING CHURCH 99 the entire region of country from the Piney Fork and the Flats, on west to Stillwater. All passed under the general name of Beech Spring. There was no Smithtield, nor Bloomfield, nor any other field, whereby to fix our limits. All was Jefferson county, and Steubenville, the seat of Justice. Over all this extensive field, claimed by both churches, we had to travel. Wherever one was found, or whenever we heard of one in our connection, him we must visit; day and night, summer and winter, all seasons of the year, without a road in most places, save the mark of an axe or the bark of a tree, or the trail of an early Indian. ISTo man that now comes in among us at this distant day, and highly improved state of the coimtry, can so much as conjecture the labor and fatigue of the primitive pioneers of the Ohio forests, out of which the savage had just begun to re- cede, but continued still in large encampments in some places, near the skirtings of little societies, where the few came together to worship under the shade of a green tree. The two churches under our care lay nearly twelve miles apart. ]\rany Sabbath mornings, in the dead of winter, I had to travel ten miles to the place of meeting in Crabapple, having no road but a cow-path, and the underwood bent with snow over me all the way. Worn down by fatigue, and frequently in ill-health, I was more than once brought near the confines of the grave. In all the region around, there were but two clerical brethren who could afPord me any assistance, where now there are two Presbyteries and well-nigh thirty preachers. Notwithstanding all this, I must say of those early times, as Jehovah once said of Israel, eight hundred years after, "I remember thee, the kindness of thy youth, the love of thy espousals, when thou wentest after me in the wilderness, in a land that was not sown." Those were the best times, and that generation, that Israel, as a nation, ever saw. During the first years of these two congregations, a great and good Providence was evidently seen over them. They prospered exceed- ingly. Their increase was unprecedented; within our knowledge, we have seen nothing like it; without anything very special that could be called a revival (though something of the effects of the great western, revival still remained, and appeared at times in our meetings), yet so rapid was their growth, that in less than five years each became able to support a minister all his time. Accordingly^, in April, 1810, the union existing between these churches was by mutual consent dissolved, and the way opened for each to employ a pastor. Shortly after, a call was prepared by this congrega- tion for the whole of oar time, and received through the same Presbytery as before. About this time there were several small societies forming at some distance from us, and appeared to be promising. From one of these societies an earnest request was forwarded to the session at Beech Sjiring, that some part of their pastor's time might be granted them. With tliis request the congregation complied, and for some years the fourth of our time was spent in laying the foundation of what has since LofC. 100 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY become a numerous and respectable congregation, known by the name of the Iiidge. After the division of Jefferson county had taken place, and a new county formed out of it, Cadiz, then a small village, became the Seat of Justice of Harrison county. This village lay within our limits, and was considered a part of our congregation. Here we organized a church, at the request of the villagers, and labored a part of our time for three years; since which our ministry has been chiefly confined to this place alone. For several years after, this church continued still more to increase, until she became, as was generally supposed, the largest in the State of Ohio. Out of this congregation, at different periods, there have been formed not less than six contiguous organized chiirches. Still, she con- tinued to maintain her standing entire, until April, 1848, when age and infirmity made it necessary that I should resign, and the pastoral relation of forty-three years was at length dissolved. Having thus briefly outlined the history of this church, — for "Why should the wonders He has wrought. Be lost in silence and forgot." some notice is due to its officers. In the Presbyterian Church the membership of elder is recognized in all her courts. The interest this class of men take, or the course of conduct pursued by them, Avill go far in shaping the destiny, the well- being, or ill-being of any church. In the organizing of this church at first I had no concern; it took place before my settlement. But in the course of years, as the congregation increased, frequent additions had to be made, until at one time we had not less than ten members in session. All were chosen by the people, and ordained by myself, with the excep- tion of three, viz: James Kerr, Sr., John McCuilough, Esq., and Dr. Thomas Vincent. These were valuable men, and useful members of the session. They obtained their ordination elsewhere, and were received as such here. HARRISON COUNTY IN 1813 101 GHAPTEE VIII. HARRISON COUNTY IN 1813. Harrison county was erected from parts of JeflFerson and Tuscarawas. As at first constituted, tlie county included the southern portion of Car- roll county; while the western half of Franklin and nearly all of Mon- roe townships were retained by Tuscarawas county. Carroll county was erected in 1833, from parts of Jefferson, Harrison, Columbiana, Stark, and Tuscarawas, which left the northern boundary of Harrison as it is to-day. The original townships of Jefferson county, which covered nearly all of the present territory of Harrison, were Short Creek and Archer. As organized in 1803, Short Creek township included all the present townships of Nottingham, Moorfield, Cadiz, Athens, Short Creek, and the south three-sevenths of Green, besides three tiers of sections in Jeffer- son covmty; while Archer included the eastern halves of Monroe and I'ranklin, all of Xorth, Stock, Eumley, Archer, and German, and the north four-sevenths of Green, besides the southern tier of sections in Carroll and the northwestern portion of Jefferson counties. Harrison county was organized under an act of the Legislature passed January 2, 1813, to take effect January 1, 1814. On January 12, 1813, the Legislature amended the act, making it take effect February 1, 1813, which, accordingly, is the date of erection of the county. On January 14, 1813, the Legislature appointed three commissioners, to lo- c;;te the county-seat for the new county, and named Messrs. Jacob Myers, Joseph Eichardson, and Eobert Speer for this purpose. On the fifteenth of the following April, these commissioners made their report to the 102 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY common-pleas court for Jefferson county, naming the village of Cadiz as the county-seat. While Harrison county was still included within the territory of J efferson, the second war with Great Britain broke out. Jefferson county furnished at least one full regiment, consisting of thirteen companies and 1065 men, and contributed to the formation of others. The officers of the regiment were as follows : Lieutenant-Colonel, John x\ndrew; majors, Thomas Glenn, James Campbell, George Darrow, Jacob Frederick; adjutant, Mordecai Bartley; surgeon, Thomas Campbell; quartermaster, Jacob Van Horn; sergeant- major, John B. Dowden; quartermaster-major, John Patterson; drum- major, John McClintock; fife-major, John Niel; captains, (1) Aaron Al- len, (2) Thomas Latta, (3) John Alexander, (4) John Allen Scroggs, (5) .Tames Alexander (6) Nicholas Murray, (7) William Faulk, (8) Jacob Gil- bert, (9) Joseph iiolmes, (10) James Downing, (11) Joseph Zimmerman, (13) David Meek, (13) William Stoakes; lieutenants (in same relative order with captains, as to their companies, (1) John Vantillburg, (2) Hugh Christy, (3) , (1) John Eamsey, (5) HerO^y Bayless, (6) Nathan Wintringer, (7) John Berkdell, (8) John Teeton, (9) William Thorn and John Ramsay, (10) Peter Jackson, (11) James Kerr, (13) Joseph Davis, (13) Thomas Orr; ensigns (in same relative order with captains and lieutenants, as to their companies), (1) William Mills, (2) William Pritchard, (3) David Jackson, (4) John Caldwell, (5) John Myers, (6) John Carroll, (7) Jacob Grauss, (8) Abraham Fox and Conrad Myers, (9) Gavin Mitchell, (10) Thomas Smith, (11) Conrad Myers, (12) Jacob Sheffer, (13) John Caldwell. Of the companies enumerated in the foregoing list, at least three were enlisted wholly or in part within the territory of Harrison county. The first was that of Cajitain Joseph Holmes. Follov,dng is a muster-roll of this Company, taken from the records of the Adjutant-General's office at Columbus, under date of August 36, 1813: Captain, Joseph Holmes; lieutenants, William Thorn and John Eam- sev ensign, Gavin Mitchell; sergeants, Francis Popham, James Gilmore, Alexander Smith, John McCully; corporals, Edward Van Home, John Pollock, Thomas McBride, Joseph Hagerman; drummers, John McClin- tock, James Robb; privates (enlisted to serve from Aug. 26, 1812, to Feb. 28, 1813), Rezin Arnold, James Arnold, Samuel Arnold, Anthony Asher, William Barcus, James Belch, James Brown, George Brokaw, John Brottle (also written Br4ttel), David Briggs, George Carpender, Philip HARRISON COUNTY IN 1813 103 Cahill, James Cliaffin, i'indley Elliott, Thomas Elliott, Isaac Edgington, John Ferguson, Thomas Ferguson, Benjamin Foster, Thomas Glass, Samuel Gilpin, John Guttery, William Harper, Isaac Henry, Joseph Hughes, John Harriman, John Hawthorne, Khesa Kendall, Matthew Kelly, Samuel Kerr, William Kyle, Jacob Lanning, Kichard Logan, John Leach, James Long, Benjamin McClery (also written McClay), James Minnis, George McElroy, Patrick H. Madden, James McCullough, Charles McMillan, Iiobert_Maxwell, Thoma s McDona ld, James Moore, William McClintock,''john'McCoi-mick, Thomas McFadden, Jacob Meek, Jacob Osburn, Jacob Osier, John Parks, Hugh Porter, Richard Ross, Jeremiah Roach, Ebenezer Roach, Isaac Skeels, Charles Smith, James Sankey, Henry Snider, Joseph Strahl, George Sullivan, David Stevens, Luke Tip- ton, William Tipton, Jonathan Tipton, Isaac Van Bibber, Joseph White. Most of these privates re-enlisted for the spring campaign of 1813, as \^ ell as the following in addition (enlisted to serve from Jan. 1, to April 13, 1813) : David Potts, Johnston RoSlins, John Robertson, Charles Rob- ertson; (enlisted to serve from Jan. 1, to Feb. 28, 1813): John Scholes, Jonathan Wist (or West), Edward Yealdhall. Captain Aaron Allen's 'company was also largely recruited in Har- rison county, and the adjoining townships of Jefferson and Belmont, the most of the company enlisting for six months' service, from September, 1813, to March, 1813. The roll of this company is as follows: Captain, Aaron Allen; lieutenant, John A^antilburg; ensign, William Mills; sergeants, James Clare, John Farquer, Richard Shaw, Thomas Henderson; corporals, Christopher Abel, Hugh Livingston, James John- ston, David Workman; privates, Philip Ault, James Ayres, Samuel Avery, Anthony Asher, Benjamin Abel, John Barr, Robert Bay, Fred- erick Burchfield, Adam Beamer, Nehemiah Brown, Emery Burris, Wil- liam Brown, Obadiah Barnes (or Burns), Lewis Corbet, Ryan Carter, Alexander Campbell, John Close, Alexander Conn (or Cann), Alexander Crawford, John Carson, Samuel Carson, Joseph Caughey, Henry Davis, John Degoir, Tliomas Duvall, Anthony Doyell, James Ellison, David Freet, Abram Flecker, Frederick Fisher, John Fisher, Michael Fivecoats, John George, Thomas Graden, Martin Grim, Joseph Gibson, Michael Gladman, John Hitchcock, John Hardenbrook, James Hill, Jerome Har- denbrook, James Hukill, Samuel Ilolley, Joseph Haverfield, Jacob Han- ing, William Hill, John Harriman, John Have, John Hickory, Nathaniel Jinnings, John James, James Kean, Samuel Kerr, John Lyons, John Loguc, John Lyon, Samuel Lane. Samuel Lees, Robert Lisle, Emanuel 104 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY ]\ryers, John Moody, James Mays, William ]\TcCloud, Thomas Mays, Joseph Mallen, William Montgomery, James Moorehead, Jacob Myers, Thomas McMles, William McColly, Samuel Main, Robert McClerg, Felix McClelland, David McCaskey, William McClintoek, Jacob Miller, Isaac Pugh, Thomas Packman, George Palmer, John Peterson, John Quinn, Adam Qnillen, William Eutledge, Robert Ralston, Robert Russel, Mathew Richeson (or Richardson), Daniel Rickey, Caleb Reynolds, James Ray, Job Ruysel, Benjamin Ritter, Joseph Ralston, James Stuart, Philip Shaifer, Jacob Shover (or Shawber), Allen Speed (or Speedy), John Stoakes, John Smith, Adam Simmons, Daniel Steven, Benjamin Sessions, John Skelton, William Skelton, Samuel Smith, John Shepherd, John Taylor, Moses Thompson, Nicholas Wheeler, Daniel Welch, Jr., John Willits. A third company was that of Captain Allen Scroggs, enlisted Sep- tember 21, 1812, to serve until November 30, 1812. The roll of this com- pany is as follows: Captain, John Allen Scroggs; lieutenant, John Ramsey; ensign, John Caldwell; sergeants, William Wilkin, William Dunlap, William Holson, William Robertson; corporals, Samuel Avery, Joseph Haverfield, John Conoway, John^ Wallace ; privates, Benjamin Abbott, Peter Bebout, John Brokaw, Farrington Barricklow, Adam Beamer, Homeny Buris, William Brokaw, Horace Belknap, Michael Conoway, James F. Carr, Archibald Fletcher, James Francis, Benjamin Foster, Michael Fivecoats, Michael Gladmore, Abraham Henary, John Hitchcock, Samuel Holly, William Hill, Edward Jack, Henry Johnson, Ebenezer Gray, Duber Law- rence, John Dewalt, David Finley, Samuel Lees, John McClay, John Mc- Cormick, Thomas McGonigle, James Moffit, Thomas McFadden, William IMcKain, Robert Mintier, Jacob Myers, William McCally, Charles Parson, Peter Pittenger, Alexander Porter, Stephen Perry, John Reed, John Reed, Jr., Samuel Reed, Charles Robertson, Moses Robb, Nicholas Shale, John Scholes, Samuel Smith, Charles Tenet, Moses Thompson, John AVelch, Archibald Wilkins, Edward Yielhall. It will be observed that many of these names are repeated on the rolls of two or three of the companies given above. This may have been caused by the transference from one company to the other, or by a tour of service in each one of the companies. Another Company was organized in Harrison county, before its sep- aration from Jeirerson, and took the field against Great Britain. This was the Company of Captain Baruch Dickerson, in service in 1814, HARRISON COUNTY IN 1813 105 Before giving its muster-roll, the following account of its organization and record may be repeated, the same having been dictated by the a«i-ed Joshua Dickerson, in two interviews had with him in the fall of 1896. Mr. Dickerson spoke as follows : "I was but six years old, or thereabouts, when the Indians living along Lake Erie made frequent marauding excursions through this part of the State. This was about the year 1810 or 1811. There were no in- cidents of cruelty in this immediate neighborhood, but apprehendino- well the danger that might be, the settlers sought to prevent further trouble. Although I was but a child, I remember well the occurrences; perhaps my memory of this is strengthened somewhat by having heard my father relate the matter repeatedly. "David Barrett, a Quaker, came to my father, and asked what he advised doing, to prevent trouble with the Indians. Father said, 'in time of peace, prepare for war,' and on election day a Militia Company was formed. After the election, the Company numbered sixty, and in a short time reached a hundred. David Barrett having organized the Companv was chosen its first captain; Samuel Gilmore, first lieutenant; John Jamison, second lieutenant. Two years later, Baruch Dickerson, havino- succeeded David Barrett as captain, the Company was called out to serve against the British, "The Company was to serve nine months, but was out only six. They went from Cadiz, first, to Steubenville, then north to Sandusk\r. During the whole six months there was no actual engagement; onlv on two or three occasions were any shots fired. The camp life was very dis- agreeable. At Sandusky, they camped in a swamp, where they\vere obliged to cut down cedar trees, roll the logs together, and cover them with cedar branches. These cedar branches formed their bed, and cover- ing. "Samuel Gilmore was sick when they started home. He lived where Samuel Cochran now lives; he was a broad-shouldered, well-made man of about forty years, and had three or more children. Gilmore, two days before his discharge, being on the way back to Cadiz, took the fever, and not at that time having a horse, was in bad cDndition; and refusino- as- sistance from his comrades, walked thirty miles. Then the officers con- tributed sufficient money to purchase a horse, and Gilmore rode the re- mainder of the way to Cadiz, for the last two days of his march being held (m the horse by his companions. The Company reached Cadiz on a Saturday, where a large assemblage was waiting to welcome their return. 106 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Gilmore was able to recognize only his wife among the crowd; was at once conveyed to his home south of the village; and during the following vreek [Sept. 8, 1814], he died." The roll of Captain Baruch Dickerson's Company, as shown on the records of the Adjutant-General's office at Columbus, is given below, the Company forming a part of Lieutenant-Colonel William Cotgreve's (or Colgrove's) Second Eegiment of Ohio Militia. It will be observed that the titles of some of the officers diifer from those given in Mr. Dickerson's account. This may possibly be accounted for by the fact that it was cus- tomary for the militia companies of that day to elect new officers every year or so. The Company as made up to fight the British numbered but thirty-six men, and was enlisted March 12, 1814, for service until Septem- ber 13, 1814, as follows: Captain, Baruch Dickerson; lieutenant, John Jamison; ensign, Sam- uel Gilmore; sergeants, William Haverfield, Charles Holmes, Laken Wells; musicians, James Eobb, David Young; privates, Samuel Browning, Ezekiel Chambers, Samuel Carson, John Carson, Joseph Craig, Andrew Foster, Moses Foster, Michael Fivecoats, Isaac Hitchcock, James Haver- field, John Hurless, John Hovey, Sanmel Holmes, Elsy Holmes, James McConkey, Samuel McConkey, Aaron Mecham, Benjamin Nelson, Joseph Farrish, John Eichison, Francis Smith, David Scott, Bazaleel Steel, i'rancis Warpenboy, Nathaniel West, John Walraven, Henry Welday, George Young. While on the subject of the war with Great Britain, it will not be out of place to record in this place the names of some of the surviving soldiers of the Eevolutionary War, who afterwards located and lived in Harrison county. So far as known there are no printed records of these \eterans in existence, save the names of those who were pensioners, and as such enrolled on the pension lists of the Government. The first of these pension rolls was published by Congress about 1820, in volume four of Executive Papers, No. 55, first session of the Sixteenth Congress. In this roll, Avhich is very length}^, the pensioners are classified as to residence only by States, and it is not possible to determine to what counties they then belonged. In 1835, a second roll was printed by Con- gress, showing the pensioners then living, or whose heirs were drawing pensions, with their place of residence, and age. xo Harrison county at that time were credited the following: John Brannon, of the Pennsylvania Line, age, 89 years. Timothy Boyles, of the Delaware line, age, 96 years. HARRISON COUNTY IN 1813 107 Thomas Haley, of the j\Taryland Line, age, 74 years. Thomas Johns, of the Virginia Line, age, 93 years. James Larkins, of the Pennsylvania Line, died July 13, 1828, aged to years. Neal Peacock, of the Maryland Line, died Aug. 17, 1827, aged 7i years. John Parker, of the Pennsylvania Line, age, 68 years. Henry Eankin, of the Pennsylvania Line, age, 72 years. In the Government Census for 1840, a list of pensioners was pre- pared, and printed in the Census Eeport. This gave the names of all then drawing pensions for Eevolutionary, or other military service, which in- cluded pensioners of the War of 1812 and of the various Indian Wars. Harrison county then contained the following pensioned veterans: In Kumley township, George Dickerson, aged 94. In Washington township, John Parker, aged 81. In Cadiz village, William Boggs. In Cadiz township, Eobert xVlexander, aged 45; Charles D. Wells, aged 82. In Hanover village, Charles Conaway, aged 88. In North township, Mordecai Ames, aged 90. In Stock township, Frederick Walters, aged 80. In Kottingham township, William Todd, aged 84; Isaac Suddith, aged 80. The following letter, written by Walter B. Beebe, then a young law- yer, who had but recently emigrated to the West from his home in Massa- chusetts, gives an interesting description of the settlers and conditions which he found in the newly organized county, where he had determined to seek his fortune. It will be observed the letter bears a date scarcely two weeks later than the date of organization of the county: Cadiz, County of Harrison, State of Ohio, February 14, 1813. Honored Parents: — I take this opportunity to inform you that I am well and in good spirits. Since I left home, I have become tolerably well acquainted with the science of traveling. I started from St. Clairs- ville (the place from which I wrote you), on or about the 1st of Decem- ber, and took a convenient route through the middle section of this State, a route of about 500 miles. The more I get acquainted with this part of the country, the better I like it. It is certainly the best land I ever be- held. Judge Euggles went with me to Chillicothe, the seat of Govern- ment, at which place the Legislature was then sitting. I got acquainted 108 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY with Governor Meigs, and many of the members, who all appear to be very friendly to young men emigrating to this part of the coun- try! Governor Meigs is a Yankee, from Middletown, Connecticut. At Clliillicothe, I was examined by the Judges of the Supreme Court of ihis State, and admitted to practice as an attorney and counsellor at law in the several courts of record in this Staate. I found a good many counties in my route, which I thought would be good places for an at- torne}^ but was induced to settle in this, the county-seat of Harrison county, from the following considerations, to-wit : Notwithstanding this county w^as set off and organized when I was in Chillicothe, yet it is an old settlement, and the settlers are generally rich. The inhabitants of this county, and counties adjoining, have but few Yankee settlers, but settled by Virginians, Pennsylvanians, Germans, Scotch, and Irish, who are more litigious and quarrelsome than the Yankees are, and pay their money niore freely. There is no lawyer in this county, and I have the assur- ance of being appointed State's attorney, which will be worth eighty a vcar, and will be attended with but very little trouble and very little incon- Venience to other business, being only barred in criminal prosecution from appearing against the State of Ohio. This county is so situated that there are five other counties within one day's ride of it, and it is the practice in this State for lawyers to ])ractice in adjoining counties. It is the healthiest part of the State, and the water is good. These, together with other considerations, have induced me, after having been a bird of voyage for three months, to pitch on this place for my pexmanent home. This town is about twenty miles from the Ohio river, about seventy miles from Pittsburgh, and sixteen miles west of St. Clairsville. It is the shire-town of the county, and will soon be a populous town. I think my prospects are as good as a young man can reasonably expect, and I have no fear, if I have my health. I am in a land abounding in very many of the good things of this life. I have seen good pot-turkeys, weighing twenty pounds, sell for twenty-five cents; hens and chickens, six cents. Money is very plenti- ful in" this State, probably more plentiful than usual, owing to its being near the N. W. army. I remain, your dutiful son. To Capt. Stewart Beebe, WALTER B. BEEBE, Wilbraham, Hampden Co., Mass. ] It is to be regretted that somj3 of our eastern writers of American history, who have never been west of the Allegheny mountains, cannot have the advantage of a visit to Ohio, and learn as General Beebe did, that Yankees were exceedingly scarce there, outside of the Marietta and Western Reserve settlements. The first courts of Harrison county were held at the houses of ThomaiS Stokes and William Grimes. At a meeting of the county com- I I I I HARRISON COUNTY IN 1813 109 missioners held April 12, 1813, they entered into an agreement with the trustees of the Associate Eeformed congregation of Cadiz, leasing the meeting-house helonging to that society for the term of three years, for the purpose of h Iding the courts of the county. On October 24, 1815, this lease was extended for a second term of three years, or until the newly begun court-house of the county should be completed. The first terra of court was held in the house of Thomas Stokes on May 3, 1813. Very little business was transacted at this term. The second term was held August 24-26, 1813. Judges Benjamin Kuggles, President, and James Eoberts, Samuel Boyd, and Ephraim Sears, Associates, occupied the bench. The court appointed Walter B. Beebe as prosecuting attor- ney for Harrison county, and allowed him the sum of $33.33, as salary for his services during the August term. The first grand jury was com- posed of Andrew McISTeely, foreman, William Smith, Zachary Baker, William- Mercer, William Hamilton, Samuel Gilmore, William Moore, Thomas Hitchcock, John McConnell, William Conwell, Eichard McKib- ben, and John Taggart. On motion of Mr. Beebe, Eev. William Knox, a minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, was licensed to officiate at marriages within the State of Ohio. The Court also licensed John Adams to keep a tavern at his place of residence in Nottingham town- ship, for the term of one year; and likewise, William Grimes and Messrs, Middle, Niel and Maholm, to keep taverns in the village of Cadiz. The first empanelled jury was composed of Messrs. John Paxton, Samuel Os- burn, Jonathan Seers, Eobert Croskey, Samuel Dunlap, James McMillan, Siimuel Huff, David Barrett, John Clark, Andrew Eichey, James Porter, and Benjamin Johnson. The grand jury returned one indictment for lar- ceny, four for riot, and seven for assault and battery; thus apparently _ vindicating Lawyer Beebe's judgment as to the quarrelsome character of some of the Ohio pioneers. The following named persons served on the judicial bench of Har- rison county prior to 1851: President Judges — Benjamin Euggles (1810 to 1814), George Tod (1814 to 181G), Benjamin Tappan (1816 to 1823), Jeremiah H. Hallock (1823 to 1836), George W. Belden (1837 to 1839), William Kennon (1840 to 1846), Benjamin Cowan (1647 to 1852). Associate Judges — James Eoberts (1813 to 1819), Samuel Boyd (1813 to 1819), Ephraim Sears (1813 to 1818), Matthew Simpson (1818 10 1819), Alexander Henderson (1819 to 1827), John McCullough (1830 to 1834), John McCurdy (1820 to 1825), Thomas Bingham (1825 to 1839), 110 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY David Campbell (1S27 to 1829), John McBean (1829 to 1836), Robert Maxwell (1834 to 1841), Alexander Patterson (1836 to 1841), John Hanna (iSiO to 1846), SamuelMoorehead (1841 to 1848), Thomas Lee (1841 to 1848), James Maxwell (1846 to 1852), William McFarland (1848 to 1852), William Boggs (1848 to 1852). Judges after 1851: Thomas L. Jewett (1852 to 1854), Thomas Means (1854 to 1855), Samuel W. Bostwick (1855 to ]861), George W. Mcllvaine (1862 to 1870), John H. Miller (1870 to 1877), James Patrick (1877 to 1882), Joseph C. Hance (1882 to 1884, and 1889 to 1891), John S. Pearce (1884 to 1889), John Mansfield (1892 to ), Walter G. Shotwell (1899 to ). Following is a list of the Senators and Representatives in the State Legislature, who served from and were residents of Harrison county: Senators — Daniel Welch (1811, then from Jefferson county), Sam.uel Dunlap(1814 to 1815), Matthew Simpson (1816 to 1820, and 1822 to 1828), James Roberts (1820 to 1822), Daniel Kilgore (1828 to 1832), Joseph Holmes (1832 to 1834), Thomas C. Vincent (1834 to 1838), Chauncey Dewey (1841 to 1842), Samuel G. Peppard (1852 to 1854), Charles Warfell (1856 to 1858), Marshall McCall (1860 to 1862), John C. Jamison (1864 to 1866), James B. Jamison (1868 to 1872), Samuel Knox (1872 to 1878), David A. Hollingsworth (1880 to 1884), George W. Glover (1888 to 1890), Charles M. Hogg (1892 to 1896). Representatives— Samuel bunlap (1803 to 1808, and 1810 to 1813, from Jefferson county), Stephen Ford (1808 to 1810, and 1813 to 1818, from Jefferson county, prior to 1813), Andrew McISTeely (1810, 1814, and 3815, from Jefferson county in 1810), William Moore (1816 to 1819), John Patterson (1819 to 1820, 1821 to 1822, 1823 to 1824, and 1826 to 1830), Ephraim Sears (1820 to 1821), William Wiley (1822 to 1823, and 1824 to 1826), Walter B. Beebe (1830 to 1831), Joseph Rea (1831 to 1833, and 1838 to 1840), Samuel W. Bqstwick (1833 to 1836), John Gru- ber (1836 to 1838, and 1842 to 1843), Josiah Scott (1840 to 1842), Will- iam McFarland (1843 to 1844), Jacob Lemmon (1844 to 1846), Samuel A. Russell (1846 to 1848), John Hammond (1849 to 1850), Marshall McCall (1850 to 1854), Reynolds K. Price (1854 to 1856), Ephraim Clark (1856 to 1858), James Day (1858 to 1860), William H. McGavran (1860 to 1862), Smith R. Watson (1862 to 1866), Ingram Clark (1866 to 1868), Lems Lewton (1868 to 1870), Anderson P. Lacey (1870 to 1872), David Cunningham (1872 to 1874), Samuel Herron (1874 to 1876), A. C. Nixon (]876 to 1878), Jesse Forsythe (1878 to 1880), Oliver G. Cope (1880 to 1882), Samuel B. McGavran (1882 to 1884), Jasper K Lantz (1884 to HARRISON COUNTY IN 1S13 lU 1S86, and 1SS8 to 1890), Georo^e M. Patton (1886 to 1888), Wesley B. liearn (1890 to 1892), Samuel K. McLaughlin (1894 to 1898), Samuel S. Hamill (1898 to 1900). Other names on the Civil List of Harrison county are as follows: Probate Judges — Brice W. Viers (1852 to 1854), Allen C. Turner (1854 to 1867), Amon Lemmon (1867 to 1894), Elias B. McNamee (1894 to 1900), John B. Worley (1900 to -). Auditors (the title of the first three was "Clerk of Commissioners") —Walter B. Beebe (1813 to 1816), Lared Stinson (1816 to 1817), James L. Hanna (1817 to 1820), John Hanna, clerk and first auditor, (1820 to 1822), Joseph Harris (1822 to 1832), Joseph Meek (1832 to 1833), James Miller (1833 to 1837), Charles Patterson (1837 to 1840), Zephamiah Bay- less (1840 to 1843), John Sharp (1843 to 1845), Eobert Edney (1845 to 1849), Eeynolds K. Price (1849 to 1853), John Sloan (1853 to 1854), Will- S. Granfell (1855 to 1856), Kersey W. Kinsey (1856 to 1860), Samuel Knox (1860 to 1864), William H. McCoy (1864 to 1869), Reuben A. Mc- Cormick (1869 to 1871), William 0. Potts (1871 to 1875), Thomas W. Giles (1875 to 1880), James M. Scott (1880 to 1883), Henry Spence (1883 to 1884), James C. Carver, deputy for Henry Spence, (1883 to ?.884), George A. Crew (1884 to 1891), Henry G. Forker (1891 to 1896), Harvey B. Law (1896 to ). Treasurers — Samuel Osburn (1813 to 1828), John S. Lacey (1828 to 1836), James McNutt (1836 to 1840), William Milligan (1840 to 1844), Zephamiah Bayless (1844 to 1848), Ealph Barcroft (1848 to 1852), David Hilbert (1852 to 1854), J. J. Johnson (1854 to 1858), John Russel'l (1858 to 1860), Thomas Richey (1860 to 1862), Frank Grace (1862 to 1864), Wesley S. Poulson (1864 to 1866), Elias Foust (1866 to 1870), George A. Haverfield (1870 to 1876), Harvey L. Thompson (1876 to 1878), Nim- rod B. Pumphrey (1878 to 1882), Albert J. Harrison (1882 to 1886), Samuel A. Moore (1886 to 1890), J^athaniel E. Clendennin (1890 to 1894), Eobert Stewart (1894 to 1899), Joseph J. Sears (1900 to ). Prosecuting Attorneys — Walter B. Beebe (1813 to 1834), Josiah Scott (1834 to 1838), Edwin M. Stanton (1838 to 1839), Samuel W. Bost- wick (1839 to 1844), Thomas L. Jewett (1844 to 1848), Samuel G. Pep- pard (1848 to 1851), Allen C. Turner (1851 to 1853), Lewis Lewton (1854 to 1856), Jesse H. McMath (1856 to 1861), Amon Lemmon (1861 to 1863), William P. Hayes (1863 to 1866), David Cunningham (1866 to 1869)' John S. Pearce (1869 to 1875), David A. Hollingsworth (1875 to 1877)^ Jolm C. Given (1878 to 1881), John M. Garvin (1882 to 1887), Walter G.' 112 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Shotweli (1888 to 1894), William T. Perry (1894 to 1900), Barkley W. Eowland (1900 to ). Eecorders— William Tingley (1814 to 1829), Joseph Harris (1829 to 1832), William Johnson (1832), Samuel M. McCormick (1832 to 1838), Matthew M. Sloan (1838 to 1844), William Boyce (1844 to 1850), Lancelot Hearn (1850 to 1857), William A. Hearn (1857 to 1858), Joseph Rea (1859 to 1868), George Woodborne (18G8 to 1874), John Graybill (1874 ■ to 1880), Landon B. Grimes (1880 to 188G), Albert B. Hines (1886 to 1892), Thomas Arbaugh (1892 to 1898), S. Edwin Thompson (1898 to )• Sheriffs— Elescondo Henderson (1814 to 1816), James Boswell (1816 •to 1817), John Stokes (1817 to 1821), Rezin Arnold (1821 to 1824), Baruch Dickerson (1824), John S. Lacey (1824 to 1826), Matthew McCoy (1826 to 1832), James McNutt (1832 to 1835), William Mulligan (1836 to 1839), William Cady (1840 to 1842), William Barrett (1842 to 1846), John McCormick (1846 to 1848), David Hilbert (1848 to 1853), James Boyd (1853 to 1855), Alexander Barger (1855 to 1858), Edwin S. Woodborne (1858 to 1861), Stephen E. McGee (1862 to 1866), John E. McPeck (1866 to 1870), James Moore (1870 to 1872), Samuel S. Hamill (1872 to 1876), Elisha Hargrave (1876 to 1878), Emannel Howard (1878 to 1880), James C. Carver (1880 to 1886), Jefferson C. Glover (1886 to 1888), Albert Quigley (1888 to 1892), David P. Host (1892 to 1896), Samuel B. Moore (i896 to 1900), Davis Garvin (1900 to ). n Clerks of Court— Joseph Harris (1813 to 1815), William Tingley L(1815 to 1838), Thomas ^Vincent (1838 to 1845), Samuel McCormick (1845 to 1851), Charles Patterson (1852 to 1854), Thomas C. Eowles (1855 to 1860), E. M. Lyons (1861 to 1863), John Fogle (1863 to 1867), John Garvin (1867 to 1875), Allen W. Scott (1875 to 1882), Elias B. Mc- Namee (1882 to 1888), Martin J. McCoy (1888 to 1894), E. B. Kirby (1894 to ). Commissioners — John Pugh (1813), James Cobean (1813 to 1814), Eleazer Huff (1813), William Phillips (1813 to 1816), William Wiley (1813 to 1821), John Craig (1814 to 1820, and 1824 to 1825), Eobert Maxwell (1816 to 1828), William Henderson (1820 to 1826), Joseph Holmes (1820 to 1824), David Thompson (1825 to 1833), Thomas Martin (1826 to 1832), Brice W. Viers (1828 to 1831), John Caldwell (1831 to 1834), Henry Ford (3832 to 1838), John Eamage (1833 to 1836), Samuel Colvin (1834 to 1840), Jesse xMerrill (1836 to 1839), John Sharp (1838 to 1841), Andrew Richey (1839 to 1842), James P. Beall (1840 to 1843), Thomas Day (1841 HARRISON COUNTY IN 1813 113 to 18 ±2), John Downing (184-^ to 18 io), James Hoglancl (1843 to 1846), Samuel Hitchcock (1845 to 1851), Samuel Eichey (184G to 1852), Luther Eowley (1847 to 1853), John Carrick (1851 to 1852), John Yost (1852 to 1857), Elijah Carver (1852 to 1855), Joseph Masters (1854 to 1856), Jacob Cramblett (1855 to 1861), Jackson Croskey (1856 to 1SG3), Charles Wells (1860 to 1866), James J. Billingsley (1861 to 1867), Walter Craig (1863 to 1865), Andrew Jamison (1865 to 1871), Levi Snyder (1866 to 1872), Y\'illiam Evans (1867 to 1873), James Patton (1871 to 1877), John Sloan (1872 to 1874), Alexander Henderson (1873 to 1879), John Latham (1874 to 1878), Thomas McMillen (1877 to 1883), Enoch W. Thillips (1878 to 1881), Cxeorge Love (1879 to 1882), Lindley M. Branson (1882), Jackson Eea (1882 to 1884), John Miller (1882 to 1886), Michael B. Firebaugh (1883 to 1890), Robert B. Moore (1884 to 1891), Andrew Smith (1886 to- 1891), John W. Spiker (1890 to 1896), William C. Adams (1891 to 1897), Thomas H. Ryder (1892 to 1898), John H. Pittis (1896 to ), John C. Patton (1897 to ), Henry P. Worstel (1897 to ). Surveyors — James McMillan (1820 to 1825), Abner Hixon (1825 to^ 1830, and 1834 to 1837), Curtis W. Scoles (1833 to 1834), Daniel Morris (1837 to 1840), Samuel McCormick (1840 to 1847), Daniel Spencer (1847 TO 1819), Samuel Bell (1849), Jacob Jarvis (1849 to 1894), Benjamin J. Green (1894 to — ). Congressmen — Daniel Kilgore (1834 to 1838), John A. Bingham (1855 to 1863, and 1865 to 1873). Members State Board of Equalization — Walter Jamison (1850), Carl- eton A. Skinner (1890). Members of Constitutional Conventions. — Samuel Moorehead (1850- 51), Josiah Scott (1850-51), William G. Waddle (1872-73). Prominent Attorneys, who have been or are now members of the Harrison County Bar — Walter B. Beebe, Edwin M. Stanton, Chauncey Dewey, Thomas L. Jewett, Samuel W. Bostwick, Samuel A. Russell, Sam- uel G. Peppard, Josiah Scott, Joseph Sharon, Jesse H. McMath, Lewis Lewton, Josiah M. Estep, David Cunningham, David A. Hollingswo rth, John S. Pearce, Walter G. Shotwell. I\atives or residents of Harrison county who have attained a Na- tional reputation — Edwin M. Stanton, Bishop Matthew Simpson, General George A. Custer, John A. Bingham, Thomas L. Jewett, Frank Hatton. The towns and villages of Harrison county were organized as follows: Bowerstown (first called Bowersville) was platted by David Bowers, 8 114 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Henry Hoover, and Nathaniel Bowers, Aug. 21, 1853; plat filed, Aug. 22, 1852. Brownsville was platted by Absalom Kent, Jr., Dec. 20, 1815; plat filed Dec. 22, 1815. Cadiz was platted by Zaccheiis A. Beatty and Zaccheus Biggs. Oct. 29, 1804; plat filed in JelTerson county, Oct. 29, 1804; in Harrison county, May 24, 1813. Deersville was platted by John Cramblett, ISTov. 25, 1815; plat filed, Dec. 19, 1815. Fairview (Jewett) was platted by John Stahl, Dec. 5, 1851; plat filed, Jan. 9, 1852. Franklin was platted by John Marshall, March 4, 1837; plat filed, March 7, 1837. Freeport was platted by William Melton, Daniel Easly, and Jonathan ' Boo-ue; plat filed in Tuscarawas county, March 7, 1810, in Harrison county 185 (Mason's Journal, quoted on another page, states that Freeport was laid oat some eighteen months before his visit there, which was made in October, 1819). Georgetown was platted by George Eiggie; plat filed, Sept. 3, 1814. Harrisville was platted by John Wells, Thomas Gray, Store Hutch- inson, and Eobert Dutton, Oct. 19, 1814; plat filed, Jan. 9, 1815. Hopedale was platted by Cyrus McNeely, Oct. 15, 1849; plat filed, July, 30 1851. Jefferson was platted by Frederick Zollers, December, 1815; plat filed, Jan. 3, 1816. Jewett, see Fairview. Masterville was platted by G. W. Holmes in 1851. Moorefield was platted by Michael Moore and Gabriel Cane, Dec. 15, 1815; plat filed, Dec. 27, 1815. New Athens was platted by Eev. John Walker and John McConnell, Feb. 10, 1817; plat filed, Feb. 10, 1817. New Hanover was platted by John Fisher, Aug. 13, 1812; plat filed, July 25, 1834. New Market (Scio) Avas platted March 30, 1852. New Eumley was platted by Jacob Custer; plat filed, Aug. 16, 1813. Pennsville was platted by Joseph H. Penn, Oct. 30, 1851; plat filed, Jan. 8, 1852. Scio, see New ]\Iarket. HARRISON COUNTY IN 1813 115 Smyrna was platted by Samuel Burrows, Aug. A, 1817; plat filed, Aug. 4, 1817. Tippecanoe was platted by Alfred Heacock, Dec. 8. iSlO; plat filed, Dec. 23, 1840. 116 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY CHAPTER IX. HARRISON COUNTY SETTLERS IN 1813. Following are the names of some of the early settlers and non-resi- dent land-owners of Harrison county (outside of Cadiz village) up to and including the year 1813. This was the year in which Harrison county was erected, its territory before that time being comprised in Jefferson county. This list includes the names of all those who had land patents issued by the United States Government before 1815; and it is from the dates of these that many of the dates in the list are taken. Nearly all of these patents were issued after 1801; although, as a matter of fact, in al- most every case, settlement and improvements had been made on the land by the patentee or his assignor, from one to five years before. The first lands sold in Harrison county after the opening of the land office in Steubenville were under a credit sj^stem, which gave the purchaser four years' time after the date of his entry to make his payments; and patents were not issued until the payments had been completed. In some cases time of payment was extended for some years beyond the original period, so that the patent may have been dated several years after settlement was begun. A full list of all Harrison county land patents issued by the United States will be found in the latter part of this volume. Several dates in the following list are taken from the old town- ship book of Short Creek township, an abstract of which was prepared by Mr. Oliver Cope, and printed in the Cadiz Republican near the close of the year 1895. Other dates, particularly those prior to 1801, are taken from family histories and records, and not to be relied upon absolutely. In this resrard the list is not so full or correct as could be desired, and the T^O^ f HARRISON COUNTY SETTLERS IN 1813 117 « 5 writer regrets that the data at his command does not include more of the ■^ >-.early settlers of Harrison county, Tj ^ In Archer Township before 1814. — Samuel Amspoker, 1803; v^Wilham Anderson, 1811; Comfort iVrnold, 1810, from Pennsylvania; ^ Daniel Blair, 1812, from Somerset count}^, Pa.; William Barnhill, 1811; John P. Pond, 1811; Samuel Boyd, 1813; John Busby, before 1812, from Maryland; Zebediah Cox, 1810; Alexander Crawford, 1808, from Brooke county, (West) Va.; Edward Crawford, 1806, from Brooke county, (West) Va.; James Devore, 1811; Andrew Endsley, 1810; David Endsley, 1808; John Endsle}', 1810; Andrew Farrier, 1808; Samuel Ferguson, 1812; i/ George Fisher, 1811, from Washington county. Pa.; James Fisher, 1811; Isabella Haggerty, 1811; George Harriman, 1811, from Washington county, Pa; Thomas Hitchcock, before 1809, from Maryland; Gabriel Holland, before 1812, from Maryland; Peter Kail, 1810; Isaac Lemas- ters, 1813, from western Virginia; William Lisle, 1811; Joseph McClain, 1812, from W^estmoreland county. Pa.; William McCreery, 1811, from Westmoreland county, Pa.; Robert McKee, before 1811, from Fayette county. Pa.; Alexander McKittrick, 1813, -from Washington county. Pa.; Robert Meeks, 1812; David Moody, 1813; Hugh Orr, 1812, from West- moreland county. Pa.; Isaac Osburn, 1809; Charles Porter, 1813; Arthur Reed, 1810, from Pennsylvania; John Roush, 1812; James Steward, 1813, from Washington county, Pa.; William Wartembe, 1807, from Brooke county, (West) Va.; John Welch, about 1801, from Pennsylvania; Thomas Williams, 1812, from Brooke county, (West) Va. In Athens Township before 1814. — Simpson Bethel, 1806, from Loudoun county, Va.; Stacy Bevan, 1811; Jacob Black, Sr., 1808, from Fayette county. Pa.; James Cooke, before 1810, from Washington county, Pa.; Joseph Covert, 1813, from Fayette county. Pa.; William Crawford, 1809; David Cunningham, 1811, from Fayette county, Pa.; Joshua Dick- erson, 1811, from Fayette county, Pa.; David Drake, 1806; Adam Dun- lap, before 1809, from Fayette county, Pa.; John Dunlap, 1812, from Fayette county. Pa.; William Dunlap, 1806, from Fayette county. Pa.; John Fagley, 1810; Samuel Foster, 1813, from Allegheny county, Pa.; Thomas Gordon, 1811; Samuel Hanna, 1805, from Washington county. Pa.; Joseph Hollaway, 1810; Samuel Hutchison, 1810, from Chester county. Pa.; Robert Innis, 1812, from W^estmorcland county. Pa.; Tamuel Jumpes, 1812; Samuel Knight, 1808; Job Lewis, 1811; John Loney, 1813; John Love, 1808, from Washington county. Pa.; John Mc- Adams, 1811, from Washington county. Pa.; George McConnell, 1805, 118 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY from Washington county, Pa.; John McConnell, 1806, from Washington county. Pa.; John McCo_y, 1806, from Washington county, Pa.; Thomas McCoy, hefore 1810, from western Virginia; Robert McCracken, 1805, from Washington county, Pa.; James McDowell, 1806, from Fayette county. Pa; John McDowell, 1809, from Fayette county. Pa.; Samuel McDowell, Jr., 180(), from Fayette county. Pa.; John Maliolm, 1812; Alexander Moore, 1813; N'athaniel Parramour, 1811; Caleb Pumphrey, 1808; John Eeed, 1812; Nathan Shepherd, 1807, from Brooke county, (West) Va.; Roger Toothaker, 1811; Jacob Webb, 1806, from Fayette county, Pa. In Cadiz township before 1814 (Exclusive of Cadiz Village.) — John Agnew, 1807, from Washington county. Pa.; Reuben Allen, 1812, from Maryland; James Allison, about 1810; George Barricklow, 1812, from Fayette county, Pa.; Henry Barricklow, 1809, from Fayette county. Pa.; Valentine Barriger, 1813, from Adams county. Pa.; Arthur Barrett, 1808, from Frederick county, Va.; John Baxter, 1812, from Allegeheny county. Pa.; Zaecheus A. Beatty, 1804; Zaccheus Biggs, of Steubenville, 1806; John Blair, before 1810; Eannei Blair, 1809, from Brooke county, (West) Va. ; Thomas Burkhead, 1812; Samuel Carnahan, 1806; Joshua Cecil, 1813; Nathan Chaney, 1805, from Virginia; Robert Cochran, before 1805, from Allegheny county. Pa.; Samuel Dunlap, 1805, from Fayette county. Pa.; John Eagieson, 1813, from Maryland; Abraham Furney, before 1805, from Germany; John Gilchrist, 1811, from Fayette county. Pa.; Francis Gilmore, 1808; Samuel Gilmore, be- fore 1805, from Hopewell township, Washington county. Pa.; William Grimes, 1813; Jesse Haines, 1811; James Haverfield, before 1810, from Huntingdon county. Pa.; Samuel Heavlin, 1812; Samuel Hedges, before 1810, from Virginia; Alexander Henderson, 1813, from Pennsylvania; John Jamison, before 1805, from Hopewell township, Washington county; Absolom Kent, 1805, from Fayette county. Pa.; George Leporth, 1806; Samuel McDoAvell, 1811; John McFadden, before 1805, from Hope- well township, Washington county. Pa.; Joseph McFadden, before 1805, from HopeM^ell township, Washington county, Pa.; John McMillan, 1807; Andrew McNeely, before 1805, from Berks county. Pa.; James Mahon, 1812; Arthur Martin, 1813, from Lancaster county, Pa.; Mat- thew Mitchell, 1806, from Washington county. Pa.; John Morris, 1813, from western A^irginia; John Ogievee, before 1805, from Fayette corinty. Pa.; John Perry, 1813; James Porter, before 1805, from Washington county. Pa.; Samuel Porter, before 1805, from Washington county. HARRISON COUNTY SETTLERS IN 1813 119 Pa.; Joseph Kogers, 1808, from Maryland; William Rogers, 1811, from Maryland; Adam Eoss, 1801, from York county, Pa.; John Ross, ISOi, from Pennsylvania; Joseph Steer, 1805; James Stewart, 1813; David Thompson, about 1814, from county Tyrone, Ireland; Elizabeth Toole, 1810; Bazaleel Wells, of Steubenville, 1806; Charles D. Wells, 1813; Robert Wilkin, before 1802, from Pennsylvania; Thomas Wilson, 1813, from Brooke county, (West) Va. In Franklin Township before 181-4. — Walter Craig, 1809; William Craig, 1809, from W^ashington county. Pa.; Benjamin Johnson, 1813, from Brooke county (West) Va.; Joel Johnson, 1812, from Brooke county, (West) \^a.; Joseph Johnson, 1811, from Brooke county, (West) Va.; Benjamin Price, before 1805, from New Jersey; Jonathan West, 1811, from Pennsylvania. In Freeport Township before 1814. — Isaac Cadwallader, 1811, from Fayette county. Pa.; Samuel Colvin, 1812, from Washington count}-. Pa.; Daniel Easley, 1810, from Halifax county, Va.; John Gilmore, 1810, from New York; John Flollett, about 1806, from Maryland; Berriman McLaughlin, 1808; William Milton, 1812, from Washington county. Pa.; James, John, Richard, Thomas, and William Reeves, 1813; Henrv Stevens, 1808. In German Township before 1814. — George Abel, from Loudoun county, Va.; John Abrams, 1811; George Atkinson, 1804, from Brooke county (West) Va.; Jacob Beckley, 1813; Robert Birney, 1807, from Chester county. Pa.; Stephen Ford, 1807; William Gallaher, 1809, from Fayette county, Pa.; David Gibson, 1809, from Brooke county, (West) Va. ; jSicholas Gutshall, 1806, from Washington cpunty. Pa.; James Hanna, 1810, from WasMngton county, Pa.; George Hartford, 1809, Brooke county, (West) Va.; James Hazlett, 1812, from Fayette countv, Pa.; Henry Heisler, 1806, from Northumberland county. Pa.; Peter Hesser, 1807; Francis Holmes, 1811; Nathan Johnson, 1813; Jacob Kail, before 1806, from Pennsylvania; John Kail, before 1810, from Pennsyl- vania; James Kelly, 1809; Robert Kelly, 1811, from Brooke county, (West) Va.; William Kelly, 1813, from Brooke county, (West) Va.; James B. ]\Iagrew, 1806, from Westmoreland county, Pa.; Peter Marklev, 1811, from Washington county, Pa.; Benjamin Menyard, 1811; David Miller, 1813; William Nichols, 1813; George Pfautz, 1805, from Cum- berland county. Pa.; Frederick Reed, 1807; John Riddle, 1812, from Allegheny county. Pa,; Jacob Sadler, 1806; George Shultz, 1810, from Loudoun county, Va. ; Jacob Smyer, 1810; Joseph Sprott, 1806, from 120 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY f Fayette county, Pa,; Jacob Stees, 1812; Matthias Stohl, 1806; William Wallace, 1809, from Brooke comity, (West) Va.; Benjamin Wheeler, 1806, from Baltimore county, Md.; Nicholas Wheeler, before 1810, from Mary- land; John Winnance, 1812. In Green Township before 1814. — John Baker, before 1805, from Pennsylvania; Henry Barriger, 1813, from Adams county, Pa.; William Birney, 1813; James Black, 1806, from Adams county. Pa.; Anthony Bricker, 1801; George Brokaw, before 1805, from Pennsylvania; John Caldwell, 1808. from Fayette county, Pa.; Alexander Cassil, 1806, from Washington county. Pa.; Joseph Clark, 1806, from Westmoreland county, Pa.; John Craig, 1803, from Donegal township, Washington county. Pa.; John Croskey, before 1805, from N^ew Jersey; Kobert Croskey, be- fore 1805, from Pennsylvania ; Kobert Davidson, before 180^irfrom Penn- sylvania; Philip Deleiiy, 1806; Henry Ferguson, 1806, from Washington county. Pa.; Archibald Fletcher, 1813, from Adams county. Pa.; James Ford, 1808, from Brooke county, (West) Ya.; John Fowler, before 1810, from Maryland; John Fulton, 1806, from Fayette county. Pa.; John Gard- ner, 1810, from Washington county. Pa.; Hugh Gwynn, 1813; William Hanna, 1805, from Pennsylvania; William Hogg, 1801, from Fayette county. Pa.; William FEolmes, before 1804, from Pennsylvania; Joseph Kent, 1806, from Washington county. Pa.; John Laughlin, before 1806, from Pennsylvania; Caleb Merryman, 1807, from Baltimore county, Md.; Jane Milligan, 1811, from Adams county. Pa.; Mark Milliken, before 1812, from Pennsylvania; William Moore, before 1805, from Hopewell township, Washington count)'^. Pa.; John ISTicodemus, before 1805; John Oldshoe, before 1806; Eobert Orr, before 1805, from Westmoreland county. Pa.; William Orr, 1812; Joseph Pumphrey, 1806; William Pum- phrey, 1806; John Eamsey, before 1805, from Washington county. Pa.; Thomas Eankin, 1807; Rev. John Pica, 1804, from Washington count}^. Pa.; John Shepherd, 1807; Jacob Shepler, S06, from Westmoreland count)^. Pa.; Martin Snyder, before 1805; John Stapler, 1806, from Bucks county. Pa.; Galbreath Stewart, 1805, from West Middletowu, Washington county. Pa.; John Taggart, before 1805, from Washington coimt}^. Pa.; Hugh Tease, 1806; Fdmund Tipton, about 1814; John Wal- lace, 1804, from York county. Pa.; William Watt, before 1804, from Washington county. Pa., Pa.; Bazaleel Wells, of Steubenville, 1805; Daniel Welch, before 1803, from Cecil township, Washington county. Pa.; John Wilson, 1806, from Washington count}^. Pa.; John Young, 1814, from Anne Arundel county, Md. HARRISON COUNTY SETTLERS IN 1813 121 In Mouroe Township before 1814. — William Baim, 1801; Bernard Bower, 1812; John Bower, 1809; William Constable, 1801; Jacob Easter- day, 1811; John Fry, 1813. In Moorefield Township before 18 1-J-. — Eobert Baxter, 1812; Robert Bell, 1811; John Cadwalladcr, Jr., 1812; Thomas Crabtree, 1812; Robert Hurton, 1811, from Ohio county, (West) Va. ; Henry Johnson, 1812, from Allegany connty, Md. ; Joseph and Lemuel Johnson, 1812; William John- son, 1810, from Allegany county, ]\Id.; John Kennedy, 1811, from Wash- ington county. Pa.; Matthew Kennedy, 1811, from Scotland and the Dis- trict of Columbia; John Knight, 1812; Edward Lafferty, 1810, from AVashington county. Pa.; James Lamb, 1810; John Lamb, 1806, from Washington county. Pa.; Peter John Lance, 1812; Anne Mifflin, of Phil- adelphia, 1807; William Eamage, 1808; Thomas Rankin, 1805, from Mt. Pleasant township, Washington county, Pa.; Rachel Titus, 1812; Alex- ander Wilson, before 1810; Israel Wilson, 1811; James Wilson, 1812; Jonathan Wright, 1811. In North Township before 181-1. — Jacob Albert, 1811; Martin Bog- hart, 1812, from Somerset county. Pa.; Christian Canaga, 1807, from Somerset county, Pa.; Jacob Canaga, 1807; Philip Creplever, 1812, from Washington county, Pa.; James English, 1812, from Fayette county, Pa.; John aiid Philip Firebaugh, 1812, from Somerset county, Pa.; Nancy Forney, 1812, from Westmoreland county. Pa.; Peter Forney, 1810, from Somerset county. Pa.; Joseph Gundy, 1812, from Somerset county. Pa.; Joseph Keiser, 1812; Henry Miser, 1811; Peter Smith, 1812, from Somer- set county. Pa.; Thomas Yarnell, 1811, from Washington county, Pa. In E"ottingham Township before 1814. — William Arnst, 1811; James Caldwell, 1813; George CarotJiers, 1811, from Washington county, Pa.; John Carson, before 1812, from Maryland; Peter Crabtree, 1812, from western Pennsylvania; William Grist, of West Nottingham town- ship, Chester township. Pa., 1809; Isaac Haines, 1812; Thomas Haines, 1807; John Hines, before 1810, from Westmoreland county, Va.; Ben- jamin Johnson, 1810, from Allegany county, Md. ; John Johnson, 1810; John McCorkle, 1812; William Phillips, of West jSTottingham township;, Chester township. Pa., 1809; John Pagh, 1807, from Chester county. Pa.; John Richardson, 1813; John Riley, 1812; Jonathan Sayes, 1811. In Rumley Township before 1814. — Samuel Buchanan, 1806, from Washington county. Pa.; David Custer, 1811; Emanuel Custer, 1812, from Allegany county, Md. ; George Custer, 1804, from Fayette county. Pa.; Andrew Hendricks, 1812, from Allegany county, Md.; John and 122 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Joseph Hendricks, 1813, from Somerset county. Pa.; Adam Kimmel, 1813; Leonard Kimmel, 1807, from Somerset county. Pa.; John Low- miller, 1808, from Pennsylvania; Joseph McLain, 1812, from Westmore- land county, Pa.; John j\[iller, ISOG, from Frederick county, Md.; Abra- ham Nolfsker, 1806; Abraham Pittcnger, 1813, from 'Ne^v Jersey; John Ptough, 1812; Jacob Turney, 1813 . In Short Creek' Township before 1811.— John Adams, 1805, from the Korth of Ireland; Thomas Anderson, before 1805; Joseph Apple- gate, 1805, from Brooke county, (West) Va.; James Beatty, 1803; John Beatty, 1803; David Belknap, 1807; Kobert Braden, 1802, from Wash- ington county, Pa.; William Brown, 1805, froiu Brooke county, (West) Va.; James Carrick, 1812, from iVdams county. Pa.; Sarah Chambers, 1806, from Brooke county, (West) Va.; Joshua Clark, 1808, from Fay- ette county. Pa.; John Cope, 1813, from Frederick county, Va.; Thomas Cruinley, 1812, from Aarginia; Kobert Culbertson, 181L from the Xorth of Ireland; Thomas Dickerson, before 1805, from Fay- ette coimty. Pa.; James Ervin, 1812, from Maryland; James Finney, 1806, from Fayette county. Pa.; John Fuller, 1806; Joseph Gill, 1806; Samuel ITanna, before 1806, from Washington county. Pa.; Simpkins Harryman, 1802, from Maryland; Samuel Haund, 1801; Ptobert Hill, 1807; Isaac Holmes, about 1800, from Brooke county, (West) A^a.; Joseph Holmes, about 1800; Ellis Hoopes, 1812; Nathan Hoopes, 1809; Joseph Huff, before 1800, from Brooke county, (West) Va.; John Hurford, be- fore 1810, from Culpepper county, Va.; Abner Hutton, 1805; Jonathan Jessop, 1806; John Johnson, 1807, Westmoreland county; William John- son, about 1801, from Pennsylvania; Enoch Jones, 1806; James Kerr, 18D7, from Adams and Westmoreland counties. Pa. : James McBride, 1809, from Washington county. Pa.; Vincent Metcalf, before 1804; Baldwhi Parsons, 1803; Samuel Primes, 1806; Andrew Kitchey, Jr., before 1805, from York and Washington counties. Pa.; Charles Eichey, 1805, froui Washington county. Pa.; John Eitchey, about 1807, from York and Washington counties. Pa.; Eichard Eidgway, 1803; James Eoberts, be- fore 1806; Hugh Eogers, 1806, from Washington county. Pa.; Wilham Eouse, 1805; William Sherrod, 1804; John Singer, about 1808, from Virginia; William Smith, 1812; Benjamin Stanton, 1803; Silas Stephen, about 1810; Jacob Styers, 1812; Jonathan Taylor, 1813; Bradway Thompson, 1804, from Washington county, Pa.; Isaac Thomas, 1812; Thomas and William Thorn, 1806; Joseph Townsend, about 1812, from Bucks coimty. Pa.; Nathan Updegraff, 1806; Thomas Vanbuskirk, 1804; HARRISON COUNTY SETTLERS IN 1813 123 Joseph Vanlaw, 1805, from Burlington county, IST. J.; William Walraven, before 1805; John Wells, ISOG; Ezra Wharton, 1806, from Bucks county, Pa.; William Wile}', 1804, from Washington county, Pa.; Michael Yost, 1806, from Frederick county, Ya.; Charles Young, 1805, from Washing- ton county. Pa. In Stock Township before 181-1. — Michael Conaway, before 1810; James Hoagland, 1811; Isaac Johnson, 1812; William Johnson, 1812; Hugh McDonough, 1812; Alexander Moore, 1811; Charles Prather, of Brooke county, Ya., 1811; John Simpson, before 1810, from Washington county. Pa.; Aquila Tipton, before 1812; George Yenamon, 1809, from Washington county. Pa. In Washington Township before 1814. — John Henry Carver, 1812, from Germany; John Cooper, 1813; Lewis Davidson, 1809, from Eayette county. Pa.; JSTathaniel Gilmore, 1811; Jesse Huff, 1811; John Huff, 1812; William Huff, 1810; Robert Parks, 1810. Besides the names given above, a list of the first lot-owners in the town of Cadiz will be found in connection with the account of its early settlement; and, as stated before, a complete list of the Government land patents issued for lands in Harrison county, is given in another portion of this book. There were many early settlers in the county, however, who did not get their land directly from the Government, but bought it at second-hand from the original pre-emptors. The names of some of these are given in the following supplementary list, covering the period from 1814 to 1829, inclusive. This list is very incomplete; and it is a matter of regret that more records are not available to the writer. But such as have been obtained are here given; although many families will find the names of their pioneer ancestors missing, when they properly deserve a place in such a list as this: John Adams, Freeport, before 1812, from Erie county. Pa; Thomas Adams, Cadiz, 1815, from Pennsylvania; George Addleman, Monroe, 1820, from Greene county, Pa.; James Aiken, German, 1826, from Wash- ington county. Pa.; John Alexander, Freeport, 1828, from county Antrim, Ireland; John Arbaugh, Pumley, about 1820, from Maryland; Johr Arch- bold, Archer, 1814, from Westmoreland county. Pa.; David Barclay, Moorefield, about 1826, from county Derry, Ireland; James Barnes, Athens, 1824; Zenas Bartow, North, 1819, from Washington county, N. Y.; Samuel P. Baxter, Green, 1821, from Fayette county. Pa.; James P. Beall, Nottingham, before 1825, from Pennsylvania; Sampson Beatty, Archer, before 1826, from the Xortli of Ireland; Samuel Beck, Freeport, 124 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 1814; Peter Barger, Cadiz, 1818; Joseph Bernhard, Short Creek, 1814, from Chester county. Pa.; Hugh Birney, Creen, before 1830, from the Xorth of Ireland and Chester county, Pa.; Samuel Borland, North, 1819, from Westmoreland county. Pa.; James Bradford, Cadiz, before 1821, from Washington county. Pa.; Benjamin Brindley, Archer, 1835, from Harford county, Md.; John Cadwallader, Freeport, 1814; Joseph Cadwal- lader, Freeport, 1814; John Cady, Cadiz, 1834, from county Tyrone, Ire- land; John Campbell, Green, before 1833, from Pennsylvania; Erasmus Cannon, Athens, 1815, from Harford count}^ Md.; John Cecil, Moore- field, 1819; Philip Cecil, Franklin, before 1833, from Maryland; Eobert Christy, Archer, before 1830, from Scotland; Eobert Clark, Cadiz, before 1830; James Clements, Cadiz, before 1830, from Maryland; Jacob Condo, German, 1814, from York county. Pa.; Hiram Conwell, Cadiz, before 1816, from Virginia; Caleb and Imla Cooper, Washington, 1814; William Cooper, Washington, 1814; James Copeland, Green, 1816; Thomas Cope- land, Green, about 1814; William Coultrap, Stock, 1815, from western Virginia; ISTathaniel Crawford, IMoorefield, 1814; John Creal, North, 1830, from Maryland; Valentine Creamer, Freeport, 1814; James Cree, Freeport, about 1818, from Pennsylvania; James Cummings, Monroe, before 1830, from Kent county Del.; Samuel Curry, Archer, 1831; Jacob Custer, Eumley, before 1816, from Anne Arundel county, Md.; Jacob Dennis, Green, before 1830, from New Jersey; Chauncey Dewey, Cadiz, 1831, from Norwich, Conn.; Henry Dillon, Archer, 1814; James Endsley, Archer, 1817, from Lancaster county. Pa.; David Firebaugh, North, before 1817, from Pennsylvania; John Firebaugh, North, before 1835, from Pennsylvania; John Ford, Nottingham, before 1820, from Fayette county, Pa.; William Foreman, German, 1818; Jesse Forsythe, Washington, 1835, from Fayette county. Pa.; Alexander Foster, German, 1815; George Foster, 1816, from England; John Fowler, North, before 1830, from Pennsylvania; John Fulton, Green, 1816, from Harford county, Md. ; Philip Fulton, Notting- ham, before 1830, from ]\raryland; James McC. Galbraith, German, 1814, from Cumberland county. Pa.; Abram Gaud}'', before 1810, from Mary- land; Hezekiah Garner, Nottingham, 1818, from Maryland; John Green, Freeport, 1835, from the North of Ireland; Eobert Guttry, Moorefield, 1814; William Guttery, Athens, 1815; Elijah Guyton, Nottingham, about 1836, from Maryland; Edward Hagan, Short Creek, 1815, from Adams county. Pa.; W. P. Hall, Archer, about 1815; Samuel W. Hamill, Mon- roe, 1838, from the North of Ireland; Francis H. Hamilton, Cadiz, 1830, HARRISON COUNTY SETTLERS IN 1813 125 from the North of Irehmd; Joshua Hamilton, Cadiz, before 1825, from Pennsylvania; James Ifanna, German, about 1816, from Washington county. Pa.; John Hanna, Cadiz, 1814, from AVestmoreland county, Pa.; Pobert Hanna, Green, 1814; Hezekiah Harrison, Green, 18-?0, from ]\[aryland; John Harrison, Xorth, 1816, from Yorkshire, England; Christopher Hartley, JSTorth, about 1820, from England; John Haveriield, Cadiz, 1817; Joseph Haverfield, Cadiz, 1817; James Haw- Ihorne, Short Creek, before 1830,' from the N"orth of Ireland; John Heberling, Short Creek, 1823, from Berkeley county, Va.; John Hefling, Washington, 1821; Henry Hemry, Archer, 1815; John Henderson, Pum- ley, 1816, froin Indiana county, Pa.; Jacob Hendricks, Eumley, 1814; Thomas Hidey, Eumley, 1830; Leonard Hilton, 1826, from Maryland: Eudolph Hines, 1814, from Germany; Samuel Hitchcock, 1808; Eobert Holliday, Freeport, 1815, from the North of Ireland and Westmoreland county. Pa.; Henry Houser, Cadiz, before 1825; Edward Huston, Moore- field, before 1830, from Pennsylvania; Solomon Insley, Franklin, 1816, from Maryland; Andrew Jamison, Green, before 1825, from Pennsyl- vania; William Jenkins, Washington, 1814, from Nova Scotia; Alexander Johnson, German, 1814; from county Tyrone, Ireland, and Pennsylvania; Derrick Johnson, Mooreiield, 1814; Samuel E. Johnson, Monroe, 1824, from Maryland and South Carolina; Daniel Ivilgore, Cadiz, before 1815 from Pennsjdvania ; John Kimmel, North, 1814; Charles Kinsey, Cadiz, before 1820, from Bucks county. Pa.; Hugh Kirkpatrick, Athens, 1818; James Kirkpatrick, Athens, 1821, from Cecil county, Md. and Washing- ton county. Pa.; William Knox, Cadiz, before 1813, from the North of Ireland and Maryland; John S. Lacey, Cadiz, 1816, from Sussex countv Del.; Samuel Latferty, Mooreiield, 1814, from Washington county, Pa.; James Laughridge, North, before 1820, from the North of Ireland; tlohn Law, Monroe, 1826, from the North of Ireland; Georo-e Lewis, Eumley, about 1818, from England; Jacob Long, Moore- field, 1816; Eobert Lyons, Cadiz, 1810, from Pennsylvania; Georo-e Mc- Adanis, ]\Ioorefield, 1815; James McAfee, Eumley, 1823, from Washino-- ton county. Pa.; James McAfee, North, 1828, from Westmoreland county. Pa.; Joseph McBeth, Monroe, 1829, from Westmoreland county. Pa.; John McClery, Green, 1814; John McClintock, Nottingham, 1830; Eob- srt McConnell, Washington, 1814, from Pennsylvania; James McDjvitt, N'orth, 1S20, from Pennsylvania; Samuel McFadden, Cadiz, 1815; Eobert . ]\reFarland, Athens, before 1824; John McMillan, Nottingham, 1818, from Pennsylvania; Thomas Maddox, Short Creek, 1825, from Virginia; 126 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Joseph Maholm, Cadiz, 1814; Emarmel Mallernee, Nottingham, 1829, from Marjdand; Allen Manl}'-, Green, before 1817; Thomas Marquis, Athens, before 1823; Arthur Martin, Archer, before 1817, from the North of Ireland, and Lancaster county. Pa.; Peter Martin, Green, 1823, from Virginia; Abraham Mattern, Green, before 1830, from Westmoreland county. Pa.; John Megaw, North, 1816, from Westmoreland county. Pa.; Micajah Merryman, Cadiz, before 182.0, from Maryland; Alexander Mil- lekin, Cadiz, 1815; John Mitchell, Archer, before 1816, from Maryland; John Mitchell, Cadiz, before 1828, from Washington county, Pa.; Ezekiel O'Bryan, Moorefield, 1814; Alexander Osburn, Athens, 1815, from West- moreland county. Pa.; Jane Pattison, Moorefield, 1816; Joseph Patter- son, Archer, before 1820, from the North of Ireland; James Patton, Short Creek, 1816, from Pennsylvania; Joseph Patton, Eumley, 1816, from Fajrette county. Pa.; Thomas Patton, Green, 1816; Thomas Perry, Moorefield, 1815; John Phillips, Cadiz, before 1828, from West Nottingham township, Chester county, Pa. ; Eichard Phillips, Wash- ington, 1815, from Pennsylvania; Thomas Phillips, Cadiz, before 1826, from West Nottingham township, Chester county. Pa.; John Pollock, Green, 1814, from Fayette county. Pa.; Joshua Quillan, Freeport, 1815; John Eamsouer, Eumley, before 1820; James Eankin, Athens, 1815; Eobert Eankin, Cadiz, 1818; Thomas Eichey, Cadiz, 1817; Eoberfc Eoberts, German, 1817, from Brooke county, Va.; Eobert Eobertson, Cadiz, before 1826, from Loudoun county, Va.; John Eobison, Franklin, about 1826, from Virginia; William Eoss, Archer, 1817; John Eowland, Moorefield, 1815, from York county. Pa.; John Sampson, Stock, 1827, from county Tyrone, Ireland; Adam Sawvel, Eumley, 1815, from Penn- sylvania; Matthias Schilds, Monroe, 1814; James Scott, Cadiz, 1819, from Yorkshire, England; Thomas Scott, Athens, about 1822, from county Down, Ireland; William Scott, Archer, 1817; Peter Sewell, 1828, from Delaware; George Shambaugh, Eumley, 1817, from Perry county. Pa.; John Sharp, Cadiz, before 1830; John Shivers, Cadiz, before 1816, from Pennsylvania; Hugh Shotwell, Washington, 1814, from New Jer- sey and Pennsylvania; John Shotwell, Washington, 1814, from Fayette coimty. Pa.; James Simpson, Green, 1829, from Washington county. Pa.; Samuel Skinner, Moorefield, about 1820, from the Shenandoah valley, Virginia; Andrew Smith, Archer, 1814; Daniel Smith, Stock, 1821; from Huntingdon county. Pa; John Smith, Noftingham, 1818, from the North of Ireland; David Smylie, Cadiz, 1815, from Washington county. Pa.; John Sneddeker, German, 1816, from Washington county. Pa.; John HARRISON COUNTY SETTLERS IN 1813 127 Snider, ]Srortli, before 1824; Eli SparroAv, Green, before 1820, from Mary- land; Thomas Sproal, about 1820, from the North of Ireland; Jacob Stall!, liumle}', 181G, from Charles connty, Md,; Basil Steel, Washington, 1815, from Berkeley county, Va., and Pennsylvania; Eobert Steel, Moorelield, 1816; Archibald Stewart, Cadiz, 181G, from Pennsylvania; Matthew Templeton, Athens, 1815; Andrew Thomson, Moorefield, 1815, from Washington county, Pa.; Samuel Thompson, 1813, from Franklin and Westmoreland counties, Pa.; Thomas Thompson, Green, 1816, from Centre connty, Pa.; Thomas Thompson, Freeport, 1820, from the North of Ireland; Charles Timmons, Cadiz, 1817, from Berkeley county, Va.; Eli Town, Jr., Freeport, 1814, from Washington county. Pa.; Alexander Urquhart, 1813, from Scotland; Henry Utterback, Cadiz, 1820, from Vir- ginia; Joseph Walker, Stock, 1822, from county Derr}'-, Ireland; John Wallace, Moorefield, 1822, from York county, Pa.; Samuel Welsh, Archer, 1814; John Weyandt, Monroe, about 1817, from Washington county, Md., and Somerset coimty. Pa.; John Whan, 1815, from Chester, North- umberland, and Washington counties. Pa.; Ezra Wharton, Short Creek, 1818, from Bucks county. Pa.; Isaac Wheldon, Freeport, 1814; Joseph White, Nottingham, about 1818, from Maryland; Archibald Wilkin, Washington, before 1818, from Pennsylvania; Isaac Wood, Archer, 1814; Jonathan Worrall, Short Creek, 1815; David Wortman, North, 1825; John Wylie, German, before 1818. 128 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY CHAPTEE X. CRABAPPLE AND UNITY CHURCHES. While Beech Sprine: was the first Presb3'teriaii church organized within the present limits of Harrison county, the congregation of CRABAPPLE, composed largely of Harrison county people, and for five years united with Beech Spring under the same pastoral charge, was gathered some three or four yyears before that of the latter. Crabapple church is situated in Wheeling township, Belmont county, about two miles south of Xew Athens, and a short distance north from UniontoAvn. Near here, at the beginning of the present century, the set- tlers were perhaps more numerous than in any other part of the county. The most of them had come from Washington and Fayette counties, Pennsylvania; and for some years before 1800 the Presbytery of the Ohio, whose members were then cliiefly stationed in Washington county, had. sent nearly every one of their number on missionary tours to the new settlements in the Western Territory, as Ohio was then called. Among these ministers were liev. John MciMillan, Joseph Patterson, and Elisha Macurdy, the f:rst named being one of the earliest Presbyterian ministers to settle west of the Allegheny mountains, and at that time perhaps the most prominent. On October 17, ]s98, Rev. Joseph Anderson was licensed by this Presbytery, and at the same time appointed to visit the settlements west of the Ohio river, and to preach at "' Indian Wheelin Creek " (St. Clairs- ville), on the fourth Sabbath of October, and at '' Indian Short Creek " (Mt. Pleasant), on the first Sabbath of November. He continued to sup- CRABAPPLE CHURCH 129 ply these clmrches occasionally, and on October 15, 1790, at a request of a committee from these churches, the Presbytery appointed Mr. Anderson as a stated supply for one year. On April 15th of the following year, however, a call from the united congregations of Indian Wheeling Creek (now first called Eichland, and later, St. Clairsville), Short Creek (Mt. Pleasant), and Cross Eoads (Crabapple), was made for the pastoral ser- vices of Mr. Anderson, and accepted by him. His ordination took place at Cross Roads, Western Territory, on August 20, 1800, Presb3"terv hav- ing met at that place the day before. This is sometimes erroneously stated to have been the first ordination of a Presbyterian minister in what iS now the State of Ohio; but such is 2iot the case. Rev. James Kemper having been ordained and installed, at Cincinnati, by the Presbytery of Transylvania, as early as October 23, 1792. It was, however, the first or- dination by the Presbytery of Ohio vdLl'in the present limits of that state. ]\rr. Anderson was a member of the church of Upper Buffalo, in Hope- well township, Washington county, Pennsylvania, and probably pursued his studies in part at the Canonsburg Academy. He was a man of deep, and abounding zeal, a faithful and devoted laborer, and in an eminent sense, a pioneer. Within two years after his installation. Cross Roads (Crabapple) ceased to be a part of his charge, owing, doubtless, to Iut creased labors resulting from his rapidly growing congregations. In April, 1813, his pastoral relation to Short Creek (Mt. Pleasant), was dis- solved; but in 1820, Short Creek is again coupled with Richland in Pres- bytery's report to Synod. In 1827, Richland is first reported as St. Clairs- ville, and in 1829, is reported as his sole pastoral charge. He was re- leased October 3, 1830; and in June, 1835, he was dismissed to the Pres- bytery of St. Charles. His death occurred at Monticello, Mo., in 1847 in the eightieth year of his age. Mr. Anderson's Avife was a dauo-hter of IJov. Joseph Smith, first pastor of Cross Creek and Upper Buffalo churches, in Washington county, Pennsylvania. Robert McCullough and William McCullough were the first rulino- eld- ers in Crabapple church. In this capacity, Robert McCullough represent- ed the infant congregation in a meeting of the Synod of Virginia held at Washington, Pennsylvania, in 1800; and he also attended the meeting of the Presbytery of Ohio in the following year. The organization of the church, nevertheless, seems to have become dormant in 1802, and so con- tinued for a year or more. In the spring of 1804, however, in union with the newly organized congregr.tion of Beech Spring, Crabapple presented 130 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY a call to Eev. John Eea, whose acceptance of the same, and subsequent labors in this field, have already been related in connection with the former sketch of the history of Beech Spring Church. A somewhat different account from the above, of the permanent erection of Crabapple congregation is given by Mr. J. A. Caldwell, in his "History of Belmont and Jefferson counties." Mr. Caldwell says : In the year 1803, Eobert and William McCullough sent to George- town, Harrison [then Jefferson] county, Ohio, for Samuel Hanna, to " come up and help " them to form a " praying society." He came, and from this germ planted in the wilderness, sprang Crabapple Presbyterian Church, the first and largest church organization in Wheeling township, Belmont county, Ohio. The first sermon was preached by the Kev. John Eea, and the church organized with forty members, in 1804, by Eev. Joseph Anderson and Dr. [Samuel] Ealston, a committee sent by the Presbytery of Ohio. The early records are lost, but the following fam- ilies were among the first members: The McCulloughs, McKibbons, Campbells, Snedekers, Brokaws, and Merritts. The first bench of elders was composed of William McCullough, Eobert McCullough, and Daniel [David] Merritt. While the account is probably correct, so far as it goes, yet, undoubt- edly it refers to the second organization of the church, Eev. Joseph Anderson had certainly gathered the nucleus of the congregation here as early as 1799, and it seems to have continued as one of his preach- ing stations for two or three years afterwards. The records of the Pres- bytery of Ohio show a meeting of Presbytery at Cross Eoads, Western Territory, as Crabapple was then called, on Aug. 19, 1800, as stated above. At this meeting were present, Eevs. John McMillan, James Hughes, John Brice, and Thomas Marquis, all well-known ministers of AVashington county, Pennsylvania, and elders, Samuel Dunlap and John Irwin. On Wednesda}', August 20th, "Presbytery proceeded to the ordin- ation of Mr. Joseph Anderson, and by fasting and prayer, and with the laying on of the hands of the Presbytery, solemnly ordained him to the holy office of the gospel ministr}^, and installed him pastor of the united churches of Eichland, Short Creek, and Cross Eoads, W. T." Dr. Mc- Millan preached on this occasion, from 2d Corinthian?^ v. 20; and Eev. John Brice gave the charge. Mr. Anderson relinquished the charge of Crabapple in 1802, as stated above; and in August, 1805, was succeeded by Eev. John Eea. An account of Mr. Eea's five years' ministration here has been given in CRABAPPLE CHURCH 131 the sketch of Beech Spring Church, which during that period was united with Crabapple as one pastoral charge. At the end of five years (in April, 1810), he withdrew from Crabapple, that he might give all his labors to the Beech Spring congregation. The Crabapple division of his charge had become too laborious for him, spreading over a district of nearly fourteen miles square; for the territory of the future churches of New Athens, Morristown, and Nottingham was Avithin its bounds. The latter was then a mission station, under the care of the pastor and elders of Crabapple. The following extracts from the records of the Presbytery of Ohio will give us an idea of the strict orthodoxy of the early fathers of Crab- apple congregation; and it is possible they may also furnish one of the reasons for Mr. Rea's withdrawal from the charge of this congregation. The Presbytery met at Cross Eoads, in Washington county, Pa., on October 10th, 1808. On Friday, October 21st, "Samuel Hannah, a mem- ber of Crabapple congregation, appeared in the Presbytery with the fol- lowing charge: "The Reverend John Rea is hereby charged with preaching and circulating heterodox sentiments at the following places, viz., at Crab- apple, the Sabbath on or about the 20th of April last, and on Monday at Samuel Hannah's, at an examination: That the Covenant of Grace was not made with Christ, but with man only, and that man promises faith and repentance on his part; and maintains, that if the Covenant of Grace was made with Christ, he could not be the Mediator of it. "The Presbytery agreed to take up the charge, and ordered the par- ties to appear before them at their next meeting, prepared to have the matters brought to an issue." Upper Buffalo, December 21st, 1808. "The Presbytery proceeded to the consideration of the charge which was at the last meeting brought by Samuel Hannah against the Revd. John Rea. The charge being read, Mr. Rea denied that ever he had taught as stated in the charge." Wit- nesses were accordingly sworn and examined, William and Robert Mc- Culloch on that day, and Andrew Aekelson and William Wylie on the day following. Presbytery then "ordered Mr. Rea to prepare a written explanation of his sentiments." On the 23d, "Mr. Rea brought in a written explanation of his sentiments, which being read and considered, the Presbytery proceeded to consider the several items in the charge; and judged that they were not supported by the testimony." 132 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Ecv. Thomas B. Clark, a licentiate of the Presbytery of Hartford, was ordained and installed pastor of Crahapple in 1811, preaching one- fourth of his time at the IS^ottingham mission station; and continued un- til 1818, when his relation to this charge was dissolved. The third pastor was Eev. Samuel Cowles, who was installed in 1819, and continued seven years. After Mr. Cowles, there occurred a vacancy of several years, supplied from various soiirces; and then Mr. Jacob Coon, a licentiate of the Presbytery of Washington, preached as a can- didate for settlement, received and accepted a call, and in 183-4 was or- dained and installed. He remained four years. Eev. M'oses Allen was the fifth pastor of the church. He studied theology under his fi^LJaer-in-laAV, Dr. John McMillan, and was licensed to preach by the Presbytery of Ohio in 1807. He remained for thirty years in the bounds of that Presbytery, and then removed to the state of Ohio, where he was installed as pastor of Crahapple church in 1839. He continued in this relation from that time until his death, a period of seven years. In June, 1847, Eev. McKnight Williamson was installed pastor of this church, and remained for five years and nine months. He was suc- ceeded by Eev. AVilliam E. A'incent, who served for thirteen years. Mr. Vincent was followed in succession by John P. Caldwell (1869-1872), T. J. Milford (1874-1882), and George S. Hackett (1883). The first structure used by Crahapple Church as a place of worship was a so-called "tent," being nothing more than a rude pulpit, erected in the forest, possibly built against the side of a tree, and with a small projecting roof or hood of clap-boards, designed to protect the minister and his bible from tlie sim and rain. His congregation usually stood around in groups, or seated themselves on the grass, or on fallen logs. Soon afterwards, a log house was built, which later was succeeded by a brick building, and this in turn gave place to a frame structure, which has continued in use since its erection. About the year 1835, under the ministrations of Eev. Jacob Coon, Crahapple church seems to have reached the flood-tide of its prosperity. Its communicants then numbered over three hundred, with a Sabbath school of some two hundred members. Eevs. William M. Grimes, Thomas K. Crawford, James Grimes, Eobert Armstrong, Eobert Tannehill, and Joseph Lyle were reared in this church, and received their early religi- ous training in its Sabbath school. UNITY CHURCH 133 UNITY CHURCH. The first sermon preached to the families of this congregation was delivered by Eev. Joseph Scroggs, about the year 1813-13, As Dr. Scroggs was not licensed by his Presbytery until October, 1813, it is pos- sible the date of his visit may not have been until after that event.- The church was regularly organized as an Associate Presbyterian congrega- tion by Eev. John Walker, in 1814, and at that time consisted perhaps of no more than eight families, whose heads were as follows : John Trimble, James. Cook, Eobert McCracken, Alexander McCall, Eobert Hammond, John Love, Thomas Love, and John McCaskey. The first bench of elders was composed of Messrs. John Trimble, Eobert McCracken, Alex- ander McCall, and Eobert Hammond. Of the first minister of this congregation, more than a passing no- tice is required; as few men have had a greater or more beneficial in- fluence upon the moral welfare of the county, than John Walker. He was born in 1786, in Washington county, Pennsylvania; was educated at Jefferson College, and studied Theology with Dr. John Anderson, at Ser- vice, Pa.; was licensed in the summer of 1809 by the Presbytery of Ohio, and ordained July 11, 1811, by the same; served as pastor of Mercer and connections in Pennsylvania, until September 14, 1814; was installed over Unity, Mt. Pleasant, and Cadiz, in the summer of 1815. As his congregations increased, he resigned Cadiz in 1818, but retained the others until his death, which occurred March 8, 1845, from erysipelas. He was not distinguished for scholarship, but possessed an exceedingly enthusiastic temperament, which made him very energetic and active in his labors. He was a pioneer in the temperance cause, even to total ab- stinence; was very decided in his opposition to Free Masonry; and was intensely bitter in his hostility to slavery. He was always ready, even anxious, to defend his views, and oppose what he regarded as error. Hence, he was engaged in a number of public discussions, the most mem- orable of which was that with Alexander Campbell, the founder of the Campbellite Baptists. Mr. Walker desired to establish a classical school in Harrison county, and as none of the villages would take hold of the matter, he, in connection with a neighbor, laid out a town upon the ad- jacent portions of their farms, which they named ISTew Athens. Here he started a classical school, and rested not uutil he succeeded in getting from the Legislature the charter of Franklin College. He studied medicine in his youth, and practiced more or less in an amateur way during his whole ministry. In later years he felt a necessity to open a regular practice. The 134 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Durning of his house, together with a boundless hospitality, and a general financial mismanagement, made him very poor. For some time before se- curing the charter for his college, he conducted it as an academy in New Athens, under the name of the "Alma Mater," in active rivalry with a similar institution carried on by Eev. Donald Mcintosh, in Cadiz. In the archives of Franklin College is found the record of a single meeting of the trustees of that academy, held on September 28, 1824, the names of the trustees being: Rev. Salmon Cowles (president), John McCracken (secretary), Eev. John Walker, John Whan, John Wylie, Alexander Ham- mond, Alexander McNary, Daniel Brokaw, and John Trimble. At this time, the project for a charter for the academy at Cadiz was being agi- tated; but by the superior activity and tact of Mr. Walker, the charter was obtained for the academy at New Athens, under the name of "Alma College." This name was changed at the next meeting of the Legisla- ture to that of Franklin College. The charter is dated January 22, 1825, and the original incorporators were Revs. John Rea, Salmon Cowles, and John Walker, and Messrs. David Jennings, William Hamilton, John McCracken, John Wylie, James Campbell, David Campbell, John Trimble, John Whan, Daniel Brokaw, Alexander McNary, and Alexander Hammond. To these were added by election, at the first meeting of the trustees under this charter, held April 5, 1825, Eev. Thomas Hanna, John McGlaughlin, Stephen Caldwell, Joseph Grimes, and Matthew Simpson, At this same meeting of the trustees, the Rev. William Mc- Millan (a nephew of Dr. John McMillan), of Canonsburg, Penna., was elected President, with John Armstrong, of Pittsburg, as Professor of Mathematics; and on June 8th of the same year, the college was for- mally organized. At the Semi-Centennial Celebration of the organization of Franklin College, held at New Athens, June 23, 1875, Dr. Andrew Finley Ross, then presideut of the institution, sketched the history of the school from its organization; and from his address on that occasion, the follow- ing account has been condensed. The leading spirit in the enterprise M^as Rev. John Walker, a min- ister of the Secession church. Mr. Walker was a fit son of that particular branch of the church; a church characterized by its zealous orthodoxy and sturdy theology. He was a man of deep conviction upon the subject of equal rights. Hence, he entered into the anti-slavery contest with all the ardor of his impetuous nature, and during that long controversy, was one of the leading anti-slavery spirits of the West. By the superior tact J UNITY CHURCH 135 and energy of Rev. John Walker, the charter of Franklin College was obtained. Dr. William McMillan was elected President, and John Arm- strong, Professor of Mathematics. Dr. McMillan was the nephew of Dr. John McMillan, the original founder of Jefferson College at Canons- burg, Penna., of which institution he had been for some time president. He had thus been associated with and reared under the tuition of that noble band of men, the Smiths, Powers, McMillans, and Ealstons, who were so instrumental in planting the seeds of Presbyterianism and sound learning in the country west of the Alleghenies. John Armstrong was the mathematical oracle of western Pennsylvania. He made all the almanacs, and solved all the mathematical propositions. Learned so- cieties in Europe recognized his attainments by admitting him to their fellowships. What are the results? In this small college, with its two professors, were educated such men as the Hon. John Welsh, of the Supreme Court of Ohio; the Hon. William Kennon, a member of Con- gress during Jackson's administration, a friend and adviser of the Presi- dent; Wilson Shannon, a former governor of Ohio; Dr. Joseph Ray, the well-known mathematical writer, whose works have maintained a lono-er popularity and gained a wider circulation than perhaps any other mathe- matical works ever written; besides giving to the church such men as Drs. Johnson, Bruce, Henderson, Walkinshaw. Surely, this is harvest enough for less than seven years. Dr. McMillan died in 1832. [He was followed, in succession, by Revs. Richard Campbell and Johnson Welsh]. In 1837, the Board appointed as president, Dr. Joseph Smith, then pastor of a church in St. Clairsville, the grandson of Rev. Joseph Smith and Dr. James Power, both noted pioneers of Presbyterianism in western Penn- sylvania. He was thus from the same stock, and reared under the same tuition with Dr. McMillan. The anti-slavery agitation was becoming more and more intense. The people who attended the ministrations of Rev. John Walker were al- most to a man strongly anti-slavery. The Presbyterian General As- sembly was divided. The congregation of Crabapple was divided, al- though Rev. Jacob Coon, the pastor, was strongly anti-slavery. Dr. Smith opposed agitation of the question. Mr. Coon left Crabapple, removed to JS'ew Athens, and organized a Presbyterian church. Dr. Smith resigned the presidency, and Mr. Coon was elected in his stead. The majority of the Board was composed of anti-slavery men, but it was not their intention to commit the college to this principle. Coon was succeeded in a year, by Rev. William Burnett, an Associate Reformed 136 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY minister, from near Pittsburgh, but born in South Carolina, and con- -servative on tlie slavery question. He resigned within a twelve-month, followed by Professor Armstrong. In 184:0, the Board appointed Eev. Edwin H. Nevin, President; .George K. Jenkins, Professor of Mathematics; and Eev. Andrew Black, Professor of Languages. The members of the Board then resolved to throw themselves entirely upon the side of the anti-slavery sentiment of the country. The place had already come to be regarded as the hot-bed of Abolitionism in eastern Ohio; and Mr. Nevin's eloquent denunciation of the monster iniquity, aided by the hot shot of Eev. John Walker, soon began to tell upon the community. The college had become involved in debt, and the creditors sued for their claims. The anti-slavery men, then in control, were unable to meet these claims, for varioiis reasons, and in consequence, the property of the college was taken in execution, and sold by the sheriff. Thus Franklin College, after her long struggles, found herself without a home. But this was not all. The college edifice, with its appurtenances, was purchased by the colonization, or pro-slavery party, and under the name of "Providence College," the}^ succeeded in establishing a rival institu- tion. The anti-slavery men, however, were adequate to the crisis, and notwithstanding the demands that had already been made upon their liberalit}', they at once raised funds for the erection of a building for the accommodation of Franklin College. To secure it from the claims of the old creditors, yet unliquidated, and for the satisfaction of which their property had been sacrificed, they located their edifice upon their church lot, thus vesting their title in the trustees of the church; and so Franklin College was accommodated with a home. The popular qualities of President Nevin and his associates in the faculty attracted at once all the students that resorted to the place, and Providence College, after a feeble effort to gain a hold upon the public patronage, was abandoned. The anti-slavery men had now fairly won the field. President ISTevin, in having the bell cast for the new college, placed upon it the words : "Pro- claim Liberty Through all the Land." Dr. ISTevin was succeeded in 18-15 by Eev. Alexander D. Clark, who remained until ]8G1. The sons of Franklin College are found occupying high positions all over the land. She has given to the Senate of the United States a Cowan, a Fowler, and a Sharon; and to the House of Eepresentatives, a Kennon, a Bingham, and a Lawrence. She is represented in the halls of medical UNITY CHURCH 137 science by an Armor; on the Supreme Bench of Ohio, by a Welsh; on that of Alabama) by a Bruce; and in the theological seminaries of the country, by a Bruce, a Clark, and a Henderson. Seventy-five per cent, of her graduates have entered the Christian ministry, and some of the most distinguished and useful men who adorn the pulpit are found among them. In his "Pathfinders of Jeft'erson County," Mr. William H. Hunter has recorded considerable of the once forgotten history of the Abolition movement in Ohio, and in referring to that part of the subject connected with Harrison county, he says: "The Short Creek valley, from Cadiz to Mt. Pleasant, and including the region about New Athens and Crab- apple church, just over the divide, on the head waters of Wheeling creek, was noted for its warmth of abolition sentiment, from 1820 down to the close of the irrepressible confiict — abolition of slavery, pure and simple; the hard-headed, austere Seceders, the followers of Dr. John Walker, and other ministers of his kind, would tolerate no compromise, and they looked upon Benjamin Lundy's colonization schemes with almost the same disrespect that they would consider any half-way measure pro- posed by the pro-slavery advocates. Franklin College, founded by John Walker, was long recognized as the fountain-head of the abolition senti- ment of eastern Ohio, and it is but natural that the people first to drink of the stream were powerfully influenced; and further, it was in accord- ance with the eternal fitness of things, that numerous 'underground stations,' so-called because slaves were surreptitiously conveyed along certain routes, kept hid during the day, and hurried during the night season from one station to another, on their way to Canada, should be established in this valley. "Of course, there were stations at the mouth of Short creek, one kept by George Craig, and one by William Hogg. One was kept by Joseph Medill, on Warren Kidge, near Hopewell M. E. Church. There were many in Mt. Pleasant, the slaves being kept during daylight in any of the houses in the village, and there is authority for the statement that one good Friend kept a number of strong negroes on his farm from corn- planting until after harvest. The house of Kev. Benjamin Mitchell was a noted station, there being a trap-door in the kitchen floor, through which runaway slaves reached a large hole in the ground when slavo-hunters were searching the premises. Tlie Updegraff house, a mile west of Mt. Pleasant, and that of David Robinson, west of Trenton, were also well kno^v'n to the slave on his way to liberty. The Bracken house in Mt. 138 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Pleasant was so constructed that the negroes could enter an attic by means of a trap-door in the roof, after climbing a ladder. Benjamin Ladd, the Quaker philanthropist, kept the Smithfield station. The one at Lloydstown, named for Jesse and Isaac Lloyd, was kept by Eli ISTichols; one at Unity, kept by Kev. John Walker, the courageous Seceder min- ister: at Hammond's Cross Roads, by Alexander and John Hammond — John Hammond, Jr., and Joseph Eodgers, now of Cadiz, being con- ductors between this point and Hopedale; one at the house of James Hanna (brother of Eev. Thomas Hanna), near Georgetown; one at the house of Cyrus McNeely (founder of Hopedale College), between Hope- dale and Unionvale; one at the house of Judge Thomas Lee, near Cadiz; one at Miller's Station, by David Ward; one at Eichmond, by James and William Ladd; and from here, the negroes were conducted to the home of Judge Thomas George, on Yellow creek, and then to Salem, in Colum- biana county, from which point they had comparatively safe passage into British possessions." Those who harbored fugitive slaves in those days ran great risks, the penalty being $1,000 fine, and imprisonment. John Walker was succeeded at Unity by Eev. William Wishart, who began his ministry in September, 1847, and served until April, 1868. He was followed, November 30, 1869, by Eev. William G. Waddle. The first meeting-house of Unity congregation was built in 1815, on the site of the present graveyard. The structure was built of round logs, and was twenty-five feet in size. It had a clap-board roof, and the whole of one end of the house was occupied by the fire-place. This building was very primitive in construction, and defective in ventilation; so that the congregation, in order to avoid the smoke, which filled the room when a fire was burning, worshipped on the outside during the winter season, whenever the weather was sufficiently mild. The second building, made this time of hewn logs, was erected in 1820. and was en- tered through three different door-ways. This house was built under the direction of Eev. John Walker, near the site of the present building, and was occupied by the congregation until 1833, when a third building, of brick, was erected in its stead. The brick house was fifty-five by sixty-five feet in dimensions, and it is said to have accommodated 500 worshippers. It stood until 1875, when the present frame structure was erected. The congregation reached its greatest period of pror.perity about the year 1841, nnder the ministrations of Eev. John Walker. At that time the membership numbered nearly two hundred and fifty persons, more than twice its present size. EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 139 CHAPTER XI. THE EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ. In taking up the history of the early churches of Cadiz, we find that some years elapsed after the town was established before any church or- ganization was made. The Presbyterian worshippers of the community were then included in the congregation of Beech Spring, and ministered to by Eev. John Eea, who undoubtedly preached in Cadiz at private dwellings before 1810. Most of the first settlers who took up lands in the vicinity of Cadiz seem to have been of the Associate Reformed Pres- byterian faith, among them being the large families of the McFaddens, Gilmores, Jamisons, and Craigs, from Washington county, Pennsylvania. The membership of this church in America is made up chiefly from de- scendants of the Scotch-Irish immigrants who came to America from Ulster after the close of the Revolutionary War. More than ninety per cent, of the pre-Revolutionary emigration from Ireland consisted of Presbyterians of the Old School. The later emigrants, on first coming to Pennsylvania, where their relations or friends had settled many years before, found much of the best lands taken in these older settlements. Though at first they settled in tlie western counties of the Keystone State, they were not satisfied with their condition, but usually took up with the earliest opportunity of bettering it. This came to them with the opening to settlement of the lands in the Northwest Territory; and it was not many months after the land office was opened at Steubenville before many of the choicest tracts in the vicini+^,y of Cadiz were occupied by these Washington county Scotch-Irish. During the time between their removal to Harrison county, and the organization of the Associate Re- formed Presbyterian Church at Cadiz, it is hardly reasonable to suppose 140 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY that they were without occasional religious services. The present United Presbyterian Church of Cadiz, as of other churches of that denomination throughout the country, was formed in 1858, by the union of the two former congregations known as the Associate Presbyterian and the Asso- ciate Reformed Presbyterian churches. Prior to the formation of the Second Ohio Associate Reformed Presbytery, in 1824, Cadiz was included in the territory of the Presbytery of Monongahela, and as such was doubt- less often visited and preached to by ministers belonging to that Pres- bytery who were residents of Washington county. And it is reasonable to assume that many of them came as missionaries before the formal or- ganization of the congregation in 1810. The writer, not having tlie minutes of Monongahela Presbytery before him, is unable to give any details as to the number or frequency of these early "supplies"; but that tbey were provided and paid for, there is no reason to doubt. It is also very probable that a small log church building may have been erected in Cadiz township by this congregation some years before the erection of their meeting-house in Cadiz village. We find from the records of Harrison county, that Lots numbered 58, 59, and 60 in the town of Cadiz (the present residence of Mr. A. H. Carna- han), were deeded on April 16, 1812, to "John McFadden, Samuel Carna- han, John Craig, William Hamilton, and John Jamison, trustees ap- pointed by the Associate Reform ed congregation of Cadiz," for the pur- pose of a meeting-house for public worship. We can therefore deter- mine positively that prior to the date here given, this congregation was fully organized and able and ready to sustain a minister. An historica] sermon was delivered by Rev. W. T. Meloy, D. D., then pastor of the United Presbyterian Church at Cadiz, on August 26, 1876, giving the history of the congregation from the time of the organization of the Associate Reformed church. This history is so full of interest, and con- tains so much information regarding the subject to which it relates, as to be in every way worthy of permanent preservation; and the historical part of Dr. Meloy's discourse is therefore given here in full: THE UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. The Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church of Cadiz was one of the earliest mission stations west of Pennsylvania. As early as October 10th, 1810, we find them petitioning the Monongahela Pres- bytery for supplies. Rev. Buchanan was appointed to preach in Cadiz the 2d and 3d Sabbaths of March, 1811. Supplies were afterwards fre- EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 141 quently sent them. Jime 23d, 1813, an application was made to have the liord's Slipper dispensed; Mr. Buchanan was appointed for that service, and to preside at an election of ruling elders in that societ3\ I^ev. Bu- chanan reported to Presbytery, the following September, "that Joseph McFadden, George McFadden, William Hamilton, and Robert Orr, had been elected ruling elders. At the same meeting Revs. Riddell and Bu- chanan were appointed to dispense the supper at Cadiz on the fifth Sab- bath of October, 1813, and to attend to the ordination of elders the pre- ceding Friday. On the 30th of October, 1813, Joseph McFadden and Robert Orr were ordained and installed to the eldership. George McFad- den declined accepting the of lice, and William Hamilton was absent. November 10th, 1813, application was made for the moderation of a call by Cadiz, and Upper Wheeling, a society near TJniontown. There was, however, a connection existing between it and Lower Wheeling and Short Creek. Discretionary power was then given to Mr. Buchanan, who was, in general, to be guided by the resolution — "that, provided Lower Wheeling and Short Creek shall satisfy the member who shall be ap- pointed to moderate, that they willingly relinquish the connection exist- ing between them and Upper Wheeling, then, and in that case, he shall proceed to this business." The minutes of the two subsequent meet- ings of Presbytery were lost, and the Clerk records such business as he could recall. He forgot to record the report of Mr. Buchanan. The re- sult, however, was, that Mr. Buchanan proceeded to moderate, and Mr. William Taggart vras elected Pastor. The first house of worship used by this congregation was a log build- ing, erected on grounds purchased from Zachariah Biggs, situated on the corner of South and Ohio streets. The purchase price was $20. The deed for these lots is on record in Jefferson county. The log buildino- was torn down and a substantial brick erected in 1828. This house was occupied by the congregation until 1870. Its cost cannot now be de- termined. It was not completed till 1833, when the pews were sold to pay for its completion. The total value of sixty-six pev/s was $1,812, the lowest being appraised at $10, and the highest at $40. Nearly all the pews were sold, as the anionnt received was $1,740.67. The Trustees were incorporated by act of Legislature, Feb. 18, 1830, and were John McFadden, Thomas Patton, William Hamilton, David 'Jhompson, and Thomas Bingham. William Haverfield was elected the same year, in place of Thomas Patton, deceased. The building commit- tee were John Mcl'adden, David Thompson, and Thomas Bingham. Mr. Bingham very often advanced money, and generally settled by takino- the even hundreds and deducting the odd dollars and cents, for which° doubtlessj the congregation felt duly grateful, although no record is' made of their expressing it. The building was no doubt one of the best in Cadiz, and was esteemed at the time most eligibly located. Yet why our fathers persisted in erecting store rooms and hotels on front streets and churches out of 142 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY to\m, or on back streets, it is difficult to tell. They certainly did not ad- vocate the penance of wading unnecessarily through the rich mud of Har- rison county, on scriptural or sanitary grounds. It was the custom of the time to spend most of the Sabbath in and about the Church. The forest trees had been cleared away, where the old graveyard now is, but on every side the chestnut and oak and maple afforded a pleasant shade under which to hitch the horses, eat the Sabbath biscuit and discuss the sermon. It is even hinted that in those days there were worldly men, who talked about stock and politics, and women who discussed their neighbors' dresses, and gay young people who arranged for week night meetings that were not strictly ecclesiastical. And to that old grave-yard, now so sadly neglected, the mourner went, Bible in hand, and read over the verses on the new gray sand-stone, now fallen and broken, dropped a llower on the grave where now the briers and old ivy twine together, and with wet eyes turned again to the house of God to hear a reverend pastor tell of a Savior who is "the Eesurrection and the Life." But the mourner and the motirned have met together, the grave encloses both. As already noticed, the first pastor elected was Mr. William Taggart. He, together with Mr. Samuel Findley, had been taken under care of Presbytery as students, on Sept. oth, 1809. He was licensed Sept. 1st, 1S13. He delivered his ordination trials at Cadiz, jSTov. 9, 1814. Eev. Findley preached the ordination sermon from 2d Corinthians, ii., 16, "And who is sulficient for these things;" after which Mr. Taggart was or- dained to the" office of the holy ministry;" and installed pastor of the united congregations of Cadiz and Upper Wheeling. He was about thirty- two years old when he began his labors here, and fifty-five when he was re- leased. He gave to this field the years of his vigor. He was a man of very line reasoning power. He spoke slowly, and at times with apparent hesi- tation, but Avhen the discourse was completed, antecedent and conseqttent, premise and conclusion, were bound together by a chain that could not be broken. It must, however, be confessed that Mr. Taggart took ample time for the elucidation of his text. His discourse never fell short of an hour, and frequently reached twice that length. The order in public worship then was to have, after the invocation prayer, the reading and explana- tion of the psalm. This exercise was as long as a modern sermon, and as it proceeded, more and more of the hidden beauties of Divine truth Avere displayed. Each thought of God is a deep, and the pastor loved to bring up its treasures, that the people might sing with full hearts. The precentor then gave out, and the people sang one line at a time. It was something of a departure to mingle bass with the air, but this was occa- sionally done. On communion Sabbaths, there were long debarrances made, that seemed to shut out the very elect from the table. Tokens of admission to the table were distributed on Saturday, and were brought on Sabbath to thft table, where an elder received them. The male por- tion of the congregation carried the leaden token in the vest pocket, and EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 143 ilie female, carehilly tied up in the corner of a snow white 'kerchief, Seated npon rude slabs, the rustic sofa of the early times, Mr. Taggart spoke to the people all the words of this life. Socially he was a man of courteous though dignified demeanor, and was greatly beloved. We must not, however, take the salary paid, or rather promised him, as the measure of the people's alfection. Nominally it was $180 for half his time; yet there is a record in the full, clear hand of Thomas Patton, Clerk, that on the 11th of September, 1830, there was owing to the pastor $6G3.(iO. That is, the congregation was less than four years in arrears. On the 2d of June, 1836, we find the following record: "After a careful investigation it was found that there was a balance yet due Mr. Taggart of $1,1'32." On the 27th of May, 1837, this amount was reduced to $350.50. An excuse for this tardiness that was somewhat amusing, though it might be a terror to rich fathers-in-law, was, that Mr. Taggart had stock in a St. Clairsville bank and had married a rich wife. The Uniontown church took all of Mr. Taggart's time, and he re- moved there in 1838. On September 6th, 1865, Rev. William Taggart ceased from his labors. His body rests in the grave at St. Clairsville. This old and honored servant of God was not called to his reward until the eighty-fourth year of his age. To him the shadows had grown very long, and the rest of the evening time was sweet. In 1838, Eev. Thomas Speer was elected pastor, but declined the call. Two hundred and fifty dollars a year was appropriated for the payment of supplies, and raised by a levy on the pews. On the twenty-seventh of September, 1839, Eev. Parks moderated in a call which was made in favor of Eev. Alexander Wilson, his salary being fixed at $500. His labors began T^^ovember 1st, 1839. Eev. William Bur- nett preached the sermon on this occasion, and a copy was requested by the congregation for publication. The women of the church were not in those days supposed to have much to do with its management, as we notice that on January 25th, 1841, it was annoum^ed from the pulpit that the "male members" would detain to attend to congregational business. Possibly this may account, in part, for imperfect management, as we certainly would fail to-day with- out the help and counsel of our sisters. We were not surprised, therefore, to find that the congregation, six months later, appointed a committee to wait upon Mr. Wilson and inquire of him whether he would be willing to accept of $400 as his salary or stipend, after the present year., Charles Warfel, one of the members of that committee, refused to serve, and if he were living I would commend him for it. During the years 1841-42, the male members frequently met and attempted to doctor the salary, which was falling constantly behind. The arrearages were, in •'41, $36.76; '42, $93.31, '43, $116.67. At last the collectors, seemingly in utter despair, resigned, and new ones were appointed. It was then re- solved, November 23d, 1844, that these arrearages be assessed on the 144 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY pews. To this plan there must have heen serious objections^ for on Janu- ary 27th, 1845, this resohition was repealed. The male members met in October, 1815, and reported the folloAv- ing arrearages: 1842, $93.31 ; '43, $109.67; '44, $181.50; '45, $384.00. A report on this subject was presented by S. McFadden, C. Warfel, and M. H. Urquhart. Joseph Braden, Moses Urquhart, John Mitchell, James Patton, Sam- uel Carnalian, and David Carnahan were chosen singers, and two of them were allowed to rise at one time. The worldly business in which Mr. Wilson was constantly engaged, was some excuse for a low salary, and might have justified a petition for his release, but it was no excuse what- ever for neglecting to pay a debt Mdien it fell due. At this time the number of families in this congregation was seventy- seven, and of communicants, 144. In December, 1850, Mr. Wilson tendered his resignation. The con- gregation adopted the following, which may seem very strange, so far as the connection between the statement and resolution is concerned: Whereas, it is the duty of every congregation to support the pastor, and: Whereas, the said congregation has withheld from the said Alexander Wilson that support which a faithful pastor merits; therefore: Resolved, That no objections be made by the congregation to the prayer of said Petition to Presbytery. The congregF.tion then attempted to settle with him on the basis of $300 a year. ' Mr. Wilson claimed fifty dollars more, and after appealing to Presbytery, his claim was paid, and for once the congregation was free from debt. It would indeed be difficult to tell how a pastorate, involved in such constant and harassing troubles, could be successful. The services of Mr. Wilson were doubtless rendered ineffective l)y them, and yet the con- gregation maintained its position and even advanced duriug his pas- torate. Two candidates were again before the congregation December 6th, 1851, some twenty-five of the "male members" being present. Eev. Thomas Cunningham received 17 votes, and James Porsythe, 8. Eev. Lorimer moderated in this call, February 24th, 1852. Eev. Cunningliam having declined to be a candidate, the iDlank was filled by inserting the name of Eev. James C. Porsythe. He was installed October 27th, 1852. His salary was at first fixed at $500, but was afterwards raised to $600. A meeting was called October 31st, 1857, to regulate the singing of the congregation, at which the clerk was directed to stand at the pul- pit rather than in the center of the house, the vote being 40 to 25. It was also decided, by a vote of 50 to 15, that the psalm slrould be sung without lining out. Gradually the old land marks that had arisen witli the necessities of the time, faded away; they filled their purpose; aud while these customs were dear to many, they yielded to the claims of the EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 143 present, and ^vcre willing to give up all but the principles which as a church they had maintained. The pastorate of Eev. Forsythe was brief. He resigned April, 1858. The congregation enjoyed considerable prosperity under his min- istry; and with the union of the two churches, the Associate Reformed Congregation of Cadiz ceased to exist. We now return to the other branch of this church. THE ASSOCIATE CONGREGATION OF CADIZ was ornanized A. D. 1813. Its first place of worship was a "tent," which had been pitched a short distance north-west of the present depot of the P., C. & St. L. R. R. This tent was a house of worship for the pastor alone. It was about six or eic^ht feet square, was reached by high steps, was under a roof that fell off to each side, and was boarded up in front to about the height of the pastor's waist. The congregation sat outside on logs, and benches made of split timbers, under the shade of the trees. If it did not rain or storm they experienced no inconvenience. A slight rain did not spoil our mothers' bonnets. In the winter, services were held in the court house or in private houses of members. The location of the tent was finally changed to a part of jVfr. Grimes' farm, nearer town, where afterwards a brick church was erected. It does not appear th^t there was entire unanimity about the new' church. The first resolu- tion in regard to it was adopted IMay 7th, 1827, at a meeting of which John Miller was chairman, and James Lee, clerk. Resolved, That this congregation talce up a subscription to build a brick meeting-house, sixty feet long and forty feet wide. The following January a motion was lost that the ground then oc- cupied be sold and the house built on a lot owned by George Craig. It was, however, ordered, that "the trustees have discretionary power as to the size of the meeting house, according to the funds subscribed." A second resolution M'as "to see what additional funds could be raised, pro- vided the house would be built on George Craig's lot;" an expedient which, resorted to some forty years later, secured the present location of our church. At a subsequent meeting it was determined not to build on Craig's lot, not to build a house in connection with the Union congrega- tion, and that the house should be one story. On the first of January, 1830, the fifty-eight pews were appraised, the values ranging from $2.25 to $7.50, the whole value, $275.50. The largest suliscriber was to have the first choice. No pew was to be sold for less than its appraised value. No person ooitld purchase more than two pews nor less than one. The minister's salary was to be a'ssossed by a regular per centum on the pews so sold. In case any oije refused or ne- glected to pay his assessment, three months grace was 'o be .given him, 10 146 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY and if not paid at that time, the pew was to "be offered for sale to make np the deficiency. In case it did not sell, the pew was to become the property of the congregation. It was further made the duty of the trus- tees to raise what money they could from those not purchasing pews, in order to lighten the assessment on purchasers, until all the congregation, or those subscribing, shall have obtained pews. It will readily appear how, under such financial management, this congregation would be kept out of debt. There is nothing in the records to show that they were ever seriously troubled. Occasionally they got in arrears, but prompt measures were taken to remedy this. How much more the Word preached would profit under such circumstances. There was no action taken but such as was based on principles of fairness and honor. A good financial pilot was at the helm. Shrewd business ideas prevailed then as now. In a slip torn from a will which had been written at that time and was used to mark the page in the congregational book, I find the following bequest of Mr. W , of Bloomfield: "I will and bequeath my big brass clock to whichever of my sons-in-law M'ill give the most for it." But as that was only a book-mark of the clerk, it would not be fair to hold the con- gregation responsible for it. This church was not well located. The site was low, much lower at that time than is indicated now. Arrangements for ventilation were not much cared for in those days, and had not been needed when worshipping at the tent. Many a good sermon has been spoiled by bad air. In June, 1847, a new and violent form of disease suddenly appeared among the flock. From what we can learn from the symptoms of this fatal disease, it Avas the typhoid fever. No such name was then known, and, as it was at first confined entirely to members of this congregation, it was univer- sally called the "Seceder fever." Many of the members died from it. among whom was the amiable wife of the pastor. This disease spread throughout the coimtry, and showed equal violence when preying on the members of other churches and upon heretics. Many of those attacked died. The physicians, ignorant of its nature, in some cases, resorted to that old foe of human life — the lancet, and aided the disease in quickly reducing the sufl'erer. The angel of death brooded over many homes, and the mourners were often met on the streets. It is impossible to tell certainly the cause of this malady. It was asserted that a stranger who had contracted the disease abroad, was that Sabbath a worshipper, and that there was a pool of water under the church. This was denied. Some light is gained by a bill which I find for digging the earth from about the church. Impure air must have given rise to the disease, and this may have resulted from a full house with too limited a supply of fresh air and too much of what had been de-oxodyzed a score of times. The miasmatic in- fluence was in the air, and may have arisen from physical causes not even guessed at, as has often been the case since. The house was blamed, and whether guilty or not, it was well that suspicion attached to it. It never had been comfortable. Members of the congregation attended servioes EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 147 as usual, but strangers sought some other place of worship. It was there- fore resolved soon after to hnild a new meeting house, forty-five by fifty- five feet, and a committee was appointed to select a site. A committee was also appointed to find how much more funds could be raised to build in town than on the present lot. Lot numbered 103, on Steubenville street, was purchased from William Eeid for $200, and a frame house, yet standing, was erected thereon. Part of the material of the old church was put in the foundation of this building. This house was occupied imtil the time of the union of the churches, when it was sold to Mrs Hatcher, for $1,400. This congregation was organized about 1813, though occasional ser- mons had been preached here before. The first record is Oct. 1st, 1814. "The Eev. John Walker accepted the call of and took charge of said congregation." He was installed sometime between the 24th of May and the 4tli of July, 1815, and was at the time twenty-nine years of age. His time was divided between Mt. Pleasant, Unity, and Cadiz. The in- stallation occurred at Unity. Eevs. French and Allison were appointed to this duty, but Mr. Allison was prevented from attending. Thomas Maxwell was ruling elder. The winter following, William Braden was installed, and Joseph Braden ordained to that office. The roll of the con- gregation rapidly increased under Mr. Walker-* labors. But, alas ! poor human nature. Discipline soon had to be exercised against offenders. Greater and lesser offences were strangely combined in the early dis- cipline of the church. The first ofience was intoxication. The offender was rebuked, and notification given to the congregation. The friends of the next accused, will pardon me for naming her — "Mrs. Agnes Crossen confessed her sorrow for violating the laws of the church and breakino- her own vows, in that she was married without publication." She was accordingly admonished — possibly not to fall into the same offence again, which she was not likely to do while her husband lived — and then re- stored to church privileges. The musters of the time were fruitful causes of offence, also the huskings and choppings. Any one who sets up the claim that there was no drunkenness at that time, need only read over the session records. Eev. John Walker, the first pastor of this church, was, in manv re- spects, a remarkable man, and was esteemed a preacher of great ability. His utterances were easy and rapid. With a quickness of perception, lie knew well to say the right thing in the right place. His manners outside the pulpit were agreeable and easy. Outside of his profession he was shrewd and active. He was instrumental in securing the location of Franklin College at New Athens, and would have gone forty miles on horse or foot to secure a student for that institution. He was a o-ood physician, and had an extensive practice; and, as he looked after both the souls and bodies of his hearers without receiving much pecuniary com- pensation, he became very popular, and was widely known. He conformed to the custom of his time and preached sermons of immoderate length. 148 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY To this day there are some who delight to tell how long the services were at the Tent. This was signally so on Communion Sabbath, when there was the most minute examination of heart and life. The offences of the time were most severely denounced, and the man who had tossed a copper, marked the ashes with a stick, or resorted to any similar form of divination, did not go unwarned. The weightiest matters, too, were not neglected. Persons who grew tired o| sitting, rested themselves by standing. The Sabbath evening examination on the shorter catechism properly belonged to exercises of the day. To criticise a sermon, or com- ment on the dress, manners, or bearing of the minister, would have been esteemed a serious offence. The people carried their Bibles, and com- mitted the text, and the older members of the family were questioned about the ijitroduction, divisions, and application. Dr. Walker was re- leased about 1820, and gave his entire time to Unity. He died March 8th, 1845, in the sixtieth year of his age, and thirty-sixth of his ministry. His body rests in the cemetery at Unity, and on his tombstone are the words : "Eemember ye not, that when I was yet with you I told you these things !" Mr. Thomas Hanna accepted a call to Cadiz, Piney Fork, and Wills Creek, and was ordained as pastor, December IGth, 1831. The number of families in the Cadiz church at this time was forty-one, in Piney Fork, thirty-eight, and in Wills Creek, fourteen. He was soon after released from the Wills Creek branch. In 1835 his whole time was given to Cadiz. At the time of Mr. Hanna's settlement, the session consisted of Robert, Henry, and Thomas Maxwell, James Alexander, William Hender- son, and James and Thomas Lee. William Miller and Eichard Hammond were ordained, and James Flanna installed June 19th, 1834. Francis Grove was installed, and Matthew Clark was ordained and installed, May 11th, 1837. Dr. Hanna was not a fine pulpit orator, nor was he regarded as a profound theologian. He was, however, a very instructive preacher. His sermons were often so systematically and minutely divided that one who took away the divisions carried the whole sermon. He had a very Idnd heart and was eminently sympathetic. It became convenient for him to live in Washington, Pa., owing to his marriage with Miss Foster, then, and for many years after, the honored Principal of the Washington Female Seminary. He was released April 24th, 1849. Dr. Hanna took charge of the church in Washington in May, 1850, and continued as pastor until physical prostration compelled him to give up the field. He died February 9th, 1864, in the sixty-fourth year of his age, and the forty-third of his ministry. His memory is fondly cherished by his people. There were many offenders against the law and order of the church during his pastorate, and there was not one meeting of the session in six that did not have one or more persons arraigned. Intemperance was doubtless the prevailing evil. But it was often the case that persons felt eaicouraged in carrying complaints to the session, just as children do to a parent or teacher. One man, when riding to Cadiz, had boasted with an oath, that he could ride down all the Whig horses in the county; occa- EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 149 sional hearing; marrymg withont publication; shooting for pennies; dancing; neglect of ordinances; unfair dealing; cutting bee trees; teach- ing on fast days; with an occasional sin of a graver nature, occupied most of the session's time. The cases seemed to grow the more they were dealt with, until the 7th of April, 1848, the following committees were appointed : Eobert Maxwell and Thomas Lee were appointed a commit- tee to confer with three persons, whose names I withhold, for occasional liearing; James Hanna, a committee to confer with three others about attending a ball; William Henderson, a committee to confer with W. W and wife, for neglect of ordinances; and Matthew Clark, a com- mittee to confer with J. D. B for the same offence. A large amount of business, truly, for one day. The church militant was rapidly earning the title of the church litigant. Discipline, however, in most cases was effective, and tlie erring were brought back. The membership of the church constantly increased, and its spiritual condition was healthy. On the 5th of June, 1839, Thomas Lee presented the following: Resolved, That all members of the Secession Church Avho approve of a resolution passed at a political meeting, held in Cadiz on the 15th day of May, A. D., 1839, approving of the course pursued by the State and Na- tional Administration on the subject of abolition, are guilty of a breach of the moral law. and the principles of the Secession Church. The vote on this resolution stood, ayes four, noes four. The moder- ator asked time to decide. A month later he cast his vote in the negative. A month later the vote was reconsidered, and the resolution adopted. An appeal from this was taken by Robert Maxwell. The whole matter was finally referred to Synod. The Church had already seen the "impend- ing crisis," and was preparing for the noble stand she afterwards took ar.d maintained on the day of our nation's trial. The Solemn Covenant engagement to duties is also recorded, although the date is not given. It was about 1840. There are but seven persons m> mbers of this church at the present time who joined in it. The scene niust have been one of deep solemnity when the congregation, with up- liCled hands, swore to live for Christ. A single sentence of this lengthy cngairement will suffice: "We do, with our hands lifted up to the Most High Clod, hereby confess, and before God, angels, and men, solemnly de- clare, that we desire to give glory to the Lord by believing with the heart; confessing with the mouth; and subscribing with the hand, that in Him vre have righteousness and strength." The congregation was vacant about a year, when Rev. J. R. Doig was called, and became pastor in May, 1850. He was never installed, ow- ing to a neglect on the part of Presbytery. He had supplied the con- gregation during the preceding winter, in the absence of Dr. Hanna, who was most of his time in Washington with his new wife. When, therefore, Dr. PLanna resigned in the spring, Mr. Doig was ready to take his place. He was at that time a professor in Franklin College, and continued to 150 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY reside in Athens. His work, therefore, could not have been so effective as it otherwise would have been. Mr. Doig, in the fall of '51, was taken ill, and remained so during the entire year. This, together with the death of his partner, induced him to resio-n, after having held a last communion with his people. '^Eev. Samuel Patton was the next pastor. He was ordained and in- stalled December, 1853. His relations with the people are said to have been pleasant, although he was not here long enough for his labors to be deeply impressed on the minds of the people, or to gain a lasting place in their memories and hearts. Two causes may have led to his early removal. He married in the congregation, and possibly imagined that what is true of a prophet is also true of his wife. He had preached at Detroit before settling at Cadiz, and the people there desiring his return, he accepted their call, and was released July 13th, 1854. His pastorate lasted onlv a little over six months. He labored but a short time in De- troit, when the Master called him home to an early reward. For about two years the congregation depended on supplies, and but few records were kept to show either its spiritual or financial condition. Mr. J. S. McCready was ordained and installed as pastor, August 7th, 1856. He soon gained a deep hold on the affections of his people. He was kind and unobstrusive in his manners, courteous in his bearing, yet firm as a rock in his convictions. His preaching largely partook of these characteristics, and was of a kind to set forth the truth in both its attrac- tiveness and strength. He had early imbibed an abhorrence of oppres- sion and showed by his conduct the sincerity of his faith. The religious instruction of the colored children of Cadiz had been neglected. He or- ganized, and during his ministry superintended, their Sabbath School. The IJniversalists had for some years gained a foot-hold in Cadiz. In 1857, Mr. McCready was challenged to discuss the question by an able debater named Emmet, who had often been engaged in discussions of this kind. The debate began Tuesday morning, and closed Friday evening. A writer who was familiar with the debate, says : "The truth was not only vindicated, but rendered triumphant. The Universalists were repelled, routed, aud overcome." Thev have not had a single sermon in Cadiz since. Meantime, the two churches, whose separate history we have been tracino-, were growing more closely together. Unkind words and acts had been hicklen away under the sacred mantle of charity. It was even hinted that the churches were already one — one in worship and in heart, and so nearly one in faith that but few were able to tell the difference between them. There were over-cautious ones who deprecated union, over-timid ones who deplored it. God's time had come. Tlie two streams were to flow in one, and to be so commingled that the separate source of either could not be traced. The Associate Synod was meeting in Pitts- burgh, and the Associate Eeformed in Allegheny City, on the 2Gth of May, 1858. The vote on union had carried in the Union Synod. Great EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 151 anxiety was felt about the result in the Seceder Synod. It was also carried there. The union was complete. A few discontented spirits still sought to maintain the Associate Church, but they had not the force of head or heart of a Marshall or a Clarkson, and no recruits could now come from over the water. Their numbers, small at first, are now less than 1,200. The United Presbyterian Church, pledged to maintain the truth and for- bear in love, continued to bear forward the history of the illustrious ones whose bans had been proclaimed. This cause in Cadiz found itself now with two congregations, two houses of worship, and one pastor. Rev. Forsythe having resigned. A basis of union between the two congregations was agreed upon. Each congregation was to choose three of its members, who were to constitute the Board of Trustees. The church was to be called the "First United Presbyterian Congregation of Cadiz." The trustees of the Associate con- gregation were to transfer all their property to the new Board. The United Church was to occupy the brick house, and the pews in it were to be forever free. Each congregation was to have an equal number of elders. The United Congregation was to meet on the last Saturday of March to ask for the moderation of a call. These conditions were signed by Andrew Jamison and John IMcFadden, on the part of the Union Church, February 20th, 1859, and by Martin Wilson and John Carnahan, on the part of the Seceder Church, February 36, 1859. In accordance with these propositions, the Seceder church building was sold to Eliza Ilatcher for $1,400, and the congregation worshipped in the old Union Church. The elders of the Seceder Church were Alexander Haverfield, William Miller, John Carnahan, Daniel Mitchell, and Thomas Jamison — five. Those of the Union Church were Joshua Hamilton, Robert Davidson, and Charles Warfel — three. Andrew Jamison and James C. Love were elected to make the number equaL Mr. Love was installed, but Mr. Jamison declined to serve. Rev. McCready demitted his charge April 19th, 1859. On the 3d of the following May a call was unanimously made for his services by the First U. P. Congregation of Cadiz. This call was accepted on the 14th of the following June. The congregation seemed now to enter on a career of unbounded prosperity. But already the dark shadow of civil war was beginning to fall on our country. The aggressions of the slave power were felt. This church had always, in the branches from which it came, denounced slavery. But now, alas! its extension became largely a political issue. On this subject our church gave no uncertain sound. Rev. McCready had not waited to be an abolitionist until slavery was overthrowTi. He was not one of those braves who stab the dead Percy- He was a patriot; and was willing to seal with his blood the testimony of his lips. He entered the Union array, August 14th, 1862, as Captain of Company II, 126th 0. V. I. Two months later he wrote to his con- gregation: "Your pulpit was not silent in regard to those sins which have convulsed the land. Nor did it give an uncertain, non-committal sound, 152 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY taking its cue from the dictation of party politics. It was 'known and road of all men.' Seven years ago, when thousands of statesmen and divines who are now with it, were against it, it preached what it preaches to- day, and what all the pulpits are coming rapidly to preach. It had not to he"impelled by divine judgments. To these truths, which I have preached to vou, dear "brethren, if I fall in this struggle, I am a martyr. But fo/ their influence, I hud not been here. My home was as dear, my life as sweet, my congregation as near to me as others are to them. As for official promotion, I was stepping down. As for money, I am probably losing. Besides, what is money, compared with life and home comforts ? "But you and I had raised up a standard for God's truth. We stood up for its" divinity. We had talked — the time came to act. God de- manded sacrifice in its behalf. The clergy of the South had shown how much they were willing to dare for tliis error — this great self-evident lie — this blot upon civilization — this outrage upon all religion, and all virtue. God put the question to us : Were we willing to do and dare as much for truth, for liberty, for country ? What could I reply ? I may fall! your beloved sons and brothers may fall! Be it so. Our testimony in behalf of God's truth is not lost. You will reap the benefit of it in future years." As such letters from the absent soldier pastor Avere read, feeling in the congregation ran high, and some refused to hear them at all. Others, who had sons and brothers and husbands with him, were indignant alt this, and for a time the peace of the congregation was much disturbed. C. L. Vallandingham was nominated for Governor of Ohio in 18G3, by the Democratic party. He was at the time banished for disloyalty, and was stopping at the Clifton House, in Canada. The following resolutions were passed by the Session: Resolved, That it is utterly inconsistent with the principles of the United Presbyterian Church to vote for C. L. Vallandingham for Governor of Ohio. Resolved, That we consider that voting for that candidate involves a creat moral question, and that no member of the United Presbyterian Church can vote for him without ignoring his principles on slavery and countenancing and encouraging disloyalty. These resolutions were read on the 27th of September. Eev. Mc- Cready obtained leave of absence and came home soon after. He moder- ated the Session, and dispensed the Supper Oct. 17th, 1863. It would have been strange if he, fresh from the field of battle, where his brave bovs then were (save those who had fallen), could have been silent. He was not wont to conceal his convictions of the truth. Thirteen families and a lar2:e number of adherents withdrew from the church. A few of these never formed any ecclesiastical connection, but most of them were received into the communion of the Presbyterian church of Cadiz. It was my privilege to meet Mr. McCready after his return from the army. EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 153 He talked of the field at home but spoke no words of bitterness. Doubt- less he would have suffered more had it not been a time when such mighty emotions were swaying the hearts of men. In the army. Captain :McCready was the same in modesty, candor, firmness, bravery, and cour- tesy, that he was at home. His company, brave as any in the army, united with him in daily prayers to the God of battles. On the 6th day of May, 18G4-, Mr. McCready was wounded in the left arm during one of the terrible battles of the Wilderness. He was carried from the field, taken to Washington, and finally died in Baltimore, at the house of Mr. Carson, Sept. 7th. His end was peace. The church was draped in mourning. All classes wept for him. Even those who had spoken harshly, now spoke with broken utterance. But no sincerer moarners gathered about his bier than the colored men whose constant friend he had been. He, of all the ministers who served this church, is the only one who died while its pastor. On the night of the 31st of December, 1864, your present pastor arrived in Cadiz to fill, by arrangement, the appointment of Eev. Mr. McKenzie. Another brother had been secured to preach, but gener- ously refused when he heard that I was present. But as he was paid the regular per diem for listening to me, I did not feel that he was greatly injured. The appearance of the house was not in the least prepossessing. The arched ceiling had been painted blue, and an occasional board ha^l partly broken loose from its fastenings and threatened to drop, like the famous sword of Damocles. The pulpit had come down from its orio-jnal height, but was still reached by a flight of stairs — about eight in numl:)er. An ill-fitting window was directly at the back of the little pulpit-box, and an occasional blast of wind from the north reminded me that there' was a broken pane in it. ' The day was unpleasant and the congregation small. A slight survey of the audience convinced me that there were manv earnest and intelligent men and women among them. I preached twice afterwards, and in the early spring was elected pastor. The entire congregation united in the call. My regular labors began the third Sabbath of May, 1865. I was ordained and installed June 23d, 1865, by the Presbytery of Wheeling. Eev. Campbell preached the sermon from 2d Cor. v., 20. The congregation was at the time somewhat discouraged. With- drawals had been frequent. The salary promised was $800. It was, after six years, generously raised to $1,200. It was still the custom to preach two sermons on Sabbath, Avith a half hour's interval. Changes, how- ever, had been made. The word "male" had disappeared from the record of our proceedings, and the singing was led by a choir, most of whom were ladies. The excuse for this was that the young men of the congre- gation had generally gone to the army. The Sabbath School was re'-or- ganized, and Charles Warfel elected Superintendent. The Session con- sisted of Joshua Hamilton, Daniel iMitchell, Alexander Haverfield. John 154 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Carnahan, and Charles Warfel. Eobert Paxton and Alexander Campbell were ordained and installed May lltli, 18G6; J. D. Osburn and Samuel Kyle, May 22d, 18G8, at which time Ebenezer McKitrick was installed. T. C. Grove and James Megaw were ordained and installed Nov. 8th, 1873. The propriety of erecting a new church had been considered for some time. The first meeting was held in 18G7. The proposition was dis- cussed at some length, and with considerable warmth, and was voted down by an overwhelming majority. Subsequent meetings were held, at which it was argued that the church was needing repairs; that in a few years a new one must be built; that the present one could not be made comfortable; that it was located at such a distance from the main street that it would not be possible to keep a good pavement to it; that money was plenty, and the congregation abundantly able to build. It was ar- gued on the other hand that the old church could be repaired at a very slight cost; that although money was plenty, building materials were high; and that the present location was eligible, affording ample hitch- ing room for the horses. The advocates of the new church constantly gained in number, until finally in the fall of 1868, a committee to solicit subscriptions was appointed. The congregation subscribed liberally. About $7,000 was raised, and there was nearly $3,000 in the treasury remaining from the sale of the Associate church. It was finally deter- mined to build on a lot adjoining the church property on Steubenville street. This lot was purchased and additional subscriptions taken. Many of the congregation, however, had talked about the present loca- tion. But Mrs. McNutt still occupied rooms in the old hotel located on it, and was, in her infirmity of mind and body, unwilling to remove. She died about this time (January, 1869). A meeting of the congre- gation was called. The matter was left in the hands of a committee, and $4,000 additional was subscribed on condition that the new church be located on the McNutt lot. This lot was purchased for $3,200. The congregation had now six lots, and the jest was made that they were go- ing into the real estate business. The transaction, however, was care- fully managed. The old church property was sold for $2,500, and the lot first purchased, at an advance of $100. The old buildings were also sold, and work on the new church commenced. As it progressed, changes were made in the original plan. The ladies had joined in the work and raised a considerable sum with which to carpet and cushion the house. The children also helped. The people had a mind to the work. Com- fortable stalls were erected for the horses. The basement of the church was occupied in the spring of 1870. As the work neared completion, a proposal was made to sell the pews and stalls. To this there was earnest opposition. An effort was made to raise the balance, but failed. The pews were then appraised. The lowest valued at $10 and the highest at $100. The total appraised value was $2,700. The pews were all sold, and also the stalls. The building committee consisted of John C. Jamison, Walter Craig, EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 155 W. L. Hamilton, x\ndreAv Jamison, William Hamilton, Sr., and David Cunningham. Their work was done to the entire satisfaction of the congregation, and was a standing evidence of fine business management. The Ladies' Mite Society contributed $2,000. Tlie church was dedicated on Thursday, Nov. 2.tth, 1870 (Thanksgiving Day). The congregation has suffered heavily from removals. Joshua Hamilton, one of the oldest members of Session, removed to Spring- Held. His loss was deeply felt, as also the removal of the younger mem- bers, Alexander Campbell and Samuel Kyle. Death, too, has greatly thinned our roll. Dr. Wilson, a man who had been eminently useful in the church, who had been a power in its meetings for prayer, was gathered home January 10th, 1872, aged 87 years. Our hearts were again made rad by the sudden death, from typhoid fever, of Elder C. Warfel, whose name had often appeared on our records. He was at the time a ruling elder and trustee, and had long and efficiently superintended the Sabbath bchool. He died February 2, 1871. His remains were taken to the church, which was thronged with the congregation and friends, among whom were many colored people, to whom he had been a constant friend. Alexander Haverfield was, after a few mouths' illness, released from earthly labors January aith, 1875. His death made a breach in the Ses- sion which could not be easily filled. He had long been a devoted friend to the congregation, and was a man of large religious information. On the 11th of August, 187G, Daniel Mitchell died. He was one of the oldest members of the Session, and a man of irreproachable char- acter. He was conscientiously regular in the observance of religious or- dinances. Of the history of oiir church in Cadiz no one need be ashamed, while all her true children may rejoice in it. I have neither sought to magnify the virtues nor palliate the faults of our fathers. One loved pastor fell in the great struggle for the life of our country and the free- dom of a race. From her communion there went forth as heralds of the Gospel such men as Hans W. Lee, Thomas B. Hanna, and John B. Clark, who, though early called from earth, held places second to none in the churches, and in the affections of the people. A daughter of one of the early and earnest men of this church is pointing the sisters in Egypt to the Lamb of Calvary. 156 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONiS OF HARRISON COUNTY CHAPTER XII. THE EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ— Con tiuued. While the Associate Eeformed congregation was doubtless the first Te«'iilarly organized religious society in Cadiz, it is probable the citizens were first ministered to by the Presbyterian minister at Beech Spring — ■ IJev. John Eea. lie is said to have preached his first sermon in Cadiz in 1804, standing under the shade of a large forest tree, which stood on the site of the present court-house. At this time, it is thought, there Avere but two buildings in the village, namely. Garret Glazener's blacksmith shop, and a log dwelling-house. THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. The first mention of Cadiz, as a separate congregation on the records of the Presbytery of Ohio, appears under date of Wednesday, June 11th, 1816. The Presbytery having met at Raccoon, in Washington county. Pa., applications for supplies were made from Cadiz and Freeport. ]\Ir. Joseph Stevenson was appointed to preach at Cadiz on the second Sab- bath of July, and Elisha Macurdy one Sabbath at his discretion. Rev. John Rea was appointed to supply at Freeport on the first Sabbath of Juty. The Presbytery met again at the same place on October loth, 1816, and applications for supplies were again received from Cadiz and from Freeport. On the following day, " Mr. [John] Munson, a licentiate from Presbytery of Hartford [Ohio], was granted leave to itinerate, and ordered to supply Cadiz the fourth Sabbath of October, and Freeport, the first Sabbath of January." Rev. Moses Allen was directed to preach ut Cadiz on the second Sabbath of December, and John Rea, one Sabbath at discretion. Rev. Joseph Anderson was likewise appointed to preach EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ* 157 at Freeport on the third Sahhath of N"oveinher; and Andrew Gwinn, at Cadiz, on the second Sabbath of November. From this time on, supplies seem to have been sent as frequently as Presbytery could furnish them, until the installation of a regular minister. The following account of this church is taken from an historical sermon delivered by Dr. W. P. Shrom at Cadiz, on August 31st, 188-i: If the records to which we have had access are correct, there was but one white family living within the limits of what is now Harrison county previous to the year 1799. This was tli-e family of Mr. Daniel Peterson, and his place of residence was at the forks of Short creek. During the year 1799, Mr. Alexander Henderson and his family moved into this vicinity from Washington county, Pennsylvania. In the following year immigration set in, chiefly from- western Pennsylvania, and the ancestors of a large portion of the present inhabitants made this region their liome — the names of Craig, Jamison, McFadden, and others being almost as familiar then as now. The immigration was evidently very rapid, for in 1820 the popula- tion of the county is given at 14,345, and in 1830 at 20,920, while the population as given in the census of 1880 is only 20,455, being less than that given in 1830 by 465. The county was organized in 1813 from portions being struck off from Tuscarawas and Jefferson counties. I'he town of Cadiz was laid out in 1803 or 1804, by Messrs. Biggs and Beatty. The present ground was then covered by a heavy forest, and inhabited by the Indian and such wild animals as abounded in this region. The town was laid out at this precise point because of its being the junction of two roads — the one from Pittsburg via Steubenville, and the other from Washing- ton, Pennsylvania,, via Wellsburg, leading to Zanesville. Before the building of the National Pike, this was the chief thoroughfare through the State from east to west. Very early in the history of the settlement of this county, attention was given to the organization and building of churches. The first church built in this region was what is still famil- iarly known as Beech Spring Church, one mile west of the eastern bound- ary line of this coiinty. Its first buikling was a small log structure which was destroyed by fire. This was succeeded by a larger one, holding 1,000 people, and was the center to which all Presbyterians tended from a wide range of country. It was at one period the largest Presbyterian church in this State, numbering upwards of 400 members. The P^ev. John Eoa became pastor of this church in 1804, at which time what is now Cadiz, was regarded as in the central portion of his parish. His first sermon in this immediate vicinity was preached in 1805 in a pri- vate house. As was then the custom, he continued to preach at different points in his large parish, and this region became one of these preaching points. The services were generally held on Sabbath afternoons or even- 158 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY ings in private hoiipos or in the log school -house, as was most convenient. This continiied nntil ihe spring of 1817, when, under the direction of the Preshytery of Oliio, with TMr. Rea as chairman of the committee, the Presbyterian Church of Cadiz was organized. In his historic sketches, ]\fr. Rea says: "I first saw the ground on which Cadiz is now located, in 1804, when the place now occupied hv the court-house and other public buildings, was a forest of oak, walnut, and sugar trees." Mr. Rea continued to preach after the organization of the church, as stated supply until 1820. The history of the church from its organization is a little more difficult to trace, from the fact that the early records of the church have been lost. The earliest sessional record we have been able to find is June 18, 1831 — so that fourteen years of the most valuable records are wanting. The church Avas organized under Ohio PresbA'tery, and was for a time under its care. Then in 1819 the Presbytery of Steubenville was struck off by order of the synod of Pittsburg, and this church then be- longed to that Presbytery until 1839, when the Presbytery of St. Clairs- ville was organized, under whose care the church is at this time. In Steubenville records of 1820, Cadiz church appears with several others — the last on the list as "vacant, not able." The same record oc- curs in 1821, with the addition that Obediah Jennings, of Steubenville First Church, was appointed to preach at Cadiz. At a meeting of the Presbytery, held April IG, 1822, at Tavo Ridges, Matthew McCoy ap- peared before Presbytery, and presented a call for the pastoral services of Mr. Donald Mcintosh, and Avas granted permission to prosecute the call before the Presbytery of Ohio, of AA^hich he was then a licentiate. The call was accepted, and Mr. Mcintosh was ordained and installed pas- tor of this church, October 17th, 1822, Rev. Obediah Jennings preach- ing the sermon, and Rev. John Rea delivering the charge (AAdiether to people or pastor is not stated). Rev. Donald Mcintosh was the first pastor that served this church. He was born in Aberdeen, Scotland, but came to this country earlv in life, and graduated in his collegiate course at Jefferson College, in the vear 1817, and was licensed to preach the gospel by the Preslayterv of Ohio. He continued to serve the church as pastor until 182G, when the pastoral relation was dissolved on account of ill-health. ]\lr. Mcintosh then returned to the State of jSTcav York, and from there he went to Florida, in 1828, where he died in 1830. Thus early in life the first pas- tor passed aAvay to his eternal rest and rcAvard. The second pastor was the Rev. John McArthur. He was born March 25, 1803, in Argyle, Washington county, N", Y. He removed to Ohio in 1819, took the degree of A. B. at Jefferson College in September, 1825, and was licensed to preach by the Presbytery of Hartford, October 3, 1827, then in session at New Lisbon, and A\-as ordained and installed pastor of the united charge of the Ridge and Cadiz churches — in the EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 159 former TSTov. 19, and in the latter Nov. 20, 18'3S, and continued until October 3d, 1837, when his relation was dissolved by the Presbytery of Steubenville. Mr. McArthar then removed to Miami University, and entered upon the duties of a Professorship in the Greek language, to which he had been elected, and for twelve years ho taught in this univer- sity, and preached to a small congregation until his death, which oc- curred in 1849. The third pastor was Eev. James Kerr. He Avas born Dec. 23, 1805, in the county of Wigton, Scotland. He emigrated to America in 1832. He finished his educaiion at the University of Glasgow, was licensed to preach by the Presb3^tery of Baltimore, April 27, 1836, and was ordained as an evangelist by the Presbytery of Winchester, April 22d, 1837, and labored in Hampshire county, Virginia, until July 15th, 1838, and being invited he visited the Church of Cadiz as a candidate, and in due time received a call and was installed pastor. May 6th, 1839, by the Presbytery of St. Clairsville, and remained sixteen years the incumbent of said of- fice until his death, which occurred April 19, 1855. The fourth pastor was the Rev. William M. Grimes, who was born at Crabapple, Belmont county, Ohio, September 15th, 1821. He took the degree of A. B. at Franklin College in September, 1814, was licensed to preach the gospel by the Presbytery of St. Clairsville on the 18th day of April, 1850, and was ordained and installed pastor by the same Pres- bytery in the Church of Concord, jSTovember 20th, and in the Church of Beallsville — the one-half of his time in each place — and remained in this field of labor about six years. A call from the Church of Cadiz Ohio, was presented in the Presbytery of St. Clairsville for the minis- terial labor of the Rev. William Grim^es, and after considerable discussion, the pastoral relation between Mr. Grimes and the Cliurches of Concord and Beallsville was dissolved on June 17th, 1856, with a view of his ac- cepting the call from Cadiz, and he was installed pastor of this church in October, 1856, by the Presbytery of St. Clairsville. A call from the First Church of Steubenville, Ohio, was presented before the Presbvterv of St. Clairsville for the ministerial labors of the Rev. William M. Grimes and the pastoral relation between the Rev. William M. Grimes and the First Church of Cadiz was dissolved on January 25th, 1876, after a pastor- ate of over nineteen years. Very much might in truth and justice be said about each of these pastoral relations, but especially the last. Its unusu- ally happy relations of pastor and people — the unusual results — all would be sufficient reason for continued remark. But we deem it best to leave this for future occasion, your own familiarity with this portion of the pastoral history making this the less necessary. The fifth pastor was the Rev. Robert Dickson, called September 18, 1876. ]\Ir. Dickson was born in County Down, Ireland, in 1818, and was educated at Belfast Royal College. The first nine years of his ministry were spent in Ireland. He came to the United States in 1850, and con- tinued his ministry in Pennsylvania and Ohio. He served a term dur- 160 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY ing the war, as Chaplain of the 100th Pennsylvania Eegiment. He was called from the Second Presbyterian Church of New Albany, to take the pastoral charge of the church in Cadiz, and continued at this place imtil 3 881, when he was called to Clifton, Ohio. The church was without a regular pastor for about two years following. Your recent pastor is the sixth in order. The installment took place on the 14th day of June, 1883. What the results will be remain to be seen. There have been since the organization of the church thirty elders elected, of w^hom ten are now living, and constitute the present session. The first were Matthew McCoy, John Hanna, and William Eamsay, who seemed to have been elected at the time of organizing the church. [Among other early elders Avere Robert McCullough, John Megaw, and Peter Bargerj. Most of these have been men who have left a good re- cord, and whose influence is seen and felt to this day in the church and in the community. I have not been able to secure either the names or the number of those who composed the church at the time of its organization, except three elders already named. But previous to the pastorate of Mr. Kerr, there had been 323 identified with the church. During his pastorate, 279 were added. Daring the pastorate of Dr. William M. Grimes 6G4 were added. During the pastorate of Dr. Dickson, 146. Since the dissolution of his pastorate, 52 have been added, making a total membership of 1,464, of whom far the larger part have passed from the church militant to the church triumphant, and we trust uniting with the former pastors in prais- ing God in the upper sanctuary- — 464 remain, while many are scattered to every quarter and some are holding places of responsibility and trust in other churches. Two at least are preaching the Gospel to other churches. The ground on which the present church building stands was pur- chased from Daniel Kilgore for a consideration of $150. There have been two church buildings on the ground. The first was built about 1831 or 1832. It was a large building for the time, with galleries on three sides, and was built at a cost of ahout $5,000 or $6,000. The money was raised for building by subscription, and paid partly in money and partly in labor. The brick work was done by John Pepper, and the wood work by Mr. Robinson. Before the erection of this build- ing the services were held in the Court House and in private houses, and also in the Associate Reformed Church, With the building of the present church you are all too familiar to need any word from me. It was dedicated May 25th, 1871, the sermon beinc preached bv Dr. S. J. Wilson, of Allegheny Seminary, the house costing about $40,000. The method of ministerial support in those i-arly times was quite liberal, as compared with the cost of living. Suln^uriptions were some- times made partly in money and partly in produce. EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 161 At its organization in 1820, the church liad to receive support from ilie committee of Domestic Missions, which then composed the present board of Home ]\Tissions. It has not in the past been forgetful of and will not in the future forget its debt of gratitude to this agency of the church, for helping new and growing churches in the days of their infancy and necessary financial weakness. The church has had two seasons of special revival, — one in 1840 under the ministry of Kev. James Kerr, when many were awakened and converted, and another beginning in 1865 and con- tiuuing for two years, during which time 120 persons united with the cliurch. This was under the ministry of Dr. Grimes. THE METHODIST EPISCODAL CHURCH* was established in Harrison county as early as the year 1801. The first Methodist emigrants settled on the south branch of Short creek, and consisted of Joseph Holmes, Samuel Humes, William Walraven, Isaac Buskirk, and others. Soon after, Thomas Dickerson came from Kedstone, Fayette county , Pennsylvania, and cleared some land and built a cabin near the settlement. Through his labors and influence a Class was formed, prayer meetings Avere established, and the people instructed in religion. Following the labors and progress of this good man, came the itinerant minister — Asa Shinn — and the first M. E. church of the county was erected and named "Dickerson." In the year 1802, the first seed was planted by Henry Johnson, who penetrated the forest to that place, and gathered to him after awhile a Methodist class. As early as 1814, there v.-ere societies organized at Eankin, Deersville, Bethel, Morris West's, two miles northeast of Cadiz, and at Cadiz. In the years 1807-8, Rev. James B. Finley traveled througli this region and organized a number of classes in the western part of the county. He preached with such ])Ower as to impress himself aud his message upon the minds of the people, so that neither were ever forgotten. Eev. Finley has given us in a book of his life, an account of his work during these years and a de- scription of his circuit as it had been formed by the Eev. James Watt. It was called "Wills Creek Circuit," and was not less than seventy-five miles in extent. "Beginning at Zanesville and running east, it embraced all the settlements on the Wheeling road, on to Salt Creek and Buffalo fork of Wills creek, thence down to Cambridge and Leatherwood, on Stillwater, including all the settlements on its various branches to the mouth, thence up the Tuscarawas through New Philadelphia, thence up Sanfly Yiew to Canton, and on to Carter's, thence up Sandy to Sugar ♦This sketch was prepared by Mr. William M. McCounell. 11 162 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY creek and down said creek to the mouth, thence down the Tuscarawas tc> William Butts, thence down to the mouth of White Woman, thence after crossing the river, and including all the settlements of the Wap- atomica, down to Zanesville, the place of beginning." About this time the societies and the classes in the territory of Harrison county were placed in West Wheeling Circuit. This circuit was composed of three counties, Harrison, Belmont, and Jefferson, snd belonged to the Baltimore Conference. While in the Baltimore Conference, Thornton Fleming was presiding elder, and R. E. Roberts preacher in charge. At a conference held in 1808, the West Wheeling Circuit was ti'ansferred to the Western Conference, with James Quinn, presiding elder; Jacob Young, preacher in charge; and James Wilson, James Watts, and Thomas Church, assistants. Tog;ether with these brethren were others, named. Revs. Michael Ellis, Caleb Humphrey, and Archibald McElroy, the latter at that time a vigorous local preacher, and afterwards a regular itinerant for years. The early history of the chiirch scarcely furnishes a more singular character than that of McElroy. He was without advantages in his youth, and of very limited education. But endowed with good sense, great natural and moral courage, and withal an honest man, he enjoyed the confidence of all who knew him. Possessed of stout frame, manly bearing, and open and frank countenance, and being absolutely '^fearless in pursuit of the right, he won the respect of all, even those of the baser sort.'' At a time when the traffic in intoxicating liquors was some part of almost every man's business, and when scarcely a man was to be found, either in the pulpit or out of it, to open his mouth upon the subject, McEl- roy 6ame forward with lance and trumpet — an unpolished lance, but a trumpet with no tmcertain sound — and made war with the beast. He de- livered hundreds of temperance lectures, the most electrifying ever heard in the State of Ohio. Without any temperance organizations, or news- papers to support him, with many of the clergy opposed to him, and very few to encourage him, alone in those pioneer times, he lifted up his standard. As a preacher he was earnest, enthusiastic, and successful. It is said that at one of his quarterly meetings the church could not hold the congregation, and they resorted to a grove in the neighborhood. The master of a dancing school in the place and some of his pupils went to the church late, and finding it vacated, danced awhile, when the master said: "Now let us go to the church aud get converted." When they reached the ground the preacher. Rev. Swayze, was closing his sermon EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 163 with a thrilling exhortation. The master listened for a few minutes, and fell to the ground crying aloud for mercy. McElroy was on hand, and ■when he saw the dancing master down, he improvised an altar and cried: "All hands to, here's a bull in the net, here's a man who taught the people to serve the devil by rule, and I pray God to break his fiddle, con- vert his soul, and turn his heart to sing his praise." Eev. J. B. Finley says in his Autobiography that this occurred at St. Clairsville, but Alfred Brownson insists that it took place at Cadiz. In those years, when churches were very small, and when the settlers lived in cabins, and many of them in rude huts, the people sought the groves, and camp meetings were of wonderful interest and success to the new and restless church. We have accounts of these meetings being held within the bounds of West Wheeling Circuit as early as 1808. In that year there was one held at St. Clairsville, under the management of James Quinn and Isaac Young, at whix^h, with very little ministerial as- sistance, more than one hundred were added to the church. A camp meeting was held near Cadiz in 1812, which was attended by many of the leading preachers of the Conference. Bishop Asbury came from a meeting at Uniontown, Pennsylvania, to attend the meetino- at Cadiz. Jacob Gruber, then presiding elder of the Ohio District of the Baltimore Conference, accompanied him. Eev. William Lambden, v.dio was probably in charge of West Wheeling Circuit, was present, with the able support of such men as Rev. J. B. Finley, Eev. Michael Ellis, and Eev. Archibald McElroy. The order at the meetings was generally good; but a slight interruption occurred on Saturday night. On that occasion Bishop Asbury took the stand at midnight, and after saying some kind things, told the rabble that the Methodists were not all sanctified, and if they perssted in disobeying the rules of the meeting they would find that out. The Bishop preached during the meeting. The ministrations v/ere all able, and much good was done. Just when the Methodists of Cadiz commenced their worship is not known. As early as 1806 or 1807, a few families met together from time to time, going from house to house with prayer and religious services. More frequently, than at any other place, these services were held at Brother James Simpson's, the father of the renowned Bishop Simpson. The services continued until about 1815, when the society was organized, and a Board of Trustees chosen for the purpose of erecting a house of v/orship. Thi^i Board consisted of Matthew Simpson, the Bishop's uncle, William Tipton, Joseph Tingley, and Thomas Inskeep. On April 20, 164 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 1816, they purchased the lot at the south corner of Spring and Buffalo streets, and erected thereon a small church. In this church the Meth- odists of Cadiz worshipped without pride or ostentation, and without preserving much history, for twenty years. In this building, which is still standing, although now much dilapi- dated and used for a tenement house, the renowned Bishop Simpson preached many of his most powerful sermons. In fact, he was at this time sent as an associate pastor to the church, and made his home there. Being of very progressive views, he suggested to the church the ad- vantages of having a Sabbath School. The older and wiser brethren shook their heads and said it would not do to bring the children into the church with their dirty faces on Sabbath, that they had hard work enough to keep the house clean and in order as it was. The young* preacher finally succeeded in the organization of a Sabbath School in the house, upon the condition that he would give the house an extra sweeping after Sabbath School. This is reputed to be the first Methodist Sabbath School established, and the only one existing in the entire county for many years. Before the removal of Mr. Simpson, measures were introduced with a view to the incorporation of the Society, and to replace the old church with a more commodious and better structure. In December, 1835, the Legislature of Ohio passed an act of incorporation, and Matthew Simp- y/son, Edward Tipton, William Tingley, Eobert McKee, James Poulson, V Phillip Trine, John Davis, George White, and Elijah Laizure are named in the act as trustees. The Matthew Simpson named at the head of the list was an uncle to the Matthew who afterward became Bishop Simpson. When this church was incorporated, Cadiz was the chief appoint- ment of the then St. Clairsville Circuit. The other appointments were Pickerson's, ISTew Athens, Stiers, Uniontown, Eaton's, Wesley Chapel, Bates', Neff's, Weige's, Crozier's, Mt. Glenn or Cross Eoad, Scott's, Bridge- port, Martin's Ferry, Grose's, and Harrisville; two preachers on the cir- cuit. The first record of names of preachers is Eev. I. C. Taylor, pastor in charge when the second church was built, and James Drummond, his colleague, the latter having been received on trial at the conference the spring previous. Cadiz remained on this circuit until 1866, when it became a regular station. The lot upon which the second church was built, and upon which now stands the third commodious structure, was deeded to the con- gregation by William Tingley and wife. Mr. Tingley was permitted to EARLY CHURCHES OF CADIZ 165 live many years afterward, and was one of the church's most ready and willing workers. Among other names as members appear Edniond Tip- ion and wife, Eobert McKee and wife, Michael McConnell and wife, Cliarles Chapman, wife and daughters, Judge Turner, Mrs. Major Lacy, Thomas Thompson, Matthew White, Mrs, William Arnold, and Mrs. Dr. McBean. All of them have been called from the church militant to the church triumphant- The second church building was commenced in 1835, but was not completed until 1836. The dedicatory sermon was preached by Eev. Wesley Browning, of Wheeling. Bishop Simpson, who was stationed then in Monongahela City, preached at night. The present beautiful church building was erected in 1876. 166 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY CHAPTER XIII. NOTTINGHAM AND FREEPORT CHURCHES. For several years after the beginning of the present century, the ter- ritory comprising N"ottinghani congregation, together with the region where Cadiz and Freeport are now located, as well as many other points in eastern Ohio, were mission fields, sustained in part by the Synodical Home Mission Fund of the Presbyterian Church, which had its officers and headquarters in Pittsburgh. For nearly sixteen years there was only a mission station in the vicinity where Nottingham Church now stands; and all was connected with the pastorate of Crabapple. So far as known, Eev. John Rea, pastor of Beech Spring and Crabapple, preached the first sermon in this region, on the second Sabbath of June, in the year 1806, on the old Cunningham homestead. The history of NOTTINGHAM CHURCH has been made familiar to many residents of Harrison county, through the sketches published in 1886, in the "Reminiscences" of Dr. Thomas Crawford, for forty years the pastor of this congregatioi*, and though the good Doctor's form is now missed from its accustomed place in the church, it is to be hoped the remembrance of his genial, helpful, kindly presence will live forever in the hearts and minds of his congregation and their posterity. In detailing the history of this church, we will follow Dr. Crawford's own words : In this sketch we propose some historical reminiscences of the Pres- byterian Church of Nottingham — its pioneers, pastors, progressive Avork, and historical incidents. In the preparation of this narrative I was NOTTINGHAM AND FREEPORT CHURCHES 167 governed by 1113^ cliary, old records, and, in some instances, by the re- collections of the oldest citizens. For several years the territory of this congregation was considered -within the limits of Crabapple and Cadiz churches. Although eight to nine miles distant, it was traveled by our forefathers, in hot and cold weatber, and often on foot, more regularly than do some of us who live but two or three miles distant from the house of public worship. To remedy this inconvenience and exposure, a preaching point was estab- lished in this vicinity, and the first sermon ever preached by a Presby- terian minister in tbis part of Harrison county was by the Eev. John Eea, D. D., in the summer of 180G, at the root of a large chestnut tree, standing on the eastern slope of the hill, near where the barn now stands on the Cunningham farm, and about one-half mile from this house. The same element that settled Western Pennsylvania settled South- eastern Ohio, and gave to it, as to the former, the Presbyterianism which both possess to a very large extent. Those pioneers came into an un- broken wilderness, which required hard labor and much self-denial to gain a subsistence, and for a time many of them lived in rude and un- comfortable cabins, but wore not disposed to leave tbeir religion behind them, as is too frequently the case with many emigrating to a new coun- try, for no sooner had they found a home for themselves in the western wilderness, than they sought a place where they might worship the Lord our God. Ninety-five years ago this whole region was an unbroken forest, and over these hills and through these valleys roamed the wild beast of the wood, and the more savage men, with their implements of death. Near to this site passed the Indian trail to their hunting grouuds in the !Mus- khigum and Scioto countries. At the close of the Ecvolutionary War, peace was declared, but only established between Great Britain and the United States. The Indians still continued hostilities on our frontier settlements,, partly owing to the deceptions and frauds imposed upon them by the early traders. Scenes, however, began to change for the better, which opened up the way for a daring and enterprising population to come into the ISTorthwest Territory and to settle in companies, even before Con- gress declared Ohio to be regularly constituted a State. But those emigrating so early not only encountered the common hardships of a frontier life, but for a few years were continually exposed to attacks from savage warriors, under such cruel leaders as the reneii'ade "Simon Girty," "Old Cross-fire," and "Red Jacket," who, with their In- dian forces, infested this whole region, and continued more or less for several years after tbe white population began to locate in communities near some garrison or block-bouse, into which they were often compelled to flee in times of alarm, both for defense and safety. The first settlements in this vicinity were made from 1798 to 1803. Abraham Brokaw, John Glenn, William Ingles, George Laport, Thomas 168 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY AVilson, Arthur Barrett, Jones, and Moffitt, and perhaps others. These were but the advance of a great mass of people that m a few years scattered over a hirge tract of country. So, as by magic, the JSTorthwest Territory was settled, and signs of civilization were evident, by subdued forests, newly erected dwellings, followed by the school house and church building. So far as we can learn, the first families that came into the bounds, and identified themselves with the congregation of Nottingham, were those of Abraham Brokaw, John Glenn, Eichard Baxter, Adam Dunlap, Samuel Lafferty, and John Price. These were the pioneers of^^esbT-' terianism in this region, and amid many trials and discouragements la- bored earnestly to establish a nucleus of a church, in which they finally succeeded. When peace was ratified with the Indians, and Ohio admitted into the Union of States, the tide of emigration began to flow strongly in this direction. In 1802, the great western thoroughfare passed not more than three-quarters of a mile from ISTottingham Church, which was the route from Pittsburgh by the way of Steuben ville, and from central Pennsyl- vania by the way of Charleston (now Wellsburg),. forming a junction in this county, which induced the location of Cadiz; then running west nine or ten miles, forked on the lands of William Ingles (now owned by James Poland). The right branch of this road passed through the "■'White Eye" plains, and on by '"'Fort Defiance," into the Sandusky region ; the left branch running by the way of Zanesville into the Scioto and Miami valleys. Howe, in his "Historical Collections" of this State, savs, "that previous to the construction of the jSTational Eoad through Ohio, this road v/as perhaps traveled more than any other route west of the Ohio river." Mr. Ingles, then residing at the junction of the western division of this road, found it necessary to keep a public house, for the accommoda- tion of the unexpected rush of emigration into this and other settlements further west. In the spring of 1802, he erected a large double log cabin, considered in those days a magnificent house; and supposed to be the first "Hotel" ever kept in "the bounds of this county. A part of the remains of this old tavern was still to be seen, imtil qiiite recently, as a monument of the past, though vacated long since, and in a retired and lonely spot, less than one mile north of this place, but deserted both by residents and roads. Some award to our county seat the first public-house erected in tlie territory of Harrison county, which, according to history, is incorrect. Cadiz was laid out in 1804, by Messrs. Biggs and Beaty. In 1800. is tbe first record we have of a hotel kept in that town, by Jacob Arnold. At this day of comparative ease and plenty, we know but little of the self-denial, privations and hardships endured by the early settlers who came into the wilderness to find a home. They mostly emigrated from New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and some of them soon NOTTINGHAM AND FREEPORT CHURCHES .169 sought for a place where they might worship God according to the dic- tates of conscience, and after the order of their Puritan fathers. But few of the first inhabitants were religiously educated, and especially in the Presbyterian faith; and that few were necessitated for a time to travel some distance to worship in the church of their choice. In 1804, the church was organized at Crabapple, by the Presbytery of Ohio, under the direction of Drs. McMillan and Kalston, nine miles distant from our present house of worship. A committee was appointed to confer with Kev. John Kea, D. D., and the elders of Crabapple church, as to the pro- priety of establishing a mission station in the "Ball-Lick" settlement. It was thought better, for the time being, that all in this vicinity should form a connection with that congregation, until further developments of divine Providence, which soon indicated a change, because of the dis- tance and inconvenience of travel, constraining those in this region to have a place for public service nearer home. In 1806, a stand was erected in the forest at the base of a large tree (before noted), where Dr. Eea preached his first sermon in this part of the county. Six weeks after, he returned and held religious services in the same place, encouraged by a much larger attendance than on the former occasion. A council was held by a few, in connection with the preacher, as to the propriety of an organization at this point; but on more mature reflection it was thought advisable to make this an outpost for missionary work, tributary to Crabapple church, and that their pas- tor should continue to labor here part of his time, preaching and admin- istering the sealing ordinances of the church to such as desired them, to which all parties agreed. Although there was no formal organization of this church until several years after, yet it was virtually organized under the ministry of Dr. Eea, who continued for five years to preach occasionally at this point, a part of the time in a private house, and in suitable weather, in the grove. In 1808, a tent was erected on the south side of the graveyard, by Abraham Brokaw, Pobort Baxter, John Glenn, and Adam Dunlap. This tent was occupied in the summer season for eight or ten years, and the house of Robert Baxter in the winter or stormy days. In the call that was made out in 1805 by the church of Crabapple and vicinity for the labors of Rev. John Rea the one-half of his time, the representatives of Nottingham interest signed said call with the ex- press understanding that a part of the pastor's services would be em- ployed in this region, if desired. Fifty pounds per annum was the sum specified in the call, one-half in cash and the other half in produce; the latter to be delivered at a certain llourins: mill near the mouth of Big Short creek. In keeping with these conditions, the supplies of grain in- creased rapidly, at such prices as 20 to 25 cents a bushel for wheat, and 12 to 25 cents for corn and rye. It soon became necessary for the min- inister to have his large stock of produce manufactured and put into market, that he might procure some funds wherewith to replenish his 170 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY library, and supply the wants of his hmisohnld. When a sufficient num- ber of barrels and lading were ready to (ill a ilat boat, a man of approved character and ability was employed to take the oversight of the cargo, and ship it down the Ohio and IMississippi rivers to some southern port, make sale, and bring back the returns, which, after paying expenses, were often quite small. Mr. Rea was the first minister of the gospel of Christ to gather a group of worshippers in the western part of Harrison county, and amid great difficulties and much self-denial, continued his mission to this people until the Beech Spring congregation presented a call for the whole of his time, with a salary of one hundred pounds sterling, payable semi- annually, which he was constrained to accept in 1810, and immediately occupied all his time in that church. Mr. Eea established the ISTottingham Mission, in 180G, and served it at stated times from the beginning, until 1810, when all his labors were required at Beech Springs, where his pastorate continued forty- five years, and during all this time, he was much beloved and appreciated by the people. The older members of the congregation were enthusias- tically attached to him, both as a preacher and spiritual adviser, and well they might be, for he was untiring iu his exertions for their well- being. Thomas B. Clark, a licentiate of the Presbytery of Hartford, Ohio, came into this vicinity in the spring of 1811, and supplied the Mission Station every fourth Sabbath for six years; for there was no formal or- ganization of a church here then, though often considered and desired by the scattered families of the "Ball Lick" settlement, but from some cause unknown to us, it was still postponed, perhaps from the pretext that regular preaching, and the sealing ordinances were enjoyed at this place, as an outpost of Crabapple. Mr. Clark was ordained and installed at Crabapple by the Presbytery of Ohio, June, 1811, and continued to preach there, and fill this appoint- ment until he was dismissed in 1818. He had the credit of being quite punctual in his engagements, and rarely failed to meet his contracts for public worship, although his labors were abundant, for his pastorate covered a territory of about fourteen miles square. When coming to this place, his road passed a flouring mill, on a branch of Stillwater. Being a conscientious and zealous man, he was ex- ceedingly annoyed by the running of this mill on the Sabbath, and was in the habit of reproving the miller (Mr. Logan) for his desecration of the Lord's day. On oiie occasion, when coming to his preaching place at the "Old Tent," as he passed on Sunday morning, near the hour of public service, discovering that the mill was in motion, he stopped his horse, paused for a moment, as if reflecting on what was his duty, at length dismounted and tied up his bridle-strap, Avent into the mill to dis- suade, if possible, his reckless friend from a continued violation of civil and divine law. But Mr. Logan evaded the minister, for, going out at the NOTTINGHAM AND FREEPORT CHURCHES 171 roar door, lio locked it aflcr liini, and coiniiifr round ho secured ilio other door, "makinpf," as ho said, "a prisoner of the parson," and keeping him confined until the horn- of pid)lio worship Iiad expired. Then Mr. Clark, for a few moments, directed his discourse to the transoressor, and kindly remonstrated with him on what was his duty in reference to the claims of God and the eoiiimonwealth, and in view of his family and himself in future. ITis exhortations were 7iot lost, for the Lord succeeded these efforts to the rcforrnaiion of Mr. Logan, who became the warm friend of Mr. Clark, changed his course of life, and in a few months made a profession of religion under his ministry. In the spring of 1821, Rev. William Wallace, an evangelist, under the direction of Steubenville Presbytery, came into this neighborhood, and after preaching here and elsewhere for about six months, he made application to Presbytery, by request of the people, for an organization of a church at the "Tent." The request was granted, and Mi-. Wallace was chairnum of a com- mittee that organized the Church of Nottingham, November 17, 1833, with twenty-two names on the roll, as follows: Archibald Todd, Nancy Todd, Thouias Morrow, Jane l\lorrow, William Crawford, Adam Dunhip, Abraham Brokaw, Margaret l>j-okuw, Elizabeth J^aU'erty, Samuel Lafferty, John Glenn, Nancy Glenn, John Price, Mrs, Price, William Hamilton, Elizabeth Hamilton, John Peed, Ann Heed, Pobert Baxter, Margaret Baxter, Mary W. Wallace, and Sarah McKil)l)on. 'J'he following persons were elected ruling ciders, and iinmediately ordained and installed, namely: Archibald Todd, William Crawford, and Thomas Moi-row. Kev. William Wallace, a member of the Presbytery of Steubenville, having spent a few months in this and other missionary points in the western part of the county, a call for one-half of his labors was made out by the congregation of Nottingham, ]\Iarch 18, ,1833, signed ])y Archibald Todd, liobert Baxter, and fourteen others, moderated by Pev. John Pea, and carried up to the April meeting of the Presbytery and put into the hands of Mr. Wallace, who, signifying his acceptance, was duly in- stalled pastor. The stipend was to be paid quarterly, one-fourth in cash and tliree- fourths in produce. Money was scarce, and little to sell with which to procure it. The products of the ground were few, until the wilderness was subdued and turned into cultivated fields; and after a supply of grain was had, the markets were so distant, the ]al)or of shij^ping so tedious and costly, that when the expenses were paid the agriculturist had little left. The whole amount of salary promised Mr. Wallace was but three hundred dollars per annum, paid equally by this and tlie Freeport Church, To us this appears like short allowance for the preacher, as it surely was. Yet it would go as far in those days toward supporting a 172 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY family as more than double the amount would do with the prices of these times. Eev. William Wallace, son of John and Margaret (Anderson) Wal- lace, wsis horn in Chester county, Pa., March 17, 1787. He finished his academic education at Jefferson College, Pa,; studied Theology under the direction of James Hervey, D. D., and was licensed to preach the Gospel by the Presbytery of Steubenville in the spring of 1821. He entered the service of his Divine Master as a domestic missionary, going through the new settlements of eastern Ohio, and hunting up families of the Pres- byterian order, and when finding one or more such families in any desti- tute place, he would publish a notice for preaching at some convenient point, and in this way was instrumental in gathering up and forming nuclei from which have arisen some of our most prominent congregations. After reporting progress to Presbyter}^, he was appointed chairman of a committee that organized several churches in this territory, and among them the Churches of Nottingham and Freeport, and to each of the last named places he gave one-half of his labors for eighteen years, until his health so failed that he was compelled to resign his charge in 1839, and after two years of increasing infirmities, he died of heart dis- ease, December 18, 1841, in the fifty-fifth year of his age, having spent twenty years in the work of the ministry. Eev. Gilbert M. Hair was then in charge of this congregation two years. Mr. Hair graduated at Wasbington College, Pa., in 1838, studied Theology (while teaching an academy in Martinsburg, Ohio), with Henry Hervey, D. D., and was licensed to preach the Gospel by the Presbytery of Eichland, October, 1810. He received a call from the congregation of Nottingham, and was ordained and installed pastor of this church in the Spring of 1841, by the Presbytery of St. Clairsville, and continued in this relation two years. Another opening oft'ering itself more to his mind, he then asked and received a dismission in April, 1843, to the church at Wellsburg, W. Va. Mr. Hair, after laboring successfully in fourteen different charges, died June 5, 1884, at Elyria, New York. Thomas E. Crawford, a licentiate of the Presbytery of Steubenville, immediately received a call from the church of Nottingham. He began his ministerial work October 19th, 1846, and in due time was ordained and installed pastor, continuing in this office fort}'' years. He graduated at Franklin College, Ohio, in 1 844, and on the same day was chosen Pro- fessor of Mathematics in said College; and during the time of his teach- ing there, he read Hebrew under the President, Eev. A. D. Clark, D. D., and Theology under Dr. Eea. He soon left college for the purpose of completing his studies; and was licensed to preach the Gospel by the Presbytery of Steubenville, October 6th, 1846. He was born near New Athens, Ohio, March 8th, 1821, and when but a few months old, his parents and family removed to Jefferson county, near Steubenville, Ohio. At the age of fourteen, he began his academic studies, preparatory to entering college. In the eighteenth year NOTTINGHAM AND FREEPORT CHURCHES 173 of his ago, he -nnitcrl Arith the church under the ministry of Eer. Jacob Coon, of ^STew Athens, during a revival of religion that occurred among the students in 1840. After he received authority to preach, he took a traveling certificate to the Presbyterian church and Presbytery of ]\Iarion, but ncTcr reached the place; for when ready to start. Dr. Rea insisted on him filling an ap- :)ointment at the Church of ISTottingham, which was vacant, and at once le received a call, and returning his traveling certificate to the Presb}^- tery of Steubenville, was regularly dismissed to the Presbytery of St. Clairsville, and in due time was ordained and installed pastor of said church, for tAvo-thirds of his time; and the one-third at Deersville, as stated supply for nine years, from October, 184G, when he was called to spend all his time and labors at the Church of ISTottingham. At the time of my installation as pastor, the Board of Elders con- sisted of Archibald Todd, Kathan Tanneyhill, Alexander Russell, Alex- ander Beall, William Kirkpatrick, and John W. Milligan. Shortly after, Joseph Rea and Allen AVallace were added to the Session; but one of the former is still living and quite infirm, being far advanced in years. All those men were reliable and trustworthy in counsel. In 1863J A. J. Rea and Samuel ]\I. Wallace were introduced into the Session. In 1870, John W. Hilton, Jacob Compher, and William Scott were added to the Board of Elders. The first house of worship erected by this congregation was a log- cabin, which stood a short distance above the "Old Tent," and was built in 1821 by Abraham Brokaw, Thomas Morrow, Archibald Todd, Adam Dunlap, and Samuel Lafl"erty. The last two named men having o-ood teams, were requested to draw in the logs, whilst the balance of the labor was divided according to choice. The ladies, by personal efforts, procured the nails and glass. It was a rude structure, but answered the purposes for the time being. In the winter season, a pile of logs was built on an earthen platform in the center of the building, and fired up to warm the auditory, whilst the smoke escaped as best it could from the roof. This house corresponded in the main with the improvements of those days, and was e([ual in architecture to the dwellings of the worshippers. There were no Boards of Home Missions and Church Erection in those times to aid young and feeble congregations to build houses or sustain preachino- in their midst. There was, however, a Synodical Fund for the purpose of aiding mission stations. Money was scarce and hard to be got; and had there been convenient markets, there was not grain to sell, for the land was not yet cleared out, but crops were produced abundantly in pro- portion to the ground brought under cultivation. The second house of worship was a brick building, fifty by forty feet, and began to be constructed in 1828, but was not completed until' 1833. The congregation worshiped in this edifice twenty-nine years, until it be- came rather small for the people that desired to attend church, to be com- fortably seated. It was deemed necessary to call a meeting to consider 174 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY the propriety of erecting a larger house for the accommodatioii of the increased attendance on the preaching of the Word. According to previous notice, the people met in the month of August, 1859, to confer upon the subject, in relation to building a third house of worship. The books were opened at said meeting, and about one-half of the whole amount of money necessary to complete the struc- ture was subscribed on sight, in less than thirty minutes. _ Duplicate papers were prepared and sent around to the absentees, and in due time returned with the required money pledged. A building committee was appointed at a meeting held February 3, 1860, and directed to erect a house seventy-three by fifty feet in the out, with gallery in front, twenty- feet story in audience room, and tower one hundred and six feet high. The committee, after receiving sealed proposals on a certain day, let out the contract to Mr. John McGraw, of Wheeling, W. Va., who un- dertook and finished the entire building ready for occupancy, in a satis- factory and workman-like maimer. And this house was dedicated, free from debt, to the worship of Almighty God, April 18th, A. D. 1861, and continues to this time. FREEPORT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. This church was organized in 3 821, by the Presbytery of Steuben- ville. Messrs. Holliday, Leaper, and Ivincade were ordained and in- St-dled ruling elders. For five years before that date the congregation had received occasional supplies from Presbytery, some account of them already having been given in connection with the sketch of the Presby- terian Church of Cadiz. The first pastor was Eev. William Wallace, who divided his services equally between Nottingham and Freeport. He sup- plied both pulpits until the spring of 1839, when he was compelled to re- sign, on account of failing health. He died of heart failure, Dec. IS, 1841. Mr. Wallace was a man of ardent piety and practical worth. The Freeport church attained a larger membership and greater efficiency under his pastorate than it has ever enjoyed since. Eev. John Hattery, an evangelist from Washington Presbytery, be- came stated supply at Freeport in 1843, for two-thirds of his labors, and remained until 1847. He was succeeded by Eev. Samuel Mahaffey, who served as stated supply for something over eight years. From 1857 to 1859, occasional supplies were sent by Presbytery; and in the latter year Eev. John B. Graham became stated supply, giving Freeport a portion of his time, and remained until 1865, when he was dismissed to the Pres- bytery of Washington. After his departure, Eev. Samuel Mahaffey was again invited to supply Freeport for one-half his time, and served the conorecation from 1867 to 1873. He was succeeded, three years later, by Eev. H. E. McDonald, who remained until 1881. DICKERSON CHURCH 175 CHAPTER XIV. DICKERSON, BETHEL, AND RANKIN CHURCHES. The following Historical Address, giving an account of the early history of Dickerson Church, was delivered by Mr. Joseph Holmes, one of the trustees, at the dedication of the new building, near Cadiz, on October 7, 1888: The history of the Dickerson Society commences early in the present century. As early as March, 1801, Joseph Holmes moved to the farm on which he lived and died. Soon after, the following settlers came into the neighborhood: Joseph Huff, William Walraven, Thomas Dickerson, Eli Dickerson, VV'illiam Scoles, James and Thomas Worley, Abraham Holmes, and William Welling. In the Fall of 1802, Thomas Dickerson settled on the farm on which Dickerson Church is located. He was a man of strong religious convictions, and during the same Fall, he suc- ceeded in the organization of a prayer-meeting circle, at which he gave religious instruction to those who attended the meetings. The meetings were held weekly, from house to house in the neighborhood, and they increased in numbers and interest from time to time, imder the super- vision of Thomas Dickerson. In 1801, a Society of Methodists was or- ganized, with Thomas Dickerson duly appointed class-leader. Among the first meml)ers of the society were: Thomas Dickerson and wife, Joseph Holmes and wife, William Walraven and wife, William Scoles and wife, James Worley and wife, Abraham Holmes and wife, EU Dickerson and wife, William Welling and wife, and James Jones and wife. /Preaching was held like the prayer-meetings, from house to house. 'In those days, sermons were like angel's visits, "few and far between." The first quarterly meeting was held on the farm of Joseph Holmes in the summer of 1805. This meeting was conducted by the Rev. Asa Shinn. Methodists and others from beyond and about Wellsburg, on the Ohio river, and from the Holmes Church, on Short creek, came to 176 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY the meetinfi:, not only to renew the friendship of other years, hut to aitl in pushing forward the cause of Christ. It may seem strange to those of modern times, when we describe the arrangements for holding this first quarterly meeting. The meeting was held in the grove. The seats were made of rails, logs, and puncheons. A few puncheons were used for a platform. In each of two trees, stand- ing about six feet apart, a notch was cut, and in those notches was placed a puncheon about sixteen inches wide, and on this the preacher laid his Bible, and this was the make-up of the preacher's pulpit. The meeting was one of great spiritual power, and several persons united with the church. The second quarterly meeting was held on the farm of Thomas Dickcrson in 1807, with the same arrangements, aud like results. In 1813, a quarterly meeting was held in the barn of Thomas Dickerson, conducted by Eev. James B. Finley. From 1807, preaching services be- came more frequent. Asa Shinn, James B. Finley, Bishop Eoberts, and the Eev. McElroy, were some of the early itinerate ministers who have preached in our community. The first church was built in 1817; although the selection of a site for a church had been made in 1806. The first burial in the cemetery was in 1807. The ground was conveyed by Thomas Dickerson and wife to Joseph Holmes, William Scoles, William Welling, James Worley, and Abraham Holmes, as trustees of the M. E. Church. The organization of the Dickerson Church is clearly traceable to the labors of Bishop Asbviry and Bishop McKendree, from the fact that the first members of the church came from Virginia and Pennsylvania, direct from the fields of labor of these great and good men. But directly to Thomas Dickerson, more than to any other, belongs the honor of the oro-anization of the church at this place. He was blessed with a fine so- cial nature, and a vigorous constitution. His piety was deep and uni- form. . . . From 1817 to 1828, the church moved steadily forward. In 1828, Thomas Hudson and S. E. Brockunier were appointed to the West Wheeling Circuit, and this circuit included the Dickerson appoint- ment. During this year, there Avere some accessions to the church, and the membership was greatly revived. But the year 1829 is especially re- markable for its great spiritual prosperity at Dickerson's. During this vear, Thomas Hudson and William Tipton were travel Ung the circuit and Joshua Monroe, Presiding Elder. At the first meeting of the Quarterly Conference that 3'ear, a re- solution was passed to hold a camp-meeting on the farm of Thomas Dickerson. The meeting was appointed, and was largely attended. In the "Life and Times of Eev. Thomas M. Hudson," he says, as the meet- ino- progressed, the work of revival greatly increased, awakenings be- coming more general, and conversions more frequent every day. . . . He tells us, that among the numerous subjects of that great revival that he received into the church at Cadiz, were many interesting young men, DICKERSON CHURCH 177 five of wliom became ministers of the Gospel. Bishop Simpson was one of them. vSorae weeks after the close of the camp-meeting, Hudson determined to hold a meeting at the Dickerson appointment. As a result of this meeting, over sixty persons professed conversion. . . . This revival included to a greater or less extent the families of the entire neighbor- hood, and bore its fruit for many years. From 1829 to 1835 the church was in a prosperous condition. But during 1835 and 1836 many members of the Dickerson appointment re- moved their membership to New Athens. The number of members thus removing was about twenty-live. This greatly weakened the Dickerson Society. This removal of membership was caused by a new church being built at New Athens. But those remaining still adhered to the Society with a strong faith. In 1839, the second camp-meeting was held, on the old camp ground. ... As a result of this meeting, several persons united with the Society. From 1840 to 1850, the membership remained about the same. There were several additions to the church during 1851 and 1852, but during the winter of 1853, a revival meeting was held by Eev. D. P. Mitchell and Kev. J. D. Knox. . . . This was the last protracted effort ever held in the old church building. . . . It was the opinion of many and the desire of others, that as soon as Thomas Dickerson was gone, the old church should be abandoned, and that the members of the Society should either go to Cadiz or New Athens — but those persons were much mistaken. Thomas Dickerson died. The workman fell, but still the work went on. The mantle of Thomas Dickerson was resting on the shoulders of his son, Joseph Dick- erson. By much labor of his own, with such help as he could secure, the second church was built, in 1854. The dedicatory sermon was preached by Dr. Nesbitt. After the building of the new church, the Society re- ceived new life. The membership increased from sixty-five in 1856, to ninety-three in 1858. For the next two years after, the membership re- mained about the same. The next four years were years of war, and while the Society and community were loyal to the church, they were also loyal to the Govern- ment. In proof of this, twenty-eight of the young men that were either members or patrons of the Society gave their services to their country. "Within a circle of one and one-fourth miles from the church, thirty-eight of our best and bravest young men left for the seat of war. It is not saying too much when we declare, that the Dickerson neighborhood fur- nished more soldiers to the square inch than any other country-place in the county. The first Sabbath school was organized in 1825, with Joseph Dick- erson as superintendent. This history would be deficient without the names of its class-leaders from its organization to the present. They are as follows: Thomas 13 178 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Dickerson was leader for forty-eight years. During the latter part of his life, he had an assistant. The next, in order, were Joseph Dickerson, Joshua Dickerson, A. H. Thomas, William Perry, Washington Soule, Joseph Holmes, Ahraham Holmes, R. B. Green, S. M. Dickerson, and G. B. Holmes. From ISO-i to 1855, there was hut one class. In the lat- ter year, it was divided into three classes, and a leader appointed for each class. Time has removed nearly all who were born before the building of the first church. Only three' remain with us [in 1888]. They are, Asa and Mary Holmes, and (Knob) Joshua Dickerson. Only seven persons now hold their membership with us who were members of the Society when the second church was built. The others have either died or re- moved to other places. Joshua Dickerson's membership — now the oldest ■ — dates from 1837. In the history of the Society, we deem it necessary to briefly re- fer to others who have gone from our midst, and were either members of the church or Sabbath school. From the family of William Scoles, two young men went forth to preach the Gospel. . The family of James and Susan Jones furnished five Methodist preachers. A. H. Thomas died when he was Presiding Elder. During the last decade, 0. W. Holmes and W. H. Dickerson have entered the ministry from this Society; also, David Porter, who was a member of the Sabbath school. There are others who have taken high positions in life. From a class of twelve young men in the Sabbath school, which I had the pleas- ure of teaching, were Capt. Joseph Dickerson, Capt. Thomas McElravy, Capt. John Finley Oglevee, ex-auditor of the State of Ohio, Col, J. T. Holmes, of Columbus, Abraham Thomas, a minister of the North Ohio Conference, Dr. Hamline Welling, of Columbus, Capt, William McEl- TSLYj, of Iowa, William Oglevee, of Illinois, Rev. D. S. Porter, David Har- rison of Kansas, James Oglevee of the 126th Q, Y.JL, now resting in the cemetery at this place, and Robert McElravy, who was killed in the cap- ture of Richmond. BETHFL CHURCH. The following sketch of Bethel Church was written by Mr. J. Fletcher Birney, of Means, Ohio, and printed by him in 1894: Rev. James B. Finley, the pioneer of Ohio Methodism, organized the first class in this vicinity, at what is now the home of Joseph L. Thompson, one mile north of Cadiz, in the 5^ear 1811. It consisted of nine members, as follows: Morris West, leader; John Baker, Sr., and Margaret Baker; William Foreman, Sr., and Sarah Foreman; Zebedee Baker and Cassandra Baker; Joseph Kent, and Eliza- beth Chaney. In 1814, when John Birney, Sr., from Ireland, and his brothers. BETHEL AND RANKIN CHURCHES 179 Hugh and William, with their families, from PGnnsylvania, arrived here, two other classes were formed, one at the Baker farm, one mile west of the church, on the Cadiz and Jefferson road; the other at what is now the home of Mrs. Samuel Pittinger, one-half mile south of Jewett. Hugh Birney, St., and John Baker, Sr., led the classes alternately. ' Eobert McKee and Kichael McKee, and Nancy Moore (Foreman), joined soon after. The three classes continued nntil 1818, when Bethel Society was formed. In March of that year, one acre of land was purchased of Pobert Orr, for which twenty dollars was paid. It was deeded to John Baker and others. On this lot the old log church was built. It was about thirtv feet square, and stood about twenty-five feet west of and parallel with the present building. The door Avas in the center of the east end. The pulpit was in the west end, with a window on each side of it. The seats were split logs, with legs in them._ In the rear part of the house, they were placed north and south; and in the fore part, east and west. The preaching then, was at noon on Thursdays. Eev. Jacob Young followed Eev. Finley as circuit preacher. From the building of the church, to 1830, the following persons united with the organization : Hugh and Jane Brown, Eobert and Mar- garet Birney, Mrs. Keziah Wheeler, Mrs. Nancy (Foreman) Moore, Mrs. :\rary Ealston, Abraham and Deborah Busby, Eebecca Busby, William Kent, Sr., and his wife. From 1830 to 18-10: Samuel Foreman, Lemuel and Mary Green Ellen Gallagher, Otho and Mary Baker, Evan Baker, John and Leucintha Ealston, Charles Conaway and wife, Lydia Eyan, John Brindley, Sr., and wife, James ]\IcKee, Hamilton and Hugh Birney, Jane Scarlot, Abram and Mary Mattern, Mary, wife of George Lease, Sr., Cassandra Fife Jacob and Eebecca Dennis, Jacob Lewis, Sr. ' Of the above named persons, but four are now [1894] living (Ham- ilton Birney, John Brindley, Sr., Jane Lease, and Deborah Maxwell) The rest have gone to their reward. Most of their bodies rest in Bethel cemetery. The present church is about forty by fifty feet. It was beo-un in 1839 — Eev. Pardon Cook the preacher in charge. Its seating capacity is about 300. The brick was made near where the church stands by James Means, of Cadiz; the mason work was done by Andrew and James Jelly; the carpentering, by T. W. Wells, who lived near the church. The pulpit, at first, was one of the upper story kind, as it took three high steps to get into it ; and the preacher had to stand up to see over the top. The seats were high-backed, and closed at the bottom The building cost $1,600. ... It was dedicated by Eevs. Edward Smith and A. J. Eich, entirely free from debt, in 1840.' Following were the preachers who ministered to Bethel conoreo-a- tion from 1835 to 18G0 (Cross Creek Circuit): William Tipton and W Hank, 1825-26; J. Monroe and S. Adams, 1826-27; J. Monroe and J* 180 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Graham. 1827-28; J. Graham and E. H. Taylor, 1828-29; W. Knox and E. H. Taylor, 1829-30; W. Knox and D. C. Merryman, 1830-31; S. E. Brockunier and D. C. Merrvman, 1831-32; Simon Lauck and Walter Athev, 1832-33; Simon Lauck and P. Green, 1833-34; E. H. Taylor and W. Athey, 1834-35; J. P. Kent and H. Wharton, 1835-36; T. Jamison and Job "Wilson, 183G-37; J. W. ]\Iinor and P. K. McCue, 1837-38; C. Thorn and Alexander Scott, 1838-39; Pardon Cook and J. Hammett, 1839-40; Edward Smith and A. J. Rich, 1840-41; James C. Taylor and W. F. Lauck, 1841-42; Wesley Smith and J. L. Clark, 1842-43; Weslev Smith and T. McCleary, 1843-44; Ebenezer Havs and B. F. Sawhill, 1844- 46; Charles Thorn and David S. Welling, 1846-47; J. C. Merryman and J. Henderson, 1847-48; J. C. Merryman and J. W. Shirer, 1848-49; John J. MolHt and C. A. Holmes, 1849-51; D. P. Mitchell and George Crook, 1851-52; D. P. Mitchell and J. D. Knox, 1852-53; S. F. Minor and L. Pettay, 1853-55; S. P. AVolf and Hiram Sinsahaugh, 1855-57; John J. Moffitt and E. W. Brady, 1857-58; John J. Moffit and W. B. Watkins, 1858-59; J. M. Bray and H. M. Close, 1859; J. M. Bray and James Day, 1860; Alexander Scott and J. W. Shearer, 1860; Alexander Scott and T. J. Scott, 1860-62. Bethel appointment was first in the bounds of Knox Circuit, Musk- ingum District, Western Conference, with James Quinn Presiding Elder. The Conference for that year (1811) was held at New Chapel, Shelby county, Kentuclq^, on Kovember 1st, 1810. In 1813, it fell into the Ohio Conference, and in 1825, into the Pittsburgh Conference. The Circuit then bore the name of Cross Creek, which it retained until 1834, when it was changed to Richmond. In 1838, the Conference was held at Cadiz, Bishop Enoch George presiding. Bethel was then joined to Cadiz Circuit, which had been formed the year previous. In 1847, the Circuit was composed of the following appointments: Cadiz, Bethel, Athens, and Harrisville. Stiers was added in 1850, and Jefferson in 1852 (formed in 1847, by David Welling), Rumley and Hanover (the latter formed by C. Thorn and W". Devinney), in August, 1853, and Jewett (formed in 1847), in December, 1853. The same year, Harrisville, Athens, Stiers, and Dickerson's were joined to other Circuits, leaving five appointments. In 1854, Rumley was dropped. In 1864, Cadiz and Dickerson's were joined, leaving Bethel, Jefi'erson, Jewett, and Hanover. The Circuit was then named Bethel Circuit, which name was retained until 1887, when it was changed to Jewett. After the formation of the Society at Howard Chapel (Cadiz Junction), in 1892, a new Circuit was formed, consisting of Bethel, Howard Chapel, Mount Plope, and Asbury Chapel, and named Bethel Circuit, which name it still retains. The District bore the following names: West Wheeling, 1825-26; Barnesville, 1826-32; Steubonville, 1832-36; Wheeling. 1836-40; Steu- benville, 1840-47; Cambridge, 1847-76; New Philadelphia, 1876-94. Presiding Elders, to i860: Rev. W. Lambdin, 1825-28; Rev. D. Limerick, 1828-29; Rev. J. Monroe, 1829-32; Rev. W. Browning, 1832- BETHEL AND RANKIN CHURCHES 181 36; Eev. S. E. Brockimier, 1830-40; Eev. B. Hopldns, 1840-44; Eev. H. Gilmore, 1844-46; Eev. S. E. Brockimier, 1846-48; Eev. J. C. Taylor, 1848-52; Eev. W. Cox, 1852-55; Eev. John J. Moffiitt, 1855-56: Eev. W. F. Lauck, 1S56-60; Eev. W. A. Davidson, D. D., 1860-63. The cemetery was laid out when the old church was built, the lots in rows, about ten feet wide, running north and south, and were taken by families as follows, beginning at the west end : First row, Holland, Web- ster, Devore; second row, Tipton, Hatton, Eutledge; third row. Busby, Auckerman, Braden, Young; fourth row. Busby, Pittinger, Adams; fifth row, Pittinger, Lemasters, Fife, Maxwell; sixth row, Ealston, Eankin, Ivnox, Eyan; seventh row, McKee, Brindley; eighth row. Foreman; ninth row, Thompson, Campbell; tenth row. Baker; eleventh row, Beaty, Brown, Green, Dennis; twelfth row, Hugh Birney, John Birney, Sr. ; thirteenth row, Lewis, Kent, Eobert Birney, Sr. ; fourteenth row, George Lease, Wheeler; fifteenth row, liorman, Bargar; sixteenth row, Mehol- lin, Speer; seventeenth row, H. Thompson, Busby. In 1858, the ceme- tery was enlarged by the purchase of fifty-four perches of ground; and again, in 1881, by the addition of two acres. Hugh Brown's head-stone is dated 1822; and those of Margaret, wife of John Baker, Sr., and Mar- garet, daughter of John Birney, Sr., are both dated 1829. Many head- stones have crumbled, until the dates are lost. Deceased members, with year of death: Cash Adams, 1892; Maggie C. Ault, LS91; John Baker," Sr., 1847; J\rargaret Baker, 1829; Otho Baker, 1855; Marv Baker, 1870; Evan Baker, 18—; John Baker, Jr., 1879; Eezin Baker, 1876; Sarah T. Baker, 1892; William Baker. 1890; Laura B. Baker, 1886; Mollie Baker, 1889; Mary Jane Baker, 1863: John Birne}', Sr., 1854; Eebecca B. Birnev, 1843; Hugh Birnev, Sr.,'l861; Elizabeth B. Birney, 1828; Nancv C' Birnev, 1854; Eobert Birney, Sr., 1871; Margaret Birney, 1866; John ^s^. Birnev, 1876; Hugh Birney, 1880; Eobert Birnev, 1884; Eachel M. Birney, 1886; Nelson Birnev, 1867; Samuel F. Birney, 1894; Isabel Birney, 1863; Hester M. Birney, 1888; Elias Benedict, 18—; Hugh Brown, 1822; Jane Brown, 1884; Wil- liam Brown, 1874; Lizzie Brown, 1887; John Brown, 1873; Sarah Boals, 18—; Ann B. Brindlev, 1889: Wesley Brindlev, 1876; Albert Brindlev, 1869; Mary Ann Bradford, 1882: Abraham Busby, 1855; Deborah Busby, 1884; Eebecca Busby, 1892; Shird Busby, 1884; May A. Crawford, 18—; Charles Conaway, 18 — ; Fanny Conaway, 18 — ; John Campbell, 18 — ; Margaret Copeland, 1861; Ankrim Caldwell, 1881; Arthur Chaney, 1884; Elizabeth Chaney, 18 — ; Jacob Dennis, Sr., 1880; Jacob Dennis, Jr., 1890; Eebecca Dennis, 1883; Aaron Dennis, 1866; Cassandra Fife, 18—; William Foreman, Sr., 1845; Sarah Foreman, 1864; Jennie E. Ford, 1893; John Folks, 18 — ; Lemuel Green, 1860; Lizzie Green, 18 — ; Mary T. Green, 1879; Cordelia Gallaher, 1865; Eehocca Gntshall, 1881; Thomas Healy, 18—; Phebe J. Hines, 1884; Lewis Hall, 18—; Hiram I-Iarriman, 18—; S. 0. Howell, 1880; Eachel Jenkins, 1886; William Kent, Sr., 1872; Katie Kent, 1882; W. W. Kent, 1886; Asbury Kent, 182 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 18—; Susan C. Kent, 18S6; Zaelmriah Kont, 18—; Kennedy Kent, 1883; Joseph Kent, Sr., 18 — ; Joseph Lewis, 1858; Mary Lewis, 1850; Eliza- beth Lewis, 18 — ; Josiah Lewis, 18 — ; William Lemasters, 1878; Jacob Lewis, Sr., 1882; Abram Mattern, 1880; ]\[arv B. Mattern, 1890; Hu£vh :Nrattern, 1876; Eobert i\reKee,, Sr., 1851; Kaehel McKee, 18-17; Hannah i\[cKee, 18 — ; James j\reKee, Sr., 18—; Catharine McKce, 18G1; Ann B. McDivitt, 1863; IMartha A. Xonnan, 1890; James Eoberts, 18—; John llalston, 1881; Leusintha A. TJalston, 1846; Ella Rntled.sxe, 1884; Jane Scarlet, 1868;' Rebecca Snyder, ISS'^; Euth A. Snyder, 1892; Catharine Speer, 1883; Maruaret Speer, 1886; Sophia Speer, 1849; John Thompson, 1893; Elizabeth Thompson, 1858; Iluoh T. Thompson, 1878; Marv Ann Thompson, 1880; Harry Thompson, 1891; Thomas Thompson, Sr.,"l875; Rebecca Thompson, 1854; Mary Thompson, Sr., 1860; Thomas Tumble- son, 18 — ; Keziah Wheeler, 1876; Morris West, IS — ; Mclinda Young, 18—. RANKIN CHURCH. This church was organized about the year 1814, by Kev. James Rob- erts and Thomas Dic.kerson. Services were held for some five years in the log-cabin of Thomas Rankin, during which time, among others, the following members were enrolled: Thomas Rankin, Mary Rankin, James and Hester Rankin, William Johnson and wife, Joshua Dickerson, John. Early and wife, Jonathan Early and wife, Margaret Early, Arthur Barrett, Isaac Barrett, William Jones, Rachel Jones. In 1819, Thomas Rankin donated an acre of ground to the Society on Section 31, in Moorefield township, for the site of a church, and bury- ino- ofround. Soon after, a loc; building was erected, and the membership of the church materially increased. At one time, it numbered over 100 members. Four ministers were sent out from this church, namely, Benja- min Johnson, Baruch D. Jones, John Moffit, and Allan Moffit. Before 3850, the membership began to decrease, and at one time the roll was re- duced to thirteen members. In 1870, a new building was erected; and since that time, the congregation has regained much of its former pros- perity. THE RIDGE CHURCH 183 CHAPTER Xy. THE RIDGE CHURCH. This clnirch is the oldest religious organization in Archer township and one of the oldest Presbyterian churches in Harrison county. The congregation has had four different preaching places or buildino- sites since the church was set off from that of Beech Spring. The first of these was at the house of William Barnhill, then standing on section four. The second location, and site of the first church building, was on the northwest quarter of section eight; the third, on the southwest quarter of section seventeen; and the present building, on the southwest quarter of section twenty-three, near the village of Hanover. The following history of Ridge Church is condensed from an An- niversary Discourse, delivered by its pastor. Rev. Robert Herron, D. D., at the church on December 13, 1873 (printed at Uhrichsville, Ohio, 1874): The importance of having a continuous history of this church on record engaged the attention of the session early in the present pastorate. The importance ol' this was the more manifest from the fact that all the first records, both of the session and the congregation, were lost or mis- laid, so that they could not be reached. This solicitude on the part of the session led to the adoption of the following resolution, which is taken from the records of the session of Ridge Church, Sept, 36, 1851: The Moderator was appointor to collect the facts, and write out a his- tory of the church from its orf^auization to the present time. The Moderator in duo time sul)mitted the following report to the ses- sion, which was accepted and approvod by that body: "According to the foregoing action of the Session, I have talcen consider- able pains to collect and arrange, in a historical form, all the facts relating to this church. T regret, however, that after liaving written to the Stated 184 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY Clerks of the Presbyteries of Ohio and Steubenville, I am unable to ascertain how many persons were organized into a church here, or who were the ruling elders at the time of its organization." The report was then presented, containing a historical sketch of this church, drawn from such information as could be gleaned from tra- dition, in the memory of a few of the older persons yet living among us; from congregational records commencing with the year 1835, and from sessional records commencing in the year 1842, which will be made the basis of our historical sketch, until the commencement of the present pastorate. The Eidge Church, under the direction of Divine Providence, owes its existence to the following circumstances: The boundary of Beech Spring on the west extended for a considerable distance down the valleys of Stillwater and Connotton creeks. Hence, those members of this church found that their regular attendance upon the means of grace dispensed in the church where they worshipped Avas attended with great inconvenience. This fact induced them to ask the congregation to give their consent for their pastor, Eev. Dr. John Rea, to come and preach statedly among them a portion of the time. To this request the congregation readily assented. The pastor, with a self denial and zeal in his Master's service, by which his long ministerial life was character- ized, cheerfully came to break unto them the bread of life eternal. The extent of this self denial can be learned, partially, it is true, by reflect- ing on the fact that every time he visited this part of his charge, he travelled from home a distance of from ten to twelve miles, over roads new and poorly made, in a broken country. Dr. Eea's labors commenced in this way in the spring of 1810, and continued until the spring of 1817, a period of seven years. The proportion of time which Dr. Eea spent in this manner cannot be satisfactorily ascertained; but it is judged to have been about one-fourth of it, during this period. He commenced his labors by preaching in the house of Mr. William Barnhill, on the farm now owned by Mr. John Reed, on the road lead- ing from Smithficld to the road leading from Cadiz to Congress Furnace, and four miles from the point of intersection with it where the church now stands. He preached and administered the ordinances of religion, alternating this place occasionally with other dwelling-houses for a few years, when it was deemed advisable by the parent congregation to settle upon some place for holding their public services. Accordingly, a location was selected on the iNew Rumley and Cadiz road, on the farm now owned by Mr. John Lisle, three miles north of Cadiz. There they erected a house of worship, in which they were accustomed to assemble dnring the re- mainder of Dr. Rea's ministrations among them. This bniVling — a log- cabin — was, doubtless, of small proportions, and of hum'' nretension-*, .yet it would sustain a favorable comparison with the dw. ngs of those THE RIDGE CHURCH 185 who assembled there to worship the Most High; for they did not dwell in ceiled houses. . . . The Providence of God appeared to indicate in the spring of 1817, that this society should be left without the stated means of grace, by Dr. Rea's withdrawal from them. Dr. Eea proposed to the people, now respectable in numbers, that they should covenant with God, and witli one another, that they would remain united together, whatever should befall. This agreement was made by the whole body holding up their right hands. Thus ended Dr. Kea's official connection with the germ of the Eidge Church. . . . A Presbyterian church was now about to be organized in Cadiz, and it was believed that if this society should continue to assemble in its present place of worship, it would stand in the way of that church's pro- gress. This consideration prompted removal from this spot to another, on the northeast corner of the farm of John Endsley, Sr., now owned by his grandson, John E. McPeck. Here a tent was set up, and around it the people were accustomed to assemlile for Divine worship. The society now felt the necessity of assuming an organized form, as a Presbyterian church. In order to do this, they presented a petition to the Presbytery of Ohio, whose boundary extended thus far westward. This petition was favorably regarded by the Presbytery, and a committee, consisting of Revs. Messrs. Snodgrass and Clark was appointed to visit the field, and organize a church if the way were found to be clear. The committee discharged their duty, and organized the Ridge Pr'esbyterian church, on the 17th day of October, 1818. The Synod of Pittsburgh ordered the organization of the Presby- tery of Steiibenville previously to this committee's reporting to the Pres- l)yt»ry of Ohio, as to their action in the premises. This resulted in plac- ing the name of the Ridge church on the roll of the churches of the Presbytery of Steubenville, without its being found on the roll of churches of the Presbytery of Ohio. The organization continued to worship in this vicinity, occup3'ing private houses and barns for two years, when they removed their place of worship to the village of Hanover, where they erected a tent for ])rcaching purposes, north of where the Methodist church now stands. They met here, and in adjacent dwelling houses, for devotional purposes until February, 1833. But not finding this an eligible site on which to build a permanent house of worship, they secured, by purchase, two acres of ground from Mr. George Hospelhorn. One of these was used for building purposes, and the other was appropriated to burial uses. At a meeting of the congregation held March 15th, 1823, it was re- solved to proceed at once to erect a house of worship, and a tent. The house was for use on inclement Sabbaths, and the tent was to be occu- pied in favorable weather. The house was to be built fifty feet long by thirty wide, with a story twelve feet high. The tent was to be built eicrht feet lone and six feet wide, and be weatherboarded. 186 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Messrs. Samuel Buchanan, John Archihold, and Samuel- Welsh were appointed a committee to carry out this action of the congregation. This church building was completed and occupied by the congrega- tion in the latter part of the following year. No doubt the work went forward as rapidly as the means of the people could drive it onward, as their number was small, and their resources limited. This church nov/ became united with the church of Cadiz as one pas- toral charge. They unitedly called Eev. Donald Mcintosh to become their pastor, giving to each part one-half his ministerial labors. The salary promised him from this branch of his charge was two hundred dollars: one-half cash, and the other half in produce, at the following rates — wheat, fifty cents per bushel; rye and corn, each thirty-three cents per bushel. The grain was to be delivered to Mr. Matthew Mc- Cov, Cadiz, Ohio, with whom Mr. Mcintosh boarded, being an unmar- ried man. The writer of this paper has in his possession a book, in which the following note is inscribed, by Mr. John Morrison Forsythe : "The Eeverend Donald Mcintosh, this 9th day of February, 1833, began liis heavy labors in Archer township. It shall be said of this man, and that one, that he Avas born there." Mr. Mcintosh was regularly installed pas- tor over this united charge; and from a communication sent to the trus- tees of this congregation, it appears that he also had charge of an academy for two }^ears, when he resigned it, in order that he might devote himself entirely to his ministerial work. Mr. Mcintosh's care of this charge continued until 1826, when fail- ing health required his resignation, in order to admit his travelling southward. Mr. Mcintosh is remembered as an accomplished scholar and an instructive preacher. He died soon after in East India. Rev. John McArthur became pastor of the same united charge in the year 1828. Mr. McArthur was regarded by his co-presbyters as a thor- ough scholar, and well-skilled in the doctrines of the holy Scriptures; a faithful expositor of God's word, and an acceptable and instructive preacher. Mr. McArthur was born in Washington county, New York, March 25th, 1803. He graduated in Jefferson College, at Canonsburg, Pa., in 1825; studied theology under the Presbytery of New Lisbon, and was licensed by them in the fall of 1827; married Miss Christina Ann Robert- son, daughter of Rev. James Robertson, of CarroUton, Ohio, in the winter of 1829, by whom he had six sons and one daughter. Two sons died in infancy. His wife survived him about seven years, Mr. McArthur continued in this relation until 1836, when his time was entirely devoted to the Cadiz branch of his charge. The memory of- Mr, McArthur was ever carefully cherished by all who were under his pastoral care. He is believed to have been the instrument in the hand of God in moulding this church in the pattern of sound doctrine and good government. It was at his instance, and througli his influence that the congrega- THE RIDGE CHURCH 187 tion obtained a charter as an incorporated body in the year 1835, by act of the Legislature of Ohio. The incorporators in this act were, "Walter McClintock, Jacob Kichey, Samuel Buchanan, Ealph Atkinson, Jacob Vasbinder, Thomas Day, James L. McLane, James Megaw, John Lyons, George McPeck, John Welsh, Jr., William Lisle, Thomas Albertson, Wil- liam j\Iiller, and James McCliiitock.'^ He afterwards became professor of languages in Miami University, at Oxford, Ohio, and died at Indianapolis, Ind., in July, 1849. Eev. William Doane McCartney became pastor of this church, de- voting his entire labors to it, in 1838, and sustained this relation to it until 184:2, when, at his request, the pastoral relation was dissolved. Mr. McCartney was born in Montrose county. Pa., January 20th, 1806. He made a profession of religion in the Presbyterian church of Derry, Pa., September, 1823; graduated at Washington College, Pa., 1832, and immediately commenced the study of theology in the Western Theological Seminary. He was licensed to preach the gospel by the Presbytery of Washington, April, 1833; and by the same Presbytery he was ordained to the whole work of the ministry, June 27th, 1836. Mr. McCartney and ]\Iiss Maria Jane Stewart, of Washington county. Pa., were united in marriage, A])ril 25th, 1837. The result of this mar- riage was four children. One of these, the wife of Mr. D. S. Noble, ruling elder in Wellsville church, survives him, Mrs. McCartney and his other children having preceded him to their heavenly home. He was called to bear severe afflictions near the close of his life, but the full vigor of his mental powers, and the sustaining grace of the Lord Jesus Christ were with him to the end, and that end was peace. He fell asleep in Jesus near AVellsville, Ohio, July 27th, 1863, and his mortal re- mains repose in Bethel churchyard, awaiting the resurrection of the just. Eev. James Cameron became pastor of this church in the year 1844, and sustained that relation until the year 1847, when, at his own request, the pastoral relation was dissolved. Mr. Cameron was born in the city of Pittsburgh, Pa., June 1st, 1813. He obtained his primary education in the place of his nativity, and graduated at the Jeiferson College, Pa., in the year 1839. Soon after he entered the Western Theological Seminary, where he completed the pre- scribed course of study, and was licensed to preach the gospel by the Presbytery of Ohio, in the year 1842. He received and accepted a call from this church to become its pas- tor, and in the year 1844 the Presbytery of Steubenville ordained and in- stalled him pastor over this church. Two-thirds of his labor were to be given to this church, and the remaining one-third to Centre Unity. His record here is that of an industrious and efficient pastor, who did what he could to extend the interests of this part of the kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ. Mr. Cameron's wife was Miss Isabella Eichey, of Pittsburgh, Pa., by whom he had four children — three sons and one daughter — all of 188 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY whom, with their mother, survive him. His death occurred May 1st, 1866, in Brunswick, 111., and was the result of paralysis. The following records are found amongst the papers of Mr. Samuel Buchanan, deceased: "Messrs. Walter McClintock and Jacob Eichoy were ordained Ruling Elders for the Eidge congregation, by Eev. Mr. Clark, August 31st, 1819. "Messrs, Ealph Atkinson and Jacob Vasbinder were ordained Euling Elders for the Eidge congregation, by Eev. Mr. Mcintosh, August 22d, 1823. "Messrs. William Patterson and Samuel Buchanan were ordained Euling Elders for the Eidge congregation, by Eev. Mr. Eutherford, April 29th, 1827." An election was held for Euling Elders, by the congregation, it is believed, in the year 1834, which resulted in the choice of Messrs. James Megaw, Thomas Day, James L. McLane, and John Lyons. They ac- cepted the office, and were ordained and installed by Eev. Mr. McArthur. On the 20th day of August, 1844, Messrs. Alexander Osburn, Hugh j\lcllravy, and George McKinney were elected Euling Elders by this con- gregation. Mr. Osburn had formerly been a Euling Elder in Crabapplc church, and therefore only required installation in this church. The other Elders elect were ordained and installed by Eev. Mr. Cameron. Messrs. Eobert Scott, Samuel Adams, and Samuel Osburn were elected Deacons by the congregation, August 20th, 1844, and were or- dained and installed in their office by Eev. Mr. Cameron a few weeks afterwards. Of these, Messrs. Adams and Osburn remain in the dis- charge of their duties amongst us; but Mr. Scott has fallen asleep, as we believe, in Jesus, and was fully ripe for eternal glory, through the saving grace of the Lord Jesus Christ. Thus far we have traced the way along which the Lord led this church in paths which are known to us only as revealed by the pen of the historian, or handed down by tradition. From this time forward we are enabled to speak of things which we ourselves have seen. The present pastor formed a slight acquaintance with this congre- gation in the fall of 1847, while preaching a few Sabbaths to relieve a sick friend, Eev. Ephraim Ogden, then temporarily in charge of the con- gregation. The congregation becoming vacant, he was invited by the congregation at a meeting held June 20th, 1848, to visit them, and if he and they were mutually satisfied, to become their pastor. This invita- tion was accepted, and his labor in this way commenced on the fifth day of the succeeding July. His ministrations being regarded as satisfactory, a meeting of the congregation was held on the 20th day of September, next, for the purpose of taking the sense of the congregation on that subject, and on the vote being taken, it was unanimously in favor of the candidate's election as pastor, and a call was accordingly made out for two-thirds of his ministerial services, promising him a salary of three hundred dollars a year in half yearly payments. He being a licentiate, THE RIDGE CHURCH 189 under the care of the Presbvtery of Washington, the Preshyterv of Steu- henville gave the congregation permission to prosecute the call before that body. The Presbytery of Washington placed the call in his hands, and it was by him accepted Oetol)er 14th, 1848, whereupon he was dis- missed to the Presbytery of Steubenville. . . . Presbytery ordered 111 at the ordination take place at Corinth on the 17th day of the ap- proaching 'N'ovember, and assigned to him Hebrews, xii., 1. . . . The ordination took place according to the order of Presbytery, Eev, Dr. Beatty presiding, asking the constitutional questions, and leadino- in the prayer of ordination. Presbytery directed that the installation of the pastor elect take place on the 13th of the approaching December, and appointed Rev. Joseph H. Chambers to preside, preach the sermon, and propose the con- stitutional questions, and Rev. Dr. Brown to deliver the charges to the pastor and people. The installation services took place as directed by Preshyterv, according to the stipulations of the call. A careful canvass of the church Avas now made by the session of the church, in order to ascertain the strength of its membership. The result of this investigation showed that at that time there were seventv-two persons in fall communion in the church. Several of these were ao-ed and infirm, so that the active working force of the church may be set down as sixty. Officers in the church, 1848: Ruling Elders — Samuel Buchanan, Thomas Day, John Lyons, Alex- ander Osburn, Hugh Mcllravy, George McKinney, and James Megaw. Deacons — Robert Scott, Samuel Adams, and Samuel Osburn. Trustees — George Fisher, John Lyons, John Welch, Jr., Hu^h Mc- llravy, Joseph Buchanan, and Thomas Day. Treasurer — George McPeck. Clerk of the Congregation — William Smiley. Precentors — (Who stood before the people, gave out the lines of the hymn, pitched the tune, and led in singing it) — John Welch, Jr., Hugh Mcllravy, George McKinney, and Samuel Osburn. Additions to the church officers to 1873: Moses Cole and Isaac Pratt were elected to the office of Ruling Elder, and ordained and installed February 10th, 1853. Samuel Herron and John E. McPeck were elected to this office, and ordained and installed October 13th, 1860. Robert Anderson, formerly a Ruling Elder in Few Hagerstown church, was elected and installed in this office, February 3d, 1862. Samuel Osburn was elected to this office, and ordained and installed January 18th, 1867. John E. McPeck, having withdrawn from the membership of the church, owing to a change of residence, and having now^returned to us, he was elected and installed in this office, October 28th, 1870. 190 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Present Church Officers [1874] : Eiiling Elders — John Lyons, Samuel Herron, Robert Anderson, Samuel Osburn, and John E. McPeck. Deacons — Samuel Adams and Samuel Oshurn, Trustees of the Congregation — David Patton, Eobert Anderson, Samuel Currey, John S. Adams, Eli Cavin, and John Atkinson. Congregation's Clerk — G. M. McPeck. Treasurer — George McPeck. It is proper that in this place there should be given a brief re- sume of the pastor's labors and successes during the quarter of a century just now closing. The labors of this time were commenced by giving two-thirds of my time to this church, and the remaining one-third to Centre Unity. This arrangement continued until January 1st, 1864, a period of fifteen years, when this congregation began to occupy my entire time, until the present. The reported number of sermons, of members received, and of baptisms administered, will cover only those pertaining to this congregation. I have preached twelve hundred sermons in the interest of the Eidge church, in discharging my pastoral duty to it. I have received into full communion in the Eidge church three hun- dred members. Some of these persons have come to this church on let- ters of dismissal from other churches of our own order; and a proportion of them have come from other denominations ; but much the larger part of these additions have been made on examination. I have administered the ordinance of baptism, in the interest of this congregation, to twenty-seven adult persons, and to two hundred and seventy-five infants. I have solemnized the marriage of one hundred and twentj^-nine couples, that being, in some instances, of the parents and the offspring. It has been my lot to be present and ofliciate, wholly or in part, at the funerals of one hundred and eighty-five persons. These have, how- ever, not all been in connection with this congregation, nor even with the Presbyierian church. Nearly two generations of men have passed away since the organi- zation of this church. It is not known that anv one of the oris^inal mem- bers is now living. If we limit our range of vision by the horizon of the last twenty- five years, we find, to-day, in the session of this church but a single mem- ber, Mr. John Lyons, Sr., who was in it at that time. Two others, Messrs. Hugh McUravy and George McKinney, are believed to be yet living, in other localities. To-da}'-, there are but fifteen living members in connection with us, who were members of this church at the commencement of the present pastorate, and who have retained their membership in it until the present time. The condition of the church is specially encouraging. During the THE RIDGE CHURCH 191 present year she has sent forth a colony of thirty persons to form a church in tlie neighboring viUage of Fairview, on the P., C. & St. L. Rail- way, called Buchanan Chapel. And still are left one hundred and fifty active workers in the cause of Christ, besides a few fathers and mothers in Israel, who linger among us to bless us with their counsels and prayers. The congregation is free of debt, and owns a substantial and con- venient brick house of worship. PART SECOND. HARBISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS, EARLY MARRIAGES, BURIAL RECORDS, AND WILL ABSTRACTS. 13 HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 195 PART SECOND, riEST LANDOWNERS IN HAEEISON COUNTY. Tlie first measure providing for the establishment and maintenance of government by the United States in the territory nortliwest of the Ohio river, was an ordinance passed by Congress on April 23, 1784. The ordinance "was reported by a committee of which Thomas Jefferson was chairman, and contained a clause prohibiting slavery in the territory after the year 1800. This provision, however, was stricken out before the ordinance was finally passed. The only important result accom- l)lished under the first ordinance was the beginning of the survey of the territorial lands. Congress, having purchased from the Indians at the treaty of Fort Stanwix, October 27, 1784, whatever title the Six Nations had to lands in the valley of the Ohio, now sought to provide for the survey and disposal of the same; and on May 20, 1785, was passed, "An Ordinance for Ascer- taining the Mode of Disposing of Lands in the Western Territory." This ordinance provided that a surveyor should be appointed from each State. On May 27th Congress chose as surveyors: Nathaniel Adams, New Hampshire; Eufus Putnam, Massachusetts; Caleb Harris, Rhode Island; "'Ailliam ]\Iorris, New York; Adam Hoopes, Pennsylvania; James Simp- son, Maryland; Alexander Parker, Virginia; Absalom Tatum, North Carolina; William Tate, South Carolina; and on July 18th, Isaac Sher- man, Connecticut. Benjamin Tupper was appointed Instead of Rufus Putnam from Massachusetts, as the latter Avas then surveying lands in Maine, and could not serve. Caleb Harris and Nathaniel Adams having resigned. Col. Ebenezer Sproat and Winthrop Sargent were chosen in their places. 196 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY The surveyors were to divide the territory into townships, six miles square. The first north and south line was to begin on the Ohio river, at a point due north from the western terminus of a line that had been run at the southern boundary of Pennsylvania; and the first east and west line was also to begin at the same point. It was provided that as soon as seven ranges of townships had been surveyed, the Geographer should transmit the plats of the same to the Board of the Treasury. The Secretary was then to take by lot a number of townships and fractional townships, both of those to be sold entire and of those to be sold in lots, such as would be equal to one-seventh part of the whole seven ranges, for the use of officers and soldiers of the Continental army. The survey was begun in July, 1780, under the management of Thomas Hutchins, the Geographer of the United States. He started on the Pennsylvania line at the north bank of the Ohio river, and first ran a line west through Columbiana and Carroll counties, now known as the "Geographer's Line," a distance of fortj-two miles, setting a post each mile. Every six miles was a township corner, and from these corners the south lines were run to the Ohio river, and the north lines to the southern boundary of the Connecticut, or Western Reserve. Hutchins began numbering sections at the southeast corner of the township, which was called section 1, thence north to the northeast corner, which was section 6. Section 7 began at the bottom again, west of section 1, end the numbers were carried up to section 36, which was in the north- Avest corner. In Charles Whittlesey's tract on the "Surveys of the Pub- lic Lands in Ohio," it is stated that this is the first application in the history of land surveys, of the rectangular system of lots in squares of one mile, with meridian lines and corner posts at each mile, where the number of the section, town, and range was put on the witness trees in letters and figures. This system of numbering was followed in the survey of the Ohio Company's lands about Marietta, and in the Symmes Pur- chase. It was changed to the present system in 1799, by which the num- bering of the sections begins in the northeast corner of the township, and proceeds alternately from east to west, and thence west to east. The plan originally adopted by Congress for the sale of the lands in the Northwest Territory, proposed to sell it in tracts of two million HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 197 ricres; the second ordinance, in smaller tracts, of one million. Under the last ordinance, the contract of the Ohio Company, on the ]\Iuskingnm, and that of Judge Symmes and his associates, between the Miamis, were made, the former for two millions, the latter for one million acres. By a subsequent ordinance, passed in May, 1785, seven ranges of townships, each six miles square, were surveyed westward from the Ohio river and the Pennsylvania line, which were divided and offered for sale, in quarter tovrnships ; first at Pittsburgh, and afterwards in Philadelphia. Harrison county lies between the western lines of Eanges three and seven, its townships thus being included in the four western ranges. In May, 1796, an act was passed by Congress, directing the Surveyor General to cause the public lands to be divided into townships of six miles square; and one-half of these townships, taking them alternately to be divided into sections of one mile square, and the residue into ouarter townships of three miles square. In the year 1800, another law was passed, ordering a portion of these lands to be subdivided, and sold in half sections, of three hundred and twenty acres. When this law came into operation, land offices were established at Cincinnati, Chillicothe, IVfarietta, and Steubenville, and a large quantity of the richest and most productive soil was brought into the market. Before that time, the tracts of land offered for sale by the Gov- ernment were so large that men of limited means were unable to pur- chase. The smallest tract that could be bought was a section, containing six hundred and forty acres. Under this arrangement, most of the lands in the present townships of Short Creek, Athens, Green, and Cadiz were entered by the section: thus indicating that the first comers were men of more than ordinary means or enterprise. Although the later pro- vision for the accommodation of the settler of limited means was of much importance, 3^et it was not sufficiently so as to advance the settle- ment of the Territory with much rapidity. But an act passed at a sub- sequent session of Congress which ordered the sections and half sections to be subdivided and offered for sale in quarter sections (IfiO acres), at two dollars per acre, on a credit of four years, was of vastly more im- portance; as it enabled thousands to become landowners who otherwise must have remained tenants; and it thus encouraged and increased emi- gration to the western country. 198 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Tlie Act of Mny 18, 1796, (First Statute at Large, 464), and the Act of May 10, 1800 (Second Statutes ai Lai-ge, 72), provide, in substance, for the sale of pu])lic lands to the highest bidder, one-fourth of the pur- chase monej'' to be paid at tht' time of sale, one-fourth within two years, one-fourth within three years, and the remaining one-fourth within four years from date of sale. The Act of March 2, IS?! (Third Statutes at Large, 612) provides for the relief of purchasers of the public land, where the purchase was made prior to July 1, 1820, and they had been unable to comply with the provisions of the previous act. Tn all credit sales patented jirior to the passage of this relief act, it is safe to assume that the purchase was made within the four or five vears preceding the patent. Cash entries, as a rule, Avere made from six months to two years prior to the date of patenting, although in the case of a few suspended entries, this rule would not apply. Hence, as a general rule, all patents issued for lands in Harrison coimty prior to 1821 (and many during the next four or five years after 1821), bear a date from four to five years later than the date of the original entry and settlement of the land. In the descriptions of lands given in the following list, the words, "section," "township," and "range" have been omitted, and are to be understood as following the three numbers describing the location of the respective tracts. For instance, "all 6.9.4" means "all of section 6, town- ship 9, range 4," which would locate the tract as section number 6 in Short Creeiv township. "^Y^^•^ SW 6.9.4 means, "the Avest half of the ionthwest quarter of section 6, township 9, range 4," which would locate :he tract as eighty acres of section number 6 in Short Creek township. A section of land comprises 640 acres, the common subdivisions of ft'hich are half sections (containing 320 acres), of which there may be the uorth half, the west half, the south half, or the east half; quarter sections, or "qaarters'" (containing 160 acres), of which there may be the northeast (NE) quarter, the northwest (X W) quarter, the southwest (SW) quar- ter, and the southeast (SE) quarter, as well as adjoining halves of two adjoining quarters; eighth sections, or "eighties" (containing eio-hty acres), of which there may be the north half of the northeast quarter (NVi NE), west half of the northeast quarter (WVa 'NE), etc., east half of the northwest quarter (E'/i NW), etc., east half of the south- HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 199 U'est quarter (E^/4 SW), etc., south half of the southeast quarter (S'/4 SE), etc., as "well as any two adjoining or cornering half-eighties; and six- teenth-sections, or "forties" (containing forty acres), of which there may bo the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter (NW NE), etc., and so on through sixteen different descriptions, as well as any two adjoining or cornering twenty acre tracts which taken together comprise forty acres. If will be remembered that there are thirty-six sections in a township, the numbering beginning with the section in the southeast corner, which is numbered one, and proceeding thence north to the section in the northeast corner of the township, which is numbered six, thence begin- mng again on the south line of the township with the section adjoining number one on the west, which is numljered seven, and proceeding north to section tAvelve; and so on; the section in the northwest corner of each numerical township being numbered thirty-six. The different numerical townships and ranges of Harrison county correspond with the geograph- ical names of the different townships as follows: Township 8, Jlange -1: Sections 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12, 16, 17, 18, 22, 23, 24, 28, 29, and 30 form the south half of Short Creek township. Sections 34, 35, and 3G, form part of the east one-sixth of Athens township. Sections 1, 2, and 3, 7,8, 9, 13, 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, 25, 20, 27, 31, 32, and 33 form the east three-fourths of Wheeling town- ship, Belmont county (adjoining Short Creek township, Harrison county, on the south), in which are located Craba^ple and Unity '^ churches. Township 9, P.ange 4: Sections 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, 13, 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, 25, 26, and 27 form the north half of Short Creek township. Sections 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12, 16, 17, 18, 22, 23, 24, 28, 29, and 30 form the south three-sevenths of Green township. Section 31 forms the northeast corner section of Athens town- ship- Sections 32, 33, 34, 35, and 36 form the east one-seventh of Cadiz township. Township 10, Tiange 4: Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 15, ]6, 19, 200 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 20, 21, 22, 25, 26, 27, and 28 form the north four-sevenths of Green township. Sections 5, 6, 11, 12, 17, 18, 23, 24, 29 (excepting the northwest eighty acres), and 30 (excepting the west 160 acres) form the south two-fifths of German township. Sections 33, 34, and the south half of 35 form part of the east one-sixtli of Archer township. Section 26, the north half of 35, the west 160 acres of section 30, and the northwest 80 acres of section 29 form part of the south- east corner of Eumley township. Township 11, Eange 4: Sections 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, 13, 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, 25, 26, and 27 form the north three-fifths of German township. Sections 31, 32, and 33 form part of the east one-fifth of Eum- ley toAvnship. The remainder of township 11-4 lies in Jefferson and Carroll counties. Township 9, Eange 5: Sections 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12, 16, 17, 18, 22, 23, 24, 28, 29, and 30 form the south three-fourths of Athens township. Sections 34, 35, and 36 form part of the east one-seventh of Moorefield township. Sections 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, and 9 form the west fourth of Wheeling township, Belmont county. Sections 13, 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, 25, 26, 27, 31, 32, and 33 form the east two-fifths of Flushing townihip, Belmont county. Township 10, Eange 5: Sections 1, 7, 13, 19, and 25 form the north fourth of Athens township. Section 31 forms the northeast corner section of Moorefield township. Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, and 36 form the west six-sevenths of Cadiz township. Township 11, Eange 5: Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16, 19, 20, 21, 22, the south half of sections 5, 11, 17, and 23, and the east two-thirds of sections 25, 26, 27, 28, and of the south half of 29 form the township of Eumley. Sections 6, 12, 18, 24, the north half of sections 5, 11, 17, and HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 201 23, and east fourth of section 30 and of north half of 29 form part of the south one-third of Rumley township. Township 12, Eange 5 : Sections 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, 13, 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, and the east fourth of sections 25, 26, and 27 form part of the north two- thirds of Eumley township. The remainder of township 12.5 lies in Carroll county. Township 10, Eange 6: Sections 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12, 16, 17, 18, 22, 23, 24, 28, 29, 30, 34, 35, and 36 form part of the south three-fourths of Moorefield township. Sections 1, 3, 3, 7, 8, 9, 13, 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, 25, 26, 27, 31, 32, and 33 are in Belmont county. Township 11, Eange 6 : Sections 1, 7, 13, 19, 25, and 31 form part of the north one-fourth of Moorefield township. Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, and 36 form all of Not- tingham township- Township 12, Eange 6: Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16, 19, 20, 21, and 22 and the south portion of sections 5, 11, 17, and 23 form the west eight-elevenths of Stock township. Sections 6, 12, 18, and the north portion of sections 5, 11, and 17 form part of the southwest quarter of North township. Sections 25, 26, 27, 28, 31, 32, 33, 34, and the south portion of sections 29 and 35 form the east two-fifths of Franklin township. Sections 24, 30, 36, and the north portion of sections 23, 29, and 35 form part of the southwest corner of Monroe township. Township 13, Eange 6 : Sections 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, 13, 14, and 15 form the northwest portion of North township. Sections 19, 20, 21, 25, 26, 27, 31, 32, and 33 form the northeast portion of Monroe township. The remainder of township 13.6 lies in Carroll county. Township 11, Eange 7: Sections 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12, 16, 17, 18, 22, 23, 24, 28, 29, 30, 34, 35, and 36 form the south three-fourths of Freeport township. Sections 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, 13, 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, 25, 26, 27, 31, 32, and 33 are in Guernsey county. Township 12, Eange 7: Sections 1, 7, 13, 19, 25, and 31 form the >l 202 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY north one-fourth of Freeport township. Sections 2, d, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, and 36 form all of Wash- ington township. Township 13, Eange 7: Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16, and j I the south portion of sections 5, 11, and 17 form the west three-fifths of Franklin township. Sections 6, 12, and ]8, and the north portion of sections 5, 11, and 17 form part of southwestern portion of Monroe township. The remainder of township 13.7 lies in Tuscarawas county. Township 14, Eange 7: Sections 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, 13, 14, and 15 form the northwest portion of Monroe township. The remainder of township 14-7 lies in Carroll and Tuscarawas counties. LIST OP HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS. / George Abel, Loudoun county, Va., SE 15.11.4, June 19, 1S13. ^ George Abel, Loudoun county, Va., NW 21.11.4, Nov. 26, 1813. John Abrams, assignee of Philip Everhart, dec'd, SW 8.11.4, Nov. 30, 1811. ^ John Adams, Harrison county, NE 4.11.7, Feb. 14, 1817. ^ William Adams, Jefferson county, SW 21.11.5, March 7, 1818. SJ John Agnew, Washington county. Pa., all 11.10.5, Feb. 10, 1807. ^ Jacob Albert, Jefferson county, SB 2.13.6, Dec. 30, 1811. ' Esther Alexander, Harrison county, Wy^ NW 36.11.6, July 1, 1831. Isaac Alexander, assignee of Jacob Manback, E14 NW 13.13.6, Aug. 10, 1827. John Alexander, Harrison county, W^^ NW 24.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Reuben Allen, Harrison county, EVo 32.11.6, Aug. 18, 1817. Isaac Allen, Harrison county, NE 31.11.6, Aug. 18, 1817. Oliver Allis, Wi{. SW and Ni/, SE 22.10.6, Jan. 23, 1822. Oliver Allis, Harrison county, Ei/o SW 22.10.6, Sept. 10, 1823. .X Oliver Allis, Jefferson county, NW 22.10.6, Aug. 19, 1824. ^ Asa Anderson, Belmont county, SW 24.10.6, May 29, 1818. ■Isaac Anderson, Jefferson county, WV2 NW and SE SW 22.12.6, Sept. 10, 1834. James Anderson, Fayette county. Pa., SW 35.11.6, Aug. 30, 1816. William Andreson, Jefferson county, NE 13.11.5, Nov. 10, 1811. Joseph Applegate, Charlestown, all 1.9.4, July 22, 1805. Daniel Arbaugh, Harrison county, NE 3.13.6, May 22, 1827. John Arbaugh, assignee of David Custard, NE 6.11.5, July 29, 1819. John Archbold, Westmoreland county, Pa., NW 17.11.5, Aug. 4, 1814. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 203 John Archbold, Harrison county, NE 28.11.5, Aug. 3, 1818. John Archbold, Harrison county, E^l. NB 34.11.5, Nov. 13, 1822. George Atkinson, Brooke county, Va., all 27.11.4, Aug. 18, 1804. James Atkinson, Washington county. Pa., NE 15.11.5, Aug. 1, 1819. John Atkinson, Harrison county, W^^. NE 21.12.6, April 30, 1822, John Auld, Union county. Pa.. NW 35.11.6, Jan. 21, 1819. Samuel Auld, Northumberland county. Pa., NE 33.11.6, June 26, 1820. Samuel Auld, Jr., Harrison county, WV. NW 34.11.6, Nov. 13, 1822. Samuel Auld, Jr., Harrison county, Wi^ SE 5 and WVo SE 6.12.7, April 20, 1827. Samuel Auld, Harrison county, WY2 NE 4.12.7, Nov. 18, 1833. William Auld.Northumberland county, Pa., NE 28.11.6, June 26, 1820. Ihomas Ayres, assignee of James Kendal and Thomas Mills, NW 8.12.5, Aug. 19, 1824. George Badger, Washington county. Pa., NW SE 28.12.7, Dec. 8, 1835. Emnior Baily, assignee of Charles Lownes, SW 10.12.7, Dec. 29, 1818. Daniel Bair, Somerset ccounty. Pa., SE 6.11.5, May 23, 1810. Daniel Bair, Somerset county, Pa., NE 5.11.5, June 8, 1812. Daniel Bair, Harrison county, NW 35.10.4, Aug. 4, 1814. George Baker, Harrison county, W/j SE 30.12.7, Nov. 12, 1832. John Baker, Harrison county, SE 25.13.6, March 7, 1817. Otho Baker, Harrison county, WYs NE 36.12.6 and Ei^ NW 25.13.6, Nov 1, 1830. ?Nathan Ball, Carroll county, NW SW 9.14.7, April 1, 1837. Cornelius Barber, Harrison county, Ei,4 SW 4.11.7, Dec. 6, 1831. Barger, see Barriger and Berger. John Barkhurst, Jefferson county, W% SW 33.12.7, Jan. 1, 1833. James Barnes, assignee of Horton Howard, Belmont county, E^^ SW and Wy^ SW 22.9.5, Aug. 19, 1824. William Barnhill, assignee of Samuel Osburn, SE 4.11.5, May 10, 1811. William Barnhill, Harrison county, NW 3.11.5, Dec. 18, 1816. William Barnhill, Harrison county. By- NB 29.12.6, May 20, 1826. John Barr, Washington county. Pa., SW 29.10.5, Nov. 24, 1814. Arthur Barrett, Sr., Frederick county, Va., all 26.10.5, Jan. 20, 1808. Arthur Barrett Sr., Jefferson county, NW 33.10.5, Jan. 20, 1812. Arthur Barrett, Sr., Jefferson county, NE 33.10.5, Aug.l9, 1812. George Barricklow, Fayette county. Pa., SW 15,10.5, July 30, 1812. Henry Barricklow, assignee of William Welling, NW 13.10.5, Jan. 20, 1809. Henry Barricklow, Jefferson county, SW 36.9.5, Dec. 9, 1815. ;i;arriger, see also Berger. Henry Barriger, Adams county Pa., NW 21.10.4, Aug. 10, 1813. Valentine Barriger, Adams county. Pa., NE 21. 10.5, Aug. 4, 1814. Xopherius Bartholome, Harrison county, NE SE 14.14.7, April 1, 1837. David Barton, Washington county. Pa., all 13.8.4, Dec. 20, 1808. George Barton, Harrison county, E1^ NE 6.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. George Bartow, Harrison county. NE 5.12.6, Dec. 29, 1818. 204 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY George Bartow, Harrison county, W^j SW 18.12.6, March 21, 1832. William Baun and William Constable, assignees of Arnold Henry Dorhn, all of Town. 13, Range 7, May 15. 1801. John Baxter, Allegheny county. Pa., NE 28.10.5, Dec. 15, 1812. Robert Baxter, assignee of John Maholm, SE 6.10.6, Dec. 15, 1812. Alexander Beall, Harrison county, WV^ SE 21.11.6, April 8, 1828. Colmore Beall, Washington county, Pa., SE 22.11.6, March 7, 1818. Colmore Beall, Washington county. Pa., NE 21.11.6, Nov. 13, 1822. Colmore Beall, Washington county. Pa., W1/2 NW 21.11.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Dory Beall, Harrison county, Ei/o SW 4.12.6, Oct. 2, 1821. James P. Beall, Harrison county, WVo NE 22.11.6, Dec. 10, 1827. John Beall Harrison county, EVo NW 21.11.16, Dec. 10, 1827. 5^1exander Beard, Belmont county, W^-^ NW 26.12.7, July 1, 1831. Sampson Beaty, Harrison county, EV2 NW 30.12.7, Nov. 18, 1833. William Beatty, Harrison county, WI/2 SW 21.12.5, May 6, 1824. Zaccheus A. Beatty, Steubenville, all 5.10.5 (the site of Cadiz), April 20, 1804. Samuel Beck, Harrison county, NE 11.11.7, Sept. 29, 1814. Jacob Beckley, assignee of Stephen Ford, NE 15.11.4, July 30, 1812. Walter B. Beebe, Harrison county, NE 19.12.5, Aug. 19, 1818. Walter Butler Beebe, Cadiz, WV2 SW 4.12.6, Dec. 2, 1832. Harvey Beens, Washington county. Pa., WV- NW 34.11.7, Nov. 1, 1830. George Beer, Frederick county, Md., NW 9.12.5, Oct. 20, 1819. pavid Belknap, assignee of Thomas Hayne, all 2.9.4, Feb. 2, 1807. Robert Bell, Belmont county, NE 11.10.6, Aug. 10, 1811. Jsmes Cummings Bennett, Tuscarawas county, W14 SE 7.14.7, Dec. 6, 1831. Eerger, see also Barriger. Peter Berger, Harrison county, NE 22.10.5, Aug. 3, 1818. Valentine Berger, Adams county. Pa., SE 21.10.5, Aug. 6, 1813. Valentine Berger, Adams county, Pa., NW 22.10.4, Aug. 18, 1817. Heirs and legal Representatives of James Best, dec'd, Westmoreland county, Pa., EV. NW 22.11.5, May 25, 1825. Simpson Bethel, Harrison county, SE 31.9.5, Aug. 19, 1824. Thompson Bethel, Harrison county, E14 SW 35.10.6, May 20, 1826. Stacy Bevan, Belmont county, NW 29.9.5, Aug. 10, 1811. Zaccheus Biggs, Steubenville, all 10.10.5, May 20, 1806. Zsccheus Biggs, assignee of Zaccheus Beatty, all 33.9.4, Aug. 27, 1807. William Billingsley, Belmont county, WU SE 11.12.7, June 23, 1826. Hugh Birney, Harrison county, Ei{. SW 36.12.6, May 20, 1826. fiugh Birney, Harrison county, Wi/. SW 36.12.6, May 30, 1826. John Birney and William Birney, Harrison county NW 17.10.4, Oct. 20, 1824. William Birney, Steubenville, NE 22.10.4, March 20, 1813. William Birney, Harrison county, E^/. NW 36.12.6, Oct. 6, 1826. William Birney, Harrison county, BI/2 SE 30.12.7, April 20, 1827. John Bishop, Harrison county, Ei-4 NE 18.10.4, Sept. 10, 1823. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 205 Daniel Black, assignee of Frederick Erfort, NE 33.13.6, Dec. 27, 1822. Jacob Black, Sr., Fayette county. Pa., all 12.9.5, Jan. 20, 1808. James Black, assignee of Benjamin Hough, all 4.10.4, March 1, 1810. Archibald Blair, Bedford county, Pa., EVj 36.11.6, March 7, 1818. Rannel Blair, Brooke county, Va.. all 23.10.5, Jan. 20, 1809. Edward Bleakney, Harrison county, EV-S NW 18.12.6, March 21, 1832. Kesiah Bliss, Columbiana county, NE 31.12.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Zadok Bliss, Harrison county, W^,^ SE 32.12.6, July 1, 1831. Martin Boghart, Somerset county. Pa., SW 9.13.6, Jan. 20, 1812. Jonathan Bogne, Tuscarawas county, SW 7.12.7, Dec. 26, 1815. Samuel Bolen, Harrison county, EVa SW 22.11.6, Nov. 1, 1830. ' , James Bo],es Harrison county, Ei/o NE 21.12.7, April 17, 1828. James Boles, Harrison county, WV2 NE 21.12.7, Nov. 1, 1830. William Boling, assignee of Barton Hooper, Ey^ SW 14.11.6, May 25, 1825. John P. Bond, Brooke county, Va., NE 32.10.4, Nov. 30, 1811. John Booth, assignee of William Rouse, NW 3.14.7, Nov. 2, 1829. John Borland, Westmoreland county. Pa., NE 15.13.6, March 7, 1818. Samuel Boreland, Westmoreland county, Pa., SE 9.13.6, Jan. 27, 1819. Samuel Borland, Harrison county, Ey> NE 20.12.6, Dec. 6, 1831. Bernard Bower, Jefferson county, SB 27.13.6, July 30, 1812. Bernard Bower, Tuscarawas county, SW 27.13.6, Nov. 13, 1822. Bernard Bower, Tuscarawas county, SW 21.13.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Bernard Bower, Tuscarawas county, WVo NE 32.13.6, June 23, 1827. David Bower, Sr., Tuscarawas county, Ei/. NE 32.13.6, June 23, 1827. Pavid Bower, Tuscarawas county, WV2 NW 13.13.6, Nov. 1, 1830. David Bower, Tuscarawas county, EVa SW 26.13.6, Dec. 2, 1830. David Bower, Tuscarawas county, EVo NE 19.13.6, March 21, 1832. Henry Bower, Tuscarawas county, SW 32.13.6, Dec. 2, 1830. Jacob Bowers.Tuscarawas county, W14 NW 31.13.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Jacob Bowers, Ei/o NE 1.14.7, Nov. 1, 1830. John Bower, Jefferson county, NW 27.13.6, Jan. 20, 1809. John Bower, Harrison county, Ei^ NW 24.12.6, Aug. 10, 1827. John Bower, Harrison county, E14 SW 30.12.6, April 17, 1828. Madelena Bower, Tuscarawas county, W14 SE 26.13.6, Dec. 2, 1830. John Boyd, assignee of John Dixon, NE 25.12.7, Nov. 6, 1815. John Boyd, Jefferson county, NW 20.12.7, June 5, 1816. Samuel Boyd, Brooke county, Va., all 12.10.5, Sept. 8, 1806. Samuel Boyd, assignee of Zaccheus Beatty, SW 7.11.5, June 8, 1812. Jeremiah Bradley, Westmoreland county. Pa., SW 29.11.5, Aug. 19, 1824. John Branson, Stafford county, Va., SW 15.9.5, March 16, 1815. Rees Branson, Frederick county, Va., SW 27.9.5, Feb. 1, 1814. Bricker, see also Pricker. Anthony Bricker, assignee of Zaccheus Beatty, all 24.9.4, Aug. 18, 1804. George S. Brock, Belmont county, NW 5.10.6, July 8, 1818. 206 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Jesse Brock, Stafford county, Va., NW 27.9.5, Dec. 15, 1811. George Brokaw, Jefferson county, NE 15.9.5, June 8, 1812. James Brown, assignee of John Brown, NW 30.10.6, June 26, 1820. John Brown, assignee of David Custard, SE 7.12.5, July 29, 1819. John Brown, Jr., assignee of John Brown, NW 25.11.6, June 26, 1820. John Brown, Harrison county, Ei^. SE 33.12.7, Dec. 6, 1831. Michael Brown, Harrison county, W% NE 22.12.7, Sept. 1, 1823. William Brown, Brooke county, Va., all 13.9.4, Aug. 27, 1805. William Brown, Washington county, Pa., E^^. SW 15.12.5, Sept. 10, 1823. William Brown, Washington county, Pa., Ei/4 SE 29.11.5, April 2, 1829. William Brown, Harrison county, E^^ NW 27.12.7, Dec. 6, 1831. Ezekiel Orrick Bryan. Prince George county, Md., N% 28.10.6, July 2, 1814. Samuel Buchanan, Washington county. Pa., NW 11.11.5, May 8, 1806. Nathaniel Buck, Harrison county, SW 8.12.7, March 28, 1820. John Burkhead, Harrison county, NW 36.10.5, Aug. 26, 1815. Thomas Burkhead, Jefferson county, SW 17.10.5, July 30, 1812. Thomas Burkhead, Harrison county, NE 36.10.5, Aug. 19, 1824. William Burns, Harrison county, 'E1^ NW 30.12.6, July 1, 1831. Benjamin Burrows, Brooke county, Va., SW 36.10.6, May 5, 1821. Samuel Burrows, Harrison county, Wi,4 SW 4.11.7, Nov. 13, 1822. Joseph Burt, Washington county. Pa., SW 34.11.7, Nov. 26, 1819. Thomas Burton, Jefferson county, NE 5.11.6, Aug. 10, 1827. Abraham Busby, Baltimore county, Md., SW 35.10.4, Jan. 27, 1819. Abraham Busby, Harrison county, EVo SW 5.11.5, Sept. 15, 1823. Isaac Cadwalader, Fayette county. Pa., NE 6.11.7, Dec. 30, 1811. John Cadwallader, Jr., Tuscarawas county, SW 1.11.6, July 30, 1812. John Cadwallader, Fayette county. Pa., NE 12.11.7, March 16, 1814. John Cadwallader, Jr., Tuscarawas county, SE 12.11.7, March 16, 1814. John Cadwallader, Tuscai-awas county, SW 1.12.7, Aug. 4, 1814. Joseph Cadwallader, Harrison county, NE 2.12.7, Aug. 4, 1814. Griffith Cahill, assignee of George Bohrer, SE 33.10.5, March 9, 1815. Alexander Calderhead, Jefferson county. SE 3.8.4, April 15, 1812. William Calderhead, Jefferson county, NE 3.8.4, April 10, 1812. James Caldwell, St. Clairsville, NW 32.11.6, May 22, 1813. David Campbell, Washington county. Pa., SW 21.8.4, Oct. 9, 1812. James Campbell, Vv^estmoreland county. Pa., Wi/o SB 7.12.6, Feb. 20, 1827. John Campbell, Washington county, Pa., all 26.8.4, Feb. 26, 1808. Christian Knagy (Canaga), Somerset county Pa., SW 26.12.5, March 10, 1807. Christian Kanagy (Canaga), Somerset county. Pa., E^^ 26.12.5, Jan. 30, 1810. Christian Kanagy (Canaga), Jefferson county, NW 25.12.5, Oct. 1, 1811. Jacob Kanagy (Canaga), SW 32.12.5, March 10, 1807. Jacob Kanagy (Canaga), Jefferson county, NW 32.12.5, Nov. 1, 1811. Joshua Carens, Harrison county, WA NE 20.12.6, Dec. 2, 1830. Samuel Kernaghan (Carnahan), Jefferson county, all 6.10.5, Sept. 15, 1806. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 207 Samuel Kernaghan (Carnahan), Jefferson county, Northwest Territory, all 9. 10.5, Dec. 1, 1809. George Carothers, Washington county. Pa., SW 8.11.6, Dec. 30, 1811. George Carothers, Washington county, Pa., iiE 14.11.6, Aug. 26, 1815. George Carothers, Harrison county, SW 31.11.6, Sept. 10, 1S31. James Caruthers, Harrison county, NE SE 5.12.7, Nov. 18, 1833. Jesse Caruthers, Harrison county, EVo SE 6.12.7, Nov. 18, 1833. John Caruthers, Harrison county, NW SE 35.11.6, Nov. 18, 1833. Samuel Caruthers, Belmont county, NE 5.12.7, Aug. 10, 1827. Elizabeth Carr, Washington county, Pa., Wi/, SW 15.12.5, Sept. 15, 1823. Elizabeth Carr, Harrison county, W% SE 15.12.5, Nov. 1, 1830. James Carr, Jefferson county, Wi/o NW 27.12.7, Oct. 10, 1831. John Carson, Harrison county, NE 4.11.6, March 7, 1817. John Carson, Harrison county, WV2 NW 15.12.6, May 6, 1824. Evan Carter, Jefferson county, SE NW 26.12.7, Dec. 11, 1839. Henry Carter, Tuscarawas county, W14 NE 15.14.7, Dec. 10, 1827. Henry Carver, Jefferson county, SE 27.9-5, June 23, 1810. Henry Carver, Belmont county, SE 14.12.7, Aug. 19, 1812. Henry Carver, Harrison county, NE 13.12.7, May 29, 1818. Ninian Cash, Harrison county, EVo SE 21.11.6, Sept. 1, 182^. Alexander Cassil, V/ashington county. Pa., all 23.9.4, Sept. 10, 1806. Jchn Castell, Jr., Harrison county, SW 19.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Michael Castner, assignee of William R. Dickinson, NE 33.12.5, May 3, 1822. Michael Castner, Jefferson county, NW 27.12.5, Aug. 10, 1827. Wilson Cawood, Harrison county, NE 25.12.6, May 21, 1819. Hazle Cecil, Harrison county, SW 6.11.6, Oct. 21, 1816. John Cecil, SE 35.9.5, April 22, 1819. Joshua Cecil, assignee of John McMillan, SW 20.10.5, July 30. 1813. Sarah Chambers, Brooke county, Va., all 30.8.4, Feb. 18, 1806. Eli Chandler, Belmont county, SE 34.10.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Enoch Chandler, Belmont county, WV2 SW 34.10.6, Oct. 10, 1831. William Chauey, Harrison county, NE 9.14.7, Aug. 19, 1824. Daniel Chicken, Kent county, Del., NE 24.11.7, July 27, 1814. George Christy, Jefferson county, SW 19.11.5, July 30, 1812. Alexander Clark, Ohio, EVo NW 34.11.7, Jan. 22, 1822. Alexander Clarke, Harrison county, EVo SE 5.11.7, July 1, 1831. John Clark, Belmont county, assignee of James Stevens, NW 15.8.4, June 6, 1814. Joseph Clark, assignee of Richard Noble, Sr., all 18.9.4, Oct. 10, 1806. Robert Clark, Sr., assignee of Asa Engle, SE 30.10.6, Jan. 10, 1820. Robert Clarke, Jefferson county, W% NW 29.12.7, Oct. 24, 1826. Thomas and Mathew Clarke, Jefferson county, EV- NE 35.12.7, Oct. 24, 1826. Thomas Clarke and Matthew Clarke, Harrison county, SW 30.12.7, Sept. 10, 1834. 208 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Samuel Clifford, Brooke county, Va., SW 33.10.5, Oct. 10, 1815. Charles Cole, Jefferson county, EVo SW 18.10.4, May 30, 1826. John Coleman, Jefferson county, Northwest Territory, all 1.8.4, Feb. 1, 1810. John Coleman, Harrison county, W^a NW 28.11.G, April 2, 1829. William Coltrap, Jefferson county, NW 19.12.6, Nov. 1, 1818. Samuel Colvin, Washington county, Pa., NW 18.11.7, July 30, 1812. William Calvin, Fayette county, NE 3.12.7, June 24, 1815. William Colvin, Fayette county. Pa., NE 35.11.7, July 1, 1816. William Colvin, Fayette county, NE 32.12.7, March 7, 1817. William Compher, Harrison county, NE 22.10.6, March 7, 1818. Eli Conoway, Harrison county, EVo SW 34.11.5, Jan. 1, 1833. Michael Conoway, Harrison county, WI/2 SW 33.11.5, Nov. 1, 1830. James Conel, Jefferson county, SW 20.12.6, Nov. 21, 1820. Joseph Cook, Jefferson county, NW 23 and NE 29.11.7, March 7, 1818. Joseph Cook, Jefferson county, SW 23.11.7, Sept. 10, 1831. William John Cook, Harrison county, SE SW 17.11.7, Dec. 10, 1839. John Coope, assignee of Thomas Johnson, NE 21.9.4, Jan. 23, 1813. Caleb and Imla Cooper, Harrison county, NW 8.12.7, Aug. 4, 1814. Caleb Cooper, Harrison county, Wi/o SE 15 and Ei/o 15.12.7, June 23, 1827. John Cooper, Fayette county, Pa., SW 14.12.7, March 20, 1813. William and John Cooper, Jr., Harrison county, SW 9.12.7, Aug. 4, 1814. David Copeland, Jefferson county, W1/2 SE 23.12.6, Dec. 2, 1832. Jsmes Copeland, Ha-rrison county, NE 21.10.4, July 5, 1816. j£.mes Copeland, Jefferson county, Ei/1. NE 34.12.7, Nov. 1, 1850 (?). John Cousins, Jefferson county, NE SE 23.12.6, Sept. 10, 1834. Elijah Covington, Harrison county, NE NW 26.12.7, Jan. 1, 1833. Zebediah Cox, Jefferson county, S% 20.11.5, Nov. 1, 1810. Zebediah Cox, Jefferson county, NW 19.11.5, Jan. 1, 1811, Zebediah Cox, Jefferson county, SE 19.11.5, May 10, 1811. Zebediah Cox, Jefferson county, NW 1.11.6, Nov. 10, 1811. Cornelius and Gabriel Crabtree, Harrison county, SW 29.11.6, May 25. 1825. Peter Crabtree, Harrison county, SW 17.11.6, July 16, 1819. Thomas Crabtree, Jefferson county, NW 19.11.6, Aug. 19, 1812. John Craig, Washington county, Pa., all 29.9.4, Sept. 15, 1806. Stokely Craig, Greene county, Pa., W1/2 SE and E14 SW 35.12.7, Sept. 15, 1823. Walter Craig, Washington county. Pa., SE 27.12.6, Oct. 1, 1811. William Craig, Washington county. Pa., SW 27.12.6, Oct. 30, 1809. William Craig, Washington county. Pa., NE 33 and SW 34.12.6, Oct. 1, 1811. John Cramblit, .Jefferson county, SE 25.12.6, Dec. 9, 1819. John Cramblett, Jefferson county, Wi/o SW 22.12.6, Dec. 1. 1830. Robert Craven, asr.ignee of William Davis, SW 10.12.5. Dec. 22, 1819. Alexander Crawford, Brooke county, Va., NE 25.11.5, March 1, 1808. Alexander Crawford, assignee of John Henderson, SW 19.12.5, June 23, 1827. Edward Crawford, Brooke county, Va., NW 13.11.5, Sept. 7, 1812. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 209 John Crawford, Harrison county, W% NW 17.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Nathaniel Crawford, Jeiferson county, SW 5.10.6, Oct. 8, 1814. William Crawford, Belmont county, SE 29.9.5, Feb. 10, 1809. Joseph Creal, Steubenville, SW 27.12.5, Nov. 13, 1822. iValentine Creamer, Harrison county, NW 31.12.7, Jan. 15, 1814. Philip Creplever, Washington county, Pa., SW 8.13.6, Jan. 20, 1812. John Crom, Harrison county, SE 15.13.6, April 22, 1819. Robert Crosson, Harrison county, E% NW 20.11.5, Aug. 10, 1827. John Crumrine, Tuscarawas county, E% NE 2.14.7, Sept. 10, 1823. Jchn Crumrine, Tuscarawas county, Wi/o SW 1 and EVo SE 2.14.7, Dec. 2, 1830. Thomas Cummings, Tuscarawas county, E% NW 14.14.7, Oct. 10, 1831. Thomas Cummings, Tuscarawas county, W% SW 15.14.7, Dec. 6, 1831. Thomas Cummings, Tuscarawas county, W% SE 15.14.7, Nov. 12, 1832. Robert Cummings, assignee of William Henderson, NE 18.11.5, May 21, 1819. David Cunningham, assignee of James Dougherty, NW 36.9.5, Nov. 10, 1811. David Cunningham, Harrison county, NE 5.10.6, March 16, 1814. Samuel Curry, Westmoreland county. Pa., NW 28.11.5, April 27, 1821. John W. Curtis, Harrison county, EVo SW 24.11.6, Dec. 1, 1830. David Custard, Jefferson county, NE 7.12.5, Oct. 1, 1811. Emmanuel Custer, Allegany county, Md., NE 14.12.5, Oct. 7, 1812. George Custard, Fayette county. Pa., all 36.10.4, March 20, 1804. Jacob Custer, assignee of Emmanuel Custer, SE 14.12.5, Aug. 10, 1815. James Darrah, assignee of Archibald Jones, NE 18.11.6, April 17, 1820. Daniel David, assignee of Robert Thompson, SW 6.11.7, Jan. 30, 1816. Henry David, Harrison county, SE 17.11.7, Feb. 14, 1817. Henry David, assignee of Thomas Gray, SE 23.11.7, March 7, 1817. James David, Jefferson county, NE 23.11.6, Aug. 10, 1827. Jesse Davidson, Harrison county, E% NW 28.11.7, April 20, 1827. John Davidson, Allegany county, Md., SW 34.12.7, Aug. 19, 1824. John Davidson, Harrison county, E% NW 34.12.7, June 23, 1827. Lewis Davidson, Tuscarawas county, SE 29.11.7, Nov. 6, 1815. Lewis Davidson, Harrison county, W^/o NE 27.12.7, Nov. 12, 1832. Samuel Davidson, Allegany county, Md., SE 27.12.7, Aug. 4, 1814. Thomas Davidson, Allegany county, Md., NW 29.11.7, Nov. 13, 1822. Thomas Davidson, Harrison county, BV^ SW 29.11.7, Oct. 10, 1831. William Davis, Harrison county, W^^ SB 31.13.6, March 2, 1831. Samuel Dearmon, Columbia (?) county, Ey^ SE 22.12.7, Jan. 30, 1827. Philip Deleny, assignee of John Miller, all 9.10.4, Sept. 10, 1806. Abraham DeLong, Tuscarawas county, Ei/o SE 14.14.7, Dec. 2, 1830. William Denning, Jefferson county, NW 30.11.7, Nov. 2, 1829. James Derry, Harrison county, WV2 SW 7.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Jesse Desellems, Belmont county, NW 21.9.5, March 7, 1818. James Devore, Jefferson county, SE 9.11.5, Aug. 10, 1811. John Dover, Brooke county, Va., all 13.9.5, July 1, 1807. 14 210 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John Dewitt, Harrison county, WV. NE 26.11.6, March 20, 1828. Joshua Dickerson, assignee of Robert Latta, NE 19.10.5, Jan. 14, 1811. Thomas Dickerson, Fayette county, Pa., all 32.9.4, Sept. 10, 1806. John Dicks, assignee of Nathaniel Buck, Harrison county, SE 8.12.7, Aug. 10, 1824. John Dicks, Harrison county, W^ NW 24.12.7, March 10, 1825. Henry Dillin, Washington county. Pa., NE 2.11.5, Dec. 19, 1814. William Disart, Washington county. Pa., SE 15.8.4, Aug. 10, 1813. John Dixon, Allegany county, Md., NW 19.12.7, May 21, 1819. James Dodds, assignee of John Beall, SE 18.11.6, Feb. 20, 1827. James Donaghey, Allegheny county. Pa., NW 12.12.7, Feb. 28, 1821. James Donaghey, Allegheny county. Pa., NE 18.12.7, May 25, 1825. John Donaghey, Harrison county, Ei{. NW 18.12.7, April 20, 1827. James Dougherty, Washington county. Pa., W% NE 22.11.7, July 1, 1831. David Drake, Jefferson county, all 11.9.5, Oct. 1, 1806. Jefferson Drake, Washington county. Pa., WVo SW 29.11.7, April 2, 1829. Thomas Drummond, Jefferson county, SE 31.12.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Nathaniel Dunham, Harrison county, Ei/o SW 26.12.6, Oct. 2, 1821. William Dunham. Jefferson county, SE 26.12.6, May 10, 1820. Adam Dunlap, Fayette county, Pa., assignee of William R. Dickerson, SW 13. 10.5, Feb. 16, 1809. John Dunlap, Jefferson county, NW 23.9.5, April 20, 1812. Samuel Dunlap, Fayette county, Pa.. SE 20.10.5, Dec. 10, 1805. William Dunlap, assignee of Roger Toothaker, NW 19.10.5, Nov. 15, 1809. ■William Dunlap, Fayette county, Pa., SE 36.9.5, Oct. 8, 1818. Jeremiah Dutton, assignee of Jesse Clark, WVj SW 20.13.6, May 25, 1825. Daniel Easely, Halifax county, Va., SE 18.11.7, June 23, 1810. Daniel Easley, Halifax county, Va., NE 17.11.7, Dec. 15, 1810. Daniel Easley, Halifax county, Va., SE 19.12.7, Dec. 15, 1810. Daniel Easley, assignee of Berriman McLaughlin, NW 13.12.7, Aug. 30, 181 G. Daniel Easley, Harrison county, NW 11.11.7, March 7, 1818. Jacob Easterday, Jefferson county, NE 27.13.6, Aug. 10, 1811. James Edwards, Belmont county, E1/2 NE 26.11.6, Oct. 24, 1826. John Edwards, Tuscarawas county, Wi^ SW 7.14.7, May 20, 1826. Thomas Elder, assignee of James Edie, Wi/1> NE 20.11.5, May 25, 1825. Jonathan Ellis, Belmont county, all 3.9.5, Aug. 15, 1807. Theodore Ellis, Frederick county, Va., NW 33.9.5, Feb. 16, 1809. Theodore Ellis, assignee of Stacy Bevan, SW 33.9.5, June 1, 1815. Endsley, see also Insley. Andrew Andsley, assignee of Henry Hemery, SE 5.11.5, Dec. 23, 1811. David Endslay, Jefferson county, NE 4.11.5, Aug. 26, 1808. John Endsley, assignee of Isaac Osburn, SW 17.11.5, Aug. 22, 1810. James English, Harrison county, NE 12.12.6, Aug. 18, 1817. James English, Harrison county, EVo NW 5.12.6, June 23, 1827. II HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 211 James English, Harrison county, EVi; NW 12.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. El win, see also Irwin. Andrew Erwin, Harrison county, W'l/j SW 33.12.6, Oct. 10, 1831. Jcsmes Ervin, assignee of Philip Spiker, NW 31.12.6, May 25, 1825. Jane Erwin, Harrison county, WM; NW 14.12.6, Aug. 10, 1825. Joshua Erwin, assignee of Robert Irwin, W% SE 15.12.6, Aug. 10, 1827. Robert Erwin, Harrison county, SE NW 32.12.6, Nov. 18, 1833. Robert Erwin, Harrison county, NE NW 32.12.6, Sept. 10, 1834. Asher Evans, ^larrison county, WVo NE 15.12.7, Dec. 1, 1830. James Evans, Harrison county, EV2 S^ 5.12.6, Dec. 1, 1830. William Evans. Harrison county, W% SB 4.12.6, Dec. 2, 1832. John Everhardt, Harrison county, NW 1.12.5, Jan. 21, 1819. Jacob Fadley, Loudoun county, Va., NW 15.12.5, Aug. 19, 1818. Jonas Fagley, Jefferson county, Ohio, assignee of Josiah Wickersham, NW '^8, 9.5, June 19, 1813. Henry Ferguson, V/ashington county, Pa., all 3.10.4, June 6, 1806. Samuel Ferguson, Washington county. Pa.. SE 13.11.5, July 30, 1812. James Ferrell, Harrison county, EVj NW 15.11.5, April 5, 1S22. James Ferrell, Harrison county. Wi/4 NW 15.11.5, April 30, 1822. James Ferrell, Harrison county, EVo NE 22.11.5, April 20, 1825. James Ferrell, assignee of Robert Thompson, W1/2 NE 22.11.5, Aug. 10, 1827. Andrew Farrier, Jefferson county. NW 27.11.5, Oct. 5, 1808. Andrew Ferrier, assignee of Thomas Archbold, S'^ 23.11.5, April 20, 1812. Andrew Farrier, Harrison county, SB 26.11.5, Oct. 8, 1814. James Finney, Fayette county. Pa., all 27.9.4, Sept. 15, 1806. David Firebaugh, Harrison county, NE 20.13.6. Oct. 18, 1825. John Firebaugh, assignee of Elizabeth Forney, SE 14.13.6, June 8, 1812. John Firebough, Tuscarawas county, NE 13.13.6, Nov. 6, 1815. Heirs of Philip Firebaugh, dec'd, of Allegany county, Md., SW 33.12.5, Sept. 7, 1812. Philip Firebaugh, Somerset county. Pa., NW 14.13.6, Nov. 17, 1812. Philip Firebaugh, Tuscarawas county, SW 15.13.6, March 28, 1820. George Fisher, Washington county, Pa.. NW 10.11.5, Dec. 30, 1811. George Fisher, assignee of William Barnhill, Harrison county, NW 23.11.5, Aug. 19, 1824. George Fisher, Harrison county, W% SW 24.11.5, July 1, 1831. James Fisher, assignee of Samuel Osburn, NW 4.11.5, June 10, 1811. James Fisher, assignee of Samuel Osburn, SW 4.11.5, Dec. 30, 1811. James Fisher, Harrison county, SE 8.14.7, Sept. 1, 1819. James Fisher, Tuscarawas county, WVj SW 2.14.7, 15, 1823. James Fisher, Tuscarawas county, W% NE 7.14.7, May 30, 1826. James Fisher, Tuscarawas county, SB NE 8.14.7, Nov. 18, 1833. John Fisher, assignee of Dory Beall, W^^ NE 6.12.6, May 25, 1825. John Fisher, Harrison county, E% SW 6.12.6, July 1, 1831. \l 212 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John Fisher, Harrison county, WVo SE 1.13.6, Dec. 2, 1832. Thomas Fisher, Jefferson county, NE 29.11.5, June 5, 1816. John Fissal, Harrison county, E^/o NW 30.11.5, Jan. 10, 1820. Thomas Fitzgerald, Harrison county, SW SE 35.11.6, Dec. 8, 1835. Archibald Fletcher, Adams county, Pa., SW 21.10.4, July 30, 1813. Henry Ford, Harrison county, Ei/o NB 36.11.5, Nov. 1, 1830. Isaac Ford, assignee of Lewis Ford, Harrison county, NW 29.11.6, Nov. 13, 1822. James Ford, Brooke county, Va.. all 34.9.4, Oct. 5, 1808. James Ford, Harrison county, SE 36.10.6, June 5, 1816. John Ford, Harrison county, £% SE 35.11.6, Aug. 10. 1827. Lewis Ford, Fayette county. Pa., SW 5.11.6, Oct. 8, 1818. Stephen Ford and Peter Hesser, executors of Nicholas France, all 1.11.4, Aug. 1, 1807. Stephen Ford, assignee of John Cook, all 31.11.4, Oct. 1, 1811. Stephen Ford, assip:nee of John Schwartz, NW 31.12.5, Sept. 9, 1817. Thomas Ford, Harrison county, Ei/o SE 32.12.5, Nov. 1, 1830. John Fordyce, Tuscarawas county, E^t NW 33.12.7, Oct. 10, 1831. Samuel Fordyce. Fayette county. Pa., WVo NW 35.12.7, May 20, 1826. Vv^illiam Foreman, Harrison county, SE 17.10.4, Dec. 29, 1818. Nancy Forney, Westmoreland county. Pa., NW 7.13.6, Jan. 1, 1812. Peter Forney, Somerset county, Pa., NW 8.13.6, Sept. 21, 1810. Alexander Foster, assignee of Henry Ernes, NW 6.10, 4, March 30, 1815. Samuel Foster, Allegheny county. Pa., SW 29.9.5, Sept. 3, 1813. John Fowler, Harrison county, SE 36.11.5, March 7, 1818. John Fowler, Harrison county, W^o NW 23.12.6, May 20, 1826. John Fowler, Jr., V/Vs SE 30.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. John Fowler, Harrison county, Wi/o NE 20.12.6, July 1, 1831. France, see Stephen Ford, executor. George Fresh, Jefferson county, SE 21.8.4, April 15, 1813. John Fry, Jefferson county, NW 20.13.6, Aug. 10, 1813. John Fuller, assignee of Jacob Myers, all 10.8.4, April 5, 1806. John Fulton, Fayette county. Pa., all 35.9.4, Sept. 15, 1806. William Fulton, Harrison county, WVo SE 23.12.7, Aug. 10, 1825. William Fulton, assignee of Isaac Webb, EI2 SE 23.12.7, Aug. 25,1825. James McC. Galbrrrith. Cumberland county. Pa., NE 23.10.4, March 18, 1814. William Gallaher, Fayette county. Pa., NE 17.10.4, Feb. 20, 1S09. George Gamble, Tvrscarawas county, EVo SW and Wi/^ SE 9.14.7, Nov. 1, 1830. William Gamble, Jefferson county NE 3.14.7, May 21, 1819. William Gamble, Tuscarawas county, WVo SE 32.13.6, Nov. 1, 1830. William Gamble, Jr., assignee of William Gamble, WVo NW 33.13.6. Feb. 20, 1827. John Gardner, Washington county. Pa., E% 22.9.4, Nov. 1, 1810. John Gardner, Washington county. Pa., SW 22.10.4, May 15, 1811. John Gardner, Washington county, Pa., SE 22.10.4, Oct. 7, 1812. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 213 Mahlon Gardner and other heirs at law of Samuel Gardner, dec'd, NW 22.11.6, Nov. 10, 1827. Samuel Gardner, assignee of William Bush, NW 23.11.6. March 5, 1818. Samuel Gardner, Berkeley county, Va., SW 23.11.6, March 5, 1818. William Garmier, Greene county, Pa., SW 3.14.7, Aug. 25, 1S25. Hezekiah Garner, assignee of John Johnson, Sr., SW 28.11.6, Aug. 19, 1818. Casparus Garretsoa, Jefferson county, NB 23.11.7, March 18, 1814. Jacob Gatchel, Harrison county, SW 28.10.5, Jan. 27, 1819. Christian Geabeler, Harrison county, SW 2.12.5, Aug. 10, 1827. William Geary, Allegheny county, Pa., SW 20.11.6, May 10, 1820. William Gervis, Harrison county, W^/^ NE 23.11.5, April 5, 1822. David Gibson, Brooke county, Va., SW 17.10.4, Feb. 20, 1809. Joseph Gilbert, Harrison county, W14 NE 11.11.6, Nov. 1, 1830. John Gilchrist, Fayette county. Pa., SW 14.10.5, Jan. 1, 1811. Archibald Gilkison, assignee of James Steel, admr. of James Turbet, dec'd, NE 34.11.6, May 5, 1821. Joseph Gill, assignee of David Lupton, all 23.8.4. June 3, 1806. William Gillespie, .Jr., Jefferson county, SW 32.11.6, Aug. 3, 1818. Francis Gilmore, Jefferson county, NW 14.10.5, Dec. 29,1808. Francis Gilmore, Jefferson county, NE 19.11.5, Feb. 1, 1810. Francis Gilmore, Jefferson county, NE 25.10.5, Sept. 7, 1812. Gordon R. Gilmore, assignee of Nathaniel Gilmer, Harrison county, E14 S"W 29.12.7. Aug. 19, 1824. John Gilmore, New York, SW 13.12.7, Jan. 1, 1810. Nathaniel Gillmor, assignee of James Wright, SE 24.12.7, Jan. 1, 1811. Nathaniel Gilmer, assignee of James Wright, assignee of David Moody, E^l. NE 17.12.7, Aug. 19, 1824. Samuel Gilmore, V/ashington county. Pa., all 3.10.5, Feb. 10, 1807. Robert Given, assignee of James Boyd, SW 10.12.6, April 10, 1827. Mathias Glass, Tuscarawas county, SW NW 9.14.7, Jan. 1, 1833. Mathias Glass, Harrison county, NW NW 9.14.7, April 1, 1837. Peter Goodman, Washington county, Pa., WV, NW 22 11.7, Sept. 1. 1823. John Gordon. Washington county, Pa., WV2 SE 29.11.5, Oct. 6, 1826. Thomas Gordon, assignee of Robert Guttray, SW 25.10.5, Oct. 1, 1811. John Gutschall, Cumberland county. Pa., SW 6.11.5, July 5, 1819. Jonas Gotshall, Perry county. Pa., NW 21.12.5, Sept. 25, 1823. .Joseph Gotshall, Harrison county, NE 15.12.5, Sept. 20, 1823. Margaret Gotschall, Harrison county, NE 12.10.4, June 23, 1827. Nicholas Gutshall, Washington county. Pa., all 17.11.4, May 8, 1806. Francis Grace, Harrison county, WV. SW 11.12.6, Oct. 20, 1824. J'rancis Grace, Harrison county, BVo SE 17.12.6, Dec. 1, 1830. Francis Grace, Harrison county, SE NW 11.12.6, Jan. 1, 1833. John Grace, Harrison county, WV2 SE 36.12.6, April 2. 1829. John Grace, Harrison county, E^/j SE 36.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. I 214 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY William Gracey, Jefferson county, NW 32.12.7, Dec. 29, 1818. I]benezer Atherton Gray, Harrison county, Wy^ SB 34.12.7, Sept. 10, 1834. Henry Green, Harrison county, BV2 NE 27.12.6, April 20, 1827. Abraham Grein, assignee of Jesse Edgington, NW 23.10.4, May 5, 1820 (can- celled). Jonathan Grewell, Harrison county, W% SW 27.12.7, Dec. 6, 1831. Moses Griffin, Belmont county, NE 26.9.5, Aug. 15, 1808. William Griffith, Harrison county, Wi/o SW 6.12.7, Nov. 1, 1830. Abraham Grim, assignee of Jesse Edgington, NW 23.10.4, Feb. 21, 1821. William Grimes, assignee of Alexander Millikan, NW 15.10.5, July 30, 1813. William Grist and William Philips, assignee of Benjamin Stanton, SW 9.11.6, Dec. 1, 1809. Abraham Grove, Greene county. Pa., W% NE 35.12.7, May 6, 1824. John L. Grubb, Brooke county, Va., SE 24.11.7, May 25, 1825. Benjamin Gudgeon, Harrison county, SE 4.11.7, Oct. 8, 1818. Joseph Gundy, Somerset county. Pa., NE 14.13.6, Jan. 10, 1812. Joseph Gunty, Harrison county, SW 14.13.6, July 10, 1817. Joseph Gundy, Harrison county, W^ NW 1.13.G, May 20, 1826. Josiah Guttry, Harrison county, SE SE — 12.7, Nov. 18, 1833. Robert Guttrj% Jefferson county, NW 35.9.5, Aug. 4, 1814. William Guttery and Matthew Templeton, assignees of Thomas Henderson Sy2 30.9.5, Oct. 10, 1815. Elisha Guyton, Tuscarawas county, E^^ NE 4.12.7, Oct. 6, 1826. Elisha Guyton, Tuscarawas county, EVa NW 34.11.6, Oct. 6, 1826. Hu^h Gwynn, Jefferson county, SW 22.9.4, Aug. 6, 1813. j Abraham Hagey, Franklin county. Pa.. SW 3.12.5, July 5, 1816. 1 Isaac Haines, Jefferson county, SE 4.11.6, July 30, 1812. j Jesse Haines, assignee of Thomas Barrett, NE 27.10.5, Oct. 1, 1811. I Samuel and Israel Haynes, and other heirs of John Haynes, NW 10.11.7, Noi , ! 2, 1829. i Thomas Haines, assignee of David Barrett, NW 9.11.6, March 10, 1807. j Isabella Haggerty, Jefferson county, SW 3.11.5, May 10, 1811. John Hamble, Jefferson county, SW 12.11.6, Feb. 17, 1820. William Hamilton, assignee of Samuel Pickering, NE 32.9.5, Aug. 15, 1811. Fiet Handel, Jefferson county, WV2 SW 18.10.4, Oct. 20, 1824. Robert Hanlin, Jefferson county, Wy^ SW 12.12.6, Jan. 1. 1833. James Hanna, Washington county. Pa., Sy^ 29.10.4, March 1, 1810. Robert Ilanna, assignee of Charles Wilson, NW 28.10.4, Oct. 8, 1814. Samuel Hanna, Washington county, Pa., all 10.9.5, Aug. 27, 1805. Samuel Hanna, Washington county. Pa., all 24.8.4, Sept. 15, 1806. John Harding, Harrison county, SE 28.12.6, Dec. 1, 1830. Jacob Harman, Harrison county, Ey^ NW 3.13.6, April 2, 1829, Michael Ilarmon, Harrison county, NW 21.13.6, May 29, 1818. Michael Harmon, Harrison county, SE 21.13.6, Jan. 27, 1819. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 215 Michael Harmon and Joseph Bartholomew, Tuscarawas county, NW 26.13.6 May 25. 1825. George Harrimon. Washington county. Pa., NE 14.11.5, May 15, 1811. Jeremiah Harris, Jefferson county, SW 31.9.5, July 10, 1821. Joseph Harris, Harrison county, WVs SW 3.12.7, Nov. 13, 1822. John Harrison, Steubenville, Wi/^ SE 33.12.5, Aug. 19, 1824. Joseph Harrison, Harrison county, EVij SE 33.12.5, Aug. 10, 1828. George Hartford. Brooke covmty, Va., NE 6.10.4, Feb. 1, 1809. James Harvey, Jefferson county, SE 18.10.6, Feb. 14, 1817. William Hatfield, Belmont county, SE 5.11.6, Sept. 1, 1819. (Abraham Havmer, Chester county. Pa., SE 26.9.5, April 5, 1806. John Haverfield, Harrison county, SE 22.10.5, March 7, 1817. Joseph Haverfield. Harrison county, NW 22.10.5, May 20, 1817. David Hazen, assignee of John Bower, SW 32.12.7, Feb. 14, 1817. James Hazlett, Fayette county. Pa., NW 18.10.4, Jan. 20, 1812. James Hazlett, Jefferson county, WV2 NE 18.10.4, Sept. 25, 1823. Thomas Hazlett, Steubenville, NW 6.11.6, Feb. 14, 1817. John Histand, Somerset county, Pa., SE 20.13.6, Aug. 10, 1827. John Heastand, Tuscarawas county, WVo NE 19.13.6,^ July 1, 1831. Edward Heath, Jefferson county, Ei/. NW 21.12.6, April 30, 1822. Edward Heath, Jefferson county, WI/2 NW 21.12.6, Sept. 10, 1823. Adam Tleavilin, Harrison county, W^A SE 2.12.6, Aug. 19, 1827. Samuel Heavilin, Jefferson county Pa. (?), NE 30.10.5, Jan. 1, 1812. Spmuel Heavilin, Harrison county, SE 25.11.5, Jan. 27, 1819. Samuel Hedges, assignee of John Caldwell, who was assignee of Robert Mc- Laughlin, admr. of James McLaughlin, dec'd, SW 30.10.5, May 15, 1822. Fielding Hefling, Harrison county, EV> SW 6.12.7, Nov. 1, 1830. John Hefling, Belmont county, NW 6.12.7, March 2, 1821. John Hefling, Belmont county, NE 12.12.7, Aug. 19, 1824. Henry Heisler, Northumberland county. Pa., all 9.11.4, Feb. 17, 1806. Charles Henderson, assignee of Gavin Allison, SB 10.10.6, . John Henderson, assignee of John Yoimg, all 27.8.4. June 6, 1806. William Henderson, Jefferson county, NE 17.10.5, April 10, 1812. William Henderson, Harrison county, SW 3.13.6, Aug. 10, 1827. Andrew Hendricks, Allegany county, Md., NE 35.10.4, Dec. 12, 1812. Andrew Hendricks, Harrison county, NW 3.12.5, Aug. 4, 1814. Andrew Hendricks, Harrison county, NW 12.11.5, Oct. 8. 1814. Andrew Hendricks, Harrison county, W^o NE 12.11.5, Aug. 25, 1825. Emanuel Hendricks, Harrison county, Ey^ NE 32.12.5, Dec. 10, 1827. Jacob Hendricks, Harrison county, NE 3.12.5, Aug. 4, 1814. Jacob Hendricks, Harrison county, SE 19.12.5, May 21, 1819. Jacob Hendricks, Harrison county, W/j NE 32.12.5, Dec. 10, 1827. John Hendricks, Somerset county, Pa., NE 21.11.4, March 20, 1813. 216 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John Hendricks, Somerset county, Pa., SB 20.12.5, Oct. 25, 1813. John Hendricks, Sr., assignee of Timothy Spencer, Jr., SW 13.12.5, Aug. 19, 1818. Joseph Hendricks, Somerset county. Pa., NE 20.12.5, March 20, 1813. Henry Hemry, Harrison county, NW 32.10.4, March 30, 1815. James Henry, Westmoreland county. Pa., SW 11.11.5 and SE 32.11.5, Sept. 1, 1819. Robert Henry, Westmoreland county, Pa., NW 4.12.6, April 27, 1821. Vv^illiam Henry, assignee of Anthony Sell, Harrison county, SE 13.12.5, Nov. 13, 1822. Heirs of Christian Herr, SE 8.13.6, June 10, 1811. James Hicks, assignee of William Newsam, NE 2.12.5, July 25, 1820. Thomas Hidey, W14 NE 21.12.5, Nov. 1, 1830. Anthony Hiller, Greene county, Pa., EV2 SE 32.13.6, Dec. 1, 1829. Jchp Hines, Harrison county, SW 36.10.5, Aug. 19, 1824. Joseph Hines, Harrison county, WI/2 SE 30.11.6, Nov 1, 1830. James Hoagland, Jefferson county, Pa., NE 33.11.5, Oct. 1, 1811. James Hoagland, Harrison county, E% SE 33.11.5, Oct. 10, 1831. Thomas Hougland, Harrison county, E% SE 7.12.6, April 2, 1829. Francis Hobson, assignee of Joseph Pugh, SE 11.11.6, Jan. 20, 1817. Mary Hoff, Harrison county, W% SW 19.13.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Richard Hoff, Harrison county, EVo SE 26.13.6, April 8, 1828. Robert Hogge, Washington county. Pa., SE 26.12.7, Jan. 21, 1819. William Hogg, Fayette county. Pa., all 11.9.4, Nov. 27. 1804. John Hollet, Jefferson county, SE 11.11.7, March 5, 1818. John Hollett, Jefferson county, W14 SW 5.11.7, May 11, 1824. Robert Holliday, Jefferson county. NE 30.11.7, Jan. 20, 1817. David Hollingsworth, EVa NW 5.12.7, April 20, 1827. Aaron Holloway, Stafford county, Va., NW 32.9. 5, Jan. 2, 1810. Asa Holloway, Sr., Belmont county, NE 27.9.5, Jan. 20, 1812. Daniel Holloway, Belmont county, SW 11.12.7, Feb. 14, 1817. Jacob Holloway, assignee of Horton Howard and Isaac Parker, S^^ 21.9.5, July 16, 1819. Jacob Holloway, Belmont county, Ei^ 22.9.5, April 20, 1825. Jacob Holloway, assignee of Horton Howard, NE 21.9.5, Feb. 6, 1826. James Holloway, Harrison county, W14 NW 5.12.7, June 23, 1826. Jonas Halloway, Harrison coimty, W% SW 5.12.7, Dec. 2, 1830. Jonas Holloway. Harrison county, EVo NE 10.12.7, Dec. 6, 1831. .Joseph Holloway, Belmont county, SE 23.9.5, Nov. 15, 1810. Robert Holloway, assignee of John Porter, NW ri.9.5, March 2, 1821. Francis Holmes, Jefferson county, SW 11.10.4, Oct. 1, 1811. Heirs of Isaac Holmes, dec'd, assignees of Daniel McMillan, W14 SW 14.14.7, Oct. 18, 1826. Joseph Holmes, Jefferson county. Northwest Tenltory, all 25.9.4, Jan. 22, 1806. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 217 John Hoobley, Harrison county, E^^ SE 27.12.5, Nov. 2, 1829. Ellis Hoopes, Jefferson county, SE 15.9.4, Oct. 7, 1812. Nathan Hoopes, Jefferson county, NW 15.9.4, Dec. 4, 1809. John Hoover, Jefferson county, Ei/o NW 35.12.6, March 2, 1831. Horton Howard, assignee of James Pollock, NW 15.9.5, Aug. 26, 1815. Abel Howell, Belmont county, SW 23.9.5, May 12, 1815. Abel Howell, Belmont county, Ei/o SE 17.10.6, Oct. 10, 1831. John Howell, Belmont county, SE 25.9.5, Jan. 20, 1812. 6eth Howell, Pittsburgh, SE 29.10.6, Dec. 9, 1819. Benjamin Howse, Jefferson county, SE 6.11.6, April 22, 1819. Francis House, Jefferson county, SE 32.10.5, Dec. 26, 1815. William House, Harrison county, EVs SE 20.12.6, Dec. 2, 1830. Benjamin Hudson, Harrison county, E14 NW 24.11.7, Aug. 19, 1824. Eli Hudson, Harrison county, Wi/o NW 24.11.7, April 2, 1829. Jesse Huff, Jefferson county, NW 14.12.7, Dec. 15, 1811. John Huff, Jefferson county, NE 20.12.7, Nov. 17, 1812. Joseph Huff, Jefferson county, all 36.8.4, Sept. 10, 1806. William Huff, Jefferson county, SE 4.12.7, Feb. 1, 1810. James Huntsman, Belmont county, WV2 NE 10.12.7, Nov. 12, 1832. William Humphreys, Harrison county, BYs SE 4.12.6, Dec. 1, 1830. William Humphreys, Harison county, Wy^ SW 34.11.5, Dec. 1, 1830. Isaac Herless, Harrison county, Ei/o NE 18.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Samuel Hurleass, Harrison county, EU SW 18.12.6, Oct. 10, 1831. Samuel Harless, Harrison county, NW SE 18.12.6, Sept. 10, 1834. Robert Hurton, Ohio county, Va., NW 17.10.6, Aug. 10, 1811. John Hutchinson, York county. Pa., NW 3.8.4, June 7, 1808. Samuel Hutchinson, Chester county. Pa., NE 13.10.5, June 23, 1810. Heirs of Samuel Hutchinson, Chester county. Pa., NE 13.10.5, Feb. 28, 1816. William Hutchinson, Jefferson county, SW 3.8.4, Jan. 20, 1812. Samuel Hyde, Harrison county, Ei/^ NW 31.13.6, Sept. 15, 1823. Robert Innis, Westmoreland county. Pa., SE 28.9.5, Nov. 16, 1812. Insley, see also Endlsey. Micajah Insley, assignee of William Sherron, EVa SE 19.12.6, Aug, 10, 1827. Micajah Insley, Stark county, Ohio, WV2 SE 19.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. James Irons, Allegany county, Md., NE 29.12.7, Feb. 17, 1820. Thomas Irons, Allegany county, Md., SE 28.12.7, May 25, 1825. Thomas Irons, Harrison county, EVs SE 28.12.7, Nov. 1, 1830. Irwin, see also Erwin. Robert Irwin, SW 31.12.6, Sept. 19, 1817. Joseph Janney, Loudoun county, Va., all 2.9.5, Aug. 27, 1805. John Jeffries, Harrison county, WV2 NW 19.13.6, April 2, 1829. Catherine Jeffries, Harrison county, E% NW 19.13.6, April 2, 1829. Michael Jenkins, Hampshire county, Va., all 20.8.4, Oct. 10, 1806. Michael Jenkins, Belmont county, all 19.9.5, July 30, 1812. 218 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Jonathan Jessop, assignee of Josiah Updegraff, all 31.9.4, April 30, 1806. Amon Shannon Johnson, Harrison county, NE NE 29.11.5, Dec. 8, 1835. AndreAV Johnson. Harrison connty, Ei/. NE 15.12.6. April 2, 1829. Benjamin Johnson, Allegany county, Md., SW 10.11.6, May 23, 1810. Benjamin Johnson, Brooke county, Va., NW 27.12.6, April 20, 1812. Benjamin Johnson, Brooke county, Va., Wi^ NE 27.12.6, Aug. 10, 1827. Derrick Johnson, Jefferson county, SB 31.11.6, March 18, 1814. Elijah Johnson, Harrison county, Wi/1> SW 21.11.6, Sept. 1, 1823. Enoch Johnson, in his own right, and assignee of Benjamin Johnson, NW 10. 11.6, Aug. 25, 1825. Henry Johnson, Allegheny county, NE 24.10.6, June 8, 1812. Isaac Johnson, assignee of Abel Johnson, Brooke county, Va., NW 34.12.6, Oct. 7, 1812. James Johnson, Sr., Tuscarawas county. NW 23.12.7, June 1, 1815. Joel Johnson, Brooke county, Va., SW 28.12.6, April 10, 1812. John Johnson, assignee of Samuel Dannell, all 29.8.4, Aug. 27, 1807. John Johnson, Jefferson county, NW 27.11.6, May 23, 1810. John Johnson, Sr., Harrison county, SW 30.11.0. Oct. 3, 1816. John P. Johnson, Harrison county, SW 25.12.6, May 21, 1819. John Johnson, Tuscarawas county, WVL- NE 31.13.6, Dec. 10, 1827. Joseph Johnson, Brooke county, Va., NW 28.12.6, Dec. 25, 1811. Joseph and Lemuel Johnson, Tuscarawas county, SE 24.10.6, Aug. 19, 1812. Joseph Johnson, Steubenville, NE 28.12.6, Mai-ch 7, 1817. Joseph Johnson, Harrison county, NE 34.12.6, Aug. 3, 1818. Joseph Johnson, assignee of Abraham Lance, NE 30.10.6, May 21, 1819. Joseph Johnston, Harrison county, SE 24.11.5, Sept. 1, 1819. Josiah Johnson. Harrison county, SW 29.12.6, Nov. 2, 1829. Nathan Johnson, Jefferson county, NW 11.10.4, April 10, 1812. Nathan Johnson, Harrison county, NW 30.11.6, May 21, 1819. Nimrod Johnson, E^y SE 33.12.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Samuel R. Johnston, Steubenville, SE and SW 20.12.6, Oct. 20, 1824. Thomas Johnson, Tuscarawas county, WU NE 30.11.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Thomas Johnson, Harrison coimty, WVo NE 15.12.6, Oct. 10, 1831. William Johnson, Allegany county, Md., NW 18.10.6, May 23, 1810. William Johnson, assignee of Joel Johnson, SE 34.12.6, Jan. 1, 1812. William Johnson (of James) Jefferson county, NE 23.12.7, July 30, 1812. William Johnson. Harrison county, E14 NE 35.9.5, May 25, 1825. Malachi Jolly, Harrison county, Ei.^ SE 1.13.6, Oct. 10, 1831. Edward Jones, Harrison county, NW 30.10.5, July 29, 1819. Elijah .Tones, assigiiee of Richard McKibben, Belmont county, SW 17.10.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Henry Jones, Harrison county, E'l^ NW 1.13.6, Dec. 1, 1830. Isaac Jones, Harrison coimty, EV2 NE 15.12.7, May 20, 1826. John Jones, Harrison county, Ei4 SW 11.11.6, Aug. 19, 1824. I I i HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 219 John Jones, Harrison countj-, W14 SW 36.12.7, May 20, 1826. John Jones. Harrison county, W^/j NW 30.12.7, April 2, 1829. William Jones, Belmont county, W14 NE 35.9.5, April 20, 1825. William Jones, Belmont county, Wy, SE 17.10.6, April 20, 1825. Zachariah Jones and James Hutson, Harrison county, SE 28.10.6, June 20, 1820. Samuel Jumpes, Jefferson county, SW 24.9.5, Nov. 17, 1812. Jacob Kail, Harrison county, WVo SE 18.10.4, Dec. 2, 1830, Peter Kail, JeiTerson county, NW 18.11.5, May 23, 1810. Peter Kail, Jefferson county, SE 18.11.5, Oct. 7, 1813. John Karr, Harrison county, E^. NE 23.11.5, Aug. 19, 1824. James Keep, Allegheny county, Pa., NW 2.12.5, Aug. 19. 1824. Benjamin Keeran, H:arrison county, E14 NE 32.11.6, Oct. 20, 1824. Joseph Keiser, Harrison county. NE 2.13.6, Sept. 3, 1813. Thomas Kells. Steubenville, NW 26.11.5, Aug. 3, 1818. James Kelly, Washington county, Ohio (?), all 3.11.4, Feb. 1, 1809. Robert Kelly, Brooke county, Va., NE 29.10.4, Nov. 10, 1811. William Kelly, Brooke county. Va., SE 23.10.4, Jan. 20. 1812. Amanda Kemp, Harrison county, Wi^ SW 5.11.5, March 10, 1825. Citizen James Kennedy, Harrison county. Ei/4 NE 30.11.6. Dec. 1, 1830. John Kennedy, Washington county. Pa., NW 6.10.6, Dec. 15, 1811. Matthew Kennedy, Harrison county, NW 13.11.6, March 7, 1817. Matthew Kennedy, Harrison county, SW 13.11.6, Nov. 2, 1829. Absalom Kent, Fayette county. Pa., all 1.12.6, Aug. 27. 1805. Absalom Kent, Jefferson county, N^/. 24.10.5, Aug. 27, 1805. Absalom Kent, Jefferson county, SE 29.10.5, Aug. 27, 1805. Absalom Kent, Fayette county, Pa., all 31.11.5, Feb. 1, 1809. Absalom Kent, Jefferson county. SE 9.12.6, Dec. 25, 1811. Absalom Kent, Jefferson county, NE 7.12.6, Jan. 20, 1812. Absalom Kent, Harrison county, SW 32.12.6, Jan. 21, 1819. Absalom Kent, Sr., assignee of James Darrow, SW 18.12.7, Aug. 10, 1827, Joseph Kent, Washington county. Pa., all 27.10.4, July 14, 1806. William Kent, Harrison county, EVo NE 36.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. James Kerr, assignee of Zaccheus A. Beatty, all 8.9.4, Feb. 1, 1810. Josiah Kidwell, assignee of Leonard Barnes, NE 1.11.6, March 28, 1820. John Kiggen, assignee of Zaccheus A. Beatty, NE 34.10.6, Jan. 26, 1809. James Kimble, Pennsylvania, WV> SW 22.11.6, Jan. 26, 1822. Adam Kimmel and Jacob Turney, Harrison county, SE 2.12.5, April 15, 1813. Adam Kimel, Harrison county, NE 1.12.5, July 1, 1816. John Kimel, Jefferson county, SW 20.12.5, March 16. 1814. John Kimel, Harrison county, NW 19.12.5, July 1, 1816. John Kimel, Jefferson county, SW 7.12.5, July 1, 1816. John Kimmel, Harrison county, E% NE 25.12.5, Nov. 1, 1830. Leonard Kimel, Sr., NW 20.12.5. July 1. 1816. William King, Harrison county, E^^ NE 22.12.6, May 6, 1824. 220 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY William King, York county, Pa., Ei/4 NW 8.14.7, Aug. 12, 1826. Christopher Kinsey, Harrison county, SE 2.12.7, July 16, 1819. Richard Kinsey, assignee of Daniel Johnson, NW 6.11.7, June 5, 1816. Stephen Kinsey, Jefferson county, NE 33.9.5, Jan. 20, 1812. Benjamin Kirk, Belmont county, SB 15.9.5, Dec. 22, 1812. Hugh Kirkpatrick, assignee of John Wallace, of Ohio, NW 25.10.5, March T, 1818. Israel R. Kirkpatrick, assignee of Jesse Updegraff, who was assignee of Daniel Hoobler, B^A NE 27.12.5, Aug. 25, 1825. (Israel Kirkpatrick, Harrison county, Ei^ SW 24.11.5, April 2, 1831. George Kitt, Harrison county, NE 35.12.6, April 8, 1828. John Knight, Jefferson county, NE 18.10.6, Oct. 7, 1812. John Knight, Tuscarawas county, NW 3.11.6, March 16, 1815. Heirs of John Knight, dec'd, Tuscarawas county, SW 18.10.6, Sept. 19, 1817. John Knight, Harrison county, Ei^ NW 28.11.6, April 2, 1829. Samuel Knight, Somerset county, Pa., all 7.10.5, Dec. 20, 1808. Jacob Kuhn, Washington county. Pa., all 14.8.4, Aug. 27, 1805. Benjamin W. Ladd and Henry Crew, in trust for the use of certain persons of color, emancipated, Ei^ NE 21.12.6, Jan. 26, 1822. Benjamin W. Ladd, BVs NW 22.12.6, April 2, 1829. Edward Laferty, Washington county. Pa., NE 10.10.6, Jan. 1, 1810. Samuel Lafferty, Washington county, Pa., SW 10.10.6, Oct. 8, 1814. Samuel Laffarty, Harrison county, NW 10.10.6, Jan. 27, 1819. Jonathan Lazer, Harrison county, NW 8.11.6, May 25, 1825. William Laizure, Harrison county, W% SW 11.11.6, Nov. 1, 1830. John M. Lakin, Bedford county, Pa., WYn SE 22.12.7, Feb. 20, 1827. Thomas Lakin, Sr., Bedford county. Pa., SW 36.11.7, March 7, 1818. Thomas Lakin, Jr., Bedford county. Pa., NW 36.11.7, Jan. 10, 1820. Thomas Lakin, Sr., Harison county, E% SW 22.12.7, Feb. 20, 1827. Isaac Lamasters, Harrison county, SE 11.11.5, March 20, 1813. John Lamb, assignee of John Williams, NW 11.10.6, Sept. 10, 1806. John Lamb, assignee of John Williams, SW 12.10.6, June 1, 1810. John Lance, Jefferson county, SW 19.11.6, Dec. 12, 1815. Peter John Lance, assignee of Thomas Johnson, NW 24.10.6, Dec. 14, 1812. Matthew Lane, Harrison county, NE SW 22.12.6, Jan. 1, 1833. Adam Lauver, Tuscarawas county, E1/2 NW 33.13.6, Oct. 20, 1824. John Lavely, assignee of Robert Laughlin, NW 29.10.5, May 25, 1825. John Law, Harison county, WVo SW 25.13.6, Dec, 2, 1830. John Law, Harrison county, Ei/i SW 25.13.6, Dec. 2, 1830. John Law, Harrison county, Ei-^ SE 31.13.6, Dec. 2, 1830. John Law, Harrison county, Ei^ NE 31.] 3.6, Dec. 2, 1830. Matthew Law, Harrison county, W% SE 34.11.5, July 30, 1828. Matthew Law, Harrison county, W^^ NE 22.12.6, Oct. 10, 1831. James Leeper, assignee of Henry Dillin, E% 3.11.5, Oct. 3, 1816. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 221 John Leeper, Harrisoh county, NW 10.12.6, May 6, 1824. Jacob Lemmon, Pickaway county, NW 7.12.7, May 5, 1821. Samuel Leonard, V/ashington county. Pa., W^^ SW 22.11.7, May 6, 1824. Abraham Leeport, Harrison county, EVa NW 14.12.6, Nov. 13, 1822. George Leporth, Jefferson county, all 18.10.5, May 8, 1806. George Leporth, Jefferson county, NE 14.12.6, June 8, 1812. Job Lewis, Belmont county, NE 28.9.5, July 12, 1811. William Linsley, Jefferson county, Wi/a SW 21.12.6, Sept. 10, 1823. Amasa Lipsey, assignee of John Cadwalader, SW 12.11.7, Dec. 15, 1812. George Lisator, Steubenville, assignee of Charles Wilson, SW 30.11.7, March 7, 1818. William Lisle, Jefferson county, NW 8.11.5, Jan. 13, 1811. John Liston, Harrison county, E^^ NW 26.12.5, Dec. 2, 1830. Heirs of Adam Little, Allegany county, Md., EVo NW 15.13.6, Aug. 10, 1827. Samuel Little, assignee of Nathaniel Gillmer, SW 12.12.7, May 5, 1821. Abel Lloyd, Jefferson county, NE 2.11.6, July 1, 1816. John Loney, Jefferson county, NE 30.9.5, July 30, 1812. Adam Long, Westmoreland county. Pa., SW 34.11.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Charles Long, Washington county, Pa., SW 9.14.7, Sept. 10, 1834. Esther Long, Washington county. Pa., NW 9.13.6, March 2, 1821. Jacob Long, Westmoreland county, Pa., NW 36.10.6, Aug. 30, 1816. Jacob Long, Westmoreland county. Pa., Ei4 1.12.7, July 25, 1820. Jacob Long, Westmoreland county, Pa., SE 10.127, May 25, 1825. Jacob Long, Westmoreland county. Pa., SW 36.11.6, Feb. 20, 1827. Samuel Long. Harrison county, W^^ SW 12.11.5, May 12, 1S28. Jonathan Longshore, Greene county, Pa., SW 25.12.7, Sept. 9, 1817. Robert Longshore, Greene county. Pa., Ey, SW 27.12.7, Nov. 13, 1822. Solomon Longworth, assignee of Elisha Nelson, NW 18.11.6, Nov. 26, 1820. Edward Laughridge, Jefferson county, SE 12.12.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Edward Laughridge, Harrison county, E^^ SW 12.12.6, Aug. 10, 1828. Edward Loughridge, Jefferson county, WMi NE 17.12.6, April 2, 1829. James Laughridge, Harrison county, W^o NW 3.13.6, Nov. 1. 1830. Joseph Loughridge, Harrison county, NW 5.12.6, Dec. 10, 1839. Matthew Loughridge, Harrison county, W% SW 6.12.6, July 20, 1828. William Loughridge, Harrison county, E^^ SE 18.12.6, July 1, 1831. George Love, Jefferson county, SW 15.8.4, Oct. 25, 1813. James Lowery, assignee of Peter Crabtree, of Harison county, W'/^ SE 23.11.6, Nov. 13, 1822. John Lawrey, Cadiz, SE 17.11.6, Feb. 17, 1820. James Lyon, Guernsey county, BV2 NE 32.11.5, arch 21, 1832. John Lyons, assignee of Jacob Rymor and Aaron Morris, NE 9.12.7, May 25, 1825. George McAdams. Harrison county, SW 6.10.6, June 1, 1815. John McAdams, Washington county. Pa., NW 24.9.5, Nov. 1, 1811. 222 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John McBeath. Harrison county, Wir. NW 25.13.6. April 2, 1831. William McBeath, Harrison county, W1/3 SW 30.12.6, July 1. 1831. James McBride, Washington county. Pa., SW 21.9.4, July 1, 1809. James McBride, Washington county. Pa., NW 21.9.4, Dec. 23, 1815. Alexander McCall, Washington county. Pa., all 33.8.4, Jan. 26, 1809. William McCarroll, Harrison county, EV. SW 11.12.6, Jan. 1, 1S33. Joseph McClain, Westmoreland county. Pa., NE 17.11.5, June 8, 1812. Joseph McClean, Westmoreland county. Pa., SE 25.12.5, Jan. 15. 1814. Joseph McClean, Westmoreland county. Pa., S^/o 30.11.5, June 26, 1815. William McClean, Washington county, Pa., NE 7.13.6, Feb. 14, 1817. John McClery, Jefferson county, assignee of Isaac Osburn, SE 21.10.4, Jan. 15. 1814. John McClintock, E^o SE 30.12.6, Dec. 2, 1830. Kerr McClintock, assignee of Robert McClintock, SW 3.12.6, Aug. 10, 1827. Noble W. McClintock, Steubenville, KU SW and Wio SE 33.11.5, Aug. 10, 1825. John McCollum, Harrison county, W^^ NW 8.14.7, Sept. 10, 1834. William McCombs, Columbiana county, E14 NE 30.12.6. April 2, 1831. John McConkey, Harrison county, SW 10.11.5, Aug. 25, 1825. Alexander McConnell, Washington county, Pa., all 7.8.4, Oct. 21, 1805. Alexander McConnell, Belmont county, SE 12.12.7, Jan. 10, 1820- George McConnell, Washington county. Pa., all of 4.9.5, Dec. 20, 1805. James McConnell, Jefferson county, W14 NE 18.12.6, July 1, 1831. John McConnell, Washington county. Pa., all 5.9.5, April 20, 1804. John McConnell. Washington county, Pa., all 34.8.4, July 14, 1806. John McConnell, assignee of George Cox. SE 5.10.6, March 7, 1817. Robert McConnell, Belmont county, NW 11.12.7, Oct. 8, 1818. Francis McCord, Harrison county, SAV NW 5.12.6, Sept. 10, 1834. John McCorkle, SB 3.11.6. June 8, 1812. John McCoy, Washington county, Pa., all 1.10.5, Feb. 26, 1806. William McCreery, Westmoreland county. Pa., NE 24.11.5, May 10, 1811. Alexander McCullough, Harrison county. BV. NE 15.11.6, Sept. 1, 1823. — James McCullough. Harrison county, SE 17.12.7, May 25, 1825. Richard McCullough, Jefferson county, NW 32.11.5, Aug. 19, 1824. William McCullough, Guernsey county, NW 14.11.6, May 10, 1820. Daniel McCurdy, assignee of Richard Kinsey, SE 33.9.5, Nov. 16, 1812. Joseph McDannell, Tuscarawas county, SE 9.14.7, Sept. 10, 1834. Charles McDivit, Harrison county. SE 23.12.6, Jan. 1, 1833. Charles McDivit, Harrison county, NW SW 17.12.6, Nov. IS. 183^. George McDivit, Fayette county, Pa., NW 35.11.5, Oct. 8, 1818. George McDevit, Jr., assignee of George Fisher, W^^ NE 11.12.6, March 6, 1827. George McDevit, Harrison county, WVi NE 36.11.5, Dec. 1, 1830. George McDivit, Harrison county, WVj NW 11.12.6, Dec. 6, 1831. George McDivit, Harrison county, NE NW 11.12.6, Nov.18, 1833. George McDivit, Jr., Harrison county, FA/. NE 11.12.6, Dec. 2, 1832. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 223 John McDivit, Harrison county, W14 SE 11.12.6, April 2, 1829. Samuel McDivit, Tuscarawas county, EI/2 NW 17.12.6, Dec. 2, 1832. Alexander MacDonald, assignee of Thomas Christy, SE 30.10.5, May 30, 1826. Robert McDonald, Harrison county, Ei^ SW 33.12.7, Nov. 13, 1822. Hugh McDonough, Jefferson county, NE 4.12.6, Nov. 17,1812. John McDounaugh, assignee of Zenas Barton, SE 6.12.6, July 10, 1821. John McDanaugh, assignee of William Mimons, SW 1.13.6, May 25, 1825. James McDowell, Fayette county. Pa., SE 24.9.5, Feb. 18, 1806. John McDowell, Fayette county. Pa., NE 24.9.5, Feb. 16, 1809. John McDowell, Fayette county. Pa., NE 23.9.5, Jan. 1, 1811. John McDowell, Fayette county. Pa., NE 36.9.5, Jan. 1, 1811. Samuel McDowell, Jr., Fayette county. Pa., all 18.9.5, Dec. 31, 1806. Samuel McDowell, Jefferson county, NE 20.10.5, Jan. 1, 1811. James McElwee, Jefferson county, SE NE 17.12.6, Dec. 8, 1835. John McFadon, Washington county. Pa., all 4.10.5, May 8, 1806. John McFadon, Jefferson county, SE 13.10.5, July 1, 1809. Samuel McFadin, Jefferson county, SE 25.10.5, Oct. 7, 1812. Samuel McFadin, Harrison county, SW 22.10.5, June 1, 1815. George McGee, assignee of Asa Engle, NW 29.10.6, Jan. 10, 1820. Hugh McGee, Harrison county, SW 13.12.6, Jan. 21, 1819. Heirs of James McGinnes, dec'd, assignee of James Means, NE 13.12.5, Aug. 3, 1818. James McKein, Harrison county, SW 18.12.6, Jan. 1, 1833. Alexander McKeown, Belmont county, NW 35.11.7, March 6, 1827. Richard McKibben, Harrison county, SW 11.10.6, Aug. 3, 1818. Alexander McKitrick and James Steward, Washington county. Pa., SW 15.11. 5, March 20, 1813. Berriman Mcl-auglilin, Jefferson county, NE 19.12.7, Dec. 22, 1808. David McMath, Harrison county, WVo NW 26.11.6, March 6, 1827. Daniel McMillan, Tuscarawas county, NW 7.14.7, March 15, 1815. 'Daniel McMillan, Tuscarawas county, NE 13.14.7, Dec. 29, 1818. Daniel McMillan, Tuscarawas county, By2 SW 8.14.7, May 20, 1826. Daniel McMillan, Tuscarawas county, Wi/o NW 13.14.7, Aug. 12, 1826. John McMillan, assignee of Jonathan Jessop, all 2.10.5, Aug. 24, 1807. Patrick McMullin, Tuscarawas county, E% NE 25.13.6, Sept. 20, 1823. Patrick McMillan, Tuscarawas county, WV2 NE 25.13.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Patrick McMillan, Tuscarawas county, Wi/o NW 30.12.6, Dec. 2, 1830. Robert McMillen, Jefferson county, NE 20.11.6, Feb. 28, 1821. James B. Magrew, Westmoreland county, Pa., all 13.11.4, Feb. 18, 1806. John Maholm, Jefferson county, NM.- 31.10.5, July 30, 1812. Joseph Maholm, Jefferson county, SE 28.10.5, Jan. 15, 1814. James Mahon, Jefferson county, SE 17.10.5, Aug. 19, 1812. Jacob Mambeck, Harrison county, assignee of George Brown, SW 1.12.5, July 10, 1821. 224 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Benjamin Manbeck. Harrison county, WV2 SE 27.12.5, April 8. 1828. Robert Manley, Tuscarawas county, El^ SE 19.13.6, July 30, 1828. Thomas Mansfield, assignee of John Johnson, NW 25.12.6, Jan. 10, 1820. William Markey, Harrison county, NE 24.12.7, March 30, 1815. Daniel Marckley, Harrison county, E% SE 15.12.5, Sept. 20, 1823. Peter Markly, Washington county, Pa., assignee of John Roush, NW 29.10.4, Dec. 15, 1811. Thomas Marquis, Washington county, Pa., all 7.9.5, Nov. 15, 1807. Daniel Marrit, Washington county. Pa., all 31.8.4, Aug. 27, 1805. John N. Marsh, Jefferson county, W^^ NW 36.12.7, April 20, 1827. John Marshall, Jefferson county, Ei/^ SW 15.12.6, Nov. 13, 1822. Arthur Martin, Lancaster county. Pa., SW 24.10.5, Nov. 26, 1813. Joel Martin, Harrison county, NW 20.11.6, Aug. 19, 1818. Samuel Martin, Washington county, Pa., SE 34.11.7, Sept. 1, 1823. Samuel Martin, Washington county, Pa., W^/o SE 22.11.7, Sept. 10, 1823. William Mathers, Belmont county, E^^ SE 35.12.7, Dec. 8, 1835. Jonathan Maxson, assignee of the executors of James Robinyon, deceased, SW 19.12.7, Dec. 29, 1818. Henry Maxwell, Harrison county, W% NW 20.11.5, Nov. 1, 1830. Robert Maxwell, Harrison county, SW 26.11.5, Aug. 19, 1824., Robert Maxwell, Harrison county, EK- NE 27.11.5, Nov. 1, 1830. William Maxwell, Harrison county, NW 14.11.5, Feb. 14, 1817. George May, Fayette county. Pa., SE 29.12.7, Nov. 1, 1830. George May, Fayette county. Pa., SW 28.12.7, Nov. 1, 1837. James Means, Jr., assignee of Thomas McFaddin, Harrison county, SW 26.11. 6, Nov. 13, 1822. Robert Meeks, Sr., assignee of Benjamin Johnson, SW 9.11.5, Nov. 17, 1812. John Megaw, Westmoreland county, Pa., NE 30.11.5, Nov. 24, 1814. Henry Miser, assignee of John Funk, NE 31.12.5, May 15, 1811. Henry Meiser, Jefferson county, WV^ SE 32.12.5, Aug. 19, 1824. William Meldrum, Jefferson county, SE 18.12.7, Dec. 2, 1832. Barnabas Melone, SW 28.11.7, April 2, 1829. William Melton, Tuscarawas county, SE 13.12.7, Jan. SO, 1816. Benjamin Menyard, assignee of Stephen Ford, NW 15.11.4, Oct. 1, 1811. Caleb Merryman, Baltimore county, Md., all 25.10.4, Nov. 15, 1807. Benjamin Michener, Jefferson county, EI/2 NE 11.11.6, Aug. 19, 1824. William Middleton, Tuscarawas county, EVo NW 9.14.7, Dec. 2, 1830. >A.nne Mifflin, Philadelphia, SW 29.10.6, Jan. 3, 1807. Asa and Eli Miller, Harrison county, NW 15.12.7, Nov. 1, 1830. David Miller, assignee of Obediah Jennings, SE 8.11.4, Oct. 7, 1812. David Miller, Jr., Pittsburgh, SE 2111.5, March 5, 1818. David Miller, Harrison count3^ EVo NE 8.12.5, Oct. 20, 1824. John Miller and Francis Dever, Rockingham county, Va., Trustees of colored persons emancipated by Ruth Davis, Wi/o NW 36.11.5, Sept. 28, 1826. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENT^, 225 Mason Miller, Jefferson county, NW 1.12.7, March 15, 1815. Heirs of Peter Miller, Somerset county. Pa., SE 8.12.5, Aug. 19, 1824. Alexander Milliken, Harrison county, SW 21.10.5, June 1, 1815. Alexander Milliken, Harrison county, NW 21.10.5, July 30, 1816. Jane Millegan, Adams county. Pa., SW 15.10.4, Dec. 30, 1811. John Milliken, assignee of Alexander Milliken, NW 34.10.5, May 9, 1818. William Millison, assignee of Henry Carver, SW 31.12.7, Aug. 18, 1817. William Milton, Washington county, Ohio (?), NE 18.11.7, Jan. 30, 1812. John Minart, Harrison county, NE 1.13.6, Aug. 25, 1825. John Minnick, Tuscarawas county, NE 9.13.6, Dec. 26, 1815. Matthew Mitchell, Washington county, Pa., NE 32.10.5. Sept. 10, 1806. James Molesworth, Jefferson county. NE 35.11.6, April 27, 1821. David Moody, assignee of Peter Pettinger, NW 9.11.5, June 19, 1813. David Moody, Harrison county, assignee of Jesse Young, SE 15.11.5, Oct. 3, 1816. Alexander Moore, Jefferson county, SW 25.11.5, June 10, 1811. Alexander Moore, Jefferson county, SW 31.10.5, March 20, 1813. Alexander Moore, Harrison county, NE 35.10.5, Oct. 9, 1813. Alexander Moore, Jr., Harrison county, SW 18.11.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Ammi Moore, Harrison county, NE 7.11.6, Aug. 19, 1824. James Moore, Harrison county, SE 27.11.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Maurice Moore, Tuscarawas county, W^/o SW 31.13.6, May 6, 1824. Michael Moore, Jefferson county, NE 23.10.6, March 7, 1818. Michael Moore, assignee of William Harris and John Fate, NW 23.10.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Robert Moore, Jefferson county, SE 13.11.6, Aug. 24, 1816. •Robert Moore, Harrison county, Wy2 NW 2.11.6, Feb. 20, 1827. William Moore, Jefferson county, NW 15.14.7, Sept. 10, 1823. William Moore, Harrison county, Ei/4 SE 14.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. John Morton, Jr., Jefferson county, W^^ NW 5.11.6, Nov. 13, 1822. Benjamin Murphy, assignee of John J. Moore and Gabriel Cain, SW 23.10.6. Nov. 2, 1829. Samuel Myers, Tuscarawas county, W1/2 NW 18.12.7, Nov. 1, 1830. John Nace, Baltimore county, Md., NE 28.11.7, Dec. 26, 1815. Abraham Naffsker, all 32.11.4, July 23, 1806. Jacob Naffster, Harrison county, Ei/o NW 12.10.4, April 8, 1828. John Nauftzger, SE 31.12.5, May 3, 1814. William Neel Belmont county, NW 9.12.7. May 25, 1825. Elisha Nelson, EVo SE 21.12.6. April 5, 1822. William Nelson, Harrison county, NW 9.12.6, Aug. 10. 1827. Isaac and Thomas Nevett, assignees of James W. Right, Jr., NW 10.12.7, May 25, 1825. William Nichols, Steubenville, assignee of Alexander Holmes, NE 8.11.4, Oct. 25, 1813. 15 226 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY William Nichels, Belmont county, Ei4 SE 22.10.6, April 30, 1822. Samuel Nickle, Harrison county, assignee of William Nickle, BVa NE 22.11.7, March 21, 1832. Thomas Nickle, Guernsey county, E^o NW 22.11.7, Oct. 10, 1831. John Nichodemus, Frederick county, Md., assignee of Thomas McCausten, all 2.10.4, May 21, 1805. John Nixon, assignee of Joseph McDannal, SE 17.11.5, Nov. 1, 1818. Joseph Norrick, Harrison county, W% SE 19.13.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Charles Norris, Frederick county, Md., Wi/o NW 33.12.7, Nov. 1, 1830. James Brown Norris, Harrison county, E% NW 22.12.7. Aug. 10, 1827. Jeremiah Norris, Harrison county, SW SB 28.12.7, April 1. 1837. Sarah Norris, Greene county, Pa.. EVo NW 29.12.7, April 2, 1829. Samuel Oatley, Washington county. Pa., E14 NW 26.11.6, May 25, 1825. Thomas Ogden, Frederick county, EV2 NW 36.12.7, April 2, 1829. '- — William Oglevee, Harrison county, NW 17.11.7, Oct. 10, 1831. John Oldshoe, of Fayette county. Pa., all 28.9.4, June 3, 1806. Joseph O'Neal, Bedford county. Pa., SE 23.10.6, Feb. 14, 1817. John O'Rourke, assignee of Peter Marckley, SE 3.12.5, Jan. 27, 1819. Hugh Orr, Westmoreland county. Pa., NW 24.11.5, Jan. 1, 1812. John Orr, Jr., Harrison county, E14 NW 24.11.6, April 17, 1828. William Orr, assignee of John Williams, NE 28.10.4, July 30, 1812. William Orr, Harrison county, Wy^ NW 24.11.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Isaac Osburn, Jefferson county, NE 10.11.5, March 20, 1809. Daniel Palmer, Chester county, Pa., SW 11.11.7, Nov. 13, 1822. James Palmer, Tuscarawas county, Wi^ SE 14.14.7, Oct. 10, 1831. John Palmer, Harrison county, EVo SE 29.11.6, Oct. 10, 1831. Lerick Palmer, Harrison county, NE 26.12.7, Sept. 19, 1817. James Parkenson, assignee of Nathaniel Wells, NE 17.11.6, Dec. 12, 1822. John Parker, Harrison county, Wy, NE 17.12.7, Dec. 6, 1831. David Parks, Belmont county, SW 35.10.6, Nov. 18, 1833. David Parks, Belmont county, NW SW 35.10.6, Sept. 10, 1834. Robert Parks, Jefferson county, SE 3.12.7, May 23, 1810. Robert Parks, Harrison county, E1/2 SW 3.12.7, Aug. 12, 1826. Nathaniel Parramour, Jefferson county, SW 19.10.5. Jan. 13, 1811. Mordecai Parrish, Jr., assignee of John Johnson, SE 1.14.7, Oct. 3, 1816. Joseph Patten, Jr., assignee of Henderson and Mills, NW 13.12.5, Aug. 18, 1S17. Andrew Patterson, Washington county. Pa., all 2.8.4, Dec. 16, 1806. Arthur Patterson, Allegheny county. Pa., NE 26.11.5, Feb. 17, 1820. Samuel Patterson, Harrison county, E1/2 SW 31.13.6, Dec. 10, 1827. William Patterson, Harrison county. EV2 NW 1.14.7, Nov. 1, 1830. Jane Pattison, assignee of Farrington Barricklow, SW 35 9.5, June 5, 1816. Thomas Patton, assignee of David Moody, SW 28.10.4, July 5, 1816. John Paxton, Belmont county, NE 14.10.5, Aug. 20, 1806. Eli Peacock, Harrison county, W1/2 SW 14.11.6, Dec. 10, 1827. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 227 Thomas Peairs, assignee of Joseph Cook, NE 13.11.6, Aug. 18, 1817. Hugh Peasley, Harrison county, NE 10.11.7, Dec. 12, 1815. Samuel Peoples, Harrison county, SW 9.12.5, Aug. 10, 1827. Jonathan Perrin, Harrison county, NE 19.11.6. March 16, 1815. John Perry, Jefferson county, SW 34.10.5, July 30, 1813. Thomas Perry, assignee of Levi Engle, Sr., SE 12.10.6, Feb. 1, 1815. Leroy Petty, Harrison county, EU NW 15,12.6, Dec. 2, 1830. Rodern Petty, Harrison county, Ei/> NW 11.11.6, Nov. 1, 1830. George Pfautz, Cumberland county. Pa., all 14.11.4, Oct. 26, 1805. George Pfautz, Cumberland county. Pa., all 19.11.4, Oct. 26, 1805. George Pfautz, Cumberland county, Pa., all 33.11.4, Dec. 1, 1807. Jacob Pfautz, Harrison county, WU SW 13.13.6, Nov. 1, 1830. John Pfautz, Harrison county, Wy2 NE 23.12.6, April 2, 1829. Jonathan Pfauts, Ki^rrison county, E^^ NE 23.12.6, May 22, 1827. Michael Pfoutz, Harrison county, Eir. SW 13.13.6, Oct. 20, 1824. Michael Pfoutz, Tuscarawas county, EVo SW 20.13.6, July 1, 1831. Joseph Phillips, Jefferson county, W^^ NW 21.12.7, April 2, 1829. Richard Phillips, Jefferson county, SW 21.12.7, June 1, 1S15. Richard Phillips, Harrison county, SW 20.12.7, Oct. 3, 1816. Richard Phillips, Harrison county, NE 33.12.7, May 24, 1817. Richard Phillips, Harrison county, E14 NW 21.12.7, Nov. 1, 1830. William Philips and William Grist, assignees of Benjamin Stanton, SW 9.11.6y. Dec. 1, 1809. Alexander Picken, Harrison county, W/o SE 35.11.5, April 1, 1837. Matthew Picken, Harrison county, assignee of James Boyd, SW 35.11.5, May 12, 1815. Matthew Picken, assignee of Michael Pfoutz, SW 7.13.6, April 10, 1827. Matthew Picken, Harrison county, Ei/. NW 34.11.5, Nov. 1, 1830. Matthew Picken, Harrison county, EV2 SE 35.11.5, July 1, 1831. Matthew Picken, Harrison county. Wi/L> NW 34.11.5, Dec. 2, 1832, Ecos Pickering, Belmont county, NE 25.9.5, Nov. 2. 1829. iHiram Pickering, Harrison county, NW SE 5.11.7, Sept. 10, 1834. John Pickering, Belmont county, SW 26.9.5, Dec. 3, 1808. Jonathan Pickering, Belmont county, EVo SE 11.12.7, June 23, 1826. Jonas Pickering, Belmont county, all 20.9.5, July 20, 1808. John Piggott, assignee of Joel Gilbert, NW 26.9.5, Aug.3, 1810. ^\braham Pittinger, assignee of John Roush, NE 11.11.5, Oct. 9, 1813. Robert Pittis, Tuscarawas county, E'/o NE 32.12.6, March 6, 1827. Elias Polen. Harrison county, SE NE 14.14.7, Sept. 10, 1834. Nathaniel Poler, Jefferson county, SE 12.10.4, Aug. 19, 1824. Nathaniel Polen, Harrison county, Wi/o SW 12.10.4. Aug. 10, 1827. John Pollock, Fayette county. Pa., SE 15.10.4, March 6, 1814. John Pollock, Jefferson county, SE 10.11.5, March 18, 1814. John Pollock, Jr., Harrison county, NW 15.10.4, Dec. 19, 1814. 228 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Charles Porter, assignee of Thomas Hazlet, SE 27.11.5, Jan. 23, 1813. Charles Porter, Steubenville, SW 25.12.5, Jan. 15, 1814. Charles Porter, Steubenville, NW 6.12.6, Jan. 21, 1819. Charles Porter, Steubenville, SW 36.11.5, Jan. 21, 1819. Samuel Porter, assignee of Samuel Holmes, all 8.10.5, Aug 27, 1807. John Poulson, devisee of James Poulson, SE 36.10.5, July 5, 1816. John Poulson, Frederick county, Md., WI/2 NW 15.11.6, Sept. 1, 1823. John Poulson, Frederick county, Md., WVa NE 15.11.6, Sept. 1, 1823. Nelson Poulson, Harrison countjr, EVa NW 15.11.6, June 23, 1827. John Prather, Harrison county, W1/2 SE 14.12.6, Sept. 10, 1823. John Prather, assignee of Robert Carson, Harrison county, NE 13.12.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Charles Prather, Brooke county, Va., all 8.12.6, Feb. 2, 1804. Charles Prather, Brooke county, Va., SW 9.12.6, May 8, 1806. Anthony Pricker (Bricker?), assignee of Peter Kail, all 24.10.4, July 1, 1807. Samuel Primes, Jefferson county, all 12.8.4, Nov. 3, 1806. Provines, see also Purviance. Matthew Provines, Washington county. Pa., SW 14.12.6, Jan. 20, 1817. John Pugh, Chester county, Pa., NE 3.11.6, March 10, 1807. John Pugh, Chester county, Pa., NE 9.11.6, March 10, 1807. John Pugh, Chester county. Pa., SB 10.11.6, March 10, 1807. John Pugh, Frederick county, Va., NW 33.11.6, Dec. 1, 1807. John Pugh, Chester county, Pa., NE 10.11.6, June 1, 1810. John Pugh, Jefferson county, SW 2.11.6, Jan. 10, 1811. John Pugh, Frederick county, Va., SW 33.11.6, Aug. 19, 1812. Thomas Pugh, assignee of Benjamin Tappan and John C. Wright, of Steuben- ille, SW 4.11.6, Nov. 13, 1820. William Pugh, Harrison county, SE 9.11.6, Nov. 21, 1820. Caleb Pumphrey, Jefferson county, all 17.9.5, Oct. 19, 1808. John Pumphrey, Harrison county, EVo SW 34.10.6. May 30, 1826. Joseph Pumphrey, Jefferson county, all 13.10.4, July 18, 1806. Joseph Pumphrey, assignee of Thomas McMillan, Jefferson county, W^^ SE 33.12.7, Aug. 19, 1824. Reason Pumphrey, Brooke county, Va., Wi^ NW 33.12.6, Aug. 10, 1827. Reason Pumphrey, Brooke county, Va., EV2 NE and WV2 SE 13.14.7, Dec. 10, 1827. Reason Pumphrey, Tuscarcwas county, E^^ NW 33.12.6, Oct. 10, 1831. Reason Pumphrey, Tuscarawas county, Wi^ SE 33.12.6, Oct. 10, 1831. William Pumphrey, Brooke county, Va., all 4.9.4, Oct. 1, 1806. Purviance, see also Provines. Thomas Purviance, Jefferson county, W'/o SE 28.11.7, Nov. 13, 1822. Harlan Pyle, Washington county. Pa., NE 35.10.6, July 5, 1816. Adam Quillan, Jefferson county, NE 31.12.7, March 7, 1818. lElihu Quillan, Harrison county, WVo SE 32.12.7. Dec. 10, 1827. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 229 Joshua Quillin, Jeffersou county, SE 25.12.7, May 12, 1815. William Ramage, Belmont county, all 4.10.6, March 21, 1808. Obadiah Ramsbottom, Harrison county, Ei/o SE 21.12.5, Sept. 25, 1823. John Ramsower, assignee of John Barr, Harrison county, W^ NB 8.12.5, Nov. 13, 1822. James Rankin, Jefferson county, NW 30.9.5, Oct. 10, 1815. Robert Rankin, assignee of John Gibson, of Pennsylvania, SE 15.10.5, March 7, 1818. Ihomas Rankin, Jefferson county, all 30.9.4, Feb. 10, 1807. Thomas Rankin, assignee of Abraham Pittinger, SE 31.10.5, Aug. 10, 1813. William Rankin, Harrison county, SE 35.11.7, Nov. 26, 1819. John Rea, assignee of Eli Chandler, Fayette county. Pa., SW 30.10.6, Aug, 19, 1824. Frederick Reed, Belmont county, all 30.10.4, Feb. 10, 1807. John Reed, Jefferson county, NE 29.9.5, June 8, 1812. John Reeves, Harrison county, SE 7.12.7, March 20, 1813. Jacob Reigal, Harrison county, E1/2 NW 29.12.6, Dec. 2, 1830. Caleb Reynolds, Jefferson county, Wi/^ SE 5.12.6, April 22, 1819. John Richardson, Chester county. Pa., NE 8.11.6, July 30, 1813. Philip J. Richardson, assignee of William Grigory, NW 32.10.5, July 8, 1818. Andrew Ritchey, Jr., Washington county, Pa., all 28.8.4, Sept. 15, 1806. Jacob Ritchie, Jr., Washington county. Pa., NE 9.11.5, May 24, 1817. Thomas Ritchey, Harrison county, NE 15.10.5, March 7, 1817. John Riddle, Allegheny county, Pa., SW 23.10.4, July 30, 1812. Richard Ridgway, all 11.8.4, Nov. 3, 1803. Richard Ridgway, all 4.8.4, Nov.3, 1803. Timothy Ridgeway, Greene county, Pa., SW 2.12.7, Nov. 6, 1815. John Riley, Jefferson county, SW 27.11.6, Jan. 20, 1812. John Riley, Harrison county, SE 36.12.7, July 5, 1819. Moses Riley, Harrison county, E% SW 36.12.7, Aug. 12, 1826. Daniel Rineker, assignee of John Brown, SE 9.12.5, Sept. 1, 1819. John Ripley, Belmont county, NE 36.11.7, March 30, 1815. John Ripley, Harrison county, SE 36.11.7, April 27, 1821. James Roberts, Fayette county. Pa., all 13.9.4, Sept. 10, 1806. Aaron Robinson, Harrison county, E% NW 5.11.6, April 2, 1829. Job Robinson, Harrison county, E14 NW 36.11.6, April 2, 1829. William Robinson, Harrison county, \YV2 SW 27.11.5, Jan. 1, 1833. Joseph Roby, Jefferson county, Wl^ NW 1.14.7, Dec. 2, 1832. Leonard Roby, Tuscarawas county, BV2 SE 7.14.7, Dec. 2, 1832. William Roby, Harrison county. EI/2 SW 35.12.6, Dec. 2, 1832. Hugh Rogers, Washington county, Pa., all 19.9.4, May 20, 1S06. Joseph Rogers, Harrison county, NW 4.11.6, Aug. 10, 1827. William Rogers, assignee of Thomas Rogers, NW 28.10.5. June 10, 1811. William Rogers, Jefferson county, SE 34.10.5, June 10, 1811. 230 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John Roland, assignee of James H. Ball, SE 12.11.6, May 9, 1818. Moses Romans, Chester county. Pa., SE 10.11.7, Aug. 3, 1818. Robert Rose, Harrison county, Wi-^ SE 28. 11.6, Oct. 24, 1826. Adam Ross, York county, Pa., SE 24.10.5, June 8, 1812. William Ross, Harrison county, SE 22.11.5, July 10, 1817. William Ross, Harrison county, E% NE 21.11.5, Oct. 20, 1824. Elizal)eth Roush, Harrison county, NW 6.11.5, March 28, 1820. John Roush, Jefferson county, SE 12.11.5, April 20, 1812. Hugh and Thomas Rowland, Allegheny county. Pa., SV2 15.11.6, July 29, 1819. Edward Rubey, Jefferson county, SE 7.11.6, Dec. 26. 1815. John Rubey, Jr., Allegany countj', Md., SE 2.11.6, Feb. 17, 1820. John Rule, Harrison county, Wi/o NW 35.12.6, Oct. 2, 1821. Alexander Russell, Belmont county, Ei/o SW 21.11.6, Aug. 10, 1827. Ann Russell, Tuscarawas county, WI/2 NW 14.14.7, Dec. 2, 1830. Patrick Russell, Allegheny county. Pa., SE 34.11.6, May 25, 1825. Daniel Rutan, Harrison county, E% NE 21.12.5, Dec. 2, 1830. John Rymmerfield, Harrison county, NE SW 17.11.7, Dec. 10, 1839. Jacob Sadler, Washington county, Pa., all 2G.11.4, July 14, 1806. John Sampson, Harrison county, SE 22.12.6, Dec. 10, 1827. Jonathan Sayes, Jefferson county, assignee of William James, NE 27.11.6, May 10, 1811. Jacob Schunck, .Jefferson county, NW 14.12.5, Nov. 6, 1815. Matthias Schilds, Greene county, Pa., SW 33.13.6, June 4, 1814. George Schultz, Loudoun county, Va., NW 8.11.4, May 23, 1810. Charles Scott, Jefferson county, WV2 NE 32.12.6, Oct. 10, 1831. John Scott, Harrison county, WVa NW 32.12.6, July 1, 1831. Thomas Scott, Washington county. Pa., EI/2 SW 15.14.7, April 2, 1829. Thomas Scott, Washington county. Pa., Ei^.NE 15.14.7, April 2, 1829. William Scott, Harrison county, NW 7.11.5, March 7, 1817. Enoch Sears, Tuscarawas county, EiA NW 28.12.7, Oct. 24, 1826. Adam Seebert, Frederick county, Va., all 9.8.4, Dec. 28, 1807. Nicholas Selbey, assignee of Caleb Selby, NW 35.10.5, June 20, 1820. John Senter, Westmoreland county. Pa., NW 35.10.6, March 2, 1821. Edward Settle, Jr., Culpepper county, Va., NW 7.12.6, March 6, 1829. Elijah Seward and Stephen Miller, Harrison county, Ei/4 SW 5.11.7, Nov. 1, 1830. Elijah Seward, Harrison county, SW SB 5.11.7, Sept. 10, 1834. Andrew Sewell, Jefferson county, Wi^ NE 30.12.7, Aug. 10, 1827. Andrew Sewell, Tuscarawas county, EVa NE 30.12.7, Dec. 6, 1831. George Shambach, Harrison county, NW 7.12.5, July 10. 1817. Joseph Sharpe, Washington county. Pa., all 32.8.4, Feb. 18, 1806. Thomas Sharp, Washington county. Pa., all 9.9.5, May 8, 1806. Joseph Shearer, assignee of William D. Mefendish, NE 9.12.5, March 28, 1820. John Shepherd, assignee of Jeremiah Burran, all 10.9.4, Dec. 20, 1807. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 231 Nathan Shepherd, Brooke county, Va., all 35. S. 4, Aug. 15, 1807. Nathan Shepherd, Jefferson county, NW 21.8.4, Nov. 16, 1812. Nathan Shepherd, Jefferson county, SE 22.8.4, Dec. 12, 1S12. Nathan Shepherd, Jefferson county, NE 21.8.4, Oct. 25, 1813. Heirs of Ezekiel Shimer, dec'd, NE 6.11.6, May 25, 1825. Jacob Shipler, Westmoreland county, Pa., all 14.10.4, April 7, 1806. William Shipton, Harrison county, Ey^ NE 20.11.5, April 8, 1828. Benjamin Shreeve, assignee of Charles Wilson, SW 32.11.5, May 25, 1825. Hugh Shotwell, Fayette county, Pa., NE 14.12.7, July 2, 1814. Hugh Shotwell, Fayette county, NE 8.12.7, July 5, 1816. Hugh Shotwell, Fayette county, Pa., SE 9.12.7, July 5, 1816. Hugh Shotwell, Harrison county, NW 27.10.5, July 10, 1817. • Hugh Shotwell, Harrison county, Ei/. SE 15.12.7, Nov. 1, 1830. John Shotwell, Fayette county. Pa., SE 21.12.7, July 2, 1814. John Shotwell, Fayette countj% Wy. SW 15.12.7. Sept. 1, 1823. Alexander Simpson, Harrison county, W^/[, NE 10.12.6, Oct. 10, 1831. Alexander Simpson, Harrison county, NE 17.12.6, Jan. 1, 1833. John Simpson, Harrison county, SE 10.12.6, Jan. 21, 1819. Matthew Simpson, Harrison county. NW 29.11.5, Jan. 10, 1820. Robert Simpson, Harrison county, W^^ NW 36.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Robert Simpson, Harrison county, W^/o NE 9.12.6. Dec. 2, 1830. Robert Simpson, Harrison county. Eij SE 15.12.6, Dec. 6, 1831. Joseph Sims, assignee of David Mathews, NW 25.11.5, Sept. 10, 1831. Ihompson Sinclair, Belmont county, WVj NW 4.12.7, Nov. 12, 1832. Joseph James Slemmons, assignee of William Glumer, NW 34.10.6, May 5. 1821. Alexander Smith and Frederick Schilds, Greene county. Pa., NE 26.13.6, March 6, 1818. Alexander Smith, Harrison county, E^. SE 32.12.7, Nov. 13, 1822. Andrew Smith, Jefferson county, NE 8.11.5, June 6, 1814. Daniel Smith, Huntingdon county. Pa., SE 3.12.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Daniel Smith, Harrison county, WV2 SW 15.12.6, April 20, 1825. Daniel Sm.ith, Huntingdon county. Pa., NE 2.12.6, May 25. 1825. Daniel Smith, Harrison county, Ey. SW 13.14.7, Dec. 10, 1827. Ely Smith, Harrison county, EVo NE 11.12.7, Jan. 30, 1827. George Smith, Guernsey county, SW 10.11.7, Aug. 19, 1824. George Smith, Harrison county, W^^ NE 27.12.5, Nov. 1, 1830. •James Smith, Harrison county, Wi/i- NE 11.12.7, April 5, 1822. John Smith, Jefferson county, SW 18.11. 7, Nov. 1, 1818. John Smith, assignee of Thomas Scoles, SE 24.11.6, March 6, 1827. Peter Smith, Somerset county. Pa., NW 2.13.6. Oct. 7, 1812. Peter Smith, assignee of David Moody, NE 8.13.6, July 30, 1816. Peter Smith, Harrison county, NE 21.13.6, Aug. 19, 1824. Robert Smith, Harrison county, WVo NW 15.13.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Robert Smith, WV2 NE 30.12.6, Dec. 6, 1831. 232 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Samuel Smith, Harrison county, NW 2.12.6, Jan. 27, 1819. William Smith, Brooke county, Va., Wi/^ 22.8.4, July 30, 1812, William Smith, Jefferson county, NW 3.12.7, Nov. 17, 1812. William Smith, Pittsburg, Pa., Ei/o SE 12.10.4, Nov. 1, 1830. William Smith, Harrison county, E% SW 17.12.6, March 21, 1832. Jacob Smyer, Adams county. Pa., SW 6.10.4, June 1, 1810. Garret Snedeker, Brooke county, Va., all 1.9.5, Sept. 10, 1806. David Snyder, Washington county. Pa., NE SE 8.14.7, Dec. 8, 1835. John Snider, Harrison county, SE 13.13.6, Sept. 1, 1819. John Snider, Harrison county, WM> NW 18.12.6, July 1, 1831. Lawrence Snyder, Harrison county, SE 1.12.5, Nov. 13, 1822. Samuel Snyder,' Harrison county, W% NE 24.12.6, Jan. 30, 1827. Samuel Snyder, Harrison county, W14 NW 29.12.6, April 8, 1828. Christian Spiker, Jefferson county, NW 20.12.6, Jan. 15, 1814. Isaac Spiker, assignee of William Bush, NE 24.11.6, Dec. 29, 1818. Isaac Spiker, assignee of Jacob Vasbenner, SW 2.12.6, Aug. 10, 1827. Isaac Spiker, Harrison county, Ky, NW 23.12.6, Dec. 2, 1832. Henry Spiker, Allegheny county. Pa., NE 26.12.6, May 29, 1818. f rederick Spring, assignee of John Rowland, NE 29.10.6, March 7, 1818. John Springer, Harrison county, Wi^ SW 35.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Joseph Sprott, Fayette county, Pa., all 2.11.4, Oct. 1, 1806. Hugh Sproul, Washington county, Pa., NE 36.10.6, Aug. 18, 1817. Hugh Sproul, Washington county. Pa., NW 31.11.6, July 25, 1820. John Sproul, Washington county, Pa., SE 25.11.6, July 16, 1819. John Sprowl, Harrison county, W% NW 12.12.6, Dec. 1, 1830. William Sproul, Harrison county, E% NW 36.11.5, July 1, 1831. Elijah Staats, Fayette county. Pa., NW 4.11.7, Dec. 29, 1818. Benjamin Stanton, all 9.9.4, Nov. 3, 1803. Benjamin Stanton, Jefferson county, all 5.8.4, April 5, 1806. John Stapler, Bucks county, Pa., all 5.9.4, May 20, 1806. David Starling, Tuscarawas county, Ei/o SW 1.14.7, Dec. 2, 1830. Jacob Stees, Jefferson county, SW 15.11.4, Dec. 12, 1812. Bezaleel Steel, Jefferson county, SW 26.12.7, June 26, 1820. Robert Steel, Jefferson county, NE 6.10.6, Jan. 30, 1816. Joseph Steer, Jefferson county, SE 27.10.5, Oct. 23, 1805. Joseph Steer, assignee of John Lemasters, SE 33.11.6, Nov. 15, 1810. Henry Stevens, assignee of Rimrod (Nimrod) Ferguson, SE 6.11.7, July 20, 1808. Archibald Stewart, assignee of William Griffith, assignee of James Harman, assignee of Joseph Whitney, NE 6.12.7, Nov. 2, 1829. Galbreath Stewart, Middletown, Pa., all 12.9.4, Dec. 20, 1805. Galbreath Stewart, Washington county, Pa., all 17.9.4. Dec. 20, 1805. James Stewart, assignee of John Pugh, SW 27.10.5, April 20, 1812. James Stewart and Rowet Kerr, Harrison county, NE 34.11.7, May 24, 1817. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 233 John Stockdale, Jr., Guernsey county, EVo NE 31.11.7, June 12, 1828. Matthias Stohl, Jefferson county, all 20.11.4, May 8, 1806. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, WV. SW 29.12.7, April 20, 1827. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, Ei/o NW 35.12.7, June 23, 1827. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, Wy^ SW 3-5.12.7, Aug. 10, 1827, Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, Ei/o SW 5.12.7. Oct. 10, 1831. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, Ei/o SE 34.12.7, Oct. 10, 1831. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, W'l/o SW 22.12.7, Oct. 10, 1831. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, WVo NW 28.12.7, Oct. 10, 1831. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, EU SW 14.14.7, Dec. 6, 1831. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, Bi/o 7.14.7, Dec. 6, 1831. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, Wi/o SE and E1/2 SE 30.11.7. Dec. 6, 1831. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, E1/2 NW 4.12.7. March 21, 1832. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, WVo NW 22.12.7, Nov. 12, 1832. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, Ei/o SW 33.12.6, Nov. 12, 1832. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, WV2 NE 34.12.7, Nov. 17, 1833. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, FA/2 NE 22.12.7, Sept. 10, 1834. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, WVo SW 8.14.7, Sept. 10, 1834. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, Wy^ SE 14.14.7, April 1, 1837. Samuel Stokely, Steubenville, Eyo SE 15.14.7, April 1, 1837. William Stringer, assignee of Joseph Scott, NW 3.12.6, Jan. 21, 1819. Hugh Strong, Jefferson county, SW 4.12.7. Jan. 27, 1819. John Christian Stroub, York county. Pa., WU NE 8.14.7, Aug. 12, 1826. Jacob Styers, Jefferson county, NE 22.8.4, Dec. 12, 1812. John Sullivan, assignee of Basil Moreland, BV2 SW 7.12.6, Aug. 10, 1827. John Swim, Jefferson county, SW 28.10.6, Jan. 21, 1819. Magdalene Swinehart, Washington county. Pa.. SE 3.13.6, March 2, 1821. James Tarbert, assignee of Edward Rubee, NW 7.11.6, Sept. 19, 1817. Alexander Tayler, Harrison county, EU NE 9.12.6, Dec. 6, 1831. Jonathan Taylor, Jefferson county, NE 15.9.4, March 20, 1813. Hugh Tease, Jefferson county, all 7.10.4, Feb. 26, 1806. John Tennar, Baltimore county, Md., SE 29.12.6, July 5, 1819. iTsaac Thomas, Jefferson county, SE 21.9.4, April 10, 1812. Ann Thompson, Harrison county, EI/2 SE 11.12.6, Dec. 2, 1832. Eradway Thompson, Washington county. Pa., all 18.8.4, Feb. 2, 1804. John Thompson, Harrison county, Ei4 NE 10.12.6, Sept. 15, 1823. Thomas Thompson, assignee of Caleb Reynolds, NW 25.12.7, Jan. 21, 1819. Andrew Thomson. Washington county, Pa., assignee of George Bohrer, NE 12.10.6, Aug. 9, 1815. William Thorn and Thomas Thorn, trustees of heirs of Isaac Thorn, dec'd, all 14.9.4, April 3, 1806. William Tingley, Harrison county, Eyo SE 23.11.6, March 10, 1825. William Tingley, Cadiz, Ei^ SE 30.11.6, Oct. 10, 1831. Aquila Tipton, Jefferson county, NE 19.12.6, Feb. 1, 1815. 234 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Samuel Tipton, Harrison county, NW 13.12.6, March 6, 1827. Samuel Tipton, Harrison county, WVi; SB 20.12.6, Nov. 1, 1837. Sylvester Tipton, Harrison county, Ei/l. SE 18.10.4. Sept. 20, 1823. Rachel Titus, assignee of William R. Dickinson, SE 1.11.6. Aug. 19, 1812. Rachel Titus, Harrison county, EV2 SE 28.11.6, Dec. 6, 1831. William Todd, Washington county, Pa., assignee of Thomas Peairs, NE 14. 11.6, Aug. 19, 1818. Thomas Thomlinson, Harrison county, WI/2 NW 26.12.5, Oct. 10, 1831. Elizabeth Toole, Sr., assignee of Levi Cecil, NW 20.10.5, Aug. 3, 1810. Roger Toothaker, Jefferson county, SE 19.10.5, Jan. 1, 1811. Matthew Torrence, Allegheny county. Pa., NW 33.12.5, March 7, 1818. Eli Towne, Jr., Washington county, Pa., SE 31.12.7, May 3, 1814. Joseph Tripp, Washington county, Pa., Ei/o SW 22.11.7, Sept. 1, 1823. William Turne r^Tuscarawas county, Ei/o NE 27.12.7, Nov. 1, 1830. Joh'n'Turnpaugh, Jefferson county, SW 32.10.5, July 30, 1812. Robert Twigg, Harrison county, NE 36.12.7. March 7, 1818. Thomas Underhill, Harrison county, E1/2 SE 35.12.6, Dec. 2, 1830. Thomas Underhill, Harrison county, WK' SE 35.12.6, Oct. 10, 1831. Nathan Updegraff, Jefferson county, all 26.9.4, Oct. 10, 1806. George Venamon, Washington county. Pa., NE 3.12.6, June 20, 1809. George Vaneman, Washington county, Pa., SW 13.11.5, April 21, 1810. George Vaneman, Washington county, Pa., NW 33.11.5, April 21. 1810. Joseph Vanlaw, Burlington county, N. J., assignee of Samuel Haines, all 17. 8.4, March 18, 1805. Isaac Vanordstrand, assignee of Peter Vanordstrand, SW 31.12.5, Jan. 27, 1819. William Vaughan, Tuscarawas county, SW 14.12.5, March 7, 1818. Jonathan Veasy, assignee of Joshua Buckingham, WV:i SW 24.11.6, Aug. 10, 1827. John Vickers, Jefferson county, BV2 NW 26.12.6, Sept. 10, 1823. John Vickers, Jefferson county, W^:. NW 26.12.6, Dec. 2, 1830. Archibald Virtue, assignee of Dory Beall, EI/2 SW 5.12.6, April 27. 1821. Archibald Virtue, Harrison county, WVo SW 5.12.6, March 2, 1831. John Wagers, Harrison county, EV^ SW 23.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830, Richard Wagers, Harison county, W% SW 23.12.6, Nov. 1, 1830. Joseph Wagstaff, Harrison county, W% NE 21.11.5, April 2, 1829. William Wagstaff, Allegheny county. Pa., SE 14.11.5, June 1, 1815. James Walker, Washington county, FAA NW 2.11.6, Nov. 13, 1822. James Walker, Harrison county, WV2 NE 32.11.5, April 2, 1829. John Walker, assignee of James Rieves, SW 35.11.7, Aug. 10, 1827. Robert Walker, Harrison county, NW 17.11.6, April 10, 1827. David Wallace, assignee of Samuel Grimes, all 8.8.4, Dec. 30, 1807. David and Agnes Wallace, Belmont county, NE 15.8.4, Jan. 15, 1814. William Wallace, Brooke county, Va., NE 11.10.4, Feb. 10, 1809. Henry Walters, Harford county, Md., SE 35.10.5, Dec. 12, 1815. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 235 Abraham "Warner, assignee of Michael Lawber, SE 3.14.7, May 25, 1825. Abraham "Warner, Tuscarawas county, NW 32.13.6, Nov. 2, 1829. John Warnei-, Tuecarawas county, W1/2 SE 2.14.7, Dec. 2, 1832. William Wartembe, Brooke county, Va., all 33.10.4, July 1, 1807. William Watkins, NE SE 9.14.7, Jan. 1, 1833. Matthew Watson, Columbiana county, E% SW 19.13.6, Dec. 2, 1830. William Watt, Washington county, Pa., all 10.10.4, July 14, 1806. William Watt, assignee of Joseph Patterson, NE 15.10.4, Jan. 30, 1816. Allen Watters, Harrison county, E% NW 24.12.6, Dec. 2, 1830. Heirs of Henry Waters, dec'd, Harrison county, NE 34.10.5, Aug. 10, 1827. William Waters, Harford county, Md., SW 3.11.6, May 20, 1317. John B. Way, Columbiana county, W% NE 12.20.7, Aug. 10, 1827. Jacob Webb, Fayette county. Pa., all 6.9.5, Feb. 18, 1808. Heirs of John Webster, Harrison county, EI/2 SW 12.11.5, Aug. 19, 1824. Welch, see also Welsh. Paniel Welch, Washington county. Pa., all 1.10.4, March 10, 1807. Daniel Welch, Washington county, Pa., all 6.9.4, March 10, 1807. Henry Welday, Jefferson county, SE 7.13.6, Aug. 19, 1824. David Welling, Harrison county, SW 23.9.5, Aug. 18, 1817. Bezaleel Wells, Steubenville, all 20.9.4, March 6, 1806. Bezaleel Wells, Steubenville, all 36. 9.4, March 6, 1806. Bezaleel Wells, Steubenville, all 31.10.4, April 5, 1806. Bezaleel Wells, assignee of Thomas Holmes, all 19.10.4, June 6, 1806. Bezaleel Wells, Steubenville, all 1.11.5, Aug. 20, 1808. Bezaleel Wells, Steubenville, SW 32.10.4, Aug. 10, 1811. Bezaleel Wells, Steubenville, SW 2.11.5, July 30, 1812. Bezaleel Wells, Steubenville, NE 7.11.5, July 30, 1812. Bezaleel Wells, Steubenville, SE 7.11.5, July 30, 1812. Bezaleel Wells, Steubenville, SE 2.11.5, July 30, 1812. Bezaleel Wells, assignee of Zaccheus Beatty, all 34.10.4, July 30, 1812. Bezaleel Wells, assignee of Zaccheus A. BeattJ^ SW 8.11.5, Sept. 7, 1812. Bezaleel Wells, assignee of Zaccheus A. Beatty, SE 8.11.5, Sept. 7, 1812. Bezaleel Wells, Steubenville, SE 32.10.4, Sept. 7, 1812. Bezaleel Wells, Steubenville, NW 5.11.5, Aug. 6, 1813. Charles D. Wells, Harrison county, SW 35.10.5, Oct. 9, 1813. Jsaiah Wells, Harrison county, SW 24.12.7, March 16, 1815. Welsh, see also Welch. John Welsh, Washington county, Pa., NW 21.11.5, April 5, 1822. Samuel Welsh, Harrison county, SE 28.11.5, July 2, 1814. Samuel Welsh, Harrison county, E;{. SW 22.11.5, April 30, 1822. Samuel Welsh, Harrison county, W^^ NE 27.11.5, Sept. 15, 1823. Samuel Welsh, Harrison county, EVo SW 27.11.5, Oct. 20, 1824. Samuel Welch, Harrison county, SW 28.11.5, Dec. 10, 1827. Samuel Welsh, Harrison county. W^^ SE 22.11.5, July 1, 1831. 236 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John Wert, Harrison county, W14 SE 31.12.5, Oct. 20, 1824. John Wert, Harrison county, Ey. SW 21.12.5, Oct. 20, 1824. John Wert, Harrison county, Ei/o NE 12.11.5, July 30, 1828. John Weyandt, Tuscarawas county, W^/^ SW 26.13.6, Jan. 30, 1827. John Weyandt, Tuscarawas county, Ei^ SW and Ei^ NW 2.14.7, Dec. 10, 1827. John Weyandt, Tuscarawas county, W% NW 2.14.7, Dec. 2, 1830. John Weyandt, Tuscarawas county, W% NE 2.14.7, Jan. 1, 1833. Ezra Wharton, Bucks county. Pa., all 6.8.4, May 20, 1806. Benjamin Wheeler, Sr., Baltimore county, Md., all 5.10.4, June 6, 1806. Benjamin Wheeler, Jr., assignee of Anthony Beck, SE 6.10.4, Jan. 7, 1808. .Isaac Wheldon, Tuscarawas county, NE 7.12.7, June 6, 1814. Levi Wherry, Washington county. Pa., NE 25.11.6, Dec. 29, 1818. Charles White, Harrison county, W% NW 11.11.6, Dec. 10, 1827. Elijah White, Fayette county. Pa., WV^ NW 28.11.7, Dec. 10, 1827. James Whittaker, Harrison county, NE 35.11.5, Oct. 8, 1818. James Whittaker, Harrison county, W% NW 30.11.5, April 2, 1829. William Whitten, Jefferson county, Wi/^ SW 26.12.6, April 8, 1828. William Whitten, Harrison county, EY2 SE 32.12.6, Oct. 10, 1831. William Whittenton, Harrison county, EVj SE 22.11.7, May 6, 1824. George Wible, Harrison county, E% SE 34.11.5, March 21, 1831. George Wible, Harrison county, W% NE 34.11.5, Dec. 6, 1831. Thomas Williams, Brooke county, Va., SW 14.11.5, Nov. 17, 1812. Thomas Williams, Washington county. Pa., SW 25.11.6, Feb. 1, 1815. John Williamson, Harrison county, NE 17.10.6, March 7, 1817. Charles Willison, Harrison county, SE 19.11.6, Jan. 27, 1819. Charles Wilson, Steubenville, NW 24.12.7, Aug. 3, 1818. Hans Wilson, Steubenville, NW 17.12.7, Jan. 30, 1816. Bans Wilson, Steubenville, SW 17.12.7, July 30, 1816. Hans Wilson, Steubenville, Ei^ NE 7.14.7. Dec. 2, 1832. Israel Wilson, Tuscarawas county, SE 35.10.6, Oct. 1, 1811. Israel Wilson, assignee of Dudley Milner, NE 5.11.7, Nov. 16, 1812. Jsrael Wilson, Tuscarawas county, SE 20.12.7, Dec. 12, 1815. 'Israel Wilson, Harrison county, NW 5.11.7, Jan. 27, 1819. James Wilson, Jefferson county, NW 12.10.6, Oct. 7, 1812. James Wilson, Jr., assignee of James Wilson, SW 7.11.6. Aug. 24, 1816. John Wilson, Jefferson county, WV2 NW 12.10.4, Oct. 20, 1824. Thomas Wilson, Brooke county, Va., NW 17.10.5, June 10, 1812. James Winder, NW 12.11.7, Feb. 10, 1809. James Winders, Fayette county. Pa., NW 2.12.7, July 1, 1816. John Winnance, Jefferson county, SE 21.11.4, Jan. 20, 1812. John Winance, Jefferson county SW 21.11.4, Dec. 12, 1812, John Wynants, Jefferson county, SW 8.12.5. July 30, 1813. John Winte, Wheeling, Va., all 19.8.4, Feb. 11, 1806. John Winter, Wheeling, all 25.8.4. April 10, 1804. HARRISON COUNTY LAND PATENTS 231 Isaac Wood, Jefferson county, SW 18.11.5, May 3, 1814. John Wood, Harrison county, BVz SE 28.11.7, Dec. 6, 1831. John Wood, Harrison county, W% SW 17.11.7, Nov. 12, 1832. Jonathan Worrall, Jefferson county, SW 15.9.4, March 16, 1815, David Wortman. Jefferson county, W^/o NE 25.12.5, March 10, 1825. Jacob Wright, Harrison county, Ei/. SE 2.12.6, Feb. 20, 1827. James Wright, Belmont county, SE 32.9.5, Aug. 15, 1811. James Wright, Belmont county, NW 25.9.5, Feb. 17, 1820. James Wright, Belmont county, NE 31.9.5, Nov. 13, 1822. James Wright, Jefferson county, W% NE 29.11.6, Nov. 13, 1822. John C. Wright, Steubenville, SE 8.11.6, Oct. 20, 1819. Jonathan Wright, Belmont county. SE 11.10.6, May 18, 1813. Moses Wright, Harrison county, SW 24.11.7, Jan. 10, 1820. Thomas Washington Wright, Harrison county, SE NE 29.11.6, Nov. 18, 1833. William Wright, Belmont county, SW 32.9.5, March 5, 1818. William Wright, Harrison county, E% SW 21.12.6, April 5, 1822. William Wright, Harrison county, W^^ SE 21.12.6, April 30, 1822. William Wright, Jefferson county, SW SE 29.11.6, Sept. 10, 1832. William Wright, Jefferson county, NW SE 29.11.6, Nov. 18, 1833, Peter Wicoff, Brooke county, Va., NE 12.11.6, June 24, 1815. Peter Wicoff, Brooke county, Va., NW 12.11.6, Feb. 28, 1821. William Wyckoff, Tuscarawas county, SE 26.11.6, Feb. 14, 1817. tieirs of John Wylie, dec'd, SE 11.10.4, May 9, 1818. Jesse Young, Harrison county, SE 13.12.6, April 17, 1820, John Young, Anne Arundel county, Md., NW 22.9.4, Jan. 29, 1814. 238 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY MAliPJAGES m HAREISON COUXTY. 1813 to 1840, Inclusive. Adam Abel and Rachel Wagner, Aug. 11, 1829, by John Gruber, J. P. John Abel and Elizabeth Shick, June 10, 1827, by John Wagner, J. P. John Abel and Sarah Ann Abel, Oct. 29, 1837, by John Wagner, J. P. Elias Ackerman and Elizabeth Shades, Dec. 1, 1830, by Rev. John Crom. Baldwin Adams and Eleanor Brock, Jan. 18, 1820, by Desberry Johnson, Esq. George Adams and Milly Hitchcock, Dec. 24, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. James Adams and Elizabeth Cope, Dec. 16, 1824, by Phineas Inskeep, J. P. James Adams and Nancy McDowell, Nov. 30, 1826, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Joshua Adams and Jane Brown, Dec. 14, 1835, by Rev. James C. Taylor. Samuel Adams and Jane Stewart, Aug. 30, 1833, by John McArthur, V. D. M. William Adams and Elizabeth Clark, March 7, 1825, by Rev. James Roberts. Willian^ H. Ady and Rebecca Ady. Aug. 13, 1828, by John Heberling, J. P. George Albaugh and Betsy Amraons, Sept. 10, 1829, by John C. Huston, J. P. Solomon Albaugh and Presila Makisan, Nov. 4, 1817, by Martin Guilinger, J. P. William Albaugh and Sarah Thompson, Sept. 18, 1823, by B. W. Veirs, J. P. Thomas Alberson and Fanny Campbell, Jan. 22, 1820, by Robert Maxwell, J. P. Isaac Alexander and Nancy Hurless, Aug. 20, 1822, by John Hurless, J. P. Robert Alexander and Elizabeth Carothers, Dec. 1, 1834, by Richard Campbell. Thomas Alexander and Esther Miller, Nov. 6, 1821, by John Rea. V. D. M. James Allen and Mary Knox, Jan. 9, 1834, by Rev. William Tipton. Ruton Allensworth and Eliza Barnhouse, May, 23, 1838, by John Wagner, J. P. James Allison and Margaret Hervey, Oct. 12, 1815, by John Rea, V. D. M. Ephraim Allwood and Elizabeth Salsbury, July 15, 1824, by John Wagner, J. P. Peolia Alwood, and Mary Ann Salsbury, June 20, 1826, by Rev. Jacob Winter. Daniel Amies and Mary Thornburg, Feb. 11, 1826, by John Wagner, J. P. Philip N. Amiss and Edna Basyn, July 19, 1830, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William Aims and Precilla Shultz, Aug. 26, 1828, by John Wagner, J. P. Alexander Amspoker and Mary Lyons, Jan. 27, 1831, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Amspoker and Catlierine Bay, Oct. 4, 1827, by John Rea, V. D. M. Samuel Amspoker and Ellen Bell, May 5, 1840, by Rev. Alexander Wilson, Benjamin Anderson and Agnes Love, Aug. 31, 1826, by John Walker, J. P. Geoi-ge W. Anderson and Jane Pritchard, Oct. 8, 1840, by James Kerr, V. D. T.I. Grafton Anderson and Mary Henry, April 24, 1832, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P. Harmon Anderson and Mary Ann White, July 25, 1839, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Jacob Anderson and Lavina Field, May 7, 1835, by William Arnold, J. P. James Anderson and Lavina Carrick, Feb. 21, 1822, by John Rea, V. D. M. James T. Anderson and Mariah Lindsley, Nov. 6, 1838, by James Evans, J. P. John Anderson and Maria Young, Sept. 17. 1S22, by Phineas Inskeep, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 239 John W. Anderson and Rachel Grubb, Nov. 16, 1826, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Samuel W. Anderson and Matilda Tipton, Feb. 20, 1837, by David Finnicum, J. P. William Anderson and Jane Frier, Feb. IS, 1834, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William Anderson and Matilda Wagstaff, Nov. 28, 1837, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Barton Andrews and Rachel Barrett, April 2, 1815, by Rev. James Roberts. Charles Andrews and Jane Glasgow, Sept. 8, 1831, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. David Andrews and Mary Ramsey, Dec. 20, 1820, by John Rea, V. D. M. Hazel Andrews and Martha Archbole, March 21, 1816, by Thomas Fisher, J. P. Jeremiah Andrews and I-ibby Archbold, Aug. 5, 1813, by William Barnhill, J. P. Charles Angel and Eva Muntz, May 19, 1822, by John V/agner, J. P. Lsrael Angel and Nancy Hardner, Feb. 1, 1818, by John Rinehart. John Anguis and Sarah Cook, Nov. 14, 1820, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Benjamin Ankrim and Nancy Race, March 22, 1832, by Robert Pittis, J. P. James Ankrum and Susanna Auld, Nov. 3, 1836, by William Wallace, V. D. M. John W. Ankrim and Margaret Hamilton, Nov. 25, 1830, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Benjamin Antrim and Elizabeth Merit, April 12, 1825, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P. David Arbaugh and Susanna Long, Feb. 19, 1837, by Rev. Abraham Keller. James Arbuthnot and Eliza Armstrong, Dec. 29, 1823, by Salmon Cowles, V. D. M. Thomas Archbold and Phebe Valentine, Dec. 3, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Thomas Armstrong and Elizabeth Patter£,on, Oct. 29, 1833, by Rev. Jacob Coon. Jacob Arnda and Caty Miller, Feb. 8, 1818, by Martin Guilinger. James Arndt and Sarah McGlintock, Nov. 20, 1817, by Rev. John Rea, George Arnold and Rachel Walker, March 11, 1840, by William Boggs, J. P. John W. Arnold and Elizabeth Davis, Oct. 3, 1834, by William Arnold, J. P. John Arnold and Nancy Galbraith, June 17, 1836, by William Arnold, J. P. Solomon Arnold and Barbara Stonebrook, Oct. 29, 1820, by Jacob Tope, J. P. William Arnold and Miss Jane Hoyt, May 17, 1831, by Rev. William Tipton. Daniel Ashbaugh and Christence Ann Little, Sept. 20, 1838, by George Shaffer, J. P. Anthony Asher and Milly Barks, Aug. 8, 1816, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Richard Askin and Cynthia Dorsey, Dec. 5, 1837, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. John Askren and .Tulianna Lee, June 5, 1825, by Rev. James Roberts. Samuel Askren and Eliza Worley, Oct 13, 1822, by Rev. James Roberts. David M. Atherton and Eliza Nevitt, Nov. 1, 1821, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Barten Atkison and Margaret Hendricks, Aug. 29, 1839, by William D. Mc- Cartney, V. D. M. David B. Atkinson and Nancy Amanda McCollough, Feb. 22, 1837, by Rev. Jacob Coon. John Atkinson and Mary F. Ritchey, Dec. 27, 1831, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. John Atkinson and Ann Ross, Feb. 4, 1836, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Samuel Atkinson and Rebecca Kyle, Dec. 20. 1840, by Joseph Clokey, V. D. M. William Atkinson and Mary Kyle, Jan. 4, 1838, by Rev. Joseph Clokey. Daniel Auld and Jane Auld, March 22, 1839, by Andrew Isaacs. James Auld and Helena Alexander, May 20, 1839, by Andrew Isaacs. John G. Auld and Hannah Marinda Ankrum, Sept. 3, 1835, by William Wallace, V. D. M. 240 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John L. Auld and Jane Hanna, May 23, 1837, by M. B. Lukins, J. P. Stewart Auld and Sarah Connel, Sept. 30, 1819, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Stewart M. Auld and Martha Matilda Ankrum, April 18, 1839, by William Wal- lace, V. D. M. William Auld and Mary McAdow, Sept. 25, 1817, by Thomas B. Clark. J. P. William Auld and Elizabeth Todd, June 11, 1822, by John Russel, J. P. William Auld and Elizabeth Alexander, Aug. 5, 1829, by John Walker, V. D. M. George Ayres and Leah Flory, Jan. 22, 1833, by Thomas Ford. Jacob Ayres and Polly Petty, June 7, 1832, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. John Bain and Polly Taylor, Nov. 21, 1825, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. Daniel Bair and Elizabeth Manbeck, Sept. 22, 1831, by Thomas Day, J. P. Seorge Bair and Hannah Robinson, Aug. 9, 1838, by David G. McGuire, J. P. John Bear and Mary Turner, March 6, 1827, by George Brown, J. P. Andrew Baker and Ann Young, Dec. 9, 1840, by John Knox, J. P. Eli Baker and Polly Easlick, Dec. 16, 1823, by Robert Maxwell, J. P. George Baker and Jane Birney, Oct. 12, 1825, by Rev. WMlliam Tipton. Iven Baker and Belinda Cox, Jan. 22, 1823, by John Busby, J. P. John Baker and Nancy Thompson, March 6, 1832, by Rev. William Knox. John Baker and Elizabeth Foreman, Nov. 6, 1834, by Rev. Edward H. Taylor. Nathaniel Baker and Balinda Eusby, Nov. 11, 1819, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone Otto Baker and Mary Cox, March 29, 181), by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Otho Baker and Nancy Buchannan, Sept. 7, 1S37, by Rev. James L. Russell. Rezin Baker and Sarah Thompson, Feb. 13, 1834, by Rev. Aurora Callender. Samuel Baker and Mary McCombs, Oct. 28, 1830, by John McArthur, V. M. D. Samuel Baker and Betsey Orr, Feb. 3, 1836, by William Tagjart V. D. M. William Baker and Mary Waters, Feb. 1, 1827, by Robert Orr, J. P. William Baker and Ann Barnhouse, Sept. 10, 1829, by Jacob Tope, J. P. Zachariah Baker and Ede Busby, Feb. 3, 1825, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Mordica Balderson and Ann Kirby, Nov. 15, 1839, by Joseph Clokey, V. D. M. Colmore Ball and Mary Lance, Oct. 2, 1838, by Rev. Pardon Cook. James H. Ball and Terry Andrews, Aug. 15, 1815, by Rev. James Roberts. James Banister and Caty Woods, Aug. 24, 1815, by Henry Ford. J. P. James Barber and Betsey Jane Martin, July 16, 1835, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Cornelius Barber and Prudence Ford, Oct. 29, 1817, by William Wyckoff, J. P. John Barber and Lucinda Dewell, Feb. 15, 1827, by Samuel Dunlap, J. P. John Barcroft and Anna Stone, Oct. 25, 1827, by John Rea, V. D. M. Ralph L. Barcroft and Margaret Guinn, May 27, 1819, by H. H. Leavitt. Abraham Barger and Mary Welch, May 21, 1840, by M. D. McCartney, V. D. M. Alexander Barger and Elizabeth Lafferty, Feb. 21, 1837, by William Wallace, V. D. M. George Barger and Deborah Pugh, March 8, 1838, by Richard Hammond, J. P. John Barger and Eliza Ann Gatchel, May 28, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. John Barger and Isabella Day, Oct. 27, 1836, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Peter Barger and Ruth Ann Crawford, April 11, 1834, by Rev. William Tipton. Arnold Barker and Isabella Rutan, Nov. 24, 1831, by Rev. John McArthur. Joseph Barker and Anne Manchester, March 31, 1825, by J. R. Kirkpatrick, Matthew Barker and Rachel Duel. June 30, 1S25, by Sam.uel Dunlap, J. P. Charles Barkhurst and Ellen Davis, Feb. 9, 1837, by Rev. Jas. C. Taylor. Charles Barkhurst and Mary Booth, April 18, 1839, by Rev. John Wilson. Daniel Barkhurst and Mary Wallraven, Dec. 26, 1833, by Eev. J. Waddell. EARLY MARRIAGES 241 Isaac Barkhnrst and Isabel Moore, May 29, 1833, by Thomas Parkinson, J. P. Jamos Barkhurst and Elizabeth C. Welling, July 29, 18.^0, by William Tii)ton. John Barkhurst and ilebeckah Belch, April 16, 1816, by Paul Preston. Thomas Barkhurst and Susanna Davis, July 13, 1837, by Rev. James C. Taylor. William Barkhurst and Drusilla Tipton, March 12, 1834, by Rev. Aurora Cal- lender. Elisha S. Barlow and Sarah Harris, Jan. 13, 1837, by John Chalfan, J. P, James A. Barnes and Betsy Barnett, Nov. 12, 1815, by Charles Chapman. J. P. John P. Barns and Aby Barnett, Dec. 23, 1820, by William Haverfield, J. P. Levi Barnes and Susan Rogers, April 10, 1823, by Hugh Shotwell, J. P. Richard H. Barnes and Susan J. Dorsey, Oct. 10, 1839, by Rev. J. H. Miller. Jacob Barnhart and Sophia Turner, Feb. 3, 1825, by Alex. Moore, J. P. Hugh Barnhill and Maria Finnicum, Dec. 2, 1830, by Van Brown, J. P. John Barnhill and Mary Thompson, March 16, 1837, by John McArthiir, V. D. M. Francis Barnhouse and Nancy Kelly, Oct. 28, 1828, by Robert Orr, J. P. Jacob Barnhouse and Elizabeth Cane, May 9, 1839, by James Endslcy J. P. John Barnhouse and Ann Kail, Sept. 29, 1831, by John H. Huston, J. P. Peter Barnhouse and Susanna Beckley, June 19, 1825. by John Wagner. J. P. William Barnhouse and Eleanor Holmes, Dec. 28. 1827, by John Rea, V. D. M. William Barnhouse and Mary Graham, Dec. 23, 1830, by Michael Conaway, J. P. William Barnhouse and Sarah Kelly, Nov. 8, 1838, by John Caldwell. J. P. Henry Barnet and Elizabeth Maxwell, March 13, 1824, by Hugh Shotwell, J. P. Henry Barnett and Jane Haverfield, March 13, 1831, by William Taggart, V. D. M. James Barnett and Mary M. Lacy, May 28, 1834, by William Arnold, J. P. John Barnett and Ceney Merryman, March 14. 1833, by J. Stanoart, J. P. Joseoh Barr and Marjery Hall, Feb. 27, 1823, by J. Staneart. J. P. Thomas Barr and Emily Fincer, Jan. 19, 1826, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Arthur Barrett and Hannah Sears, March 2, 1837, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Erasmus Barrett and Susannah Rogers, June 11, 1836, by Thomas Phil]i))s, J. P. Isaac Barret and Rachel Cannon, Feb. 7, 1813, by Rev. David McMasters. Thomas Barrett and Susan Perry, Jan. 22, 1835. by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William Barrett and Phebe McKeever, Sept. 24, 1829, by Rev. Wiliiam Knox. John Barricklow and Rachel Watson, March 24, 1^36, by Rev. Jacob Coon. Edward Barrister and Milly Cral)tree, July 31, 1815, by William Knox. John M. Bartholow and Sarah Sears, Feb. 14, 1839, by Rev. Jacob Lommon. William Bartholow and Mary Miller, Feb. 22, 1838, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Charles Bartlet and Ursula Wyckoff, July 5, 1822, by Benjamin S. Cowan, J. P. John Bartlett and Margaret Lamb, Aug. 10, 1818, by John Crawford, J. P. Absolom Bartley and Susanna Springer, Sept. 16. 1817, by David Custer, J. P. Charles Bartley and Hannah Mulford, Jan. 27, 1840, by Thomas Finnicum, J. P. Francis Bartow and Mary Lisle, Aug. 31, 1837, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. George Bartow and Matilda Pickin, March 30, 1820, by Michael Conaway, J. P, Zenus Bartow and Mary Boyce, June 7, 1814, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. Martin Bash and Catherine Noffzgar, March 16, 1837, by Rev. Adam Hetsler. Wiatt Basye and Jane Wilson, March 8, 1823, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P. Jesse Batten and Mary Ann Rosenberger, Sept. 22, 1831, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Thon.as Batten and Mary Steel, Sept. 6, 1827, by Thomas Lakin. John Baxter and Lucinda Suddith, Jan. 8, 1828, by Samuel Hitchcock, J. P. 16 242 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Thomas Baxter and Nancy Suddeth, March 1, 1834, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. William Baxter and Sarah Paulson, March 4, 1830, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Hugh Bay and Rebecca Uonel, April 23, 1835, by John McArtliur, V. D. M. Zephemiah Bayless and Jane Dickey, June 11, 1832, by John McArthur, V. D. M. George Beall and Margaret Elliot, March 28, 1839, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Isaac Beal and Jane Neel, Oct. 14, 1830, by William N. Smith. John Beal and Provy Davis, Nov. 19, 1819, by Charles Chapman, J. P. James P. Bealle and Minerva Huff, Dec. 9, 1819, by Abriam Johnson, J. P. James Beall and Mary Garner, Sept. 21, 1837, by M. B. Lukins, J. P. Samuel Beal and Mary Ann Leard, June 11, 1835, by John L. Layport, J. P. Harman M. Beans and Sarah Broadhurst, Dec. 2, 1830, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Joseph Beans and Abigail Rankin, June 7, 1838, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Thomas Beard and Eliza France, Oct. 24, 1838, by Thomas Hunt. Abram Beatty and Ruth Hall, June 7, 1S14, by Thomas Dickinson, J. P. Sampson Beatty and Rachel Johnson, April 15, 1826, by Rev. William Tipton. Samuel Beatty and Margaret Wilson, Feb. 6, 1827, by William Taggart, V. D. M. William Beatty and Maria Hendricks, Nov. 13, 1823, by Michael Conaway William Beatty and Mary Black, Sent. 4, 1832, by John Rea, V. D. M. William Beatty and Mary Wilkins, Nov. 9, 1837, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Isaac Beaver and Betsey Trusal, Nov. 20, 1832, by Lot Deming, J. P. George Beck and Delila Miller, Dec. 26, 1839, by John Knox, J. P. James Beck and Nancy Turupaugh, Nov. 10, 1825, by George Brown, J. P. Levi Beck and Rachel Dutton, May 15, 1839, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Michael Beck and Eve Bair, April 19, 1831, by John Gruber, J. P. Presley Beck and Sarah Boyles, Dec. 16, 1827, by T. P. Jenkins, J. P. Henry Beckley and Ann McGee, March 22, 1832, by John Wagner, J. P. Jacob Beckley, and Susanna Shulty, July 12, 1818, by John Wagner, J. P. John D. Bedwell and Polly Foster, Nov. 5, 1829, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Horace Belknap and Saloma Winders, March 16, 1826, by Daniel Limerick, Elder M. E. Church. Dary Bell and Cassa Moore, June 18, 1840, by William Arnold, J. P. George W. Bell and .Tane Heavlin, Feb. 2, 1826, by Alexander Moore, J. P. Graft Bell and Margaret Deeper, April 3, 1832, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Graft Bell and Margaret McClintick, April 11, 1840, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. John Bell and Betsey Turner, Aug. 26, 1825, by Silvanus I^amb, J. P. John Bell and Catherine Grimes, July 31, 1832, by William Tipton, Robert Bell and Charlotte Blanchard, Sept. 26, 1821, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Robert H. Bell and Jane Simpson, July 31, 1823, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Robert H. Bell and Margaret Richards, March 25, 1840, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. Samuel Bell and Rachel Croskey, Dec. 28. 1826, by James Phillips, V. D. M. Walter Bell and Sarah Hovey, Jan. 18, 1816, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Walter Bell and Anne Parker, Sept. 1, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. William Bell and Martha Hooper, March 29, 1838, by William Wallace, V. D. M. John Beltz and Martha Stuffy, May 26, 1830, by John Wagner, J. P. John Bendue and Ann Hibbs, July 16, 1839, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Philip Benedict and Sarah Harmon, Nov. 4, 1830, by John Gruber, J. P. Jarret Bennett and Mary Turner, Oct. 29, 1829, by Joseph Rea, J. P. Valentine Berger and Elizabeth Wable, Jan. 11, 1827, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 24^ Daniel Berry and Isabella Hayes, Feb. 26, 1835, by John Rsa, V. D. M. Jesse Berry and Hariett Walker, Jan. 15, 1828, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Samuel Berry and Jane Hays, Feb. 11, 1836, by John Rea, V. D. M. Barnet Bethel and Anne Chandler, Jan. 24, 1823, by George Brown, J. P. John Bethel and Elizabeth Oglevee, March 7, 1827, by Joseph Rea J, P. Jacob Betz and Christena Feltenberger, Dec. 22, 1836, by John Wagner, J P. Philip Bidinger and Sarah Hartman, April 5, 1821, by John Graham. Alexander Biddle and Mary Knossker, May 17, 1832, by Rev. Adam Hetsler. Joshua Biddle and Sally Notsker, July 12, 1838, by James McGaw, J. P. James Bigger and Polly Bigger, April 4, 1817, by William Taggart, "V. D. M. James J. Billingsley and Jane Meldrum, Feb. 1, 1838, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Wesley Binas and Anna Haver. Nov. 12, 1833, by James Smith, J. P. Michael Binger and Elizabeth Zollars, Oct. 12, 1828, by John Gruber, J. P. Jacob Bingham and Katherine Kennard, Aug. 16, 1832, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P. Joseph Bingham and Rachel Bernhard, April 14, 1825, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P. Stephen N. Bingham and Sarah Townsend, Api'il 5, 1821, by Rev. James Roberts. Hamilton Birney and Rachel McKee. Sept. 23, 1839, by Rev. Parden Cook. Israel Birney and Martha Hedge, Aug. 23, 1837, by John McArthur, V. D. M. John Birney and Hannah McKee, Nov. 23, 1833, by Rev. Aurora Callender. Letchworth Birney and Nancy Forsyth, Nov. 14, 1839, by Rev. Lewis Janney. Robert Birney and Elizabeth Law, Feb. 2, 1836, by Rev. Job Wilson. William Birney and Nan-cy Moore, March 2, 1830, by John McArthur, V. D. M. John Bishop and Naomi Blue, Aug. 16, 1817, by Henry Kail, J. P. Thomas Bishop and Susanna Gutshall, Feb. 17, 1831, by Thomas Day, J. P. Daniel Black and Mary Fulton, Oct. 2, 1823, by William Holmes, J. P. Zigismond M. Black and Ruth Ann Peterson, Oct. 18, 1837, by Rev. William Knox. Samuel Blackford and Sarah Williams, Nov. 2, 1819, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P Samuel Blackstone and Rachel Rowlands, Jan. 10, 1839, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Adam Blair and Elizabeth Scoles, Dec. 22, 1829, by Thomas M. Hudson, J. P. Arcliibald Blair and Susanna Orr, Feb. 6. 1824, by James McMahon Daniel Blair and Susanna Haverfield, Nov. 2, 1819, by William Anderson, J. P. John Blair and Eleanor Haverfield, Dec. 28. 1S26, by Samuel Hitchcock, J. P. John Blair and Isabella Oliver, Aug. 1, 1827, by Rev. William Knox. John Blair and Jane BroKaw, Nov. 19, 1830, by Rev. William McMillan. Randel Blair and Sarah Barnett, July 11, 1820, by Rev. William Haverfield, J. P. William Blair and Sarah Day, Dec. 14, 1826, by Alexander Moore, J. P. John Bleeks and Darcus Maholm, Nov. 20, 1823, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M- James Boals and Margaret Clifford, Feb. 12, 1837, by John McArthur, V. D. M. James Bowles and Martha Hanna, Oct. 17, 1839, by Joseph Clclvey, V. D. M. Robert Boals and Catherine Manly, Oct. 25, 1822, by John Rea, V. D. M. William Boggs and Martha Beatty, Sept. 6, 1827, by Rev. Salmon Cowles. William Boggs and Martha Simeral, June 19, 1838, by John Rea, V. D. M. Joshua Bond and Ruth Cole, Dec. 21, 1815, by John Roberts. Alexander Bonham and Susannah Yarnel, Nov. 21, 1833, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Evan Bonham and Mary Worley, May 1, 1828, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. :n HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HAUUISON COUNTY Smith HiMiham and Julian Worloy, ,T:m. 4. IS.T. by Uev. Benjamin Wood. Miohaol l>oop and Kli/.ahoth Winin.us. Juno -J). ISJo. by Kov. l^aniol Rahauser. Jaiob iUH)tl\e and Mary Harkhurst. IVo. 26. lSo3. by Rov. G. WaddoU. JortMuiah Booth and Elizabeth Ann Carnor. Sept. 20. ISSS. by William Arnold. J. P. Isaac Boothe and Leah Arbuokle. Deo. 7. 1S24. by Salmon Cowies. V. O. M. John Botho and Mary Cox. Aug. 20. ISIS, by James Roberts. John Booth and Mary Ann .\ikins. April 21. ISol. by Rev. John Seorest. John r>oothe and Elendev Ann MeKee. April II. IS:?3. by Edward Talbott J. P. Samuel Borland and Mary Little. April 20. 1S20. by John Hurless. J. P. Satnnel Boivland and Elizabeth Heavlin. Oct. 4. 1S27. by Rev. Sewel C. Bris:::s. Jaeob Bo!5ley and Elizabeth N. Kail. Juno 25. ISoo. by John Wagner. J. P. Medad Bostiok and Mary N. Ci-aij;. Oct. 1. ISUV by Desberry Johnson. J. P. Elias Bowers and Forill.x .MoBonald. April m. ISIS, by Rev. M. Cole. William Bowers and Crilly Barneys. Eeb. 3. ISIS, by Charles Chapman. J. P. Williant l5ower and Sarah Tauner. Jnne lH. lS3ti. by David Bower. J. P. David r.oworsook and Margaret Shiok. April S. 1S27. by James Mannin;t. Abraham r>oyoe and Elizabeth Cram. Apdl 20. 1SU5. by Thomas Diokerson. J. P. William Boyco and Sarah Reynolds. Jan. 7. lS2v^. by Michael Conaway. J. P. Jantes F. Boyles and Mary \nn Hook. Jnne 2. 1S37. by B. W. Viers. J. P. Albert Boyd and Raohel Ann J. Eaton. Doc. 20. 1S;U5. by M. B. Lnkins. J. P. Jatjves Boyd and Maria Barger. Nov. 4. ISSO. by John McArthur. V. D. M. John Boyd and Caty Henry. Sept. 24. 1S2'J. by Henry Ford, J. P. John P.oyd and Mary Burnett. Oct. 22. IS32. by Thomas Phillips. J. P. John >U\vd and Karonhappuok Parrish. June SO. lS3o. by William Tag?:^rt, V. D. M. Samuel P>oyd and Eliza Christy. Deo. 23. 1S2S. by Sanmel Hitchcock. J. P. Samnol Boyd and Nanoy Allen. Fob. ItS. 1S3S. by John M. Brown. J. P. Thomas Boyd and Catherine Kent. Maroh 6. 1SS2. by John MoArthnr. V. D M. William Boyd and Anna White. Maroh 13. 1S23. by John Orahani. William Boyd and Margaret Boles. April 3. 1S24. by Joseph Fry. J. P. Joseph B. Braden and Isabella Sharp. Oct. 23. lS3i>. by Rev. William Taggart. V. D. M. Walter Braden ar.d Esther Long. May S. 1S24. by Thomas Hanna. Y. D. M. Walter Braden and EUza Graham. April 2. 1S40. by James Kerr. V. D. M. Thomas P.radford and Mary Ann Palmer. Sept. 6. 1S21. by John Rea. V D. ^L Jesse Bradiuburgh and Matilda Turner. May 19. ISIS, by Desberry Johnson. J. P. Thomas Bradley and Rachel Scott. March IT. 1S36. by John MoArthnr. V. D ^L Willian\ Breidenthal and Catherine Timmons. Maroh 20. 1S2S. by Rev. James MiHii"e. James B. Brennan and Esther Matson. April 19. 1S20. by Thomas Parkinson. . J. P. John Brannon and Nancy Mcl.an?hlin. Jan. 7. 1S23. by Thomas Patton. J. P. Kiohard Brewer and Mary Mercer. Aivc. S. 1S37. by John ChaUan. J. P. Henry Bricker and Uvdia Miser. Shortcreek. April 20. 1S13. by Samuel Dunlap. J. P. John Bricker and Anna Busby. Feb. 14. iSSS. hy William Arnold. J. P. John Briudley and Ann Brown. A'ovii S, jSSO. by Rev. William Knox W illiam Briudley an>l Mary Little. July 2. 1S40. by James Evans, J. P. RAKI.V MARRIAGES Joseph rirondhiirst niu\ Riu-liol Carver. ?.ray !V 1S16, by Pni'.l Pro'^ton. KiMil)on HiDiiv ami Kli/.aboth Uik>y. Pih-. ::o. 1S2 1. by I'ainoas luskooi). J. V. Thomas Brock and Polila Fajiloy, Jan. 11. KSl'O, by Dosborry Johnson. En\. Thomas P^roi-k and Mar\ Smith. Jan, 7. ISlio. by .Vreliibahl Mcl'^iroy. Abraliam I'uokaw ami I\lary llvUhrio. Jnno 3, JSIO, by Uov. Alusos Alien. Benjamin Ih-okaw and Martha Ividwell. Sov)t. 23. 1S30. by Philip Fnlton. J. P. Geor,i;e l?roka\v and Kli/a Hamilton. An-. 13. 1S27. by William Wallaee. V. IX RF. Peter IJrokaw and Sarali Grant. Sept. IIO. lS2o. by Isaac Allen. J. P. John Brooks and Mary Fancet. Feb. 27, 1822. by IClias Crane. D. C. Thomas P>rooks and l\Iary Grace. May 15. 1S2S. by Rev. William Knox. Clark Mnnvn and Rachel Poulson. .March 22, 1S;'.2. by Rev. William Knox. Daniel I'rown anil Snsanna UpdegralT. .\pril 1. 1S2S. by Rev. Joseph Anderson. Klislia Mi'own and Mar.naret Ann Vanhoia. .Inly 2,'>. 1SI'!>, by Richard llamnunid. George Brown and Nancy Laivb. Marcli 27. ISIS, by William ^Vyc^•olT. J. 1'. George Brown and Sarah Tipton. Nov. ,). 1S20. by William Anderson. .1. P. Georsie Brown and Susanna Kidwell. Jan. 24. 1S3;). by Charles Thorn. Griiisby P.rown and Sarah Uubel. Sept. I'J. 1S37. by Thomas P. Jenkins. J. P. Jacob lirov.n and Eleanor Tipton. April Ui. ISIO. by Robert C\ildwell. J. P. James Brown and Mary Dryden. Feb. 11, 1S31>. by Andrew Isaac. Jefferson Brown and Mary Gass. March 27. 1S32. by .John Mc.Vrthnr. V. I). M. Joel Brown and Leah Mister. May S. 1S23. by David McMasters. John R. Brown and Mary Beek. Sept. 10. ISIS, by Peter Johnson, J. P. John Brown and Sarah Davis. Dec. 23, 1S21, by Rev. John Watterman. John Brown and Martha Williams. Nov. 8. 1S27. by Michael Conaway. J. P. John Brown and Hannah Beck. Auii'. 20, 1S2i). by Thomas P. Jenkins. J. P. John Brown and Eli/.abeth Kirkwood. April 20, 1S31, by Van Brown, J. P. John iM. Brown and I'li/.a ,lane Norris, Jan. 2, ISol. by John L. Grnbb. J. P. Joseph l>rown and Mary Meek. April 2. lS2r>. by Rev. John McMahon. Joseph Brown and lOliza Robinstui. Sept. 23. 1S30. by ,lohn Mc.Vrthnr. V. D. M. Joshua Brown and Sally Ikirnes. Feb. lv">. ISl'G. by James Clements. WMlliam Brown and Lena Dawson. Jan. 11. 1S23. by William Wallace. William Brown and Mai-,;;aret Cnlhert^on. Feb. 14, 1S3S). by Rev. Jacob Coon. William Brownin ;ind Hannah Barr. Feb. 2S, ISIS, by Desberry Johnson. J. P. James Rrownlee and Elizabeth Sheridan. Jnly G, 1S30. by Rev. John Moflit. Samnel Bnimley and l.>dia Wyne. April 17. 1S2S. by Rev. Jacob Lemnion. Alexander Buchanan and Rosanna Gilmore. May 3. 1S32. by Thomas Philips, J. P. Geor.ue A. Biu-hanan and l<>li/.abeth Ferris. Nov. 4. 1S3S. by Charles Thorn. John Buchanan and Mary Pittin.s;er. Dee. 4. 1S32. by John McArthnr, V. D. M. Joseph Buchanan and Elizabeth Hynes, Feb. 8, 1838, by Rev. John Knox. Abraham Buck and l''leanor Cliicken. Jan. 2(5. 1S28. by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. William Ihick and Corander Smith. .Vpril 5. 1S14. by Rev. Janies Roberts. Nathaniel Buck and Nancy David. Oct. 13. 1815, by William WyckotT. J. P. Jesse Buthngton nud Fanny \\allace, Nov. 3, 1835, by Samnel Skinner, J. P. John Buger and Racliel Markley, May 22. 1814, by Gcor.sic Pfautz, J. P. John Bnrch and Eli/.abeth Pasley. Dec. r,, 18Ui, by John Crawford. J. P. Resin Burdett and Rachel .Martin, March 17, 1833, by John Barry, J. P. Daniel P>uri}:e;- and Caty Alhon^h, Dec. 23, 1818. by Martin Guilinser. J. P. James Burk and Elizabeth Smoot, Sept. i), 182G. by James Clements, J. P. 210 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Matthias Buvkhart and Eli?.aboth Kail. Feb. 2L 1S20. by John Wagner. J. P. William nuvkhart and Fanny Arnold. M-^y l>. 1S23. by .lohn Wagnor. J. P. Abraham lUirkhoad and Anna Burkhoad. Nov. 31. 1S2G, by Samuel Hitohoock. J. P. .loshna Bnrkhead and Maria rurniiavii;l\. May 23. 1S27. by Saniiiel Hitehooek. J. P. Joshua P>urkhead and FUi-.abeth Cox. Sept. li>. 1S30. by Thomas Phillips. J. P. Mahalaleel Purkhead and Sarah lUair. Ang. 10, 1S24. by Isaac Allen. J. P. Nathan Purkhead imd Susanna Rogers. Feb. 5. 1S31. by Peter Barger. J. P. Thomas Burkhead and Sarah Ann Oordou, Juue 15, 1S3T, by Richard Hammond. J. P. John Burns and Rachel Lett. Feb. 25. ISIT. by .lohn Crawford. J. P. John M. P.uins and Kli/abeth llilbert. Jan. 4. 1S3!\ by Andrew Lynch. J. P. William Burns and Rachel Randolph. AprU 20. 1S30. by John McArihur. V .U. M. Robert Bnrnside and Margaret McAdam, March 12. 1S40, by Hugh Parks. V. n. M. Benedict Bnrrass and Elizabeth Creder. Dec. 30. 1S23. by Rev. William \Vallaci\ Jacob Burrier and Catherine Heudi'icks. Sept. 3, 1S33. by David Finnicum, J. P. Lee S. Burton and Hannah Stone. July 2S. 1S31. by John Rea. V. D. M. Joseph Burwell and Mary Scott. Jan. 13. 1824. by Rev. William Wallace. William Burwell and Nancy Morris, Feb. 2. 1S32. by William L. Robisoa. J. P. Robert Busby and Amanda Ken\p. March 10. 1825. by James Phillips. Joshua Bush and Ruth Ann Peterson. Jan. 0. 1S23. by Rev. James Roberts. William B. Bush and Sarah McCleary, Dec. 25. 1S32. by Edward Talbott. J. P. James Bushtleld and Mary Carnee. April S. 1S24. by Jesse Hooper. J. P. John Butler and Sarah Jane Lowrey Budianan. May 3. 1S3S. by George Atkin- son. J. P. John Butterfield and Emma Shepherd. June 14. 1S32. by Rev. Jacob Cozad. Thomas Butterfield and Mary Minnick. Oct. 7. 1S32, by Lot Deming. J. P. William Cady and Rachel Baruett. March 20. ISoG. by John McArthur. V. D. :\I. David Cahill and Eleanor Capper. Jan. S, 1S20. by John C. Huston. J. P. Griffith Cahill and Mary McQueen. March 22. 1S21. by B. W. Veirs. J. P. William Cahill and Rebeckah Barrett. March 16. 1S15, by William Knox. Thomas Calahan and Nancy Bennington. Oct. 2S. 1S24. by Jacob Tope. J. P. Alfred Calvert and Cassa Browning. Dec. 24. 1S41. by John Hastings. John Caldwell and Sarah Reed. Jan. 7. ISIO. by John Rea. V. D. M. John Caldwell and Elizabeth Granfell. Sept. 5, 1830. by Rev. L. D. Kinnear. Joseph Caldwell and Nancy Gillespie. May IS. 1837. by John McArthur. V. D. M. Thomas P. Caldwell and Catherine Crabb. April 25. 1830. by William Taggart, V. D. M. Levi Caldwell and Catherine Smith. Oct 20. 1S33. by J. Staueart. J. P. Abram Camp and Nancy Nance. Ang. 24. 1837. by George Nickels. Archibald Campbell and Catherine Hauk. Juue 17, 1830. by John Rea, V. D. M. James Campbell and Sarah Foster, Nov. 14, 1S30. by Rev. Benjamin Wood. John Campbell and Elizabeth Flickinger. Feb. 7. 182S. by John Huston. J. P. John Campbell and Lucinda Plowman. April ti, 1837. by David Bower. J. P. Robert Campbell and Margaret Archbold, June 10. 1S24. by Michael Couaway, J. P. William Campbell and Mary Kerr. June 15. 1837, by John Rea. V D. M. Jacob Canagey and Sarah Fisher, Dec. 17, 1S35, by Rev. Adam Webster. f EARLY MARIUAGES • 247 Canaga, see also Kenagoy. MoscB Cannon and iiachel Turner, Oct. 14, 1819, by William Wyclioff, J. P, Thomas Cantwell and'Aroy Buckingham, March 30, ]H2<), by Rev. Willlaia Knox. David Capper and Mary Elliott, .Tan. .3, 1828, by Rev. William Knox. John Capper aud Susanna Morrisson, April 28, 1831, by .John Craham. Meredith Capper and iOliza Carter, Feb. .5, 1822, by H. W. Veirg, J. P. Samuel Camahan, and Sarah McFadden, Sept. 21, 1821>, by William Tag^art, V. D. M. Camahan, see also Kernaghan. John Carnes and Eliza Melgon, June 9, 1831, by .Joseph Johnson, J. P. Thomas Carrens and Klizabeth Harding, Nov. 7, 18.38, by M. H. Lukins, J. P, William Carnes and Sunan Riggle, March 16, 1832, by Jo.seph Johnson, J. P. George Carlisle and Hannah McCurdy, Aug. 14. 1832, by John Huston, J P. James Carlile and Nancy McDowell, Oct. 9, 1830. by Jacob Tope, J. P. Philip Carol! and Maria Feltbarger, Sept. 13, 1832, by Van Brown, J. P. George Carothers and Anne Hurnes, Sept. 12, 1815, by John Rea, V. D. M. George Carothers and Ann Black, March 24, 1828, by .l(iiiH. 1839. by D. Rothacker. Benjamin Culbertsou and Naucy Moore. Nov. 20, 1830, by William Wallace. V. D. M. George Culbertsou and Sarah Crawford. Nov. 24. 1S3G, by John :Mc Arthur. V. D. M. Hugh Culbertsou and Mary Lindsey. Feb. 12, 1835. by Rev. Jacob Coon. William T. Culleu and Sarah Humpress. Nov. 0. 1817. by Daniel David. J. P. William T. Cullen and Mary Holliday. Aug. 24. 1829. by Thomas P. Jenkins. Elias Cullison and Polly Gridgeu. Dec. 29. 1S21, by Rev. Curtis Goddard. Lemuel Culver and Mary Parmer. Sept. 10. 1839. by John Rea. V. D. M. John Cummins and Susanna Lett. Nov. 25. 1818. by James Roberts. Joseph Cnmmings and Jane Foster. Feb. 7. 1839. by Rev. John Willinor. George Cunningham and Mary Ann Humphrey. Nov. 17. 1831. by Rev. Thomas Hanna. James Cunningham and Anna Ekins. April IG. 1835. by John Rea, V. D. M. John Cunningham and Nancy Sharp. Feb. 3. 1829. by William Taggart. V. D. M. Stephen Cunningham and Margaret Ward. June 19. 1832. by John McArthur. V. D. M. John Curry and Elizabeth Shirey. Jan. 20. 1840. by Joseph W. Spencer. J. P. Johu W. Curtis and Sarah Palmer. March 28. 1827. by Rev. Samuel Adams. Emanuel Custer and Matilda Veirs. Aug. 7. 1828. by John Rea. V. D. M. Emanuel H. Custer and Maria Kirkpatrick. Feb. 23. 183G. by John McArthur. V. D. M. Jacob Custer and Catherine Gutshall. Oct. 20. 1S3G. by David McGuire. J. P. George Damm and Elizabeth McCardle. Sept 2G. 1839. by Rev. Robert E. Car- rot hers. George Dancer and Rachel Holland. Aug. 12. 1S23. by John Hnrless. J. P. John Dancer and Margaret Boyce. July 10. 1823. by Johu Hurless, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 253 Samuel Daniel anfl Nancy Maple, Dec. 4, 1825. by Van Brown, J. P. Charles Darby and Eliza Ann Star, .Jan. 1, 1833, by Rev. .Jacob Coon. Rufus Darby and Belinda B. White, March 12, 183.5. by Rev. Jacob Coon. Joseph Darling and Elizabeth Bedwell, Aug. 2r,, 1833. by Rev. Jacob Coon. John Darr and Rachel VVater.s, June 16. 1831, by John Wa'^nor, J. P. James Derrough and Polly Barr, Nov. 25, 1830. by George W. Bell, J. P. William Darrow and Bettsy , Dec. 12, 1816. by Robert Erwin, J. P. William Darrow and Namoi I^ukens, Oct. 2.5, 1827, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Jesse Davidson and Nancy Dinning, April 10, 1821, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Jesse Davidson and Eleanor Carey, March 31, 1836, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Jonah Davidson and Sally Joice, Dec. 3, 1829, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Lewis Davidson anrl Trolly J^ongshore, Nov, 28, 182G, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Lewis H. Davidson and Lucinda I^atham, Jan. 7, 1830, by Moses Wright, J P. Thomas L. Davidson and Rebecca Walker. Oct. 22, 1837, by .John Knox, J. P. David Davis and Mary McCuinor, Dec. 24, 1819, by Desberry Johnson, J. P. Evan Davis and Sarah Reed, Sept. 6, 1832, by John C. Huston, J. P. Ezekiel Davis and Elizabeth Wiley, Nov. 7, 1833, by John Rea, V. D. M. Ezekiel Davis and Catherine Norn's, Sept. 7, 1837, by Rev. Thomas Foster. Francis A. Davis and Lucy Smith, Feb. 1, 1833, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Guian Davis and Priscilla West, Sept. 5, 1839, by James Kerr, V. D. M, James Davis and Nancy Baker, Jan. 18, 1838. by George W. Bell, J. P. Jesse Davis and Mary Ann Wallcutt, Oct. 26, 1830. by George Waddell. John Davis and Elizabeth Knox, Sept. 11, 1819, by William Wyckoff, J. P. John Davis and Nancy Walker, Dec. 14, 1838, by L. G. Walker. Thomas Davis and Susan Spring, March 30, 1820, by John Russell, J. P. Thomas Davis and Eliza McClenighan, March 6, 1828, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. John Davy and Sarah Snider, Nov. 21, 1826, by John Wagner, J. P. Isaac Dawson and Martha Daly, Dec. 22, 1836, by Samuel Moorhead, J. P. William Dawson and Ann Porter, Nov. 6, 1832, by Lot Deming, J. P. John Day and Margaret Wilkins, Nov. 10, 1829, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Uriah Day and Luesia Keesey, June 3, 1831, by Peter Barger, J. P. Uriah Day and Prudence Jones, Feb. 6, 1834, by Peter Barger, J. P. John Deary and Polly MacCurdy, June 1.5, 1816, by John Rea, V. D. M. Ephraim Deavenbaugh and Rebecca Redden, June 2, 1825, by J. R. Kirkpat- rick, J. P. Abraham Deens and Sarah Shouse, May 20, 1832, by John Chaffant, J. P. David Dehuff and Margaret Phillips. Oct. 9, 1828, by Morris Allbaugh, J. P. John Dahuff and Hannah Hasfilhom, Jan. 7, 1819, by William Anderson J. P. Samuel Delany and Albina McXeely, June 21, 1826, by John Rea, V. D. M. Aaron Dell and Isabella Conaway, Dec. 13, 1832, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Peter Dell and Margaret Walsh, Nov 30. 1830, by John Gruber, J. P. Thomas Dell and Jane A. Waller, June 23, 1836, by Rev. James C. Taylor. Isaac Delong and Sarah Dickerson. Jan. 16, 1823, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Jesse Delong and Elizabeth Middleton. May 18, 1833, by John W. Her. J. P. John Delong and Demaris Delong, Dec. 2, 1838, by Levi Peddycoart, J. P.. George Deming and Eliza Conrad, Feb. 6, 1823, by Elias Cran, D. C. Treat Deming and Catherine Lyons, Nov. 28. 1837, by Rev. Richard Brown. Jacob Dennis and Rebecca Lyon, Jan. 11, 1827, by Robert Orr, J. P. John Dennis and Mary Herrel, April 26, 1840, by John Brown, J. P. Jacob Devon and Elizabeth Jones, M^ay 16, 1816, by David Custer, J. P. 254 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John Derry and Elizabeth Orr. March 1, 1832, by George W. Bell, J. P. John Derry and Berthia Warton, Dec. 19, 1839, by Joseph Fry, J. P. George Denser and Sarah Little, June 27, 1826, by Henry Ford. J. P. Samuel Deusenberry and Susan Swallow. Jan. 17, 1840, by Rev. Parden Cook. Moses Devore and Polly West, January 14, 1S36, by William Arnold. J. P. John Dew and Winifred Kirby, March 6, 1840, by William Arnold, J. P. John Dewalt and Rachel McLovedy, Dec. 18, 1823, by Robert Orr. J. P. William Dewalt and Hannah Strausbaugh, June 28, 1830, by John Patterson, J. P. Solomon Dewel and Patience Potts, June 1, 1815, by Martin Gu 1 nger, J. P. John Dewell and Phebe Jolly, Jan. 30, 1828, by Van Brown. J. P. Samuel Dewell and Mary Vanhorn, June 22, 1826, by Samuel Dunlap, J. P. Chauncey Dewey and Nancy Prichard, Feb. 11. 1823, by John Rea, V. D. M. George Dewit and Sarah Britt, Sept. 2. 1828, by Jesse Hooper, J. P. John Dewit and Mary Ruble, Jan. 19, 1832, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Lyle Dewitt and Nancy Simpson, March 29, 1831, by John Graham. Robert Dick and Elizabeth Dick, April 23, 1829, by Rev. William McMillan. Samuel Dick and Martha Clark, May 13, 1836, by Thomas P. Jenkins J. P. William Dick and Sarah Biggart, Dec. 16, 1828, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Asa Dickerson and Jane Dunlap. April 27, 1836, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Eli Dickerson and Sarah Crumley, Sept. 12, 1822. by Rev. James Roberts. Hiram Dickerson and Mary Crumley, Jan. 14, 1830, by Thomas M. Hudson. John Dickerson and Eliza McFadden, Feb. 23, 1832, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Joshua Dickerson and Nancy Glasener, Sept. 21, 1820, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. Joshua Dickerson and Belijah Lafferty, Jan. 28, 1830, by William Wallace, V. D M. Joshua Dickerson and Elizabeth Crumley, May 2, 1833, by Rev. William Tipton. Levi Dickerson and Margaret Hanna, Dec. 20, 1823. by Salmon Cowles. V. D. M. Thomas Dickerson and Mary Chew, May 6, 1819, by Rev. James B. Finley. William Dickerson and Elizabeth Holmes, Jan. 7, 1818, by James Roberts. William Dickerson and Jane Lafferty, March 8, 1838, by William Wallace, V. D. M. William W. Dickerson and Susan Ann McCoy, Oct. 17, 1839, by James H. White. Benjamin Dickey and Nancy Watson, Oct. 29, 1840, by M. F. Burkhead, J. P. Joseph Dicks and Anna Smith, Jan. 2, 18:^6, by James Smith, J. P. James Dillon and Rachel McQueen, Jan. 6, 1825, by John Hurless, J. P. George Dinger and Mary Heisler, March 11, 1821, by John Wagner, J. P. Alexander Dinning and Margaret Couch, Sept. 18, 1834, by Rev. Robert Cook. William Dinning and Margaret Hinton, June 8, 1826, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Samuel Dixon and Delila Figley, Jan. 3, 1839. by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Stacy Doan and Elizabeth Wells, Aug. 8, 1826, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P . David Dobbins and Martha Smith, Oct. 23. 1828. by William Wallace, V. D. M. John Dobbins and Ann McCullouch, April S, 1S19, by John Rea, V. D. M. Matthew Dobbins and Eliza McKibbin. Feb. 3. 1820, by John Rea, V. D. M. James Donaghey and Ruth Loudon, Jan. 9, 1835, by Mark Hogge, J. P. John Donaghey and Sarah Picken, Dec. 11, 1823, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Philip Donaghey and Eleanor Auld, April 12, 1821, by Abriam Johnson, J. P. Benjamin Doney and Elizabeth Summers, Jan. 15, 1839, by Matthew Phillips, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 255 Samuel Doney and Mary Covert, Jan. 15, 1828, by George Brown, J. P. Samuel Douglas and Isabella Pritchard, March 23, 1827, by John McArthur. David Dougherty and Mary Davidson, March 6. 1834, by John L. Grubb, J. P. James Dougherty and Sarah Lucy, Sept. 22, 1831, by Elder George Lucy. Michael A. Dowden and Ruth Greenland, Feb. 18, 1820, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Merriam Downey and Jemima Vanhorn, April 3, 1826, by Rev. Salmon Cowles. Bazel Downing and Eliza Rees, Oct. 4, 1824, by Rev. Samuel Cowles. Richard Downes and Elizabeth McKinney, April 5, 1821, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. David Drak and Nancy Drummond, Dec. (i, 1838, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. George Drake and Rachel Johnson, March 1, 1820, by Abraham Johnson. Joseph Drake and Actions Greer, Sept. 23, 1827, by Samuel Dunlap, J. P. Samuel Drake and Susan McCarthy, June 24, 1835, by William Arnold J. P. Thomas Drake and Hannah Browning, Jan. 25, 1837, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. James Drummoud and Fanny Phillips. Nov. 26, 1818, by William Taggart, James Drummond and Lydia Ann Hutchison, Feb. 25, 1824, by William Tipton. Rev. James Drummond and Catherine Taggart, July 29, 1840, by Rev. William Knox. John Drummond and Sarah Leinerd, Jan. 6, 1818, by Charles Chapman J. P. Samuel Drummond and Anna Bird, April 1, 1821, by Charles Chapman, J. P. David Duff and Jane Carr, July 11, 1815, by John Rea, V. D. M. William Dugan and Esther Gilmore, Jan. 23, 1834. by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. Maxon Duly and Lydia Dawson, July 8, 1817, by Daniel David, J. P. Joseph Dunbar and Eleanor Welch, Feb. 14, 1839, by William D. McCartney, V. D. M. Archibald Duncan and Mary Williamson, April 21, 1831, by William Wallace, V. D. M. James Duncan and Margaret Williamson, Nov. 25, 1834, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Nicholas Dunfee and Rebecca Shaeffer, March 26, 1834, by Lot Deming, J. P. Jesse Dungan and Margaret Grisell, May 1, 1823, by Rev. James Roberts. Abel Dunham and Rachel Harding, Aug. 13, 1839, by Rev. G. D. Kinnear. Lewis Dunham and Sarah Ann Nelson, Nov. 5, 1824, by Rev. John Crom. Adam Dunlap and Jane Patterson, Oct. 2, 1817, by Thomas B. Clark, J. P. John Dunlap and Ann Vanhorn, Nov. 2, 1815, by Martin Guilinger, J. P. John Dunlap and Betsey Berger, Oct. 4, 1819, by William Haverfield, J. P. Joseph Dunlap and Sarah Gilmore, May 18, 1819, by John Rea, V. D. M. Joseph Dunlap and Mary Ann Roberts, Nov. 3, 1840, by Jacob Coon. Mathew Dunlap and Ann Greer, July 1, 1813, by Alexander Lee, J. P. Robert Dunlap and Polly Patterson. April 29, 1819, by Thomas B. Clark, V. D. M. Samuel Dunlap and Hannah Greer, May 10, 1821, by Robert McLaughlin, J. P. William Dunlap and Mariah Ramage, Sept. 12, 1839, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Thomas Dunn and Sarah Dorsey. March S 1S36, by Rev. Cornelius D. Battelle. Jacob Dunmire and Rebecca Snodiker, May 9, 1828, by John Wagner, J. P. John Duvall and Rachel Jones. Nov. 22, 1834, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Nicholas Durbin and Margaret Oliver, May 2i, 1829, by Thomas Parkinson. Thomas Durban and Miram Groves, Oct. 9, 1837, by James McCoy. Cyrenius Dusenberry and Isabella McConkey, Nov. 3, 1836, by R. H. Sedwiclc. V. D. M. 256 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY David Dvittnn and Hulda Strade, Aug. 8, -iSSQ. by Thomas Phillip. J. P. William Kagle.-on and Jane Gourley, March 17, 1830, by John Rea, V. D. M. William Eagleson and Matilda Biggart, April 7, 1831, by William Taggart, V. D. M. John J. Eager and Ann Forbes, May 26, 1836, by Richard Brown. James Eakins and Elizabeth Foster, Jan. 24, 1830, by John Rea. V. D. M. Samuel Eakins and Mary Eagleson, May 27, 1840, by John Rea, V. D. M. William Eakins and Martha Osburn, May 10, 1886, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Aaron Earley and Rebecca Joy, Sept. 21, 1826, by James Clements, J. P. Aaron Earley and Elizabeth Conner, July 26, 1831, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Alexander Earley and Nancy Davis, Dec. 18, 1822, by John Russel, J. P. Ira Earley and Eliza Eicher, March 11, 1840, by Charles Thorn. John Earley and Nancy Rankin, Dec. 10, 1835, by Rev. Cornelius D. Battelle. Jonathan Earley and Matilda Ruby. Sept. 27, 1825, by Philip Fulton, J. P. Richard Easley and Elizabeth Valentine, June 11. 1827. by Rev. James Roberts. Isaac Easley and Mary Norris. April 8, 1830, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. James Easter and Sarah Maholm, Oct. 10, 1839, by Rev. William Taggart, V. D. M. Martin Easterday and Peggy Shaber, Jan. 31, 1818, by John Rinehart. Joseph Eastland and Mary Ann Norris, Dec. 24, 1835, by Joseph Masters. J. P. David P. Eaton and Eliza Jane Marshall, Feb. 28, 1839, by Rev. Robert Cook. Johiel E. Eaton and Sarah Coalman, March 26. 1840, by Rev. J. D. Kinnear. Joseph E. Eaton and Peggy Anna Ankrim, Feb. 16, 1832, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Jacob Ebert and Nancy Vandolah, April 6, 1812, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. Joshua Edie and Rachel Hall, Aug. 7, 1821, by Rev. James Roberts. William Edgar and Betsey Kirkpatrick, Dec. 28, 1820, by Thomas B. Carter, J. P. Harvey Edwards and Edith Voshel, Oct. 22, 1839, by David Bowers, J. P John Edwards and Eliza Moore, June 25. 1833, by Cornelius Crabtree, J. P. Joseph Edwards and Sarah Barkhurst, March 20. 1834, by Rev. Moses Scott. John Eicher and Nancy Davis, Feb. 16, 1831, by William McMillin. Samuel Eiraes and Eleanor Robinson. May 5, 1831, by John Wagner, J. P. William Elgar and Nancy Watson, Nov. 2, 1830, by John Gruber. J. P. John Elliott and Susan Kendal, March 24, 1830, by Alexander Simpson, J. P. Martin Elliott and Mary Hawkins, Dec. 17, 1S40, by Elias Gatchel. Berin Ellis and Mary Ann Moffet, March 17, 1831, by Lentulus Kirk. J. P. Jonathan Ellis and Margaret Lister, Feb. 17, 1820, by John Russel. J. P. Nathan Ellis and Margaret Brian, March 26, 1835, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Washington Ellison and Sarah Kent, Jan, 29, 1834, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. George Ely and Sarah Girt, March 27, 1823, by Thomas Patton, J. P. Thomas Ely and Barbara Ann Moore, Nov. 8, 1827. by Michael Conaway. J. P. William Emmons and Catherine Bussler, Feb. 11, 1832, by John C. Huston, J. P. Simon Emory and Rebecca Minick, June 3, 1840, by E. Greenwold. Thomas Endsley and Matilda Kerr, March 4, 1824, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. James Endsley "and Christian Baker, Oct. 29, 1829, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Asa Engle and Mary Ripley. July 9, 1818, by William Wyckoff. J. P. John English and Rebecca Miller, Dec. 3C, 1817, by Thomas Dickerson. John English and Elizabeth Baker, May 28, 1835, by William Arnold, J. P. Matthew English and Melila Anderson, March 14, 1839, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 25^ Patrick English and Susanna Dickerson. Feb. 3. 1818, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. Thomas English and Susanna Walraven, Oct. 28, 1820, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. Jacob Ensniinger and Elizabeth Huff. Nov. 17, 1825, by James Smith, J. P. William Erskine and Rachel Barber, Feb. 20, 1838, by Rev. James Drummond. Barney Ervin and Mary Fi:;her, Jan. 1-5, 1833, by John Chalfan, J. P. Henry Ervin and Elizabeth Wheeler, Nov. 27, 1838, by M. B. lAikins. J. P. John Ervin and Nancy Carson. Dec. 8, 1S33. by Thomas M. Granfel, J. P. William Ervin and Anna Hardin, July 27, 1837, by Thomas M. Granfel, J. P. Erwin, see also Irwin. Andrew Erwin and Esther Mcllroy, March 6, 1821, by Rev. William Knox. James Erwin and Martha Dunham, Feb. 19, 1829, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Joshua Erwin and Nancy Hyret, May 23, 1825, by Michael Conaway, J. P. William Ei'win and Sarah Dunham, Aug. 1, 1825, by Rev. John Crom. George Eschaltot and Nancy Hanna, Sept. 26, 1829, by Robert Pittis, J. P. Benoni Evans and Elizabeth Bradley, Sept, 23, 1S19, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Ezekiel Evans and Mary Simpson, Sept. 3, 1818, by Rev. William Knox. George W^. Evans and Elizabeth Spiker. April 15, 1838, by Rev. Jacob Lammoa, James Evans and Elizabeth Simpson, Feb. 13, 1821, by John Graham. James Evans and Willimenah Rigel, May 10, 1832, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P. Mordicai M. Evans and Lydia Dillon, Sept. 26, 1825, by Silvanus Lamb. J. P. Robert Evans and Amanda McGrew, July 11, 1839, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Barnabas Everhart and Rachel Hofane, Aug. 3, 1813, by George Pfautz. J. P. David Everheart and Rachel Hicks, Nov. 13, 1819, by Rev. John Rinehart. John Everhardt and Cerrillah Shaw, June 20, 1832, by Charles Fawcett, J. P. Peter Everhart and Polly Fry. Feb. 27, 1816, by Martin Guilinger. Philip Everhart and Polly Carpenter, March 23, 1830, by John Gruber, J. P. Thomas Everhart and Mary Wheeler. Nov. 13, 1817, by Rev. M. Cole. John Fairchild and I>enday Welch, April 20, 1824, by Thomas Parkinson, J. P. William Faris and Elizabeth Riley, Feb. 13, 1831, by Thomas Phillips. J. P. Alexander Fawcett and Elizabeth Brooks, Aug. 16, 1826, by Josiah Foster. Charles Faucet and Marjery Brooks, Jan. 25, 1820, by John Graham. Jonathan Faucett and Caroline McGibbons, March 21, 1839, by Matthew H. Phillips, J. P. George Faulknor and Mary Hidey, Aug. 22, 1825, by Morris Albaugh, J. P. John Faulkner and Ellen Miller, Sept. 18, 1817, by David Custer, J. P. .Jonas Fayley and Nancy Johnson, March 28. 1814, by Henry Barricklow. William Feinery and Mary Smith, Feb. 18, 1813, by Rev. Thomas B. Clark. Charles Feister and Margaret Thompson, July 3, 1827, by Jesse Hooper, J. P. Robert Feister and Mary Crabtree, Oct. 13, 1828, by C. E. W^eirich. Joseph Fell and Sarah Peck, Aug. 26, 181b, by James Roberts. Thomas Fell and Willy Ann Gray, Feb. 15. 1827, by Rev. William B. Evans. Henry Feltenbarger and Susan Stonebrook, Dec. 28, 1838, by John Gruber, J. P. Benjamin Ferguson and Cynthia Haskings, Nov. 17, 1833, by Rev. Benjamin W^ood. Hugh Furgeson and Margaret Sharp. June 12, 1832, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Macomb Ferguson and Mary Patton, June 19, 1840, by John Walker. Rczin Ferguson and Martha Ann Andrews, Oct. 29, 1832, by John Chalfan. 17 258 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Vincent Ferguson and Mary Araspokcr, March 19, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. William Ferguson and Rebecca Walker, Aug. 18, 1831, by John Gruber, J. P. Benjamin Ferrell and Sarah Ann McNamee, Nov. 5, 1840, by John Knox. J. P. James Ferrell and Peggy Ann Cook, Aug. ]8, 1836, by William Arnold, J. P. John Ferrell and Jane McGoogan, Sept. 30, 1824, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. David Ferrier and Susan Hendricks, Nov. 23, 1820, by Robert Maxwell, J. P. John Fife and Cassander Lyon, Dec. 23, 1828, by Robert Orr, J. P. Jacob Figley and Maria Shannon, July 10, 1834, by William Wallace V. D. M. William Figley and Margaret Chord, Aug. 11, 1823, by Rev. Curtis Goddard. John Finney and Betsey Cannon, Dec. 10, 1816, by William Taggart, V. D. M. David Finnicum and Elizabeth Lowmiller. June 29, 1828, by John Gruber, J. P. William S. Finnicum and Maria Richards, Sept. 28, 1822, by Robert Mc- Laughlin. Daniel Firebaugh and Caty Little. March 30, 1827, by Henry Ford, J. P. Jacob Firebaugh and Catherine McCarroll, Dec. 30, 1835, by Thomas Foster. Barak Fisher and Jane Pickering, Nov. 14, 1822, by George Brown, J. P. Boanaparte N. Fisher and Lydia Canagey, Feb. 17, 1836, by Rev. Alexander Biddle. Eli Fisher and Elizabeth Maxwell, Feb. 26, 1831, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Garret Fisher and Ann Hamilton, Oct. 31, 1816, by James Roberts. George Fisher and Susanna Johnson, Dec. 24, 1818, by Thomas Dickerson. J. P. George Fisher and Elizabeth Burkhead, Dec. 23, 1823, by Isaac Allen, J. P. George M. Fisher and Anna L. Brown. Dec. 21, 1830, by John Gruber, J. P. George Fisher and Mary Welch, Sept. 4, 1833, by John McArthur, V. D. M. George Fisher and Sarah Lisle, Oct. 17, 1839, by Rev. William Taggart. James Fisher and Ann Harrison, Oct. 13. 1815, by James Roberts. John Fisher and Mary Fowler, Oct. 27, 1S25, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. John R. Fisher and Sarah Early, Oct. 21. 1830, by John Russel, J. P. John Fisher and Eliza Edwards, Jan. 4. 1838. by David Bowers, J. P. Samuel Fisher and Elenor Marshall. Nov. 4, 1824, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Thomas Fisher and Elizabeth Picken, Oct. 5, 1815, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Thomas Fisher and Elizabeth Holtzman, Nov. 5, 1829, by Morris Allbough, J. P. Michael Fivecoats and Nancy Cheney. Aug. 31, 1815, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Nathan Fivecoats and Eleanor Steel, Oct. 30, 1837, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Absalom Flemming and Sarah Wright, March 10, 1821, by John Russel, J. P. Robert Fletcher and Martha Moorehead, Aug. 21, 1832, by John Rea, V. D. M. Abraham Flory and Catherine Hagney. Sepjt. 3, 1821, by John Hurless, J. P. Joseph Fogle and Sabra Cochran, March 27, 1836, by Thomas P. Jenkins. J. P. Frederick Foltz and Anna S. Williams, Oct. 11, 1832, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. James Force and Mary Williams, June 1, 1821, by John Graham. James Ford and Susan Delany, June 16, 1833, by John L. Grubb, J. P. Lewis Ford and Rebecca Dodd, April 15, 1819, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Richard Ford and Darkey Pierce, April 4, 1821, by Phineas Inskeep, J. P. Stephen Ford and Elizabeth Thompson. Feb. 4, 1838, by David G. McGuire, J. P. Thomas Ford and Catherine Polen, Dec. 13, 1821, by Williamson Carrothers, J. P. David D. Fordyce and Margaret Feister. June 28, 1831, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. John Fordyce and Lydia Ann Parkes, Nov. 28, 1826, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Henry L. Foreman and Jane Cosgrove, April 25, 1833, by Thomas Lakin. EARLY MARRIAGES 259 Levi Foreman and Elizabeth Amanda Jones, March 24, 1836, by Kev. Benjamin Wood. William Foreman and Susanna Cummins, Sept. 5, 1839, by John Graham. Joseph Forker and Mary Conwell, Oct. 16, 1834, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Peter Forney and Fanny Gundy, March 20, 1823, by Rev. John Crom. John B. Forsythe and Christena Burkhart, June 2, 1831, by John Gruber, J. P Abraham Foster and Lucinda Coleman, Dec. 25, 1823, by William Holmes, J. P. Alansin Foster and Mary Ann Prouf, Nov. 16, 1839, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. David Foster and Jane Johnston, Feb. 24, 1831, by John Rea, V. D. M. Eli Foster and Sarah H. Edie, Jan. 3, 1828, by Rev. William B. Evans. George Foster and Jane Davis, May 24, 1837, by David G. McGuire, J. P, John Foster and Fanny Hendrickson, Feb 14, 1822, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Josiah Foster and Rebecca Johnson, May 24, 1831, by Robert Pittis. J. P. Moses Foster and Hannah Randels, March 14,' 1819, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Samuel Foster and Sarah Young, May 9, 1815, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Samuel Foster and Mary Moore, March IS, 1824, by Isaac Allen, J. P. Samuel Foster and Anne Johnson, Jan. 27, 1831, by Robert Pittis, J. P. Andrew Fowler and Betsy Martin, April 26. 1821, by William Carrothers, J. P. Francis Fowler and Mary Giles, Nov. 4, 1830, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Garret Fowler and Hannah Eagleson, April 3, 1819, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone Harrison Fowler and Elizabeth Bridgeman, Oct. 7, 1839, by M. B. LuKens, J. P. James Fowler and Mary Gifford, Feb. 11, 1830, by Rev. John Crom. Joel Fowler and Esther Fisher April 20, 1836, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. John Fowler and Cassander Keepers, April 10, 1822, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone, John Fowler and Amanda Burchfield, Dec. 24, 1835, by Thomas Foster. Thomas Fox and Sarah Hartley, June 28, 1838, by George Shaffer, J. P. James Francis and Amelia Selby, May 21, 1813, by Rachel Hall. James Fransis and Nancy Boals, Aug. 11, 1835, by William Taggart, V. D. M. James Frasure and Rebecca Erwin, June 20, 1833, by George W. Bell, J. P. Daniel Frester and Rachel Ann Darling, July 10, 1831, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Ludwig Frietsh and Catherine Manbeck, Feb. 21. 1832, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. Robert Fryer and Susanna Oram, Aug. 30, 1836. by Rev. Thomas Hanna. David Furby and Fanny Luke, Dec. 16, 1838, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. James Furbay and Beulah Stephen, May 8, 1838. by George Atkinson, J. P. Thomas Furbay and Margaret White, Sept. 15. 1825, by Rev. James Roberts. Alexander Fulton and Sarah Ramsey, Nov. 2, 1826, by Joseph Rea. J. P. William Fulton and Polly Moore, Oct. 28, 1823, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. William Fulton and Elizabeth Pugh, May 3, 1832, by James Miller, J. P. James M. Galbreath and Caty Delany, Nov. 10, 1819, by Elijah C. Stone. Robert Galbraith and Lydia Yarnell, Nov. 27, 1820, by John Rea, V. D. M. Samuel Galbraith and Rebecca Able, Oct. 24, 1839, by John Gruber, J. P. Henry Galentine and Ellen Treacle, March 5, 1838. by Mark Hogge, J. P. John Gallaher and Levina Young, May 10, 1832, by William Arnold, J. P. Patrick Gallaher and Sarah Gibson, May 15, 1819, by Phineas Inskeep. Patrick Gallaher and Martha Bevard, Aug. 25, 1837, by Rev. William Knox. Thomas B. Gallaher and Jane Farmer, Feb. 15, 1838, by Rev. Joseph Clokey. William C. Galaher and Eleanor Green, Dec. 5, 1839, by Rev. Parden Cook. John Gamble and Sarah Heck, Dec. 29, 1839. by B. W. Veirs, J. P. Joshua Gamble and Elizabeth Heck, March 27, 1834, by William Arnold, J. P. John Gant and Elizabeth Cellar, Oct. 9, 1828, by Salmon Cowles, V. D. M. 260 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Joseph Gant and Sarah McCUsh. June 2. 1S36. by W. B. Luklus, J. P. Androw Gardner and Elizabeth Riddlemoser, Nov. 20. 1S34. by George Blown. J. P. Georire Gardner and Sarah Wright. May 9. 1S2(5. by Alexander Moore. J. P. Isaao Gardner and Nancy Rose. May 12. ISIS, by Rev. Samuel Hamiltou. Lemi'el Gai'dner and Mary Derault. Feb. 10. 1S31. by Robert Orr, J. P. John Garner and Sarah Cusick. May t5. 1S30. by Jesse Hooper. J. P. Edward B. Garrett and Catherine Suddith. March 23. ISoI. by Rev. Benjamin Wood. John Garret and Margaret Haines. J.^n. 13. 1S20. by Phineas Inskeep. J. P. Joseph W. Gari-etson and Jane N. Pooi\ Dec. 15. 1S3»>. by Rev. Jacob Coon. John Garvin and Hannah Whan. March 11. 1S19. by Thomas Diokerson. J. P. John Garvin and Ag^ness Rankin. Jan. 25. 1S3S. by Rev. Jacob Coon. Charles Gassuch and Matilda Roberts. July IT. iS2S. by Rev. James Moore. Amor Gatchel and Almira Moore. April 16, 1S35. by John McArthur, V. D. M. Amos Getchell and Elizabeth Burger. June 23. 1S36. by John McArthur. V. D. M. Elias Gatchel and Mary Sudduth. Nov. S. 1S25. by Donald Mcintosh. V. D .M. Elijah Getchell and Harriett Drake. July 29. 1S27. by Philip Fulton. J. P. Job w:. Gatchel and Fi-ancis Clemens. Aug. 7. 1S35, by William Wallace. V. D. M. Henry Gayer and Betsey McAfee, Nov. 21, 1S33. by B. W. Viers. J. P. Anderson Geary and Catherine Vanhom, Nov. 2, 1S20. by Rev. Thomas B. Clark. Matthew Geary and Driisilla Johnson, May 1. 1S17. by John Crawford. J. P. James Gearwood and Mary McCleary. Oct. 19. 1S24. by John Hurless. J. P. B ' ■ Geasy and Juliann Ruble. Oct. 6, 1S39. by Joseph Fry. J. P. K. Geddes and Tamer Yarnell. Oct, 17. 1S2S. by Ezekiol Paramer. E. C. C. John Geddes and Julian Geddes. July 24, 1S31, by Edward Talbott. J. P. George B. George and Mary Warfel, March 13, 1SS4, by William Taggart. V. P. M. Edward Gibbins and Emily E. White. June 30. 1S36. by Rev. C. D. Battell. Henry Gibbins and Ann "\i\ilson. Nov. 17. lS3o, by Rev. Jacob Coon. David Gibny and Rebecca Henry. Dec. 23. 1S30. by Thomas Phillips. J. P. James B. Gibson and Polly Ann Maxwell. Jan. 29. 1S29, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Robert Gibson and Elizabeth S. Maxwtll. Nov. S, 1S2T. by Thomas Hanna. V. D. M. Robert Gilbreath and Mary Beeman. June 5. 1S2S. by Michael Conaway. J. P. Thomas C. Gilcrest and Eleanor Guttery. May 26. lS3o. by John McArthur. V. D. M. James Giles and Lettice Gordon. Jan. 2S. 1S3S. by Rev. Henry Wharton. John Giil and Caroline Richards. Dec. IS. :S32, by Joseph Wolff. J. P. Charles Gillaspie and Margaret Himebaiigh. Dee. 37, 1S32. by Dewalt Rothacker. James Gillespie and Susan Catherine Painter, June 7, 1S32, by Rev. David C. Merryman. John Gillespie and Tama Biggart. Jan. 16, 1S35. by Rev. Jacob Coon. Moses Gillespie and Catherine Turner. April 16. 1S36. by David Finnicum. J. P. Thompson Gillespie and Hetty Chapman. Dec. 17, 1S26. by Daniel Limerick. E. of M. E. C, Cyrus Gilmore and Hannah Moore. Oct. 23. 1S34. by John McArthur. V. D. M. Francis Gilmore and Elizabeth Shimer, Feb. 1, 1S33, by John ?IcArthur. V. D. M. EARLY MARRIAGES 261 Francis Gilmore and Mary Ann PattersjoiL Aug. 29, 1839, by M. F. Burkheape and Mary Reid, Dec. 22, 1831, by John Rea, V. D. M. James Horn and Eleanor Davidson, Dec. 23, 1830, by Rev. Thomas P. Jenkins. John Horn and Hannah Phillips, April 18, 1837, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Moses Horn and Vilinda Ann Grear, Jan. 11, 1838, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Noah Horn and Rebecca Tucker, May 2, 1839, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Thomas Horn and Lucinda Davidson, April 3, 1834, by James McCullough, J. P. Henry Hornbaker and Catherine Lightner, Feb. 4, 1830, by Rev. William Tip- ton. Lewis Horseman and Isabella Murphey, Aug. 30. 1821, by George Brown, J. P. John Hosey and Mary Moore, April 18. 1816, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Jacob Hospelhorn and Rebecca Wilson, Sept. 26, 1816, by William Slemmons, J. P. John Hosterman and Polly Hoobler, Oct. 13, 1825. by John Wagner, J. P. Peter Hosterman and Elizabeth Lisle, Aug. 16, 1831, by John Wagner, J. P. Jacob Hough and Agnes Campbell, Sept. 29, 1829, by Lot Deming. Hillary Howse and Rachel Crabtree, Dec. 30, 1820, by Rev. Joseph Casper. John House and Mary Wroland, Nov. 30, 1819, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Nathan House and Sophia Johnson, Dec. 11, 1823, by James McMahon. Samuel House and Betsey Eaton, July 15, 1817, by William Haverfleld, J. P. William House and Matilda Cox, Feb. 28, 1833, by George W. Bell, J. P. Gasaway Houser and Lydia Walker, May 17, 1826, by William Taggart, V. D. M. William Houser and Martha McCarrol, Nov. 21, 1839, by Rev. P. K. McCue. William H. Houston and Eliza Pritchard Feb. 4, 1829, by W. Millan, V. D. M. James R. Howard and Tabathia Ann Covington, May 1, 1839, by Rev. John Wilson. John C. Howard and Anna Cadwallader, Jan. 3. 1825, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Joshua D. Howard and Harriett Warfel, Nov. 6, 1834, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Joseph Howell and Mary Perry, April 12, 1838, by Samuel Moorehead, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 269 William Howell and Jane Ellen Fraisiire, Jan. 18, 1838, by John Caldwell, J. P. Caleb Huff and Madelena Welch. April 25, 1839, by David Ruggles, J. P. Jacob Huff and Rebecca Gladden, Sept. 20, 1830, by William Arnold, J. P. .Joseph Huff and Hester Webb, Nov. 22, 1821, by Elder William Cunningham. Reuben Huff and Letty McAdow, Feb. 11, 1830, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Zacheus B. Huff and Margaret Donahy, Feb. 23, 1820, by Abriam Johnson, J. P. Benjamin Hughes and Elizabeth, Barrett, Aug. 7, 1834, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Samuel Hughes and Jane Galbraith, April 6, 1836, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. John Hull and Elizabeth Christy, Oct. 12, 1830, by Robert Orr, J. P. John S. Hull and Clarissa Pritchard, March 23, 1837, by John McArthur V. D. M. Joseph Hull and Sarah Kail, Nov. 18, 1830, by Thomas Day, J. P. George Humphrey and Eliza Gutrldge, Dec. 31, 1820, by Rev. Joseph Casper. Christopher Humphreys and Catherine Noble, Nov. 20, 1834, by William Wal- lace, V. D. M. William Humphreys and Jane Law, April 11, 1834, by Rev. David C. Merriman. Joseph H. Hunter and Ann Walker, Feb. 14, 1839, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Thomas Hunter and Amelia Crist, Jan. 23, 1827, by James Roberts. Michael Huntsman and Hannah Anderson, Nov. 6, 1828, by Edward Talbott J. P. Michael Huntsman and Maria Surges, Sept. 2, 1839, by Cornelius Crabtree, J. P. William Huntsman and Mary Aderson, Feb. 29, 1820, by Phineas Inskeep, J. P. Isaac Hurless and Caty Stillwell, June 3, 1830, by Lot Deming, J. P. Isaac Hurless and Amma Jones. June 5, 1834, by George W. Bell, J. P. John Hurless and Christine Morgan, April 10, 1821, by Robert Maxwell, J. P. Samuel Hurless and Susanna Snider. March 24, 1818, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Samuel Hurless and Hannah Curry, Feb. 27, 1834, by B. W. Veirs, J. P. Alexander Hueston and Margaret Crabtree, Nov. 21, 1821, by John Russel, J. P. Benjamin Hughston and Rachel Johnson, Dec. 4, 1821, by John Russel, J. P. Edward Hughston and Catherine Lamb, Aug. 10, 1818, by John Crawford, J. P. Michael Hughston and Charlotte Keller, March 10, 1818, by John Crawford J. P. James R. Hutchison and Anne Culbertson, Sept. 16, 1833, by Rev. Jacob Conn. James Hutchison and Mary Jamison, Oct. 4, 1838, by William Taggart. V. D. M. John Hutchinson and Mary Foot, Dec. 5, 1822, by George Brown, J. P. William Hutchinson and Elizabeth Leslie, June 28, 1835, by George Atkinson J. P. Benjamin Hutson and Ann Butterfield, Sept. 5, 1822, by Ellas Crane, D. C. Samuel Icenoggle and Elizabeth Kendal, May 28, 1835, by John Wagner, J. P. Micajah Indsley and Clarissa Hous. March 31, 1825, by John Russel, J. P. James Irons and Jane Titus. Dec. 27, 1838, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Thomas Irons and Mary Davidson, Jan. 13. 1825, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Fl-ancis Irvin and Hannah Gatchel, Aug. 9, 1838, by Rev. Dyer Neal. John Irwin and Lena Hearn. June 15, 1826, by Thomas Parkinson. J. P. Robert Irwin and Mary Auld, Aug. 13, 1818. by Thomas B. Clark, J. P. Robert Irwin and Rebecca Law, Sept. 12, 1838, by C. C. Wierock. William Irwin and Mary Carnine, Nov. 24, 1818, by Thomas B. Clark, J. P. Robert Israel 'and Julian Heggins, Jan. 27, 1818, by David McMasters. John Jackson and Mary Crawford, March 19, 1818, by Thomas B, Clrrk V. D. M. i:0 HlSTOKlCAl: COT.LECTIOXS l>F 11 VKKISOX COIN 'V Isniol Jamos }\m\ T-ydIa Ann Harrison. Poo, 7, 1SS7. by Saniuol l.owls. .1. V John Janjos anvl Koboooa .loUnson. t>opt, SO, ISIJO. by Jv>hn HoblUiK. .' 1' Kobort Jan\os and Mary Wobb, July 2. IS.y. by Uoorsv r.ivuvn. ,1. I', San»uol Janios and l.any Hall, Juno S, lS-5>. by William Artiold, J. V. Soott Jamos and Harriot Arnold, July .7, IS-O, by Thonias IV c'artlor. J. V. Pavid Jon\lson and Mary Jano MoKni^ht. Hoo. 30. IS"JJ. I'v Willtaui Pa^jvart, V. l>. M, IV^vid Jomison nnd Ksthor IMshop. Poo. J. IS:'!, by Jv^hn \Va;u»or. J. P. Jsunos Jomlssou and Harbara Uaypoit. Maroh (?. IS;M. by John MoArthur. V. P. M, W'altor Jamison and Martha Poaty. Ja!\. LM. ISJS. by Sahnon (.'owlos. V. P M. WtkUor Jamison s>nd Mary Snidor. J\il> IS. 1SS7. by John MoArthur. V. P, M. Josoph Joltors and I'arbara Mooro. Juno JO, ISl'O. by Thomas Hanna. V. P. I\l Oosoph JotYors auvl KUr.nboth MoCombs, Maroh ->>. ISoO, by Kobort (.trr. J, P. Joseph JotTivy and Savrah Ann TaUn^t. May l^. 18S7, by Gwr.sio W. Pollard. Jatwos Jolly and Margarot Koboooa Siu>psou, Jan. :?0. IS 10. by John Uoa, V. P. M. Samnol Jolly and l.ydta Davidson. Fob. 6. IS40, by Rov. Aloxandor Wilson John Jouldns and Pathorino Johnson. Poo. 27, 1.^22. by Josoph Pry. J. P, John Jonkius and Mary ChaUan. Pob. 14. ISoS. by Samnol Skinnor. J. P. John Jowol and Marjjarot Klllor. Maroh 7. lS2l>. by Rov. P>.MvJ;vmiu Wood. John Jobo and .\nn Misor. Pob. 2t?. ISSJ>. by Uov. Harvoy Pradshaw. Aaivn Johnson and Hannah Poistor. Pob. S. ISl^S, by Samuol G. J. Worthtnsxton. AauMi Johnson and UolHxnnv Karly. Juno 1. ISS8. by Nathan Tannohill. J P. Abol Johnson and Mary Hoath. May 10. 1SS2, by Kobort Pittis. J. P. Abol Johnson and M.irgarot GiUaspio. Pob. IM?. 1SS3. by Goors;o W. Poll. J. P. Abriam Johnson and l.ydia Tnrnor. Aujj. 5. IS19. by William WyokotY. J. P. Abraham Johnson and Mary Nowhouso. Sopt. 14. lS-4. by Ponald Molntosh, V. P. M. ,\dam Johnson and Koboooa K;dj;o\vay. Oct. 2. IS28. by Josoph Pry. J. P. Aloxandor Johnson and S;nah l.athraui. Poo. 20. IS3S. by Uiohaul iiammoad. J. P. Andivw Johnson and Margarot Humphrios. Oot. 24. 1S33. by Kov. P C Morry- mau. Poixjamln Johnson and Eurith Davis, Fob. 17. 1S25. by John RnssoV. J. P. Ponjamin Johnson and Sarah Prabtroo. .\pril IL\ 1,^32, by Kov. Jaoob Poninum. Ponjamin Johnson auil Kaobo Shannon. Juno 2S. IS3S. by Kov. Jaoob Pommoa. Ik^njsunln Johnson and KUsaboth Oillospio. Oot. 15. 1840. by Rev. Lowls Jonny. Charlos Johnson atxd Pli;-.aboth Coaltrap. May P5, 1S22. by Josoph Johnson. J. P. Charlos M. Johnson and Hanna A. Gray. Poo. 13. 1832. by Pdward "Palbott. J. P. Cyrus Johnson and Maria Johnson. Fob. 21. 1834. by Jamos MoPollongh. J. P. Davis Johnston and Kaohol Paldwoll. Jan. 1.=^. 1830. by Povi Poddyooart. J. P. Pisbury Johnson and Mar> Poopor. Juno 20. 1817. by William Slommons. J. P. Klias Johnson and Eliza Hido. Maroh 23. 1810. by Josoph Johnson. J. P. Elias .Tohnson and Anna Harvoy. Poo. 23. 1831. by John OhaiT.m. J. P. Kmon Johnson and Louisa Purgoss. Poo. 2S. 183,=i. by Rov. Jamos 0. Taylor. Gabriol Johnston and Nanoy Suddoth. Poo. 31. 1810. by Oharlos Oh;vpman. J. P. GiH>rs:o Johnston and Jane Graco. Sept. 20. 1830. by Thomas 'l^ompson. Grilhn Johnson and Mariah Groves. Oct. 28. 1838. by Rov. Jaoob Lommon. Honry Johnson and Mars:arot Gibson, May i;. 1824. by Jamos Smith. J. P. EARLY MAimiAOES 271 llo'/Ai'S .](th:i;'.<>u uri'i Jari', '.-AfWiuy'iri, Apni 2'.',. W/t'/, ,rj .iniiii ,VJ'; A ;'.;>')/, V it '.A. Ixaac .]<)\.u<(in nif] S-.iiif.y .taUtiHon, F<;b, H, Wl'), by Jatnt'-n HtniiU. J. f. .\A<:()h JohrjHon and Mary M':Mlll'fn, Vtth. 1«}, 18:{2, by f^;rnmori, Jam<»« JohriKOD and .fan'; donUm, July 2'.f, 1813, hy 'A'fllfar/j Harnhlll, J, P. ./arii'iH JohjiHof) and .Janilrna Griffln, Auj?. 22, 18K, by WIIDarn V/yck/iff, J, J^ .liiwii JohnKon and iCUmnor Mowd<;r, ilarf-Ai 2'.f, 1820, by -lohn iiUHUt'A, .1. V, JarrXfH .foiiriH'in and Jan^i Carr, AprH 4, 1822, by IMi'^ti. iA'A/xnviUWn, J, P, JaffKiX J'. .fohuKoii and Ko«';«.ta HrnHb, VIar';h 2, 1824, by DonaXd iA». M. .Jarn'fH .lohnmin and Nanry !U'Awt-l[, Jun'; 14, 1827, by Thomas P, .JankUtn, ./. 1', Jam<;K I'. JohiiHon And Hannah JanjnK, Oct. 19, 1837, by B<;v. ftobftrt Cook. JoH'rph J';hn-:on and f;-;ah'd Vajibind'rr, I)«!C, bert Maxwell, .f. P. H.'irnuel K. J(Atn-^Um and Ji<;becca iiarnhill, July 20, 182<5, by V/iJiiam Wallace. V. D. M. Bamuel I{. .foYitmm and Eleanor Thomj/w^n, Feb. 1!:^, 182{>, by WlJlIarn McMillan, V, D. M. Harnuel Johnwon and Itfichel 'Clark, Feb. 21, 1832, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Karnuel Johnson and Jane WellB, Jan. 10, 18-3«, hy William 'ra;ayf>^irt. J. P. •Jhomar; John, on and UtAt'-JAtin MarKhall, April li>, 1838, by .Han. - J. P. Thomaa .iohuvMn. and Hhoda Crabtree, Aug. 27, 1840, by Rev. i^. . . , , . .x. William Johnnon and Sarah Ruby, fiept. 3, 1818, by Willianj Wyckoff, J, P. William C. John»on and Jane McFadden, Jan. 2.5, 1830, by William Taggart, J. P. Zacharlah Johnaon and SuHan LInd»ey, Auj?. 5, 1830, by Thomatt PhllllpK, J. P- Daniel JoJby and Mary Mapel, April 10. 1823, by RfAjtrrt. lAfA. J. P. John .Joria>; and DetKo-y nnfisfiW, n':i>i. t't, 1824, by Rev, D. i' t, Calvin Jones and Rachel Kyaloger, Nov. 13, 1834, by John McArtbur, V. D. M- J^aniel Jonex and Amelia Downing, .March 2.'}, 1830, by Rev. ThomaK 8. Taylor. George Jon'ru and Ku'-jan Turner, Ja,^. 28, 1818, by John Crawford. J. P. Henry Jonea and R/;becca Ann Hufsfm, Nor. 16, 1834, l>y R>f;v. Jacob I>?n)mon. Isaac Jo " ' ah KtAhAH, Dec. 10, 1840, by Thomnn ph - ' P. Israel .1 nena Ann llnnton. Dec, 18, 183^, by Sarr. .nor, J. P. Jacob JoneK and Mary Creal, >7arch 2, 1837, by Rev, Henry Wharu»n. Jameu Jones and f-: '?' " rv.on, March 23, 1820, by Jac^,»b Young. James JoncH and ', .lian, March 7, 1823, by Joseph John»on, J. P. JameH Jone-H and Lucy Hhiium, Jan, 14, 183'5, by Itev. Jaco^j I>;mmon. John D. Jones and Anna Cecil, Feb. 2, 1832, by Philip FhUjju. J. P. 272 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Perry Jones and Margaret Clark, Oct. 23, 1823, by John Ruasel, J. P. Peter Jones and Catherine Shivers, Sept. 9, 1827, by John Carson, J. P. Rees Jones and Ann Moreland. April 1, 182.5, by Arch. McGrew, J. P. Samuel Jones and Margaret Rankin, Feb. 25, 1836, by John Bethel, J. P. Samuel Jones and Sydney Musgrove, May 25, 1840, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Thomas Jones and Susanna Edwards, April 12, 1836, by Jesse Merrill, J. P. Thompson Jones and Mary Merrvman. Nov. 26, 1840, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. Wesley Jones and Maria Medley, March 26, 1833. by Rev. Benjamin Wood. William Jones and Peggy Case. Jan. 2, 1833, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. George Joy and Elizabeth Early, March 30, 1826, by Rev. William B. Evans. Adam Junkins and Archra Burkhead, Jan. 8, 1818, by William Haverfield, J. P. Daniel Justice and Polly Daly, May 21, 1828, by John Secrest. Abraham Kail and Polly Traner, June 15, 1819, by Martin Guilinger, J. P. Adam Kail and Elizabeth Wiands, Nov. 1, 1827, by John C. Huston, J. P. Frederick Kail and Elizabeth Wilson, Aug. 11, 1S34, by William Arnold, J. P. Gabriel Kail and Betsy Devore, July 13, 1815, by Martin Guilinger, J. P. John Kail and Sally Arnold, Sept. 5, 1816, by Henry Kail, J. P. Daniel Keeser and Polly Springer, Nov. 28, 1816, by Thomas Fisher, J. P. Henry Keesey and Margaret Layport. May 24, 1838, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. Alfred M. Kelly and Velleriah E. Dunn, March 8, 1838, by John Rea, V. D. M. Justice Kelly and Rebecca Courtright, Oct. 22, 1840, by George Atkinson, J. P. Philip Kelly and Mary Barnhouse, Jan. 17, 1828, by Robert Orr, J. P. Robert Kelly and Sarah Rutledge, May 23, 1833, by Robert Orr, J. P. Thomas Kelly and Almeda Campbell, March 19, 1833, by Rev. James Robertson John G. Kemp and Margaret Bricker, March 13, 1829, by William Arnold, J. P. Joseph Kenagy and Nancy Mowrey, April 19, 1831, by Rev. William Knox. Levi Kenagey and Rachel Berger. June 24, 1831, by Rev. George Lucy. Ahio H. Kennedy and Elizabeth Harvey, Dec. 26, 1833, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Carvill G. Kennedy and Mary Latham, Dec. 1, 1836, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Henry Kennedy and Mary Spring, Dec. 27, 1832, by John Chalfan, J. P. James Kennedy and Maria Johnson, Jan. 16, 1823, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Napoleon B. Kennedy and Mary Gilmore, Oct. 24, 1826, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Return Matthew Kennedy and Jane Moore, Feb. 19, 1824, by Joseph Fry, .1. P. William Kenneday and Sarah Wyckoff, Feb. 4, 1819, by James McMahon. Abner Kent and Dianna Heavlin, May 26, 1829, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Absalom Kent and Isabella Worth, Oct. 4, 1821, by Thomas Patton, J. P. Absalom Kent and Mary Walker, Dec. 5, 1833, by John McArthur, V. D M. William Kent and Catherine Baker. June 22, 1820. by William Carrothers, J. P. Samuel Kernaghan and Betsey Williams, Aug. 13, 1832, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Edward Kerr and Lucinda Fletcher, July 23, 1823, by John Russel. J. P. John Karr and Catherine A. Gossone, Dec. 31, 1829, by John McArthur, V D. M. John Kerr and Martha Wiley, Nov. 28, 1833, by John Rea, V. D. M. Robert Karr and Mary Endsley, April 7, 1825, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. Thomas Kerr and Nancy Cobean, Feb. 13, 1834, by John Rea, V. D. M. Andrew Keys and Minerva Young, Jan. 21, 1830, by John Gruber, J. P. George Kidwell and Elizabeth Gatchel, Jan. 13. 1825, by Isaac Allen, J. P. Daniel Kilgore and Mary Pritchard, April 14, 1816, by Walter B. Beebe. J. P. Robert S. Kimber and Rachel Scole, May 25, 1823, by Rev. Samuel Brockunier, EARLY MARRIAGES 273 Frederick Kimmel and Elizabeth Yingling, Jan. 12, 1826, by Henry Ford, J. P. Henry Kimmel and Christena Geddinger, .Tune 27, 1813, by Rev. John Rinehart. Henry Kimmel and Sarah Nop, Feb. 20. 1840, by Thomas Finnicum, J. P. John Kimmel and Eve Tanney, Aug. 6, 1813, by Rev. John Rinehart. Jonathan Kimmel and Maria Nop, Jan. 31, 1837, by William Arnold, J. P. Hamilton King and Sarah Easlick, Dec. 22, 1831, by Rev. John McAithur. John King and Sarah Ann Ellis, June 7, 1833, by John Rea, V. D. M. Charles Kinsey and Tabitha Gutshall, Sept. 20, 1827, by John Carson, J. P. John Kinsey and Mary Burrows, Jan. 10, 1828, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Thomas B. Kinsey and Sarah Kerr, Dec. 17, 1832, by David C. Merriman. Ephram Kirby and Elizabeth Bair, May 17, 1832, by Lot Deming, J. P. Isaac Kirby and Elizabeth Waters, Dec. 14, 1824, by J. R. Kirkpatrick, J. P. James Kirby and Christiann Hester, April 18, 1830. by Rev. John Wilson. John Kerby and Maria McMillan, Aug. 30, 1835, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Erastus U. Kirk and Mary Ann Price, Sept. 15, 1831, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Joshua Kirk and Hannah Moffit, April 7, 1832, by George Brown, J. P. Samuel Kirk and Polly Hukill, Nov. 17, 1830, by John Mc Arthur, V. D. M. Israel Kirkpatrick and Mariah Ward, Jan. 8, 1823, by B. W. Veirs. James Kirpatrick and Catherine Clifford, Feb. 19, 1829, by William Wallace, V. D. M. James Kirkpatrick and Eliza Mahafey, Sept. 9, 1831, by William Wallace, V. D. M. John Kirkpatrick and Hannah Fulton, Feb. 19, 1835, by William Wallace, V. D. M. James Kirkwood and Polly Sheeley, Feb. 1, 1827, by Samuel Dunlap, J. P. Jacob Kitch and Mary Winnings, June 18, 1818, by John Wagner, J. P. John Klinger and Sabina Brown, Nov. 13, 1838, by John Knox, J. P. Immer Knight and Rachel Ross, Jan. 8, 1838, by Richard Hammond, J. P. Daniel C. Knock and Phebe Easley, April 19, 1831, by Thomas P. Jenkins. J. P. William Knock and Maria Stanley, April 17, 1834, by John L. Grubb, J. P. John Knox and Mary Davis. Oct. 12, 1819, by Jacob Young. Thomas Knox and Eleanor Simpson, May 28, 1829, by William Wallace, V. D. M. William Kyle and Jane Slemmons, April 16, 1839, by W. D. McCartney. V. D. M. Amos Lacy and Catherine Ridgway, April 8, 1824, by Joseph Fry, J. P. John H. Lacy and Juliann Hicks, July 10, 1817, by Elias Crane. John S. Lacey and Ann Janette Hoyt, Dec. 31. 1820, by Rev. William Knox. John M. Lacy, and Anne Wallace, June 1, 1835, by William Arnold, J. P. Thomas S. Lacey and Patty Ward, Feb. 13, 1830, by Morris Allbaugh. J. P. Edward Lafferty and Margaret McFadden, Oct. 14, 1813, by Thomas B. Clark, V. D. M. Edward Lafferty and Susanna Dickerson, Dec. 24, 1835, by William Wallace, V. D. M. James Lafferty and Mary Patterson, Dec. 15, 1831, by Rev. Jacob Coon. Samuel Lafferty and Elizabeth Mansfield, Dec. 30, 1824, by Rev. William Wal- lace. John M. Laird and Eleanor Martin, Jan. 12, 1830, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Michael Leard and Ann Hitchcock. Oct. 16, 1817, by Robert McKee. Amos Laizure and Martha McCuUough, Jan. 1, 1827, by William Wallace, V. D. M. 18 274 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Elijah I-aisure and Louisa Chapman, Jan. 1, 1835, by Rev. D. C. Merryman. Elijah Laisure and Elizabeth Moore, Jan. 31, 1837, by Rev. James C. Taylor. William Laizure and Jane McCullough, Nov. 7, 1822, by Joseph Anderson. William Laizure and -Ann Chinneth, March 19, 1840, by William Cobb, J. P. Jacob Lamb and Elizabeth Adams, April 16, 1819, by John Crawford, J. P. Jacob Lamb and Mary Ann Williams, Feb. 2, 1832. by Samuel Skinner, J. P. John Lamb and Nancy Knight, Nov. 21, 1817, by John Crawford, J. P. Lawrence Lamb and Matty Burtch, Nov. 3, 1815, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Sylvanus Lamb and Isabella , Nov. 3, 1819, by Rev. James Roberts. Timothy Lamb and Darkey Robinett, Aug. 14, 1817, by William Wyckoff, J. P. John Lanning and Susaji Woodward, Dec. 30, 1830, by Edward Talbott, J. P. John Lannum and Polly Havenner, May 13, 1819, by John Rea, V. D. M. Walter Lannum and Ann Ellen Havener, Aug. 3, 1820, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. John Lantz and Elijah Fulton, Dec. 6, 1837, by Rev. Thomas Foster. William Lance and Susan Glandon, Oct. 2, 1838, by Rev. Parden Cook. Thomas Lakin and Margaret Staats, April 10, 1832, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Thomas N. Lakin and Mary Ann Pepper, Oct. 31, 1836, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William Lakin and Luesa Packer, Jan. 19, 1836, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. James Larkins and Rebecca Sharp, Sept. 1, 1831, by Thomas Day, J. P. Townsend T. Larkin and Rebecca Boothe, Dec. 30, 1830, by Edward Talbott. J. P. Washington Larkin and Martha Dillen, May 16, 1822, by B. W. Veirs, J. P. Warner J. Larimore and Rachel HoUet, April 26, 1838, by .John Knox, J. P. Robert Lathan and Susanna Davidson, March 24, 1831, by Moses Wright, J. P. Benjamin Latimer and Elizabeth Miller, March 24, 1835, by Rev. James Robert- son. David Laughlin and Eleanor Cox, April 20, 1831, by John Busby, J. P. James W. Laughlin and Sarah Kerr, Feb. 8, 1837, by John Rea, V. D. M. Henry Law and Elizabeth McMillan, Dec. 18, 1839, by Richard Brown. Matthew Law and Rebecca Birney, March 30, 183G, by Rev. John P. Kent. John Lawrence and Elizabeth Kerr, Dec. 19, 1822, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. Stephen Lawrence and Elizabeth Smith, Nov. 22, 1834, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Michael Lawver and Mary Bro\\fcri, Dec. 26, 1837, by David Bowers, J. P. Solomon Lawver and Sarah McDaniel, Oct. 22, 1833, by Rev. Alexander Biddle. Abraham Layport and Nancy Christy, Oct. 9, 1828, by John Carson, J. P. Charles D. Layport and Sarah Wallace, May 17, 1832, by John McArthur, V. D. M. George Layport and June Leeper, July 8, 1824, by Michael Conaway, J. P. George Layport and Ann Johnson, Feb. 12, 1829, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Isaac Layport and Margaret Hitchcock, Sept. 21, 1830, by Peter Barger, J. P. John L. Layport and Verlinda Harrison, March 16, 182'6, by Alexander Moore, J. P. Samuel Layport and Nancy Mowder, Sept. 17, 1826, by Samuel Hitchcock, J. P. William Layport and Hannah Milliken, Dec. 31, 1833, by Rev. Robert Cook. Jonathan Leass and Martha Medley, June 15, 1837, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. David Lee and Julian Dobbins, April 8, 1827, by Van Brown, J. P. James Lee and Jane Martin, Dec. 23, 1819, by John Walker, V. D. M. John Lee and Margaret Kail, Nov. 7, 1835, by James Endsley, J. P. Martin Lee and Sarah McClelland, June 19, 1828, by John Carson, J. P. Thomas H. Lee and Ann Bockias, May 5, 1831, by Joseph Wolf, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 275 William Lee and Maria Pritchard, March 23. 1824, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. William Lee and Mary Dickerson, Feb. 18, 1839, by William Wallace, V. D. Ai. James Leech and Anna Teets, Sept. 22, 1835, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. John Leech and Fanny Boals, June 6, 1822, by John Rea, V. D. M. James Leeper and Hannah Wright, Dec. 26. 1833, by Rev. David Wortman. Moses Leeper and Rachel Keer, Nov. 12, 1840, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Samuel Leeper and Lavina Connell, Nov. 24, 1833, by Thomas M. Cranfel, J. P. William Leeper and Rebecca Johnson, March 28, 1826, by Robert Orr, J. P. Jesse I^egget and Elizabeth Jane Robey, Dec. 24, 1835, by Rev. Moses Scott. John Ligget and Rachel McAfee, June 22, 1837, by David G. McGuire, J. P. Joseph Leggit and Mary Nelson, Jan. 8, 1818, by William Anderson, J. P. Samuel Legget and Jane Stackhouse. July 28, 1831, by John Watson, J. P. Thomas Ligget and Rebecca Gillis, May 29. 1828. by Rev. Thomas Hunt. Henry Leinard and Margaret Moore, Feb. 24. 1825, by Rev. William Wallace. Jacob Leinard and Esther Ruby, May 8, 1838, by Samuel G. J. Worthington. , John Leinard and Sally Dugan, Dec. 24, 1818, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Samuel Leinard and Rebecca Reed, July 3, 1833, by William Arnold. J. P. Abraham Lemaster and Nancy Barnes, Jan. 8, 1824, by Hugh Shotwell, J. P. Ebenezer Lomaster and Rebecca D. Nixon. Aug. 27, 1840, by Thomas Phillips. John Lemaster? and Mercy Johnson, March 21, 1833, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. William Lemaster and Elizabeth Busby, Nov. 28, 1839, by Thomas PhilMns, J. P. Griffith Lemmon and Margaret liemmon, Oct. 21, 1835, by B. Mitchell, V. D. M. Abraham Lett and Eleanor Beard, Feb. 2, 1821, by Phineas Inskeep. Elizas Lett and Elizabeth Calliman, April 26, 3 821, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. Mesheck Lett and Amelinza Wallace, May 21, 1821, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. Samuel Lett and Jane Bull, Nov. 25, 183 8, by James Roberts. Curtis Lewis and Ellen Runnells, Nov. 14, 1836, by James C. Turner. Davis Lewis and Mary Ann Ames, March 23, 1836, by Thomas Parkinson, .7. P. Elias M. Lewis and Mary Dickerson, Sept. 1, 1836, by George Atkinson, J. P. Ephraim Lewis and Elizabeth Likes, Jan. 20, 1820, by Desberry Johnson, Esq. Ira Lewis and Sarah Wilson, Jan. 10, 1833, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Isaac Lewis and Lydia Gummere, Nov. 16, 1836, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. James Lewis and Rebecca Gregory, Aug. 8, 1833, by Rev. William Knox. Jesse Lewis and Catherine Kent, Sept. 12, 1839, by William Arnold, J. P. Morgan Lewis and Sarah Lewis, July 14, 1835, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Pinkney Lewis and Jane Anne Adams, Dec. 22, 1829, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Samuel Lewis and Sarah Moore, Sept. 1, 1825, by John Graham. Samuel Lewis and Susanna Cash, Dec. 14, 1833, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Syra Lewis and Sarah Ann Grizei. March 14, 1839, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Thomas Lewis and Rebecca Heberling, March 16, 1S37, by George Atkinson, J. P. William Lewis and Nancy Crawford, Oct. 1, 1829, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Zedekiah Lewis and Isabel Connel, .July 22, 1829, by Robert Pittis, J. P. George Licester and Margaret Norris, June 21, 1838, by John M. Brown, J. P. James Likes and Mary Cunningham, Feb. 27, 1817, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Samuel Licks and Sarah Speck, March 28, 1816, by Richard Price, J. P. Simon Linder and Milly Christian, Sept. 11, 1834, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. 276 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY David Lindsey and Martha Orr, Jan. 30, 1823, by William Taggart, V. D. M. John Lindsey and Anne Biggart, Feb. 17, 1831, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Samuel Lippencott and Elizabeth Givens, Dec. 15, 1821, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Job Lisiter and Mary Blackiston, Feb. 28, 1833, by T. P. Jenkins, J. P. John Lyle and Siisanna Slemmons, Oct. 29, 1829, by John McArthur, V. D. M. John Lisle and Eliza Ann Johnston, April 4, 1831, by John Rea, V. D. M. Robert IJsle and Polly Slemmons. March 10, 1818, by John Rea, V. D. M. Robert Lisle and Elizabeth Campbell, Nov. 15, 1837, by Samuel IMoorehead. J. P. Samuel Lisle and Jane Fosbinder, Sept. 14, 1824, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. John Lissler and Susanna Markley, April 26, 1821, by B. W. Veirs, J. P. John Ijister and Catherine Springer, Sept. 11, 1827, by Robert Orr, J. P. 3David Little and Christina Shaffer, Nov. 25, 1824, by Rev. John Wagenhals. James Little and Lydia Swigert, Nov. 29, 1826, by Joshua Munroe. John Little and Rachel Williamson, Sept. 4. 1838, by William Waller. V. D. M. Manuel Little and Margaret Fulmer, July 15, 1833, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. Robert Little and Elizabeth Fissel. Sept. 27, 1827, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Solomon Little and Sarah Richard, Sept. 27, 1829, by Rev. John Secrest. William Little and Charlotte Burger, July 12, 1826, by Henry Ford. Jacob Livergood and Cateherine Miller, Feb. 28. 1837, by Rev. Abraham Keller. Cyrus M. Livingston and Catherine Bosley. Sept. 5, 1837, by John Wagner, J. P. John Lock and Agness Maxwell, Oct. 4, 1827, by John Busby, J. P. William Logan and Margaret Figley, Nov. 18, 1834, by John W. Her, J. P. Richard Loney and Rebecca Kirkpatrick, Aug. 31, 1824, by Isaac Allen, J. P. Andrew Long and Rebecca Little, Dec. 29. 1827, by John Hagey, J. P. John Long and Susannah Shearer, Jan. 20, 1839, by Abraham Keller. William Long and Elizabeth Braden, Feb. 3, 1825, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. John Longeley and Mary Wood, Nov. 8, 1826, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. John Loos and Ketherine Lowmiller, July 7. 1816, by Rev. John Rinehart. Joseph Loper and Sarah Ann Summers. April 1, 1834, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. John Lovall and Pemby Parsons, July 13, 1815, by Rev. James Roberts. John Losey and Mary Martin, April 17, 1834, by James McCollough, J. P. Robert Loudon and Polly Shroyer, Sept. 28, 1825, by David Winders, J. P. Edward Loughrige and Margery McConnell, Feb. 10, 1824, by John Conaway, J. P. James Laughridge and Anne Henderson, Dec. 20, 1836, by David G.- McGuire, J. P. Matthew Loughrige and Nancy Hendricks, Aug. 28, 1834, by Lot Deming, J. P. Moses Louthan and Rachel McGoogan, Dec. 31, 1829, by John McArthur, V. D. M. James Love and Jane McFadden, April 11, 1839, by William Taggart, J. P. George R. I^ovett and Mary Ann Vanhorn, Dec. 19, 1838, by Charles Thorn. David Lower and Rachel Reed, May 25, 1820, by Thomas Patton, J. P. Heni-y Lowmiller and Eve Hagey, Aug. 18, 1825, by Rev. John Wagenhals. Joshua Lowmiller and Mary Snider, Aug. 29, 1839, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Dennis Lowry and Dianna Spiker. Jan. 6, 1825. by John Conaway, J. P. Harrison Lawrey and Comfort Twigg, Aug. 17. 1826, by Isaac Fordyce, Esq. George Liikens and Nancy Tipton, Dec. 4, 1828, by Michael Conaway. J. P. Jacob C. Lukens and Sarah C. Bliss, May 27, 1830, by Thomas McCleary. Merican Lukens and Mary Hanna, Jan. 8, 1832, by Robert Pittis, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 277 Andrew Lynch and Nancy Peoples, Dec. 12, 1S32, by Rev. James Robertson. Charles Lyon and Mary Salmon, Oct. 31, 1839, by John Griiber, J. P. James Lyons and Nancy Ramsey, Oct. 2, 1817, by John Rea, V. D. M. James Lyons and Ruth Walters, May 12, 1831, by Michael Conaway J. P. John Lyons and Mary Miles, Dec. 4, 1817, by Rev. John Rea. John Lyons and Margaret Rsed, March 5, 1822, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Lyons and Susanna Forbus, May 21, 1835, by Rev. James Robertson. Richard Lyons and Nancy Veirs, May 27, 1830, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Robert Lyons and Anne Rowland, Aug. 7, 1832, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Samuel Lyon and Lydia Stone, May 12, 1832, by Rev. Eliza C. Stone. William Lyons and Hannah Robb, .Jan. 1, 182S, by William Wallace, V. D. M. George McAdams and Ann Jane Moore, Jan. 22, 1840, by Hugh Parker, V. D. M. James McAdams and Catherine Simmons, Aug. 28, 1830, by Lot Deming, J. P. John McAdams and Susan Dunlap, March 12, 1829, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Hugh McAdoo and Cady Hyde, Dec. 31, 1819, by Abram Scott, V. D. M. James McAfee and Lettice Gorden. June 2, 1840. by Joseph W. Spencer, J. P. Hamilton McAlhanney and Sarah Reaves, Feb. 20, 1834, by Rev. Jacob Lem- mon. Samuel McBarnes and Mary Maxwell, Nov. 8, 1838, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. John McBean and Belinda Johnson, March 8, 1829, by Rev. Thomas T. Taylor. James McBeath and Martha Burns, Nov. 22, 1831, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. John McBeth and Mary Webster, April 18, 1833, by Rev. Jacob Cozad. Alexander McBride and Emily Medley, March 29, 1838, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Robert McBride and Agnes Harriman, Dec. 24, 1833, by Thomas McCall, J. P. George McCalester and Lucy Shuck, Aug. 7, 1817. by Martin Guilinger, J. P. John McCall and Elizabeth Atkinson. May 9, 1833, by John Walker, V. D. M. John McCamis and Mary Morrison, June 18, 1833, by Rev. Jacob Robertson. John McCandless and Mary Ann Neel, Oct. 9, 1828, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Allen C. McCardy and Rebecca Mercer, Sept. 3, 1840, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John McCarroll and Jane Laughridge, Aug. 21, 1834, by Rev. David C. Merry- man. Enoch McCartney and Elizabeth Matson, Jan. 7, 1834, by Rev. Robert Cook. John McCartyand Abagail Howard, Nov. 16, 1837, by William Arnold, J. P. William McCaslin and Jane McClery, July 8, 1813, by John Rea, V. D. M. Matthew McClarren and Sarah Wilkisson, April 4, 1820, by John Wagner, J. P. Matthew McClarren and Catherine Gilmore, March 4, 1830, by Rev. George Lucy. Josiah McClenagan and Phebe Erwin, Aug. 15, 1833, by Thomas M. Cranfel, J. P. James McClintock and Elizabeth Johnson, Oct. 12. 1820, by John Rea, V. D. M. John McClintock and Eva Ann Snider, Jan. 27, 1825, by J. R. Kirkpatrick, J. P. Kerr McClintock ad Margaret Delong, Sept. 15, 1825, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. Thomas McClintick and Elizabeth Fisher, May 19, 1814, by John Rea. V. D. M. William McClintock and Susan Dewey, Dec. 2, 1840, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Abraham McColloms and Ruth Tipton. June 1, 1837, by Rev. James C. Taylor. Archibald McCombs and Catherine Jeffers, Feb. 9, 1820, by William Carrothers. J. P. ITS HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Hugh McComb and Jane Eurtch. Time 10. ISIS, by John Crawfonl. J. P. David McCombs and Isabella Ferrell, Feb. 7. 1S2S. by Samuel Hitchcock. J. E. James McCombs and Hannah Atkinson. June 26. 1S3S. by Rev. Jacob Coon. John McCombs and Mary Ann Busby. Dec. 23. 1S34. by William Arnold. J. P. Joseph McCorab and Jane Tipton. Sept. 11. 1S37. by William Arnold. J. P. David McConkey and I.ucinda Kail. Sept. 22. 1S37, by B. W. Veirs. J. P. Joseph McConkey and Maria Kent. March 11. 1S30. by Robert Orr. J. P. Samuel McConkey and Jane Moodey. April 4. 1S16. by Thomas Fisher. J. P. Samuel McConkey and Elizabeth McDonough. Aug. 15, 1S31, by George W. Bell. J. P. William McConkey and Mary Atkinson. Jan. 27. 1S35. by John McArthur. V. D. M. John McConnell and Jane Robinson. Oct. 23. 1S23. by Archibald McGrew, J. P. John P. McConnell and Catherine Medley. March 28, 1S33, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. John C. McConnell and Jane Bowles. March 3. 1S38. by Mark Hogg. J. P. Michael McConnell and Susan Gallagher. March 26. 1S26. by Rev. Simon Lauck. Robert McConnell and Abigail Burwell. Aug. 11. 1S2.5. by Rev. William Wallace. William McConnell and Mary McCollough, April 22, 1830, by James McCol- lough. J. P. John McCormick and Hester Allen. June 29, 1837. by M. B. Lukins, J. P. James McCourt and Ann Faucett. Jan. 9, 1821, by Rev. Elias Crane. Jacob McCoy and Elizabeth Condon. July 9. 1S40. by William Arnold. J. P. John McCoy and Eliza Walker, May 2S. 1S39. by William Boggs. J. P. Thomas McCue and Mary Barnett, April 2, 1830, by Rev. William Tipton. Alexander McCollough and Elizabeth Smith, March 30. 1S15. by Rev. Thomas B. Clark. V. D. M. Alexander McCullouch and Elizabeth McCullouch, Feb. 11, 1819, by John Rea, V. D. M. Alexander McCullough and Eleanor McCullough, March 8. 1S36. by John Graham. George McCollough and Hetty Simpson. Jan. 29. 1829. by Rev. William Knox. George McCollough and Sarah Whan. June 11, 1829, by Salmon Cowles, V. D. M. Hugh McCullough and Margai-et Kerr. March 9, 1836. by Andrew Isaac. James McCullough and Rebecca Smith. Feb. 13, 1816. by Thomas B. Clark. V. D. M. James McCollough and Mary Strong. April 22. 1829. by John Russel. J. P. John McCullough and Rebecca Templeton. April 7, 1831, by Rev. Jacob Lem- mon. Joseph McCullough and Sarah Lyons. May 5. 1817, by John Rea, V. D. M. Thomas McCulloch and Mary Neil. July 14. 1831. by Anderson Isaac. William McCullough and Juliann Lazure, March 9, 1821, by Abriam Johnson. J. P. William McCullough and Anne Wells, Jan. 6. 1837, by Rev. William Knox. William McCollough and Betsey Edgar. Dec. 22. 1S37, by William Wallace, V. D. M. William McCollough and Nancy Jamison, Dec. 17, 1840, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Hugh McCune and Betsey Simpson. Sept. 1, 1831. by George Brown. J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 279 Ebenezer McCurdy and Anna Vincent. Dec. 30, 1834, by John Rea, V. D. M. George McDaniel and Mary Dunlap, March 15, 1832, by Joseph Wolff, J. P. George McDavitt and Rachel Moodey, Dec. 15, 1831, by Thomas Ford, J. P. Andrew McDivitt and Jane Moodey, Nov. 16, 1831, by Thomas Ford, J. P. Andrew McDivitt and Eliza Corkhill, April 28, 1837, by Charles Evans, J. P. Charles McDivitt and Fanny Fisher, Sept. 18, 1823. by Michael Conaway, J. P. George McDivitt and Mary Johnston, Oct. 23, 1817, by Thomas Fisher, J. P. George McDivitt, Jr., and Mary Fisher, Oct. 10, 1820, by John Hurless, J. P. James McDivitt and Anne Birney, Dec. 15, 1831, by Rev. David Merryman. John McDivitt and Susanna Simpson, Oct. 18, 1827, by Michael Conaway. J. P. Elza McDonald and Mary Mustard, May 13, 1840, by Rev. Richard Brown. John McDonnal and Catherine Miles, Jan. 6, 1819, by Robert McKee, J. P. Thomas McDonnall and Mary Byers, Jan. 1, 1823, by William Taggart, V. D. M. John McDonnah and Masey Hoglin, May 18, 1813, by William Barnhill, J. P. John McDowell and Nancy Clements, April 19, 1832, by William Wallace. V. D. M. Samuel McDowell and Jane Watson, Oct. 9, 1S28, by William Wallace. V. D. M. Robert McElravy and Harriett Atkinson, May 3, 1832, by John McArthur, V. D. M. James McElwee and Lucy Smith, Dec. 20, 1834, by Pleasant Underwood. Benjamin McFadden and Mary Wilson, Sept. 4, 1821, by William Taggart, V. D. M. George McFadden and Elizabeth Kelly, Dec. 18, 1821, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Hamilton McFadden and Susanna Picken, Sept. 27, 1827, by Michael Conaway, J. P. John McFadden and Mary Dunlap, March 4, 18,15, by Rev. Thomas B. Clark John McFadden and Elizabeth Stringer, June 27, 1819, by William Anderson, J. P. Joseph McFadden and Polly Thompson, Dec. 28, 1826, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Nathaniel McFadden and Elizabeth Green, Dec. 15, 1833, by Jacob L. Grubb, J. P. Samuel E. McFadden and Sarah McFadden, Dec. 7, 1838, by William Taggart, V. D. M. William McFadden and Elizabeth Thompson, June 28, 1825, by William Tag- ■ gart, V. D. M. Wilson McFadden and Tabitha Cumi English, Dec. 8, 1831, by Michael Con- away, J. P. Fieldeu McFee and Sally Thompson, Nov. 25, 1830, by Edward Talbott, J. P. John McGare and Nancy Ann House, Nov. 18, 1828, by Rev. James Moore. • Andrew McGee and Lydia Beckley, March 17, 1836, by John Wagner. J. P. Hugh McGee and Sarah Wilson, Aug. I, 1830, by Samuel Hitchcock, J. P. William McGee and Rachel Beckley, Aug. 3, 1826, by John Wagner, J. P. William McGifiin and Lydia Butterfield, Oct. 27, 1825, by Rev. Elias Crane. Thomas McGill and Rebecca Baxter, Oct. 8, 1833, by Samuel Ramsey. J. P. James McConigle and Margaret Turner, March 31, 1831, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Joseph McGonagle and Elizabeth Crawford, Nov. 25, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. 280 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY McCaslin McGonagle and Louiza Cummins, March 24, 1836, by John McArthur. V. D. M. Robert McGonagle and Eliza McFadden, Nov. 15, 1827, by Samuel Hitchcock, J. P. Thomas McGonigal and Mary Thompson, Dec. 12, 1833, by John McArthur, V. D. M. David G. McGuire and Anna Roush, Aug. 17, 1819. by Robert McKee, J. P. George McGrew and Margaret Bricker, Feb. 28. 1838, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. John McHaines and Nancy Peppers, Dec. 29, 1833, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. Charles McHugh and Jane McCamis, Jan. 24, 1833, by Rev. James Robertson. George Mcllroy and Nancy Eschallot, Nov. 4, 1832, by Thomas M. Granfell, J. P. James McElix3y and Gassy Baker, Nov. 21, 1816, by William Anderson. John Mcllroy and Jerusa Ann Murphy, April 24, 1832, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Robert Mcllroy and Mary McFadden, May 21, 1818, by William Anderson, J. P. Archibald Mclntire and Rachel Haley, Feb. 28, 1817, by Charles Chapman, J. P. -J'ames McKee and Sarah Lew^is, Nov. 4, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Rev. Joseph McKee and Sarah E. Crocker, Nov. 20, 1839, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. George McKibbon and Eleanor Morrison, Jan. 19, 1836, by Rev. Jacob Coon. Matthew McKibbon and Jane Eagleson, Oct. 11, 1832, by Rev. Jacob Coon. Ebenezer McKinnie and Jane Williams, Feb. 15, 1832, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Friar McKinnie and Emeline Bell. Nov. 11, 1830, by George W. Bell, J. P. George McKinney and Elizabeth Conaway, Oct. 10, 1828, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. James McKinney and Mary Orr, Feb. 3, 1831, by George W. Bell. J. P. John McKinney and Nancy Campbell, June 19, 1820, by Abriam Johnson, J. P. John McKisson and Elizabeth Packer, Oct. 20, 1830, by Edward Talbott. James McKiterick and Nancy Walker, April 2, 1834, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. James McLaughlin and Mary Bair, March 2. 1820, by B. W. Veirs, J. P. ' Robert McLaughlin and Rachel Merryman, April 10, 1834, by George W. Bell, J. P. James McLean and Sarah Endsley, Aug. 5, 1S24, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. David McMath and Charity Mowders, March 21, 1822, by John Russel, J. P. Harland McMath and Julian Mitchell, Aug. 7, 1835, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Simeon McMath and Hannah Adams, Jan. 16, 1836, by Samuel Skinner. J. P. Amos McMilkin and Jane Porter, Jan. 4, 1821, by Thomas B. Carter, J. P. Asa McMillan and Mary Kelly, May 8, 1827, by Willam Wallace. John McMillan and Alice Bernhard, Dec. 28, 1820, by Thomas B. Carter, .L P. John McMillan and Elizabeth Peacock, Oct. 17, 1822, by Benjamin S. Cowan, J. P. Robert McMillen and Margaret Ann Moore, Dec. 6, 1838, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Samuel McMillan and Clarissa Milligan, April 16, 1S40, by Rev. Thomas Thomp- son. William McMillan and Jane Downey, July 13, 1S30, by Van Brown, J. P. James McMnllen and Isabella Todd. Oct. 19, 1830, by William Wallace, V. D. M. John McMullin and Fanny l^aw, Dec. 24, 1835, by Joseph Masters, J. P. Barnabas McNamee and Elizabeth Brannon, March 6, 1840, by Matthew Phillips, .7. P, EARLY MARRIAGES 281 Ruben McNamee and Pricilla Humphres, Oct. 13, 1825. by Joseph Fry, J. P. William McNamee and Mai'garet Fisher, Aug. 29, 1826, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Joseph McNutt and Nancy Yates, Dec. 20, 1832, by John McArthur, V. D. M. James McNary and Amelia Grove, Feb. 2, 1836, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. John McNary and Margaret Hawthorn, Nov. 6, 1838, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Elisha McOrr and Sai'ah Kail, March 17, 1824, by Robert Orr, J. P. George McPeck and Jane Endsley, Oct. 6, 1831, by Rev. John McArthur. George W. McPherson and Harriet Johnson, July 14, 1836, by Rev. C. D. Bat- tell. Edward McPheter, and Rachel Hitchcock, Feb. 26, 1839, by Charles Thorn. Elisha McQueen and Elizabeth Tope, July 1, 1827, by John C. Huston, J. P. .John jMcQueen and Mary Crozier, Nov. 15, 1821, by Rev. Elias Crane. Samuel McQueen and Barbara Whiteman, April 22, 1827, by John C. Huston, J. P. Matthew McShanks and Elizabeth E. Nicholason, Jan. 31, 1826, by Rev. John Crom. Asa McVaigh and Nancy Wilson, Sept. 19, 1816, by John Crawford, J. P. Stacey McVeigh and Mary Fencer, April 18. 1819, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Daniel McWilliams and Jane Braden, Sept. 20, 1836, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Thomas Mackey and Anne Ely, April 5, 1838, by Rev. James Drummond. Zenas Macomber and Hannah McKee, June 16, 1833, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Johu Madens and Mary Ann Light, June 22, 1818, by Charles Chapman, J. P. James Madison and Sarah Melaung, Aug. 3, 1815, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Samuel Magoogan and Sarah Patton, Dec. 1, 1831, by Rev. John McArthur. Joseph Mehaffey and Letitia Wells, July 31, 1832, by Peter Barger, J. P. William Mahaffey and Harriett Ourant, Dec. 30,*1830, by Peter Barger, J. P. John Maholm and Martha Bolen, April 4, 1822, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Joseph Meholin and Margaret McFadden, June 24, 1816, by William Taggart. V. D. M. Samuel Maholm and Hetty Delany, Aug. 16, 1821, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Joseph Mahan and Rebecca Brown, Nov. 12, 1835, by Rev. Moses Scott, Thomas Mahon and Anne Ferrell, April 8, 1830, by Samuel Hitchcock, J. P. William Mairs and Elizabeth Gamble, April 8, 1837, by John McKinney, J. P. John Major and Edith AVebb, Jan. 8. 1826, by Rev. James Roberts. Emanuel Malernee and Hannah Eaton, July 9, 1829, by Rev. Jacob Le«imon. John Z. Mallanee and Sarah Hayes, April 28, 1831, by Rev. Thomas J. Taylor. Levi Mallernee and Eleanor Johnson, Dec. 6, 1838, by Rev. Robert Cook. Matthew F. Mallanee and Catherine Hoyt, Jan. 30, 1838, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. John Manbeck and Elizabeth Gutshall, Oct. 14, 1824, by Rev. John Crom. Peter Manbeck and Margaret Stall, Sept. 15, 1829, by John Gruber, J. P. William Mann and Elizabeth Covert, Feb. 19, 1829, by George Brown, J. P. John G. Mannie and Eliza L. Ankrum, Nov. 15, 1832, by Salmon Cowles. V. D. M. James W. Manro and Sally Fisher, March 9, 1826. by Alexander Moore, J. P. Ransom Manrow and Prudence Hanna, March 27, 1838, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Mansfield and Rhoda Welch, June 5, 1828, by John Rea, V. D. :\I. John Mansfield and Mary Cave, June 4, 1840, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. 282 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Richard Mansfield and Elizabeth Shimer, Nov. 3, 1831, by William Arnold, J. P. Thomas Mansfield and Elizabeth Fisher, Dec. 14, 1829, by John Carson, J. P. William Mansfield and Margaret Ann Bell, July 11, 1838, by William Taggart, V. D. M. David Maple and Mary Farmer, March 1, 1816, by Alexander Lee, J. P. Joseph Maple and Elizabeth Rider, Dec. 13, 1831, by Joseph Wolf, J. P. Thomas Mapel and Mary Rider, May 23, 1827, by Van Brown, J. P. James Markee [Marquis?] and Rhoda Nevitt, June 18, 1829, by Rev. William Tipton. James Markee and Eliza Ellen Hilton, Oct. 22, 1839, by M. F. Burkhead, J. P. Joseph Markey and Mary Fordyce, April 18, 1830, by Thomas McCleary. William Markee and Hannah Norris, Jan. 14, 1830, by Thomas McCleary. William Markey and Miranda Ann Johnson, July 16, 1835, by John M. Brown, J. P. Daniel Markley and Caty Everhart, Sept. 20, 1817, by Martin Guilinger, J. P. Jonathan Markley and Anna Stine, Jan. 5, 1832, by Maurris Albaugh, J. P. Jonathan Markley and Mary Ann Hartley, May 25, 1837, by B. W. Veivs. J. P. Joseph Markley and Sevilla Wallace, July 24, 1828, by Morris Allbaugh, J. P. Moses Markley and Elizabeth Everhart, Feb. 26, 1822, by B. W. Veirs, J. P. Moses Markley and Sarah Shaeffer, March 31, 1825, by John Wagner, J. P. Robert Markley and Leah Kooken, March 6, 1834, by Richard Lyons, J. P. James E. Marquis and Harriet Johnston, Nov. 21, 1823, by Salmon Covv^les, V. D. M. Jacob Marshal and Martha Laughlin, May 2, 1839, by William Arnold, J. P. Jarret Marshell and Margaret Marshall, June 7, 1832, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Jarett Marshall and Ruth Harding, March 20. 1838. by M. B. Lukins, J. P. John Marshall and Zipora Cox, June 16, 1S14, by John Busby, J. P. John Marshall and Margaret McKinny, June 10, 1824, by Michael Conav/ay, J. P. Joseph M. Marshall and Jane McFadden, Nov. 6, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Samuel Marshall and Nancy Layport, Jan. 1, 1835, by George W. Bell, J. P. Andrew Martin and Jane Gibson, May 30, 1831, by Thomas P. Jenkins. J. P. Edward Martin and Elizabeth Haverfield, Sept. 24, 1839, by Rev. William Tag- gart. Hugh Martin and Anne Wiley, March 3, 1831, by William McMillan. James Martin and Ann Tewalt, March 16, 1816, by Walter B. Beebe, J. P. James Martin and Jane Devine, May 29, 1823, by Archibald McGrew, J. P. James Martin and Elizabeth Dewalt, Jan. 12. 1838, by John Caldwell, J. P. James Martin and Louisa Grove, Feb. 27, 1840, by John M. Branen, J. P. John Martin and Harriet HitchcocJc, March 13, 1840, by Richard Brown. Joseph H. Martin and Rebecca Sawville, June 26, 1837, by B. W. Viers, J. P. Luther Martin and Jane Clark, Dec. 9, 1830, by John Rea, V. D. M. Marshall Martin and Melinda Skinner, March 24, 1836, by Rev. Cornelius D. Battelle. Samuel Martin and Susanna Worley, Aug. 15, 1822, by William Cunningham. Samuel H. Martin and Rebecca Mercer, March 7, 1838, by John Chalfan, J. P. William Martin and Sarah Lewis, Aug. 27, 1835, by George Atkinson, J. P. Daniel Matron and Sarah Lee, Jan. 25, 1816, by John Roberts. EARLY MARRIAGES 283 Benjamin Matson and Rebecca Simpkins, June 26, 1836, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Enoch Matson and Mary Turner, Sept. 25, 1817, by James Roberts. Jolin Matson and Elizabeth Spurrier, Aug. 17, 1837, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Nehemiah Matson and Mary Townsend, Dec. 9, 1818, by James Roberts. Nehemiah Matson and Mary Anderson, June 23, 1836, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Nicholas Matson and Olivia Myers, May 22, 1831, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Uriah Matson and Jane McKee, Api-il 22, 1830, by John Heberling, J. P. Washington Matson and Elizabeth Talbott, May 15, 1836, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Abraham Mattern and Mary Brown, April 4, 1833, by Rev. Tipton. John Mattern and Margaret Griffin, Jan. 1, 1833, by John Caldwell, J. P. Henry C. Matthews and Nancy Rankin, Oct. 16, 1820, by William Wyckoff, J. P. James Matthews and Jane Thompson, Jan. 11, 1830, by .Tolin Hebling, J. P. Thomas Matthews and Martha Ridgway, July 20, 1826, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Thomas Matthews and Julian Kindle, July 23, 1828, by John Wagner, J. P. Arthur May and Elizabeth Sisler, Dec. 31, 1825, by J. R. Kirkpatrick, J. P. Henry May and Henrietta Gardner, March 7, 1839, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. John May and Mary Dempsey, April 12, 1832, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Joseph Mays and Rebecca Work, Sept. 14, 1824, by John Rea, V. D. M. William Mayhugh and Sarah Spurrier, Dec. 14, 1829, by Thomas Parkinson, J. P. Nathan Maxon and Susanna Dicks, July 18, 1815, by Richard Prue, J. P. William Maxon and Delilah Bowland. Jan. 26, 1832, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Alexander E. Maxwell and Sarah A. Keepers, Jan. 12, 1832. by Rev. John Moffit. Alexander Maxwell and Elizabeth Plumui^r, Oct. 12, 1839, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. Henry Maxwell and Esther Orr, Jan. 30, 1823, by William Taggart, V. D. M. James Maxwell and .Jane Maxwell, Aug. 12, 1824', by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. John Maxwell and Jane Orr, Feb. 9, 1826, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Robert Maxwell and Elizabeth Fisher, Dec. 21, 1821, by William Anderson, J. P. Robert Maxwell and Jemima Keepers, Dec. 20, 1838, by William D. McCartney, V. D. M. Walter Maxwell and Hannah Hawthorn, April 1, 1830, by Rev. Joseph Clokey. William Maxwell and Sarah McGaw, Dec. 31, 1840, by James Kerr, V. D. M. James Means and Jane Drummond, Aug. 24, 1824, by Isaac Allen, J. P. George Mecasky and Elizabeth Kelly, Jan. 17, 1827, by Rev. Thomas Hunt. Robert Mecaskey and Sarah McCausland, May 21, 1831, by James Robertson, A. M. George Mecausland and Mary Kelly, Sept. 2, 1823, by Rev. Thomas Hunt. Elisha Medcalf and Elizabeth McDaniel, Feb. 2. 1834, by Rev. David C. Merrl- man. Rezin Medley and Milly Jones, Sept. 20, 1815, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Richard Medley and Margaret Browning, Dec. 28, 1826, by George Brown, J. P. Isaac Meek and Margaret Heady, Feb. 17, 1831, by Rev. Nathaniel Callender. Peter Meek and Margaret Guier. Oct. 8, 1829, by Samuel Dunlap, J. P. Samuel Megaw and Jane McCombs. Nov. 13, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Thomas Meldrum and Matilda Phillips. Nov. 30, 1837, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. William Mellor and Sarah Fell, June 17. 1832, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Moses Melton and Ann Hockins, Aug. 12. 1819, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Aaron Mercer and Polly Cecil, June 30, 1831, by George Brown, J. P. 284 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Elias Mercer and Polly Randels, June 29, 1820, by Rev. James Roberts. Ellis Mercer and Nancy Bush. Dec. 18, 1817, by Rev. James Roberis. John M. Meredith and Delila Jones, Aug. 29, 1839, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Amos Merrick and Catherine Bonecutter, May 23, 1816, by Paul Preston. David Merrill and Jane Knock, Nov. 14, 1831. by Joseph Fry, J. P. John Merrill and Margaret Guttery, Sept. 24, 1835, by William Wallace, V. D. M. John Meryman and Margaret Eliza Ray, Dec. 12, 1839, by M. F. Burkhead, J. P. Nicholas Meryman and Amma Moore, June 18, 1840, by William Arnold, J. P. Sheridan Merryman and Sarah Ann Wible, April 30, 1840, by William Arnold, J. P. Adonijah Messenger and Rachel Burgess, Sept. 9, 1821, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Barr Mewherter and Mary Reed, Jan. 30, 1821, by John Wagner, J. P. James Mewherter and Lydia Reed, June 18, 1818, by Martin Guilinger, J. P. Samuel Micklederry and Sarah Elder, April 7, 1831, by Rev. John Donaldson. David Middleton and Hester House, Nov. 1, 1832, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. John Midleton and Martha Earley, Oct. 6, 1836, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Leonard Middleton and Susan Turnpaugh, March 19, 1835, by Rev. Jacob Lem- mon. Andrew Mikesell and Mary Lowmiller, May 19, 1840. by Rev. Benjamin Pope. George Mikesell and Barbara Guthrie, April 13, 1836, by John Gruber, J. P. Jacob Mikesell and Sally Shoos, Jan. 27, 1831, by John Gruber, J. P. Charles H. Mildred and Nancy Botkin, May 6, 1824, by Jacob Tope, J. P. Abner Miller and Rachel Beck, April 27, 1820, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Daniel Miller and Susanna liOwmiller, Dec. 27, 1815, by Henry Kail. J. P. Harrison Miller and Mary Ann Wheeler, Oct. 24, 1839, by John Gruber, J. P. Harrison Miller and Elizabeth Gibler, Dec. 24, 1839, by Thomas Fiunicum, J. P. John Miller and Rebecca Lowmiller, May 26, 1825, by John Wagner, J. P. John Miller and Leah Brokaw, Jan. 16, 1839, by Charles Thorn. Joseph Miller and Isabel McClintock, Dec. 18, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Levi Miller and July Ann Riley, April 18, 1839, by Rev. Robert Cook. Nathan Miller and Amy Jones, Nov. 17, 1831, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Richard J. Miller and Ann Barrett, Aug. 23, 1832, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Rozel D. Miller and Jane Curry, Dec. 17, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Samuel Miller and Sally Miller, March 13, 1822, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. Thomas Miller and Margaret R. Henderson, Oct. 21, 1822, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. Thomas Miller and Mary Cramblet, Aug. 24, 1837, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Thomas Miller and Mary Johnson, Sept. 13, 1838. by Samuel Skinner, J. P. William Miller and Polly Haun, Jan. 9, 1823, by Rev. Salmon Cowles. William Miller and Lydia Barthelow, Oct. 13, 1836, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Alexander Milligan and Margaret Richey, Dec. 10, 1816, by William Taggart V. D. M. Joseph Milligan and Isabella Wallace, May 12, 1825, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. Thomas Milligan and Sarah Bennett, Nov. 17, 1825, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. Thomas Milligan and Martha Vincent, Feb. 3, 1827, by John Rea, V. D. M. William Milligan and Lydia Miller, Nov. 6, 1823, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. John Milliken and Jemima Haines, Oct. IS, 1834, by Thomas McClintock, J. P. .Michael Milliken and Charity Day, Jan. 9, 1838, by John Selby, J. P. Elias Mills and Isabella Glendon, Dec. 29, 1836, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 285 John Mills and Sarah Arnold, Feb. 15, 1816, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Nathan Mills and Susan Condon, May 10, 1838, by Samuel G. J. Worthington. William Mills and Margaret Markee, July 9, 1816, by John Graham. Henry Minick and Mary Trushel, Oct. 28, 1823, by Rev. J. Wagenhals. Henry Minor and Catherine Bowers, May 3, 1838, by David Bowers, J. P. John Minteer and Catherine Simmons, April 22, 1821, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. Daniel Miser and Mary Hay, July 7, 1825, by John Wagner, J. P. George Miser and Caty Markley, Aug. 28, 1816, by Martin Guilinger, J. P. Henry Misor and Hannah Need, July 20, 1817, by Henry Kail, J. P. John Miser and Mary Stone, Feb. 12, 1815, by Rev. John Rinehart. John Miser and Angeline Stonesifer, May 17, 1838, by John Wagner, J. P. Philip Miser and Peggy Shultz, Sept. 9, 1821, by John Wagner, J. P. Daniel Mitchell and Elizabeth Kerr. Feb. 9, 1832, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Hugh Mitchell and Elizabeth Ferrall, Jan. 30, 1834, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Ira Mitchell and Elizabeth Harden, Jan. 26, 1836, by Joseph Fry, J. P. James Mitchell and Martha Timmons, March 24, 1825, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. William Mitchell and Mary Ann Atkinson, Oct. 18, 1838, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Allen S. Moffit and Rebecca Jones, Feb. 11, 1836, by Rev. Cornelius D. Battelle. Henry Moffit and Mary Lewis, April 23, 1815, by Charles Chapman. Henry Moffet and Ann Johnson, Jan. 7, 1819, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Rev. John Moffet and .Julian Norris, June 23, 1830, by John Graham. William Moffit and Rebecca Kelly, Nov. 11, 1819, by John Rea, V. D. M. James Moles and Betsey Connel, Sept. 21, 1820, by Rev. William Knox. Augustus Molesworth and Mary Ann Smith, March 19, 1840, by Rev. J. D. Kinnear. Thomas Moncrief and Isabella Walker, March 15, 1822, by John Rea, V. D. M. James Moodey and Nancy Giles, April 9, 1833, by Thomas Ford, J. P. Thomas Moody and Rachel Hutchinson, Feb. 25, 1836, by B. W. Viers, J. P, William Moody and Elenor McDonaugh, June 2, 1814, by John Busby, J. P. Aaron Moore and Mary Ellen Hilton, Nov. 23, 1837, by Rev. Robert Cook. Abraham Moore and Elizabeth Hagey, Oct. 2, 1831, by Joseph Walters, J. P. Alexander Moore and Catherine Mclntire, June 13, 1826, by Alexander Moore, J. P. Alexander Moore and Mary Baxter, March 12, 1829, by William Wallace, V. D. M. David Moore and Elizabeth King, Dec. 5, 1817, by Henry Kail, J. P. David Moore and Sarah Cidwell, April 15, 1824, by Hugh Shotwell, J. P. David Moore and Sarah Dunlap, Aug. 28, 1838, by William Waller, V. D. M. David Moore and Minerva Wright, Aug. 6, 1840, by Rev. Robert Cook. Edward Moore and Catherine Spiker, May 6, 1819, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. George R. Moore and Deborah Hutchinson, Dec. 7, 1826, by Silvanus Lamb. J. P. Henry Moore and Elizabeth Flnley, Aug. 21, 1828. by Salmon Cowles, V. D. M, Henry R. Moore and Lydia Ann Burson, May 16, 1832, by Samuel Skinner, J. P, Hilery Moore and Alhina West, March 11, 1837, by William Arnold, J. P. Hugh Moore and Elizabeth Jones, Feb. 27, 1817, by William Slemmons, J. P. Ire Moore and Prudence B. Ford, April 25, 1839, by M. B. Lukins, J. P. 286 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Isaac Moore and Elizabeth Cook, July 3, 1834, by Lot Deming, J. P. Isaac Moore and Eliza Coleman Feb. 23, 1840, by M. B. Lukins, J. P. Isaiah Moore and Rachel Tipton, Oct. 12, 1837, by William Arnold, J. P. James Moore and Elizabeth Rowland, Jan. 8, 1829, by Philip Fulton, J. P. James Moore and Rebecca Cook, Sept. 7, 1836, by Robert P. Simpson, J. P. James Moore and Mary Moore, Nov. 26, 1839, by Hugh Parks, Jr., V. D. M. Jesse Moore and Ruth Atkinson, Sept. 7, 1814, by William Knox. John Moore and Nancy Foreman, Oct. 27, 1822, by Rev. William Knox. John Moore and Mary Ann House, Dec. 4, 1832, by Rev. John Moffet. John Moore and Alsy Johnson, Dec. 25, 1834, by William Wyckoff, J. P. John Moore and Elizabeth Williamson, March 12, 1835, by William Wallace, V. D. M. John Moore and Elizabeth McCullough, May 24, 1836, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Moore and Sarah Mansfield, May 4, 1837, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Peter Y. Moore and Mary Rickets. June 30, 1836, by Robert Scott. Peter Moore and Sally Johnson, June 24, 1838, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Robert A. Moore and Mary Peacock, March 31, 1831, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Samuel Moore and Polly Riggle, June 18, 1818, by James Roberts. Sylvanus Moore and Isabella Muncy, April 23, 1829, by Rev. W. B. Evans. Sylvanus Moore and Alcinda Smith, Oct. 17, 1838, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Thomas Moore to Susan Cook, June 6, 1840, by E. Greenwold. William Moore and Jane Boales, March 14, 1833, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. William Moore and Ruth Harvey, April 30, 1835, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. William Moore and Lydia Delany, March 15, 1838, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Samuel Moorhead and Sarah Holmes, Aug. 27, 1824, by John Rea, V. D. M. Thomas Moorehead and Polly Hill, June 4, 1821, by Robert W. Laughlin, J. P. Benjamin Morgan and Margaret Thompson, Dec. 12, 1816, by William Ander- son. Elias Morgan and Nancy Harman, Dec. 30, 1824, by John Wagner, J. P. George Morgan and Elizabeth Shuck, May 31, 1825, by Rev. John Crom. John Morgan and Polly Kirby, July 14, 1829, by Rev. John Crom. John Morgan and Jemima Merrill, March 5, 1833, by J.. Staneart, J. P. Michael Morgan and Eleanor Whann, Feb. 6, 1838, by Rev. Jacob Coon. Thomas Morgan and Betsey Harmon, July 28, 1831, by Thomas Ford. J. P. Edward Morris and Catherine Susan Matson, Sept. 15, 1831, by Edward Talbott, J. P. John Morris and Charlotte Huff, Jan. 28, 1817, by Thomas Dickerson.. John Morris and Margaret Shepherd, Dec. 28, 1826. by Jesse Hooper, J. P. John Morris and Maria Burson, July 9, 1829, by John Heberling, J. P. John Morris and Charlotte Dickerson, Jan. 20, 1839, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Jonathan Morris and Mary Ann Parker. Feb. 22, 1827, by William B. Evans. John Morrison and Peggy Martin, Dec. 22, 1821, by George Brown, J. P. John Morrison and Mary Norris, Feb. 25, 1828, by Rev. William Knox. Thomas Morrison and Jane Gilmore, Oct. 17, 1815, by Henry Barricklow, J. P. William Morrison and Eleanor McCraney, Dec. 28, 1819, by Rev. James Roberts. Alexander Morrow and Hetty Fletcher, April 19, 1832, by John Rea, V. D. M. George B. Morrow and Eliza Guthrie, Dec. 30, 1840, by Rev. Moses Allen. Thomas Morrow and Jane Brokaw, Dec. 13, 1813, by Thomas B. Clark, V D. M. William Morrow and Margaret Fogle, Nov. 29, 1838, by Thomas P.Jenkins, J. P. William Mortimer and Mary Butler, Dec. 8. 1825, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 2S7 Samuel Morton and Jane McKee, Feb. 5, 1826, by John Busby, J. P. Conrad Mortz and Sarah Hines, Sept. 12, 1838, by Rev. John W. Minor. Henry Moseworth and Margaret Strong, Dec. 29, 1836, by Rev. Richard Brown. Conrad Mowder and Mary Mowder, Jan. 13, 1830, by Rev. William Tipton. Jacob Mowder and Sarah White, Feb. 12, 1835, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. John L. Mowder and Catherine Toland, Dec. 2, 1830, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Joshua Mowder and Mary Brewer, Sept. 5, 1832, by William Wyckoff, J. P. William Mowder and Sally Turner, May 4, 1822, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Jacob Mowry and Peggy Zimmerman, Nov. 15, 1819, by John Hurless, J. P. Michael Mowry and Eve Giddinger, Sept. 7, 1823. by John Hurless, J. P. Joel Moxly and Nancy Ring, Aug. 29, 1829, by Joseph Clokey. John Mull and Elizabeth Cotton, March 27, 1840, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Charles Mullen and Phebe Merit, April 17, 1828, by Rev. James Roberts.. Alexander Mummy and Nancy Coultrap, Sept. 12, 1838, by C. E. Weirick. Charles Mummy and Rebecca Hedge, Jan. 11, 1821, by William Haverfield. George Munson and Emily Bliss, Jan. 5, 1832, by Robert Pittis, J. P. John Murdock and Henrietta Darling, Feb. 16, 1837, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. William Murdock and Nancy Thompson, Feb. 20, 1823, by Micjiael Conaway, J. P. Arnold Murphy and Ann Richardson, Oct. 7, 1823, by John Wagnor, J. P. John Murphy and Mary Auld, May 8, 1838, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Patrick AV. Murphy and Maria Kimber, Dec. 14, 1826, by Daniel Limerick, Elder of M. E. Church. John P. Murry and Mary Musgrove, Dec. 7, 1839, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Washington Murry and Mary Abdil, July 1, 1824, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. Pearson Mustard and Jane Carson, Jan. 26, 1837, by Jesse Marrell, J. P. David Myers and Sally Binger, Nov. 17, 1831, by Morris Albaugh. J. P. Eli IMyers and Eliza Pinkerton. Nov. 23, 1831, by Charles Faucett, J. P. George Myers and Hannah Riggle, Feb. 27, 1820, by John Wagner, J. P. Jacob Myers and Rhoda Case, Oct. 24, 1830, by George Waddle. John Myers and Fanny Lowmiller, March 15, 1818, by Martin Guilinger. J. P. Joseph Myers and Ellen Hardin, Oct. 17, 1839, by C. H. Custer, J. P. Lewis Myres and Nancy Sager, April 1, 1823, by B. W. Veirs, J. P. Michael Myers and Sarah Markee, Oct. 31, 1822, by Rev. Curtis Goddard. Patrick Myers and Nancy Darr, March 9, 1830, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Phillip Miers and Catherine Fordice, Nov. 18, 1824, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Samuel Myers and Mary Connel, Nov. 2, 1830, by Robert Pittis, J. P. William Myres and Nancy Pinkerton, May 29, 1828, by Jacob Tope, J. P. George Mynart and Susanna Smith, Sept. 9, 1819, by Rev. John Crom. John Minard and Barbary Shaeffer, Nov. 11, 1824, Rev. John Wagenhals. Daniel Naragong and Eliza Hosterman, March 27, 1831, by John Wagner, J. P. Nicholas Narragong and Polly Wilson, May 4, 1832, by John Wagner, J. P. Samuel Noragong and Hester Ann Dean, Jan. 18, 1838, by John Wagner. William Narragong and Nancy Ann Watters, Jan. 1, 1835, by John Wagner, J. P. George Need and Sarah Miser, Nov. 10, 1816, by Nancy Kail, J. P. James Neel and Temperance Johnson, March 17, 1829, by Salmon Cowles, V. D. M. Lyas Neal and Mary Ann Barrett, Aug. 7, 1839, by Charles Thorn. William Neil and Nancy Armstrong, Oct. 12, 1824, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. 288 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Hugh Nelson and Betsy Wilson, Sept. 15, 1815, by Charles Chapman, J. P. John Nelson and Hannah Moody, March 5, 1816, by Robert Orr, J. P. Samuel Neson and Sally Preston, July 8, 1819, by William Anderson, J. P. Joseph Nevil and Maria Starkey, Dec. 1. 1832, by Rev. Jacob Coon. Isaac Nevitt and Rhoda Johnson, May 13, 1819, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. James Newell and Sarah White, Jan. 16. 1840, by William Arnold, J. P. John Nibloch and Sarah Grewell, Aug. 20, 1829, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. John Niblock and Matilda Haun. Sept. 23, 1840, by Mark Hogge. J. P. Henry Nicebaum and liydia Holtzman, Dec. 25, 1832, by Dewalt Rothacker. Samuel Nicholas and Sarah Ann Medley, Nov. 20. 1837, by William Arnold, J. P. William M. Nicolason and Jane McGowan, March 11, 1824, by Rev. Daniel Rahauser. William Nixon and Agnes Campbell, Dec. 20, 1827, by Joshua Monroe. James Noah and Cassey Ann Madden, Sept. 10, 1829, by John Heberling, J. P. James Noble and Martha Davis, Sept. 6, 1832. by James McCollough. William H. Noble and Mary Bosley, June 13, 1839. by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Jacob Noftsker and Susanna Gutshall, Nov. 12, 1840, by John Gruber, J. P. Samuel Nossker and Polly Foos, March 31, 1825, by John Wagner, J. P. George Norman and Nancy Sparrow, Aug. 30, 1832, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P. George Norman and Susan Wallcut, June 9, 1836, by Samuel Lewis. J. P. Daniel Narrick and Betsey Winkfield, April 3, 1816, by Martin Guilinger. Jacob Norrick and Emily Houser, Dec. 24, 1838, by Robert P. Simpson, J. P. Alexander Norris and Christena Spiker, Oct. 14, 1838, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. John Norris and Sarah McMillan, Feb. 15, 1827, by William Wallace, V .D. M. John T. Norris and Elizabeth Davis, Dec. 19, 1830, by Rev. Aurora Callender. Jacob Norvick and Mary Hurless Feb. 22, 1820, by John Hurless, J. P. James Nowells and Sarah Jones, June 1, 1825, by Isaac Allen, J. P. James Null and Rebecca Wilken, Sept. 8, 1831, by Andrew Isaac. Joshua Null and Sarah Brown, Sept. 7, 1837, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William O'Brien and Susanna Johnston, Feb. 9, 1816, by William Wyckoff. J. P. William Oden and Kitty A. Ellis, Jan. 15, 1835, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Mordicai Ogle and Betsy Waninto, Jan. 4, 1815, by Alexander Lee, J, P. -Baruch Oglevee and Rachel Dunlap, March 6, 1823, by Rev. Salmon Cowles. Hugh Oglevee and Elizabeth M. Russell, Feb. 4, 1830, by William Wallace, V. D. M. John Ohler and Sophia Shook, July 28, 1829, by Lot Doming. John Oldfield and Sarah Ann Bfown, Nov. 12, 1837. by John Caldwell, J. P. Henry Olen and Mary Staples, April 11, 1840, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. Henry Olmstead and Martha Bingham, Sept. 20, 1832, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Walter O'Nail and Ann Jones, Aug. 24, 1815, by William Haverfield, J. P. Zachariah Oram and Nancy Davis, May 16, 1822, by Jesse Hooper, J. P. George Orr and Jane Wilkin, Nov. 24, 1829, by William Taggart, V. D. M. John Or and Sarah Ayres, Feb. 10, 1819, by Thomas Parkinson, J. P. John Orr and Arey Moore, Sept. 8, 1831, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Thomas Orr and Margaret Newhouse, June 24. 1819, by Rev. James Roberts. Thomas Orr and Elizabeth Keepers, Dec. 11, 1828, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Thomas Orr and Caroline Sudduth, April 4, 1837, by Thomas "Phillips, J. P. William Orr and Anne Darrah, Aug. 9, 1832, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 2S9 Alexander Osbourn and Margaret Leeper, Nov. 6, 1837, by James Evans, J. P. Isaac Osbun and Nancy Mansfield, May 17, 1829, by Rev. Benjanjin Wood. John Osburn and Sarah Amspoker, Nov. 24, 1836, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Samuel Osburn and Elizabeth Welch, Sept. 3, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. William B. Osburn and Rebecca Rankin, Oct. 2, 1828, by William Taggart, V. D. M. John Oswalt and Hannah Neill, Jan. 29, 1818, by Robert McLaughlin, Esq. Washington Ourant and Mary Martin, Jan. 27, 1830, by John Carson, J. P. Joseph Overholt and Franah Forney, Dec. 5, 1824. by Rev. John Crom. Martin Overholt and Barbara Erford, Dec. 2, 1828, by Rev. John Crom. Beal Mackinzie Owings and Miranda Young, Sept. 21, 1824, by Robert Orr, J. P. Isaac Packer and Rebecca Allen, Sept. 5, 1833, by William Arnold. J. P. William Pain and Eleanor Figley, March 31, 1838, by George Nichols, J. P. David Palmer and Mary Magdalena Teniper, Jan. 31, 1839, by C. B. Weirick. George Palmer and Abigail Wood, May 19, 1818, by James Roberts. Hiram Palmer and Mary Birney, Oct. 12, 1830, by John McArthur, V. D. M. John Palmer and Sarah Shirey. March 27, 1838, by Robert P. Simpson, J. P. Alexander Parker and Elizabeth Gilmore, March 29, 1830, by Alexander Simp- son, J. P. David Parker and Nancy Derry, Sept. 22, 1831, by Thomas P. Jenkins. Harmon Parker and Barbara Shoemaker, April 13, 1837, by John M. Brown. J. P. Harris Parker and Mary Hutchinson, Aug. 8, 1839, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. James Parker and Eleanor Smith, Feb. 5, 1831, by George W. Bell, J. P. Lewis Parker and Elizabeth Hutchinson, Dec. 23, 1830, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Richard Parker and Catherine Sherow, Jan. 1, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Richard Parker and Isabella Gibson, April 10, 1839, by Robert Given, J. P. Samuel Parker and Elizabeth Parks, Sept. 20, 1832, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Thomas Parker and Martha Gudgeon, July 22, 1828, by Thomas R. Ruckle. David Parkhill and Margaret Davidson, July 5, 1832, by William Taggart. V. D. M. Andrew Parks and Susan Thumaker, June 10, 1825, by James Smith. Hiram Parks and Mary May, June 29, 1830, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. John Parks and Ann Firthey, Dec. 26, 1813, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Parks and Deulah Messenger, Nov. 23, 1820, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Laben Parks and Rachel Dicks, Feb. 20, 1819, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Matthew Park and Elizabeth Walker, May 6, 1825, by Alexander Moore, J. P. William Parks and Eliza Gross, Oct. 2, 1823, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Henry Parmer and Ruth Hedge, March 27, 1827, by Samuel Hitchcock, J. P. Nicholas Parmer and Jane Maxwell, Oct. 27, 1836, by David Brown, J. P. William Parmer and Margaret Naragong, Dec. 25, 1823, by William Holmes, J. P. Abraham Parrish and Mary Kent, Nov. 27, 1834, by William Arnold, J. P. Abraham Parrish and Rachel Keesey, Aug. 2, 1837, by Thomas Wilson, J. P. Garret Parrish and Mary English, June 5, 1818, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. John Parrish and Sarah Anderson, Nov. 10, 1835, by Cornelius D. Battelle. Leonard Parrish and Sophia Forney, Feb. 22, 1816, by Charles Chapman. J. P. Peter Parish and Peggy Mclntire, Nov. 9, 1820, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. 19 290 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Tolbert Parrish and Rachel Kent, Nov. 1, 1833, by William Arnold, J. P. Samuel Parr and Nancy Carruck, Feb. 29, 1816, by John Rea, V. D. M. Benjamin L. Parson and Susan Norris, Sept. 5, 1830, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Charles Parsons and Hannah Chilcoat, Oct. 7, 1813, by Rev. James Roberts. Israel Parsons and Hannah Cope, Jan. 18, 1834, by George Brown, J. P. John Pasley and Dienna Auld, May 9, 1817, by John Crawford, J. P. Andrew Patterson and Rebecca Craig, Oct. 27, 1835, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. David Patterson and Catherine Spiker, Jan. 8, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. George Patterson and Elizabeth Nolan, Aug. 16, 1829, by John G. Houston, J. P. John Patterson and Mary Delany, March 23, 1824, by William Holmes, J. P. John Patterson and Jane Graham, March 2, 1826, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Joseph Patterson and Mary Hays, June 8, 1834, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Samuel Patterson and Jane Davis, March 11, 1830, by Rev. Thomas M. Hudson. William Patterson and Sally Spiker, Oct. 25, 1832, by Michael Conaway, J. P. William M. Patterson and Susan Amspoker, Dec. 22, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. John Ij. Patton and Margaret Johnson, July 15, 1830, by John Rea, V. D. M. Joseph Patton and Jemima Hogland, Feb. 14, 1822, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Eli Peacock and Mary Moore, July 24, 1828, by William Wallace. V. D. M. Eli Peacock and Sarah Hicks, Oct. 11, 1838, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. John Piers and Jane Singer, Feb. 11, 1821, by Phineas Inskeep, J. P. James Pierce and Mary Morton, Feb. 11, 1830, by John Heberling, J. P. John Pearce and Sarah Maholm, July 16, 1840, by Rev. William Knox. John Pedan and Catherine Slika, Sept. 10, 1822, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. Levi Peddycoart and Lydia Worth, Feb. 23, 1822, by Thomas Patton, J. P, Joseph Penn and Jane Hamilton, Nov. 6, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Thomas Penn and Susana Craig, Oct. 10, 1840, by Rev. E. Smith. Hugh Pennel and Rachel Abdii. Oct. 16, 1828, by John Rea, V. D. M. William D. Pennell and Isabella Rea, March 10, 1818, by Thomas B. Clark. V. D. M. Thomas Pennington and Sarah Randolph, June 19, 1826, by Rev. Simon Lauck. Jonathan Peoples and Mahalah Norris, Oct. 19, 1826, by Thomas Lakin. Jonathan Peoples and Easter Galbraith. Dec. 27, 1836, by David Finnicum, J. P. Isaac Pepper and Anne Cramp, April 22, 1831, by John IMcArthur. Henry Peppers and Mary Mullen, Oct. 23, 1828, by George Brown. J. P. John Peregory and Ann Webb, April 12, 1832, by Rev. William Knox. James Perry and Jane Smiley. Nov. 19, 1840, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John G. Parry and Aurela Belknap, June 9, 1839, by C. E. Weirick. Martin Perry and Margaret Wilkin, Feb. 21, 1833, by John Rea, V. D. M. Thomas Perry and Sarah Chew, April 18, 181C, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. Robert Pervines and Esther Jenkins, Sept. 11, 1823, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Isaac Peterson and Mary Bush, Dec. 24, 1829, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Leroy Petty and Keziah Tipton, Nov. 16. 1830, by Jesse Hooper. J. P. Peter Petty and Betsey Heathe, Feb. 27, 1834, by George W. Bell. J. P. Rhodun Petty and Hester Ann R. Fry, Aug. 21, 1838, by Rev. Robert Cook. William Petty and Adeline Amelia Snider. Sept. 25, 1836, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Jacob Pfouts and Anna W. Waters, March 10, 1835, by Lot Deming, J. P. George K. Phillips and Mary Moodey, July 24, 1823, by Michael Conaway. John Phillips and Eliza Gilmore, May 6, 1828, by William Taggart, V. D. M. EARLY MARRIAGES 291 John Phillips and Eleanor Johnson, Nov. 19, 1831, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. , Joseph Phillips and Jemima Johnson, May 9, 1833, by Rev. Jacob Lennaon. Lewis Phillips and Matilda Ann Steel, May 9, 1S37, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Matthew H. Phillips and Susanna Dickerson, Dec. 11, 1828, by Salmon Cowles, V. D. M. Richard Phillips and Nancy Davidson, Sept. 24. 1836, by John M. Brown, J. P. Alexander Picken and Rachel Conaway, April 17, 1834, by William Arnold, J. P. Alpha Pickens and Jane Anderson, Nov. 27, 1827, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. William Picken and Fanny Overholts, Oct. 15, 1840, by Robert P. Simpson. Abel Pickering and Susanna Nichols, July 15, 1833, by John Bethel, J. P. Absalom Pickering and Susan Leinard, Feb. 24, 1831, by Lentulus Kirk, J. P. Enis Pickering and Susanna New, Oct. 18, 1816, by John Crawford, J. P. Evan Pickering and Nancy Lewis, Dec. 2, 1819, by Rev. James Roberts. Jacob Pickering and Mary Nichols, March 16, 1826, by James Clements, J. P. James Pickering and Nancy Middleton, Oct. 13, 1836, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Joseph Pickering and Priscilla Ruby, June 10, 1815, by Rev. William Knox. Israel Picket and Lydia Goodwin, Aug. 25, 1836, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Peter Picket and Elizabeth Mills. Nov. 10, 1819, by John Crawford, J. P. Somuel Pilinger and Jane Lemastress, Jan. 14, 1819, by Robert McKee, J. P. Samuel Pillars and Charlotte Potts, March 14, 1816, by Alexander Lee. J. P. Thomas Pinkerton and Jane L. Price, Jan. 6, 1836, by Rev Robert Cook. Isaac Pittinger and Harriet Myers, June 12, 1832, by Rev. D. C. Merryman. Peter Pittinger and Jane Buchanan, July 7, 1825, by Robert Maxwell, J. P. John Pittis and Ann Clark, June 11, 1839, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Tobias A. Plants and Mary E. Goodwin, July 30, 1837, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. William Pleasants and Margaret Alford, April 25, 1823, by John Russel, J. P. David Paulin and Arminta Barkhurst, Feb. 3, 1825, by Rev. James Roberts. Ellas Poland and Susan Ann Ford, March 14, 1832, by John Wagner, J. P. George Poland and Mary Gutshall, Dec. 25, 1831, by John Wagner, J. P. George Polen and Margaret Walters, July 14, 1836, by John Gruber, J. P. James Poland and Eliza Perry, Oct. 7, 1830, by Thomas Parkinson, J. P. John Poland and Polly Hutchinson, July 9, 1829, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Jonathan Poland and Catherine Hillicosts. June 15, 1826, by Rev. Simon Lauck. Nathaniel Polen and Margaret Cutschall, April 15, 1824, by Rev. Daniel Rahauser. Peter Poland and Sarah Hilligas, May 10, 1830, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Samuel M. Poland and Unity W^ilkin, May 11, 1830, by John Rea, V. D. M. William Poland and Ann Wheeler, March 10, 1816, by Rev. M. Cole. William Poland and Mary Stephens, Dec. 14, 1824, by Rev. James Roberts. William Poland and Sarah Wallace, Sept. 13, 1838, by Charles Thorn. William Pollard and Mary Miller, .July 29, 1839, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Benjamin Pollock and Ann Norman, Jan. 28, 1838, by John Caldwell, J. P. James Pollock and Margaret Brokaw, July 20, 1826, by George Brown, J. P. Samuel Pollock and Fanny Wilkins, Feb. 5, 1818, by William Carrothers. J. P. Thomas Polleck and Elizabeth Hammond, Aug. 9, 1832, by John Walker, V. D. M. William Pollock and Frances S. Reed Thompson, May 1, 1827, by William Tag- gart. V. D. M. David Porter and Terressa Stone, April 28, 1837, by William Arnold, J. P. 292 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY James Porter and Sarah Steen, Nov. 10, 182S, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Joseph Porter and Margaret Walker, June 30, 1836, by William Arnold, J. P. Joshua Porter and Elizabeth Rankin, May 3, 1822, by George Brown, J. P. Nathan Porter and Susanna Nofsker, March 17. 1835, by John Gruber, J. P. Otho Porter and Elizabeth Dusenberry, Aug. 29, 1833, by Rev. John Mofflt. Samuel Porter and Rebecca Dickerson, April 5, 1827, by Rev. James Roberts. Samuel Porter and Eliza Cox, April 30. 1832, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Zachariah Porter and Marj' Pivecoat, Jan. 1, 1839, by Richard Hammond, J. P. Cornelius Post and Rachel Richison, June 11, 1816, by Martin Guilinger. J. P. James Post and Rachel Moore, Nov. 19, 1837, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Andrew Poulson and Martha Hines, March 24, 1819, by James McMahon. Andrew Poulson and Susanna Garner, Dec. 24, 1840, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Charles H. Paulson and Narcissa A. Kilgore, May 1, 1839, by William Taggart, V. D. M. James J. Poulson and Mary Harrison, July 30, 1829, by John Carson, J. P. Jehu Poulson and Elizabeth Cox, Aug. 13, 1833. by William Arnold, J. P. John Poulson and Rachel Rogers, April 9, 1835, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. John Powell and Mary Scoles, Nov. 16. 1820, by John Graham. Joseph Powell and Mary Heller, April 10, 1816, by William Wyckoff. J. P. William H. Powers and Tabitha Boles, June 8, 1840, by Joseph Clokey, V. D. M. James Prather and Barbara Young, March 26, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Oliver Preston and Sally Temple, June 30, 1819, by William Anderson, J. P. Francis Price and Rosannah McGee, Dec. 30, 1840, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Garred Price and Susannah Smith, Dec. 25, 1818, by Robert McKee, J. P. Henry Price and Anna Hoffzgar, Feb. 16. 1837, by Rev. Alexander Biddle. John Price and Elizabeth Heastand, Aug. 7, 1834, by Alexander Biddle. Thomas Price and Levina Norman, March 2, 1837, by George Atkinson, J. P. Jesse Pritchard and Jane Lacey, Oct. 9, 1825, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. Thomas Pritchard and Elizabeth Spring. April 27, 1820, by John Russel, J. P, Aaron Pugh and Mary Gear, Feb. 10, 1820. by Robert McLaughlin, J. P. Amos Pugh and Anne Brown, Feb. 21, 1833, by Rev. Moses Scott. Benjamin Pugh and Jane Shivers, Nov. 1, 1832, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Jesse Pugh and Angeline Haines, Dec. 11. 1838, by John Selby, J. P. John Pugh and Elizabeth Crabtree, Aug. 19, 1830, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Ulysses Pugh and Frances Ann Suddith, May 10, 1838, by R. H. Ledwick, V. D. M. Harlon Pyle and Eliza Sinclear, Sept. 21, 1835, by John L. Layport. James Quinn and Rachel Moody, Dec. 21, 1824, by Robert Maxwell, J. P. Elihu Quillen and Sarah Cree, April 28, 1836, by Rev. Robert Cook. Joshua Quillin and Rebecca Bowles, March 8, 1827, by Thomas Lakin. Andrew Ralston and Eleanor Paxton, Dec. 11, 1827, by William McMillan, V. D. M. Lewis W. Ralston and Anna Darr, April 22, 1828. by John Graham. John Ramage and Elizabeth Lafferty, Feb. 13, 1821, by Joseph Anderson. Henry Ramer and Catherine Jones, Jan. 4, 1819, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Benjamin Ramsey and Isabella Hanna, Feb. 1, 1821, by John Rea. V. D. M. George Ramsey and Margaret Kyle, Oct. 13, 1825, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M, Hugh Ramsey and Jane Kyle, Nov. 7. 1826, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. Samuel Ramsey and Lydia Barcroft, March 6, 1833, by John Rea, V. D. M. EARLY MARRIAGES 293 William Ramsey and Susanna Ruby, Nov. 1, 1838, by William Knox, V. D. M. Elias G. Randall and Margaret House, Dec. 20, 1838, by John Selby, J. P. Enoch Randels and Peggy Williams, Oct. 10, 1816, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Ephram Randals and Mary Swayne. April 8, 1836, by George Atkinson, J. P. Jonathan Randolph and Isabel Cady, July 15, 1830, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Peter Randolph and Ann Atkinson, April 3, 1836, by Thomas Parkinson, J. P. Josiah D. Raney and Jane Clark, Feb. 1, 1815, by John Rea, V. D. M. David Rankin and Sarah Porter, March 20, 1819, by William Wyckoff, J. P. John Rankin and Nancy Smith, March 6, 1834, by Rev. Jacob Co5n. Thomas Rankin and Jane E. Ellis. Sept. 26, 1833. by Rev. Jacob L^mmon. William Rankin and Christena Knight, April 22, 1813, by Archibald M3Elrojr. William Raredon and Elmira Gitchell, Dec. 16, 1830. by Philip Fulton, J. P. Moses Ratlidge and Catherine Patterson, Feb. 14. 1839, by Rev. Dyas Neil. Thomas Rathrock and Delila Luke, Aug. 21, 1840, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. James Ravenscroft and Betsey Shuck, Dec. 31, 1816, by Thomas Fisher, J. P. James Rea and Jane Chambers, Dec. 1, 1835, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Rea and Sarah Daniels, May 12, 1830, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. John Rea, and Elizabeth Hamilton, April 9, 1840, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. Jonathan Ray and Sarah Merryman, Nov. 2, 1839, by M. F. Burkhead, J. P. Joseph Rea and Jane McConnel Sept. 22. 1818, by Thomas B. Clark, J. P. Levi Ray and Eliza Merryman, Feb. 27, 1840, by M. F. Burkhead, J. P. Samuel Rea and Ruth Robinson, Jan. 2, 1823, by Rev. Salmon Cowles. Samuel Rea and Rachel Chaney, April 11, 1840, by Isaac Craw^ford, J. P. William Rea and Jane Hanna, May 23, 1837, by John Rea, V. D. M. Henry Redick and Eleanor Stroad, Aug. 7, 1828, by Edw^ard Talbott, J. P. Jonathan Redick and Sarah Fulton, Feb. 23, 1819, by Desberry Johnson, J. P. William Redick and Matilda Mintier, Feb. 11, 1819, by John Rea, V. D. M. Andrew Reed and Jane Reed, Oct. 11, 1821, by John Rea, V. D. M. Benjamin Reed and Rebecca Sellers, Oct. 31, 1824, by Rev. John Wagenhals. Cyrus Reed and Lavina Kail, Nov. 2, 1837, by John Gruber, J. P. Daniel Reed and Mary Tipton, April 20, 1829, by John Gruber, J. P. Francis Reed and Nancy F. Farmer, April 2, 1818, by William Wyckoff. J. P. Frederick Reed and Rachel Tedrow, Dec. 28, 1817, by Henry Kail, J. P. George Reed and Susan Swarts, April 10, 1823, by Rev. James Roberts. Hugh Reed and Margaret Fulton, June 10. 18.30, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Jacob Reed and Christianna Shoos, April 20, 1815, by Rev. John Rinehart. James Reed and Mary McCormick, Oct. 20, 1825, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Read and Ellen Cunningham, Sept. 10, 1816, by John Crawford, J. P. John Reed and Fanny Waters, Jan. 17, 1817, by Walter B. Beebe, J. P. John Reed and Nancy Phillips, Dec. 30, 1824, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. John Reed and Motelena Wyant, Feb. 16, 1826, by Samuel Dunlap, J. P. John Reed and Margaret Milligan, Feb. 16, 1882. by John Mc-Arthur, V. D. M. Quinton Reed and Susanna West, Aug. 11, 1835, by William Arnold, J. P. William Reed and Jane Gibson. May 15. 1823, by John Rea, V. D. M. William Reed and Eleanor Tipton, Oct. 20, 1829, by John Gruber, J. P. William Reed and Sarah McDowell, Sept. 22, 1836, by William Wallace V. D. M. William Reed and Susanna Porter, Oct. 22, 1839, by Thomas Thompson Amos Rees and Mary Hillis. Jan. 13. 1820, by H. H. Leavitt, J. P. John Reeves and Henrietta Gardner, Sept. 29, 1829, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. 294 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John Reeves and Cela Harris, Oct. 19, 1834, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Richard Reaves and Eleanor Persons, Dec. 13, 1822, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Michael Reniker and Peggy Stefty, Aug. 28, 1821, by John Wagner, J. P. Isaac Reynolds and Polly Chaney, Sept. 18, 1819, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. Joseph Rhodes and Louisa Larry, Nov. 1, 1838, by George Atkinson, J. P. James Rice and Sarah Dehuff, Dec. 18, 1828, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Stephen G. Rice and Hannah Shuck, Dec. 29, 1832, by Joseph Wolff, J. P. John Richards and Betsey Fitzsimmons, April 5, 1836, by George W. Bell, J. P. Edward Richardson and Catherine Wiant, Aug. 4, 1825, by John Hurless, J. P. John Richardson and Ann Henry, April 30, 1818, by Martha Guilinger, J. P. David Ritchey and Susan Dausey, Feb. 19, 1840, by Jacob Coon. John Richey and Margaret McComb, June 20, 1820, by William Anderson. J. P. Samuel Richey and Elizabeth McGee, June 21, 1832, bj William Wallace, V. D. M. Benjamin Rjckey and Susan Williams, Oct. 24, 1833, by Robert Maxwell, J. P. Daniel Rick'ey and Providence Shimej, SepL 21, 182S„ by Alexander Moore. J. P. Henry Ricthard and Tena Dewalt, March 23, 1826, by John Busby, J. P. Daniel Ridenower and Susanna Shawber, March 2, 1820, by Rev. Josomun Vinnson. David Ridenower and Sally Shawver, April 15, 1824, by Rev. Daniel Rahauser. James Rider and Jane Hidey, April 10, 1832, by Thomas Day, J. P. John Ridgway and Sarah Underwood, Sept. 5, 1833, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Paul Ridgway and Catherine Harmon, Dec. 16, 1835, by Thomas Foster. George Rife and Sally Crosky, Oct. 29, 1829, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Augustus Rigby and Catherine Tope, March 5, 1826, by John C. Huston, J. P. George Rigg and Margaret Greenland, April 2, 1829, by Archibald McGrev/, J. P. John Rigg and Anna Fissel, Oct. 23, 1828, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Robert Rigg and Loveice Pessel, Sept. 23, 182*4, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Robert Rigg and Margaret Moore, Aug. 25, 1829, by Michael Conaway, J. P. George Rigel and Susanna Thomas, Feb. 13, 1817. by James Roberts. George Riggle and Betsey Riggle, April 18, 1838, by John Wagner, J. P. Jacob Riggle and Nancy Angel, Sept. 25, 1821, by John Wagner, J. P. John Rigel and Sarah Miller, March ]3, 1824, by Rev. John McMahon. Abraham Riley and Jemima Hinton, March 4, 1823, by Benjamin S. Cowen, J. P. Harrison Riley and Sarah Ann Luttle, Dec. 17, 1829, by George Brown, J. P. John Riley and Elizabeth Faucett, Dec. 27, 1827, by Rev. William Knox. Moses Riley and Nancy Moore, April 27, 1820, by John Russel, J. P. Peter Riley and Sally Hevenor, April 16, 1818, by Elijah C. Stone. William Riley and Rachel Phelps, Oct. 13, 1830, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Andrew S. Ripley and Eliza Jane Crosby, Oct. 25, 1832, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Jacob Ripley and Mary Dixson, Dec. 9, 1820, by Joseph Fry, J. P. John Ripley and Unity McBride, Feb. 22, 1821, by William Wyckoff, J. P. William T. Ripley and Margaret Cosgrove, Dec. 8, 1831, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Andrew Robb and Margaret McCullough, Aug. 28, 1828, by Salmon Cowles, V. D. M.. James Roberts and Elizabeth Atkinson, Feb. 28, 1833, by John McArt.iur, V. D. M. EARLY MARRIAGES 235 John Roberts and Catherine Goodman, July 5, 1838, by John Knox, J. P. Jonathan Roberts and Miriam Walker, July 17, 1831, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Joseph Roberts and Mary Ann Brown, May 13, 1827, by Joseph Rea, J. P. Joseph Robertson and Esther Crouch. Sept. 16, 1835, by John L. Grubb, J. P. Joshua Robey and Elizabeth Powlan, March 9, 1831, by John Wagner, J. P. Anthony Robison and Dianna Cooke. Jan. 27, 1820, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Benjamin Robinson and Rachel Martin, May 11, 1826, by John Wagner, J. P. Charles Robinson and Martha Denning, Jan. 9, 1818, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Christopher Robinson and Susan Kirby, Feb. 10, 1831, by Thomas Day, J. P. George Robison and Sally Heffling, Jan. 12, 1839, by Rev. Robert Cook. James Robison and Mary Ann Wallace, June 9, 1836, by Rev. James Taylor. James Robison and Jane Strong, March 16, 1837, by Rev. Richard Brown. James Robinson and Rebecca Overhultzer, March 8, 1838, by Rev. Adam ELetsler. John Robinson and Susan Lemaster, Jan. 1, 1829, by Rev. William Tipton. John Robison and Jane Brown, Dec. 9, 1830, by John Russell, J. P. Thomas Robinson and Ann Busket, Sept. 20, 1827, by John Wagner, J. P. William L. Robinson and Prudence Huff, Feb. 6, 1822, by William Cunningham. William Robison and Jane Dickey, April 9, 183.5, by Thomas M. Granfell, J. P. Warner Rodgers and Eliza Gregory, Sept. 26, 1816, by William Haverfield, J. P. Barrett Rogers and Nancy Carson, May 1, 1823, by Hugh Shotwell. Elijah Rogers and Mary Ann Poulson, Oct. 22, 1833, by Rev. William Tipton. John Rogers and Lydia Lamaster, Sept. 28, 1815, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Lewis Rogers and Sarah Ann Hilton, June 25, 1835, by Thomas Philips, J. P. Lorendo D. Rogerg and Jane Amanda Suddeth, May 20, 1828, by Samuel Hitch- cock, J. P. Nelson Rogers and Sarah Barcroft, Oct. 19, 1837, by John Selby, J. P. Osbun Rogers and Mary Mehaffee, May 12, 1831, by Peter Barger, J. P. Rowland Rogers and Mary Cummins, March 24, 1836, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Thomas Rogers and Anna Wilson, Nov. 2, 1826, by William Taggart, V. D. M. William Rogers and Hannah Waters. Nov. 2, 1820, by Thomas B. Carter, J. P. William Rogers and Nancy Burkhead, Dec. 13, 1823, by Hugh Shotwell, J. P. William Rogers and Susan Carson, Feb. 20, 1823, by Hugh Shotwell, J. P. William Rogers and Isabella Kelly, Feb. 19, 1835, by William Taggart, V. D. M. William Rogers and Miriah Adams, June 21, 1838, by John Selby. J. P. Elisha Romans and Elizabeth Knight. Dec. 10. 1840, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Evan Romans and Julian Adams, Nov. 18, 1833, by Alexander Clark, J. P. Edward Romig and Elizabeth Auld, Dec. 16, 1839, by Rev. Herman J. Titze. John Romick and Martha Ann Bonsall, Nov. 7, 1837, by Rev. Z. Ragani Jonas Romich and Nancy McGonagle, May 13, 1839, by Rev. John Wilson. Gardner Rose and Ruth Coleman, Jan. 2, 1827, by John Rea, V. D. M. Henry Rose and Rebecca Kent, Oct. 12, 1820, by Williamson Carruthers, J. P. Hugh Rose and Julian Garner, July 1, 1828, by Jesse Hooper, J. P. Jacob Rose and Elizabeth Throckmorton, Aug. 12, 1824, by John Rea, V. D. M. James Rose and Lucinda Farrlngsworth, May, 31, 1832, by John Rea, V. D. M. John J. Rose and Elizabeth Caves, March 14, 1839, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Jacob Roser and Margaret Anget, June 13, 1839, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Daniel Ross and Barbara Hospelhorn, Sept. 12, 1837. by Rev. James L. Russell. Ichabod Ross and Margaret Worley, Jan. 9, 1840, by Rev. Parden Cook. James Ross and Ann Hukill, Feb. 7, 1828, by John Rea, V. D. M. 296 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY James Ross and Jemima Hines, Jan. 8, 1839, by Charles Thorn. John Ross and Mary Tipton. Nov. 13, 1828, by Rev. William Tipton. Kins Ross and Nancy McMillan, Dec. 25, 1828, by Jesse Hooper, J. P. Nathan Ross and Sophia Arnold, Oct. 18, 1815, by John Busby, J. P. David Rouse and Agness Brown, Feb. 3, 1813, by Samuel Dunlap, J. P. George Roush and Anna Springer, July 6, 1826, by Robert Orr. J. P. William Rowan and Lydia Ann Bell, Sept. 7, 1837, by Levi Peddycoart, J. P. James Rowland and Elizabeth Leinard, Feb. 5, 1829, by William Wallace, V. D. M. John Rowland and Martha Harrison, Dec. 27. 1827, by John Carson, J. P. John Rowlands and Ann Marshall, June 15, 1837, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Levi Rowlands and Mary Shivers, April 22, 1830, by Samuel Hitchcock, J. P. William Rowland and Jane Fulton. Dec. 28, 1820, by William WyckofE, J. P. Hezekiah Rowles and Elizabeth Guynn, Feb. 4, 1819, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Eli Rozin and Sarah Wardell, May 26, 1832, by Rev. William Knox. Ezekiel Rubicam and Olive Smith, Jan. 17, 1826, by Joseph Fry, J P. Henry Ruby and Sarah Earley. Aug. 20, 1835, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Isaac Ruby and Mary Smith, Nov. 9, 1825, by Elder Daniel Limerick. John M. Ruby and Elizabeth House, April 11, 1826, by Daniel Limerick, Elder M. E. Church. Lewis RuDy and Sarah Johnson, July 16, 1818, by Rev. Cornelius Sprjnger. Thomas Ruby and Mary Gibson, July 7. ISJl, by James McCullough, J. P. William B. Ruby and Susan Landis, Dec. 19, 1831, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. James Rusk and Sarah McKibbon, Dec. 24, 1818, by John Rea, V. D. M. J.ohn Russell and Matilda Ferguson, Aug. 25, 1831, by William L. Robison, J. P. Samuel A. Russell and Mary Ann Crawford, June 12, 1839, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. William Russell and Charlotte Waller, March 10, 1834, by Rev. William Tipton. Daniel Rutan and Margaret Carr, Jan. 4, 1827, by Thomas Kanna, V. D. M. John Reutan and Hannah Shivers, June 8, 1820, by B. W. Viers. J. P. Peter Rutan and Catherine Shriver, Dec. 15, 1831, by Thomas Day, J. P. John E. Ruth and Catherine Shaffer, April 11, 1820, by John Hurless, J. P. William Ruth and Peggy Hurless, Oct. 5, 1837, by Robert P. Simpson, J. P. Jacob Sadler and Mary Wilkison, March 28, 1822, by John Wagner, J. P. Samuel Salisbury and Margaret Devenbaugh, May 7, 1818, by John Wagner, J. P. William Saltkele and Sarah Wright, Dec. 31, 1834, by George Vv^. Bell, J. P. John Saltsgiver and Mary Capper, April 14, 1831, by John C. Huston, J. P. Joseph Saltsgiver and Rebecca Elliot, Dec. 15, 1831, by Thomas Ford. Joseph Saltsgiver and Maria Davis, April 26, 1836, by Richard Lyons, J. P. James Sample and Cassey Britt, Aug. 23, 1827, by Rev. W. R. Evans. Samuel Sample and Nancy Hanshier, March 16, 1831, by Edward Talbott, J. P. William Sample and Juliana O'Rourke, Aug. 4, 1831, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Cornelius Sanders and Ann Reynolds, Aug. 12, 1819, by Archibald McGrew, J. P. Ezekiel Sankey and Mary McCullough, Feb. 3, 1824, by Salmon Cowles, V. D. M. Samuel Sankey and Hannah Faroner, June 12, 1834, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Rugler Sargent and Sarah Beams, Jan. 2, 1840, by William Arnold, J. P. Jacob Sarkey and Mary Yarnall, Aug. 3, 1826. by Rev. William B. Evans. Jerry Sawyer and Dolly Simpson, Nov. 28, 1822, by Jesse Hooper, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 297 George Sayers and Rsichel Barrett, Oct. 10, 1833, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. John Sayler and Catherine Benedict, May 29, 1827, by John Wagner, J. P. William Scales and Elizabeth Elliott, Nov. 23, 1826, by Joseph Rea, J. P. Richard Scarlet and Jane Birney, Aug. 30, 1832, by William Tipton. Alexander Schee and Alice Brindley, March 2, 1840, by Rev. William Knox. Abraham Schoonover and Nancy Ryraer, Nov. 1, 1832, by James McCollough. Kinsey Schooley and Lydia Wright, June 1, 1837, by Rev. James C. Merriman. Samuel Schooley and Ann Gardner, Aug. 19. 1817, by James Roberts. Curtis W. Scoles and Elizabeth Simpson, Aug. 16, 1830, by Rev. William Knox. Samuel Scoles and Rebecca James, Aug. 24, 1824, by George Brown, J. P. Andrew Scott and Miche Anne Treacle, Sept. 3, 1835, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Charles Scott and Margaret Dodds, April 20, 1830, by Jacob Cozad, J. P. George W. Scott and Ann Hoops, Aug. 22, 1839, by Rev. John Bums. Jacob Scott and Hannah Wortman, Jan. 12, 1836, by David McGuire. James Scott and Mary Foster, June 3, 1828, by John Rea, V. D. M. James Scott and Jantj Scott, May 24, 1830, by Thomas Phillips. J. P. John Scott and Eliza Skelly, April 3, 1821, by John Rea, V. D. M. John W. Scott and Jane Pittis, Aug. 22, 1839, by Rev. Thomas West. Joseph Scott and Mary Croskey, Feb. 7. 1822, by John Walker, V. D. M. Josiah Scott and Mary Lloyd, Aug. 2, 1830, by Rev. James Robertson. Josiah Scott and Mary Jane Bingham, Nov, 26, 1833, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Robert Scott and Catherine Scott. Oct. 11, 1839, by Rev. G. D. Kinner. George Scripper and Jean Ferrier, Feb. 26, 1818, by William Slemmons. J. P. Ebenezer Scroggs and Sarah Smilie, Sept. 19, 1839, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Enoch Sears and Sarah McMillan, Dec. 27. 1839, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. Ephriam Sears and Charlotte Shotwell, Nov. 23, 1815, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Samuel Seers and Jane Pugh, Nov. 19, 1816, by James Roberts. John W. Selby and Betsy Lion, Dec. 3, 1818, by Thomas Parkinson. J. P. John Selby and Jane Rogers. Oct. 8, 1840, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Nicholas Selby and Evelina Pugh, Nov. 9, 1837, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Benjamin Sell and Mary Fowler, Feb. 20, 1817, by Thomas Fisher, J. P. Joseph Seton and Lucy Williams, Sept. 24. 1815, by Charles Chapman, J. P. James Settle and Lydia Hancher, Dec. 11, 1835, by William Boggs, J. P. Lemuel F. Settle and Eleanor Dewitt, May 7, 1835, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Asa Sewell and Margaret Evans, Dec. 19, 1833, by George W. Bell, J. P. Greenberry Sewell and Nancy Gracer, April 27, 1837, by M. F. Burkhead, J. P. John Sewell and Jane Gilmore, Oct. 10, 1824, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Abraham Shaffer and Margaret Blagher, May 7, 1835, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. George Shaeffer and Margaret Saltzgiver, Nov. 25, 1823, by Rev. J. Wagenhals. Philip Shafer and Sarah Angel, Dec. 2, 1819, by John Wagner, J. P. Edward Shallcross and Sarah Packer. March 15, 1838, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. George Shambaugh and Matilda Hazlett, Jan. 24, 1839, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. Philip Shambaugh and Catherine Albaugh, Jan. 7, 1833, by Dewalt Rothacker. John Shamel and Rachel Grewell, Aug. 19, 1836, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Samuel Shank and Elizabeth Snedeker, Feb. 23, 1816, by Walter B. Beebe, J. P. Stephen Shanks and Mary Ann Moore, May 24, 1827, by Rev. William B. Evans. Ebenezer L. Shannon and Elizabeth Butler, Dec. 13, 1832, by Edward Talbott, J. P. 298 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Isaac Shannon and Isabella Hagerty, Sept. 27, 1821, by John Rea, V. D. M. Isaac Shannon and Sarah Stone, Jan 12, 1826, by Rev. John Rea, V. D. M. Isaac Shannon and Rachel Reed, June 30, 1837, by Rev. Joseph Clokey. Nathan Shannon and Martha Hagerty, Dec. 12, 1816, by John Rea, V. D. M. Nathan Shannon and Mary Endsley, April 27, 1820, by John Rea. V. D. M. Newton Shannon and Abigail Titus, March 19, 1816, by John Rea, V. D. M. Wilson Shannon and Sarah Osburn, Nov. 27, 1832, by John McArthur. Zacheus Shannon and Jemima Huff, June 16, 1822, by William Cunningham. Benjamin Sharfick and Sarah Blue, Sept. 6, 1821, by John Wagner, J. P. John Sharon and Matilda Havenor, Dec. 16, 1824, by Robert Orr, J. P. William Sheren and Rachel Griffin, Dec. 28. 1826, by Robert Orr, J. P. William Sharon and Esther Barcroft, March 3, 1835, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Sharp and Catherine Thompson, May 15, 1832, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Thomas Sharp and Margaret Stine, Aug. 12, 1828, by Morris AUbaugh. William Sharpe and Elizabeth Goriet. July 14, 1836, by Rev. John Walker. Thomas M. Shaw and Jane M. Pritchard, June 11, 1839, by Thomas Phillips. J. P. Abi-aham Shawver and Caty Wilson, June 24, 1831, by John Wagner, J. P. Jacob Shawber and Catherine Beckly, March 6, 1814, by Rev. John Rinehart. Jacob Shawber and Barbara Harner, Dec. 22, 1816, by Rev. John Rinehart. John Shawver and Elizabeth Shearer, Jan. 14, 1836, by D. Rothacker. Robert Sheets and Jane C. Carson, Dec. 5, 1839, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. James Shelby and Mary Ann Rogers, March 15, 1836, by R. Hammond. J. P. John Shelby and Prudence Poulson, Oct. 28, 1813, by Rev. James Roberts. Jacob Shepler and Delila Everhart, Jan. 10, 1828, by John Wagner, J. P. Andrew Sheridan and Margaret Pillars, May 31, 1828, by Rev. Jacob Cozad. Joshua Sheridan and Mary Dillon, Aug. 13, 1829, by Rev. Jacob Cozad. Caleb Shei-man and Mary Forkner, April 10, 1832, by Thomas Day, J. P. Hudson Sherrow and Eleanor Mercer, Jan. 26, 1825, by Rev. Jacob Roberts. Joel Sherwood and Mary A. Cook, Jan. 22. 1835, by George Brown, J. P. William Sherwood and Jane McCullough, May 22, 1835, by Rev. Jacob Coon. James Shields and Elizabeth Everhart, May 23, 1826. by William Holmes, J. P. John Shield and Sarah Turner, Dec. 27, 1816, by William Haverfield, J. P. William Shields and Anne Thompson, Aug. 18, 1831, by Edward Talbott, J. P. George Shildts and Margaret Webster, July 2, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Jacob Shiltz and Hannah Fisher, Aug. 20, 1840, by John Gruber, J. P. John Shlldtz and Mary Ann Firebaugh, Aug. 10, 1834. by Alexander Biddle. Wesley W. Shimer and Elizabeth Wilson, Sept. 11, 1834, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Wesley Shimer and Sarah Button. Feb. 13, 1839, by John Knox, J. P. William Shimer and Martha Bufkin, June 19, 1839, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Thomas Shipton and Elice Crossen, April 9, 1839, by W. D. McCartney. V. D. M. Richard Shivers and Margaret King, April 20, 1826, by Alexander Moore, J. P. Samuel Shivers and Catherine Brown, April 11, 1833, by George W. Bell, J. P. Thomas Shivers and Mary Morris, April 20, 1837, by Rev. Jacob Coon. Arrison ShotWell and Mary Dickenson, Oct. 1, 1835, by William Wyckoff, J. P. William Shotwell and Rhoda Beebe, Feb. 24, 1819, by H. H. Carith, J. P. Barnard Shouse and Rachel Parmer, Sept. 14. 1820, by Jacob Tope, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 299 Isaac Shover and Sally Myers, Nov. 18, 1830, by Morris Allbaugh, J. P. Jonas Shrieve and Matilda Campbell, April 13, 1826, by Alexander Moore, J. P. George Shriver and Catherine Harman, June 16, 1831, by Van Brown, J. P. George Shuck and Isablla Webster, June 26, 1819, by Martin Guilinger, J. P, John Shook and Betsey Busier, Dec. 8, 1831, by Lot Doming, J. P. Solomon Shultz and Rachel Kenouve, Aug. 19, 1823, by John Wagner, J. P. Daniel Shun>an and Hetty Pillars, April 11, 1832, by John Huston. J. P. George Simmons and Elizabeth Stall, April 19, 1833, by John Busby, J. P. Henderson Simmons and Cena Mills, May 23, 1833, by William Arnold, J. P. Isaikh Simmons and Rachel Arbaugh, March 3, 1826, by James Manning. '*^ohn Simmons and Anne Longshore, Jan. 7, 1830, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. John Simmons and Sarah Chaney Feb. 16, 1832, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William Simmons and Elizabeth Allbaugh. March 13, 1820, by B. W. Viers, J. P. George Simonton and Lydia Laymaster. July 4, 1818, by Robert McKee, J. P. Alexander Simpson and Eliza Evans. April 4, 1826, by James Smith, J. P. James Simpson and Mary Noble, June 26, 1S36, by James Evans, J. P. John Simpson and Margaret Law, Dec. 20, 1S39, by Rev. J. K. McCue. Matthew Simpson and Anna Wright, Sept. 12, 1820, by John Conaway, J. P. Matthew Simpson and Susan Orr, April 19, 1827, by Rev. William Knox. Robert P. Simpson and Asenath Fowler, Aug. 9, 1832, by Elijah C. Stone. Thomas Simpson and Nancy Mcllroy, Nov. 25, 1819, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Thomas Simpson and Rosanna McMuUans, Dec. 24, 1835, by William Wallace, V. D. M. James Singer and Tacy Goodwin, .July 29. 1838, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. John Singer and Hannah Goodwin, Feb. 27, 1833, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Thomas Singer and Nancy Woolcord, Nov. 3, 1836, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Albert Singhaus and Deborah Busby, Feb. 6, 1838, by William Arnold, J. P. John Sisler and Elizabeth Hendricks. April 28. 1835, by Richard Lyons, J. P. Isaac Skeels and Harriett Belknap, May 13, 1817, by William Dixon. John SkeDy and Esther Hanna, Dec. 23, 1834, by John Rea, V. D. M. Philip Skinner and Mary Ann Collins, March 2, 1826, by Benjamin S. Cowan, J. P. John Slemmons and Ruth Merrel, June 11, 1840, by Rev. Robert Brown. Samuel Slemmons and Susanna Osburn, Jan. 21, 1829, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Matthew Sloan and Eliza Grimes, June 24, 1830, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Jacob Smidley and Lydia Shook, Oct. 27, 1831, by Lot Doming, J. P. James Smiley and Mar.garet Cone, Oct. 2, 1837, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Aaron Smith and Margaret House, May 14, 1823, by Rev. Curtis Goddard. Alexander Smith and Jane Lyons, Jan. 13, 1813, by John Rea, V. D. M. Alexander Smith and Rebecca Smith, March 5, 1837, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Amos Smith and Mary Ann Ford, Oct. 22, 1839, by John Knox, J. P. Benjamin C. Smith and Jane B. Cartnell, Jan. 11, 1820, by Rev. James Roberts. Culbert Smith and Jane Anderson, Nov. 13, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Culbert Smith and Jane Anderson, Nov. 22, 1834, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Daniel Smith and Ziporah Orr, Nov. 23, 1837, by William Taggart, V. D. M. David Smith and Rachel Busby, May 21, 1818, by Robert McKee, J. P. Enoch Smith and Damaris Edwards, Aug. 14, 1828, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Ephriam Smith and Elizabeth Parkison, Nov. 24, 1818, by John Rea, V. D. M. Francis Smith and Edith Markee, Aug. 5, 1824, by Thomas Hurless, J. P. 300 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY George Smith and Susanna Baker, Feb. 12, 1818, by Walter B. Beebe, J. P, George Smith and Elizabeth Groves, Dec. 24, 1818, by John Crawford, J. P. George Smith and Pratty Dodds, Nov. 16, 1820, by Thomas Patton, J. P. George Smith and Rachel Eaton, Aug. 21, 1823, by Archibald McElroy. George B. Smith and Mary Emline Pritchard, March 3, 1836, by Samuel Skin- ner, J. P. ^ Henry Smith and Elizatieth Keefer, Oct. 18, 1815, by John Busby, J. P. Henry K. Smith and Elizabeth Dorsey, April 10, 1836, by Rev. Cornelius D. Battelle. Isaiah Smith and Elizabeth McLenahan, Jan. 14, 1830, by George Brown, J. P. Jacob Smith and Elizabeth Guttery, Sept. 23, 1824, by Rev. John Crom. James Smith and Mary Brown, Nov. 21, 1817, by Thomas B. Clark, J. P. James Smith and Elizabeth Cook, Feb. 23, 1832, by George W. Bell, J. P. James Smith and Elizabeth Braden, March 10, 1835, by Rev. Edward H. Taylor. Jesse Smith and Susanna Tipton, May 11, 1825, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Joel Smith and Susan Conaway, Dec. 31, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. John Smith and Sarah McFee, March 12, 1821, by Rev. James Roberts. John Smith and Caty Bair, Oct. 15, 1821, by Rev. Michael Harmon. John Smith and Sarah Beall, April 24, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Joseph Smith and Rebecca Murry, May 14, 1816, by William Haverfield, J. P. Joseph D. Smith and Louisa Hefling, March 26, 1818, by Rev. Cornelius Springer. Joseph Smith and Lydia Reeves, Dec. 1, 1825, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Martin B. Smith and Rebecca Welling, Feb. 8, 1838, by Rev. James Drummond. Nathan W. Smith and Maria Waits, Nov. 15, 1825. by John Rea, V. D. M. Nathaniel Smith and Abiah W. Merrill, Aug. 11, 1831, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Samuel Smith and Ruth Ford, Oct. 18, 1838, by David G. McGuire, J. P. Samuel Smith and Mary Gibson, Oct. 28, 1838, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. Silas Smith and Nancy Jones, May 26, 1831, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Thomas J. Smith and Dorcas Welling, Jan. 19, 1830, by Thomas M. Hudson. Washington Smith and Hannah Ramage, Feb. 18, 1839, by William Wallace, V. D. M. William Smith and Sarah Salsbuary, May 2, 1824, by John Wagner, J. P. William Smith and Nancy Burwell, Aug. 11, 1825, by Rev. William Wallace. William P. Smith and Margaret Parker, Aug. 31, 1826, by Alexander Moore. J. P. William Smath and Susanna Huff, Sept. 17, 1829, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. William Smith and Catherine Naragon, Feb. 16, 1832, by John Wagner, J. P. Philip Smithley and Polly Cook, Oct. 24, 1833, by David Bower, J. P. Barton Smoot and Hannah Doney, Dec. 31, 1829, by George Brown, J. P. John Smoot and Elizabeth Hendershott, Nov. 17, 1825, by George Brown, J. P. Nathan Smoot and Elizabeth Helm, Oct. 8, 1822, by George Brown, J. P. Henry S. Sneary and Susanna Minnick, April 13, 1837, by Adam Hetzler. Jacob Sneary and Mary Turney, Aug. 3, 1830, by John Gruber, J. P. William Snee and Ann Spirtchel July 3, 1839, by C. E. Weirick. Adam Snider and Catherine Shuess, June 20, 1822, by John Wagner, J. P. Adam Snider and Margaret Harner, April 24, 1823, by John Wagner, J. P. Adam Snider and Polly Angle, Dec. 20, 1838, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Henry Snider and Hannah Miller. March 26, 1820, by John Wagner, J. P. John Snider and Lydia Bennett, Feb. 8, 1818, by Walter B. Beebe, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 301 John A. Snyder and Christina Copeland, Jan. 22, 1835, by John McArthur. V. D. M. Samuel Snider and Rachel Moore, Oct. 30, 1838, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. David Snodgrass and Catherine Phillips, Dec. 20, 1838, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. George Snoutagle and Peggy Mundole, March 17, 1825, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. John Sparks and Mary Bair, Dec. 2, 1830, by Morris Allbaugh, J. P. John Speck and Margaret Spiker, June 8, 1837, by Rev. James Merryman. John Speedy and Christena Ann McMasters, Nov. 1, 1832, by ReV. James Robertson. John Speer and Mary Crozier, June 7, 1827, by Jacob Tope, J. P. David E. Spencer and Margaret Ferrell. Oct. 1, 1840, by Rev. William Knox. James Spencer and Susan Shivers, April 2, 1820, by Thomas C. Carter, J. P. Joel Spencer and Michael Ridgway, June 16, 1832, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Joseph Spencer and Biddy Archbold, Nov. 18, 1817, by William Anderson, J. P, Joseph G. Spencer and Mary Bryan, Jan. 17, 1833, by Philip Fulton. J. P. Christopher Spiker and Ary Carens, Feb. 24, 1825, by Alexander Moore, J. P, Christopher Spiker and Nancy Lukens, Jan. 1, 1832, by Robert Pittis, J. P. Jacob Spiker and Juliann Hanna. May 1, 1830, by Thomas McCleary. Philip Spiker and Rebeckah Makee, Oct. 27, 1814, by William Knox. Jesse Sponsler and Betsey Rymer, Dec. 29, 1836, by John M. Brovm, J. P. John Spray and Betsey Fowler, Dec. 12, 1822, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Charles Sprenkel and Sarah Neff. Sept. 19, 1826, by John Wagner, J. P. Frederick Spring and Rachel Horn, Oct. 11, 1838, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. John Spring and Margaret Williams, Aug. 27, 1818, by James Roberts. John Spring and Nancy Ferguson. Sept. 7, 1834, by V/illiam Wyckoff, J. P. Jacob Springer and Peggy Alhaugh, Jan. 24, 1816, by Martin Guilinger. John Springer and Margaret Salmons, Aug. 19, 1830, by John Gruber, J. P. Levi Springer and Mary Hendricks, Dec. 11, 1828. by Robert Orr, J. P. Samuel Springer and Elizabeth Kennedy, Nov. 29, 1832, by Elder James Garri- son. William Springer and Sarah Dewel, Aug. 1, 1815, by Martin Guilinger, J. P. John Sproul and Susan Geary. July 10, 1832, by William VvT'allace, V. D. M. William Sproul and Mary Young, April 30, 1840, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Richard Spurrier and Amy Barret, Oct. 20, 1831, by William Arnold, J. P. Samuel Spurrier and Mary Worrall, March 13, 1828, by Rev. James Roberts. Warner Spurrier and Mary Hoops, Oct. 11. 1827, by Rev. James Roberts. Elijah Staats and Ann Baker, Sept 12, 1836, by Rev.- Jacob Lemmon. Abraham Stall and Elizabeth Grove, March 14, 1828, by John Wagner, J. P. John Stall and Mary Ann Condo, March 29, 1832, by William Arnold, J. P. William Stall and Susa Firebaugh, Sept. 15, 1816, by Martin Guilinger, J. P. William Stall and Susanna Knagey, Feb. ]0, 1829, by Isaac Allen, J. P. George Stallsmith and Elizabeth Springer, Nov. 6, 1832, by John Gruber, J. P. Charles Staples and Margaret Truzle, May 4, 1819, by Michael Harmon. Charles H. Staples and Mary Suck, April 14, 1836, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. Horatio St. Clair and Ann Hickey, Oct. 29, 1828, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Israel St. Clair and Hannah Morris, Oct. 12, 1837, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Andrew S. Steel and Elizabeth Wellis, May 10, 1835, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Jacob Steel and Mary Ann Kirby, Sept. 27, 1835, by George Brown, J. P. James Steel and Susanna Norman, Nov. 25, 1824, by Isaac Allen, J. P. 302 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY James Steel and Susannah Tayson, March 7, 1837, by John Rea, V. D. M. Samuel Steel and Rebecca Kirby, Sept. 20, 1838, by Matthew H. Phillips, J. P. Elias Steffy and Susanna Wiand, March 5, 1839, by John Gruber, J. P. George Steffy and Sary Wagner, March 27, 1827, by Rev. Jacob Winters. Jacob Steinman and Susanna Muntz, July 5, 1821, by John Wagner, J. P. William Steen and Mary Gibney, Dec. 11, 1823, by Hugh Shotwell, J. P. John Steeves and Eliza Girt, May 2, 1839, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. David Stephens and Elizabeth Delany, June 15, 1813, by John Wiley, J. P. Hezekiah Stephens and Elizabeth Clow, Nov. 13, 1815, by James Roberts. Jonathan Stephen and Betsey Salmon, Feb. 24, 1825, by J. R. Kirkpatrick, J. P. Owen Stevens and Anne Chambers, Nov. 15, 1838, by Charles Thorn. Robert Stephens and Ann Walker, Feb. 22, 1821, by Rev. James Roberts. John Stevenson and Mary Ann Kinney, Dec. 30, 1829, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Andrew Stewart and Mary Ann Snider, May 31, 1840. by Rev. Robert Cook. Christopher Stewart and Magdalene Fulk, May 17, 1832, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. Ephron P. Stewart and Mary Ann Rigg, April 5, 1832, by Lot Deming, J. P. George Stewart and Mary Berrick, May 16, 1822, by John 7/agner, J. P. James Stewart and Jane Patterson, Feb. 6, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Jesse Stewart and Rebecca Haines, Oct. 7, 1831, by William Arnold, J. P. Joseph Stewart and Jane Thompson, June 19, 1837, by John McArthur, V. D. M. William Stewart and Mary Sche, April 18, 1837, by John Graham. John Stiers and Cinthia Holmes, Jan. 11, 1821, by John Gra.ham. Andrew Stinson and Elizabeth Moorehead, Aug. 30, 1821, by John Rea, V. D. M. Elias W. Stone and Tabitha Garven, March 31, 1831, by Rev. William Wallace. Elijah C. Stone and Mary Suddeth, Dec. 12. 1822, by John Graham. Lemuel Stone and Catherine McCormick, March 20, 1838, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Samuel R. Stone and Mary Hanna, March 1, 1831, by John Rea, V. D. M. Solomon Stone and Catherine Albaugh, Aug. 10, 1819, by 3. W. Veirs, J. P. Frederick Stonebreaker and Fanny Bair, Dec. 5, 1819, by Rev. John Brown, Jacob Stonebrook and Agnes Markley, Aug. 25, 1825, by John Wagner, J. P. Jacob Stoner and Honor Snider, April 26, 1838, by David P.ower, J. P. John Stracher and Hannah England, Sept. 27, 1818, by Archibald McGrew, J. P. John Stradling and Sarah Gray, Jan. 12, 1832, by Edward Talbott, J. P. George Straughsbaugh and Mary Elizabeth Smith, Aug. 22, 1839, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Peter Strausbaugh and Sophia Grim, April 4, 1833, by Dewalt Rothacker.. William Strawsbaugh and Jane Busby, March 6, 1840, by William Arnold, J. P. Daniel Strayer and Anna Knagey, May 14, 1823, by Rev. John Crom. John Striker and Eliza Beadle, Sept. 4, 1832, by Charles Fawcett, J. P. Richard Stringer and Elizabeth Caren, July 14, 1829, by Rev. John Crom. William Stringer and Isabella Ferguson, March 27, 1839, by John Rea, V. D. M. James Stroad and Sarah Parks, April 21, 1825, by Joseph Fry, J. P. James Strong and Elizabeth Wilkin, Nov. 1, 1832, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Strong and Sarah Thompson Jan. 24, 1833, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. William Stroud and Warnetta Houser, March 5, 1836, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Mordecai Stubbins and Mary Spear, Nov. 21, 1833, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. George Stull and Mary Albaugh, Aug. 10, 1815, by Martin Guilinger, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 303 Philip Stull and Catherine Fisher, Feb. 10, 1831. by John Gruber, J. P. Elias Sudduth and Margaret Garrett. Aug. 15, 1832, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Elias Sudduth and Nancy Mills, Aug. 21, 1838, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. John Summers and Rosanna Turner, April 19, 1838, by William Arnold, J. P. Isaac Suthard and Agnes Lee, Dec. 16, 1830, by Jesse Hooper. J. P. Joseph Swallow and Mary Johnson, Nov. 15, 1838, by Charles Thorn. John Swany and Julia Ann Harris, July 16, 1818. by Daniel David, J. P. Timothy Swaney and Susan P. Fry, Feb. 17, 1820, by Joseph Fry, J. P. William Swaney and Margaret Denning, Feb. 18, 1826, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Johan C. Swangel and Elizabeth Stroup, Jan. 3. 1833, by Joseph Wolff, J. P. John Swanzel and Agnes Sudduth, Nov. 21, 1839, by John Selby, J. P. Burd Swagirt and Rachel Brannon, Oct. 30, 1822, by John McMahon. Elisha Swiger and Mary Fames. June 14, 1820, by William Carrothers, J. P. Lewis Swigert and Sarah Ames, Jan. 1, 1824, by John Wagner, J. P. Joseph Swigerts and Caty Fames, Aug. 2, 1821, by Williamson Carrothers, J. P. Jacob Swolley and Catherine Smith, Aug. 5 1827, by James Manning. Elijah Swords and Elizabeth Ross, Jan. 10, 1821, by Joseph Fry, J. P, David Taggart and Mary Bradford, Dec. 29, 1840, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. James Taggart and Eliza Kernaghan, April 10, 1832, by William Taggart, V. D. M. James Taggart and Anne Craig, March 12, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. John Taggart and Margaret Gray, Jan. 8. 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. William Taggart and Betsey Kyle, April 22, 1835, by Rev. Thomas Hauna. James Tallman and Julian Cooper, Dec. 27, 1836, by Rev. C. D. Battelle. Dr. Benjamin Tappan and Vella Stanton, June 8, 1838, by William Taggart, V. D. M. John Tarbert and Sarah Ann Dugan, Jan. 12, 1837, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Peter Tarbert and Margaret Sands, April 27. 1837, by John Chalfan, J. P. Robert Tarbut and Marie Lazure, July 6, 1832, by Rev. Jacob Coon. Daniel Taw and Delila Shilts, Feb. 13, 1840, by .David Bowers, J. P. Abraham Taylor and Mary Warner, June 22, 1833, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. John Taylor and Isabel Ferrell, June 9, 1830. by John Graham. Robert Taylor and Ann Ferrell, Feb. 12, 1829, by Samuel Hitchcock, J. P. Thomas Taylor and Agness Haverfield, Feb. 10, 1834, by William Taggart, V. D. M. William P. S. Taylor and Sarah Barr, March 17, 1822, by James McMahon. Curtis W. Teator and Mary Essford, Sept. 5, 1830, by Robert Pittis, J. P. Enoch Tedrow and Julian Bricker, Nov. 10, 1836, by John Wagner, J. P. George Tedrow and Betsey Hardsock, Nov. 4, 1826, by John Wagner, J. P. Jacob Teets and Margaret McMillan, Sept. 19, 1839, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. Peter Teet and Margaret Milliken, March 25, 1830, by George Brown, J. P. Stephen Teets and Jane McMullen, April 12, 1838, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. Nathaniel Templeton and Nancy Parker, March 23, 1837, by John M. Brown, J. P. Simon Tewalt and Elizabeth Lewis, June 15, 1818, by William Carrothers, J. P. Isaac Thomas, Jr., and Elizabeth Dickerson, Dec. 20, 1822, by Rev. James Roberts John Thomas and Eliza Jane Turner, Jan. 23, 1836. by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Joseph S. Thomas and Martha B. Olmsted, March 12, 1840, by James Kerr, V. D. M. 304 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Liverton Thomas and Mary Ann Glendon, Nov. 25, 1834, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Miller Thomas and Mary Maffit, March 4, 1836, by Rev. .James C. Taylor. Thomas Thomas and Mary Doney, Sept. 24, 1835, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Andrev/ Thompson and Jane Sloan, April 11, 1832, by John McArthur, V. D. M. David Thompson and Sarah Rea, Feb. 21, 1832, by Rev. John C. Tidball. Eli Thompson and Sally Sell, Feb. 12, 1829, by Morris Albaugh, J. P. George W. Thompson and Eliza Huffman, March 31, 1836, by Robert Simpson, J. P. James Thompson and Mary Koker, Sept. 25, 1823, by John Hiirless, J. P. John Thompson and Mary Devenbaugh, April 28, 1825, by J. R. Kirkpatrick, J. P. John Thompson and Elizabeth Baker, Sept. 27, 1831, by Rev. David Mexryman. John G. Thompson and Mary Dunlap, March 23, 1837, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Joseph Thompson and Elizabeth Manly, July 5. 1831, by John Rea, V. D. M. Richard Thompson and Jane Polen, March 20, 1832, by John Wagner, J. P. Samuel Thompson and Mary Valentine, March 16, 1824, by Rev. John Mc- Mahon. Thomas Thompson and Rebecca Brown, Dec. 31, 1838, by Rev. James Drum- mond. Thomas Thompson and Isabell Edie, July 16, 1840, by W. D. McCartney, V. D. M. William Thompson and Mary Shields, Dec. 30, 1830, by William Arnold, J. P. Zachariah Thompson and Priscilla Albaugh, Jan. 15, 1822, by B. W. Viers, J. P. Jodiah Thorn and Rachel White, Oct. 25, 1825, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P. John Tice and Polly Merrill, Nov. 1, 1827, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Abraham Timmons and Martha Dent, April 18, 1816, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Forney Timmons and Elizabeth Lacy, June 11, 1839, by William Arnold, J. P. Frederick Timmons and Eliza Lacy, Dec. 16, 1828, by Rev. William Knox. Joseph Tingley and Hannah Neill, Aug. 11, 1816, by Paul Preston. Henry Tipton and Miscinda Kail, Nov. 6, 1834, by John Gruber, J. P. John Tipton and Christianna Tanner, April 8, 1818, by William Wyckoff, J. P, Joshua Tipton and Jane McConkey, Oct. 13, 1836, by James Endsley, J. P. Josiah Tipton and Catherine Norris, April 1, 1817, by Williamson Carrothers. Miles Tipton and Susan Ross, March 24, 1S31, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Shadrach Tipton and Mehala Petty, Oct. 20, 1829, by Jesse Hooper, J. P. Sylvester Tipton and Mary Bliss, June 29, 1830, by Thomas McCleary. Sylvester Tipton and Naomi Hanna, Dec. 8, 1836, by M. B. Lukins, J. P. William Tipton and Patience Pugh, Feb. 24, 1818, by James Roberts. William Tipton and Amelia Thompson, March 23, 1826, by Rev. William Tipton. William Tipton and Catherine Gregory, Dec. 17, 1829, by Joseph Johnson. J. P. William Tipton and Orpah Bond, Nov. 20, 1834, by William Arnold, J. P. William Tipton and Jane McKiterick, March 26, 1839, by W. D. McCartney, V. D. M. John Titus and Letty Baxter, Sept. 12, 1815, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Uriah Titus and Eliza Kidwell, May 16, 1833, by Rev. Moses Scott. George Todd and Jane Williamson, Nov. 15, 1827, by William Wallace, V. D. M. James Todd and Jane Smith, Nov. 14, 1822, by John Rea, V. D. M. John A. Todd and Mary Love, Aug. 16, 1830, by William Wallace, V. D. M. il EARLY MARRIAGES 305 Robert Todd and Martha Auld, Aug. 31, 1824, by Thomas Hanna, V. D. M. Cornelius Toland and Sarah Crumby, Jan. 24, 1832, by Edward Talbott, J. P. James Tomlinson and Mary Poulson, Jan. 10, 1825, by John Graham. James Tomlinson and Margaret Cope, Sept. 30, 1830, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Charles Toner and Martha Riley, Dec. 29, 1819, by Peter Johnson, J. P. John Tool and Priscilla Gregory, June 14, 1824, by Thomas R. Ruckle. Thomas Tool and Matilda Parmer, April 7, 1831, by Philip Fulton, J. P. Jacob Tope and Catherine Kail, Oct. 17, 1822, by Jacob Tope, J. P. John Tope and Mary Everly, Nov. 24, 1821, by Robert McLaughlin, J. P. Stephen Tope and Jemima Kail, Sept. 19. 1824, by Jacob Tope, J. P. Matthew Torrence and Judia Hess, Dec. 11, 1821, by B. W. Veirs, J. P. James Townsend and Mary Allen Trover, July 2, 1837, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Seneca Townsend and Eliza Downey, Oct. 28, 1830, by Philip Fulton, J. P. Edward Treakle and Eleanor Hinton Dec. 22, 1831, by James Miller, J. P. James Treacle and Lina Anders, Aug. 3, 1826, by Alexander Moore. J. P. Nathan Treacle and Polly Auld, March 27, 1818, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Samuel Tribby and Fanney Yost, June 22, 1818, by James Roberts. Philip Trine and Jane Knox, Oct. 15, 1833, by Rev. Aurora Callender. Alexander Trotter and Elizabeth Shriver, Jan. 17, 1839, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. John True and Jane Dalby, Dec. 25, 1836, by David Bower, J. P. John Trusal and Fanny Little, Dec. 26, 1826, by Rev. Samuel Briggs. Abisha Turner ard Priscilla Pickering, Aug. 27, 1825, by John Russel, J. P. Allen G. Turner and Margaret T. Kennedy, Sept. 7, 1837, by John Rea, V. D. M. Daniel Turner and Jane Hogg, Nov. 20, 1817, by Daniel David, J. P. EUbridge Turner and Elizabeth Johnson, Nov. 1, 1821, by George Brown, J. P. Henry L. Turner ind Julian Sharp, July 26, 1835, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Isaac Turner and Rachel Poulson, Oct. 6, 1833, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. James Turner and Jane Holmes, Aug. 23, 1834, by Thomas McClintock, J. P. Joab Turner and Ary Johnson, April 4, 1822, by George Brown, .1. P. Otho Williams Turner and Mary Scott, Dec. 31, 1835, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Solomon Turner and Elizabeth Porter, Jan. 12, 1832, by Rev. John Moffit. Sterling Turner and Rebecca Turner, Aug. 24, 1819, by Abriam Johnson, J. P. Jacob Turney and Rachel Lyle, May 28, 1835, by David Finnicum, J. P. Jonas Turney and Elizabeth Carpenter, May 8, 1836, by John Gruber, J. P. Solomon Turney and Barbara Ann ZoUars, June 3, 1831, by John Gruber, J. P. John Turnpaugh and Maria Rogers, Aug. 12, 1824, by Isaac Allen, J. P. John Tweedy and Elizabeth Bosley, Dec. 29, 1836, by John Wagner, J. P. Lewis Twigg and Susan Lindsey, June 23, 1831, by George Brown, J. P. John Twinam and Hannah Whann, June 5, 1828, by Salmon Cowles, V. D. M. Thomas Underbill and Elizabeth Wright, June 15, 1826, by Michael Conaway, J. P. James UpdegrafE and Motlena Manneck, Nov. 16, 1821, by B. W. Veirs, J. P. John Updegraff and Magdeleny Smithly, Aug. 8. 1833, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. Henry Urick and Nancy Carpenter, Jan. 6, 1831, by John Gruber, J. P. John Urquhart, and Mary Holmes, Feb. 18. 1819, by Thomas Dickerson. J. P. Moses Urquehart and Ann Hanna, July 17, 1823, by John Rea, V. D. M. Harrison Utterback and Harriet Fincer, Nov. 26, 1833, by George W. Bell, J. P. James Utterback and Leana Blackwell, Dec. 31, 1835, by M. F. Burkhead. Robert Utterback and Matilda Hilton, Nov. 7, 1837, by M. F. Burkhead J P 20 306 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Isaac Vail and Mary Fulton, Nov. 14, 1S33, by Rev. Jacob Coon. Absalom Valentine and Susanna Worley, July 1, 1830, by William Tiploii. Elijah Van Buskirk and Margaret Lyons, Nov. 26, 1840, by Richard Brown. John Vanceler and Elizabeth Swegirt, April 4, 1822, by John Wagner, J. P. Jacob Vandegraff and Betsey Hucle, Aug. 15, 1816, by Walter B. Beebe, J. P. Rezin Vandegraft and Abagail Tedrow, Nov. 14, 1833, by William Arnold, J. P. Jesse Vandergrifft and Sophia Bricker, March 17, 1836, by John Gruber, J. P. Bethuel Vandike and Hannah Vankirk, April 21, 1831, by Jacob Tope, J. P. Peter Vandoluh and Nancy Shotwell, Sept. 28, 1815, by Samuel G. B. Berryhill, J. P. Azariah Vanhorn and Elizabeth McClary, March 16, 1818, by Thomas Parkin- son, J. P. Isaac Vanhoi-n and Elizabeth Gilbert, Nov. 27, 1817. by Walter B. Beebe, J. P. Jacob Vanhorn and Casander Batty, Feb. 8, 1830, by Rev. James Robertson. John Vanhorn and Mary Rose, March 22, 1821, by John Rea, V. D. M. Samuel Vanliorn and Elizabeth Minord, Sept. 2, 1823, by Rev. John Crom. Samuel Vanhorn and Sophia Minard, Oct. 19, 1824. by John Hurless. J. P. Thomas Vanhorn and Harriet Richards, Nov. 24, 1821, by Robert McLaughlin, J. P. Henry Vausickle and Mary Dewitt, Sept. 29, 1832, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Levi Vansickle and Sarah Lawyers, Sept. 15, 1831, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Samuel Vansickle and Elizabeth Reeves, Sept. 12, 1833, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Mi.chael Vanvleara and Phebe Crom, Oct. 15, 1820, by William Haverfield, J. P. Ephriam Vasbinder and Maria Buchanan. Sept. 17, 1833, by John McArthur, V. D. M. George H. Veirs and Margaret Robison, April 13, 1832, by Rev. Jacob Coon. John Veirs and Rebecca Salsbury, Sept. 23, 1824, by John Wagner, J. P. Edward Veneman and Fanny Switezer, Jan. 26, 1835, by George W. Bell, J. P. George C. Vincent and Margaret Walker, Sept. 10, 1838, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. James Vincent and Eliza Jane Cranch, Sept. 19, 1839, by John Rea, V. D. M. Thomas C. Vincent and Jane Macurdy, Aug. 24, 1820, by John Rea, V. D. M. Archibald Virtue and Elizabeth Conaway, Feb. 1, 1821, by Robert Maxwell, J. P D. Jacob Vorhes and Miss Mary Welch, Dec. 24, 1829, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Voshel and Nancy Roby, Feb. 11, 1840, by Levi Peddycoart, J. P. David Waddle and Uthamia Garret, Jan. 12, 1832, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Robert Wade and Elizabeth McCarty, Sept. 21, 1840, by Rev. William L. Bald- win. Nimrod Wagers and Sarah Richey, July 5, 1832, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Richard Wagers and Sarah Mayes, Aug. 30, 1832, by George W. Bell, J. P. Daniel Wagner and Polly Brecker, June 14, 1835, by John Gruber, J. P. George Wagner and Christiana Hiseler, March 29, 1821, by John Wagner, J. P, Henry Wagner and Susanna Able, Aug. 11, 1829, by John Gruber, J. P. John Wagner and Peggy Hosterman, Aug. 7, 1823, by William Holmes, J. P. John Wagner and Molly Saylor, April 27, 1827, by Rev. Jacob Winters. John Wagner and Anna Johnson, March 18, 1830, by Robert Pittis, J. P. James Wagstaff and Eve Ross, Sept. 23, 1817, by William Taggart, V. D. M. John Wagstaff and Isabella Turner, Jan. 17, 1S28, by Samuel Hitchcock. J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 307 Joseph Wagstaff and Elizabeth Williams, March 12, 1818, by William Taggart. Robert Wagstaff and Sarah Duncan, March 15, 1831, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Robert R. Wait and Sally Staats, March 12, 1822, by Joseph Fry, J. P. William Wallcutt and Anna Aimes, Sept. 2, 1832, by John Wagner, J. P. George Walker and Ruth Park, Dec. 26, 1822, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Jacob Walker and Nancy Norman, March 13, 1821, by Rev. James Roberts. John Walker and Agnes Walker, Jan. 28, 1819, by John Walker, J. P. John Walker and Margaret Lion, April 18, 1822, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Lorenzo D. Walker and Eliza Matilda Forney, Oct. 29, 1840, by Rev. G. D. Skinner. Thomas Walker and Esther Barcroft, Jan. 10, 1838, by John Caldwell, J. P. Wesley Walker and Susanna Forney, Sept. 19, 1833, by Rev. William Tipton. William Walker and Jane McKinney, June 10, 1834, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. William Walker and Mary Jane Lightner, Oct. 24, 1839, by Rev. William Tag- gart. James Wallace and Jane McFaddcn, March 11, 1832, by William Taggart, V. D. M. James B. Wallace and Mary Ann Peterson, Nov. 12, 1839, by Rev. Lewis Janne5\ Joseph W. Wallis and Harriet Worster, Sept. 14, 1837, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Nathaniel A. Wallace and Jane Watson, March 6, 1834, by Rev. Jacob Coon. Robert Wallace and Albina Wilson, Jan. 16, 1833, by William Taggart, V. D. M, Robert Wallace and Rachel Dugan, June 20. 1833, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William Wallace and Nancy Muncy, Feb. 17, 1819, b-y James Roberts, William Wallace and Elizabeth McCague, June 22, 183.5, by Rev. D. C. Merry-. man. Verden Wallar and Edith Layport, April 12, 1825, by Michael Conaway. J. P. William Waller and Sarah Jane M. Rose, Oct. 24, 1839, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William Walraven and Polly Ross, Dec. 24, 1818, by James Roberts. Henry Walters and Catherine Myers, Dec. 12, 1822, by B. W. Veirs, J. P. Henry Walters and Elizabeth Laughridge, March 9, 1837, by David G. Mc- Guire, J. P. Jacob Walter and Susanna Manganett, March 26, 1820, by Rev. Michael Her- man. Jacob Walters and Elizabeth Crom. Feb. 20, 1823, by Rev. John Crom. Jacob Walters and Elizabeth Hogland, May 9, 1833, by George W. Bell, J. P. Jacob Walters and Clemmy Thompson, May 5, 1839, by John Gruber, J. P. Samuel Walters and Elizabeth Smith, Nov. 13, 1827, by Rev. John Crom. James Ward and Martha Thompson, Nov. 4, 1819, by B. W. Veirs, J. P. John Ward and Nancy McFee, April 13, 1822, by Rev. James Roberts. Charles Warfel and Mary Boyd, May 7, 1833, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. George Warfel and Elizabeth Helbert, March 21, 1816, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Daniel Warner and Sophia Smith, Feb. 23, 1837, by David Bower, J. P. John Warner and Margaret Chinneth. Oct. 8, 1835, by Rev Adam Webster. Thomas Warnick and Rachel Thompson, Jan. 17, 1832. by George W. Bell, J. P. Allen Waters and Mary Ann Haxton, July 17, 1821, by Thomas Patton, J. P. Allen Watters and Caroline Garret, July 6, 1837, by Rev. Richard Brown. John Waters and Sarah Kirkpatrick, April 9, 1816, by Charles Chapman, J. P. 308 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John Waters and Mary Johnston, May 23, 1816, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Watters and Elizabeth Snider, June 26, 1838, by Robert Simpson, J. P. Joseph Waters and Rebecca Merryman, May 13, 1829, by John Secrest. Nathan Watters and Catherine Foutz, May 18, 1837, by Robert P. Simpson, J. P. William Watters and Anne McAdoo, April 19, 1831, by Philip Fulton, J. P. Andrew Watkins and Hannah Moore, Nov. 1, 1821, by Rev. James Roberts. James Watkins and Mary Dolvin, June 6, 1839, by John Wilson, Minister. Elijah Watlin and Eunice Jolly, April 15, 1825, by J. R. Kirkpatrick. Benjamin Watson and Sarah Norris, March 29, 1821. by Robert McLaughlin. Daniel Watson and Mary Furbay, June 5, 1824, by Isaac Allen, J. P. John Watson and Lynna Ann Harris, Jan. 31, 1833, by Rev. William Tipton. John Watson and Julia Barricklow, April 19, 1838, by Rev. William Wallace. Joseph Watson and Jane Richey, Sept. 27, 1825, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. David Watt and Ann Gallaher, March 11, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. John Watts and Eve Shumaker, Jan. 9, 1831, by James McCuUough, J. P. Lemuel Watt and Sarah Johnson, March 4, 1831, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. Samuel Watt and Anna Stone, July 15, 1820, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Jacob Way and Elizabeth Chaney, Oct. 17, 1839, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. John Weaver and Mariah Hitchcock, May 28, 1840, by Rev. Richard Brown. Thomas Weaver and Mary Neel, May 30, 1818, by Robert McLaughlin, J. P. Ezekiel Webb and Mary Corbin, May 19, 1836, by William Arnold, J. P. Isaac Webb and Jane McCowley, Feb. 20, 1823, by Joseph Fry, J. P. Jacob Webb and Mary Ann Walker, Jan. 8, 1833, by William Arnold, J. P. Jesse Webb and Cassandra Hinton, Jan. 12, 1826, by Isaac Fordyce, J. P. John Webb and Martha Holmes, Nov. 11, 1830. by Rev. Thomas J. Taylor. Jonathan Webb and Mary Hinton, April 9, 1826, by George Brown, J. P. Sarah Webb and George Penn, Dec. 1, 1836, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. George Webster and Sarah Hendricks, March 16, 1826, by J. R. Kirkpatrick, J. P. John Webster and Margaret Buchanan, Nov. 13, 1832, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Peter Weddle and Margaret Hill, Oct. 16, 1828, by Van Brown, J. P. Ezekiel Weeks and Elizabeth McFadden, Dec. 30, 1819, by John Conaway, J. P. William M. Weeks and Elizabeth Spiker, Dec. 27, 1825, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Daniel Welch and Mary Gray, May 5, 1834, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. George Welch and Margaret Alderman, May 3, 1838, by Levi Peddycoart, J. P. James Welch and Jane Wagstaff, Dec. 23, 1824, by Donald Mcintosh, V. D. M. James Welch and Martha Slemmons, April 5, 1833, by John McArthur, V. D. M. John Welch and Elizabeth Hosplehorn, March 27, 1817, by Thomas Fisher, J. P. John Welch and Margaret Gilmore, April 3, 1833, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Michael Welch and Mary Fisher, Dec. 6, 1819, by B. W. Veirs, J. P. Timothy Welch and Octavia Suddith. Sept. 18, 1834, by Rev. Thomas Cook. William Welch and Adeline Phillips, April 23, 1835, by John McArthur, V. D. M. William Welsh and Agness Fisher, Oct. 22, 1840, by William D. McCartney, V. D. M. John Weldon and Ruhamah McKee, Jan. 16, 1823, by John Rea, V. D. M. Jacob Weldy and Jane McGrue, Dec. 17, 1839, by Rev. Parden Cook. EARLY MARRIAGES 309 David Welling and Jane Sharp, Nov. 4, 1834, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Hamilton Welling and Rachel Corbin. Feb. 8, 1838, by Rev. James Drummond. Isaac Welling and Ruth Welling, March 21, 1840, by Joseph Fry, J. P. John Welling and Polly McCullough, June 5, 1821, by Joseph Anderson. William Welling and Margaret Davis, May 14, 1830, by Rev. Thomas M. Hud- sou. Samuel Wellman and Jane Coffee, Sept. 23. 1829, by George Brown, J. P. Alexander Wells and Mary Ann King, March 31, 1825, by .John Conaway, J. P. Charles Wells and Mary Day, May 23, 1838. by Rev. James Drummond. David Wells and Mary Delany, April 14, 1818, by Elijah C. Stone. David Wells and Mary Ann Reed, June 8. 1837, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Edwards Wels and Nancy Treacle, Jan. 2. 1819, by William Anderson, J. P, Francis Wells and Nancy MafRt, Jan. 8, 1816, by William Haverfield. James Wells and Mary Shimer, Nov. 12. 1840. by John Selby, J. P. .John Wells and Nancy McB''adden, Dec. 20, 1822, by John Conaway, J. P. Joseph Wells and Providence Shimer, March 11, 1825, by Alexander Moore, J. P. Lakin Wells and Cyntha Maffet, Feb. 4, 1813, by Andrew McNeely, J. P. Nathaniel Wells and Jane Gilmore, Sept. 25. 1817, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Richard Wells and Maria Chalk, Dec. 20, 1827, by Michael Conaway, J. P. William Wells and Mary Townsend, May 29, 1838, by B. Mitchel, V. D. M. Albert West and Mary Plummer, Jan. 1, 1840, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. Amos West and MargareT^^lter, July 5. 1831, by William Arnold, J. P. Augustus B. West and Nancy Brindley, April 10, 1834, by Rev. William Tipton. Ellas West and Esther McQueen, Aug. 9, 1827, by John Huston, J. P. James West and Elizabeth Campbell, Aug. 17, 1826, by Jacob Tope, J. P. Moris West and Nancy Hudson, March 2, 1819, by Elias Crane. Robert West and Amelia Cook, June 24, 1813, by John Wiley, J. P. Thomas West and Mnry Ann Tipton, April 7, 1816, by Robert Orr. J. P. Thomas West and Eliza Tipton, Oct. 23, 1831, by John Busby, J. P. William West and Mary Allbaugh, Feb. 10, 1825. by Jacob Tope. J. P. William West and Elizabeth Martin, Jan. 17, 1838, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. David Wiand and Mary Fisher, Dec. 24, 1833, by John Wagner, J. P. George Wiant and Catherine Poslan, April 29, 1830, by Rev. H. E. F. Voigt. John Wyant and Eliza Gance, Jan. 13, 1830, by John C. Huston, J. P. John Weyant and Nancy Carr. Nov. 15, 1837, by Rev. Thomas Foster. Samuel Wyant and Eliza McCombs, Sept. 2, 1832, by Charles Faucett, J. P. Daniel Wharton and Martha Strade, Dec. 26, 1833, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P. Linton Wharton and Sarah Ann Turner, March 12, 1835, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Isaac Whealdon and Mary Ann Grewell, Dec. 29, 1831, by Thomas P. Jenkins, J. P. John M. Whealdon and Tracy Hibbs, Tan. 1 5, 1 829, by Thomas P. Jenkins. J. P. Caleb Wheeler and Rebecca Rogers, Aug. 31, 1837, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Christopher Wheeler and Rebecca Arnold, April 13, 1837, by John Wagner, J. P. Ezekiel Wheeler and Nancy Roberts. Dec. 9, 1824, by Rev. John Waterman. James Wheeler and Jane Stiers, June 15, 1824, by John Walker, J. P. Nicholas Wheeler and Hannah Poland, Nov. 3, 1819, by Elijah C. Stone. Parkinson Wheeler and Jane Carrel, June 8, 1832, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Joseph P. Wherry and Emily Johnson, April 7, 1836, by Rev. Robert Cook. Joshua Whitcomb and Miranda Mclntire, Oct. 20, 1822, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P. 310 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Alexander White and Mary Jenkins, Oct. 10, 1838, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Charles White and Matilda Cecil, July 23. 1833, by John C. Auld, J. P. George White and Nancy Knox, March 10, 1829, by Rev. William Tipton. James "VVhite and Rebecca Dorson, Dec. 23, 1824, by Silvanus Lamb, J. P. James White and Patience Harrison, Oct. 13, 1836, by George Atkinson, J. P. Joseph White and Elizabeth Friers, Oct. 9, 1823, by Rev. James Roberts. Joseph White and Hannah Rogers, April 12, 1828, by John Carson, J. P. William White and Mary Kerr, Aug. 25, 1831, by John Rea, V. D. M. William White and Mary Ann Barrett, April 23, 1838. by James M. Piper. Isaac. Whitecraft and Ruth Atkinson, Dec. 21, 1826, by William Wallace, V. D. M Abel Whitten and Amelia Ann Watts, Nov. 26, 1836, by M. B. Lukins, J. P. Findley Whitten and Eleanor Harding, Oct. 27, 1839, by M. B. Lukins, J. P, Nelson Whitten and Laney Dunham, Sept. 9, 1833, by Thomas M. Granfel, J. P. John Whittington and Elizabeth Hollett, Jan. 2, 1840, by John Kuox. J. P. Isaac Whitman and Barbary Tope. April 29, 1824, by Jacob Tope, J. P. Benjamin Whitmore and Anne ToUars, Dec. 30, 1824, by John Wagner, J. P. Amos Whitney and Matilda Wright, Feb 11, 1834, by Cornelius Crabtree, J. P. Isaac Wickersham and Eliza Lister, April 29, 1830, by Alexander Simpson, J. P. Malen Finley Wiggens and Hannah Johnson, July 5, 1836, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Joseph Wilcox and Mary Jane McClenahan, May 14, 1834, by Rev. Richard Campbell. John Wilden and Mary West, Oct. 29, 1818, by Martin Guilinger, J. P. Joseph Wiley and Anna Roberts, Feb. 25, 1817, by William Dixon. John Wilkin and Elizabeth Leech, June 12, 1834, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Robert Wilkins and Elizabeth Holmes, Oct. 11, 1817, by Elijah C. Stone. Robert Wilkin and Jane Wiley, Aug. 19, 1819, by John Rea, V. D. M. Samuel Wilkin and Jane Paisley, March 8, 1827, by Daniel McLane. Henry Willgus and Elizabeth Robinson, Sept. 29, 1831, by Thomas Day, J. P. Humphrey Williams and Priscilla Mackey, July 2. 1840, by George Clancey. John Williams and Margaret Crawford, March 22, 1814, by Rev. Thomas B. Clark, V. D. M. John Williams and Eveline Anderson, Aug. 6, 1835, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Noah Willams and Arksey Randels, Feb. 29, 1816, by Charles Chapman, J. P. Samuel Williams and Rachel Cox, Dec. 1, 1831, by John Gruber, J. P. Henry Williamson and Rebecca Graham, Feb. 14, 1823, by John Rea, V. D. M. Henry Williamson and Phebe Haxton, March 6, 1828, by John Rea, V. D. M. Isaac Willis and Jane David Sept. 13, 1832, by Joseph Fry, J. P. James Willis and Mariah Smith, Dec. 19, 1840, by Rev. William Deveny. Amos Willison and Anne McMillan, Dec. 13, 1836, by William Wallace, V. D. M. Elijah Willison and Mary Wilson, June 28, 1832, by William Wyckoffi, J. P. Henry Willoby and Susan Ferrier, Feb. 25, 1823, by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. James Wiliby and Margaret Patterson, Sept. 4, 1818, by William Anderson, J. P. Arthur Wilson and Sarah Selby, Jan. 3, 1837, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Benjamin Wilson and Catherine Crabtree, April 12, 1832, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Charles Wilson and Eliza Norris, April 11, 1833, by Edward Talbott, J. P. Daniel Wilson and Agness Johnson, Jan. 9, 1S38, by William Taggart, V. D U. David Wilson and Elizabeth Ferrier, Nov. 13, 1818, by William Slemmons, J. P. EARLY MARRIAGES 311 Hugh B. Wilson and Catherine Runey, Feb. 11, 1S19, by Thomas Dickerson, J. P. Isaac Wilson and Elisabeth Brickies. Dec. 24, 1821, by William Anderson, J. P. James Wilson and Jane Moody, .luly 6, 1817, by William Slemmons, J. P. James Wilson and Gracey All, Oct. 9, 1830, by Rev. Jacob Cozad. John Wilson and Elizabeth Palmer, Nov. 18, 1819, by Williamson Carrothers, J. P. John I. Wilson and Ann Humphries, April 20, 1821, by Joseph Fry, J. P. John Wilson and Rachel Gwynn, Nov. 24, 1835, by William Arnold, J. P. John Wilson and Jane Crawford, May 4, 1837, by William Wallace, V. D. M. John Wilson and Leticia Jones, Feb. 13, 1840, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. Joseph Wilson and Elizabeth Stone, Aug. 19, 1819, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Robert Wilson and Margaret Arnold, Feb. 16. 1838, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Samuel H. Wilson and Sarah L. Auld, Dec. 15, 1831, by Rev. Jacob Cozad. Samuel H. Wilson and Mary McGill, March 7, 1837, by W. Lukins, J. P. William Wilson and Sophia Randolph, May 28, 1829, by Archibald McGrew, J. P. William Wilson and Mary Cox, Jan. 5, 1837, by John McArthur, V. D. M. William M. Wilson and Elizabeth McConnell, May 7, 1837, by John M. Brown, J. P. John Winings and Mary Snider, Nov. 12, 1818, by John Wagner, J. P. Daniel Winshel and Catherine Dewel, Aug. 12, 1824. by Samuel Dunlap, J. P. Abner Winter and Christena Tingley, June 15, 1813, by James Roberts. William Winters and Nancy Lisle, Aug. 16, 1821, by John Rea, V. D. M. George Wise and Sarah Hay, April 19, 1838, by John Wagner. J. P. Samuel Witmer and Elizabeth Shoos, Sept. 15, 1816, by Rev. John Rinehart. Thomas Wolf and Mary Kelby, March 8, 1821, by Thomas Patton, J. P. Anthony Wood and Jane Petty, Oct. 23, 1839, by Rev. Robert Cook. Benjamin Wood and Levinah Lees, Aug. 16, 1821, by Thomas Parkinson. J. P. Benjamin Wood and Martha Arskins, Nov. 6, 1828. by Rev. Elijah C. Stone. Frederick J. Wood and Jane Brown, Jan. 7, 1840. by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Hugh Wood and Sally Spicer, Oct. 4, 1821, by John Conaway, J. P. James Wood and Elizabeth Shouse, Feb. 2, 1832, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Joseph Wood and Mary Chandler. Oct. 10, 1818, by Thomas Parkinson. Joshua Wood and Elizabeth Hudson, March 2, 1819, by Robert McKee, J. P. Reuben B. Wood and Sarah Ann Ferguson, March 29, 1838, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Sylvanus Wood and Amanda Tingley, Sept. 8, 1836, by Rev. James C. Taylor Thomas Wood and Latetia Stackhouse. Feb. 2, 1818, by James Roberts. Thomas Wood and Margaret Cope, Feb. 28, 1828, by John Carson, J. P. Jeremiah Woodford and Sarah Ann Wherry, June 26, 1834, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. James Works and Ann G. Cimningham, June 18, 1838, by William Colledge. John Work and Margaret Gallher, March 15, 1836, by John Rea, V. D. M. Daniel Worley and Sarah Peregory, Jan. 2, 1834, by Rev. Aurora Callender. David Wourley and Mary Jane Luke, Oct. 6. 183G, by Samuel Lewis. J. P. Josiah Worley and Mary Ann Minor, Sept. 17, 1833, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Michael Worley a,nd Eve Ann Markley, Aug. 21, 1828, by John Wagner, J. P. Wesley Worley and Jane Virtue, May 8, 1823, by Rev. James Roberts. George Worrell and Sarah Barnett, Oct. 14, 1830, by John Heberling, J. P. 312 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Nathaniel Worrall and Ann Barnett, Jan. 18, 1827, by Rev. James Roberts. Norman Worstall and Rebecca Ann Lake, Dec. 21, 1826, by Rev. James Roberts. James Worth and Nancy Sherron, Oct 5, 1826, by Robert Orr, J. P. John Worth and Sarah Kent, Dec. 4, 1823, by Robert Orr, J. P. David Wortman and Elizabeth Reddin, Jan. 12, 1826, by Henry Ford, J. P. Isaac Wright and Hannah Smith, May 31, 1821, by Joseph Johnson, J. P. Nathan Wright and Elizabeth Ripley, Aug. 22, 1822, by Rev. Curtis GodcSard. Sylvauus Wright and Desire Hays, Aug. 14, 1828, by George W. Bell, J. P. Thomas Wright and Mary Cellar, Jan. 28, 1823, by Rev. Salmon Cowles. Thomas W. Wright and Sally Gardner, Jan. 23, 1827, by Rev. William Knox. Thomas Wright and Margaret Ann Bear, Sept. 14. 1837, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. William Wright and Caty Nevit, Oct. 27, 1816, by William Wyckoff, J. P. William Wright and Polly Blair, May 15, 1821, by Curtis Goddard. Thomas C. Wicoff and Sarah Coleman, Dec. 5, 1838, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. William Wyckoff and Freelove Crabtree, Nov. 22, 1814, by William Knox. John Wymer and Fanny Firebaugh, Sept. 14, 1837, by Adam Hetzler. Aaron Yarnell and Harriet Poulson, Sept. 8, 1836, by Rev. James C. Taylor. Eli Yarnold and Rebecca Burton, May 24, 1839 by C. E. Weirick. Mordecai Yarnell and Providence Walraven, Nov. 4, 1824, by Rev. James Roberts. William Yarnell and Sarah Spencer, Jan. 27, 1833, by William Wyckoff, J. P. Ziba Yarnall and Jane Bowlen, Aug. 22, 1S33, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. David Yarrington and Susanna Clark, Sept. 10, 1829, by Samuel Dunlap, J. P. Ephraim Yarrington and Rebecca Simon, Jan. 19, 1826, by Samuel Dunlap, J. P. William Yarrington and Susanna Watson, Sept. 21, 1827, by Samuel Dunlap, Joseph Yingling and Mary Ann Able, Jan. 1.5, 1835, by John Wagner, J. P. John Yost and Mary Wilson, Jan. 9, 1834, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. Benjamin Young and Eve Ann Fisher, Jan. 8, 1829, by Michael Conaway, J. P. Denton Young and Melida Baker, Jan. 26, 1836, by John Gruber. J. P. George Young and Mary Ann Burkhead, March 16, 1826, by John Busby, J. P. Henry Young and Nancy Burkhead, July 6, 1815, by John Busby, J. P. John Young and Sarah Barkhurst, Feb. 5, 1815, by Paul Preston. John Young and Sally James, April 1, 1821, by Charles Chapman, J. P. John Young and Anna Kelly, March 6, 1823, by Rev. Thomas Hunt. McKinzee Young and Sarah Northamer, P'eb. 15, 1820, by William Carrothers, J. P. Michael Young and Mary Shaeffer, May 4, 1820, by John Hurless, J. P. William Young and Elizabeth Michals, Aug. 15, 1839, by Joseph Cloakey, V. D. M. John Zimmerman and Catherine Pardon, Aug. 20, 1831, by John McArthur, V. D. M. Frederick Zollars and Ann Whitmore, Nov. 27, 1823, by Robert Orr, J. P. Jacob Zollars and Elizabeth Porter, July 18, 1837, by John Wagner, J. P. John Zollars and Sarah Wallcutt, Nov. 19, 1835, by John Wagner, J. P. Zepheniah Zollars and Catherine Shilling, June 2, 1836, by John Gruber. J. P. SOME HAKRISON" COUNTY BURIALS. The following records have been gathered from tombstones stand- ing in the principal cemeteries of Harrison county, particularly, the older cemeteries. The records have been collected at various times during the past five years. In the case of the graveyards of Beech Spring, Crab- apple, Unit}^, ISTottingham, Dickerson, Cadiz, and Ridge, all the tombstones standing at the dates the lists were made, have been examined, and their records are here given, without regard to the date of birth of the de- cedents In all other cases, only those burials are recorded of those who were born prior to 1830, with a view to including only the pioneers of the county. A complete list of all the burials in the graveyards herein given in part, would make a record beyond the limits of one volume. The location of many of the various graveyards not within the limits of the villages of the county may not be out of place in this con- nection: Beech Spring graveyard is situated at Beech Spring Church, on the southwest corner of section one, in Green township, about two miles southeast from Hopedale. Dickerson graveyard is situated near the center of section thirty-two, in Cadiz township, about half-way be- tween Cadiz and New Athens. Crabapple and Unity graveyards are situated in Wheeling township, Belmont county, the former about two, and the latter about three miles southeast of New Athens. Bethel grave- yard, is situated in the southeast quarter of section twenty-eight, in Green township, about half a mile north of Folks' Station. Ridge grave- yard is situated in the southwest quarter of section twenty-three, in Archer township, about a mile southeast from Hanover, Nottingham and Rankin graveyards are both in Moorefield township, the former in esction six, and about a mile southwest of Rankin, which is in section thirty-one, one mile south of Cassville. 314 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY BURIALS IN BEECH SPRING GRAVEYARD. To July 14, 189G. Ainamla Jane Aikin, daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth, d. Oct. 1, 18(54; 7v. !)m. Josei)h Aikin, d. Dec. 27, 1868; i32y. Isabella Allison, daughter of J. and M., d. July 30, 1830; 2y. M. James Allison, b. ITUO; d. Nov IS, 1881 ; 92y. James Allison, Jr., d. May, 1859: 33y. Margaret Allison, wife of James, d. Oct. 28, 1837; 41y. 3m. 9d. Marv Allison, wife of David, d. Feb. 23, 1805; 40y. Im. 20d. Eleanor Barnhouse, wife of William, d. .ruly 8, 5838; 31y. 7m. 18d. Elizabeth Bell, daughter of J. and N., d. Nov. 15. 1838; ly. 3m. Gd. John Bell, d. July 25. 1822; .39y. John H. Bell, son of J. and N., d, March 13, 1844; lOm. Margaret Bell, wife of John, d. May 10, 18(;i; S7y. Nancy Bell. d. March 31, 1823; SOy. John Benedict, d. Oct. 11, 1890; 57y. im. nd. Nancy Benedict, d. Oct. 11, 1890; 5C>y. H. Stewart Black, d. Jan, 22, 1890; 70y. 2m. Isabella Black, wife of James, d. Dec. 30. 1805; SOy. James Black, Sr., d. Dec. 13, 184G; 90y. Jane Black, wife of James, Sr., d. Aug. 22, 1835: S2y. J. H. Black, d. March 2G, 1885; 72y. TNIarv K. Black, wife of J. H., d. May 11, 1894; 78y. 5m. 25d. Rachel Bowls, d. Jan. 22, 1845; 9y. Isabel Brown, wife of Robert, d. April 23, 1871; 92y. Robert Brown, d. May 18, 1850; 71y. E. Caldwell, d. Sept. 4, 1831; James Carrick, d. Aug., 1820; 7Gy. John Carrick, d, Feb. 1, 1854; 74y. 2m. IGd. Martha Carrick, Avife of James W., d. Jan. 8, 18.33; 30y. llm. 8d. Marv Carrick, wife of James., d. Oct. 31, 1833; 74y. Andrew Clark, d. Nov. G, 1848; GOy. A. F. Clark, d. April 28, 18G2: 22y. James Claik. d. Sept. 3, 1833; 80y. James Clark, d. Nov. 28, 1847; 3Gy. James Clark, son of Francis and Nancy: Jane Clark, wile of James, d. May 17, 1832: 78y. John G. Clark, son of Andrew M.. d. Aug. 15, 1851; 21 v. Joseph Clark, b. Feb. 12, 177S; d. Uit. 3. ISGl. Margaret Clark, wife of Andrew, d. May 20. 1835; 4!iy. Margaret Clark, daughter of Andrew, d. March 10, 1S4G; 19y. Rachel Clark, wife of Joseph, d. Sept, 3, 1854; GOy. 9m. 4d. James R. Coulter, d. Oct. 18, 1852; 24y. Gm. 29d. Mary E. Coulter, daughter of J. II. and Rhoda, d. Sep. 8, 1855; 3y. 9m. lOd. Carlisle Crawford, son of W. and B., d. Feb., 1847; Gy. 5m. Eliza Crawfoi-d, d. Nov. 3, 1837; 9y. Eli-^abeth Crawford, wife of Waller. d. May 27, 1879: 79y. 3m. 22d. George Crawford, d. Nov. 12, 1835; 13y. Hannah Crawford, daughter of W. and E., d. June 29. 1851 ; 14y. 9m. 17d. Hannah Crawford, d. Nov. 15, 1872: 57y. 10m. 20d. John M. Crawford, son of J. and H.. d. July 31, 18(!4: 21y. 4m. John N. Crawford, son of W. and E.. d. INIav 7, 1843; 23y. Giu. lOd. Samuel Crawford, d. March 23, 1837: 17y. AA'alter Crawford. . 74y. Levi Crouch, d. Sep. G, ISGl; 77y. INIarv Crouch, wife of Levi. d. April 22, 1853: G2y. William H. Crouch, d. Murfeesboro, Teun., ]March 19. 18tJ3; 33y. 5n . 29d. Mary A. Davis, wife of Jesse, d. Sep. 2G, 1853; 41y. 5m. 14d. Elizabeth Delaney, wife of Philip, d. Jan. 17, 1849; 80y. John Clark Delaney. born in Fayette county, Pa., d Jan. 8, 1820 27y. 10m. 20d. Philip Delaney, d. Nov. 21, 1852; SGy. BEECH SPRING BURIALS 315 William B. Delaney, d. April 19, 18-lG; 40y. Johnnie T. Dickerson. son of J. II. and E. II., d. All- 23, 1884; 7m. ^M. John Reed Dool, son of Rev. Wni. S. and Ann, d. Manh 20, lHo2; ly. 7m. Robert Henry I)ool, son of Rev. Win. S. and Ann, d. March 23, 18.j2; 4y. 27d. John L. Dunning, d. i-'ep. 28, 1853; 23y. John L. Dunning, Jr., d. Oct. 1, 1874; 21y. Andrew Eagleson, d. March 7, 1830, r.8y. Andrew Eagle.^on, d. April 11, 1818; 2y. Hannah Eagleson, d. Dec. 17, 1811; 8ui. Israel Eagleson, d. March , 1839; 21 y. James Ea.2:les(:n, d. Pec. 9, 1823; • James Eagleson, d. June 20, 1837; 17y. Jane Eagleson, wife of William, d. Sep. 27, 18.52; 41y. Jane Eagleson, wife of Andrew, d. June 3, 1801; 82y. Jane C. Eagleson, d. Sep. 27, 1852; 40y. 10m. Jolin Calvin Eagleson, son of Henry and Eliza, d. Sep. 26, 1841; 3y. Im. fid. Lueinda M. Eagleson, d. July 1, 1893; 73y. 10m. Maigaret Eagleson, d. June 5, 1814; 12y. Margaret C. Eagleson. daughter of W. and J., d. Sep. 18, 1841: Hy. 4m. William Eagleson, d. Nov. 15, 1877; 72y. 10m. 7d. John Eakin, son of John and Marv. d, Dec. 12. 1830; 21y. .John Eakin, d. Feb. 0, 1802; 83y. Marv Eakin, dauicliter of John any. Marv Eakin, Avife of John, d. March 8, 1801; 84y. Alfonso T. Elv. son of D. C. and I. L., 1). June 15, 1880; d. Dec. 1, 1880. Odessa M. Ely, daughter of D. C. and I. L., Im. od. Mary Endsley. d. March, 1820; 85y. Alex. Foster, d. Feb. 14, 1845; 74y. .Tames Foster, d. April 4, 1828; 22y. Martha Foster, d. Aug. 7, 1839; 24y. Celia France, daughter of J. and R., d. .luuc l.j, 1820; 4y 8m. 23d. Johu France, d. Dec. 11, 182.'); 3Uy, (•>m. lOd, Rebecca I'rance, wife of Johu, d. March 29. 18(i8; 70y. 4m. Ann Francis, wife of James, d. July 10. 182.S: 48y. James Fiaucis, d. Aug. 17, 1859; 84y. Johu Fulton, d. Oct. 2, 1850; a3y. William Gallagher,- d. Oct. 10, 1832; 53y. Lettissia Gilison. wife of Hugh; d. .June 4, 1814; 35y. George Gourley, U. July 22, 1808; 91y. 3ni. 7d. John Gourley, d. Feb. G, 1857: R5y. Jolui G. Gourley, d. June 4, 1870; 45y. Margaret Gourley, wife of George, d. Nov. 2*J, 18(i3; 75y. Ann Hanna. wife of James, d. April 27. 1833; 73y. Elizabeth Hanna, wife of Ezekiel, d. Jan. 24, 1845; 48y. 3m. Ezekiel Hanna, d. May 10, ISOl; 01 y. 11m. 9d. James A. Hanna, sou of E. aud E., d. Jan., 1849; IGy. James Boggs Hanna, son of Samuel and Doche, d. Oct. 21, 1872; 22y. Louisa Hanna, daughter of William and :Mary. d. Apiil 27, 1834; lly. Margaret Hanna, d. April 17, 1833; 57y. Martha L. Hanna, daughter of .Tohn M. aud L., d. June 15, 1845; 4m. 7d. Mary Ilaniui, daughter of John M. and L. Hanna, d. Jan. 8, 1848; 4y. Om. 15d. Marv Hanna. wife of William, d. Nov. 19, 18.53; 71y. Samuel Hanna, son of William and Mary, d. May G, 18.34; lOy. Sarah Hanna, daughter of Will. am and Mary, d. Jan. 13, 1842; 2(iy. William Hanna, d. April G, 1830; 50y. William Hanna, son of William and Marv, d. Jan. 8, 18:;9: 27y. David T. Han-ah, d. Oct. 20, 1880; 75y. .".m. 24d. James Harrah, d. Sep. 15, 1840; 3y. 9m. I'.td. James C. Harrah, d. Dec. 2, 1871; 92y, 4m. 25d. 316 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY James N. Hanah, d. Aug. 2, 1881; 3Gy. 2m. Id. .lolm T. Ilarrah, son of John and Jane, d. Nov. 10, 1SG3; lOy. 11m. 15d. Rlariraret Harrali, wife of James C, d. Dec. 7, 1834; 5Sy. 2m. 13d. Milton A. Harrali, son of .Tohn and Jane, d. April 12, 18*33; 12y. 8m. 5d. Nancy Harrali, wife of Adam, d. Aug. 1!>. 187-4; OOy. .5m. 24d. Martha Eliza Harrison, dauc:hter of W. and S., d. Oct. 27. 184G; l(jy. 2m. 27d. John Harvev, son of H. and M., d. Jan. IG, 1836; 77y. (Heni-y Harvey buried at Lower Buffalo Graveyard, Va.). Marv Harvey, daughter of H. and M., d. April 2, 1809; Elizabeth Haslett, d. July 21, 1838; 84y. Elizabeth Holmes, wife of William, d. May 8, 1849; 59y. Eliza Jane Holmes, daughter of I. and J., d. Sep. 23, 185G; 18y. P'rancis Holmes, d. Aug. G, 1825; 8Gy. Jane Holmes, wife of Francis, d. March 19, 1834; 90y. Martha Holmes, daughter of I. and J., d. Julv 29. 1862: 18v. 2m. William Holmes, d. .Tan. 22, 1861; 7Sy. Jane Hope, daughter of W. and B., d. Dec. 24, 1848; 17y. lid. INIaria Hope, daughter of W. and E.. d. Nov. 7, 1841; ly 2m. 4d. Rebecca Hope, daughter of W. and E., d. Sep. 24, 1839; 7m. Boyd Houston, son of James and Mary, d. March 12, 1832; ly. Id. Elijah Howell, d. June 27, 1871; 89y. Mary Howell, wife of Elijah, d. Sep. 11, 18G3; G8y. Eliza Hunter, wife of James, d. April 19, 1853; 33y. 7m. 27d. George M. Hunter, son of J. and Eliza, d. April 30, 18G4: 18y. 8d. Allen Jamison, d. March 12, 1846; 62y. Mary Jamison, wife of John, d. April 17, 1828; 48y. 5m. Id. Sarah Jamison, wife of Allen, d. Feb. 26, 1858; 6.5y. Samuel Jeffers, d. June 8, 1847; 70y. Eleanor Jellev, daughter of J. and M., d. Nov. 7, 18.34: 23y. James .Telley, d. Aug. 2, 1839; 55y. Mary Jelley, wife of James, d. Nov. 24, 1SG3; 79y. 9m. 22d. Nancy Jelley, d. April 13, 1852; 32y. 7m. 2Gd. Elizabeth Johnson, d. Jan. 10. ; 58y. Ephraim Johnson, d. Dec. 23, 1833; 59y. .Tames Johnson, son of E. and M., Joseph B. .Tohuson, son of J. J. and H. J., d. Feb. 18, 1845; 3y. 11m. 14a. James Johnston, d. Nov. 9, 1S63; 70y. Gm. 27d. Mary Johnston, wife of James, d. Jan. 25, 1881; 86y. 7m. 27d. Rachel Karr, wife of John, d. Aug. 8, 1830; 49y. Infant Son of T. L. and M. L. Kerr, d. Sop. 20, 1851; 4m. 15d. Agnes Kerr, wife of James, d. June 18, 183G; 85y. Ann Kerr, wife of Samuel, d. July 1, 1835; 40y. Betsey Kerr, wife of William, d. Jan. 20, 1823; S5y. James Kerr, d. June 2, 1825; 74y. Joseph Kerr, d. Jan. 1, 1850: 28y. Katharine Kerr, wife of James, d. Sep. 12, 1827; 41y. Margaret Ann Kerr, d. July 4, 1835; ISy. Mary J. Leech, daughter of B. and R., d. Aug. 2.5, 1851; 17y. 6m. 6d. John Long, d. Aug. 4, 1822; 31y. 2m. James H. Louuhrey, son of J. and M., Aug. 14, 1827: 6y. Margaret Loughrev, wife of .Tohn, of Columbus, Ohio; d. Sep. 6, 1827; 39y. Mary J. Loughrey, daughter of John and Margaret, d. Dee. 20, 1827; lOy. Margaret Ann Lowry, daughter of John and Nancy, d. Oct." 19, 1836; 6m. Id. David Lyons, d. July 23, 1826, 26y. Jane Smith Lyons, daughtei* of E. and J., d. Sep. 8. 1829; 3Gy. John Lyons, d. Aug. 3, 1829; SOy. [the adjoining tomb-stone, probably that of his wife, is entirely obliterated]. Sarah INIcCollough. wife of .Toseph, b. Sep. 27, 1795; d. March 24, 183;!. Esther INIcCrea, wife of Robert, d. Jday 17, 1834: 8.Sy. Mai'garet McCrea. d. June 7, 1823; 47y. BEECH SPRING BURIALS 317 27d. Margaret McGrew, wife of Archibald, d. April 29, 1828; 4;»y. Sarah McKeever, wife of Thomas, d. July 25, 1840: 30y. 9m. lOd. p:iiza Isabella Matthews, b. March 12, 182(;; d. June 22, 1S4(). William Matthews, Esq., b. Dec. 25, .1787; d. April 17, 1883. Joseph Mayes, d. Dec. 29, 1S45; GOy. 7m. Elizabeth Melroy, d. May 5, 1815; 41y. George Melroy. d. Jan. 2, 1829; 58y. Samuel Melroy. d. Aug. 23, 1825; (Joy. Charles Merrymau, d. Aug. 14, 1833; 28y. John B. Merryman, son of W. and N., d. June 27. 1850; 7y. 5m. 27d. Kasiah Margaret Merryman, daughter of W. and N., and ueiee of Elizabeth Merryman. d, Oct. 13, 1857; 89y. Margaret Merryman, daughter of Charles and M., d. Sep., 1841; lOy. Nancy Merriman, wife of William, d. Feb. 13, 1849; 30y. 9m. 19d. Eliza Mil j£Lu Miller, d. May 12, 1826; 7Sy. George Mills, d. Sep., 1820; 57y. George C. Mills, son of J. and E., b. Aug. 8, 1860; d. Aug. 29, 1890. Elizabeth Mills, wife of George, d. Jan. 25. 1852; 65y. Elizabeth A. Mills, daughter of J. and E., b. April 1, 1855; d, April 22, 1883. George Mills, d. Dec. 29, 1862; 52y. 20d. John Mills, b. Feb. 23, 1816; d. Oct. 19, 1885. Martha A. Mills, daughter of J. and E., b. April 1, 1865; d. Nov. 24, 1883. Mary E. Mills, daughter of J. and E., b. Sep. 25. 1857; d. May 6, 1883. Nancy J. Mills, daughter of J. and E., b. March 2, 1851; d. Oct. 11, 1^82. William B. Mills, d. Oct. 9, 1888; 28y. Tohn Moffatt, d. April 6, 18G6; 74y. Nancy Moffat, wife of John, d. Jan. 11, 1845; 69y. Ellen J. Moore, b. Feb. 16, 1846. Fanny Moore, wife 18, 1!S36; 63y. James M. Moore, b. Feb. 16, 1884. May 27, 1806; d. of Alex., d. Jan. June 25, 1808; d. Jane ^loore, daughter of Jaraes M. and E. J., b. May 23, 1832; d. Dec. 18, 184(!, John A. Moore, son of J. M. and E. T., d. Dec. 5, 1835. Mary Moore, d. Dec. 15, 1832; 47y. liebecca A. Moore, b. May 5, 1809; d. April 30, 1879. Ann Moorehead, wife of James, d. Aug. 15, 1824; ;^5y. John Moorehead, d. May 10, 1847; 8Gy. M:iry Moorehead, d. March 1, 1862; 74y. 3m. 26d. Sarah Moorehead, d. Sep. 30, 1833; 34y. Sarah Moorehead, wife of John, d. April 28, 1838; 77y. James A. Muncy, d. Aug. 23, 1822; 2y. Eliza :\I. Neely, daughter of J. and H., d. July 3, 1851; 3y. Mary J. Neely, wife of John, d. Dec. 28, 1844. Mary J. Neely, daughter of J. and M., d. Oct. 2, 1851; Gy. Eliza Jane Newlou, daughter of E. and P., d. .Tan. 8, 1834; 7m. James Newlon, son of Elijah .ind Phoebe, d. June 6, 1834; 2y. 11m. lOd. Phoebe Newlon, Avife of Eliah, d. Dec. 25, 1833; 28y. Sni-ah Newton, wife of Joshua, d. Jan. 25, 1832; 51 y. Elizabeth Ogden, b. May 27, 1814; d. Dec. 28, 1889. Martha Ogden, wife of Robert, d. A'jril 2. 1866; 85y. Martha Ogden, daughter of R. and M, d. Nov. 4, 1868; 51y. 6m. 8d. Mary Ogden, b. Aug. 10, 1815; d, July 18, 1887. Robert Ogden, d. April 14, 1848; a6y. Kesiah Emily Paxton, daughter of W. and R., d. June 10, 1852; 3y. 7m. Lydia Rebecca Paxton, daughter of W. and R., d. Oct. 4, 1838; ly. Im.. Peunel, ; 83y. Eliza J. Pennel, daugher of H. and R., d. Sep. 22, 1832; 2y. 11m. 7d. Rachel Ann Pennel, daughter of Hugh and Rachel, d. 1838; 3y 11m. 4d. Sarah J. Perry, daughter of Henry and Sarah, d. Aug. 17, 1828; 2y 7m. 2?.d. Rebecca Ramsey, wife of John, d. Feb. 318 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 12, 1S33; 20.V. William Kaiildn. d. INIay 1, ISoS; GOy. Mrs. Elizaboth R( a, wife of Rev. Johu, (1. An^. 1C>. 1S54; S2v. Rev. .Toim Eea, D. D., d. Feb. 12, 185."); .S3y. ^^ illiam P. Rea, sou of Dr. Jolm; d. June 11, 1S46; 3Gy. Sd. Isaac Reed, d. April 1.'], 1S4G; 15y. .lane Reed, d. Nov. 8. 1S78; S2y. RIaiT .lonisha Reed, daughter of M. and S., d. Oct. 31, is:)l: ;iy. 5m. 8d. Lavinah Reed, daueliter of M. and S., d. Oct. 2S, 1853: 10m. lOd. ■\Villiam Reed, b. Aug. 15, 1800; d. Feb. 27, 1872. Mary Scott, wife of James, d. May 8, 1S50: 44y. 9m. 3d. Isaac yiianuon, d. Sep. 20, 1848; 83y. Jane Shannon, Avife of Isaac, d. June 18, 1820; 51 y. James Sbevrard, son of Sarah and John, d. April, 15, 1851; 20y. Gm. 21d. John Slierrard, d. July 14, 18G0: 72v. 8m. IGd. Sarah Sberrnrd, wife of John, d. Oct. 15, ISGl; .5Gy. 6m. A. S. Simpson, d. Nov. 3, 1884; G3y. 10m. James Simpson, b. July 14, 1791; d. Dec. S, 1871. Violet Simpson, wife of James, d. June 30, 1855; 58y. William S. Simpson, d. March 9, 1S91; 65y. 10m. 9d. Esther Skelley, wife of John, d. Jan. 1, ISGO; 5Gy. 11m. 23d. John Skelley, d. Nov. 7, 1847; GGy. Margaret Skelley, Avife of John, d. Oct. 11, 1834; 53y. William Skelley, d. Nov. 2, 183G; 27y. Catharine Siemens, wife of James, d. July 17, 1851; 62 y. 8m. 25d. Deborah M. Slemons, dauiihter of S. and E., d. Aug. 26. 1851; 2y. 3m. 12d. Ann Smith, Avife of John V., d. Dec. 27, 1873; 37y. 2d. Esther Smith, wife of James, d. July 9, 1832; 36y. James Smith, d. June 12, 1833: 33y. Rosannah Stirling, [dates obliterated!. Jane Stringer, wife of William, d. June 15, 1837: 33y. John Stringer, d. July 17, 1845; 69y. Im. 7d. John ^L Stringer, d. May. 4, 1889; 57y, 2)u. William Stringer, d. Aug. 16, 1859; .55y. llm. 28d. Infant son of (Jeorce and Maria Tag- gart, b. Jan. 21, 1841; d. Jan. 30, 1811. Infant son of J. and A. Taggart, d. Oct. 26, 1842; 3m. 7d. Alexander W. Taggart, d. June 19, 1858; 38y. 2m. Anne Craig Taggart, wife of Jamts, b. Feb. 22, 1811; d. Feb. 24, 1887. David Taggart, d. Dec. 17, 1844; 27y. David Bayless Taggart, b. -Feb. 28, 1846; d. April 7, 18.4. David Welch Taggart, b. Nov. 9, 1850; d. Feb. 17. 18o4. Elizal eth Taggart, Avife of William, d. Sep. 25, 1845; -lOy. 2m. 9d. George Taggart, b. Aug. 3, 1814; d. Sep. 18, 1S7!). James Taggart, b. July 22, ISOG; d. Oct. 15, 18.)0. James A. Tagcart, son of J. and A., d. May 7, 1849; ly. im. John Taggart, d. June 4, 1843; 65y. John C. Taggart, sou of J. and A., d. Dec. 1, 1812; 3y. 7m. 3d. jNIarnaret Taggart, AAife of John, d. Aug. 31, 18(n ; 82y. 5m. lUd. ]Maria B. Taggart. Avife of George, b. June 27, 1822: d. Mar.h 14, 18!i3. Orriu G. Taguart, d. April 20, 1887; :!lv. Sarah J. Taggart, d. Jan. 24, 1883; 62y. lOm. 22d. Eliza Jane Trainer, daughter of J. and C, d. Jan. 26, 1865; 3y llm. 12d. V,illiam TAveed, d. May 29, 1853; 53y. (im. 13d. Jane \ incent, wife of Dr. Thomas, d. Oct. 11, 1858: 75y. Marv Vincent, daughter of Dr. Thomas and Mary; d. April 13, 1829; i;;y. Marv Vincent, daughter of Thomas and Mary; d. Ai)i-il 3, 1846; 8y. Di'. Thomas Vincent, d. Aug. 31, 1841; 87y. AVraham W.allace. son of J. and E., b. Aug. 24, 1813; d. Aug. 18, 1846. Eliza bi^th Wallace, Avife of Johu, b. 8e]). 23, 1776; d. Feb. 19, 1855. Jane Wallace, Avife of N. A., d. Feb. CADIZ BURIALS 319 9. LSfiS; 52y. 7di. 8d. Jolm Wallace, b. May 8, 1774; d. June 4, 1S0":{. Margaret Wallace, daughter of J. aud E., b. July IC, ISi.G; d. Sep. 20, 18;jl. Nathaniel A. Wallace, d. Dee. 28, 1S92; S2y. Esther Watt, wife of William, d. April 24, 1S34; 54v. Samuel Watt, d. Feb. 28, 1818; 70y. John Waugh. son of J. and S., d. Feb. 17, 1J-'4S; yy. 11m. 2od. Daniel Welch, Sr., d. ^ep. 7, 1819; OGy. Daniel Welch, d. Aug. 9, 18G8; 78v. Daniel P. Welch, d. May 6, 18G4; 24y. Gm. 8d. Elizabeth Welch, wife of Daniel, d. March 29. 1844; 74y. Elizabeth Welch, daughter of Daniel and Margaret; 15y. E. Gray Welch, son of D. and M., d. Nor. 30, 1877; 35v. .Tohn P. Welch, d. July 31, 18G7; 31y. 11m. 22d. Margaret Welch, wife of Daniel, d. Sep. 9, 1833; 37y. Martha AVelch, wife of Samuel, d. April 13, 183(;; 21y. Mary Welch, wife of Daniel, d. Felj. r>, 1S48: 41y. 2m. Id. Samuel AVelch, d. Feb. 22, 18G5; 20y. Im. Id. Mary White, wife of William, d. April 4, 1835: 25y. Anne Wiley, wife of J., d. April 15, 18.3G; 39y. Matilda Wiley, daughter of Joseph and Anne; d. April (>, 18.32; 5m. Rebecca L. AViley, daughter of Joseph and Anne, d. INlarch 17, 1820; lly. James AVilkin, d. April 7, 1815; 8Uy. James A\ilkin, d. Aug. 15, 1822; 19y. Hm. 7d. William Wilkin, 1808; Infant daughter of A. and L. Work, d. June 10, 18G2; Gd. Alex. Work, d. May 7, 1851; 70y. Alexander Work, son of Dr. G. L. and 5. B., d. May 9, 18G2; 19y. 10m. 8d. Alexander Work, d. Jan. 16, 1883; 55y. 5m. 12d. David C. Work, son of Dr. G. L. and S. B., d. July 19, 18G3; 18y. 5m. Jane Work, wife of A., d. April 9, 1851; G5y. Jolm B. Work, son of Dr. G. L. and S. B., d. April 10, 18G4; 18y. Im. 24d. Nevin Craig Work, son of A. and J., d. Jan. 4, 1854; ly. 11m. 13d. Robert A. Work, son of A. and L., d. March 2V,, 1802: 4y. 13d. Adam Wylie, d. June 1, 1S27; 78y. John Wylie, d. April 6, ISIG; 40y. Mary P. Wylie, wife of William, d. INIarch 10, 1888: 85y. William Wylie. d. Nov. 19, 1871; 69y. 9m. 5d. Agnes Young, consort of Jacob; .Jacob Young. Nancy Young, d. Feb. 28, 1827; 49y. BURIALS IN THE OLD GRAVE- YARD AT CADIZ. To June 22, 1896. Katharine d. Feb. 12, 1844;- 71y. son, d. July 2, 1843; 27y. 11m. Sarah Adams, d. IVIarch 25, 1854. Margaret Alexander, d. July 22, 18—2; 30y. Gm. 27d. Nancy Alexander, d. Jan. 24, 1855; 55y. 2m. 5d. Samuel Alexander, d. Feb. 16, 1873; 84y. 21d. Mary Allen, d. Jan. 7, 1837. Jane Amspoker, wife of Samuel, d. June 27, 1859: 2Gy. William Anderson, son of Hugh and Margaret, d. July 25, 1821; 2y. 3m. Ruth Andrews, formerly widow of George McFadden, d. May 22, 1871. Anna Arnold, wife of Rezln, d. Feb. 16. 1825; 29y. 7m. 3d. .Tohn Arnold, son of Rezin and Anna, d. Feb. 27, 1823; 4m. 27d. Emily Barcroft, daughter of John and Elizabeth, d. May 31, 1834. .Lnmes Bernard Barcroft. son of .L and E.. d. April 7. 1832: 7y. 10m. 21d. Martha Ann Barcroft. daughter of John and Elizabeth, d. May 26, 1835; 2y. 9m. 16d. Sarah Barcroft, daughter of Ralph L. and M., d. Oct. 8, 1824; 4y. 8m, 5d. 320 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Jane Barger. wife of Valentine, d. Sep. 12, 1853; 69y. 11m. 28d. Jane Bargor, daughter of H. and B., d. July 10. 1S4S; lly. 28d. Nancv Barger, daughter of H. and B., a. July 12, 1848; 3y. 8m. 9d. Peter Bargar, d. Jan. 30, 1800: 71y. Valentine Bargar, d. Sep. 27, 1851; 08y. 11m. 22d. Marv Barnett, wife of James, d. Jan. 21, 1838; OTy. Samuel Barnett, son of William and Phebe, d. March 22. 1842; ly. Im. Mary Ann Beale, consort of John, d. :»Iarch 2. 1S42; 2f.y. Robert Beatty, cL Nov. 15, 1849; 34y. 7m. 7d. Nancy Beebe, wife of Gen. W. B., d. Oct. 13. 1850; 77y. Gen. AValter B. Beebe, d. Jan. 24, 1836; 50y. Mary Ellen Bennett, daughter of Wil- lis W. and Mary, d. Aug. 21, 1830; ly. ■ Im. 8d. Lucinda Bingham, wife of Thomas, Sen., d. Nov. 0, 1844. Hamilton Birch, d. March 27, 1847; OOy. Isabella Birch, wife of Thomas L., d. Nov. 25, 1830; 77y. Elizabeth Blackford, wife of Samuel, d. Oct. 4, 1840; 20y. 3m. 20d. Marj' Bostwick, daughter of S. W. and Ann P. Virginia Bostwick, daughter of S. W. and Ann P., d. Sept. 0, 1831. Adaline Bovd, daughter of J. and M., d. June 21, 1851; 18y. 2ni. 22d. Alice C. Boyd, daughter of J. and M., d. Oct. 28, 1847; 9y. Eliza A. Boyd, daughter of J. and M., d. March 5, 1850; 2]y. lOd. James Boyd, d. Dec. 25, 1851; 40y. ^Margaret Bovd, consort of Thomas, d. May 8, 1831; 37y. Im. 2ed. Marv Jane Boyd, daughter of James and Maria, d. April 19, 1832; 7m. 19d. Crissinda Braden, daughter of J. B. and J., d. May 8, 1842; ly. 10m. 2d. John H. Braden, d, April 24, 1841; 2'4y. Robert Braden, d. March 21, 1839; 05y. Susanna Braden, Avife of James, d. Dec. 22, 1857; Sly. 5m. 2d. Nancv Brothers, d. Oct. 19, 1845; 2y. 2(3d. Sara M. Brothers, daughter of J. and N., d. July 3, 1851: ly. 8m. Od. Rosanuah Moore Bumey, daughter of William and Sarah Moore, and cou- sort of Hugh Burney; [dates goufj. Walter F. Bur well, son of .Joseph and Elizabeth, b. March 4, 1805; d. Jan. 10, 1823. William Bushfield, son of George and Mary, d. Aug. 7, 1828; 10m. 29d. Caroline T. Cady, daughter of J. and C. T., d. Feb. 15. 1845; 2y. Im. lOd. Elizabeth Cady, daughter of J. and C. T., d. Feb. 22, 1848; ly. 5d. John Caldwell, b. June 11. 1780; d. Dec. 10, 1859. William T. Campbell, d. Jan. 26, 1855; 35y. 9m. 23d. Elizabeth Carnahan, daughter of S. and S., d. Oct. 22, 1847; 8y. 7m. 5d. George Carahan. Joseph Carnahan, son of Samuel and Sarah, d. Dec. 24, 1855; 21y. 11m. 23d. Joseph Carnahan. d. Feb. 21, 1852, 82y. Samuel Carnahan, d. Oct. 13, 1851; 87y. Sarah Carnahan, consort of Samuel, d. Oct. 14, 1841; 34y. Eliza J. Putnam Brister. daughter of M. P. and C. 1'., 11 weeks. David Chambers, son of William and Ann, d. Sep. 13, 1821 ; 2y. 7iu. lOd. James W. Christv, son of ^^'. and M., d. Nov. 12, 1849; 20y. Martha Christv, wile of William, d. June 10, 1859: Goy. William Christy, d. April 23, 1856: 63y. Agnes Clandon, wife of James M., d. Nov. 20, 1853; 42y. Id. George G. Clandon, son of James M. and A., d. June 24, 1844; ly. 14d. George S. Clark, d. June 19, 1853; 41y. 27d. Hannah J. Clark, daughter of Joseph and S., d. May 14, 1855; 3y. 11m. Jane (^lark, wife of Joseph, d. July 12, 1844; 37y. Mary Clark, daughter of Samuel and Jane, d. Dec. 18, 1857; ly. 5m. Matthew Clark, d. May IS, 1852; 53y. Im. 22d. Samuel O. Clark, son of Joseph jind CADIZ BURIALS. 321 S.. d. Afnrph 8. 18r)o: 7y. 3ni. Gd. .Toliu R. Clilforil, son of J. and M. A.. d. Get. 14, 1852: lOy. Ann Collins, d. Oct. 17, 1828: Joroniiah Cox, d. May 17, 1825; lly. 2d. Jonathan Cox, d. Aug. 25, 1817; 3y. 9ui. 28d. v<\nn Crabb. d. Juno 10, 1814: 1.3d. ElizalH'tli Ciai?:. wife of John, b. in Washinstcn County, Fa., June 23, 1781; came to Ohio, Oct., 1803; d. Feb. 28, 1SG4. John CraiiT, d. Aug. 22, 1825; 50y. 22d. John Craig, Jr., d. Sep. IG, 1825; 3y. ]m. IGd. Johnson Craic:, son of Johnson and ISIartha. d. Oct. 1, 1837; ly. 4m. 14d. Rachel Craig, d. Aug. 22, 1825; 19y. llm. 5d. Rebecca Craig, daughter of Roland and Susanna, d. Feb. 15. 1832. Roland Crai^-, d. August 24, 1824; 48y. nm. 21d. Susanna Craig, i-elict of Roland, d. July 13, 1S2(>; 48y. Sm. 20d. Tliomas Craig, son of AValter and Elizabeth, d. Jan. 22, 18.38; 18y. Gd. Jane Crawford, consort of Thomas, d. July 2G, 183G: 27y. Hm. 9d. Mvra M. Cra^^■ford, wife of J. R., b. May 6. 1811; d. Nov. 4, 18.33. Jane Croiser, consort of John, d. Sep. 15, 1*^30: 3ny. John AY. Culbertson. son of R. and E., . d. Dec. 12, 1849: Ira. 12d. Sara Dawson, d. Jan. 20, 1858; 78y. Thomas Dawson, d. Jan. 31, KS'iO; 80y. E. IT. Ditmars, d. May 22, 18-52; 22y. Esther B. Doig, Avife of Rev. James R.. d. July G. 1851; .3.5y. Isabella Doucbiss, wife of Samuel, d. .Inly 3. lJv[9: 32y. Sara Hull Iionsrl-iss, daughter of Sam- uel and Isabella, d. July 17, 181G; 8y. Ann Drummond, wife of Samuel, d. July 25, 1844: 44y. James Drummond, Sr., d. March 13, 1830: 83y. Margaret Drummond, d. July 7, 1839; 70y. William H. Duncan, son of Richard and I\r., d. Oct. 1. 1859; 14d. Sarah Dunlap, wife of Joseph, d. May 21 18. 1837: 37y. 4ni. 4d. Ezariah Edwards, d. Oct. 5, 1858; 90y. Henrietta Edwards, wife of Ezariaa, d. March 20, 185 >; 75y. Nancv Farrell, wile of Peter, d. May 12, 1845; 82y. Peter Farrell, d. July 10, 1851; 105y. Im. Edward G. Ferguson, son of S. and H. J., d. June 9, 1852; 4 m. 9d. Lucy M. Fergii.son, daughter of S. and H. J., d. Aug. 2G, 1853: 7y. 25d. Rol-iert Ferguson, d. Feb. 25, 1852; 70y. William Ferguson, d. Dec. 15, 1832; 84y. Thomas Findley, d. Jan. 11, 1847; 40y. Julia Jenette Forties, wife of J. S., d. Nov. 22, 1844: 23y. Sara Jenette Forbes, daughter of J. and S. N., d. July 20, 1848: 9m. Sara N. Forbes, wife of J. S., d. June 25. 1848; 22 v. S. J. Forbes, d. April 2-3, 1818; 21y. Rebecca Ford, wife of John G., d. April 10, 181G: 19y. Mary Ann Fi*ancis, consort of William, d. Feb. 6, 1833; 27y. Mary Frver, wife of Robert, d. May 30, 1837; 45v. Robert Fryer, d. Jan. 28, 1857; GGy. Robert Fulton, son of W. and M., d. April G, 1850; 21v. 9m. 12d. Thon;as Fulton, d. May 2G, 1827; 31y. Abraham Furney, d. August 27, 1842: 84v. Susanna Furney, d. May 28, 1842; 90y. Margaret G vln, d. 18—4; 80y. Marv Gallacher, daughter of James and Elizabeth, d. Jan. 25, 1828. Albert J. Gillespie, son of J. W. and C. A., d. .Inly 15, 1853; 5y. 8m. Id. James P. Gillespie, son of J. W. and C. A., d. Mav 4. 1852; Gy. 6m. 3d. Little Netty Gillespie, d. July G. 1853; 2v. 9m. 4d. • Gilmore, d. March 20, 1840; Elizabeth Buchanan Gilmore, consort of Stimue). d. April 16, 1829; 52y. Francis Giluiove, d. July 8, 18iG; G5y. Rachel Gilmore, daughter of Nathan- iel and Alarv, d. Jan. 5, 1838; 4y. 3m. 5d. Samuel Gilmore, d. Sept. 8, 1814; 44y. 322 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY "A soldior of the war of 1S12." M.'iry Katherine Glass, daiisliter of S."and N., fl. Nov. 7, 1S4G; ly. 7m. 22d. Nancv Glass, wife of S., d. Feb. 11, 1858; 41y. Om. lid. INInrtlias Glassaow, daughter of John W. and Sara W., d. Aug. IS, 1830; ly. Im. Gd. Marvanna Glassgow, daughter of Wil- liaiu and Mary, d. June 12, 1S30; Kiy. 8in. 20d. Elizabeth Jane Gordon, neice of Dr. M. L. and Elizabeth Wilson, d. March 25, 1812: ISy. 7d. Elienezer Gray, Sr., d. Jan. 18, 18G1; 3Sy. 2m. 18d. aiargaret Gray, wife of Ebenezer, d. July 5. 18.52: 75y. Mary Moore Gray, daughter of George and Ann Jane Moore, and wife of John P. Gray; d. Feb. 23, 183G; 22y. James Grimes, son of William and Rebecca, d. July 10. 1841; 24y. Francis Grove, d. March 9, 1844; 62y. 7m. 2Gd. James Harper Guthrie, son of J. W. and E. S.. d. June 12, 1853; 2y. 2m. Infant son of S. and M. Hamilton. Elizabeth Hamilton, consort of Wil- liam, d. Feb. 1, 1829; 51y. 12d. Francis Hamilton, d. March 1, 1844; 77y. Joshua Hamilton, son of G. and M., d. Nov. 4. 1853; Gm. lid. Margaret Hamilton, daughter of Wil- liam and Elizabeth, d. March 15, 1830; 35y. 7d. Margaret Hamilton, wife of Francis, d. Feb. G, 1857; SOy. 5m. 27d. Ruth Hamilon, wife of Francis, d. Oct. 22, 1842; 52y. 7m. Susanna Hamilton, daughter of Wil- liam and Elizabeth, d. Jan. 8, 1837; SGy. 9m. 3d. Andrew Finlev Hauna, d. April 12, 1847; 34y. Ann Leonard Hanua, consort of John; d. ISIarch 23. 1818; 45y. George Hanna, son of A. F. and S., d. .tuly 4. 1842; ly. 5m. James L. Hanna, d. June 11, 1S20; 22y. Sm. lOd. Jamima Hauna, wife of Rev. Thomas, d. .July 14, 1847; 41y, 9m. 15:1. Jane Hanna, daughter of John, d. April 13, 1833; 22y. John Hanna. d. Juno 2, 1847; 73y. 5m. lOd. Marv Hanna, daughter of John, d. Sep. 11, 1820; 20y. Marv Hanna, daughter of A. and S., d."Nov. 13, 1S40: 2y. Gm. Thomas Hanna, son of R. P. and J. E., d. Rep. 17, 1S4S; ly. 10m. 17d. Cassandria Harper, d. July 23, 1852; 48y. James Harper, d. June 4, 1853; 60y. Gm. lUd. Jane S. Harper, daughter of James and Sarah; d. Nov. 10. 1854; 33y. 8m. Id. Samuel Harper, d. July 39, 1849; Sly. lOni. 5d. Sarah Harper, d. Dec. 20, 1837; G4y. 8m. Id. Infant daughter of W. and C. Harshe, d. May 10, 1850; 4d. Eliza Hogg Hatcher, d. June 18, ISGO; 57y. 9m. 25d. Infant daughter of John and Nancy Haverlield, d. Aug. 1, 1849; 5d. Agnes S. Haverfield, wife of John, d. Oct. 28, 1848; 77y. Alvan Haverfield, son of John and Nancy, d. Aug. 11. 1844; 2y. Catharine Haverfiiolil, wife of Joseph, d. Aug. 20, 1852; G5y. Elizabeth Haverfield, wife of W., d. Dec. 23. 1855; 84y. Isabella Haverfield, daughter of James and Martha, d. Jan. 3, 1855: ly. 3m. 19d. .John Haverfield, d. Aws. 23. 1855; 77y. Joseph Haverfield, d. March 31, 1S52; Gly. 11m. 3d. Martha Haverfield, wife of James N., d. Jan. 28, 1857; 29y. 11m. Id. INtary Haverfield. daughter of John and Nancv, d. Oct. 4, 1845; ly. William Haverfield, d. June 14, 1859. Ellen Healea. consort of Thomas, d. April 20, 1840; 20y. Prudence Hedges, daughter of Samrel and Prudence, d. Oct. 21, 1840; 17y. lira. 12d. Alexander Henderson, d. Oct. 24, 1842; 55y. CADIZ BURIALS. 323 Mary Ann Henderr-nn. wife of John N., d. Sell. 30, 1^54: .":0y. VAk\. Mary K. HoiuliTSon, wife of John N., d. May 2!), 1850; 24y. 4m. Thomas Henderson, d. June 9, 1852; 70y. Eli/.alieth Hitchcock, danshter of Samuel and Isnbelhi, d. Jan. 17, 180-; ITy. lUm. 12d. Isabelhi Hitchcock, wife of Samuel, d. Feb. 24, 1851; 63y. Emley Holfman, daughter of J. and S., ("1. Dec. 22, 1850, 18y. Im. 12d. I'ercival Thomas Hogg, son of Thomas and 10., d. Aug. 10, 1825: ly. Im. Od. Thomas Hosg, d. April 14, 18.53; 55y. 7m. 14d. William Henrv Hocrg, son of Thomas and E., d. Oct. 2U, "l8:;7; 8y. 2m. 27d. Infant daughters uf J. and E. Howard, d. Aug. 2^, 18.52, and Aug. 3, 1852. Joshua Ho^vard, d. July 31, 1S5!J; 32y. 10m. 5d. Martlia Howard, wife of Joshua, d. July 8, 18(50; 33y. 11m. 12d. Mary Howard, daughter of Joshua and Martha, d. Aug. 4, 3853; 4j'. 11m. 23d. Henry Houser, d. Sep. 23, 1855; (JUy. Dydia Houser, wife of Gasaway, d. March 28, 1844; 37y. Susanna Houser, wife of Henry, d. ^ilarch 11, lS(i7; 7Gv. Susan Hovt, d. Feb. 0, 1843; 29y. 11m. fid. Clarissa D. Hull, consort of John, d. Dec. 13. 1837; ISy. Im. 3d. Daniel K. Hull, son of Jolm S. and Mary Ann, d. Aug. 27, 1843; Gm. 19d. John R. Hull, son of John and Clar- issa D., d. March 13, 1838; 3m. lOd. .John C. Hunter, son of J. S., d. Dec. 2B. 1849: 21y. Id. Andrew Jamison, d. April 27, 1854; 6()y. Ann .Jamison, wife of John, Sen., d. Aug. 30. 1817; 67y. Barclay Jamison, .son of A. and A., d. Oct. 13. 1857; ly. 5m. 2d. John Jamison, Sen., d. Oct. IG, 1848; 74y. Martlia Jamison, consort of Walter, d. Noy. 23. 1S5G; 28y. Mary Jamison, daughter of Joseph and C. d. Sep. 8, 1858; 7m. 8d. Nancv Jamison, dauuiiter of A. an 1 M.. d. Oct. 14, 18.52; lOy. Oliyer Jamison, son of Andrew and A., d. Sep. 30, 1857; 3y. 8m. 20d. Walter Jamison, son of Walter and jNIartha. d. INiarch 1, 1835: 8m. 3d. Willard G. .Tamison. son of James K. and E., d. Noy. 23. 185G: Im. 7d. William R. .Tamison. son of J. and S., d. August 17, 1849; 5y. 10m. lid. Martha Jewett. daughter of Thomas L. and Anne, Gy. 7m. Briceland Johnson, son of James and Ann, d. Dec. 27, 1832; 5y. 3ra. 14d. Edward Johnson, son of W. and S.. d. Feb. 6, 1854; 5y. Im. 7d. George H. Johnston, son of John and Eleanor, d. May IG, 1834; 21y. Margaret Johnson, wife of Nicholas, d. Oct. 2. 1837: (ISy. 8m. 2d. - Rebecca F. .Tolins n. f'aught?r of West- comb, d. Oct. 27, 18G0; 4y. 8m. 5d. '\^'estcomb Johnson, d. August 10, 1859, 47y. Dr. William Johnson^ d. Dec. 27, 183S; 37y. Calyin Jones, d. Dec, 183G: 3"^-. Actia Junldns, consort of Adnn, d. Jan. 8, 1829; 39y. 25d. INIary J. Junkins, daughter of Adam and Actia, d. Nov. 6, 1828; 11m. 2d. M. E. Junkins. d. April 2, 182G; 3ui. 27d. Samuel P. Junkins, son of Adam and Actia, d. May G, 1825; 4y. 8d. Ilenaby Kerr, a native of Dumfries, Scotland: d. July 12. 1857: 3Gy. Mary Kllgore, consort of Daniel, b. May 18. 1800; d. Feb. 3, 1825; 24y. 8m. IGd. Mary Kilgore, b. .Tan. 16, 1S52; d. May 19, 1857. Mnry I'ritchard Tvilgore, daughter of Daniel and jNfary, b. Jan. 23, 1825: d. April 25. 1827. William Philander Tvilgore, son of Daniel and Mary, b. March 2. 1820; d. Sep. 30, 1821. Catherine Kimble, d. July 31. 1830; 63y. Munson King, son of .Toll and E., d. July 13, 1830; ly. 2ra. 8d. Solomon Iving, son of Job and E., d. Sep. 28, 1833; .3y. Im. 3d. 324 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Amanda Knox, d. May 9. 1856. Arthur Knox. d. Aiicr. 2:? i«57. K.sther Knox, d. June 27, 1S3C. Esther Knox, AvitV or ^\ ililam, d. March 2, 18(;3; 78y. Margaret Knox, dnu'^hter of James and Sarah, d. June 11, 1830: 2y. 3m. Rev. William Knox, d. June 16, ISol; 84y. Elizabeth Lacey, daughtei- of Anna and John, d. Feb. 15, 1823: ly. 2m. — d. William Lacey, d. May 17, 1828; 64y. Edward T,alferty, d. Nov. 8, l?3ii: 47y. Jane Lafferty, daughter of Edward and INIargaret, d. Jan. 21, 1835; llv. 3m. 21 d. Samuel Laffertv, d. An7y. Samuel B. McFadden, d. March 19, 1S55; 7(iy. Samuel D. McFadden, son of N. and E., d. Feb. 17, ISGU; 24 y. 10m. 27d. Sarah McP'adden, daughter of S. and I.., d. Feb. 2, 1^47 ; 4Uy. Jolm B. McGreAV, Jr. b. Nov. 30, 1844; d. Sep. cA), 1845. Benezer McKinnia, d. June 12, 1847; :ny. Hester Maholm, wife of Samuel, d. Sep. 22, 1850; 53y. Jolm Maholm, d. Sep. 9, 18.54; 59y. Margaret Maholm, d. Aug. 18, 1858; 68y. Martlia Maholm, daughter of Samuel and H., d. Aug. 19, 18.30; ly. 20d. Sarah Maholm, d. J^'ily, .1848; 45y. Sarah Maish, wife of Joseph, d. Nov. 21, ]S49: 24y. George Mahood, d. Dec. 17, 1831; 52y. Nancy Mahood, wile of James, d. June 24, 1844; 24y. Lorenzo Mariner, son of Samuel and Ciscelia, d. Feb. (3, 1831; 3m. 18d. Anna Martin, d. April 3, 185(3; 5t3y. Agnes J. Maxwell, daughter of J. C. and M., d. Dec. 21, 1852; 3y. Rebecca Mayes, consort of John, d. Feb. 24, 1817; 29y. 8m. 24d. Samuel Mealey, d. Nov. 25, 1850; 49y. eb. 4, 1810; 25y. 2m. 14d. James D. ]SIe<4c, d. May 22, 18:J5; 4y. Joseph jNIeelj, d. July 23, 1833; 34y. 10m. 29d. Alf.ed P. Meeks, d. May. 5, 1835; 8y. 10m. Joseph Mehollin, d. March 14, 1853; (iOy. Jane Miller, wife of William, d. Jan. 8, 1835; 21y. 4m. John Miller, d. Feb. 5, 1838; 76y. 4ni. 9d. Margaret Miller, d. Sep. 14, 185G; 27y. INIargaret Miller, daughter of James and Susan, d. Marcli 17, 1832; 2m. 13d. Marv Miller, Avife of John, Sr., d. Sep. 23, 1850; 97y. Mary Miller, daughter of J. and S., d. March 15, 1832; 4y. 10m. Id. Reliecca J. Miller, daughter of James and Susan, d. ilarch 19, 1832; lOm. 16d. Samuel Miller, son of S. and S., d. Sep. 12, 1828; 7m. 13d. Sarah Miller, daughter of J. and S., d. Dec. 15, 1830; 4y. 11m. lid. Thomas Miller, d. July 25, 1841; 30y. 4m. l(3d. Infant daughter of William and Lydia ?tlillisan, d. May 11. 1827. Alexander Milligan, d. Jan. 29, 1J^28; 39y. Sn]. 20d. David Milligan, Sr., d. Dec. 8, 1833; S4y. Lvdia Milligan, d. Feb. 11, 1838; 38v. 11m. 7d. Marv Milligan, daughter of William and Lydia. d. Dec. 14, 1837; 3m. 15d. Hannah INIitchell, consort of James, d. ?>lay 6, 1824; 38y. Ann .Tane Moore, wife of George, d. August 30, 1839; 59y. Elizaljoth Moore, wife of John, d. Sep. 9, 1850; 38y. Elizabeth INIoore, daughter of AVilliam and Sarah, d. Sep. 22, 1825: 18y. f^porge INIoore. d. May 19. lS-\5: ()2y. Hans W". Moore, son of Hans and Caroline, d. May 25. 1845; Om. 2d. Marv E. Monro, daughter of A. F. and S..'d. March 25, 1852; ly. Im. 4d. Robert Moore, d. Nov. 16, 1837; 30y. Sarah C. jNloore. wife of A. F.. b. S(>p. 12, 1823; d. March, 25, 1852. William Moore, d. 1847; (i8y. George Os-levee. sen of J. and E. A., d. Ain-il 3. 1857; lly. Elousia Olmstead, daughter of Piatt 326 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Bennett, b. Dec. 16. 1793; d. Feb. 17, IcSoG. Jfsse Olmstead, son of .7ohn and Ehmsia, d. April 21, 1837; 21y. 2m. 2 Id. .Jo]in Olrastead, b. Feb. IS, 1782; d. .Tune 11, 1850. Ziva Bennett Olmstead, son of Elousia, d. Oct. 23, 1823; 3y. Sm. Charlotte Osborn, daiigliter of Samuel and C, d. August G, 1828; 6m. 16d. Hannah Osborn, wife of Samuel, d. Nov. 15, 1828; 41y. 7m. lOd. -James Osborn, son of Samuel and Hannah, d. May 22, 1823; 8m. C>d. .John Osburu, son of J. and C. d. Nov. 22, 1831; 19y. 11m. 8d. Samuel Osborn, b. Feb., 1781, d. Feb. 26, 1846. L Parr, dau'jjliter of Thomas and Sara, d. Dec. 10, 1825; 11m. Id. Elizabeth J. Parrish, daughter of Ben- jamin and Katharine, d. April 30, 1 Ou.i , <)J . Charlotte Patton, wife of Dr. K. W., d. Sep. 26, 1848; .34y. 2m. John S. Patton, son of J. and N., d. Nov. 9, 1841; ly. 10m. Martha A. Patton, Daughter of J. and N., d. Sep. 2. 1841; 4v. 8)n. Thomas Patton, d. Feb. 28, 1832; 63y. 3m. 22d. Sarah Paxton, wile of R., daughter of Richard McCullough, d. Jan. 3, 18.55; 27y. John A. Peppard, son of S. G. and S. C b. March 14, 1853; d. Nov. 28. 1853. Samuel G. Peppard, Esq., b. D?c. 29, 1817; d. Dec. 5, 1855: Elizabeth Pepper, consort of Henry, d. Dec. n, 1851; 57y. 3m. 20d. Ada W. Phillips, daughter of B. W. and M., d. Oct. 9, 1854; 2y. 11m. 14il. Sarah Phillip.s, daughter of .John and Eliza, d. May 31. 1835; 10m. lid. James Poii:er, d. March 20, 1842; 37y. James Porter, son of D. and T., d. Sep. 21, 1847; ly. 9m. 14d. Samuel Porter, son of James, d. Jan. 11, 1835; lOy. 19d. C. S. Price, wife of B. W., d. Mav 30, 1857; 40y. Id. Jessie Pritchard, d. Jan. 6, 1835; 32y. Gm. 3d. Sarah Pritchard, davghter of John and Sarah, b. Aug. 11, 1814; d, June 4, 1820; 5y. 9m. 24d. William T. Pugh. son of E. M. and M. A., d. May 21. 18r.4; 5y. 9m. '.) !. E!i/ah(>th Rabe. consort of John. d. July 30, 1820; 72y. 2m. 4d. Isahella Ramsoj% wile of Ben'amiu, d. March 31, 1846; 49y. Sarali Ramsey, daughter of .J. and S., d. Dec. 29. 1851; 29y. 7m. 284. Sarah .\nn Ramsey, daughter of J. and N., d. July 26, 1850; 8m. 14d. J.'nnes Rankin, d. Sep. 23, 1823; 7(iy. Infant son of John S. and Sara Rea. — Adaline Rea. daughter of John and Sarah, d. May 24, 1835; 2y. 6m. 27d. MtivY Richey, wife of Thomas, d. Aug. 2, 1S2;',; .52y. Thomas Richey, d. Sep. 29, 1824: 55y. George W. Riley, d. June 8, 1835; 21 v. 9m. 29d. N. Riley. Sr., d. .July 18. 18.52; 83y. Nancv Riley, wile of Nathan, d. Feb. 13, I860: 76y. Margaret Ritchie, wife of John, d. Dec. 29, 1853; 63y. Jolin Robinson, d. Jan. 26, 1838; 44y. 5m. 13d. Mary Jane Rohiuson. daugliter of John and Susanna, d. Jan. 30, 1823; 2v. 2m. lid. INIary J. Robinson, daughter of J. and S.. d. April 7, 1832; Oy. 8m. 27d. Infant daitghter of J. J. and E. A. Rose, d. I>ec. 2, 1854; Im. 9d. John M. Rose, son of J. J. and E. A., d. April 16, 1857; 8m. 24d. James Ross, d. May 7, 1832; 27y. 8m. 5d. -John Ross, d. Sep. 8, 1833; 82y. 11m. 2.5d. .John Sankey, d. April 17, 1821: 4m. 17d. Robert Sankey, d. Nov. 18, 1820; 19y. llm. 24d. Elizalieth Scoles, Avife of Curtis W., d. July 18, 1833; 24y. 5m. Kid. Eleanor Scott, daughter of James and Harriet, d. Sep. 3. 1823; Idni. James Sharp, d. Jan. 6, 1838; 5y. 3m. Jane Shaii), wife of Thomas, d. April 24, 1859; 93y. 3m. 24d. CADIZ BURIALS. 327 and 57y. and 1S47; John C. Sharp, son of "William and M., d. Nov. '_>•"), IS.'il; 14y. oiu. lod. Joseph Sharp, sou of T. and J., d. iNIay 13, 18oo; 17y. 8iu. 21 d. Joseph Sharp, Sarah Sharp, danahtor of Thomas J., d. Sep. 4. 1831: 18y. 8m. ;;d. Thomas Sharp, d. Dec. 29, 1825, 5m. lid. Marv Shotwell, daughter of S. B. N. G., d. IMarch 2, 1854: KUn. Walter B. Shotwell, d. May 21, IGy. William Shotwell. d. Dec. 1, 1849; 25y. William Shotwell, d. Jan. 21, 185Y; 57y. Ann Slemmons. wife of M. G., d. March 2(1, 1857: 39y. John Slemmons, d, l^eb. 23. 1810; 25y. John D. Slemmons, son of William K. and Nancy, d. Aug. 31, 1821; 13y. 9m. 27d. William Slemmons, son of ]\I. G., d. May 23, 184G; ly. 3m. 2Ud. William Slemmons, son of B. and S., d. Aug. 19, 1848: 19y. William R. Slemmons, d. Dec. G, 1841; <51y. Elizabeth J. Sloan, daughter of Mat- thew and Elizabeth, d. March 23, 1842; 3y. fim. 5d. Samuel Smiley, son of J. V. and J. Sarah M. Smiley, daughter of J. V. and J., d. April 23, 1S51; 3y. 11m. William Smiley, sou of J. V. and J., d. May 10, 18.54; 24y. Rossweil C. Smith, son of .J. INI. and R., d. July 29. 1850; 9y. 7m. 2d. Samxiel Smith, Rachel Snider, wife of Samuel, daugh- ter of W. and S. Moore, b. March 13, 1819. d. Oct. 18. 1847. Samuel Snider, d. Dec. 18, 1854; 45y. Marv Spear, consort of John. d. June 1, 1826: -l.5y. ,lohn Steward, d. Feb. 13, 1S2G; i>m. ')d. .Tohn Steward, d. August 28, 1835 Maruaret Strausbaugh. ('auahter and B., d. July 19. Josei)h Wilson Stubl and Frith, d. May Alexander Taggart, 32y. 29y. ; 7-Jy. of V. 1848; 27y. 25d. ins. son of Henry 7, 1830; ;',0d. d. Aug. 13, 1S3G; .Mary Eliza Taggart, daughter of Alex- ander and C. 11., d. .July 24, 183G; 2y. Samuel David Taggart, son of A. and C. II.. d. July 31, 183G; 4y. Infant daughter of J. and E. Thomp- son. David Thomiison, d. June IG, 1855; 49y. Sm. 13cl. Frank S. Thompson, son of S. and S. J., d. Sep. 10, 185G; ly. 7m. 3d. Jane Thompson, wife of James W., d. May 14, 1829; 52y. Charles Timmons, d. Eli Timmons, d. April 27, 1829; 33y. 3m. 21 d. Eliza Timmons, daughter of Eli and Naomi, and niece of John S. Lacey, d. July IG, 1832; 19y. Frederick Timmons, d. 32y. 4m. 21d. Katherine Timmons, Dec. 6, 1837; dau! Jan. •hter of ol, 18ol ; of Charles, d. wife of Eli, d. of W. Charles and Mary, d. 28y. 5m. 4d. Mai'y Timmons, wife Aug. 5, 1850: 75y. Marv Anil Timmons Dec. 17, 1848; 2(iy. Anna Mary Tipton, daughter and M. E., d. Feb. 13, 1859; 17d. • Elizabeth Tipton, daughter of J. and n., d. May 24, 181G; .jy. Gm. 3d. John Tipton, d. Jan. 11, 1815; 30y. lOd. Ruth IMpton. wife of John, d. March 22. 1849; 38y. 20d. Elizabeth Vandergraft, daughter of Jacob and Elizabeth, d. Feb. 10, 1838; 5y. Im. 2Gd. IMary jNIatilda H. Yandolah, daughter ol^ Peter and Nancy, d. May IS, 1824; ly. Gm. 28d. Nimrod Waaers, d. July 29, 1841; 32v. ]2d. .Tames Walker, d. April 18, 1852; 73y. Sara Walker, wife of James, d. Dec. 28, 18.58; 79y. Jamima Wallace, daughter of Robert and Albina. d. June 17, 18G0. J. R. Wallace, b. JNlav. 1, 1809; d. Oct. 29, 184G Mary Wallace, consort of John R., d. Julv 17,. 1834; 29v. William Wallace, d. May 28, 1810; SSy. 2m. 14d. Sarah T. AValler, d;iughter of Samuel 328 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY and Amy Rose, d. June 13, 1848. Al- so sou, Feb. 7, 1850. Kiitler J. Ward, d. Dec. 1, 1844; 22y. Maria Weaver, cousort of John, d. Aug. S, 1S41; 20y. Im. 28d. Eliza Welch, wife of Rcziu, d. Aus?. (j, 1842; 41y. J.nmos Welch, son of B. and J., d. May 27, ]84<); 27y. " Rev. .Tohusou Welch, d. April 7, 1837; 27y. 7ui. 2d. .Taue Welliui?, wife of D., d. June 2G, 1844; 32y. IMiiruaret Welling, wife of David, Joseph Wells, son of Thomas W. and Elciinor, d. Jan. 19, 1832; 5m. 19d. Hannah White, d. Jan. 1. 1849; 75y. Eleanor ^Vilkin, d. June 24, 1817. Matthew Wilkin, d. Aug. 15, 1835; G4y. Mary ^^'illiams, wife of J., d. April 27, 1848; 29y. 3m. 2(;d. Infant son of T. A., and S. A. Wilson, d. April 23, 18(59. David Wilson, son of William and Lydia, d. Oct. 1, 1837; 4y. 2m. 4d. Elizabeth Wilson, wife of Dr. M. L., d. Aug. 10. 18.58; 74y. James Wilson, d, Dec. 0, 1839; G2y. 2m. Ud. Jane Wilson, wife of James, d. March 31, 1833; 50y. Gm. Dr. Martin L. Wilson, b. May 15, 1785; d. .Tan. 10, 1872; H7y. Tliomas L. Birch ^^'il.'■■on, son of Dr. Martin L. and Elizabeth, d. July 25, 1825; 6 weeks, 2d. liUcilla Caroline Young, d. April 29, 1834; 33y. BURIALS IN THE NEW GRAVE- YARD AT CADIZ. [So Far as the Graves are Marked.] Frank S. Adams, b. March 13, 18G7; d. June 30, 1891. Mary Adams, daughter of William and Matilda, d. Feb. 23, 18(J2; 22y. Matilda Adams, wife of William, d. Dec. 17, 18G8; G7y. Elizabeth Allen, wife of C. N., d. Nov. 4. 1863; 36y. 6m. Teresa J. Allen, dauglrter of C. N. and E., d. March IG, 1,S57; 5y. 2m. 7d. Virginia Alkn, daughter of C. N., d. , 18-: 2y. 23d. Alexander M. Amspoker, d. Nov. 20, 1889; 83y. Mary Amspnker, wife of Alexander, d. April (5, 1867; (!5y. Sanuiel Wilmer Atkinson, son of B. F. and Eliza A., d. July 27, 18G2; 13y. Gm. 27d. Stella Auld, daughter of E. M. and S. J., d. Sep. 18, 1877; ly. Im. 19d. Mary Barr, wife of AV. A., b. Oct. 2, 1844; d. May 9, 1879. Henry Barricklow. d. Feb. 28, 1873; 3(iy. John Barricklow, d. July 21, 1875; 71y. 9m. 3d. Mai-y Ann Barricklow, wife of John, d. July 21, 1875: 74y. 5m. 14d. Richard P. BarrickloAV, son of G. W. and R. E., b. July 23, 1871; d. Oct, 8, 1890. Jane Ann Bayless, d. Nov. 24, 18G4; 19y. 4m. 17d. Arter Reatty, b. Jan. 25, 1827; d. Feb. 11, 1894. Kate Beatty, daughter of Arter and Susan, b. Nov. 16, 1Sj3; d. Apiil 1, 1877. Lizzie M. Beatty, daughter of Arter and Susan, b. Nov. 12; 1865; d. April 11, 1877. Maria B. Beebe, d. Aug. 10, 1891; GOy. Rezin AVelch Beebe, son of Stuart and Aniauett; d. Dec. 31, 1874; 2y. 8m. George S. Bell, d. Aug. 3, 1897; 23y. Gm 15d. Jennie L. Biager. wife of John, d. June 30, 1871; 25y. 8m. Joseph C. Bigger, d. Dec. 4, 1870; 29y. 5m. 13d. Sarah H. Bigger, b. Dec. 22, 1809; d. Oct. 7, 1875. Robert Birney, born Sep. 9, 1811; d. Dec. 4, 1884. Albion W. Bostwick. Captain of Com- panv G, 74th O. V. I., d. Dec. 10. 18G2; 35y. 10m. lOd. Clai-ence E. Bostwick, son of Albion and Mar3% d. Oct. 15. 1861; 5y. Im. 5d. Samuel W. Bostwick, d. Oct. 6, 1867; CADIZ BURIALS. 329 G9.T. Itobert Bowland, b. 1708; d. 1880. Fruuk Boyles, b. July U, 1S51; d. Sep. 1, 185G. Heury Boylos, b. Jan. 5, 1814; d. July 8, 18!)L'. Maitlui Boyles, wile of Henry, b. May 12, lSi:0; d. April 4, 1S74. Martha Boylis, b. Aug. 112, 1853; d. May 3, 1874. William 11. Boyles, b. July G, 1840; d. April IS, 18!J7. Isabull N. Bradeu, daughter of R. L. aud L. E., d. Oct. 20, 1804; Oy. liu. 7d. James Bradeu, b. July 3, 1802; d. June 28, 1.S78. Melissa Braden, wife of D. B., d. May 14, 1880; 4i;y. S. M. Bradeu, wife of D. B., b. July 2, 1812; d. April 10, 1805. Elijah B. Breuau, d. March 15, 187(3; r.i^y. David Bricker, son of Johu and Anna, d. June 27, 1878; 44y. (Jm. 2(id. Johu Br.c.er, d. March 27, 18U1; 67y. loiii. l!td. Luciuda Bricker, daughter of Henry aud Mary A., and wile of John Bncker, d. May 1:4, 1871; 8tjy. Im. iiu. Lydia Bricker, wife of Heury, d. Jan. 0, 18(i5; (i8y. Sm. 21 d. Ann Brindley, d. May 27. 1810; d. Oct. t>, 1889. John Brindley, Jr., b. Feb. 5. 1844; d. Oct. 14, 1880. Laura E. Brothers, daughter of John and Nancy, d. Sep. 10, 1801; ly. 7m. 3.jd. Mary E. Brothers, f^aus-hto'- of .1. and N., d. Sep. 22, 18(51; 5y. Cm. 13d. Ida F. li. BioAv'u, v, ue or i/r. f?. IL, and daughter of F. aud M. Hamil- ton, d. Feb. 17, 1871; 21y. 10m. 23d. Dr. S. H. Brown, b. July 4, 1840; a. March 27, 1882. Louisa Brvan, wife of William XL, d. May 4, 1800; 2Sy. Mattie M. Bryan, daughter of Richai'd and Ella C, b. Oct. 20, 18G5; d. Dec. 21, 1805. Sarah A. Bryan, daughter of G. W^ and S., b. Dec. 15. 1834; d. Nov. 27, 1S81. Susanna Brvan, wife of G. W., b. March IS. 1811; d. Jan. 15, 1882. William H. Bryan, son of G. W. and S., b. Feb. 7, 183(;; d. April 14, 1873. Wilmer E. Brvan, son of U. and E., b. Feb. 23, 1870; d. Aug. 10, 1872. Enoch Bulger, b. July 2, 1810; d. May 2, 1881. Susanna Bulger, b. Oct. 19, 1828; d. May 8, 1SS7. Annie L. Bushv, wife of G, W., d. Aug. 17, 1890; 26v. 8m. 14d. C. S. Cady. [No dates]. J. Cadv. [No dates]. J. R. Cady. [No dates]. INIargaret Cady, wife of John, d. May IS, 1804: 99y. Thomas Cadv, son of William and Rachel, d. Aug. 27, 1804; 9y, 4m. Anna E. W. Campbell, first wife of S. S., d. April 1. 1872; 37y. Mary L. Campbell, second wife of S. S.. d. .June 3, 1880; 4.3v. S. S. Campbell, d. .Jan. 4, 1895; 71y. George D. Carnahan, d. May 14, 1845; 2v. lid. . David S. Cnrrick, b. April 1, 1782; d. Dec. 25, 1803. Elizabeth Carriok. wife of David S., b. Aug. 20, 1794; d. Nov. 15. 1873. Rebecca Carrick, wife of William, d. July 3. 1872; 4Gy. Sm. 25d. Elijah Carson, d. Nov. 21, 1887; 77y. 7m. 9d. James N. Carson, b. 1S49; d. 1883. Margaret ^I. Carson, wife of Elijah, d. Nov. 8, 1884; Sly. 9m. 18d. Mariraret Carson, wife of W. N., b. 1824; d. 1885. William .1. Carson, son of E. and M,, d. at Dist. San Vincenti INIinoral San Rafael, State of Sinaloa, Republic of INIexico, Dec. 10, 1872; 40y. 8m. 8d; his remains were taken up by his brother, A. W. Carson, and brought to the United States and interred here, Sep. 20, 1870. Elizabeth Cassell, wife of Jacob, d. April IS, 1807; 03y. 3d. .Jacob Cassell, d. June 7, 1881; Sly. 8m. 22d. Jennie M. Chanev. darghter of N. and J. M., d. May 17, 1878; 12y. 7m. 3d. HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY J. W. Chaney, Company C, 5th Ohio Cavalry. Jaue Chirk, wife of Matthew, d. Oct. 5, 1S(;9; 70y. Clara Cochran Clark, wife of Oliver, b. April 3, ISoO; d. Jan. 20, 1878. Ephram Clark b. Feb. 19, 1S2U; d. Oct. 10, 1886. John M. Clark, b. April 12, 1849; d. April 24. 1871. John B. Clark, b. Oct. 9, 1827: d. Jan. 13, 1872; Colonel of the 126th and 193rd Pennsylvania Volunteers from 1863 to 1864. Oliver T'laik, b. Dec. 9, 1847; d. March 3, 1804. Retta A. Clark, b. May lO, 1C42; d. April 22, 1S60. William James Clark, b. March, 1835; d. Anc. 4, 1882. Jolm Clifl'ord, son of J. and M. A., d. Sep. 1, 18C.3: 9m. Jolm C. Clifford, d. June 13, 1866; 27y. 10m. 22d. Marv Ann Clifford, wife of John, Jr., d. Sep. 2. 1863: 84y. Mary Clifford, wife of John, Sr., d. March 24, 1865; 74y. Mary Clifford, dauijhter of J. and M. A., d. July 30, 1875: 20y. 4m. 6d. J. F. Clokey, Company F, 7th Mo. Cavalry. Eleanor Cochran, damrliter of Robert and Sarah, b. Feb. 11, 1808; d. Sep. 17, 1867. Robert Cochran, b. Sep. 15, 1771; d. Feb. 1, 1862. Sarah Co(hran, wife of Ro^iert, b. Jan. 8, 1787; d. April 4. 1867. Abraham Coleman, Company C, 13th O. V. I. Fannv Bell Conwell, dansiiter of J. and" M. .L, d. June 9, 1857; 4y. 3m. 6d. Rebecca Conwell, b. March 16, 1814; d. June 7, 1886. WiUiam IT. Conwell, d. Dec. 7, 1861; r.v. 10m. 2(1. Frank G. Corbly, b. Feb. 8, 1871; d. Jan. 6, 1875. Georse D. Corbly, b. Sep. 19, 1872; d. Am;. 27, 1873. Nettie B. Corbly, b. Feb. 22, 1874; d. Sep. 6, 1892. Elizabeth Cox, b. Jan. 1, 1801; d. ,iau. 31, 1879. Jacob Crabb, b. Apiil IS, 1815; d. Apr.l 24, 1872. Jane D. Crabb, wiie of Jacob, d. Dec. 9, 1SS9. Hannah H. Craiir, wife of Walter, b. March 10, 1826; d. .Inly 27, 1879. Jane Craig, wife of Walter, d. July 12, 18.59; 36y. 6m. lOd. Johnson Craig, b. Dec. 3, 1803; d. July 14, 1888. Martha Craig, wife of Johnson, b. Dee. 26, 1810; d. July 16, 1890. Nannie N. Craig, daughter of Walter and Hannah H., d. July 20. 18G3; ly. 25d. Sarah J. Craig, daughter of Walter and Jaue, d. Dec. 5, 1857; 13y. Im. lOd. Eleanor Crawford, wife of Thomas, d. Nov. 16, 1889; 83y. 11m. 8d. Elizabeth Crawford, wife of John, b. Dec. 2, 1827; d. Aug. 11, 1877. Eizabeth J. Crawford, daughter of T. and E., d. March 27, 1864; 21y. 8m. Id. Hattie R. Crawford, daughter of J. and E., b. Mav 16. 1860; d. March 12. 1878. Thomas Crawford, d. Sep. 23, 1893; 88v. 9m. 20d. William Croskey, d. July 3, 1872; 79y. Rebecca Crundev, wife of John, d. June 30, 1870; 4Sy. 4m. 27d. David Cummins, b. March 9, 1822; d. July 12. 1894. Bessie C. Cunningham, daughter of David and Laura, b. May 8, 1873; d. Feb. 17, 1885. John Cunningham, son of David and Mary Mcliaughlin Cunningham, b. Oct. 29, 1808; d. Aug. 18, 1870. Nancy ShariJ Cunulnirham, wife of John, d. Oct. 10, 1S75; (i.5y. William S. Cunningham, son of David and Laura, d. Aug. 4. 1865; 9m. 12d. Anne Curtis, wife of Alexander, b. April 11, 1831; d. July 9, 1875. Henry G. Dallas, b. May 2L 1835; d. March 22, 1875. Elizabeth I)av( nport. wife of Jolm S., d. Dec. 18, ISSii. John S. Davenport, a native of Stock- V CADIZ BURIALS. 3"'! port, EnglauJ; d. Nov. 23, 1870; 59y. 10m. Sd. Elizabeth Daviilsun, AA-ife of Robert, d. Nov. 2(), IS.l.j; 74y. Robert David.sou, d. Dee. 20, 1805; S8y. 10m. 24d. Henry S. Davis, sou of Heury and Eliza, d. Nov. (i, 1801; 3y. 3m. lOd. Martha E. Denny, wife of Henry AV., d. Feb. 12, 1882; 24y. 3m. 12d. Alfred W. Dent, b. ]March 11, 1823; d. Sep. 2, 1880. Sarah Dent, wife of Alfred W., b. July 20. 1817: d. Got. 14, 18G8. Maigaret Devine, d. Aug. 26, 18G5; 69y. Charles Edward Dewey, b. Dec. 19, 187.'); d. Aug. 5, 1870. Chauneey Dewey, b. March 27, 1796; d. Feb. 5, IS'SO. Elijihalet C. Dewey, b. Dec. 16, 1823; d. Feb. 28, 1889. Nancy Prichard Dewey, wife of Chauneey, b. Oct. 27, 1804; d. Sep. 6. 1897. Sarah Knox Dewev, wife of E. C, b. July 10, 1823: d. .Ian. 15, 1876. Anna M. Diekerson, daughter of G. M. and L. B., b. March 21, 1882; d. July 8, 1893. Catherine Diekerson, b. Feb. 1, 1851; d. July 14, 1859. Granville M. Diekerson, d. Feb. 1.3, 1882; 26y. 10m. lOd. Maggie E. Diekerson, daughter of Rev. S. R. and J. J., b. Nov. 22, 1857; d. Nov. 15, 1872. George Dowuard, Company C, 12Gth Ohio Infantry. Catheran Drummond, wife of Rev. J., b. Jan. 27, 1805; d. Sep. 2, 1883. James Drummond, M. D., D. D., d. May 10, 1888; 80y.; was a physician 10 years, a minisler 52 years. Hugh Dunlap, b. Oct. 17, 1822; d. March 29, 1894. Isaac Eddy, Company B, 126th Ohio Infantry. Rev. Edward Ellison, D. D., d. March 10, 1883; 53y. Im. 19d. Amanda J. Estop, Avife of Josiah, b. Sep. 23, 1S37; d. March 2.3, 1S!)8. Clara Estep, b. May 26, 1862; d. Aug. 11, 1863. Emma F. Estep, b. Oct. 22, 1879; d. July 21, 1880. Josiah M. Estep, b. Feb. 19, 1826; d. May 5, 1888. Hannah Farr, daughter of J. and R., d. May 26, 1878; lOy. 11m. 21d. Rachel Farr, wife of John H.; d. Nov. :H), 1873; 3.5y. 8m. 12d. Charles Ferguson, son of S. and H. J., b. March 17. 1856; d. Feb. 21. 18^0. EdAvin G. Ferguson, son of S. and li. J., b. Feb. 1, 1852; d. June 9, 1852. Lucy Mav Ferguson, daughter of S. and H. J., b. Dec. 31, 1848; d. Aug. 26, 1S53. H. J. Ferguson, wife of Samuel, b. April 4, 1819; d. Oct. 26, 1890. Robert Ferguson, d. Feb. 25, 1852; 70y. Samuel Ferguson, b. Sep. 6, 1823; d. Oct. 29, 1895. Turner Ferguson, son of S. and H. J., b. May IS, 1854; d. Oct. 5. 1861. Margaret Finney, Avife of R. T., d. Jan. 23, 1865; Sly. Robert Finnical, b. April 4, 1818; d. Dec. 22, 189(). John Fogle, Sergeant Company B, 30th Ohio Infantry. H. G. Forker, b. Nov. 19, 1S3S; d. Jan. 25, 1896. ]\[aiT Forker, d. July 8, 1865; 73y. Elias Foust, b. Sep., 1826; d. April 5, 1873: 46y. 6m. 9(1. William E. Fulton, son of J. C. and S. C, d. Feb. 25. 1882; 17y. 10m. 24d. Reef^e Furbay, b. June 20, 1847; d. Nov. 47y. 8m. 26d.: a member of Com- panies Y and H, 170th O. V. I. John W. P. Gallagher, d. Aug. 10, 1892; 47y. 8ni. 26d.: a member of Com- panies y and II, 170tli O. V. I. Joseph Gambs, d. July 1, 1S84; 5Sy. 3m. 5d. Millie E. Gambs, daughter of J. and L. T., d. Oct. 25, 1876; 9y. 7m. 23d. Anna L. Garvin, wife of J. M.. b. March 6, 1846: d. :May 21, 1889. Helen ]M. Garvin, daughter of J. M. and A. L., b. Feb. 10, 1872; d. April 10, 1872. John M. Garvin, b. May 16, 1845; d. July 4. 1897. Albert Georire. killed at the Battle of Antietam, Sep. 17, 1802; 21y. 332 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Harry George, son of Thomas and Mira, d. June 8, 18G2; 8y. 3m. 8d. Turner George, b. . Dec. 27, 1SG2; d. Aug. 11, 1SG3. Albert J. Gillespie, d. July 15, 1853; 5y. Cornelia Gillespie, wife of J. W., b. Nov. 27, 1823; d. May 7, 1878. James F. Gillespie, d. May 4, 1852; Gy. John W. Gillespie, b. 1819; d. 1885. Nettie Gillespie, d. July 6, 1853; 2y. Wayne Gillespie, b. Nov. 11, 1858; d. June 7, 1895. Bell Glandon, niece of John and Martha Caruahan, d. July 6, 1SG3; 13y. 10m. 13d. Jane Glenn, d. Nov. 5. 1886; 82y. John Q. Glover, d. May 5, 1890; 3Sy. Willie J. Glover, sou of J. C. and G. J., d. Aug. 24, 1878; 9y. 10m. 7d. Amanda Gray, b. Jan. 2, 1840; d. Nov. 4, 1877. Benoui Gray, d. Nov. 26, 18G5; 46y. 3m. 16d. Emma Gray, b. Aug. 23, 1854; d. Jan. 27, 1870. John Milton Gray, b. May 20, 1849; d. Jan. 10, 1893. Johathan Gray, b. Jan. 27, 1807; d. July 14, 1873. Lizzie Gray, b. Aug. 3, 1843; d. Dee. 25 1881 Maggie P. Gray, b. Nov. 2, 1841; d. March 27, 1880. JIaria Gray, wife of Jonathan, b. Jan. 13. 1813; d. Aug. 25, 1875. INIary E. Gray, b. Sep. 7, 1847; d. April 17, 1881. Mattie J. Gray, b. Sep. 5, 1857; d. Aug. 15 18S1 Samuel 't! Gray, b. May 25. 1838; kill- ed at the battle of Bentonville, John- son Co.. N. C, March 19. 18G5; was a member of Co. C. 98th O. V. I. ^larv Green, wife of Allen, d. April 8, I8G2; GGy. Eliza A.Grimes, daughter of T. D. and E., d. Nov. 28, ISGi; 15y. 6m. 3d. Jesse C. Grimes, son of L. B. and M. H., b. Nov. 28, 3880; d. Sept. 20, 1884. T. D. Grimes, d. Jan. 8, 18G1; 45y. 11m. 24(1. William Grimes, Jr., son of W. and R. d. April 30, 1850; 28y. Jeunette Grove, wife of Francis, d. March 24, 1873; 84y. -Joseph Gutshall, b. Feb. 27, 1810; d. Dec. 3. 1880. INIalissa Gutshall. b. Sep. 5, 1842; d. . Nov. 22, 1879. 'Mary Gutshall. wife of Joseph, b. Nov. 8, 1817; d. March 8, 1S84. Samuel Gutshall, b. Sep. 11, 18.39; d. Feb. 2, 18S0. Craig Hamilton, b. April IG, 1825; d. Oct., 1880. Dr. David Hamilton, d. Jan. 23, 1872; 61y. 6m. 21d. Francis Hamilton, b. Dec. 13, 1815; d. Jan. 28, 1887. .Tames Hamilton, d. Jan. 20, 1879; 77y. Isabella Hamilton, wife of Levi, d. Feb. 2,5, 1889; 82y. Levi Hamilton, d. April 6. 1881; 76y. Matilda Hamilton, wife of Francis, b. Aug. 24. 1813; d. March 5. 1888. Sadie R. Hamilton, daughter of W. and M., d. Oct. 25, 1868; IGy. 19d. William Hamilton, d. June 16, 1875; 72y. William Hamilton, b. Sep. 29, 1818; d. Nov. 14, 1892. William B. Hamilton, son of W. and E.. b. Oct. 29, 18G5; d. Nov. 15, 18S1. Alexander Hanna, d. April 9, 1863; 33y. Im. 13d. Anna M. Hnnna, wife of William, d. Rep. 15, 18S5: 72y. Jane Cowden Haima, wife of Thomas, d. April 9. 1839; 79y. J. J. Hanna, b. Oct. 7, 1839; d. Aug. 31. 1890. Maruaret A. Hanna, wife of John A., d. March 27, 1871; 34v. 7m. 4a. Mary H. Hanna, d. Aug. 17, 1SG4; 27y. Im. 9d. Thomas Hanna, son of Thomas and Elizabeth Henderson Hanna, d. April 9, 1839; 79y. William Hanna, d. July 22, 1885; 80y. William F. Hanna. son of A. F. and S.. d. Aug. 1. 1SG4; 18y. 4m. 8d. Elizal eth Handy, wife of J. B., d. Aug. 27, 1867; 32y. 5m. 9d. J. B. Handy, b. Sep. 15, 1853; d. July 30. 1880. Mary M. Handy, daughter of John and CADIZ BURIALS. 333 Elizabeth, d. Sep. 9, I8G0; 5y. Im. 7d. Miiry T. Handy, d. May 23, 1875; 9y. George Harper, drowned near I.ees- burir, .Time 27, ISCil; 16y. 7m. 23d. Ruth 10. IIari)or, d. April 20, 1875; 31y. '.)m. Id. Hanuali Harrison, d. May 30, 1890; 70y. Hezekiah Harrison, d. June 3, 1877; 72y. John Harrison, d. Sep. 25, 1878; 78y. Lvdia Harrison, wife of Hezekiah, d. May 28, 1SG9; 55y. Harris Hatton, Company I, 13th O. V. I. Marsaret Hatton, b. June 10, 1878; d. March 31, 1S8.5. inchard Hatton, d. Nov. 7, 18G9; 61y. Sm. 2d. Alexander Haverfield, d. Jan. 24, 1875; 70y. Harriet Haverfield, b. Feb. 8, 1798; d. March 19, 1884. .L N. Haverfield, b. Sep. 22, 1809; d. May 9, 1873. .Timmie Haverfield, son of J. N. and J., d. Dec. 12, 1887; Sy. John N. Haverfield, b. May 17, 1820; d. April 10, 1894. Mattie E. Haverfield, dau.chter of N. T. and I., b. Aug. 18, 1879; d. July 14. isr-2. Nancv Haverfield, wife of .T. N., b. .Tan". 20, 1817; d. March 24, 1895. Nathan Haverfield, b. Oct. 25, 179G; d. Jan. 2G, 1875. Ora Bell Haverfield, daughter of N. T. and I., b. March 1, 1884; d. Dec. 1, 1887. S. r. Haverfield, d. Dec. 28, 1885; 49y. I'rances J. Havner, daughter of Joseph and Rebecca, d. April 19, 18G9; 12y. (!m. Eliza B. Havs, d. July 11, 1879; 37y. Clara Hedge, d. Oct. 25, 1864; 3y. 5m. lid. Cora Hedge, d. June 13, 18G7; 2y. 11m. lOd. Ellen M. Hedge, d. Nov. 7, 18G4; 9y. Im. 12d. Frances Hedge, d. Dec. 9, 1870; 3y. 4m. 13d. John V. Hedges, d. March 20, 1SG8; Cm. 2: Id. Luther Hedties, b. March 2, 1854; d. Nov. 19, 189(5. Prudence Hedges, wife of Samuel, d. Jan. 15. 1850; ^i'>i . 25d. Rachel Hedges, d. Jan. 28, 1 97; 79y. 3m. 18d. Samuel Hedges, Si., d. Dec. 17, 18G5; 81 y. 11m. 21d. Samuel Hedges, Jr., b. Jan. 20, 1825; d. May 29, ISSG. William D. Hedge, d. June 4, 18G7; 54v. 5m. 22d. Alexander Henderson, d. Oct. 24, 1842; 5.5y. Hannah Henderson, wife of Alex- ander, d. Sep. 2, 1875; 85y. Ruth J. Herri man, b. Aug. 22, 1852; d. April 9, 18S0. William C. Ilesford, b. Sep. 9, 1858; d. Dec. 27, 1881. Margaret I:Tighlands, d. Nov. 22, 187G; 3(5v. 3m. 9d. David Hilbert, d. Feb. 23, 18G3; 53y. 7m. 5d. Eli Hill, b. April 12, 1815; d. Dec. 7. 1S90. T. B. Hill, Company I, G9th Ohio In- fantry. Lorella Hillicas, wife of David C, d. April 28, 1872; 2i)y. 3m. 7d. Nancy T. Lacy llilligas, wife of T. N., d. June 14, 1870; GOy. Samuel Hilligas, d. Dec. 12, 1803; 21y. 11m. 9d.; Avas a member of Company C, 98th O. V. I. Tunice Hilligas, d. April 22, 1885; 85y. Ivate Drummond Hinton, wife of J. M., d. Sep. 3, 1882; 29y. 2m. Margaret Hitchcock, wife of Samuel, d. IMarch 12, 1SG2; 51y. 11m. 2Gd. Samuel Hitchcock, b. Aug. 18, 1819; d. Feb. 3, 1879. John M. Hoffman, d. April 26, 1880; 80y. 4m. 3d. Sarah Hoffman, wife of John M., d. Dec. 2G, 187G; 75y. 5m. Alliert Holbrook, d. Feb. 3, 1882; Sly. Esther Holland, wife of John, d. April 13, 1889; GSy. Gm. 21 d. David L. Husriies, b. in Berks County, Pa., April 21, 18-27; d. March 26, 1891. IMary Hughes, wife of David L., b. 534 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Dec. 25, 1825; d. July 31, 1886. Jnne Hnmi>l)rovs, wife of William, d. March 1, ISl.'i. William Humphreys, b. Jnne 24, 1812; d. Aug. 24, 1884. Joseph R. Ilnntpr, son of James and Nancy Sloan Hunter, b. in West- moreland county, I*a., May, 1804; d. April 4, 188(>. Letitia McFadden Hunter, wife of Joseph R.. d. April 13, 18S3; Tly. Mary Hunter, d. Jan. 30, 1858; 17y. 5m. Marv B. Hunter, dauchter- of J. W. and A. M., d. Feb. 28, 1S8G; 5y. 4m. Joseph Hurford, b. Oct. 5, 1809; d. July 7, 1807. Laura L. Hurford, b. April 2, 1847; d. Dec. 23, 1857. Rebecca A. Hurford, b. Jan. 31, 1824; d. IMay 15, 1875. William E. Hurford, b. Jan. 27, 1857; d. Oct. 28, 1805. Samuel .Jackson, d. April G, 1802; 76y. A?:nes Jamison, b. April 16, 183G; d. Aug. 21, 1891. Andrew Jamison, d. Nov. 3, 18S5; 61y. Anna M. Jamison, daut;hter of J. and C, d. Auc. 0, 1S(;3: 1y. 10m. 5d. Barklav .Tamison, d. Oct. 23, 18r,9; 74y. Joseph Jamison, d. Oct. 23, 1872; 4fiv. Margaret Jam'son, b. , 1830; d. May 13, 1875. M. Belle Jamison, d. , 18—; 20y. Gm. IMary Jamison, wife of Andrew, d. Jan. 8, 18(17; 7Sy. Walter Jamison, d. July 2, 1883; 82y. Walter C. Jamison, son of Andrew, d. ' March 2, 18G1: 3y. 2m. 15d. Eliza II. Johnson, daughter of J. R. and I., d. Jan. 3, 1874; 2Gy. Hannah Johnson, d. Sep. 1, 1S82; 53y. 4m. 18d. Isabel .Johnson, wife of J. R., d. June 25, 1883; G7y. Joseph R. Johnson, b. Feb. 20, 1814; d. Sep. 23, 1888. Laura Belle Johnson, daughter of E. H. and I., d. Jan. 3, 1874; 3y. Margaret J. Johrson, daughter of New- ton and Laura, d. !5ep. 8, 1891; ly. 4m. Mary Belle Johnson, daughter of J. R. and I., d. .Tan. 19, 1882; 24y. Robert E. Jones, snn of R. J. and S. J., d. Sep. 29, 1881; 14y. 11m. 18d. John II. Jumps, b. June 22, 1S3G; d. April 10, 1895; nsemher of Co. G, 98th O. V. I. Susannah Jumps. w;fe of J. IL, b. Doc. 2.5, 18:3.5. Anna G. Kennedy, daughter of Martin \/ and Martha M.", d. Nov. 12, 187G; ly. 5m. 28d. Frances Isabella Kennedy, daughter of v M. and M. M., d. Oct. 15, 1872; 12y. lOni. 2d. Martlia McKee Kennedy, Avife of ]\Iar- ■, tin, d. July 3,1882; 42y. 7m. 19d. ^Margaret Kent, wife of Alisalom, b. Oct. 14, 1815; d. March 28, 1892. Susan Kent, wife of S. H., d. March 25, 1S8G; 2Sy. Dayid Kerr, son of Rey. James and Margaret, d. March 1, 1849; 5m. lOd. Ellen Kerr, b. Noy. 21, 1831; d. July 8, 1891. Rey. .Tames Kerr, a native of Scotland, pastor of Presbyterian Church, Ca- diz: d. April 9, 1855; 42y. James Kerr, b. April 19, 1818; d. Jan. 21, ISSO. Joseph S. Kerr, son of Rev. James and INIarsraret, d. May 29, 18G4; 7m. Julia C. Kerr, b. Jan. 1, 1825; d. May 24, 1891. M. C. Kerr, daughter of .John S. and Ora E., d. Feb. 1, 1871: Im. ^largaret INIcWhirter Kerr, wife of Rev. James, a native of Scotland, b. 181G: d. Nov. 1, 1890. Mary Kerr, daughter of Rev. .Ta'.nes and M., d. IMay 25, 1842; 2y. 10m. Sarah Kerr, wife of J. C, d. Sep. 5, 18G3; 42y. Laura Kilbreath, wife of .T. C, b. March 4, 1854; d. July 28, 1893. Sarah J. Kinsev, wife of K. W., d. Feb. 7, 1SG4: 35y. 10m. 5d. Sarah A. Knox, wife of James, and daughter of William and Jane Arnold, d. April 11, 18G9; 34y. Jane Kvle, wife of Thomas, d. Oct. 4, 1884: 78y. Kate J. Kyle, daughter of Thomas and Jane, d. Dec. 12, ISGG; 24y. Mary Lacey, wife of J. M., d. April CADIZ BURIALS. 535 in, 1S33; 4Gy. Elijah I.uizure, b. July 20, ISll; d. Feb. 9, 18SS. Eliza M. LaizuvG, wife of Elijah, b. Sep. 21, 1S17: d. IMay 9, 1S87. James A. Laizure, sou of Elijah and Eliza, b. June 23, 1S3U; Quarter- master 13th O. V. I.; d. at I'arkers- burs, Ya., Oct. IS, 1801. Alice R. Lau-hlin, d. Feb. 22, 1899; 48y. Sm. Id. Elizabetli Laughlin, daughter of R. aud K., d. Jan. 6, 1873; 39y. Im. Rachel Laughlin, d. May 2, 1895; 72y. Jacob liemmon, d. May 24, 1874; 84y. Gm. 5d. Rebecca Lemmon, d, Aug. 19, 1872; 58y. 3m. 19d. Catherine M. Lewis, b. Dec. 31, 1815; d. March 4, 1886. Charity Lewis, d. Nov. 9, 1SG6; 84y. 5m. 2d. Elisha S. Lewis, d. Aug. 17, 18G2; 40y. Gm. Jane Lewis, wife of Joseph, d. April 29, 1883; 73y. Rachel C. B. Lewis, daughter of E. and C, d. Aug. 8, 1SG8; ly. Gm. 7d. Sarah Lewis, wife of Jacob, Sr., b. Nov. 2, 1802; d. MarcTi 1, 1884. Anna Bell Lewton, d. Dec. 22, 1833; 2y. 3m. John A. Lewton, d. Oct. IG, ISGl; 7y. Gm. 22d. Eliza Ann Lisle, wife of John, b. Sep. 2, 1811; d. March 20. 1889. John Lisle, b. Dec. 5, 1803; d. Oct. 3, 1890. John A. Lisle, b. May 17, 1837; d. Aug. G, 1890. Mary P. Lisle, wife of Hamilton, d. March 29, 1875; 24y. 3m. 20d. Rachel liisle, wife of William, b. Jan. 14, 1852; d. June 24, 1889. John Loofliorrow, d. March 15, 1872; 38y. Gm. 21d. Lea Roy Loofborrow, son of J. S. and E., d. April 21, 1872; 13v. 9m. 2Gd. James C. Love, d. July 12, 187G; G2y. 5m. 3d. James H. Lynch, son of E. and P., d. .Ian. 23, 18G1; 3m. lOd. Ann B. I^yons, second wife of Robert, b. Aug. 31, 1799; d. Aug. 8, 1884. Ann Eliza Lvonr.. daughter of Robert and Ann W., b, May 5. 1843; d. April 23, 1844. Anna W. Lvons, first wife of Robert, b. April 18, 1810; d. May 1(5, 1844. Nancev Lyons, daughter of Robert and Ann W., b. Feb. 27, 1835, d. Oct. 9, 1837. Robert Lvons, b. Dec. 14, 1803; d. Aug. 17, 1887. Sallie G. Lyons, wife of J. B., b. April 4, 1838; d. April 21, 1871. Hannah Jane McAdoo, second wife of William, d. March 19, 1^83; 40y. 3m. 21d. Martha McAdoo, first wife of William, d. Feb. G, 1SG4; 45v. 8m. 21d. Georgia Scott McBean, b. 1849; d. 1873. Henry McBean, b. July 5, 1848; d. Aug. 2, 1875. Dr. John INIcBean. b. Oct. 22, 1797; d. .Lin. 7, 1875. William McBean, b. 1833; d. 1884. Thomas J. McBride, d. June 15, 1S77; 35y. J. E. McCarty. [No dates]. R. J. McCarty. [No dates]. Samuel L. McClelland, b. Jan. 29, 1831; d. July 19, 1894. John McCullough, d. May 22, 1868; 70y. 6m. lid. Mary McCullough, wife of Robert, d. Dec. 8, 18G8; 72v. Robert McCullough, d. Aug. 15, 1868; 82y. Mary Quest McConnell, wife of John, A., b. in Hummelstown, I'a., April 5, 1822; d. in Charlestown, 111., March 14 1883 Michael McConnell, b. July 19, 1801; d. Julv 17, 1872. Samuel McCormick, b. Feb. 8, 1793; d. Feb. .3, 1875. Harriett C. McCoy, b. May 28, 1820; d. Feb. 12, 1898. Matthew McCoy, b. April 4, 1815; d. March 27, 1SS9. William H. McCoy, b. Aug. 22, 1832; d. Sep. 27, 1881. IMartha McCrea, d. Jan. 14, 1885; 93y. 9m. 20d. Rev. J. S. IMcCready, d. Sep. 7, 1864; 39y.; was captain of Company H, 12Gth O. V. I., aud died from wounds HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY received at the Battle of the Wilder- ness. Charles P. McFadden, son of H. S. and F. J., b. Oct. 20, 1843; d. Oct. 7, 1SP,G. Elizabeth McFadden, wife of Nathan- iel, d. Aiic:. 18, 1SS5: Ouv. 11. S. McFadden, d. July 4, 1888; 75y. J. L. McFadden, b. July Hj, 1851; d. Nov. 18, 1887. James McFadden, b. Jan. 5, 1805; d. June 15, 1874. Jennie McFadden, d. July 17, 1873; 57y. 9m. 22d. John McFadden, b. Oct. 10, 1810; d. July 4, ISSl. John D. McFadden, b. June 20, 1842; d. Nov. 20, ISGG. Lydia McFadden, wife of Samuel, d. March 22, 1866; 83y. ]Mary A. McFadden, b. Nov. 19, 1808. Mary McFadden, b. June 24, 1838; d. June 4, 1881. Mary McFadden, wife of Samuel, daughter of J. M. and A. Richey; b. July 7, 1835; d. Feb. 24, 1872. ' Nathaniel McFadden, d. Nov. 14, 1892; 82y. Samuol McFadden, a native of Ireland, d. April 10, 1S61; 80y. Samuel L. McFadden, d. April L 18G3; 4Sy. Ross Leslie McFadden, son of William A. and E. L., d. Nov. 20, 1876; Gy. 8m. 8d. Winfield ■McFadden, son of William and Elizabeth, d. March 6, 1861; 9y. 2m. 22d. James McKee, d. May G, 1887; 76y. 3m. James McKee, d. Nov. 19, 1882; ly. 15d. John McKee, Company C, 98th O. V. I.; d. Sept. 11. 1864; 2.3y. 2m. 14d. Rebecca E. McKee, b. Dec. 1, 1855; d. Jan. 3, 1892. Robert McKee, d. June 15, 1880; G4y. Gm. Jessie M. McMath, daui^hter of Jesse H. and Kate L., d. April 22, 1862; 3y. 8m. 19d. Margaret Jane McMath, daughter of J. and E. A., d. .Tan. 9, 1854; Im. 19d. Margaret McMillan, d. March 16, 1890; G4y. Arthur P. McNutt, d. Dec. 15, 1895; T4y. George W. McPherson, d. Jan. 10, 1880; 68y. 10m. 23a. David McWhirter, b. in Scotland, 1788; d. in C'adiz, Stp. 18, 1873; S6y. Jeunette McWhiiter, b. in Scotland in 1818; d. in Pittsburg, June 8, 1825; 7y. John McWhirter, b. in 1824; d. Nov., 1827; 3y. IMary McWhirter, wife of David, b. in Scotland in 1787; d. in Cadiz, Jan., 1860; 74y. Alexander A. Manner, lost on the Steamboat Sultanna, April 27, 1865; 25y. 7m. 2Sd. Joseph G. Manner, d. Aug. 4, 1870; 33y. 5d. E. A. Marsh, Company G, 98th Ohio Infantry. Edward Martin, son of John and IMary, d. Oct. 18, 1879; lly. 2m. 26d. Harriet Martin, wife of J. H. [No John Martin, d. April 17, 1872; Sly. 10m. Maria Martin, wife of John, a native of Ireland, d. Nov. 21, 18G4; 50y. Samuel Martin, d. Feb. 5, 1873; 73y. Sarah Ann IMartin, wife of John, d. May 2, 1870; 49y. 3m. Susanna Martin, wife of Samuel, d. Auc. 26, 1884: 84v. Euphema H. Maxwell, d. Feb. 3, 18G6; 57y. Agnes Mealy, d. Nov. 22, 1896; 93y. Im. 4d. Willie Mealy, son of F. K. and H., d. Dec. 3, 1876; 3v. 5m. 4d. James IMeans, d. Nov. 3, 1871; 73y. 10m. 12d. Elizabeth Megaw, wife of James, d. April 1, 1883; 69y. Jane Megaw, wife of Samuel, d. July 2, 1885; 7Gy. Samuel Megaw, d. May. 10, 1881: 7Sy. Sarah Jane Megaw, b. May 14, 1824; d. April 16, 1897. Harrv Mercer, son cf G. W., b. May 1, 1S73; d. Feb. 11, 1887. Sadie H. Millekin, daughter of John and Marv H.. d. Auril 27. 1892: 12.v. CADIZ BURIALS 337 Mary A. Miller, wife of Obadiah. [No dates]. Oliadiali :Miller. [No dates]. Sarah Miller, d. March 2, 1870; 72y. James Mitchell, a native of Ireland, d. Oct. 17, isr.ri: sir. 7m. 13d. James T. INIitchell, son of Joseph and Susan, d. Nov. 12, 1878; 27y. 13d. Joseph Mitchell, son of J. and S., d. Dec. 2.5, 1875: 18y. 7m. 23d. Mary Mitchell, danirhter of J. and M., d. July 4, 18(10; ,52V. 6m. 22d. Tliomas S. Mitchell, b. May 2, 181G; d. June n, 1888. ^^•i!liam Mitchell, d. April 24. ISSO; r.Sy. 6m. 17d. Edward Fulton Moffett, b. June 3, 1831; d. .Tan. 25. 1870. Mary IMoffelt, wife of E. F., b. March 6, 1836; d. April 7, 1SC9. Annie E. INIoore, wife of I. C, and daughter of D. B. and Martha Lyons Welch, b. Jan. 15. 1857; d. Feb. 16. 1895. David Moore, b. March 8. 1817; d. March 24, 1870; 53y. 16d. Jane Moore, wife of David, b. Sep. 26. 1818; d. June 23, 1879. John Moore, b. July 27, 1813; d. Feb. 2, 1SS3. Marauda P. Moore, wife of D. B., d. July 8, 1887; 46y. Myra L. Moore, dausrhter of D. B. and M. P., d. Feb. 18, 1867; 19d. Sarah INIoore, wife of William, b. in New Jersey, Jan. 12, 1783; came to Ohio in April, 1808; d. March 16, 1863; 80y. 2m. 4d. Sarah J. IMoore, wife of John, b. July 3, 1827: d. June 14. 1874. Samuel Moorehead. d. Sep. 24, 1879; 8.3y. 8m. 16d. J. W. Morgan, Company A, 6Gth Oh!o Infantry. John P. Moi-gan, son of J. W. and Hannah, d. Aug. 12, 1872; 4ra. Id. Alice Neville, b. Nov. 1, 1880; d. July 20, 1884. Margaret Niblick, wife of John. d. Sep. 14, 1892: 50y. 4 m. 8d. James K. Nicliolas, d. April 5, 1888; 27y. 8m. 20d. Jolm A. Nicholas, d, March 3, 1885; 25y. 5m. 23 John A. Norris, IMaior of the 9Sth O. V. I., d. .Tan. 19, 1877; 41y. Nancy Orr, b. July 8. 1810; d. Sep. 28, 1882. Alexander Osbnrn. b. May 17, 1838; d. July 25, 1875. Mary A. Oglevee Osborn, wife of S. A., d. July 21, 1874; 37y. 2m. 4d. Mary Louise Osborn, daughter of J. J. and C. M., b. March 14, 1887; d. May 30, 1890. Samuel A. Osborn, d. July 19, 1872, 32y. 9m. 25d. Benjamin Parrish, d. March 6, 1865; 85y. 27d. Charles Parish, d. Jan. 12, 1863; 4Sy. 11m. 28d. Mary Patterson, d. May 21, 1875. Amanda E. Peacock, d. Feb. 17, 1899; Sly. 9m. 23d. Eli Peacock, d. Feb. 6, 1886; 79y. 4m. 18d. Sarah Peacock, wife of Eli, d. Jan. 8, 1860: 61y. John Penn, Company G, 98th Ohio Infantry. Eliza Phillips, wife of .John, and daughter of Samuel and Elizalteth Buchanan Oilnioro, b. Feb. 2, 1807; d. .Tan. 4, 1873. Elizabeth Willi ims Phillips, wife of Thomas, b. in Cecil County, Md.. July 11, 1792: d. May 22, 1867. John Phillips, son of William and Rachel I4amilton Phillips, b. in West Nottingham township, Chester Coun- ty, Pa., June, 1797; d. May 5, 18.59. Martha Phillips, daughter of John and Eliza, b. Nov. 17, 1832; d. Feb. 11, 1863. Rachel Phillips, daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth, d. Aug. 14, 1853; 34y. 2m. 6d. Rachel Ann Phillips, daughter of John and Eliza, b. March 15, 1839; d. Julv 10, 1863. Samuel Phillips, sn of John and Eliza, d. May 24, 1860; 23y. 11m. Thomas Phillips, son of William and Itachel Hamilton Phillips, b. in West Nottingham township, Chester coun- ty. Pa., 1792; d. Nov. 23, 1871. Augustus I'orter, b. Feb. 18, 1822; d. March 25, 1893. 338 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Irwin Portor, Sr., b. 1814; d. 1897. James Porter, b. Aug. 29, 1818; d. Sep. 4, 1808. .Tane Porter, d. Dee. 25, 1848; 47y. 9m. 21d. Joseph E. Porter, son of S. B, and M., d. April 19, 1884: 4v. 14d. ISltiry Porter, d. Oct. 21, 1884; 79v. Itlary Porter, d. July 3U, 1881; G8y. (im. 14d. Samuel T. Porter, d. April 25, 1897; 75y. 4m. 22d. Elizabeth I'Dul-^on, b. March 15, 1808; d. Oct. 6, 1897. John Poulsou, b. July 14, 1792; d. Nov. 5, 1878. Samuel Poulson, Company C, G9th Ohio Infantry. John Prichard, d. June 28, 1814; n9y. Sarah Prichard, b. Jan. 7, 1782; d. Sep. 15. 1877. S. Purdy. [No dates]. Adam J. Qnisley, b. Sep. 7, 1S2S; d. Jan. 18, 18(13. John Quiftley, b. Jan. 8, 1795; d. Oct. 22, 1867. Jlary Qnii^lev, wife of John, b. Jan. 7, 1798; d. March 1, 187(5. Ada J. Rea, wife of William P., d. April 30, 1875; 19v. 7d. Isabell C. Rea, wife of John ,T., b. April 20, 1825; d. Oct. 12, 1S79. Ann W. Richey, wife of John INT., b. April 16, 1817; d. Oct. 30, 1880. Elizabeth Richev, wife of Thomas, b. Aug. 5, 1826: d. July 29, 1889. Harvey W. Richey, son of T. and E., b. March 21, 1849; d. July 3, 1888. John J\I. Richev, b. Nov. 2, 1808; d. Jan. 30, 1897. Thomas Richey, b. May 27, 1814; d. April 11, 1SS3. Craig Robb, son of Joseph and Mary, d. Feb. 28, 1865; 7y. 2m. James Robb, b. June 2, 1843; d. Mav 24, 1876. James Robb. d. May 24, 1870; 22v. 9d. John Robb, b. March 1, 1844; d.'lSSO. Mary Robb, b. Dec. 1815; d. April 3. 1893. Edward F. Roche, son of J. F. and C. T., d. Sep. 5, 1881; 22y. 10m. 13d. Elbe AVard Roche, daughter of James F. and Caroline T., d. April 28, 1866; 25, 1850; 32y. ly. 4m. 26d. Samuel Rulan, d. Sep. 1-5, 1874; 73v. 14d. Alexander T. Sectt, d. Nov. 25, 1865; 46y. 8m. 14d. David M. Scott, d. Sop. 17. 1872; 16 v. Im. Eleanor Scott, wife of Alexander T., d. Sep. 10, 1894; 68y. 9d. John W. Scott, b. in Yorkshire, Eng- land. Sep., 1811; d. in Cadiz, Sep., 1S,S6: 7.5y. Emaline Shank, daughter of S. and Elizabeth, d. March 5m. lOd. Caroline T. Sharp, d. Dec. 24. 1881; 43y. 5ra. 14d. George Sharp, b. Julv 9, 1795; d. June 25, 1877. John Sharp, d. IMarch 16, 1878; 77y. Nancy Sharp, wife of George, b. April 21, 1807: d. Dec. 13, 1877. Edward Sheets, d. Oct. 1, 1892; 28y. 7m. Fleming Sheets, d. IMarch 25, 1871; 49y. 6m. 22d. Jane Sheets, wife of Robert, d. Oct. 6. 186S; 68v. Robert Sheets, d. Jan. 15, 1865: 65y. Elizabeth Sheldon, d. Nov. 27, 1882; 50y. Stuart B. Shotwell, b. Nov. 1819; d. Dec. 3, 1890. William J. Shotwell, b. Mav 15, 1863; d. Sep. 2, 1865. Tames Simeral, d. Sop. 21. 1849; .57y. Marv Ann Simeral, wife of James, b. June n, 1790; d. April 16, 18()6. Robert V. Simeral, b. July 26. 1822; d. April 15, 1852. Eliza Slemmons, second wife of Sam- uel, b. Feb. 22, 1829; d. Feb. 25, 1879. ISIarv .Tane Slemmons, daughter of S. and S., d. April 7, 1838: 6y. 7m. 23d. Minnie Slemmons. daughter of Obe- diah. b. 1862; d. 1879; 17y. Samuel Slemmons, d. July 26, 1867; 59y. Susanna Slemmons, first wife of Sam- uel, d. Oct. 22, 1851; 41y. Belle S. Smvley, wife of John, b. April 18, 1864: d. July 6, 1883. Isabella Smiley, wife of J. V., b. June 24, 1806; d. Sep. 10, 1876. CRABAPPLE BURIALS 339 Isabella Smiley, daucliter of T. V. and I., b. Deo. 1.",, 1S41; d. May 28, 1876. James Y. Smiley, b. Nov. 15, 1805; d. Jan. 20, 1S77. JMatthew Smyloy, d. Sep. 15, 1SS7; 54y. 8m. 20d. Tarl Speclit, d. Sep. 19, 1892; 27y. Susan D. Stoops, b. May 15, 1803; d. :sray 8, lS!t7. Tilarv Stubbins, wife of Mordecai; b. Oct. 15. 1805: d. Nov. 20, 18^0. Mordecai Stubbing, b. Jan. 3, 1812; d. Oct. 9, 1893. Thomas .T. Swan, b. July 1, 1823; d. Aug. 17, 1882. r>avid Thompson, d. May 2, 1869: 95y. 2m. Id. Elizabeth Thompson, wife of Samuel. d. Aus. 29, 1873: 87y. 9m. 15d. Elizabeth Thompson, wife of James. d. April 17, 18S0: SOy. J. H. Thompson. [No dates]. James Thompson, d. July 11, 1896; 79y. Josie B. Timmons, b. Nov. 24, 1850; d. June 4, 1874. Samuel Thompson, d. June 6, 1886; 84y. 7m. Mnrtha Thompson, wife of David, d. March 10, 1844; 62v. 3m. 2d. B. C. Turner. 13th O. V. I., d. at Bow- ling Green, Ky., March 16, 1862. Sarah Yanfossan. wife of D. D., d. Nov. 9, 1889: 36y. Mai'iraret A'a«binder, wife of Jacob, d. Feb. 2, 1873: 90v. William Yoshall, b. July 21, 1840: d. .Tan. 7, 1879. Ephraim Walker, d. April 29, 18—; 63y. 4m. 6d. John Walker, d. March 23, 1865; 33y. 4m. 6d. Butler J. Ward, son of W. G. and E., d. AuET. 15, 1808; 9y. 3m. 26d. Eleanor Ward, wife of John, b. Oct. 31, 1800; d. Sep. 26, 1873; 72v. 10m. 2(:d. Jolm Ward, b. Oct. 24. 1798: d. April 12, 1809: 70v. 5m. 20d. Charles Warfel, b. Oct. 18, 1807; d. Feb. 3, 1871. Marv Jane Watkinson. wife of Ben- jamin, d. ^ifay 24, 1865; 33y. 2m. 28d. Etta Kerr Watson, wife of T. S., b. March 22, 1863; d. April 17, 1802. Sylvester Waters, suu of Robert T. and Anna R., d. Sep. 20, 1867; 2y. 4m. 24d. Martha G. Weir, b. July 23. 1823; d. Sep. 19, 1880. Eliza Welch, tirst wife of Reziu, b. Dec. 4, 1801; d. Aug. 6, 1842. John Welch, b. Nov. 20, 180S; d. Nov. 10. 1881 Maria B. Welch, second wife of Rezin, b. Sep. 12, 1807; d. Aug. 19, 18-0. Rezin Welch, b. April 28, 1795; d. Nov. 24, 1881. Rezin Welch, Jr., son of D. B. and Martha, b. at Cadiz, Ohio, Sep. 27, 1867; d. at Lincoln, Neb., Dec. 6, 1895. Jacob Werner, Company C. 74th Ohio Infantry. Albert West, son of J. and J., d. Sep. 1, 1873; 19y. 2m. 4d. Comfort West, wife of Jonathan, d. March 15, 1857; 65y. 8m. 26d. Jonathan West, Sr., d. Nov. 27, 1862; 75v. 2m. 13d. Jonathan West, Jr., d. Sep. 11, 1861; 45v. 7m. 13d. Samuel W^est, d. April 4, 1871; 56y. 11m. 6d. Sarah West, b. July 28, 1S3S; d. June 20, 1861; 28v. Im. Eliza Wilkin, wife of Robert, d. Sep. 27, 1863; 33y. Mary Williams, b. May 24, 1853; d. Jan. 15, 1861. Dr. J. D. Wortman, b. June 8, 1824; d. Dec. 28, 1898 Nancv Wosley, wife of William, d. March 22, 1877; 44y. BURIALS IN CRABAPPLE GR AYE YARD. To August 27, 1896. Elizabeth Abel, wife of G. W., d. Sep. 22, 1879; 34y. 2d. Aaron Allen, d. April 13, 1871; 4Sy. 2m. 2d. Ann Allen, wife of Aaron, d. March 15, 1873; 50y. 10m. Sd. Catharine Allen, wife of Moses, d. 340 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY April no, lS~u IMnruMiot A. Kidiloll Alh>n. wife of J. :M. Alh>n. d. Voh. 28. 1Sr>i!; R(>v. Mosos Allou. (1. .Ian. Hi. 18l»!: (>0y. pastor of (^'rabapplo (.ouyio.uation. Oscar G. Allon. d. Nov. l», iSSii; 20.v. \\illiam Aiulorson. d. Nov. 30. 1821; ;iT.v. Anna Armor, wife of Samuel, d. Sep. 21. 1878; 81 y. Elizabeth B. Armor, daimhtev of S. and A., d. April 10. 1814: 2y. (nl. .lames Armor, sou of !?auuiel and Ann; d. An.u-. 27. 18;n: 21 y. 22d. ?klartlia A. Armor, dan.irhter of S. and A., d. Oot. 8. 18r>n: 4y. Samuel Armor, b. April 10, 1700. d. David Armstrousr, b. .Ian. 27. 1838; d. Oct. 18. 1870. Eliza Arjustron.tr. wife of Warden, d. ,Tulv 0, 1.88r»; OOy. Om. 15d. Georjre Armstrong, d. Oct. 3. 1840: 7r)y. (looriie Armstronu'. sou of W. and K.. d. May 10. 1858:' lOy. 20d. I.ydia Heath Armstronu-. wife of Rev. Robert, d. Dee. 3. 187.'): ."v'.y. ^larv Armstrous:. wife of Oeortre. d. Aiig. 27. 180S; 88y. Marv Azubali Armstroug, daugliter of Rev. R. T. and L. II.. ^^■arden Armstrong, d. Aug. 31, 1877; 77v. 7m. 2d. Putnam Arnold, d. Dec. 21, 1872; t:Sy. Sarah Arnold, d. Oct. 12. 1870; 73y. Marion liartholomew. son of Samuel and Mary: d. April 21. 1852; 3m. l".d. .Tanu'S Ueall. d. Dee. 20. 1834; r»7y. .lane Reall. d. Nov. 11, 1883; lOOy. ?»[ary Reall. b. Dec. S, 1823; d. May 15, 1 880. AVilliam Reall. b. Aug. 23, 1822; d. Oct. 4. 18.", 1843: 8l!y. Joseph Bell, b. June 21, 1817; d. Oct. 23. 1800. Slaiuaret l>ell. wife of John. d. March 21, 1874: 80y. Martha Bell, b. Nov. 2, 1834: d. J:;u. 25, 1887. ^lary Blackburn, wife of William, d. April 20. 18r,7; 77y. 10m. 7d. Cliarlie '\^^ Bosrgs, son of S. M. and M. P., d. March .3, 1870; 4y. lOd. Doche .Taue Boggs, daughter of Wm. aud M., .Tames Boggs, d. IVIaroh 4. 1820; 20y. James Boggs. b. July 25, 1828: d. Feb. 2;i 1840. John Boggs, b. June 28. 1782; d. Dec. 21, 1848. I>aura S. Bogirs. daucrhter of S. iSI., and M. P., d. March 20. 1875: 13y. 4m. 27d. Marv Boggs, daughter of W. aud M.. d. Aug. 30, 18J!4; ly. Samuel B. Boggs, son of W. aud Martha, d. Doc. 16, 1S2S; 7m. Samuel M. Boiriis, b. Dec. 0. 1820: d. April 30, 1804. Sarah Bocrgs, b. Dec. 10, 1787: d. Jan. 0. 1840. Daniel Brewer, d. JIarch 27, 1805: 51 y. Sarah Rosalie Brewer, daughter of D. aud M., d. Sep. 25, 1805; Om. 19d. CRABAPPLE BURIALS Ml Infant (lai];,'htcr of Abram and Mary Brok.-nv, d. May 12, 1859; 7m. 28d. Infant dair^htcr of J. and M. Brokaw; d. April 7, 1.S.-7; 14d. Abraham lirokaw, d. May 25, 3825; GOy. Anna B. Brokaw, dargbter of .Tolin M. and E., d. Oct. 2G, 1877; 17y. 2m. 22(1. Anna Eliza Brokaw, daughter of J. A. and S. J., d. Sep. 12, 1875; ly. Oui. 21 d. Edward L. Brokaw, Fon of J. P. and ^Nlary, d. Nov. .3, 1875; ly. lid. Elizal)eth Brokaw, wife of .John, b. Feb. 4, 1824; d. May 15, 1848. Elizabeth .7. Brokaw, wife of Ben- in in m, b. May 2, 1822; d. Sep. i, 1801. Elizabeth M. Brokaw, daugliter of .John and Eliza, d. Feb. 0, 18(il; 12y. Om. Od. Ella F. Brokaw, dan^hter of J. A. and S. .T., d. Sep. 2?,, 1S82; lOy. 11m. I'JJ. Ellen Brokaw, wife of William; d. .Tnlv 1. 18(J7; 02y. George Brokaw, d. .Tuns 27, 1842; 87y. 2m. 2rtd. Oeoi'ge Brokaw, d. Nov. 27, 18S0; 07y. George BroJcaw, son of .J. and M., d. .July 28, 1845; 11m. ICd. George Brokaw, son of W. and E., n. Aiig. 2r;, 1851; 17y. 3m. 4d. George M. Brokaw, son of A. and M., d. .Tune 11. 18.54; d. .Tune 14, 1800. Isabella Brokaw, daughter of George and Mary, d. May 4, 1834; lOy. lOd. James H. Brokaw, son of .John M. and E., d. Feb. 24, 18S8; 2y. Im. Id. .Tane Brf)kaw, wife of George, d. Oct. 7, 1850; 08y. 5m. fid. John Brokaw. b. Dec. 2.3, 1703; d. March 25, 1876; a soldier of the War of 1812. John Galvin Brokaw, son of John and Maria, d. July 17, 1875; 4y. 10m. 20d. John J J. lirokaw, son of J. and M., d. July 24, 1845: 2y. fJm. Id. Lizzie Bokaw. daughter of John and Maria; d. June 30, 1882: 17y. Om. Lyle A. Brokaw. son of A\'illiam and E., d. March 25, 1858; 22y. Mary Brokaw, daugliter of William and E., d. Jan. 14, 1844; ly. 11m. 27d. aiary Brokaw, wife of George, d. July 1.5, 3S51; (iOy. Mary Brokaw, wife of Jacob, d. Scjj. 21, 1880: <;3y. Mary A. Brokaw. daughter of J. and M.. d. Nov. 20, 1800; lly. 4m. 2<;d. Nancy Brokaw, d. Jan. 20, 1853; 21 y. 2m. 20(1. Nancy Brokaw, wife of George, d. April 13, 18ii]; 75y. Om. lOd. Nancy lirokaw, wife of George, d. Sep. 10, 3870; 70y. Samuel I). Bro!;aw, son of William and K., d. Marfh 8, 18.50; 20y. Sarah Brokaw, wif(! of John, b. Sep. 10, 3802; d. April 15, 1883. William Brokaw, d. Sep. 1, 18-50; 40y. 5m. 20d. Margaret Brown, wife of William, d. Sep. 14, 1871; .5.5v. Fannie E. Caldwell, b. April G, 1845; d. April 27, 1804. Rev. .Tohn P. Caldwell, d. Jan. 30, 1872; .54 y. Ahinda Campbell, daughter of Richard and Rebf-cca, 1). June 27, 1834; d. Jan. 27, 1835. Clarissa il. Campbell, b. July 16, 1826; d. March 28, 1803. Cyrus Campbell, b. May 31, 1820; d. Oct. 15, 1880. Eleanor Campbell, wife of William, d. Aug. 2, 3842; 01 y. Eleanor Campl)ell. daughter of .T. and M. L., d. Oct. 1.5, 3 843; Oy. James Campbell, d. July 17, 1842; 60y. 7m. 30d. James Cambell, b. March 7, 1815; d. Feb. 22, 18.58. .Tane Campbell, b. June 2.5, 1808; d. June 10, 188.3. Jane I-]. Campbell, daughter of .Tohn and Cvnthia; d. Sep. 21, 3853; 12y. John Campbell, d. July 24, 1844; 69y, Om. 2d. John Campbell, d. Sep. 14, 3863; 5:iy. 31i!). 20d.. Dr. John Campbell, b. Nov. 21, 1804; d. S(-p. 17, 1S:<;2. John A. Campb(!ll, son of Thomas and Nan<^y; d. May 28, 1828; ly. 4m. 24d. John B. Camj)! ell, son of J. and C, d. Sep. 20, 3805; 7y. Gm. 5d. o4. HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY .Tosepli Cfimpljcll, d. Dec. 4, 1829; 22y. Joseph K. Campbell, b. Jan. 21, ISGU; (1. Sep. 5, 188G. Julia Aim Campbell, wife of William; d. Mairli IC, 1SS4; 7()y. J. L. Camplifll. son of W. and N. L., d. Jan. 1, 18G1; 2y. 10m. 23d. Lizzie C. Campbell, b. April 17, 185-5; d. April 29, 1881. L. P. Canipb(41, wife of AVilliam M., d. July VJ, 1S8!); 5^y. 2m. lid. Maugie C. Campbell, d. Oct. 17, 1877; !)v. 8m. IGd. Maraarct Campbell, d. Oct. 8, 1878; !>3y. 11m. 22d. Marqaret J. Campbell, Avife of Robert, b. ^larcb 13, 1830; d. April 7, 1877. ISIaria L. Campbell, wife of J., d. Jan, 23, 1847: 30y. Marj' Campbell, wife of John, d. Sep. 28, 18r,3: ()9y. Mary Campbell, eldest dausiiter of Dr. J. and Jane, b. Jan. 24, 1833; d. Feb. 15, 18.3(5. Mary Campbell, wife of William M., d. Deo. 13, 1874; 54y. jNIary A. Campbell, b. Sep. 17, 1S59; d. Sep. 13, 188.'.. M. J. Campbell, dauijhter of W. and N. L., d. Dec. 18, 1860; 4y. 6m. 23d. Pegoy Ann Campbell, wife of ^^'illiam, d. Aug. 11, 18J2; 22y. Rachel Campbell, wife of Cvrus, b. Feb. 10, 1S26; d. Jnne 20, 1SS6. Rev. Richard Camphell, A. M., b. Jan. 4, 1796: d. Nov. 17, 1835. Robert Campbell, b. April S, 1809; d. Sep. 27, 18S6. Ruth Ann Campbell, wife of James,— William Campbell, d. Oct. 28, 1845; 84y. Caroline INIatilda Canon, daughter of Buel and Julia, d. June 28, 1834; 2m. 17d. Obadiah Franklin Canon, son of Julia and Buel, d. Feb. 26, 1840; ly. 10m. 29d. Martha Carrithers. daughter of John and Elisa; d. Feb. 25, 1832; 16y. Sai-ah Christv. wife of R. R., d. April 19. 1872; 56y. 9m. 28d. James Clements, son of J. and P., d. May 14. 1833; ly. 9m. ISd. James Clements, d. March 10, 1800; 70y. Josiah Clementci, son of J. and P., d. Jan. 5, 1831; 14y. 9m. 26d. Merrit G. Clements, son of J. and P., b. Oct. 14, 1837; d. Nov. 25, 18.52. Pleasant Clements, wife of J., d. Oct. 12, 1SG2; G7y. 6m. 7d. David Cook, son of J. and W., d. June 22, 1849; 4y. 4m. Susan INI. Coon, daughter of Jacob and aiary, b. Feb. 2G, 1&37; d. Aug. 1, 1837. George E. Coup, son of G. W. and E., d. Oct. 28, 1880; 4y. 18d. Ada Zillah Covert, daughter of B. and C. d. Feb. 8, 1867; (.y.'cm. 24i1. Nona May Covert, graudi^aughttr of B. and C, d. July 21, 1887; 15y. 3m. 26d. Ora Elme Covert daughter of C. d. Oct. 15, 18 :G: 24y, 5m. B. and 14 d. William D. CovcH. son of B. and C, d, :March 11, 1866; 2m 9d. Isabella Cowan, d. Nov. 28, 1836; 67y. Jane Cowles, wife of S. M., d. Jan. 17, lid. daughter of E. 18.7; lOy. 9m. of Thoma-', d. July 17, 18:6; Henry Cramblett, son of E. and H., d Aug. 14, 1857; 21y. Nancy J. Cramblett. and H., d. April 1, 16d. Jane Crawford, wife Sep. 4, 1829; 76y. Thomas Crawford, d. 7Sy. \^'i]liara Crawford, d. Sep. 1, 1850; 73y. 4m. 3d. Alvin C. Culbertson, son of S. H. and E. J., d. April 23, 1861; 9y. 4m. 17d. Esther J. Culbertson. wife of S. II., d. March 13, 1885; 58y. 6m. 29d. iMartlia J. Culbertson, daughter of S. H. and E. J., d. May. 4, 1861; 2y. 3m. Id, Mary Culbertson, d. Dec. 4, 1886; 50y. 7m. 16d. Samuel Culbert;;on, d. Jan. 22, 1871; 91y. Sarah Culbertson, wife of Samuel, d. July 20, 185(): Gly. Im. lid. S. H. Culbertson, d. Jan. 28, 1893; G9y. 5m. 12d. EJeuor Davis, wife of Nicholas, d. March 6, 1842; 57y. 10m. 2d. CRABAPPLE BURIALS 343 OIlie Davis, dani^hter of H. and C. D., d. Sop. 23, 18(13 ; ly. 7m. 15d. Martha Ann Dayton, daughter of .TaiDO'^ and R., d. JNIareh 14, 1SS5; 7y. 4m. Hd. William Dinsmore. d. Aug. 24, 1870; 59y. Sarah Doak, danghtor of William N., d. Feb. 11, 1S"3; 'y. 7m. 2d. Infani son of J. nnd E. Downing, d. May 27. 1S32; lid. Alexander Downing, d. April 28, 1872; 69y. Jane Downing, daughter of J. and Eleanor, d. April 11, 1SG3; 19y. 5m. • Id. Margaret A. C. Downing, b. March 15, 1883: d. Oct. 12, 1875. INIary Downing, daughter of J. and E., d. April J(j. 1838; 9y. 5m. 23d. Sarali G. Downing, wife of Alexander, d. Nov. 14, 1S(;6; oOy. WilHnm Downing, son of A. and S. G., d. Dec. 25, 1831; 3y. 27d. Hugh Allen Dunlnp. son of J. G. and C. E., d. April. 1883; 2m. 25d. Margaret Dunn, wife of James, d. Oct. 21, 1834: 51y. 5m. lid. William Eagelson, d. June 29, 1829; 55y. Henry Easter, d. June 12, 1842; 55y. INlary C. Easter, daughter of Henry and Maria, d. Nov. 3, 1858; 19y. 3m. lOd. Martha Edzinger, Avife of A., d. March 1, 1885; 39y. fim. Infant daughter of J. W. and A. A. Ferguson, d. June 6, 1880. Elmira Ferguson, wife of Joseph W., d. Oct. 2, 1877: 4ny. 9m. lid. Hugh Ferguson, d. Sep. 28, 1878; 78y. 11m. Marsaret Ferguson, wife of H., and daughter of G. and M. Armstrong, d. Nov. 19, 18.50: 41 y. 15d. Mnrgaret Ferguson, wife of H. W., d. Sep. 9. 18(53; 58y. Mary Finley, wife of James, d. Jan. 0. 1879: 78 V. Catharine Gallagher, d. Oct. 17, 1881; Sly. John Gallagher, d. March 3, 1801; 53y. Nancy Gallagher, Feb. 5, 1858; 84y. Nancy Gallagher, d. Sep. 26, 1S8S; S3y, John Garven, d. Jan. 2S. 18(13; 75y. Jane Gilcrest. wife of William, d. Dec. 21. 1827; 53y. Carrie M. Gordon, d. March 13, 1892; 7y. Im. Pleasy H. Gordon, d. Oct. 22, 1891; 37y. 5m. 15d. David O. Grimes, son of G. D. and J., d. April 5, 1849; 3y. 5m. lid. Elizabeth Grimes, wife of Joseph; d. Sep. 12, 1819; 3Sy. George D. Grimes, d. Nov. 20, 1875; r.7y. 7m. 7d. Jane Grimes, wife of George D., d. Nov. 3. 1890: 77y. 7m. 14d. Joseph Grimes, d. Jan. 2, ISIO: 57y. 2m. Martha E. Grimes, d. July 5, 1851; G6y. Gm. 22d. Mary Halinda Grimes, daughter of George D. and J., d. Aug. 18, 1851; 2y. 5m. 13d. Nancy E. Grimes, d. March 30, 183S: Sly. Sai-ah Grimes, daughter of George D. and Jane. d. April 15, 1860; 8y. 8m, Sarah B. Grin)es. daughter of John L., and M. J., d. Sep. il, 1867; ly. 9m. 8d. Ellen G. Grooms, daughter of William and Delilah, d. Oct. 2, 1S59; 9m. 17d, Infant son of Samuel and PI Guthrie, d. Sep. 24. 1824; 7d. Elizabeth Guthrie, wife of Samuel, d. Jan. 21, 18G8: 85y. Elizabeth A. Guthrie, dauuhler of G. and .T. D., d. Sep. 26. 18:37: 4m. Jane B. J. Guthrie, d. April 2G, 1881; 49y. Jane D. Guthiie, wife of Dr. G. S., d. July 17, 1837; 23y. 3m. Robert Guthrie, son of Samuel and E., d. iMay 2, 1827; Sm. Samu(4 Guthrie, d. Sop. 17. 1851; 63y. Infant son of J. and M. Ha una, Eliza] eth Hanna. wife of Samuel, d. March 11. 1829; G2y. James Hanna. d. Aug. 25, 1859; SCJy. 5m. 7d. .John Hanna. Sr.. d. Aug. 12, 1840: G3y. Margaret Hanna. d. Aug. 10, 1859; G5y. 10m. Mary Hanna, wife of John, d. May 31, 1821; My. Gm. 12d. 344 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY aud b. Rachel J. ITanna. flau2;litcr of J. M., fl. Oct. 15, 1S57; 31y. 9m. Td. Rauiucl Haiina, son of J. and M May 4, 1828; d. March 24, 1848. Samuel Ilanua, d. May. 8, 1842; 7Sy. 5m. 9d. Alex. Hairah, d. July 15, 1831: 81y. Charle.'* Hai'rah, d. Jan. 22, ISSl; 73y. 2m. 21d. Jane Harrah, wife of Alex., d. March 7, 18(51 : Sly. Rachel Ilai'rah, wnfe of Charles, d. Dec. 20. 1S77; 70y. Tabitha J. Harrah, dausihter of A. and J., d. June 17, 1S3G; 14y. 4m. "William McAlvin Harrah, son of A. and J., d. April 13, 1831; 7y. 2m. 5d. Barton Harris, d. June 9, 1842; lOy. Henderson Havs, b. March 29, 1821; d. .Tan. 1. 1890. Olivia Hays, wife of Henderson and daughter of (i. Y. and W. Coul- ter, b. Nov. 23, 1825; d. Sep. 18, 1852. William R. Heald, d. Oct. 28, 1847; 27y. 8m. lid. Maria M. Henderson, wife of T. A., b. Jan. 12, 1844; d. Dec. 10, 18S7. Elizabeth Henry, d. Nov. 1, 1881; 84y. James Henry, d. Dee. 15, 18G0; Jane Henry, d. IMarch 10, 1857; Margaret Henry, d. March 19, 1845; Mari^aret Henrv, d. June 10, 1858; Marv Henry, b. Feb. 9th, 1817; d. Nov. 3, 1883. Marv Henrv, d. April 11. Nicholas S. Henry, b. May 10, 1814; d. Oct. 31, 1885. Samuel Henry, d. May 13, 1871; 70y. Elizabeth Hillis, wife of Matthew, d. Nov. 6, 1820; 78y. Tamzen L. Hose, wife of Byron M., b. May 9. 1847; d. Oct. 15, 1889. Catharine Irwin, wife of Dr. Tliomas, d. June 18. 1848; 2()y. JSIary Irwin, Avife of July 15, 1848; G4y. d. Samuel Ir win, Sr., e.3y. Samuel Irwin, son beeea. d. , Sep, . 25, William Irwin. son Sep. 3 .0, 1827 : '^y. Samuel, Sr April 28, 183(5; of James and Re- 1841; ly. Im. 25d. of S. and Mary, d. . 3m. Lvdia Ann Jewell, daucliter of R. and M., d. July 28, 1S44; ly. Sarah Jewell, daughter of R. and M., d. April 7, 1844; 14d. Abirath Jolinsoti, sou of William and Ai;nes. d. June, 6. 1831; 9y. 3m. 2d. Al)ram Johnson, d. Dec. 22, 18()3; (■)9y. Agnes Johnson, wife of William, d. Feb. 4, 18(i4; 83y. Albert Johnson, d. Dec. 10, 188G; 63y. lOd. Cornelia Ann Johnson, danshier of A. and M. A., d. Feb. 3, 1848; 17y. Gm. 3d. Elizalieth Johnson d. Sep. 5, 1871; 75y. .John Johnson, d. Sep. 28, 187G; 71y. Marcai-et J. Johnson, daughter of Wil- liam and A., d. Sei). 23. 1832; 9y. 9m. INIary Johnson, d. April 24, 188(5; 85y. Rebecca Johnson, daughter of W. aud Agnes, d. June 5, 1851; 32y. lOd. William Johnson, d. June 7, 18.55; 79y. :;»d. ]Marv Kerr, wife of J. C, b. March 5, 1813: d. March 22, 1847. Mary Lawson, wife of Thomas, d. March 25, 1833; 48y. Tliomas Lawson, died June 3, 1845; 72y. Im. 15d. Maiigie Lavi)ort, b. June 2, 1853; d. Voh. 10, 1888. Willie H. I-ayport. son of R. B. and M. J., d. Dec. 3, 18S3; ly. IGd. John Leamon, d. Aug. 27, 18GG; 5Sy. Im. 27d. Marv T. Loamon, wife of .John. d. March 15, 18(i3; 49y. 4m. 2d. Nancv E. Leamon, daughter of G. D. and H. F., d. Feb. 3, 18G1; 4y Im. 9d. Elvira Lee, d. May 2, 1887; 41y. James Lee, d. March 10. 1876; 58y. John Lee. d. March 1, 1813; 33y. Joseph Lee, b. Oct. 5. 1819; d. June 4, 1888. Joseph V. Lee. son of R. and M., d. Dec. 19, 1811: Marv Lee, wife of Robert, d. Aug. 15, 1859; S3y. Marv A. Lee, daughter of Williim ar.d jNIaiy, d. Jan. 2, 18(50; 17y. Sm. Id. Otilla Lee, dnugliter of William and Marv; d. 0(t. 23, lSri4; 14y. Im. 17d. Robert Lee, d. Sep. IS, 1838; 23y. Robert Lee, d. May 12, 1861; 85y. Rose Lee, b. Aug. 21, 1832; d. March CRABAPPLB BURIALS 345 2, lSf12. Vance liOe, son of J. and C, d. March 10, 1S(!0; 21d. Anna E. Lewis, daiigliter of W. H. and R. K., d. July 31, ISUS; 20y. 2m. Tliomas M. Lewis, son of W. H. and R. K., d. July 2S, 1SG3: 17y. I'm. Elizabeth Legrand. daugliter of De- markiis L. and Margaret, d. June 19, 185S; 4in. Od. Infant daugliter of L. H. and E. Lind- say, d. June 4, 1S8S. Eliza M. Lindsay, wife of L. H., d. Juue 12, 18r.2; 31y. Sm. 101. Ella Snedeker Lindsay, wife or L. H., d. June 9, 1S88; 29y. 8m. 18d. ■Tames Lindsay, d. July 30, 1829; 33y. James Tiindsay, son of J. and S., d. Dee. 20, 1S3S: 18y. 8m. Lewis IL Lindsay, d. March 1, 1877; 4ey. 9d. Martha Lindsay, daughter of James and Susan, d. Jan. li, 1823; Om. William Lindsay, son of J. and S., d. Aug. 4, 1823: Gy. Gm. Abner I/. Lodge, son of T. and R., d. Jan. 10, 1852; 2y. 9m. 27d. Emmet L. Lodge, son of Thomas and Rebecca ,d. Oct. 30, 1859; 2y. 25d. Hazel Lodge, daughter of J. S. and M. v., d. Aug. 28, 18^9; 2y. 8d. John M. Lodge, b. Aug. 28, 18G2; d. April 9. 1882. Nancy Ellen Lodge, wife of Thomas and daughter of John and Sarah Merritt, d. Aug. 17, 1851; 25y. 2m. 2Gd. George Loye. d. April 23, 1821: 7Gv. Oeorge Loye. Jr., d. Sep. 21, 1829; 42y. Eliza Lyle. wife of Robert, d. Sep. 20, 1894: 71y. Elizabeth Rarry Lyle, daughter of Wil- liam and Isabel, d. April 20, 1840; lly. 2m. ISd. Flora J. Lyle, daughter of D. and M., d. May 15, 1SG1; Iv. 5m. 2d. Frank M. Lyle, b. "March 22, 1892; d. Jan. 4, 1893. Isabella Lyle. wife of .John, b. Oct. 28, 1789: d. Jiily 28, 1858. Isabell Lyle. wife of William, b. July 7. 1804: d. Jan. 7, 1854. John Lyle, son of Roliert and Eliza, d. Jan. 28, IS 10; ly. 8m. 2Sd. John Lyle, d. April 17, 1872; 47y. John Lyle, b. July 17, 17S7; d, June 5, 18.-1. Linnie Lyle. daughter of John and .lane. d. Oct. 9, 1885; 26y. Mary Eleanor Lyle, daughter of G. L. and N. J., b. Feb. 27, 1SS7; d. ]March 22, 1892. Robert Lyle, b. April 28, 1811; d. Noy. 23, 1895. Rosannah Lyle, daughter of John and Isabella, d. Aug. 1, 1821; Iv. 2m. William Lyle, b. Sep. 5, 1789; d. Feb. 19, 1854. Isabella Lyon, wife of John, d. Nov. 1, 1850; 79y. .Tames Woods Lyon, son of James and Naucy, d. Jan'. 5, 1803; By. 20d. Sarah JMargaret Lyon, daughter of J. and N., d. Noy. 18, 1838; 11m. 4d. Benjamin McCann, d. Jan. 28, 1842; Gly. :m. Marearet Ann IVIcClelland, daughter of William and C, d. Feb. 11, 1849; 3y. ISd. John T. McConaughev, son of D. and R. E., d. Aug. IS, 1SG9; 4y. 10m. i;id. Magsie M. McConaughey, daughter of D. and R. E.. d. Aug. 14, 18J9; Gy. 4m. 5d. Sarah A. McConaughey, d. Dec. 16, 185(>; 39y. 10m. Sd. Elizabeth :McConnell, d. April 19, 1857; 92y. 3m. 7d. Francis Rlarion McConnoll, son of J. and J., d. Juue 22, 1SG2; 22y. 9d. James IMcCounell. son of John and Jane, d. Jan. IG, 1830; 2y. 3m. 5d. John IMcConnell, d. Oct. 16, 1831; Gly. Joim McConuell, d. .Tune 22, 185G; 22y. 8m. lOd. John ^IcConnell, d. Aug. 18, 1878; S2y. 3m. 15d. Martha McConnell, daughter of John and Jane; d. Sep. 2G, 1876; 28y. 8m. Mary McConnell, wife of John: d. "SMlliam McConnell, d. April 14, 1856; 30y. 3m. 2d. John G. McCrarken, son of Dr. John and Martlia. d. July 27, 1819; 5hrs. Elmira McCullough, d. , 1835; — y. Im. — d. Esther McCullough, d, Aug. 8, 1841; S6y. 246 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Esther J. IMcCullough, d. IManb 12, 22y. 9m. 23cl. 1S37; 17y. Sin. Re\'\ William McMillan, D. D., d. April George McCullougli, b. May 10. 1: 03; n^ 1832; 52y. d. April 3. 1S45. Alexander IMcPherson, Isabella McCnllongb. wife of William; Catharine INIcrhevson, d. May 23, 1S32: Sly. Rebecca McPherson Isabell McCullough, wife of J. G.. Richard Manslield, d. Sep. 24, 1881; d. xing. 23, 1830; 50y. S.5y. Jane McCullough. wife of Robert, d. Thomas Marshall, d. March 23, 1S39; Oct. 15, 1835; 70j. 9,;y. Jane McCullough, d. June 13, 1878; Anna Menitt, daughter of J. and S., ■'^Sy. d. Oct. 3, 1832; 8y. 6m. 29d. John McCullough, [old sandstone]. Christina L. Merritt, b. Aug. 22, 1825; John McCullough, son of Samuel and d. jiiarch 5, 1800. Eliza, d. Jan. 14, 1S37; 6y. 4m. 6d. George M. Merritt,' son of A. and I., John McCullough, b. April 29, 1834; cl. Aug. 15, ]84.:-; Iv. 9m. 17d. d. Sep. 15, 1855. James P. Merritt, b. Feb. 18, 1820; d. lionazelah Jane McCullough, d. Jan. Marr-h 18. 1850. 10, 1841; lOy. 6m. 17d. John Merritt, d.' Jan. 11, 1841; 43v. Peter John McCullough, d. 10, 9in. -id. 1841; 9y. Sm. 8d. Josia'h S. Merritt, b. May 5, 1811; d. Robert McCullough, d. June 17, 1823; April 14, 1814. 67y. MarA' E. iMerritt, daughter of Aaron Rev. Robert McCullough, d. Aug. i:;. and Isabella; d. March 27, 1852; Im. 185S; 38y. 23d. Samuel McCullough, d. June 28, 1859; Sarah Merritt, wife of John, d. Oct. 7, 71y. 18.34: 34v. 9m. 24d. Samuel I. IMcCullough, d. April 8, 1884; William L. Merritt, d. April 20, 1873; SOy. 21v. 2m. 20d. Sarah McCullough, b. Jan. 7, 1807; d. Joanna Milbui-n. (Liugliter of .Jonathan' Dec. 9, 1875. and S. E., b. June 16, 1861; d. Aug. William McCullough, d. March 18, 26. i87(i. 1831; 83y. [a soldier of the Itevulu- Jo"se])h INIiller, d. Sep. 16, 1841; 21 y. tion]. lOi^i. 25d. William McCullough, d. Nov., 1834; Marv Miller, wife of Robert, d. Aug. 18y. Im. 25d. 20. 1881; 91v. 7d. Daniel McElhatten, d. Feb. 17, 1843; Willie M. Moffatr, son of W. S. and '''5y- • M. J., d. Jan. 15, 1871; 2v. Nancy McElhatten, d. Dec. 29, If 6'; Albert Moore, b. Dec. 28, 1852; d. Feb. 78y. 4d. 28. 18.54. Cynthia McGrew, wife of William, d. H„gh INIoore, b. Aug. 9, 1829; d. April Jan. 2, 1885; 62y. 19, i856. Emma F. McGrew. daughter of AVm. .Joseph JMoore, d. IMav 16, 1875; 76v. and C. d. Oct. 12, 1876; 21y. 10m. Martin Moore, d. March 30, 1865; 26v. 1 2d. lOd. Charles McGroarty, d. Sep. 30, 1866; Mary Moore, wife of John, d. Aug. 25, "Oy. 18.54: 77y. 8m. Mary McKibben, wife of George, d. Sarah IVIoore, b. July 28, 1811; d. April May 30, 1834; 26y. 5m. lid. 7. 1S95. Sarah McKibben, wife of John, b. William Moore, d. Marrh 11, 1865; 62y. 1730: d. June 9, 1812; 82y. Thomas Morgan, d. Oct. IS, 1807; 57v. Ann IMcLaughlin. wife of Edward, d. Elizabeth Morris, wife of .John, d. Jr^iy Sep. 1, 1851; 3Sy. H, is52; 27y. 5m. lOd. Hugh Kelly McMillan, d. Dec. 20, 1852; James Noling, d. Sep. 12, 1861; 43y. CRAB APPLE BURIALS 347 2m. 14d. Martha Osborn, clan£;h1er of Alex, and :\Iary, d. July 7, 1S22; 34y. 22d. Mary Osboru, wife of Alex., d. Jan. 5, LS42; 43y. James Parr, d. Sep. 3, 1853; OSy. Jane Patton, wile of Samuel, d. April 23. 1843: Say. .Jolui Pnttou, son of Samuel and Jane, d. April If), 1814; 17y. Samuel Pattou, d. Oct. 15, 1828; G7y. Lorouza Dow Pearse, sou of Isaac and May, d. Jan. 9, 1839; 33y. [sandstone near this, marked M. P.]. Elizabeth Pearse, d. April 28, 1822; Maraaret E. Peterson, wife of P. G., d. Aug. 15. 1885; 2Sy. 11m. 4d. Infant dan^l-.ter of J. D. and E. Phillips, d. Oct. 25, 1864; Im. Infant son of M. and S. Phillips, d. April 30. 1853; Im. Marv Phillips, wife of James, d. May 5, 1838; 59y. Marv Jane I'hillips, daughter of M. and S., d. June 9, 1S30; 4m. 21d. Matthew II. I'hillips, d. Sep. 2G, 18G4; 59y. Rebecca Phillips, daughter of M. and S.. d. March 30, 1842; lOui. Sarah J. Phillips, daughter of M. and S.. d. March 4, 1840; 5y. 2m. 2Ud. Marv J. Pollack, wife of R. J., d. Oct. 24, 1882; .55y. 8m. lOd. Elizabeth Porter, wife of James, d. May 4, 18G3; 69y. Im. 3d. Margaret Porter, wife of James, d. May 25, 1851; 7."y. Margaret .Josephine Porter, wife of Josiah, d. March 25. 1854; 28y. Rebecca Porter, daughter of James and Elizabeth, d. April 11, 1SG3; 30y. Im. 3d. Samuel Porter, Sr., d. Aug. 2, 18G9; I04y. Terrissa Porter, wife of David, d. Oct. 24. 18(52; 51 y. 11m. 22d. Sarah Kaincy, d. Aug. 30, 187G; 80y. William Rainey, d. Oct. 20, 1847; 51y. William Rainey, son of W. and S., d. Sep. 21, 1829; 8m. 4d. Isabella Ralston, daughter of R. and :M.. d. April IG, 1852; ly. 4m. 5d. Joseph Ralston, d. April 9, 1S28; GOy. Samuel Rhea, son of John and Mary, d. June 14, 1838; 10m, Gd. William M. Rhea, son of John and Mary, d. Feb. 29, 1840; 7y. 4m. 3d. Georue Richner, son of John and Susanna, d. Sep. 4, 1861; 8y. Im. Id. Isaac Ricliner, son of J. and S., d. May IS, 1840; 2m 13d. Sarah A. Richner, daughter of Ji.'hn and Susanna, d. July 16, 1861; lly. 10m. 20d. Susanna Ricliner, wife of John, d. Nov. 2, 1865; 54y. Susanna R. Richner, daughter of J. and S., d. June 7, 1S68; 21y. Infant son of Andrew and Margaret Richey, d. May 2, 1822; Inl'ant son of J. B. and M. A. Richey, d. Feb. 28. 1858; 3m. Kkl. Andrew Ritchev, d. May 30, 1859; SOy. 7m. 28d. Andrew Richev, sou of A. and M., d. Dec. 13, 182S; 2m. 20d. Ann Ritchey. daughter of A. and M., d. Nov. 9. 1810; 4m. David Ritchie, d. June 21, 1856; 82y. Esther Ritchey, d. Sep. 14, 1879; 54y. 9m. 19d. James Ritchey, son of A. and M., d. Aug. 1, 1813; 9y. Jane Ritchey, daughter of Andrew and Nancy, d. Sep. 9, 1SG4; 52y. 7m. Margaret Ritchey, wife of Andrew, d. Jan. 20. 1861; 66y. 7m. Martha Agnes Ritchey, daughter of A. and M., d. Aug. 5, 1855; 14y. 5m, 17d. Mary Ritchie, wife of David, d. Nancy Ritchey, wife of Andrew, d. Aug. 2, 1814; 34y. Nancy Ritchey, daughter of A, and. M. Ritchey; d. Jan. 2, 1815; 5m. Robert C. Ritchie, son of .J. B. and M. A., d. .Tuly 30, 1S57; Gy. 11m. Sarah Ritchey, d. Feb. 15, 1829; 20y. William Richey, son of A. and M., d. INIay 28, 1833; ly. Sm. lid. Margaret Robb, wife of Andrew, d. Maj-ch 21, 1845; 47y. Samuel Rogers, son of Michael and Rachel, d. July 13, 1S24; 10m. 2d. Mariah Scott, wife of Josiah, d. Sep. 30, 1831; 20y. 27d. Infant son of G. A. and M. Skaddtn; MS HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY d. March 25, 1ST3: Im. 1 Id. Man- J. Siuitli, daimhlAi- of W. and J.,"d. Juno S, IS-IG; 14y. Nicholas Smith, d. Jan., 1S20; Anno Snotlolvov, -wi'o of W. K., b. Sop. •27. ISl!); d. Nov. 9, 1S81. Eli/alioth Snodokor, d. Oot. 15, 1847; T2y. 5ni. lid. Elizabotli S. Snedelcer, daughter of N. and II., d. June 13. 1S27; ISy. Hannah Snodolior, d. Nov. 24, 1820; 44y. James W. Smnlolver. sou of W. K. and A., d. INIaich 1(5. 1852; ly. 3m. 17d. Marion Itoss Snodolior, sou of I'otor and iNIary E., d. May 24, 1875; Im. 7d. Marv Ann Sncdolier, dauijliter of Josiah and Sarah; d. Doc. 9, 1S43; ly. Im. S)d. Mary A. Sucdoker, dau.schter of AVil- liam R. and Auuo, d. Nov. 17, 1857; lly. 10m. Ud. Mary F. Ross Suodokor, wife of I'oter. d. Ai)ril 27, 1875; 24y. 3m. 7d. Naucy Snodokor, d. Aug. 22, 1838; 35y. Nicliolas Snodokor, d. July 2S, 1844; r.(!v. rotor Snod(>kor. d. ^\>b. 20, 185(!; 82y. Sarah Snodokor, wife of Josiah, d. April 20. 184S; 34y. Om. lid. Sarah J. Suedeker. dauuhtor of W. R. and A., d. Aug. 7, 1840: 8y. Om. 3d. Caudaco C. Taunohill, d. Jan. 7, 1840; 3v. 3m. Od. Carolino Taunohill, b. Dec. IS, 1817; d. :\Iav 12. 1801. Hannah P. Tanuehill, d. Jan. 27, 1849; 5v. Isaiah Tanuehill, Jan. 26, 1817; July20, 184::. Jamos Taunohill. d. Sep. 30. 1873; S3y. Jane Tanuehill, -wife of James, d. Aug. 24. 1851; 0:>y. 8m. 14 d. Margaret Taunohill daughter of AVil- liam aud Mary, d. Maroli Hi. 1875; 78v. WHliam Tannehill, d. Oct. 28, 1845; 84 y. Im. Aud. Robert Twigg. son of L. and S., d. March 15, 1836; 3y. 10m. Id. "William T. Lindsay Twigg, son of Lewis aud Susan, d. April 14, 18.52; l()y. Im. 18d. Ann Vanhoru, daughter of IQdward aud iNIargarot. d. Oct. 19, 1815; 12y. Edward Vanhoru, d. Aug. 10, 1855; 78y. .lane Vanhoru, b. Feb. 6, 1800; d. Feb. 20, 1888. INIargarot Vauhorn. wife of Edward, d. Oct. 14. 18;'>0: (;3v. Martha \'aiilioru, b. April, 20. 1805; d. Jan. 27. 18(i0. Sanuiid R. Vincent, sou of AV. R. and E. J., d. Fob. 22, 1863: ly. 3m. 28a. Sarah J. Webb, wife of John W., b. Julv 22, 1858; d. Jan. 24, 1883. IMarv Wi'lliug. b. Feb. 6, 1872: d. Feb. 26. 1872. Agues A\'o]lman. -wife of Rudolph, d. .luuo 17, 18:!4; 74y. Rudol})h Wellmau,* d. Dec. 27, 183t;; 78y. Im. 26d. Hannah E. Whan, daughter of J. R. and ^I., d. .Inly 10. 1851: 3m. 13d. Jamos B. V^'han, d. Sep. 10, 1856; 40y. 8m. lOd. Jolui "W. "\Vh:ui. son of .John and Mar- garet, d. ,Iuly 10. 1840: 28y. Sm. Od. ISlarg.arot ^^■han. wife of Jamos F... d. May 8. 1857; 3»iy. 4m. lOd. ^lary Wlian, daughter of John aud INIargarot, d. Aug. 6, 1851; 41y. Jane AVhite. Rotsey AMloy. Avife of William, d. Siml 10. 1840; (;()V. Eddie AAilov.' sou of J. aud II. E., d. Oct. 22. 1.S61; ly. Om. 14d. Joseph AVilej', d. Aug. 20, 1873; GSy. llm. 2d. Mariiarot Wllev, wife of John, d. Aug. 11, 1823; 4(;y. Mary \Mley, d. Oct. 6, 1862; 7Sy. HI UNITY BURIALS 349 Rnlin P. Wiley, son of J. and II. E., d. Oct. 20. is.lTfc Willinni Wiloy. d. Rep. 13, 1853; 7Sy. Jaiic ^^'oo(l WilliMinsDii. wife of Rov. M.'icKnijrlit Williamson, b. March 5, 1801; (1. .Tilly 24, ISJIt. Sarah II. Williauii^oii. dan^htor of P. and H., d. June 7, 1818; ly. 8m. Id. Cook, danirhtor of .John and 23d. of William, d. P-URIAI.S IN UNITY GRAVEYARD. To August 30, 189G. James Alexander, b. July 7, 1807; d. Oct. 22. 1887. Andrew Anderson, d. Dec. 19, 1831; (;:!y. Elizabeth Anderson, wife of James, d. June 14, 1842; 25y. 10m. 22d. Sarah Anderson, wife of J., d. April (!, 1840; 38y. Om. 20d. Anna Elcanur Armstrong', daugliter of Jnl:n and Mary, b. in Pittsburg, Pa., Dee. 20, 1814; d. in New Athens, Ohio, .Tan. 1.3, 1831. Charles Ramford, d. Nov. 15, 1803; KiOy. Oin. Andrew II. Barnes, d. March 24, 1845; 23y. Thomas Barr, d. May 8, 1848; 27y. 5m. 22d. Eliza Black, d. Dec. 28, 1842; 24v. Jlartlia M. Colibs, wife of Dr. (i., d. Oct. 10, 1874; 4.3y. 20d. Mattie Cobbs, twin daughter of Dr. O. an'i :\I. M., d. April 29, 1871; 2v. 6m. 2Gd. A'angoine Cobbs, wife of Dr. Charles, b. April 17, 1845; d. June 8, 1880. Maitin Cochran, d. March 20, 1823; 35y. George Cook, b. May 5, 1804; d. Sep. 20, 1892. George Cook, son of George and M., d. Aug. 24, 1851; 17y. 2d. James Cook, d. Feb. 28, 1815; 60v. John Cook, d. June 21, 1843; 44y. ^largaret Cook, wife of .John, d. Aug. 28, 1S:',9; 35y. Nancy Cook, wife o' James, d. Jan. 20, 1820; r,<)y. Nancy Cook, wife of George, d. Jan. 9, 1888; 78y. 14d. Pollv JIargaret, d. April 19, 18.35: 2y. Rel)ecca Cook, wifo 1818: 24y. Thomas Cooke, b. .Tan. 9, 1843; d. May 21, 1872. AVilliam Cook, d. M.iv 8, 1S.38; 4Gv. Elizabeth Craig, d. .Tan. 27, 1823; 07y. .Tames Craig, son of .Toseph and Jane, d. .Tune 12, is.39; 7y. 4m. 15d. Jane Cruig, d. May 28, 1804; 75y. John Crnig. son of L. and J. C., d. Dec. 12, 1800; 15d. .Tos-eph Craig, d. May 28, 1804; 7.oy. Nancy Craig, d. .Tuly G, 1852; 74y. William Craig, minister of the Gospel. son of James and E., d. July 10, 1S18; 29y. Agnes Crawford, wife of Isaac, d. .Tan. 8, 18.33; 32y. Im. lOd. Infant son of .T. and S. Culbertson, d. Sep., 1840. Dorcas Culbertson, d. 47y. 5m. Gille,spie Culbertson, d. 74y. Infant son of .T. and S. .Tune 10, 1887. INIarv Culbertson, wife .Tuly 1.3, 1890; G7y. ]Mary B. Aug. 15, 18G5; Sep. 11, 1890; Culbertson, d. of Robert, d. Culliertson, daughter of R. d. Oct. 21, 1803; .3y. 8m. 24d. Culbertson, d. Dec. 20, 1840; Culbertson, wife of .Tohn, 1). 1840: d. Sep. 19, 1800. Culbertson, dauirhter of R. d. Oct. 2, JSG3; 5y. 4m. 18d. and M., Robert C. 87y. Sarah .T. Aug. 1, Sarah M. and M., Thomas Culbertson, d. Aug. 13, 1841: 40y. Om. Lizzie Davis, daughter of J S. .L, d. Oct. 24, 1877; lly. Sarah Davis, wife of J. ^V., d 1875; .35y. 3m. Samantha Dunbar, May .3, 1890. William Dnnbar, b. Sep. G. isni. William Dunbar, b. Aug. 3, 1874. .Tennie Dvsart, wife 10, 1873: 28y. 1m. Lucinda Carolin"' Dysnrt William and L., d. Nov W. and 4m. 1.5d. Nov. 14, 1. Sep. 8, 1823; d. April 19, 1810; d. April 13, 1851; d. W., d. Nov. of B 20d. dauirhter of 14, 18G2; 8y. 350 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 6rn. Marv E. Dvsart, daughter of William ami Lucinda, d, Feb. 9, 1840; 2y. 5m. Mary INI. Fergus on, wife of Malcolm, d. Oct. 5, 1S45; 32y. 5m. lid. Nancy J. Ferguson, daughter of M., and J. A., d. Nov. 29, 1S60; 8y. 4m. 18d. Agnes Finlev, d. Oct. 15, 1843: 47y. Elizabeth Finley, d. May 8, 1833; 42y. Emma Eliza Finney, daughter of Thomas and E. [No dates]. INIai-garet Ann Finney, daughter of Thomas and E. [No dates]. Infant son of Thomas and E. Finney. [No dates]. George Frater, d. July 9, 1877; 78y. Gm. ISd. George W. Frater, son of J. D. and S. J.. d. Sep. 19, 18G1; 9m. 29d. Henry O. Frater, b. Feb. 17, 1858; d. July 17, 1868. Lillie Frater, daughter of M. O. and J. K., d. Aug. 11, 1889; 4y. 7d. Luretta Jessie Frater, daughter of W. A. and B. H., d. March 11, 18G7; 2m. 2d. R. F. Prater, b. Feb. IG, 1833; d. Dec. 25, 1881. Susanna Frater, d. Aug. 19, 1874; 78y. Gm. 18d. Susanna Frater, b. Oct. 30, 1831; d. Sep. 11, 1891. Homer Richey Gaston, son of Joseph and Mary, d. Oct. 3, 1885; d. Feb. 19, 188G. David Givnoy, d. Feb. 26, 1859; 85y. 11m. James Gibney, son of D. and M., d. Feb. 14, 1846; 29y. 5m. 21d. Martha Gibney, daughter of D. and M., d. Dec. 22, 1853; 31y. Mai*y J. Gibnev, daughter of J. and E., d. Oct. 4, 1856; 9y. 10m. 5d. Ague.'! Gillespie, wife of James, d. Sep. 24, 1873; 85y. 8m. 24d. Eleanor Gillespie, wife of Robert, d. March 28, 1859; 34y. Joseph H. Gillespie, son of R. and E., b. INIarch 12, 1849; d. Nov. 12. 1861. Sarah Cillespie, wife of J. T., d. Nov. 2, 1873; 2Gv. Im. 14d. Levi Graham, d. Feb. 26, 1845; 29y. 11m. lOd. IMarv Graham, d. March 5, 1885; 78v. Agnes Gray, d. Feb. 3, 1879; 72y. 2Gd. Benjamin M. Grav, son of Roliert and Ann, d. April 7, 1841; 5m. 2d. Catharine Hammond, wife of Robert, d. July 5, 1846; 32y. David Hammond, d. Sep. 22, 1S2G; 63y. David Hammond, d. July 13, 1836; 30y. 2m. 6d. Ellen F. Hammond, daughter of .7. and S., d. Dec. 14, 1863; 8yr 7m. 15d. Garrett Hammon, son of William and Jane, d. Feb. 20, 1839; Grizzilla Hammond, daughter of J. and M., d. Dec. 6, 1849; 17y. Hannah H. Hammond, wife of R., and daughter of Alex, and Eleanor Clark; d. Sop. 1.5, 1843; 35y. Infant son of J. and J. Hammond, d. x\pnl 21, 1834. Infant son of J. and J. Hammond, d. April 24. 1838. Infant daughter of J. and J. Ham- mond, d. Feb. 28, 1847. James Hammond, b. May 13, 1808: d. July 9, 1880. Jane Hammond, wife of Robert, d. Feb. 23, 3852; SSy. Jane Hammon, wife of William, d. Dec. 16, 1837; 29y. 11m. Jane Hammond, wife of James, d. May 1, 1S50; 37y. Gm. John Hammond, d. Aug. 6, 1874: 72y. John G. Hammond, son of J. and .J., d. Oct. 15, 1846; ly. 17d. Joseph F. Hammond, son of ,T. and S.. d. Dec. 21, 1862; 7y. 2m. 16d. Martha Ellen Hammond, daughter of J. and M., d. Feb. 18, 1862: 20y. Robert Hammond, d. Jan. 15, 1845; 81y. Robert Hammond, d. Aug. 10, 1S47; 4.3y. Robert Hammond, son of John and M., d. March 17, 1831; ly. 4m. Sarah J. Hammond, wife of James, b. Aug. 27, .1832; d. Aug. 4, 185S. Sarah M. Hammond, daughter of J. and S., d. Dec. 14, 18G1; 3y. lid. W. Lee Hammond, son of M., d. Aug. 23, 1883; 8m. Thomas B. Ilanna, son of R. P. and .L E., d. June 9, ISGO; 5y. 9m. 19d. UNITY BURIALS 351 Walter riiillips Hanna, son of J. E. and Belle, d. Jnne r>, LSSU; 4m. David B. PTaAvtlKirne, b. March 27, 1S75; d. Jan. 9, 1SS2. Ja^ips Hawthorne, d. Oct. 24, 1844; HGy. Mai4,iiie .T. Hawthorne, b. Aug. 2, 1S<;2; d. Feb. 16, 1S93. Marsjaret E. Hawthorne, b. July 1, 1S53; d. June 5, 1SS7. ISIartha Tenia Hawthorne, b. June 2, 1SS7; d. Jan. 9, 1SS2. Robert G. Hawthorne, d. April 19, 1804: 41y. Gm. 14d. Kosanna S. Hawthorne, daughter of J. and II., Feb. 14, 1831; 2m. Willis Lemoin Hawthorne, b. July 27, 1873; d. Dec. 25, 1881. Sarah A. Trimble Hars, wife of D. J., d. April 2G, 1873; 37y. 7m. 6d. Alex. M. Henderson, son of M. and M. O., d. May 19, 1849; ly. 11m. Andrew Henderson, b. April 10, 1798; d. July 1, 18G0. Andrew J. Henderson, b. July 20, 1828; d. April 20, 1830. David Henderson, d. June 11, 1870; 53y. Edward Henderson, son of Matthew and Miranda, d. Aug. 16, 1840; 20y. rid. George H. Henderson, d. Oct. 30, 1889; G9y. 4m. 20d. George S. Henderson, son of G. S. and M. A., d. Oct. 14, 1853: 2y. 6m. 29d. George S. Henderson, son of G. S. and M. A., d. Dec. 12, 1860: 7y. 9m. 28d. Infant son of G. S. and M. A. Hender- son, d. Feb. 28, 1855; 29d. James C. Henderson, d. Dec. 12, 1870; 61 y. Jane Henderson, wife of William T., d. April 26, 1822: Giv. 11 m. 7d. Jane Henderson, daughter of A. and M., d. Jime 21, 3825: JOy. Janet Nichol Henderson, wife of An- drew, b. Jan. 29, 1801; d. Sep. IS, 1891. Jennie W. Henderson, d. July 12, 1883; lOy. 10m. 20d. John Henderson, son of Alex, and H., d. Dec. 13. 1842; 5y. John N. Henderson, b. Sep. 8, 1821; d. March 13, 1882. Leander Henderson, son of M. and M., d. April 22, 1840; 2.\. Margaret Henderson, daughter of A. and H., d. Dec. 17, 1843; lOy. Margaret Ann Henaer.son, d. June 7, 1ST3; 53y. lUni. 5d. Martha Henderson, wife of Andrew, d. April 11, 1858; 8Gy. Martha M. Henderson, daughter of D. and M., d. Sep. 29, 18G3; 8y. 3m. 8d. Mary Henderson, wife of David, d. July 27, 1874; 58y. 9m. 19d. Mary J. Henderson, wife of John, b. Dec. 22, 1826; d. June 29, 1847. Musetta :Mary Maud Henderson, daughter of M. H. and M. J., d. Sep. 24, 1875; ly. Sm. 25d. Nancy J. Henderson, daughter of G. S. and M. A., d. Oct. 14, 1853; 2y. 6m. 29d. Nathaniel T. Henderson, b. Dec. 15, 1814; d. Sep. 3, 1888. Rebecca Jane Henderson, daughter of James and Barbara, d. Jan. 18, ISSG; 33y. 2m. lid. Samuel Henderson, son of Alex, and Mary, d. Dec. 25, 1815: 7y. Samuel Henderson, d. Aug. 5, 1833; 2v. Im. 21d. William Henderson, son of G. S. and M. A. William T. Henderson, d. Aug. 25, ]8G1; 46y. William T. Henderson, b. May 1, 1838; d. Dec. 18, 1862. James Henry, d. Sep. 11, 1856; 37y. Thomas Heniy, son of James and Re- becca, d. May 21, 1834; 21y. Maffsie J. McNarv Kasley, wife of Samuel H., d. Feb. 3, 1874; 34y. 2m. 2Gd. Infant of David and Jane Kilgo-e. Elizabeth K. Gilgore, d. March 26. 1877; 57y. Jeremiah Ivilgore, d. April 12, 1866; 5Gy. Sarah E. Kilgore, wife of William M., d. July 29, 1871; 24y. 9m. Tacie Kilgore, wife of William M., b. Sep. 7, 1855: d. Jan. 3, 1894. Andrew M. King, d. Feb. 12, 1844; SOy. Griffith Lemmon, d. Nov. 12, 1870; 84y. Mary Lemmon. wife of Griffith, d. Oct. 352 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY 20. 1834; 30y. Margaret Dunbar Lodore, wife of Wil- liam, d. July 5, 1S81; 3 jy. Im. lOd. Caroline J. Love, daughter of G. and J., d. ]May 28, 1853; 2y. 11m. lid. George Love, d. Dec. 20, 1880; 70y. (Jm. 21d. George Love, son of R. INI. and S. H., I). Jan. 10, 1807; d. Feb. 24, 1807. Jane Love, wife of George, d. Feb. 21, 1S01: 72v. 3m. 4rl. John Love, d. March 28. 1?62; 88y. Joseph MeFadden Love, son of Robert and Sarah IL, d. April 15, 1872; lly. Sm. 12d. IMarv Love, wife of John, d. Dec. IG, 1S30; 44y. Marv Love, wife of John, b. Sep. 11, 1877; 70y. Nancv Love, daughter of G. and J., d. March 3, 1842; 3y. 5m. 25d. Nancv J. Love, daughter of G. and J., d. March 19, 1849; 4y. Cm. GQ. Jane Lumsdon, wife of Thomas, daughter of William and Jane Hind- marsh; born in England, May 15, 1831; d. Jan. 29, 1859. Emily Lyle, wife of George A., d. April 7, iS79; 21y. Om. Carrie Patton Lvle, wife of Addison, d. May 1, 1804; 24 y. Jane L. McBratuev, wife of Robert, d. Sep. 15, 1830: 84y. 7m. Elizabeth JNlcBurney, d. June 9, 1849; 90v. Alex. McCall, d. Nov. 10, 1833; G4y. 22d. Alex. JlcCall, son of T. and M., d. Oct. 22, 1840: ly. Im. Elizabeth McCall, wife of Thomas, d. Dec. 20. 1840; .39y. 2m. 14d. George S. McCall, son of T. and M., d. Sep. 5, 1849; 6y. Hugh F. McCall, son of Thomas and Miriam, d. July 22, 1848; ly. Im. 20d. Rev. J. -V. McCall, d. July 15, 1800; 56j'. Erected by congregation of U. P. Church, Cedarville, O. Jane McCall, daughter of M. and N., d. Sep. 3, 1872; 08y. John McCall, b. Aug. 22, ISOS; d. Oct. 13, 1883. Margaret iNIcCall, wife of Alex., d. Dec. 5, 1844; 61 y. Marearet McCall, wife of .John, d. May 7, ~1839; 20y. 5m. 2Gd. Margaret J. INIcCall, daughter of "^i'homas and Miriam, d. May 9, 1SG7; 15v. 5m. ]2d. Matthew McCall, d. April 17, 1838; G5y. Miriam .-\lma McCall, daughter of T. and M., d. Feb. 12, 1S63; 27y. Gm. 9d. Nancy McCall, wife of Matthew, d. Oct. 2, 1804; 83y. 2m. 24d. Thomas McCall, son of INI. and N., d. Aug. 20, 1842; 20y. 11m. 20d. Infant son of T. and M. McCall; d. Feb. 14, 1838. Marsiaret McCrac^-en, wife of William, d. '^June n, 1832; 29y. 10m. Id. Martha McCracken, wife of R., d. Oct. 9, 18.:0; 82y. Martha McCracken, d. Jan. 29, 1854; 51y. 3m. 17d. Martha A. McCracken, daughter of William and Margaret, d. Nov. 22, 1844: 17y. 4m. 13d. Marv ^IcCracken, wife of William, d. Jan. 21, 1879; 78y. 10m. 21d. Nancv INIcCracken, b. Aug. 12, 1804; d. Sep. 10, 1885. r.obert McCracken, d. June 18, 1840; 7Sy. William McCracken, b. March 4, 1797; d. June 0, 1884. Elizabeth McFarland, d. Feb. 5, 1875; 77y. Margaret A. IMcFarland, wife of An- drew, d. Mav 27, 1872; 3.5y. Om. Kid. Marv McFarland, d. Aug. 22, 1883; S7y. Robert McFarland, d. Nov. 26, 1842; 91 y. Wiliiam McFarland, d. May. 14, 1877; Sly. Ann INIcGaskey, d. Jan. 26, 1850; 67y. 5m. 15d. James McGaskey, b. May 10, 1797; d. and J. M., b. July 8, 1830; d. June Jan. 9, 18.53. Jane IMcGaskev, wife of .Tames, b. May 31, 1804: d. Feb. 17, 183L Jane IMcGaskey, b. Oct. 1, 1804; d. Sep. 20, 1884. Jane McGaskev, daughter of H. M. and R., d. Nov. 20, 1822; 7y. 3m. 17d. John McGaskey, d. Oct. 11, 1833; 74y. UNITY BURIALS 353 John McGaskoy, d. May 10, ]ST2; ISy. Sarah McGaskey, daughter of II. M. and K., d. July 7, 1S47; Saiah J. McGaskey, daughter of J. and J. M., b. July 8, 1830; d. June 28, 1837. William McGaskey, b. Nov. 7, 1799; d. :May 8, 1855. Mary T. McHenderson, wife of John, I). Dec. 25, 1837; d. April 12, 3889. David McKee, d. Sep. 17, 18(i3; 44y. Infant daughter of D. and M. A. I\lc- Koe, d. Aug. 4, 1853; 14d. Joseph R. McKee, sun of D. and M., I). Dec. 3, 1849; d. April 4, 1851. Klixabeth McMillan, d. [no datps] : 68v. Nancy Me:\Iillan, d. Dec. 2(:>, 185G: 4Sv. Robert McMillan, d. Aug. 14, 18S7; 83y. Alex. McNary, d. Aug. 30, 1827; 47y. lOd. Hannah E. McNary, daughter of J. and M., b. Dec. 3, 1854; d. July <>, IS.-M. James McNaiT, b. March 2, 1810; d. March 2, 1881. Jol-.n McNary, b. Oct. 21, 1801; d. Feb. 7, 1890. Mnrgaret McNary, b. Dec. 11, 1780; d. .March 31, 1855. Martha E. McNai*v, daughter of J. and M., b. .Tan. 5. 1852; d. May 1.5, 1853. William McNary, died at Soldiers' Home, Pittsburg, Pa., Sep. 2, 18tj4; 18y. Im. 23d. John Ma.ior, d. Dec. 12, 1858; 59y. 9m. 22d. J. Thomas Marrow, b. July 26, 1829; d. Nov. 2(), 188(5. Margaret E. Miller, daughter of W. :ind M., d. Oct. 10, 18.55; 2y. 8m. 8(1. Mary Miller, wife of William, b. Feb. 23, 18.30; d. Dec. 23, 1801. Infant daughter of W. and M. Miller, d. Oct. 12, 1855; 15d. Alvina Minteer, daugliter of J. and E.. Eleanor ]\Iinteer, wife of Josepii, d. July 0, 1853; Sly. Eliza Minteer, wife of .Joseph, d. ]May 2(;, 1800; 54y. 9m. 1.5d. Eliza Ann Minteer, wife of .Tames, d. June 28, 1855; 22y. 3m. 19d. Elizabeth :\Iinteer, v^rife of R., d. Oct. 5, 1803; 67y. 23 Elmer Minteer, son of .Tames and Mary, d. .Tuly 2, 1805; 4y. 3m. 25d. Infant daughter of .T. and M. Minteer, d. Jan. 1, 1800; 2d. Joseph Minteer, d. March 10, 1871; 72y. 8m. 7d. Joseph C. Minteer, d. Jan. 21, 1863; 28y. 7d. Lavina A. Minteer, daughter of J. and E., d. Aug. 31, 1849; 3y. Lillie G. Minteer, daughter of G. and M. J., d. Feb. 9, 1872; 4m. 22d. Martha Minteer, daughter of R. and E., d. April 20, 1S50; lOy. Mary Minteer, wife of James, d. July 14, 1805; 20y. 9m. 9d. R. G. Minteer, b. March 31, 1853; d. :May 10, 1883. Robert Minteer, d. Feb. 10, 1870; 78y. William Vincent Minteer, d. Oct. 18, 1871; 31y. 2m. 1.3d. Elizabeth IMoore, daughter of J. and M., d. May 22, 1827; 1.5y. Gilespie Moore, d. Jan. 4, 1874; 58y. 7m. 28d. James Moore, d. Aug. 1, 1817; 45y. James Moore, son of J. and M., d. March 13, 1837; 17y. James Moore, d. Sep. 22. 1828; 9y. 9m. Sarah R. Aloore, wife of .1. W., d." April 5, 1894; 42y. 2m. 21d. William M. iNIoore. son of G. and E. A., d. March 3, 1870; 2ay. 5m. lid. Sarah R. Nichols, wife of M. H., b. Nov. 8, 1839; d. May 5, 1890. Mary J. Parr, daughter of T. and N., d. Sep. 7, 1842; ly. Annie C. Patton, d. June 5, 1885; 75 v. Annie W. Patton, d. Dec. 16, 1891; 07y. 8m. lOd. Elizalieth I'atton, wife of .T. B., b. Feb. 2, 1845; d. Sep. 30, 1889. Harriet Dunbar Patton, wife of Cal- vin, d. April 0, 1873; 25y. James H. I'atton, d. Oct. 3, 1860; 75y. Jane Patton, wife of James, b. Sep. 13, 1789; d. June 0, 1880; 91 ji. Rachel S. Patton, daughter of J. and J., d. Nov. 20, 1845; 19y. Ray Jewel Patton, son of C. D. and .Tane, b. Sep. 9, 1893; d. Sep. 8, 1894. Rev. Samuel Patton. d. Nov. 1.5, 1857; 28y; Pastor of First Associate Pres- byterian Church, Detroit, Mich. 554 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY Snnih ratton, wife of Dr. R. W., d. .ToTi. 18, 1S7G; 59y. Svlvanus Patton, son of William and "a., fl. Sep. 29, 1863; 12y. ^^■il!ianl ratton, d. May 2, 1873; 74y. ^\iiliam Patton, sou of James and Jane, cl. Dec. 8, 1841; lOy. 11m. 2d. Alex. Pollock, b. March 25, ; d. Aug. 5, 1821. J:unes Pollock, b. Sep. 4, 1821; d. Jan. '.), 1S23. James W. Pollock, son of J. and N., d. June 28. 1851; 18y. 9m. Jnlui Pollock, d. April 24, 1853: 82y. John Pollock, Sr., d. Feb. 2G, 18G1; 65y. lliu. 23d. John Pollock, member of Company B, 98th Reijiment O. V. I., wounded at Chickamauga, Sep. 20; died at Chat- tanooga, Tenn., Oct. 17, 18G3; 33y. 9d. J.Iary Pollock, wife of John, d. April IG, 185G; 78y. Nancy Pollock, d. Sep. 7, 1879; 81 y. 5m. 12d. Nancy R. Pollock, daughter of Samuel and Jane, d. Sep. 17, 1861; ly. 10m. 17d. Rebecca J. Pollock, b. July 7, 18.52; d. Feb: 26, 1893. Samuel Pollock, b. Jan. 11, 1818; d. March 29, 1892. Margaret D. Porterfield, d. March 19, 1887; 75y. Sarah Potter, wife of James, d. June 5, 1851; 80y. Elizabeth Ritchov, wife of John, b. Jan. 8, 1781: d. Nov. 11, 1859. James Ritchev, son of John and Eleanor, d. Dec. 12, 1839; 15y. 8m. 8d. .John Ritchev, b. Dec. 8, 1776; d. March 24, 18.52. Mary Ann Ritchey, daughter of J. and S.,* d. Aug. 1, 1844; 3y. 7ra. lOd. Abicail Robb, d. Nov. 17, 1863; 67y. William Robb, d. Jan. 21, 1858: 72y. Mary Ellen Rogers, daugh+er of J. and S.,'d. .Tan. 3, 18G3; 14y. 2m. Id. James H. Rogers, son of J. and S., d. Dec. 31, 1862; 62y. 4m. 15d. Joseph Rogers, son of J. and S., d. Jan. 17, 1863; 6y. 2m. lOd. Robert F. Rogers, son of J. and S.. d. Dec. 31, 1862; 7y. 5m. William James Rogers, son of J. and S., d. April 10, 1831; Sly. 9m. 13d Mary M. Cook Rourk, wife of J. H.. b. April 11, 1845; d. March 30, 1879. Jane Scroggs, daughter of J. G. and M. P., d. June 11, 1854; 44y. John C. Seroggs, d. Feb. 20, 1855; 77y. Caroline Sharp, d. Oct. 20, 1386; 72y. Sm. 28d. William Sharp, d. May 18, 1859; 50y. 3m. 8d. Rachel Jane Shearer, daughter of J. and M., d. Sep. 5, 1849: ly. 5m. 22d. E. J. Ferguson Sloan, wife of William, d. Jan. 17, 1867; 52y. Agues Smith, d. Nov. 2G, 1842; 2m. 2d. mi/.a S. Smith, wife of Joseph B., d. March 12, 1887; 78y. Joseph Smith, d. Feb. 24. 1878; 86y. Smith, d. April 27, 1845; 13y. of J. and E., d. Nov. M. J. 27d. Silas Smith, son 20, 1850; 7Gy. Samuel Steen, son of John and Cath- arine, d. Aug. 18, 1822; 10m. 12d. Anna A. Stevenson, daughter of Rev. J. and E., d. June 5, 18G4; ly. 9m. Agnes Stewart, wife of John, d. Oct. 11, 1856; S4y. Elizabeth SteAvart, d. Dec. 25, 1840; 31 V. Elizabeth Stewart, daughter of J. and A., d. Nov. 7, 1831: 2y. 2m. Esther Stewart, wife of William, d. Oct. 25, 1813; 28y. Harry A. Stewart, son of J. E and M. J., d. Jidy 31, 1862; lOui. Jr.mes S. Stewart, d. July 1, 1842; ly. 11m. Jane Stewart, wife of Edie, d. Feb. 11, 1847; 68y. Matthew C. Stewart, son of J. S. and J., d. Nov. 8, 1849; 9y. 9m. Robert Stewart, d. July 30, 1889; 33y. William Stewart, son of J. and A., d. Nov. 4, 18—; 3y. 11m. 3d. Martha J. Stiles, wife of W. H.. b. Sep. 1, 1857; d. March 28, 1889. [Also infant]. Sarah J. Taggart, daughter of H. and E., d. Feb! 2.5, 1847: 14y. 6m. William Taylor, b. Aug. 18, 1849; .d. NOTTINGHAM BURIALS 355 Sep. 20, ISSo. John G. Thompson, son of S. and M. A., d. Sep. 20, 1849. I No ase]. John Trimble, Sr., d. Sep. 14, 1843; 07v. Mary Trimble, d. Sep. 8, 182.5 : 40y. Thomas Trimble, d. Aug. 11, 1870; G2y. 10m. James Trusdall, son of L. and E., d. June 4, 1847; 21y. 5m. Margaret G. Vincent, wife of Rev. G. C, d. June 24, 1841; 30y. James Walker, son of Rev. J. and R., b. Aug. 1.5, 181:3; d. April 12, 18.53. Rev. John Walker, d. March 8, 1845; in the 30th year of his ministry, hav- ing been pastor of Unity Church 31 years. Joseph Hanna Walker, infant son of Rev. J. and R., d. April 7, 1829; 14d. Margaretha R. Walker, daughter of Rev. J. and R., d. March 15, 1845; 7ra. 2Sd. Mary Walker, wife of Robert, d. Feb. 27, 1825; 75y. Nancy ISI. Walker, daughter of Wil- liam and Martha M., d. July 9, 1871; 4m. 7d. Rachel S. Walker, wife of Rev. John, d. Nov. 10, 1830: 43y. William Houston Walker, Pastor of Associate Ohio Cong ogaticn, Beaver Co., Fa., d. June 20, 1841; 20y; in the 4th year of his ministry. Mary E. Wallace, daughter of T. and M., d. March 0, 1857; Im. lid. Jane Watson, wife of William H.; daughter of .T. and M. Hammond, d. July 31, 1854; 2Gy. William AYatson, b. ]\:arch 20, 1822; d. June 19, 1889. Esther White, daughter of Paul and Mary, d. Oct. 20, 1S2G; 3y. 8m. Paul White, d. May 25, 1827; 43y. Henry H. Wibon, son of Mordecai and Hester, d. Sep. 22, 1804; 5y. 11m. 2Gd. James Wishart, son of Rev. William and Sarah, d. April 19, 1863; ly. 2m. lOd. Samuel Wishart, son of W. and S., d. Dec. 31, 18.52: weeks. Mai-y M. Yoshall, and infant, wife and daughter of William, d. April 15, 1877; 32y. 11m. 25d. BURIALS IN NOTTINGHAM GRAVEYARD. of B., d. E. E., To May 10, 1898. Elizabeth Al(>xander, wife Sop. .30, 1800; 74y. 8d. Robert Alexander, d. Feb. 1, 18.50: 61v. Urn. 24d. Jane Barclay, daughter of A. and d. Nov. 11. 18.54; lly. 4m. 23d. Elizabeth Bargar, wife of Alex., May 5, 18.54; .39y. Sm. .5d. Jane Bargar, daughter of D. and d. Nov. n. 1854; lly. 4m. 23d. Nancy Barricklow. wife of Frederick, d. Oct. 17. 1881; Sly. 8m. 4d. Frederick Barricklow, d. May 1, 1858; 03y. 5m. 28d. Henry Barricklow, d. April 27, 1851; 80y. IMeriba Barricklow. wife of Henry, d. ]\fay 1.5. 1848; 75y. Rachel Barricklow. wife of John, d. March 20, 1839: 20y. Im. 20d. Mary J. Belknap, d. .\ug. 24, 18.54; 3riy. 20d. Elizabeth Bethel, wife of John, d. Bee. 18. 1872; 77y. 10m. Id. Frances Bethel, wife of Simpson, d. Oct. 20. 1882; 52y. 5m. 13d. John Bethel, b. June 29, 1800; d. April 4, 1887. Alloc <^arrothers. son of James and Elizabeth, d. Aug. 27, 1873; ly. 10m. 17d. Anne Carrothers. wife native of Ireland, b. d. .Tan. 14. 1880. Elizabeth Carrothers, wife March 8, 1804; 42y. 4m. George Carrothers, a mtive of Irp- and E., d. May 23, 1875; lly. 2m. I9d. Hiram D. Carrothers, son of J. and E.. d. .Tan. 22. 1840; 5y. Mary Carrothers, daughter of George •Tnd Anne. d. Aug. 8, 1804; 29y. Mary E. Carrotliers. daughter of J. and E.. d. Jan. 14, 1846; 9y. Daniel Clements, b. Dee. 24, 1819; d Sep. 1. 1872. Elizabeth Clements, b. Nov. 25, 1822; of George, a May 1, 1798; of J., d. 356 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY (1. Jan. 22, ISSS. ElizM (Clemens. AAifo of Johu, d. July 14, 188G; Sliy. 2. 14d. Cillespie rifiviens, son of J. and M., d. March ."(), 1S71; 27y. llni. 20(1. James Cli'inons, d. Nov. 20, 1S72; 72y. John Clenu'U.s, d. July 28, 1880; i>:)y. Ini. Ijou'sa E. Clomonts, daushtor of D;in- iel and Elizabeth, d. Jan. 10, 1870; lOy. Ivucinda J. Clemens, daughter of J. and E., d. May 23. 1875; lly. 2m. 19d. Mary Clemens, wife of James, d. June lo' 1868; 6Sy. Rol)oeoa Clemens, daughter of J. and isr., d. March 10, 18(;(): 2(;y. 7m. Samuel A. Clements, sou of Daniel and Elizabeth, d. March 9, 1870; 2Gy. Asness Clifford, daujihter of S. M. and M., d. Dec. 2, 1852; ly. 11m. David Clifford, d. Sop. 17, 1852; 21y. 8m. 3d. James W. Clifford, son of S. and N., d. Feb. 14, 1847; 22y. 8m. 7d. James Clifford, son of E. and R., d. Oct. 27, 1847; ly. 27d. Margaret Clifford, dau^^iter of S. M., and M., d. March 20, 1850; ly. 8m 12d. Maria Clifford, wife of S. N., d. April 20, ]S5(); 27y. 7m. 2d. Naucv Clifford, wife of Samuel, d. Mav 3. 1804; 80y. Samuel Clifford, d. April 22, 1850; 70y. Compher, see also Gompher. Charles S. Compher, son of G. W. and yi. E . d. Feb. 1, 1M)2; 5y. 4ra. 20d. ]Maiv ('ompher, wife of Jacob, d. Nov. 17,' 1877; 44y. 22d. Sarah J. Compher. danchter of J. and M.. d. Oct. 26. 1S64; 8y. 8m. 2d. William Bingham Compher, son of S. and J., d. Sep. G, 18t)4; 2y 8m. 21d. Lizzie Crawford, d. April 27, 187(;; 23y. David Cuuninsihani, d. May 27, 18413; 58y. Mary ]McLauc:hlin Cunninq:ham, wife of David, d. April 0, 182'J; 40y. Om. «)d. Belis.';ah Dickerson, d. Aug. 11, 1887; SOy. Clara J. Dickerson. daughter of J. and R., d. Jan. 11, 188S; 22y. 22d. Courtland B. Dickerson, son of J. B. and M.. d. Jan. 25, 1878; ly. 2m. Hii. I^dward Dickerson, son of AVilliam and Jane, d. July 18, 18G4; 8y. Om. l!)d. Eliza Dickerson, d. March 20, 1887; 75y. Elizabeth P. Dickersun, wife of Joshua T., d. July 11, 1870; 42y. 5m. 24d. Hannah Ij. Dickerson, wife of M. V., d. June 10, 1895; 37y. 8m. lid. Jane Dickerson, wife of William, d. Sep. 11, 1SG4; 4Gy. 10m. 7d. Jane I>ickerson, wife of Samuel, d. June 9, 1889; 45y. John Dickerson, d. Feb. 20, 1878; GSy. 5m. 19d. Jolm F. Dickerson, son of J. K. P. and H. W., d. April 10, 1889; 3y. 5m. 21 d. Jt sliua Dickeson, d. April 12, 1850; 50y. 3d. Joshua Dickerson, d. Oct. 6, 1872; G9y. Joshua Dickerson, sou of Joshua ami Beligah, d. Dec. 29, 1848; 7y. Hm. 24;1. Louisa Dickerson, daughter of Josliua and Beligah, d. Dec. 31, 1848; oy. 3m. 4d. INL-irv Dickerson, wife of William, d. May 9, 1877; 50m. 5m. 12d. Marv Dickerson, daughter of Joshua and Beligah, d. Dec. 31, 1848; 9y. 9m. lOd. Marv Dickerson, wife of Joseph B., d. AjH-il 4. 1878; 26y. 9m. 28d. M.ii'v E. Dickerson, daughter of J. and II.'. d. Jan. 25, 1891; 26y. 3m. 19d. Rebecca Dickerson, daughter of Joshua, d. Dec. 28, ISSS; 45y. Im. 7d. Roliecca Dickerson, daughter of Joshua and Beligah, d. May 22, 1851; Im. 9d. Sarah Dickerson, wife of .Toshna, d. Feb. 25, 1871; 91 v. Im. 25d. Robert Dool, d. Sep. 23, 1829; 42y. Catherine Doutran, d. Aug. 25, 1851; 85y. Adam Dunlap, d. Jan. 10, 18:30; 77y. Adam Dunlap, d. Sep. 20, 18G3; 73y. 5d. Adam Dunlap, d. Feb. 20, 1883; 77y. 10m. 12d. Adam Dunlap, son of John and Nancy, d. April 24, 1849; 3vly. 7m. 7.1. Adam Dunlap, d. Feb. 11, 1895; 74y. Im. 9d. NOTTINGHAM BURIALS 357 Aflnm C. Dnnlnp, b. June 3, 1S51; d. April IS, 18S1. Clara B. I^uulap, dauc:liter of Adam and E. J., d. March 15, 18S1; lOr. Ilni. Elizabeth Dnnlap, -wife of Adam, d. May 35, 1S71; 42y. Evora Jane Dunlap, daxmhter of J. A. and S., d. Oct. 21, 1885; 6v. 4m. 20d. James R. Dunlap, d. Dec. 20, 1SS5; 22v. 10m. 2Sd. Jane Dnnlap, wife of Adam, d. April 24, 1840; SOy. Tra. 7d. John Dunlap, d. Feb. 24, 1874; 87y. 27d. Jolm Dunlap, son of Adam and Jane, d. Dec. 38, 1872; 34y. 4m. 27d. John A. Dunlap, son of H. P. and S. J., d. June 6, 1805; 12y. 9m. 28d. Joseph Dnnlap, d. March 23. 1878; 85y. oni. lid. .Toshua Dunlap. d. Sep. 4, 1879; .57y. Julia Ann Dunlap, wife of .Joseph, d. Sep. 3, 1878; 5.5y. Im. 28d. Lizzie Dunlap, daughter of Adam and Mnrscaret, d, Feb. 26, 1873; 18y. oin. 25d. Margaret Dunlap, wife of William, d. May 19, 1838: 51 y. [Margaret Dunlap, wife of Adam, d. ]March 14, 1803; 3Sy. 9m. 20d. Martlia Dunlap, wile of Adam, d. Feb. 8, 1848; 34y. 2m. 5d. Mnrv Dunlap, wife of Robert, d. Sep. 29. 18.52; .55y. 11m. 19d. Mary Dunlap, daughter of Adam and Mavuaret, d. June 3, 1872; 22y. 7d. Nanov Dunlap, wife of John, d. Nov. 23, 1870; 80y. 3m. 8d. Nancy G. Dunlap, d. April 3, 1884; G2y. Nancy Dunlap, d. Aug. 29, 1885; 61y. 10m. 24d. Nancy Galaher Dunlap, dau.ghter of Robeit and Mary, d. Oct. 10, 1809; 11 y. .5m. 12d. Rebecca Dunlap, d. March 9, 1840; 90y. 4m. RnbcTt Dunlap, d. March 2, 1800; 65y. lOiti. 22d. Robert Dunlap, sjn of Robert and Mary, d. Dec. 13. 1848; lly. Om. 13d. Samuel Dunlap. d. Oct. 2, 1839; OOy. 21d. Samuel Dunlap, b. May 20, 1820; d. Oct. 19, ISS'.t. Samuel Dunlap, d. June 28, 1882; 50y. Om. 5d. William Dunlap, d. Feb. 24, 1865; 85y. Evaliua M. Hamilton, daughter of Nicholas aod M., d. May :i4, 1805; 19y. 2m. 9d. Marearet Familtou, wife of Nicholas H., d. May 22, 1847; 2.5y. 2m. 7d. Benjamin Ferrel, son of B. &ud S., d. Dec. 13, 1804; lly. 8m. lOd. Adam Figloy, d. Aug. 12, 18; '.2; 28y. Adam Figley, d. i.arch 9, 18.50; 50y. Jacob Figley, d. Sep. 13, 1844; 34y. 8ui. Jane Figley, daug..ter of A. and E., d. June, 1831; 23y. 8m. Samuel G. Figley, son of J. and S., d. Nov. 23, 1855; Oy. lOm. 17d. Sarah A. Fulton, daughter of A. and S., d. Sep. 15, 1S:.2; 2y. 2m. 12d. Gompher, tee alj-o Compher. J. Lafayette Gom])her, son of S. and J., d. July 23, 1879; 20y. 2:n. Od. Mary Gompher, Mite of William Gom- pher, d. Aug. 27, 1877; 8oy. 11m. 8d. INIary Gompher, wife of Samuel, d. July 11, 180(); 28y. 7d. AMlliam Gomjther, d. April 4, 1872; 75y. 8m. 22d. John Gordon, son of T. A. and M. J., d. Oct. 0, 1805; 8y. 6m. Mary Gordon, wife of John, d. Dec. 16, 1S70; 76y. Samuel C. Gordon, d. Jan. 17, 18;)9; 33y. Thomas A. Gordon, d. March 15, 1879; 45 v. William Gordon, son of T. A. and M. .)., d. Sep. 21, 1S05; ly. 5m. Alfred Gregg, son of Presley and Sarah, d. May 9, 1840; 20y. 5m. Id. Henry Gresg, son of Presley and Sarah, d. Jan. 14, 1847; 19y. 9m. 24d. John Gregg, son of Presley and Sarah, d. Oct. 13, 1837; ly. 2m. J-d. Presley Gregg, d. Oct. 1, 1819; Oly. Sarah Jane Gregg, daughle;- of i'resley and Sarah, d. Sep. i), 1840; 4y. 5ia. lOd. Jane Guttery, Avife of Robert d. May 31, 1815; 54y. Robert Guttery, d. May 6, 1815; 63y. Alexander Hamilton, d. Aug. J 7. ISOu: 358 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 62y. Andrew Hamilton, d. Sep, 5, 1865; 41y. llni. 2M. Rebecca Hamilton, wife of Alex. d. .Alarch 24, 18G4; TGy. 11m. 24d. Mary Haverfteld, wiie of Gillespie, d. April 25, 1859; 40y. Alex. Hayes, d. April 5, 1852; 34y. Hannah Kays, wife of John, d. June 10, 1855: 60y. Im. 18d. Harriet Hayes, d. July 29, 1845; 7y. Cm. John Hays, d. Feb. 20, 1842; 52y. 11m. lid. Jol)n Hays, Jr., d. Oct. 24, 1887; GSy. 29d. Joiseph Hays, d. July 27, 1815; 24y. Agnes Hilton, wife of Thomas, d. Oct. 5, 38()t;; 72y. Margaret Hilton, daughter of T. and A., d. July 5, 1830; 28y. .'Jm. iSd. Matthew H. Hilton, d. Oct. 9, 1891; 87y. Robert Hilton, son of T. and A., d. May 2, 1842: Itiy. 8m. 3d. Thomas Hilton, d. Sep. 4, lSt?5; 75y. ]m. 17d. Calvin C. Holliday, son of G. W. and M. E., d. Dec. 30, 188G; 11m. 2d. Ellen Johnson, wife of Thomas, d. Feb. 20, 1809; 73y. Margaret J. Johnson, wife of William L., d. June 5, 1873; 23y. s Angelino Kennedy, daughter of J. and E., d. Nov. 1, 1871; lly. 8m. 24d. Eliza Kennedy, wife of Jackson, d i: 33y. 5m. 7d. Margaret Lafferty, wife of Samuel, d. April 4, 1842: 60y. INIargaret Lafferty, wife of Edward, d. Sep. 14. 1864; 75y. Michael Lafferty, wife of S., d. Dec. 1, 1855; 5Sy. Samuel Lafferty, d. Nov. 29, 1857; 75y. 7m. 15d. Susannah Laffertv, wife of Edward, d. Jan. 5, 18G8; 5Sj. 2d. William Roa Lalferty, son of J. and NOTTINGHAM BURIALS 359 E., d. Maieli 7, 1S33; 4y. Oiu. Id. Aiuos Laizure, d. fcjop. 17, 18S1; 7Gy. Gm. 5cl. Maria Laiziire, daughter of A. and M., d. Aug. 17, 1S()9; ;:>7y. Khii. lid. Martha Laizure, wife of Amos, d. May 15, 1N7S; 81y. 8m. ISd. Martha J. l.eizuie. daughter of W. aud .]., d. July 17, 1851; :iiy. Mary A. iiaiziire, tlauglitcr of II. N. aud S., d. Feb. IS, ISSli; Urn. 18d. ^\■illiam McG. Laizure, «on ui A. aud M., d. A])ril 15, 18i)l; 2oy. 5jn. Llud. Eliza K. Lautz, d. Feb. 8, 1887; l'2y. J. N. Laniz, d. Jan. 1, ISUl; 18y. John Lautz, d. ISov. V, l^,;i; (ly. Lnuaa E. Lee, daughter of K. aud N., d. May 21, 18(JI; ...uu. loil. ^^■illi■^m lUieuben Lee, sou of J. V. aud E. J., d. April 1, 188o. Cliristtuey lA'iuar.i, c.augliter of II. and M., d. Aug. 23, 18b0; ly. Samuel Leinara, sou of H. aud M., d. .April 14, 182G; lim. lUU. i'ost Liuard, d. ISov. oU, 185a ; 'J3y. 5in. lild. Sarah Jane Logan, wife of J., d. July 23, IS 18; 30y. 8m. 18d. Eliza ;\lc'Adams, uaugiuer of John and S., d. Jau. 23, 184(i; lly. lUm. 1-d. Eliza McAdaius, daughter of George and Eliza, d. Oct. G, 1854; VJy. !Jm. George iMtAaams, d. (Jet. :.4, i8i8; V8y. Harriet ]Mc Adams, wife of Joiin, d. March IL 18G1; 5Gy. Im. ^aney McAdams, daugiiter of John aud S., d. Aug. IT, 1844; 14y. 2ia. 2Ud. S;trah McAdams, d. June 24, 185L); 44y. 2ui. 15d. Thomas McAdams, d. March 24, 18S5; 5()V. Mm. 24(1. William MeCuUough, d. Sep. 18, lSi;3; •i'Jy. I'raueis :McDowell, d. Nov. 7, 18(.5; 8y. 8m. Sd. Ilauuah McDowell, wife of "William, d. June 12, 1802; UOy. 9m. lUd. Jane McDowell, wife of Samuel, d. Dec. 22, 18ti4; 83y. 4m. 23a. Jane McDowell, b. Feb. 23, 1805; d. June 22, IS8U. Samuel McDowell, d. April 20, 1852; 7(;v. Im. 28d. Samuel McDowell, d. May 13, 1S7S; 71y. 11m. 18d. William McDowell, d. May 21, 18U!j; (;uy. (im. l(]d. Mable Grace McFadden, daughter of (). U. aud S. S., d. Sep. 1, 18,S4; 10m. aiartha A. McKibbeu, a. Feb. 23, 1849; r>y. Sd. Martha McKibben, daughter of G. B. aud S., d. Aug. 21, i8j,4; 24y. Mary jNIcKibben, wife of George B., d. July 18, 1871; 47y. Susannah McKibbeus, wife of George B., d. June L9, 18u3; 33y. Um. Theodore McKibbeu, sou of John aud Isabella, d. May 2(>, 1877; lOy. Im. 20d. James JNIcMilleu, d. Sep. 20, 18(11 ; 68y. Mary McMUleii, wife of James, d. Aug. 20, 1858; 5(;y. Robert McAlulen, d. April 10, 1854; 74 y. 9m. Gd. Hannah Kesaltha McWalty, daughter of James and Jane, d. Aug. 28, 1SU3; ly. 2m. 14d. Elizabeth Maxwell, wife of James, d. Aug. 2G, 1SG5; 35y. 2m. 21d. Agues Mitchell, daughter of J. aud M., d. April 4, 1837; 19y. 8m. 15d. George Mitchell, d. Jan. 10, 1853; 24y. lieueeca Alitehell, AVile of J. D., d. Sep. 15, 18G5; 34y. 3m. 13d. Rebecca H. Mitchell, daughter of J. 1). and R., d. Qet. 3, 18Gj; 19d. Alexander Moore, u. Feb. 9, 1844; G7y. 11m. 4d. Ann Christina Moore, wife of Samuel, (1. June 24, 188G; Sly. 4m. 23d. Eliza JMoore, wife of John, d. July 4, 18(,4: 44y. (id. Eliza betli Moore, daughter of J. W. and E., d. April 10, 1882; 3Gy. 5m. 17il. George Moore, d. Aug. 24, 18G4; 2Sy. 10m. 4(1. James iNIoore, son of R. aud E. J., d. Sep. VA. ISGl; lUm. Gd. James Moore, son of J. W. aud E., d. Aug. 29, 1852; 5m. James Everett Moore, son of S. A. aud M. J., d. Sep. 13, 187G; 9m. 12d. John W. Muoie, d. Aug. 3, 18S3; 72y. John -AIooio, d. Sep. 20, 1857; 33y. Im. John INIoore, sou of J. aud E., d. July 360 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 2, 1845; ]y. 7m. lid. LeoiKi Dell iSlooie, daughter of \V. G. and R. J., d. Sep. 20, 1875; 'Jin. 12d. Liuard jNIoore, d. Jan. IS, 1S88; 60y. 3ni. ISd. laicinda Moore, daughter of S. and G., d. .Jan. 30, 1870; 28y. Im. 24d. Lydia B. Moore, daughter of B. and E. J., d. Nov. 21, 18(54; ly. 5m. 27d. INlargaret Moore, wife of Samuel, d. Oct. 5, 18(J5; 75y. Mary Moore, wife of Robert, d. March 22, 1851; 80y. IMary Moore, wife of R. A., d. Sep. 7, 18(M: 60y. 11m. ISd. Mary E. Moore, daughter of Uriah and Mary A., d. Dec. 12, 1871; lOy. Im. Mary E. Moore, daughter of W. G. and R. J., d. Sep. 20, 1881; lOy. Om. 22d. INIary F. Mooi'e, daughter of Albert and Sarah, d. May 31, 1870; Om. Robert Moore, d. Feb. 1, 1835; 6Gy. Robert A. Moore, d. Sep. 3, 1878; 75y. 6m. 25d. Ruth xMoore, d. Jan. 4, 1849; OSy. l£u
  • 8y. 23d. "William Oglevee, d. July 6, 1884; 70y. James Floyd Porter, son of S. M. and M., d. Nov. 26, 1880; 11m. 17d. Rebecca Porter, d. Dec. 23, 1869; 69y. 3m. 6d. David Price, son of .John and Eliza- beth, d. March 8, 1827; lOy. David Ramsey, d. July 31, 1852; 60v, 6m. 25d. Jane Ramsey, wife of Charles, d. June 21, 18.54; 29y. 2m. 26d. Mary Ann Ramsey, d. Aug. 17, 1875; 78y. 3m. 24d. Jane Rea, wife of Joseph, d. May 21, 1859; 58y. 8m. 17d. Joseph Rea, d. April 19, 1862; 65y. 6m. 29d. Joseph Rea, son of Joseph and Jane, d. Aug. 13, 1845; 5y. 2ni. 27d. John Reed, d. Nov. 30, 1828; 21y. 3m. 12d. IMatthias Reed, d. March 14, 1864; 57y. Eliza Roberts, wife of George A., 0. July 12, 1831; d. July 23, 1868. Mary Ann Robinson, wife of David A., d. Sep. 6, 1875; 78y. 3m. 24d. Julia Ann Ross, d. Dec. 10, 1893; 93y. Elizabeth Russell, d. Nov. 28, 187*; 73y. 28d. Anna C. Elise Schreiber, daughter of C. L., d. July 27, 1859. Anne E. Schreiber, daughter of A. J. and M., b. Dec. 30, 1850; d. Feb. 14, 1873. C. L. Schreiber, d. Jan. 8, 1850; 67y. Conrad L. Schreiber, son of A. J. and ]\1., b. March 25, 1855; d. May 2, 187(5. Marv Emma Schreiber, daughter of A. J. and M., b. Nov. 5. 1862; d. Oct. 10, ]8(i3. Ann Eliza Scott, ■wife of James, daugh- ter of William and Susanna Ogle- vee, d. Nov. 10, 1874; 24y. 4m. 2d. Eleanor Scott, (laughter of Thomas and Sarah, d. Feb.ll, 1861; 27y. James Scott, son of Thomas and Sanih, d. Feb. 8, 1859; 22y. Jane Scott, wife of William, d. Aug. 25, 1831; 30y. John Scott, sou of Thomas and Sarah, d. Sep. 27, 1865; 25y. Margaret Scott, wife of John, d. Sep. 23, 1861; 26y. Margaret K. Scott, daughter of Wil- liam and Margaret, d. Sep. 16, 18(53; 3y. 8m. 18d. • INIartha Scott, daughter of Thomas and Sarah, d. July 14, 1858; 15y. Marj Jane S(.:ott, Avife of John, d. Oct. NOTTINGHAM BURIALS 361 5, 1865; 2Gy. Sarah Scolt, wife of Thomas, d. Aug. 2G, 187"); 7;)y. Tlioiaas Seott, d. Jan. IG, 1S7.">; S2y. William Scott, d. Oct. G, 1SG3; GSy. Andrew G. Sharp, d. Sep. 22, 1874; .5(^y. ElizalK'th Shaw, wife of James, d. Jujy G, IS 16; 46y. Im. 4d. Henrietta Shaw, wife of James, d. Feb. 28, 1848; 67y. 22d. James Shaw, d. Sep. 4, 1865; GGy. 2m. lid. James W. Slater, d. Ana;. 9, 1S75; 59y. ;}m. r.d. Margaret J. Slater, d. D.^c. G, 1876; 58y. (-;d. Francis Sloan, d. Nov. 26, 3840; 4i)y. 7m. lid. Jane Sloan, wife of John, d. Se]). -8, 1844; 40y. Alexander A. Snyi'er, son of I. and R., d. March 21, 1857; 3y. 6m. 22(1. Rhoda Snvder, wife of Levi, d. Oct. 11, 1873; 3!)y. 13d. Elizabeth Sproull. wife of Thomas, d. Feb. 15, 1882; 82y. Hush Spi'onll, son of T. and E., d. Oct. 16, 1855; lly. James Sproul, d. Aug. 21, 1856; 39y. 9m. 13d. Jane A. Spronl, daughter of J. and E.. d. April 8, 1874; 20y. 2m. 24d. John Sproul, son of Francis and Mar- garet, d. May 21, 1881; 25y. lOd. Margaret Sproul, wife of Francis, d. NoV. IG, 1840; 49y. 8m. lOd. Thomas Sproull, Sr., d. April 10, 1872; S3y. Thomas Sproull, son of T. and E., d. Julv 7, 1867; ISy. lOm. lid. Robert Steel, d. July 20, 1831; GGy. 3m. Hai-riett M. Tarbert, daughter of J. and E.. d. June 7, 1866; 3v. 13d. James Tarberr, d. May 31, 1867; S3y. Im. 27d. James Tarbert, d. Jan. 28, 1881; GGy. 3m. 14d. James E. Tarbert, d. June 13, 1S65; 23v. Im. 17d. Joseph A. Tarbert, d. May 30, 18G0; 38y. 10m. ."d. Josiah Tarbert, d. Nov. 28, 1870; 51 y. 7m. 3d. Mariiaret .lane Tarbert, wife of Ander- son, d. Oct. 14, 1885; 59y. Maciiie Tarbert, daughter of Albint and Marv, d. March 22, 1883; Gm. 2d. Marv P.ell Tarbert, daughter of James and E., d. May 1, 1883; 17y. 8m. 2d. Salina J. Tiirbert, daughter of J. and E., d. Sep. 24, 1884; 15y. 7m. Id. Sarah Tarbert, daughter of J. A. and M.. (1. April 19, 1849; Im. 2d. "William Tarbert, d. July 27, 1873: G>ly. William I'arbert, b. July 2, 1855; d. Julv 22, ISO.",. Archahold Todd, d. Feb. 19, 1852; SOy. Im. 7d. Marearct Ann Todd, wife of William, d. Jan. 18, 1858; 25y. lOm. 18d. James Walker, d. May 5, 1862; 83y. James Walker, d. April 22, 1859; 44y. ^Margaret A^'aiker. wife of James, d. Aug. 21. 1849; Gly. 6m. 8d. Rell Wallace, wife of S. M., d. July 17, 1888; .51 V. Allen Wallace, d. Feb. 21, 1880; i^i\y. 10m. 6d. John Walhi e, d. Mnj 1, 1832; 72.v. Julia Barricklow Watson, Avife of John M.. d. Feb. 24, 1859; 24y. ]Margaret Wallace, wife of John, d. .March 25, 1848; Sly. jNIarv Wallace, wife of Rev. William, (1. "Doc. 21, 1869; 72y. 9m. 4d. :Maiv Wallace, wife of Allen, d. April 12," 1874: 84y. 3m. lid. Nathaniel A. Wallace, d. March 22, 1855: .".5y. Rev. William Wallace, pastor of the Prcsbvterian Church, Nottingham, d. Dec. 13. 1841: 54y. 7m. 26d. Wilson E. Wallace, b. May 6, 1836: d. Aug. 18. 1895; 59y. John W. Watson, d. July 22, 1859; 45y, 5m. 15d. Marv Jane Watson, daughter of .John and Julia, d. Aug. 16, 1848; lOy. 8m. 9d. Rachel Wa+son, wife of R. S., d. May 18, 186G; 85y. 5m. Robert Talbert Watson, son of .Tohn and Rebecca, d. Aug. 28, 1849; 3m. 21d. Robert R. Watson, d. Nov. 19, 1872; 362 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 8Gy. 8m. Kid. S. R. Watson, d. April 30, 1S77; 55y. om. JSd. Martha A. Bell AVeaver, daughter of John and Susanna, d. Dec. 24, ISTo; .\v. i>sd. Wilson Dunlap Webb, son of John and Louisa, d. Oct. 29, 1880; ly. 5m. Id. David Welling, d. June 19, 1864; 85y. 4ni. ISd. Nancy PI AA'elling, wife of David, d. Feb. IS, 1873; 50y. Samuel West, d. Oct. 6. 18G4; 12y. 10m. nd. George Wobble, d. April 17, 1884; 65y. 10m. 21d. Nancy Wible, wife of G., d. Oct. 28, 1S(;4; 41y. Sarah E. "Wilabv, daugliter of S. and R., d. Sep. 19, iSG4; 5y. 7d. Jane Williamson, wife of John, d. Aug. 8, 1845; 71y. Jolni Williamson, d. Jan. 25, 1847; 78y. James Wilson, d. Aug. 4, 1873; 53y. Im. Nancy .T. Wilson, wife of James, d. Feb. 23, 1858: 34y. 5m. 9d. Sai'ah Jane Wilson, wife of James Wilson, daughter of George and Ann Carrothers, d. Feb. 23, 1804; .']5y. William T. Wilson, son of J. and N., d. Sep. 8. 1854; 5m. 8d. Mary C. Vk'inning, niece of J. W. and S. Milligan, d."" June 18, 1845; 11m. 18d. BURIALS IN RIDGE GRAVE- YARD. To May 30, 1898. Ellen Adams, daughter of William and Mary, b. Nov. 10, 1819; d. Aug. 10, 1843. Jane Adams, d. March 12, 1S92; 80y. 4m. 20d. Mary Adams, wife of William, d. July 24, 1800; 14j. Samuel Adams, d. June 13, 1874; GGy. 4m. 23d. William Adams, d. July 28. 1830; 66y. Catherine Anderson, wife of Samuel, d. Oct. 10, 1847; 50y. 10m. 5d. Esther McCollough Anderson, wife of Robert, d. Sep. 24, 1892; 73y. John Anderson, d. April 28, 1855; 20y. 9m. 4d. John E. Anderson, son of Robert and Esther, d. March 25, 1864; ly. 7m. lOd. Rojiert Anderson, d. April 25, 1891; 7Gy. Samuel Anderson, d. Feb. 22, 18CG; 83y. 11m. 4d. John Archnliald, d. May 21, 1820; OOy. Sarah Arch.ibald, wife of John, d. Sep. 30, 1835; 83y. Elizalieth Osburn Atkison, daughter of J. and M., d. Jan. 17, 1860; 26y. 10m. 12d. Harriett Atkison, wife of Levi, d. March 20, 1849; 25y. 2m. 20il. James Atkison, .Tr., son of John and Ann. d. at Fredericksburg, Va., May 12, 1804, of wounds received in the Battle of The Wilderness; 27y. 3m. Od. Jane Atkison, wife of James, d. Aug. 1, 1802; 70y. 9m. ISd. Marv Atkison, wife of John, d. Jan. 31, 1835; 21y. 10m. 15d. Ruth Atkison, daucrhter of J. and J., d. Feb. 1-5, 1835; ly. Ora Beall, daushter of .L T. and B. A.. d. Dec. 28, 1884; 2y. 11m. 2d. Annie R. Braden, daughter of J. G. and Rachel, d. Sep. 23, 1867; 21y. 9m. 2.5d. William Brown, d. Feb., 1829; 60y. Albert Buchanan, son of Joseph and E., d. Sep. 10, 1801; 2y. 4m. lOd. « Elizabeth Buchanan, wife of J. N., b. Jan. 20, 1819; d. Jan. 6, 1883. Elizabeth Buchanan, daughter of Joseph and E., d. Oct. 15, 1862; lOd. James Buchanan, son of Joseph and E., d. Dec. 11, 1857; ly. 2m. 6d. John Ross Buchanan, son of T. N. and S. J., b. Oct. 25, 1889; d. May 22, 1890. Joseph N. Buchanan, b. April 23, 1814; d. July 11, 1883. Marv Buchanan, wife of Samuel, d. .Itx'n. 21, 18.38: OOy. Snmuel Buchanan, d. March 23, 1858; 82y. Samuel Buchanan, son of Joseph and RIDGE BURIALS 363 E.. (1. Sep. 5. 18G3: lOy. lOni. lOil. Elizabeth C. Can-, wife of John, d. I\4i. 24, 1837: GTy. Ellen CaiT, daushtor of J. and S., b. Nov. 20, 1840: d. :\Iarch 11, 1877. Isabella Carr, daimhter of J. and S., b. Jan. 8, 1849: d. May 8, 1870. Jolm Carr, d. Aug. 7, 18G3; 55y. 8m. 27d. Sai'Mh CniT, wife of John, d. Oct. 10, ]S(;7: "Sy. Im. 5d. Sarah Jane Carr, dauahter of John, d. Mav IT), 1836: Iv. 4(1. W. W. Carr, sou of J. and S., d. Nov. 21. 1875: 23v. Im. 18d. William Carr, d. March G, 1871: 75y. Elizabeth Cavan, Avife of Hugh, d. Sep. 21, 1878: G8v. Iluijh Cavan, d. Nov. 25, 185.^; r)Gv. William Cavan, d. Nov. 3, 18G2; 22y. fim. 7d. Elizabeth Cole, daughter of R. and M., d. May 27, 1852: 4m. 27d. James Cole, son of R. and M., d. Mav 9, 1834: 5y. Gm. 16d. .John Cole, son of M. and R., d. Feb. 18, 18fi3: 20y. 10m. lid. Ma IV Cole, d. Oct. 1, 1875; 19y. 9m. 27d. Moses Cole, d. Jan. G, 1865; 49y. 10m. lOd. Jesse H. Cook, b. Feb. 6, 1847; d. May 27, 1886. Toann Cook. d. IMarch 13, 1843: 82y. Geoi-2;e Cox, d. Ser^. 12, 1849; 65y. 2m. 9d. Sarah Cox, wife of George, d. Sep. 9, 1877: OOy. llni. Kid. Jane Cramer, wife of Joseph, and daughter of William and Mary Adams, d. May 17, 1836; 30v. 2m. 7d. Natlianiel Crawford, d. April 0, 1895; Elizabeth Currv, wife of Samuel, d. Oct. 10, 1840; 62v. 6m. 26d. Elizal Curry, d. "May 23, 1875; 57y. Id. Lettice Ann Curry, d. July 18, 1870; 55y. 6m. Od. Marv Currv, daughter of E. and S., d. Feb. 24, 1882: OOy. 11 m. 12d. Rosan Currv, daughter of S. and E., d. Feb. 28, 1874; Sly. 2m. IGd. Samuel Curry, d. May 18, 18GG; 71y, Gm. 2Gd. Albert Custer, son of W. W. and F., b. April 19, 1850; d. April 1, 1870. James H. Custer, b. Nov. 26, 1847; d. June 9, 18G4. John A. Custer, son of E. H. and Ma- tilda, d. July 29, 1836; 3y. 3m. 7d. Matilda P. Custer, Avife of E. H. ami daughter of B. W. and Hannah Veirs, b. March 4, 1804; d. July 18, 1835. W. W. Custer, M. D., b. July 1, 1816; d. June 13, 1802. Alexander Denny, d. Nov. 21, ISSG; 75y. Ellinor DennA', daughter of A. and J., d. Aug. 27, 1859; i2y. 4m. 2d. Jane Denny, Avife of Alexander, d. March 31, 1887; 70y. William Dennv, son of A. and J., d. Oct. 30, 1855: ly. 2m. 19d. Ellabiu'g Donaldson, daughter of W. and N., d. Nov. 9, 1865: 4y. 3m. 27d. Nancv Donaldson, wife of William, d. March 9. 18(H>: 34y. 9m. 21d. Cyrus II. Easlick, d. Jan. 13, 1881; 27y. 7m. 21d. Elizabeth Easlick, Avife of Henry, d. July 1, 1874; Oly. Harriett Ellon Easlick, daughter of J, and E., d. July 17, 1866; 6y. 11m. 2Sd. HarA'ey A. Easlick, d. Nov. 13, 1870; 22y. Om. 12d. Henry Easlick, d. Jan. 6, 1859; 75y. Gm. 6d. Martha Ann Easlick, daughter of J. and E., d. July 3, 1866; ly. 10m. Gd. Melissa Endsley, daughter of R. W. and E., b. April 1, 1847; d. Oct. 0, 18(59. Nancy Easlick, d. Oct. 0, 1880; 56y. 6m. 7d. Susanna Easlick, d. June 4, 1880; 32y. Im. 4d. Elizabeth Edie. daufhtor of M. C. and E., d. Sep. 19, 1869; ly. 11m. 4d. Joseph B. Edie, d. Nov. 14, 1847; ISy. 11m. 24d. Elizabeth Endsley, wife of James, d. IVTnv 25, 1864: OOy. 12d. Elizabeth Endsley, Avife of Robert W., 364 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY b. IMaroh 3, 1820; d. March 28, 1S97. James Endsley, d. Jan. 4, 1860; 87y. 9d. Jane Blair Endsley, wife of John, d. Jan. 20, 1848; THv. John Endslev, d. April 29, 1835; .Wy. John Endslev, d. Jan. 23, 1850: 31y. Robert Endslev, b. Jan. 11, 1813; d. June 6, ISfiO. Ann En£?liKh, d. Oct. 17, 1884; 75y. Sni. 12d. James Ensrlish, b. Oct. 27, 1791; d. June 0, 1809. Jane En2:lish, b. Jan. 9, 1797; d. Sop. 30. 1843. Massv IT. En-rlish. v^'ife of George, d. .Tnne 13, 1872; 21y. 4m. 15d. Georsie E. Finnienm, son of A. W. and S. M., d. .Tan. 22. 1878; 4y. 5m. 29rl. Emma .T. Fisher, danjihter of John, d. Jan. 1(>, 1879; 17y. Im. lOd. Georce Fisher, d. Aug. 13, 1872; 79y. 10m. 20d. Jacob Fisher, son of G. and M., d. Nov. 3, 1843; 2y. 14d. James Fisher, b. Nov. 24, 1819; d. Jan. 7, 1882. Mary Fisher, wife of George, d. Dec. 15," 1844: .33y. Mary A. Fisher, wife of John, d. May 27," 1895: 55y. 7m. 12d. Rebecca Fisher, wife of George, d. Sep. 25, 1858: 47v. 4m. 15d. Robert Maxwell Fisher, son of Eli nnd Elizabeth, d. Oct. 17, 1843; 3y. 9m. Id. Samuel Fisher, son of G. and M., d. Aus. 8. 18.30; ly. 7m. 19d. Sarah Fisher, wife of George, d. Oct. ^25. 1844: 35y. Snsanna A. Fisher, wife of George, d. Sop. 25, 1838: 39y. William Fisher, b. Sep. 4, 1820; d. April 29, 1855. Jane Graham, wife of J., d. Ang. 28, isr,8; 79y. Joseph Gi-aham, d. March 13, 1877; 75y. 11m. 20d. Thomas Gntshall, son of S. and H., d. April 20. 1875; 11m. Chavlos W. T. Hamilton, son of .Tames and IVIarv, d. Ang. 21. 1803; 9y. 4m. 27d. James S. Hamilton, d. Aug. 8, 1878; 32y. Marv Hamilton, wife of James, d. March 10, 1877; C4y. James Henderson, d. Feb. 22, 1802: 82y. James A. Henderson, son of .\. and E. B., d. Nov. 10, 1805; 11m. 24d. Susanna Henderson, d. Nov. 18, 1892: 7.3y. 9m. Winona Henderson, daughter of G. F. and Julia, d. .Tan. 28, 1885; 3y. 3r.i. 4d. Jane Herron, wife of Rev. Robert, d. :\ larch 20. 1859; 29y. Jdlin E. Herron. son of S. and S., d. Jan. 2, 1874: 19y. 5in. 18d. Rev. Robert Heiron, Pastor of Ri(lg<' Church 20 years, b. April 10, 1817; d. .lune 17, 1884. Amos nines, son of J. and S., d. July 14, 1857: 24 V. 10m. 23d. George Hines, d. May IS, 1801; 41y. Om. 29d. Jacob Hines. d. Dec. 20, 1848; 54y. 9ni. 7d. Martha Hines, wife of John, d. April .5, 1872; 20y. 3m. Susanna Hines, wife of Jacob, d. Sep. 27, 1885; 87y. George Hospclhorn, d. Jan. 5, 1835; 70y? Margaret Hospelhorn, d. Sep. 17, 1834; 75y. Margaret Hospelhorn. d. June 17, 183(i; 3y. 10m. Marv Huston, daughter of J. and M., d. Feb. 12, 1878; 11 m. 28a. Marv Jane Huston, b. Oct. 25, 1834; d. JulvSl, 1879. M. Karr, d. March 25. 1832; 23y. 4m. 24d. Marv Lee, wife of T. M., d. Jan. 10, 1893; G8v. 2m. lOd. Archabald Leejier, d. April, 1820; 70y. Charles TiOwton, son of J. and N. A., d. Aus. 20, 1S05; 5y. 5m. 28d. Jacob Lewton, d. Nov. 21, 1877: 87y. William Lisle, d. July 21, 18.37; 74y. James Newton Lyons, son of J. and M., d. April 27. 1842; 1.5y. 5d. John Lvons, d. April 23. 1875; 80y. 7m. 22d. Malicha J. Lvons. son of R. M. and M.. d. Ang. 5, 1801; 9m. 25d. RIDGE BURIALS Martha Lyons, daughter of J. and M., d. July 17, 1S38: 14.v. 3m. 4d. Wary Lyons, wife of John, d. March ID, 1875; SOy. 7m. 4d. Mary Lyons, wife of U. M., d. June 11, IS.")!). Nunt-y Lyons, wife of liirliard, b. May 5, 1813: d. June 14. 183;"). Capt. R. M. Lyons, fell at the Battle of The Wilderness, May G, 1804; 3:;!y.; his remains were never recovered, as they were burned ^viih ir.any others. McClain, see also McLean. James McClain, d. June 7, 1S.j2; 49y. 8m. Gd. Jane McClean, daughter of James L. and Sarah, d. Sep. 29, 1835; l(»y. Joseph McClain, son of S. and J., d. Oct. 9, 1855; ly. 11m. Martha McClain, daughter of J. L. and S., d. April 18, LSGlf; 21 v. Gm. IGd. Nathan S. McClain, d. Aug. 10, ISL.S; -IGy. 10m. 12d. Sarah McClain, wife of J. L., d. Nov. and Sarah, d. Feb. 22, 18G8; 22v. 7m. 2G. 1882; 79y. 2m. Gd. Thomas Endsley McClain, son of J. L. IGd. "William McClain, son of J. L. and S., d. Nov. 2G, 1S()7; 24y. 11 m. 27d. Eleanor McClintoek, wife of N. W., d. Julv 14, ISGG; SOy. Eliza McClintoek, d. Aug. 23, 1888; S5y. Elizabeth McCollougli, wife of Joseph, d. April 15, 1884: S3y. Jane ]McCollouch, wife of John, d. June 3, 18G4: 37y. 27d. John W. McCollough, son of J. and J., d. Feb. 2G, 18G0; 2y. 11m. Joseph McCollough, d. Jan. 31, 1870; 7-1 V. 11m. 24d. J()S('i)h INIcCombs, d. Aug. 12, 18SG; tltly. 10m. 27d. Ellen Mcllrayy, wife of Hugh, d. March 28, 1857; 63y. 11m. 9d. Samuel Mcllravy. son of H. and E., d. Oct. 2. 1843: Sv. 7m. Id. Cathei'ine McKittrick, d. Sep. 4, 1890; 7Gy. 8m. McLean, see also McClain. Elizabeth :\rcriean, wife of Samuel, d. Jan. 15, 1883; 757. Gm. 20d. Emma McLean, d. Oct. G, 187G; 25y. lid. Samuel McLean, d. Aug. 17, 1S76; 74v. 2m. 24d. Samuel II. McLean, d. March 25, 1847; 2m. 21 d. Catherine McMiUan, wife of Thomas, d. Oct. 24, 1881; G5y. 10m. 21d. Thomas McMillan, d. Aug. 27, 1875; SOy. Barbara McPeck, widow of John Ends- ley, and second wife of George Mc- Peck, d. Dec. 1, 1855; 34y. 10m. 8d. Catherine Lyons McPeck, wife of Georiie, h. March 28, 1822; d. July 10, 1883. David Blair McPeck, son of G. and J., d. .Tan. G, 1845; 21d. Georce McPeck, b. Oct., ISOS; d. March 24, 1S8G. George ISIcKenney IMcPeck, son of George and Jane, d. Jan. 30, 1874; 27y. 9m. 7d. Jane Endsley McPeck, wife of Georg*^, b. Feb. 10, ISIO; d. Aug. 22, 1851. Willie INIcPeck, son of George and Catherine, d. July 24, 1875; IGy. 4m. lOd. Agness D. Maxwell, daughter of Wil- liam and A., d. July 7, 1853; IGy. 11m. 12d. Henry INIaxwell, d. Oct. 28, 1863; 21y. 10m. 14d. James MaxAvell, son of R. and M. A., d. June 4, 1840: 7y. 3m. 4d. Jane Maxwell, daughter of Robert and M. A., b. April 11, l>'-22: d. June 10, 1847. John Maxwell, son of William and S.. b. March 2, 1842; d. Sep. 27, 184G. John McGaw Maxwell, son of W. and S., b. Nov. 21, 184G; d. .Tan. 21, 18.54. Marv Maxwell, wife of Walter C, d. July 21, 1855: 33y. Im. 25d. Robert G. IMaxwell, d. Jan. 29. 1SG5; 22y. Im. 21 d. Catherine Megaw, wife of .Tohn, d. Sep. 9, 1847; 58y. 7m. lOd. James Megaw, d. Oct. 24, 1851; 58v. Im. 9d. Mary E. IMecaw, dnushter of J. and M." E., d. May 28, 1858; 2j'. 2m. 13d. James Melanev, a. May 15, 1888; 75v. 3m. 7d. Jane :\relaney, d. April 21, 1870; 5Sy. lOm. 3d. 366 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John Mplaney, d. Jan. 20, 1863; 76y. llin. 27d. J.nno Miller, Tvife of Rozeld, d. March MO, IS^O: 3G.V. Cm. 9d. Anna Martha Moore, dane:hter of W. J. and N., d. Sep. 2, 18G9; lOy. 8m. 4d. Marsaret Moore, "vrife of John, d. June 5, 18SS; TOy. William H. Moorhead, son of Samnel and Sarah, d. Feb. 1, 18G3; 29y. 4m. 16d. Alexander Osbnm, d. Aug. 17, 1867; S2y. 4m. 3d. Elizabeth Osburn, wife of James D., d. Jan. 17, 1800; 27y. Lncinda J. Osburn, daughter of J. D. and E., d. Oct. 18, 1803; 7y. 4m. IGd. INIartha Osburn, wife of Alexander, d. Dec. 25, 1848; 60y. Mary Palmer Osburn, wife of James D., d. Oct. 14, 1802; 27y. Isabella Patterson, wife of John, d. Nov. 17, 1840; 37y. 8m. 8d. Isabella Patterson, daughter of J. and J., d. .June 29, 1857; 2y. 2m. lOd. Jane Patterson, daughter of J. and C, d. Aug. 3, 1840; lid. Jean Patterson, daughter of J. and C, d. March 15, 1854; 2v. 2m. 26d. John Patterson, d. Sep. 1.3, 18.59: G8y. John Patterson, son of J. and C, d. Aug. 0, 1840: ly. 7m. 15d. ]\Iaria Pattei'son, daughter of J. and J., d. July 20, 1805; 2y. Om. Mary Ann Patterson, wife of James H., b. Oct. 2, 1832; d. Oct. 24, 1859. Mary M. Patterson, daughter of J. and J., d. July 23, 1805; 4y. 4m. Thomas Patterson, son of J. and C, d. Aug. 2, 1840; lOd. Fremont Patton, son of M. M. and S. J., d. ]\Iarch 5, 1858; ly. Om. Od. Joseph Patton, son of M. M. and S. J., d. Aug. 22, 1851; 3y. 3m. 15d. Samuel Patton, son of M. M. and S. .L, d. Aug. 31. 18.51: ly. 4m. 19d. Sarah Jane Patton, d. June 13, 1878; 57y. 8m. 1 2d. William Patton, son of M. M. and S. J., d. Feb. 27, 18.50; 3y. Om. lOd. Matthew Picken, d. March 29, 1842; 09y. Susanna Picken, wife of Matthew, d. June 3, 1845; 74y. Elizabeth Richey, R'ife of Jacob, d. Jan. 24, 1845; 58y. 5m. 24d. Jacob Richey, d. April 25, 1830; 80v. lOni. Jacob Ritchey, d. Feb. 5, 1845; 55y. Im. Id. Jacob Richey, d. Nov. 4, 1864; 35y. lum. 13d. Jane Richey, d. Jan. 13, 1845; 22y. Om. 27d. Mary Ann Richey, wife of Jacob, d. June 24, 18.35; 75y. Mai-y A. Richey, d. Nov. S, 1873; 53v. 9m. ISd. William Richey, d. April 24, 1884: 07v. 4d. Caroline Robersnn, wife of William G., d. May 15, 18.52; 48y. 3m. 22d. Elizabeth Roberts, daughter of J. and E., d. Feb. 15, 1855; ly. 11m. lid. John E. Roberts, son of J. and E., d. May 11, 18.55; 4y. ;^m. 2d. James S. Robinson, b. April 11, 1808; d. March 1, 1892. Mary Robison, daughter of J. and M., b. Dec. 1, 18CS; d. Dec. 20, 1854. Hannah Ross, daughter of William M. A., d. April 17, 1840; 4y. 5m. 24d. Mary A. Ross, d. Feb. 26, 1891; 33y. Om. 29d. James C. Scott, son of R. and N., d. Sep. 10, 1851; 3y. 11m. Lucy Scott, daughter of R. and N., d. Sep. 0, 1848: 3y. 10m. 18d. Nancy A. Scott, daughter of R. and N., d. Sep. 12, 1848; 5v. 10m. 21 d. Samuel Shaffer, d. Feb. 27, 1854; 49v. 9m. 20d. Mary Shipman, wife of William, d. July 1, 1827; 37y. William Shipman, d. April 25, 1854: 73y. Mary Jane Shipman, daughter of W. and M., d. March 15, 1827; 7y. 2m. Baty D. Shuse, son of J. and M., d. May 10, 1802; 2y. 9in. 17d. Mary Jane Simpson, wife of Isaac, d. April 6, 18.54; 34y. 6m. 17d. William H. Simpson, d. Aug. 10, 1858; 2y. Om. 19d. Abram Skipper, d. Aug. 21, 1876; Sly. 4m. 2d. Mary A. Skipper, d, Jan. 25, 1891; 78y. RIDGE BURIALS 367 Sarah J. Skipper, d. March 7, 1S91; <;Sv. William Skipper, d. April 12, 1S91; Soy. Charles M. Sleramons, son of A. and S., d. May 22, 1849: Gni. Jane Slemmons. Avife of William, d. July 4, 1851; 70y. Joseph D. Slemmons, d. IMav 31, 18")9; 24y. 7m. 13d. Joseph J. Slemmons, d. Dec. 4, 1SG8; 82y. Snsanna Slemmons, wife of Joseph, d. Oct. 29, lSr,2; Glv. Susanna Slemmons, d. Feb. 23, 1SS5; noy. William Slemmons, d. Jan. 27, 1827: GGy. William J. Slemmons, d. April 19, 1S.:9; 21 V. 7m. 18d. Elizabeth Sloan, b. April 5, 1810; d. Jan. 20, 1883. John Sloan, d. Nov. 12, 1882; G9y. Im. 4d. ISIary Sloan, wife of William, d. Feb. 10, 1853; 82 V. Robert Sloan, d. April 5, 1880; 72y. 4m. lOd. William Sloan, d. Feb. 14, 18G4: 93y. Joseph Smith, d. June 28, 1890; 89y. 5m. David Smylie, d. Sep. 13, 1843: 72y. David Smvlie. son of William and Rachel, d. Oct. 4, 1813: ly. 7m. 17d. Jane Smvlie, wife of David, d. Oct. 11, 1843; 75y. Marcaret Smvlie, danschtor of William and Rachel, d. Oct. 7, 1843; 19y. 5m. 21 d. Sarah J. Smvlie, danshter of William and Rachel, d. June 24, 1850; 14y. 2m. 24d. Thomas Smvlie, son of William and Rachel, d.' Sep. 25, 1843; 12y. 4m. 18d. Franie Snyder, daughter of D. J. and M. E., d. Feb. 24, 1871; 3y. Im. 8d. Willie Snvder, son of D. J. and M. E., d. Aug. 26, 1877; 3y. 23d. James Stewart, d. Dec. 27, 1878; GSy. 11m. 7d. Jane Stewart, d. March 24. 1881; 67y. 7m, Andrew Thompson, d. July 12, 1881; S2y. 3ra. 25d. Andrew Wilson Thomp.son. son of A. and J., d. Oct. 24, 1870; 2()y. 9m. 8d. Jane Thompson, wife of Andrew, d. Dec. 22, 18S9; 85y. Sarah Thompson, daughter of A. and J., d. Aug. 17, 1845; 8y. Sarah Toland, daughter of J. S. and J., d. Sep. 15, 1851; 10m. lOd. Ephraira Vasbinder, d. June 21, 1849; 40y. Im. 17d. Mariah Vasbinder, wife of E., d. Aug. 2G, 1847; 42y. 2Gd. Hannah Tiers, wife of B. W., b. Sep. 18, 1885; d. Sep. 5. 1827. Ann Webster, wife of John, d. March 11, 1894; 68y. 3d. Florence Webster, daughter of J. and A., d. Aug. 27, 1881; 22y. 7m. 2Gd. Ira B. Webster, son of John and Ann, d. Aug. 6, 1893: 20y. 2m. IGd. John Webster, d. Oct. 28, 187G; Goy. 7m. 8d. INIarcaret Webster, wife of John, d. Aug. 22. 1841; 30y. 2m. Gd. Marv Webster, wife of John. d. Marcli 1, "1848; 72y. 11m. Id. Sarah A. Webster, d. March 19, 18SS; 50y. 2m. IGd. Agness Welsh, wife of William, d. Feb. 14, 1845; 24y. 7ni. IGd. Ella J. Welsh, daughter of D. aud S., d. Aug. 2G, 18G5; 2y. 10m. Emma V. Welsh, daucrhter of D. aud S., d. March 21, 1889; 13y. 6m. 29d. George Welsh, son of W. and A., d. Aug. 8, 1845; Gm. Jane Welsh, wife of John, d. Feb. 17, 1872: 79v. John Welsh, d. Dec. 30, 1871; 89y. John V. Welsh, son of D. and S., d. Sep. 1, 18G5; ly. 8m. 9d. Martha S. Welsh, wife of James, d. June 15, 1845; 32y. 9m. 8d. Samuel Welsh, d. March 30, 1850: 78y. Martha F Whittaker, d. Feb. 17, 1888; 31 y. Elizabetli Tv'illinms, wife of Thomas, d. Feb. 7, 1850; 7Sy. 8m. 8d. Note. — The foregoing list of burials is from the present Ridge Graveyard, located on section 23 in Archer town- ship, about a mile southeast from Hanover. 368 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY BURIALS IN DICKERSON GRAVEYARD. To Aug. 3, 1806. George Allen, d. March 11, 1S31; [age gouel. John Allen, d. June 27, 1833; 27y. Josliun Allen, d. Jan. 22, 183r.; 22y. .losiah Allen, Sr., d. Dec. 28, 1842; Sly. Nauev Allen, d. .Inly 31. 1835; ?,'Ay. Susanna Allen, wife of Josiah, d. Mareh 14, 1835; n9y. Susanna Allen, d. Sep. G, 1832; 33y. Wilbert Anderson, son of C. and M., d. Dec. 18. 1874; 4y. 19d. Elisha I'.uxton, d. INIay 4, 1838; OGy. 3m. Mary Buxton, wife of Elisha. d. Nov. 16, 1S49; 70y. William Buxton, d. Aug. 8, 1834; 25y. (Jul. 2d. John (,:haney, d. May 9, 1873; 3ny. Thom.as Chauey, b. Oct. 28, 18U3; d. .July 1, 1800. >Yi]liam V. Clieny, son of S. V. and Clara, b. April 10, 1885; d. May 4, 1885. Margaret Jane Christy, daughter of Richard B. and Sarah, d. Sep. 1, 1SG3; 5y. 5m. Id. Amanda E. Crumley, daughter of J. and M., July 23, 1815; 8m. 2Gd. Caroline Elizabeth Crumley, daughter of D. ]\I. and S., d. April 17, 1S54; 3y. 8m. 7d. Elizabeth Crumley, wife of Thomas, b. Oct. 1, 1780; d. I\Iay 15. 1857. Emily Crumley, daughter of J. and M.,"b. Dec. 28, 184G; 7m. 2d. Emma C^rumlev, daughter of "Wilson and Sarah H., d. Sep. 9, 18153; 5y. lui. Jd. Hannah Crumley, daughter of J. and M., d. Sep. 14,1849; ly. 7m. 2;!d. James Crumlev. d. Jan. 28, 18!)4; 4Gy. 7m. 9d. Member of Co. I, 13th (). Y. I. John Crumley, d. April IS. 1SG5; n2y. 12d. Joseph Crumley, son of J. an:l ^l.. d. June, 1851; Im. Id. Margaret Crumley, wife of James, d. Feb. 23. 1854; 37y. Sm. 2Gd. Siunuel Crumley, d. June IG, 1830; 29y. S<1. Susanna Moore Crumley, wife of Da^id, b. Feb. 17, 1878; 51y. 4m. 15d. Thomas Crumley, d. July 3, 1801 ; 84y. (>m. 3d. William Crumley, son of J. and M., d. .Tune 28. 1850; 2d. John Davis, d. Oct. 12, 1876; 69y. 8m. 22d. Adam Dickerson, d. Feb. 26, 1878; 71y. 2m. 15d. Adam D. Dickerson, d. April 16, 1875; 27y. Im. 6d. Alfred Dickerson, son of William and Cabriella. d. Feb. 21, 18(56; 24d. Aaron M. Dickerson. son of J. and M. J., d. Aug. 30. 1875: 30y. Barbruch r>ickersrn, son of J. and M. J., d. Nov. 6, 1864. Baruch Dickerson, d. Oct. 2, 1821; 38y. 4m. 12d. Bai'ucii Dickerson, son of Joseph and Mary, d. Sep. G, 1827; 2d. Baruch Dickerson. son of William W. and S., d. Feb. 1*8, 1843; ly. 7m. 3d. B(>rtlia Wiley Dickerson, d. May 6, ISSG; Gv. Sm. 5d. Eli Dickerson, d. Nov. 24, 1834; GGy. lOni. 9d. Elizabeth Dickerson, wife of Joshua, d. July 30, 1842; Sly. Im. 5d. James B. Dickerson. son of John and C. A., d. Sep. 30, 1858; 2y. 9m. 22d. .Tajues AVhite Dickerson, d. May 30, 18G0; .38y. Jav Toland Dickerson, son of W. 11. and Lizzie, b. March 22, 1891; d. May 3, 1891. Jolin A. Dickerson. son of Joseph and Mary, d. June 2. 1841; 2y. 23d. Joseph Dickerson, d. May 10, 1877; Sly. Joshua Dickerson, son of Thomas and Mary, d. April 17, 1847; 19y. 3m. 22(1. Maiia J. Dickerson, daughter of Hiram and IMary, d. July 20, 1850; lOy. 17d. Marv Dickerson, wife of Thomas, d. ;March 30, 1853; S7y. 2m. 14d. Marv Dickerson. wife of Eli, d. April 28." 1831; 5.5y. 2m. 12d. ]\Kary Dickerson, Avife of Joseph, d. DICKERSON BURIALS 369» IMarr-h 10, 1S77; r.")y. Samuel E. Dickerson, son of Joslina and N. A., d. Oct. 9, 1857; 12y. Gm. 3d. Snnmol T,. Diekerson, d. July 3. ].'80; ;;0y. lOm. 17d. Sarah Dickcison, wife of Eli, d. Miy S. 18.10; 2Ty. Im. lOd. Sarah Dickorson, daughter of Josliua and Sarah, d. Oct. 16, 1823; lOy. 3m. lOd. Thomas Dickerson, d. Dec. 24, 1852; SSy. 7ni. 5d. Thomas Dickerson, son of William W. and S., d. .Tune 29, 1845; 2m. 20d. William Jamison Dickerson, son of A. and J., d. Jan. 12, 1878; 27y. Om. 12d. Elizabeth 0. Dunlap, wife of Jolia, Jr., d. Sep. 6, ISSf,; .50y. Sm. 27d. Susan Dunlap, wife of .Joseph, d. Au?. J, 1878: 5Sy. 5m. 1.5d. Arirulas W. Edwards, son of J. and E. .7., d. Aug. 12, 1803: 2y. Sm. 19d. Henry Edwards, b. May 15, 1809; d. March 19, 1890. Mairaie M. Edward^daughter of .T. and E. J., d. ^0^9, 1874; 3y. Sm. rds. son of J. aud E. 5^8, 1886: 22y. 2m. 14d. isener, d. Jan. 14, 1853; 91y. Ruth Clfi^ener, wife of Jacob, d. March 28. 1846; 77y. William Glasener, d. May 9, 1803: 31y. 9m. 2d. Catherine Gritfith. wife of R. L.. d. March 14. 1S!)0; 57y. R. L. Gritfith. d. Dec. 22, 1890; 62y. ^Margaret Hamilton, daughter of Eli and Mary. d. Nov. 3, IStil; 13y. James C. Harrison, son of G. W. aud H.. d. March 31, 1852; 3y. 4m. 8d. T»c'ter Harrison, d. April 20, 18,54: SSy. Emma Laura Hinkle, daughter of J. N. and M. J., d. Feb. 21, 1864; 2m. 14d. William J. Hinkle. son of W. and E., d. Sep. 20, 1861 ; 29d. William O. Hinkle, son of W. and E., d. July 28, ISGO; IGd. Abraham Holmes, d. May 3, 1880; 71y. 5ra. 2d. George H. Holmts, d. June 29, 1886; 86y. 8m. 5d. 24 John H. Holmes, son of G. B. and A., d. April 27, 1884; ly. Ini. 20d. Joseph Holmes, d. April 20, 1868; 97y. 2m. 24 d Joseph Holmes, I). Oct. 24, 1825; d. Nov. 20, 1889. Mary A. Holmes, daughter of A. and: R., d. Feb. 20, 1853; 9m. 6d. Mary A. Holmes, daughter of J. and M., d. Oct. 20, 18(;2; Sy. Im. 8d. RLai-v J. Holmes, wife of Joseph, d. INLarch 16, 1856, 34y. 6m. Id. Rachel Holmes, wife of Abraham, d. Feb. 12, 1854; 39y. 10m. 2Sd. Sarah Holmes, wife of Joseph, d.. ]March 5, 1802: 78y. Gm. 9d. William A. Holmes, member of Com- panv C, 98th O. V. I., d. Jan. 19. 1S72: 2Gy. 11m. 13d. William W. Holmes, son of G. B. and; A., d. Oct. IG, ISSl; 10m. lOd. Euiily C. Howell, daughter of J. andi .AI.,*d. June 10, 1S50; ly. 7m. 12d. Thomas IMcBride, d. Feb. 23, 1867; 5G>'. William McBriile, member of Company C. 98th O. V. I., d. Feb. 14. 1863;; 27y Albert M. McCoy, son of J. and E., d. April 2, 1875; 23y. 9m. 7d. Eliza McCoy, b. March 30, 1819; d. July 22, 1890. Bennevt McCoy, d. Dec. 9, 1889; 64y. 4m. 7d. John McCoy, b. Sep. 23, 1816; d. Dec. 3, 1890. Mary E. McCoy, daughter of Ebenezer and Hannah,"d. May 13, 1859; 8m. 2J. INLarv E. Md'addon, wife of John, d. Nov. 28, 1890; 3Gy. 10m. 2d. Isabella McFarland, daughter of R. P. and E., d. Jan. 10, 1S54; lOy 6m. 13d. William McFarland, son of R. P. and E., Oct. 25, 1852; 7y. 2m. 27d. Daniel Mcllravy, d. April 28, 1860; G2y. 24 d. John W. Mcllravy, son of Daniel, d. April 24, 1851; 29y. 3m. 20d. Maria J. Mcllravy, wife of George, d. April 28, 1869; 49y. 9m. 6d. Ann Mercer, daughter of A. and J., d. July 17, 1822; ly. 6m. Susannah Mercer, daughter of Aaron 370 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY and Jane, d. Feb. 13, 1830; 7y. Om. 2nd. Ca'anthia A, Bnrdette Minard, wife of II. F., b. Jan. 1, 1805; d. Aug. t>, 1SS7. Daniel Mitchell, d. An?. 11, 1876; 68y. Elizabeth Mitchell, wife of Daniel, d. Oct. 13, 1844: :^J7y. 4d. Elizabeth Mitchell, daushter of D. and E, d. March 3, 184.5; 2y. 2m. 2d. Jolm L. Mitchell, member of Capt. Mc- Cready's Company, 126th O. V. I., d. Ang. 10, 18ti3; 25y. 11m. lOd. Marv J. Mitchell, daughter of Daniel and Elizabeth, d. Nov. 10, 1849; 17y. Id. Reedie Mitchell, son of J. D. and E. E., b. .March 20, 1888, d. M:iy 18, 1880. Sarah Mitchell, d. INIarch 10, 1803; 52y. Sarah Mitchell, wife of Daniel, d. Aug. 10, 1865; 42y. Alexander ^Morris, son of J. and C, d. May 18, 1824; 4y. 10m. 4d. Eliza Ann Ilanna Oglevee, b. June 31, 1808; d. March 31, 1863. James Wilson Oglevee, member of Capt. McCready's Company. 120th O. V. I., b. Mav 11, 1842; d. May 23. 1863. John Oglevee. b. Dec. 14, 1810; d. March 12, 1865. Nancy Jane Oglevee, b. Feb., 1849; d. June 25, 1865. Susanna Elizabeth Og'evee, b. Julv 2.3, 1852: d. Feb. 10, 1880. John Pennock, Member of Company C, 98th O. V. I., d. at Camp Deunison, Ohio, June 29, 1863; 32y. Richard I'ennock, d. Jan. 29, 1853; 60y. Ilenrv Perrv, b. March 1.5, 1774; d. May 21, 186.5. Samuel C. Perry, son of William and E., d. Aug. 5, 1851; 3y. Im. 12d. Sarah Pen-y, b. Jan. 11, 1784: d. April 7. 1866. William W. Perry, d. Aug. 20, 1865; 42y. Jolm Ryburn, d. Oct. 5, 1847; 17y. 20d. Jane Sharp, wife of Joseph, d. July 3. 1844; 34v. John Smith, d. .Tuly 24, 1850. [no age]. Margaret Vertue Smith, sister of John, d. May 11, 1831; 6y. Margaret A. Shearer, wife of Rov. J. R., d. Oct. 16, 18.54; 2.5y. Infant daughter of E. and S. Timmons, d. Sept. 17. 1851. Joseph O. Tucker, son of H. O. and N. M., d. Nov. 32, 1804; Im. 12d. George Weaver, d. Sep. 27. 1851; 30y. Dorcas Welling wife of William, d. April 21. 1848; 69y. 8m. 9d. Eliza A. Wooley, daughter of W. and E.. d. Nov. 4. 1860: 12y. James Wooley, d. April 7, 1857; 74y. llni. Jane AVoolev, wife of Wesley J., d. March 18, 1857; 53y. 2m 5d. Maria B. Wooley, daughter of W. and J., d. Aug. 19, 1854; 18y. Marion II. Woolev, son of J. and J., d. ,Ian. 19. 1877; ly. 8m. 2d. Martha AVoolev. daughter of W. and J., d. Sep. 22, 1839; 6m. Marv E. Wooley. daughter of W. and J., d. April 9. 18.53. Susanna Wooley, wife of J., d. Feb. 4, 1839; 7.3y. Susannah Woolev. daughter of W. and J., d. Oct. 10, 1850; 19y. BURIALS IN RANKIN GRAVE- YARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) Albina Barrett, b. Nov. 10, 1827; d. Feb. 13, 1891. Elizabeth Barrett, wife of Arthur, d. April 11, 1874; 45y. Joseph Barrieklow, d. April 13, 1875; 69y. 10m. Id. Elijah Bartow, d. June 22, 1870; 48y. 9m. 22d. Zenas Beall, d. April 17, 1852; 33y. 8m. 15d. John P. Cope, d. April 20, 1890; 05y. 8m. 5d. Rebecca Early, d. May 19, 1831; 22y. Christinia Fulton, b. July 28, 1825; d. Dee. 2, 1893. John Hastings, d. Dec. 0, 1840; SOy. Elizabeth Johnson, d. July 30, 1871; 57y. John W. Johnson, b. May 29, 1823; d. Nov. 30. 1889. Mary Johnson, wife of R., d. Dec. 8, 1877; 74y. RANKIN AND CORINTH BURIALS 371 William Johnson, Sr., d. Nov. 30, 1889; 79y. Ini. 4(1. Jonathan .Tones, d. April 1, 1SS4: 88v. Josiah Kidwell, d. Feb. 23, 1846; 72v. 5m. lOd. William Kidwell, b. Oct. 19, 1814; d. Deo. 22, ISS.-,. Charles McMillin, d. Aug. 1, 1867; 87y. Rosanna McMillin. wife of Charles, d. Nov. 27, 18.56; 29y. 9m. 7d. John MoiTis, b. May 4, 1816; d. Jan. 20, 1894. Thomas B. Morris, d. April 15, 1890; 68y. Jane Porter, wife of John, d. Nov. 8, 1837; 2oy. 8m. 20d. James Rankin, d. July 5, 1858; 73y. 6m. 13d. Kester Rankin, wife of James, d. March 29. 3874; 81 y. Nancv Rankin, daucliter of David and Sarah, d. Sept. 28, 1842; 19y. 7m. 19d. Sarah Rankin, wife of David, d. May .5, 18.52: .55y. 4m. 14d. Thomas Rankin, d. Mav 12, 1832; 71y. 8m. William Rankin, d. Jan. 3, 1864; 41y. 9m. 21d. Cyrus P. Rowland, b. May 28, 1817; d. July 5, 1898. Elizabeth Rowland, wife of James, d. March 4, 1SS4: 75y. 10m. 17d. James Rowland, d. July 31, 1890; 85y. 5m. 7d. John Rowland, d. April 29. 1855; 96y. Rachel Rowland, Trife of John, d. May 4, 1863; 85y. Susanna Rowland, wife of Cvrus P. b. April 8. 1818; d. Sept. 12. 18S4. Elizabeth Ruby, wife of John, d. Jan. 28, 1845; 62y. John Ruby, d. Nov. 6, 1849: 72y. Ammon Shannon, d. Jan. 23, 1892; 04y. 9m. 6d. Alexander Simpson, b. March 4, 1771; d. March 22, 1841. Sarah G. Simpson, d. Dec. 15, 1858; 34y. Thomas Simpson, d. Aug. 7, 1896; 87y. Mary Sproul, daughter of John and Jane Hastings, d. Oct. 13, 1836; 44y. Im. Mary Stewart, d. April 16, 1845; 20y. Matilda Toole, wife of Thomas, d. Oct. 10. 1883; SOy. Thomas Toole, d. Mav 9. 1S64: 70v. 2m. 2d. Joseph White, d. Dec. 17, 1874; 43y. 10m. 7d. Sarah White, wife of .Joseph, d. Dec. 10, 1865: 38y. .Joseph Wineman. d. Jan. .30. 1872: 79y. BURIALS IN CORINTH GRAVE- YARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) Corinth Graveyard is situated in the northwest corner of section 14. town. 12, range 7, in Washington township, about three miles southeast from Tip- pecanoe. Rebecca Crabtree. wife of Gabriel, d. Oct. 31, 1869; 74y. 9d. Jesse Forsythe, d. Nov. 5, 1857; 87y. John Forsvthe, b. June 15, 1818; d. April 3; 26y. lOrn. 2d. Joseph D. Foi-sythe, d. Nov. 12, 1859; 44y. 10m. 20d. Levi G. Forsythe, d. Jan. 20. 18.54; 31y. 5m. 18d. Sarah Forsythe, wife of Jesse, d. June 24, 1854; 62y. James B. Jenkins, d. Nov. 16, 1883; 63y. 11m. Id. Frances Kerby. wife of James, d. June 6, 1874: 89y. John Knox. a. INIav 21, 1SG3; 6Sy. 4m. 23d. Mary Ivnox, wife of .John, d. April 12, 1887; 85y. 5m. 27d. Sarah J. Knox, d. May 4, 1848; 18y. 6m. Hannah Layport, d. May 6, 1880; 80v. 7m. 20d. Elizabeth Miller, wife of Richard, d. March 16, 1849: 79y. Im. 21d. Rifhard Phillips, d. Dec. 4. 18.56: 84v. Hush Shot well. d. March 17, 1854; 90y. Betsy Slonecker, wife of John, d. Oct. 16, 1855: 49y. 7m. lOd. John Slonecker, d. :May 12, 1862; 67y. 2m. 6d. James Wright, d. Oct. 29, 1878: lOOy. HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY BURIALS IN :MIXKSVILLB GRAA'EYARD. (Those Born Boloiv 1S30.) Minksville Gravoyard is situatoil nonr tho southoast eornor of soe'tiou 10, town. 11, range G, Nottingluun town- ship. Jai-ob Barsar, d. July 29, 1891; GSy. lid. James Campbell, d. May 10, 1846; 55y. :5m. LMd. Samuel L. Carpenter, b. June 5, 1827; d. Mareli S. 188"). Franlcliu Carson, d. June 16. 1S74; 65y. 11 m. 2d. Hannah Carson, wife of John Carson. Sr.. d. Nov. 2, 18.VJ; 74y. 11m. lid. John Carson, Sr., d. May 13. 1858; 77y. Oni. 27d. Sarah Carson, wife of Franklin, b. Feb. 10, 1807; d. Feb. 22. 1844. Tabitha Carson; wife of Franklin, d. Aug. 10. 18t;9: r)8y. ~m\. 20d. Lydia Cash, wife of William, d. Mav 9. 1837; 23y. 4m. Id. Robert Cook, d. Sept. 12. 1845; 41v. Jaoob Cope, b. Oct. 7, 1822: d. April 22, 1897. Jane Cope, wife of Samuel, d. Ante 7, 1855: 68y. 2m. 17d. Martha Cope, vlauirliter of Samuel and Jane Cope, d. June 2, 1841; 22v. 9m. 29d. Martha A. Cope, wife of Jaoob, d. .Vpril 10, 1809: 37y. 10m. 18d. Samuel Cope, d. Get. 19, 1865; 73y. 2m. 17d. Benjamin Ford. d. Jan. 19, 1855; 33y. (>m. 17d. Rebecca Ford, wife of Lewis, d. Feb. 23, 1845: 52y. Deborah Furnev. wife of Frederick, d. June 19. 1872: 84y. 3m. 22d. Frederick Furney, d. Oct. 26. 1855; 68y. Im. 28d. Abraham Ilillis, d. March 26. 1836; 31y. Im. 21d. Elder Abiram .Johnson, d. Mav 5, 1873: 73y. 5m. lid. Elizabeth Johnson, wife of Samuel, d. Oct. 22, 1844: 39y. 8ra. 14d. Joelm Johnson, b. June 1, 1S22; d. Dec. 22, 18S1. T-ydia .Johnson, wife of Abiiain. d. Ai)ril 23. 1S.".8: .-.4y. Im. lid. Marv .Vnn Jolnison, wile of L.. d. Oct. 29. 1890: 61y. 3m. 17.1. Nancy Johnson, wife of Ephraini. d. April 3. 18(50: 62y. 7m. 7d. ICllcn Mallernee, wife of Levi. d. Dec. 23, 18(53: -13y. 10m. 26.1. Emanuel Mallernee, d. Feb. 23, 18:^.9; (50y. 3m. 20d. T^evi Mallernee, b. Feb. 12, 1816: d. .June 1, 1880. Lewis C. Mallernee, b. Mav 12, 1823; d. Sept. 11. 1S92. James Maxwell, d. April 19, 1870; 80y. H.innah IVIilliken. wife of J. Milliken, d. l'\4> 3, IS 12: (v3v. .Jonah H. Nichols, d. An?:. 19. 18(5S: 70y. 6m. 29d. Martlia Nichols, wife of Jonah, d. April 21. 18S9: 84y. 7m. .Jonathan Perrin, d. .Jan. 2. 1852: 82y. Artluu" Futrh, son of Daniel and Susan- nah rujih, d. April 29, 1855; 28y. <5m. 9d. Emily Ramsay, wife of John C, d. Doc. 1, 1880: 5(>y. 4ra. 27d. Marv Richardson, wife of "William, b. Ai.ril 7. 1811: d. Feb. 1. 1897. William Richardson, d. Ausr. 20. 1854; (i(5y. 3m. 3d. Jane Rowland, wife of William, b. Dec. 15. 1801; d. Nov. 17. 1881. Piety Ann Rowland, d. Sept. 5. 1865: 3."ty. 5m. 13d. William Rowland, b. Mav 19. 1796; d. .Ian. 13, 1873. James Shields, d. Sept. 21, 1882: 90y. Albert Sinsrhaus, d, Nov. 2, 1851: 41v. 10m. l(5d. Elias Suddith. d. Feb. 5. 1873: 8.3y. Ann Wilson, d. Nov. 30. 1854: 8.">y. BURIALS IN PLEASANT VALLEY GRAVEYARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) Pleasant Valley Graveyard is situ- ated in the east half of section 14. town. 12. range 6, Stock township, one mile west of Laceysville. Elizabeth Campbell, wife of John L., d. June 29, 1873; Sly. 4m. 20d, MORAVIAN RID(;E BURIALS William Evnns, b. Dec. 22, 1821; d. Feb. 12. 18;j(). P.fnjamin Fowler, d. May ir», 1801; 88y. Jane Fowler, Avifc of Benjamin, <1. April 20, 18S0; 87y. James Oallaher, d. Sept. 11, iH:>r,- : rjy. 7m. 3d. Patrick Gallaher, b. Dec. 4, 1794; d. May 1, 1877. Catherine A. <^;il)son, wifV' of Edwai-d, b. June 4, 18:i(j; d. .July 9, 188.-j. Edward Gibson, d. Jan. 10, 18(;8; (;r,y. John Gildea, d. Sept. 12. 18(Jf;; 4Sy. 7m. Martlia Gildea, wife of Jo'in, b. Jan. 2."). 1800; d. Oft. 20, 1801. Flizalictli Ibavlin, wilt! of Stephen H., d. June V.i, 1804: 74y. Om. 12d. Stephen H. Heavlin, d. Dec. 11, 188.'j; 66y. 3m. 5d. Phebe Houfrliland, wife of James, d. Nov. 12, 1882: t;8y. 3m. 20d. Jesse Hoyt, d. Oct. 27, 18>"(>: 81 y. Anna J. Lacv, wife of John, S,, b. July 21, 180.t: d. Sept. .30. ^HH^,. John S. Lacv, b. .Tan. 14, 1703: d. .Tan. 10, 1873. William B. Lacy, b. Dec. 11, 1823; d. Jan. 14, 1807. Cynthia Lavjtort, wife of Isaac, b. Sept. 4, 181.-;; d. :May 2, 180,-. Isaac Layport, d. Aug. 3, 1882; 07y. 11m. 8d. William Layport, d. March 20, 1867; 01 y. Om. 8d. Klizaheth Le>;gitt, wife of Levi, d. F(']). 19. 1802; .-7y. Im. 12d. Levi Leggitt, d. June 9, 1808; 08y. 4m. l.Sd. Marjraret Lewis, wife of Aaron, d. Oct. 2, 18.-0: .*!0y. Robert McFadden, d. Marcli 15, 1870; 63y. Sarah McFadden. wife of Robert, d. June 21, 1870; 70y. .3in. l.'jd. Samuel Miller, d. July 2(;, 1889; 8.-iy. Im. Worley Mummy, d. Aug. 31, 1884; 55y. 4m. 27d. Hannah Parker, b. Dec, 31, 1809; d. Dec. 27. 1874. Francis Simpson, d. March lo, 1870; CGy. John Simpson, b. March 26, 1814; d. Oct. 7, 1877; (Wy. Om. lid. Margaret Simpson, wife of I^'rancls, d. Nov. 9. 1884; 8.3y. Aiii'ah.'iin SingliauK, d. Oct. 12, 1857; .30y. Om. 12d. Maigaret Smith, wife of William P., d. AiHil 24. 1870; OOy. 3m. lOd. William P. Smith, d. May 15, 1890; 80y. 7m. 25d. Ara Spiker, wife of Christopher, d. -Marcl) 10, 1870; 63y. 8m. :',(). Christopher Spiker, d. March ):,, 1870; 74y. Elizabeth Tipton, wife of Samuel, d. July 21, 1870: 07y. Elizabeth Turney, wife of James, d. Feb. 2.5, 1887; 70v. 2m. 3d. Albert West, d. July 0, 1801; 72y. 7m. 3d. Mary West, wife of Albert, d. Oct. 4, 18.-.0: ,37y. 10m. 4d. Margaret Wheeler, d. Nov. 6, 1858; (;8y. lOd. BURIALS IN MORAVIAN RIDGE GRAVEYARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) Moravian Ridge Graveyard Is situ- ated in the northwest corner of section 23, town. 10, range ,5, in Cadiz town- ship, about four miles west of Cadiz. I'ercival Adams, ],. Sept. 10, 1820; d. Jan. .30, 1808. Hugh Anderson, d. Marcli 16, 1891; (^ly. 9m. 3d. Isabella Bargar, wife of John G., d. Oct. 18, 18.52; .33y. Om. 14(1. Sarah Blair, wife of William, d. July 24, 18.80; 72y. 2m. 28d. William Blair, d. .Tan. 29, 1807; 62y. 10m. 1.5d. Margaret Christy, d. Oct. 11, 1802; 20y. Om. 14d. Roltert Christy, d. Oct. 9, 1853; 54y. Lydia Conawav, wife of AVilliam, d. July 20, 18.53: 21 y. 14d. Elizabeth Cope, wife of David, d. Oct. .3. 1851; 31 y. 7m. 1.3d. rjeorge Day, d. May 4, 18.55: 60y. Margaret D.ny, wife of George, d. Feb. 14, 18.-9; Sly. 5m. 374 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John Dowus. son of R. and.E.. d. May 31, 1S4!»; 22y. Im. 22d. Mary Downs, wife of George, d. Aug. in, IS."); 2Sy. Gm. 2Td. Jolin Finnicai, b. April 4, 1829; d. Feb. 4. 1809. Oliver C. Grimes, b. Aug. 7, 182G, d. Feb. 4, 1892; 6.5y. .^m. 28(1. Gillespie Haverfield, b. Nov. 14, 1818; ■d. March 17. 1882. Stephen Heavlin. d. Feb. 3. 1840: 7.">y. Alexander Henderson, b. Aug. 9, 1813; d. March 17, 1883. Mary Henderson, daughter of William and Nancy, d. Feb. 27, 1851; 22y. 11m. 22d. Nancy Henderson, wife of William, d. Feb. 3, 1844; 54y. 4m. 14d. Nancy Henderson, d. April 1, 1857; 33y. Im. Thomas B. Henderson, son of William and Nancy, d. Aug. 19, 1845; 28y. Bm. 8d. William Henderson, d. May 9, 1852; 75y. Daniel Hines, d. Feb. 3, 18G1: 65y. Elizabeth Hines, wife of Samuel, d. Feb. 18, 1875; 83y. Elizabeth Hines, d. June 22, 1822; 28y. 3m. lOd. Hannah Hines, wife of .Tames, d. April 10, 1844; 31y. 7m. 5d. Isaac Hines, d. Oct. G. 18G5: 7Gy. Isabella Hines, d. April 15, 1809; 92y. 2m. 21d. John Hines, son of Samrel and Eliza- beth, d. Feb. 7, 1833; 18y. 5m. ,Tohn F. Hines, d. June 29, 1851; 29y. Gd. .Toseph Hines, d. Oct. 1, 1823; 71y. Martha Hines, daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth, d. Aug. 22, 1821; ly. 2m. lid. Rebecca Hines, wife of John, d. Jan. 27, 1859; 75y. 3m. 13d. Rudoloh Hines, d. .Tan. 31, 1888: 74y. Samuel Hines, d. Oct. 22, 1872; Sly. Sarah Hines. d. Nov. 9. 18G5; 7Gy. Sarah H. Hines, daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth, d. Sept. 2, 1830; ly. Im. lid. Susannah Hines. daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth, d. Jan. 80, 1839; 30y. 7m. 19d. William Hines, d. Sept. 8, 1887; S7y. 5m. 20d. Marv Johnson, wife of Hugh, d. Nov. 15." 18G9: 74y. 9m. 19d. John Kent, b. March G, 1812; d. Nov. 29. 1885. Ruth J. Kent, wife of John, b. Nov. 11, 1818; d. Dee. 14, 1891. Sarah Kent, wife of Absalom, d. May 25. 1885; .SSv. 8m. 2d. George Ivitt, *d. Aug. 2, 18.30; 33y. John Lavely,'d. Dec. 3, 1841; 54y. 10m. 25d. Marv Lavely, d. May 2G, 184G; 20y. 2m. 18d. Jacob Marshall, d. May 15, 1824; SOy. 6m. 7d. Martha Marshall, wife of Jacob, d. Aug. 7, 1844; 31 y. Marv Marshall, wife of Jacob, d. Jan. 29.^1848; 102y. 10m. Zapporali Marshall, wife of John, d. June 25, 1838; 79y. Rachel H. Martin, wife of George, b. Feb. 4, 1831; d. Jan. 17, 1881. Sophia Merrvman, Avife of Migagah, ■d. Julv 2f), 1881; 91y. 4m. lOd. David Mitchell, d. Aug. 15, 1847; 25y. 8m. 4d. Hugh Mitchell, d. Aug. 27, 1847; 41y. 5m. Id. James IMitchell, d. Sept. 12, 1847; 48y. Gm. 8d. John Mitchell, d. April 12, 1844; 72y. John H. Mitchell, d. Sept. 21, 1847; 28y. Marv Mitchell, wife of .Tohn, d. Jan. 7, 1850; G7y. 11m. 2Gd. Wasliington Ourant, b. Sept. 15, 1808; d. Sept. 10, 1884; 7Gy. •Jemima Patterson, wife of Joseph, b. April 11, 1801, d. April 2, 189(i: 95y. .Tosepli Patterson, b. April, 1799, in Countv Down, Ireland; d. April IG, 1879; 80v. Marcia Patterson, b. Nov. 30, 1822; d. April 12. 1890. AndrcAv Poulson, son of .Tames and Rachel, d. Jan 28. 1831; 3Gy. Im. Gd. William Ramsey, d. Feb. 18, 18.5G; G4y. Parmelia Rickey, wife of H., d. Feb. 14, 1853; 32y. 2m. 2d. Providence Rickey, wife of Daniel, d. Sept. 6, 1855; 63y. BETHEL BURIALS Caleb Ross, d. June 4, 1SG4; 55y. Im. 29cl. Susanna Rnss, wife of Adam, d. Jan. 11, 1847; GSy. Mary A. Shivers, b. Jan. 2G, 1831; d. Jan. IS, 1893. Elizabetli Watterp. wife of John, d. Sept. 30. 1852; 33y. Mary Wells, wife of Charles, d. Jan. 31, 1880; 72y. BURIALS IN BETHEL GRAVE- YARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) William Argo, d. Feb. 2G, 184G; 82y. Gm. 14d. Mary Arnold, b. Feb. 2.j, 17GG; d. Jan. 8, 1854. James Balier, b. Feb. 17, 1804; d. Nov. 30, 1879. John Baker, d. Feb. 12, 1847; GOy. 10m, 29d. Lillah Baker, wife of Otho, b. Aug. 30, 1818; d. Nov. 14, 1843. Mary Baker, wife of Otho, d. Feb. 13, 1870; 74y. Otho Baker, d. Feb. 24, 18.55; 74y. Reziu Baker, d. May 23, 187G; G5y. Gm. 18d. Charles Bartley, d. Feb. 16, 1845; 73y. Margaret Beatty, d. Oct. 6, 1838; Sly. Rachel Beatty, vs'ife of Sampson, d. Jan. 25, 1850; 49y. 5m. Id. Sampson Beatty, d. Nov. 27, 1849; G3y, 5m. 21d. Weslev Beatty, son of Sampson and Rachel, d. Sept. 7, 1840; 12y. 23d. Elizabeth Birnev, fir.st wife of Hugh, d. Sept. 5, 1828; 40y. Hugh Birney, d. Sept. 28, ISGl; 82y. John Birney, d. July 6, 1854; 77y. Margaret Birney, wife of Robert, d. Feb. 2, 18G6; 71y. Nancy Birney, second wife of Hugh, d. Dec. 27, 1854; GOy. Nelson Birney, d. June 14, 18G7; 47y. 9m. 2Gd. Rachel Birney, wife of John, d. Nov. 12, 1843; G3y. Robert Birney, d. Aug. IG, 1871; SGy. 7m. 15d. Benjamin Brindley, Jr., d. July 12, 18G0; 49y. 5m. lod. Hugh Brown, d. Nov. 12. 1822; 3Gy. Jane Brown, wife of Hugh, d. Sept. 3. 1884; 9Gy. William Brown, d. Dec. 20, 1874; 55y. 5m. 8d. Catherine Busby, second wife of Sheri- dan, b. Sept. 25, 183G; d. Feb. 25, 18G4. Eliza Busby, first wife of Sheridan, b. June 22, 1822; d. Nov. 14, 1852. Sheridan Busliy, b. July 4, 1817; d. A us. 31. 1884. William Chaney, d. July 30, 1839; GSy. 4m. lOd. Zebadee Cox, d. Nov. 1, 18G1; 65y. Gm. 2Gd. James Devore, d. June 12, 1S51; 79y. Lydia Devore, wife of James, d. Dec. 25. 1848; 7Gy. Mary Devore, wife of Moses, b. March 27, 1818; d. May 25, 1892. Moses Devore, d. Jan. 20. 188S; 79y. John Fife, d. Oct. ISGS; G2y. Margaret Fogle, wife of George, d. Jan. 22, 1838; SOy. Lucinda Foreman, wife of Samuel, b. April 21, 1821; d. May 14, 1897. ISIartha R. Foreman, wife of Ephra!m, d. Oct. 14, 1844; SOy. Gm. lid. Sarah Foreman, wife of William, d. Sept. 13, 18G4; 85y. 5m. 7d. William Foreman, d. June G, 1845; 70y, 10m. 9d. Lemuel Green, d. April 10. 18G0; 72y. Mary Green, wife of Lemuel, d. Sept. 9. "1879; 93y. Elizabeth Guthrie, wife of James W., d. Dec. IG, 1898; 81 v. 2m. James W. Guthrie, d. Dec. 8, 1883; 84 y. 4m. Isabelle Henderson, wife of Matthew, d. Aug. 31, 1898; 78y. 4m. 6d. MattheAV Henderson, d. Feb. 7, 1898; Sly. 4m. Gabriel Holland, d. Jan. 18, 1871; Sly. 11m. Susannah Holland. Avife of Gabriel, d. Sept. 27, 1861; 73y. ISd. Margaret Kail, d. June 10, 1850; 28y. 4m. lid. William P. Kent, b. Feb. 14, 1798; d. Oct. 11, 1872; 74y. 7m. 27d. William W. Kent. b. March 7, 182G; d. Feb. 21, ISSG. 376 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY George Leas. d. March 7, 1S70; 70v. '^^^^'^ Eal^<"on, wife of John, d. July 11m 5d ' ■*• 1*^0'; ^-y- 1™- ■ici- Marv'Lea^. wife of George, b. April Christopher Rankin, son of Henry and 11. ISOo: d. June 6. 18S3. J^'^IW^"":: -^ ^^^f = ^^^L T" Sarah J. Rankni, daughter ot Henrv aud Ruth. d. April 11. 1S40; lly. 10m. Jane Ryan, d. Sept. 12, IStiG; 74y. tim. Id. Isaac Lemaster, d. April 21. 1844; 70y. 7m. 7d. Jane Lemaster. wife of Isaac, d. April 27. 1S55: 7ny. Im. 20d. William Lemaster, d. March 8, 1878; 61y. 2m. Sd. Hannah Lewis, daiishter of Joseph. and Rachel, d. March 11. 1897; 82v. Im. 26d. .Joseph Lewis, d. Sept. 4, 1853; 83y. 10m. 3d. Joseph Lewis, d. Jlarch 1, 1882; 87y. 25d. Mary Lewis, wife of .Joseph, d. April 17. 1850; 48y. 2m. 19d. Rachel Lewis, wife of Joseph, d. Sept. 1, lSo2; 83y. 10m. 12d. Anne Lindsey. d. March 13. 18.30: 52y. NancT McGuire. wife of James, d. Dec. 30, 1834: 49y. Melinda Ryan, wife of Lewis G., d. Oct. 4, 189.5; 73y. Jane Scarlet, wife of Richard, d. Feb. 15, 18GS; 6Gy. Katherine Speer. d. May 9. 1833; 70y. Rachel Speer, wife of William, d. May 28. 1867: t)5y. 28x1. Sophia G. Speer, d. May 11, 1849; 53y. 5m. 5d. William Speer, d. Dec. 15, 1849; 53y. Im. ]4d. Netty Thomlinsoii, wife of Thomas, d. Feb. 24. 1S4.T: 41y. Im. 25d. Elizabeth Thompson, wife of John. d. Jan. 30, 1858: 49y. 7m. Sd. Mary Thompson, wife of Thomas, d. May 29. 1860; 76v. Catherine McKee, d. March 26. 1861; Thomas Thompson.' d. Sept. 29, 1842; ^IJ'- 2Sv. 3m. 9d. Rachel McKee. wife of Robert, d. ganiuel Tipton, d. March 27, 1859; 45y. Sept. 29, 1847; 58y. 4m. 6d. 3m. 24d. Robert McKee, d. June 3. 1851; 73y. Kezia'wheeler. wife of Mordicai. d. 7m. 24d. jniie .5. 3^7:5; jtv. ,5m. 20d. Axie Maholm. wife of James, d. Feb. Mordicai Wheeler." d. Feb. 6. 1S84; 9, 1871: 67y. James Maholm. d. Feb. 23. 1859: 65y. Abraham Mattern. b. Oct. 22. 1806: d. Feb. 16. 1889. Mary Slattern, wife of Abraham, b. April 14. 1808: d. Dec. 17. 1890. Lucy Mav. wife of Andrew, d. Dec. 30, 1830; G7y. 3m. lOd. Abraham Fittinger. d. Oct. 6, 1859; 87y. 2m. 15d. Margaret Pittinser. daughter of S. and J..~'d. NoA-. 16, 1854: 24y. Gm. 27d. GOy. Soloman Wyant. d. Julv 24. 1851: 20v. 3m. BURIALS IN GREENWOOD GRAVEYARD OF GREEN TOWNSHIP. (Those Born Before 1830.) Greenwood Graveyard is situated near the centre of the east line of see- Jane Pittinger, wife of Samuel, d. Feb. tion 20. town. 10, range 4, Green town-" 13. 1875: 75y. 11m. 8d. ship, two miles southAvest of Hope- Samuel Pittinger, d. Aug. 26, 187G; dale. "^y- 1™- I)avid Allison ,b. April 20, 1820; d. Susannah Pittinger. Avife of Abraham; Sept. 1. 1894. Samuel IP. Baxter, d. Sept. 19. 1887; d. Mav 2. 1847: 69v. 30d John Ralston, d. Oct. 24, 1881; 82v. 3m. lid. Leusintha Ralston, wife of John, d. Jan. 13, 1S46; 38y. Im. 5d. 90y. Im. 4d. Nancy Baxter, wife of Samuel P., d. Nov. 28, 1840; 43y. 7m. 18d. \ GREENWOOD BURIALS 377 Dr. William Beadle, b. March 29, 1830; d. Oct. 20, 18S0. Ann Boll, wife of Francis, d. Dec. 30, 1873: 71y. Im. 20d. Elizabeth Bell, wife of Francis, d. March 29, 1834: G9v. 4m. 17d. Francis Bell, b. Feb. 12, 17G5; d. Sept. 20, 1848. Francis Bell, d. JuJy 23, 1862; G2y. Gm. 27d. Jackson Bell, son of Samuel and Rachel, d. Feb. 5. 1835; 7y. 3m. 29d. Jane Bell, wife of Francis, d. July IS, 1876: 71y. 8m. 21d. John M. Bell, son of Samuel and and Rachel, d. Feb. 4, 1835; 5y. 3m. lid. William Brinkerhoff, L. L. D., b. Aug. 21. 1821; d. Oct. 5, 1885. Abraham H. Busby, b. Jan. 22, 1814: d. July 11, 1S9G. Amanda Busby, wife of Robert, b. May 10. 1807; d. June 20. 1893. Eleanor Busby, wife of Abraham 11., b. Feb. 20, 1820; d. Aug. 19. 1893. Robert Busby, b. June 19, 1803; d. Feb. 11, 1896. Ankrum Cardwell, b. July 23, 1823; d. Dec. 7, 1883. Isaac Case, d. Nov. 29, 1871; 83y. Im. 26d. George Chaney, d. May 5, 1888; 82y, 11m. 18d. Eleanor Cope, wife of James, d. March 14. 1870; 61y. 11m. 25d. James Cope, d. Jan. 17, 18G8; G2y. 2m. 14d. Jacob S. Copeland, b. Oct. 10, 1818; d. Aug. 7, 1882. Nancy Copeland, wife of Thomas, d. April IS, 1857; G4y. 7m. 4d. Nancy M. Copeland, wife of Jacob S., b. Oct. 4, 1821; d. April 29, 1896. Thomas Copeland, d. March 8, 1879; 83y. 5m. 13d. Nathan Couch, Sr., d. March 11, 1S4G; 72y. Nathan Couch, Jr., d. Noy. 12, 1847; 28y. Sd. Catherine Croskey, Ayife of John, d. Jan. 22, 1863; 82y. Gm. 27d. Elizabeth Croskey. wife of Jackson, d. April 6, 1882; 67y. 7m. 27d. Esther Croskey, wife of John, d. Sept. 27, 1835; 27y. 3ra. 7d. Jackson Croskey, d. Feb. 7, 1890; 75y. Id. John Croskey, d. March 16, 1862; 86y. 5m. 9d. John Croskey, d. Oct. 20, 1867; 65y. 6m. Phebe Dowden, wife of Thomas A., b. July 18. 1819; d. Feb. 23. 1892. Thomas A. Dowden, b. Nov. 16, 1822; d. Aug. 20, 1890. Elizabeth Fisher, wife of George, d. Oct. 19, 18.38; 89y. 7m. 13d. George Fisher, d. Sept. 11, 1823; 71y. Hannah Jane Fulton, wife of William, d. April 13, 188G; 73y. 2m. 15d. Maria Louisa Fulton, wife of James, d. Sept. 30, 1875; 44y. 6m. lOd. Sophia Fulton, wife of William, d. July 27, 1889: 73y. 4m. 21d. William Fulton, d. July 30, 1884; Sly. Id. Christopher S. Hall, d. July 23, 1878; 85y. 5m. 7d. y Hannah Hall, wife of Christopher S., d. April 6. 1891; 86y. Mary Handy, dausrhter of Moses and Nancy, d. Aug. 18, 1826; 17y. 4m. 5d. Moses Handy, d. March 2, 1871; Sly. 8m. 22d. Nancy Handy, wife of Moses, d. Oct. 7. 1860: 71y. John M. Ha una, d. June 20, 187S: 74y. Susannah Harrson, wife of William, d. Feb. 25, 18G3; 53y. William Harrison, Sr., d. Sept. 19, 1885; 83y. Isaac Holmes, d. Feb. 12, 1884; 76y. Jane Holmes, wife of Isaac, d. July 18, 1884; 84y. Joseph Howell, b. June 24, 1811; d. Sept. 2, 1884. Mary Howell, wife of Joseph, b. Feb. 20. 1814: d. May 9, 1884. William Jones, d. Jan. 24, 1839: 26y. 8m. 23d. Catherine Kennedy, wife of Dr. Moses, b. Aug. 18, 1794; d. Feb. 5, 1869; 74y. 5m. 13d. Elizabeth Kennedy, daughter of Moses and Catherine, d. July 11, 1830; 7y. 4m. 19d. 378 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Dr. Moses Kennedy, b. Dec. 24, 1797; d. April 7, 1857; 59y. 3m. 14d. Edwai'd Lauglu-idge, d. June 14, 1SS9; 87y. Elizabeth Leech, wife of William, b. 1820; d. 1897. William Leech, b. 1821; d. 1897. Rebecca Lindley, d. Feb. 17, 18GG; 47y. Matilda McClaiu, d. April 13, 1887; 72y. D. W. Mansfield, b. March 20, 1829; d. April 14, 1883. Allen Maxwell, d. July 12, 1894; 77y. 2m. 6d. Mary A. Maxwell, wife of Allen, d. Aua:. 14, 1892; 6Gy. 3m. 8d. M. Meuhirter, d. Feb. 2, 1372; 97y. William Narra^ong, b. June 15, 1811; d. Sept. 30, 1893. Elizabeth Parkinson, wife of Thomas, d. April 24, 1847; 88y. 10m. 2Gd. Thomas Tarkinson, d. Nov. 10, 1838; 7Gy. 12d. John Ramsav, b. June 23, 1805; d. March 27, 1895. Mary B. Ramsay, wife of John, b. June 22, 1817; d. Nov. 11, 1889. Sarah F. Rife, d. Feb. 22, 1870; 59y. Im. lOd. Susannah Rogers, wife of J., d. Aug. G, 1886; GGy. Gm. IGd. Christena Shepler, wife of Jacob, d. July 19, 1854; 81y. 5m. 14d. Jacob Shepler, d. Juue 18, 1841; 68y. 8m. 29d. Jacob C. Shepler, d. June 13, 18G3; 32y. 7m. 26d. Samuel Shepler, b. April 9, 1799; d. Oct. 11, 18G5. Susannah Shepler, wife of Samuel, d. March 13, 1854; 49y. 5m. 23d. Mary Jane Snedderker, wife of Sam- uel, d. June 24, 189G; 73y. Catherine Snider, b. March 1, 1804; d. Dec. 24, 1886, Martin Snider, b. Oct., 1805; d. April 5, 1882. Catherine Snyder, wife of Martin, d. Aug. 29, 1821; 62y. Christina Snyder, wife of John A., b. April 1, 1815; d. Aug. 15, 1858. Martin Snyder, d. Nov. 7, 1810; 82y. Joseph M. Stewart, b. 1822; d. 1891). Cynthia Swan, wife of Hezekiah, b. Oct. 4, 1820; d. Feb. 25, 1895. A. B. West, b. Sept. 1, 1800; d. March 19, 1889. INIary West, wife of A. B.. b. June 28, 1818; d. March 2, 1884. BURIALS IN HOLMES CHURCH GRAVEYARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) Holmes Graveyard is situated in Jef- ferson county, about one mile south- east from Adena. Elizabeth Barkhurst, wife of Joshua, b. Nov. 2, 1785; d. March 13, 1873. Jacob A. Barkhurst, b. Dec. 25, 1807; d. Nov. 20, ISO]. Jane Barkhurst, wife of John B., d. Dec. 26. 1879; G9y. 3m. Id. John B. Barkhurst, d. Aug. 19, 1891; 78y. 4m. 19d. Joshua Barkhurst, b. 1774; d. Sept. 12, 1837: 53y. Joshua D. Barkhurst, son of Joshua and Elizabeth, d. Sept. 15, 1832; lOy. 7m. 19d Mary Barkhurst, wife of Joshua, d. June 15. 1872; G4y. 5m. 2d. Marv Barklnu'st, daughter of .Joshua and Elizabeth, d. Sept. 13, 1832; 21y. Im. 20d. Nancy Barkhiu'st, wife of William, d. Aug. 22, 1842; 57y. 11m. 7d. William Barkhurst, d. April 18, 1861; 76y. Id. F. Raslmry Belknap, d. Nov. 27, 1826; 23v. 3m. Elihu Carter, d. Oct. 24, 1898; 75y. 7m. 17d. Mary Carter, wife of Nelson, d. May 11.1875; 45y. 2m. lid. William Comley, b. Oct. 6, 1825; d. Oct. 21, 1897. Rebecca Edwards, d. Aug. 20, 1820; 9y. Josiah Glover, b. Nov. 13, 1814; d. May 7, 1891. ISJary Glover, wife of Josiah, d. Feb. 10. 1872: 5.5y. 5m. lid. Marv Hammond, wife of John, d. Sept. 15, 1883; 57y. 4m. 5d. BOWERSTOWN BURIALS 379 wife of James, d. Feb. 4, 1830; 57y. James and 24v. 5m. Gd. 20, 1807; d. Eliza Hastings, 8, 1840. James Hastings, d. June 9m. Jolin Hastings, son of Eliza, d. .Tune 14, 1828; Josepli Hastings, b. Nov. April 15, 1889. Ruth Hastings, wife of Joseph, b. Oct 14. 1812; d. .Tan. 7, 189.3. Daniel Hayne, d. May 18, 1868; lOly. Francis Hayne, d. May 5, 1846; 79y. Joseph Havne, son of Daniel and Mary. d. Aug. 29, 1844; 23 y. 3m. 19d. Mary Hayne. wife of Daniel, d. 'June 0, 1834; 50y. Mary Hayne, daughter of Daniel and Mary, d. Aug 30, 1831; 20y. Natlian Hayne. b. April 20, 1809; d. May 30, 1896. Phoebe Hayne, wife of Nathan, 1). May 10, 1816; d. April 9, 1897. Raehel Hayne, daughter of Daniel and Mary, d. Oct. 5, 1839; 2.3y. Ruth Hayne, daughter of Daniel and Mary, d. March 22, 1830; 25y. Ann Innskeep, wife of Ralph, d. May 30, 1826; 22y. 8m. 1.5d. Absalom McCue, b. June 11, 1810; d. .Tan. 18, 1898. Elizal)et]i McCue, wife of Absalom, b. IMarch 8. 1818; d. March 21, 1898. William Meek, d. Aug. 12, 1831; 73y. 5m. 26d. Mary Moore, wife of Richard, d. Oct. 28," 1878; 59y. 4m. 28d. Silas Moore, b. Aug. 4, 1792; d. Nov. 5, 1872. Silvanus Moore, b. March 2, 1754; d. March 5, 1840. Marv Pearce, wife of Isaac, d. Dec. 20," 1822: 3.5y. 10m. 24d. Rebecca Pearce, daughter of Isaac and Mary, d. June 15, 1827; 18y 4m. John Scott, d. Sept. 23, 1860; Sly. Im. 25d. William Scott, d. Nov. 9, 1852; 78y. Jonathan Talbot, d. Dec. 10, 1863; 72y. 9m. 15d. Susan Talbot, daughter of Jonathan, d. March 4, 1874; 51y. 7m. 21d. Sarali Webster, wife of N., d. Nov. 21, 1839; 30y. BURIALS IN BOWERSTOWN GRAVEYARD. (TLose Born Before 1330 i Elizabeth Addleman, wife of George, d. April 8, 1850; 50y. 5m. 20d. George Addleman, d. June 30, 1886; 90y. 11m. 2d. Bettie Baker, b. July 4, 1815; d. April 26, 1897. Samuel Baker, Sept. 25, 1870. Ann Bower, wife of Caleb, 28, 1865; 25y. 9m. 9d. Anna Bower, wife of Jacob, d. 27. 1870; 65y. Barnhart Bower, d. Dec. 29, 1844; 84y. Caleb Bower, d. Oct. 6, 1865; 27y. 7m. David Bower, d. Feb 16, 1858; 54y. 9m. 2d. b. Jan. 23, 1818; d. d. Sept. April of John and Mar- 1830; 3y. 5m. 15d. wife of David, d. 5m. 8d. N., d. Aug. 16, Elias Bower, son garet, d. Jan. 4, Elizabeth Bower, Jan. 1. 1866; 59y. Esther Bower, wife of 1855; 28y. 3m. Id. Henry Bower, d. March 9, 1883; Sly. 10m. lid. Jacob Bower, d. Aug. 23, 1871; 70y. 7m. 5d. Jacob Bower, d. March 29, 1883; 61y. 9m. 27d. John Bower, d. Sept. 7, 18G3; 68y. 6m. 16d. Margaret Bower, wife of .John, d. June 23, 1863; 69y. 2m. 26d. Margaret A. Bower and Ann, d. Jan. 19d. Mary Bower, wife of Barnhart, d. May 6. 1847; 87y. Samuel Bower, son of Jolm and Eliza- beth, d. Jan. 1, 1838; 13y. 8m. 23d. Susan Bower, wife of Henry, d. Aug. 5, 1865: 58y. 10m. (kl. Thomas Bower, d. May 13, 1852; Sly. 6m. 18d. John T. Boyd, d. Oct. 11, 1893; 93 y, 9ra. 18d. Catherine Crnmrine. wife of John, d. Jan. 21, 1885; 87y. John Crnmrine, d. Sept. 6, 1852; 55y. 5m. Id. daughter of Jacob 4, 1893; 62y. 5m. 380 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Adam Easterday, d. May 2, 1857; 28y. 4m. 2d. Elizabeth Easterday, wife of Adam, d. June 7, 1898, 75y. 7m. 24d. Eve Easterday, wife of John, d. Dec. 28. 3880; SOy. 6m. 2Sd. Jacob Easterday, d. Dec. 31, 1S24: /(y. John Easterday, d. Nov. 19, 187:5; 7':y. 10m. Id. Magdalan Easterdry, wife of Jacob, d. Nov. 18. 1838; 60y. Catherine Flow, wife of JosepJi. d. March 29, 1883; 83y. 5m. ISd. Joseph Flory, d. Nov. 17, 1875; Sly. 4m. Id. Magdalena Grundy, wife of Bpnjarain, d.'Sept. 18. 1847; 56y. 4m. 14d. Adam Ilagey, d. July 12, 1881; 'Ay. Gm. 12d. Maria Hagev, wife of John, d. Dec. 23. 1887; 72y. 7m. Daniel Hess, d. June 9. 1872: 70y. Elizabeth Hess, wife of Daniel, d. Jan. 2. 18G2; 58y. 8m. 4d. Judeth Hess, wife of William, d. March 29. 18G4; 85y. Catherine Lawler. wife of William, d. April 25, 1858; 40y. 7m. 3d. William Lawler, d. Aug. 31, 1837: 45y. Catherine Little, -nife of Samuel, d. April 8, 1880; 85y. 2m. Hannah Long, wife of Gooigo, d. Juno 9. 1853; 33y. 4m. 21d. Oliver P. Long, d. Dec. 19, 1S8S; (.3y. 11m. 24d. Mary IVIcCurdy, d. Sept. 10. 1851; GOy. Catherine Minnick, wife of John, d. Nov. 8, 1845; 65y. 10m. 2(1. John Minnick, Dec. 7, 1818; 7Gy. 10m 5d. Joseph Minnick, d. May 1, 1871; 53y. 3m. 2d. Marv Miirphv, wi'^e of P., d. June 27, 1855: Sly. 4m 18d. P^ cr SJ.avp, d. March 12, 1S8.': 8 iv. :.'.• 28d. Henry S. Sneary, d. May 28, 18G7; 57y. 6m. 24d. Susan Snearv. wife of Henry S., d. Sept. 22. 1892; 75y. 11m. 5d. Gabrial Swinehart, b. July 20, 1798; d .Jan. 15. 1878. Lesla Swinehart, d. Oct. 1, 1898; 73y. 3m. 17d. Marffaret Swinehart. wife of Gabrial, b. July 9. 1802; d. Sept 28. 1883. Elizabeth Triisell, wife of Solomon, d. Nov. 6, 1845; 72y. 11m. 5d. Fannie Trushel, wife of John, d. June 12, 1875: 72y. 6m. lOd. John Trushel, d. March 22, 1885; 82y. 5m. 25d. Sarah Trushel. second wife of Valen- tine, d. INIarch 8. 1876; 51y. Im. IGd. Solomon Trusell, d. Feb. 9, 1846; 68y. 9m. 17d. Susanna Trnshel, first wife of Valen- tine, d. Nov. 8. 1845; 3.3y. 8(1. Valentine Trushel, d. Oct. 6, 1880; 75y. 7m. 23d. BURIALS IN CASSVILLE GRAVE- YARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) David Barclay, d. April 9, 1876; SG.v. Elizabeth Barclay, wife of David, d. June 9. 1871; 70y. James Barclay, b. Sept. 15, 1828; d. April 21, 1885. Susanna Bargar, wife of Peter, d. July 7, 18G2; G5y. 2m. Gd. David Barrett, d. April 12, 1881; 59y. 7m. 17d. Winnifred Barrett, b. March 12, 1787; d. June 11, 18G7; 80y. 2m. 29(1. Conrad Barricklow, b. Dec. 15, 1814; d. Dec. 8. 1874. Elizabeth Blair, wife of .John, b. Aug. 13. 1815: d. June 20. 1890. Jane Clark, wife of Samuel, d. Sept. 26, ; 57y. 18d. Joseph Clark, d. Jan. 25. 1885; 82y. Samuel Clark, d. Sept. 28, 1886; 78y. 21d. Abraham Corban, d. March 24, 1873; 6Gy. Jane Corban. wife of Abraham, d. April 17. 1876; G8y. 11m. 14d. Ann B. Cunningham, wife of David, b. May 8, 1808: d. Aug. 13. 1887. Asa Dickerson, d. Oct. 26, 1864; 50y. 7m. 3d. Jane Dickerson, wife of Asa, d. Marcli 31, 1873; 59y. 4m. 29d. Alexander Fulton, d. March 15, 1881; 77y. 6m. 3d. DEERSVILLE BURIALS 381 Sarah Fulton, wife of Alexander, a. .May 20, 1S94; 90y. 3m. Sd. Adam B. Hamilton, d. May 11, 1872; 40y. Elizabetli J. Haverfield, wife of James, b. June 2, 1830; d. Aug. 6, 18r>(>. James Haverlield, b. May 5, 1817; d. April 2, 1881. Nancy Haverfield, d. Aug. 23, 1882; 70y. 4m. 7d. William James, d. Aug. 23, 1863; 44y. Mar2:aret Johnson, b. INIay 27, 1810; d. Oct. 11, 1887. Mary Johnson, d. Feb. 16, 1873; 71y. Ellen Knox, d. July 5, 1SS8; G8y. Ben.iamin McFadden, d. Nov. 7, 1880; S.-)y. Elizabeth McFadden, b. May 16, 1818; d. May 26, 1893. Jane McFadden, wife of Samuel, d. Sept. 9, 1884; 85y. 9m. 6d. Mary McFadden, wife of Benjamin, d. Sept. 9, 1882; 80y. 4m. Samuel McFadden, d. Nov. 12, 18G9; 84y. Eleanor McKibben, first wife of George, d. Nov. 15, 1866; 58y. Jane McKibben, second wife of George, d. Feb. 28, 1887; 66y. George McKibben, b. Sept. 5, 1804; d. Dec. 27. 1891. Samuel B. McKibben, d. April 7, 186G; 23y. ]Mar2:aret Mehollin. wife of Joseph, d. April 14. 1877; 88v. John Mitchell, d. Sept. 26, 1865; 78y. ."m. 20d. Mai-v ]Sloffit. wife of Henrv, d. Feb. 19. 1875; 77y. Jane Moore, wife of Thomas, b. Oct. 3. 1806; d. Oct. 20. 1891. Tliomas Moore, b. Dec. 10, 1800; d. June 8, 1882. Hannah Nash, wife of William, d. Feb. 15, 1876; 82y. 11m. 7d. Margaret xVnn Nash, wife of John, d. May 25, 1876; .52y. 5m. Eliza Sloan, wife of John, b. May 15, 1818; d. Oct. 8, 1890. Jolin Sloan, b. Nov. 24, 1803; d. Sept. 19, 1878. Jjinies Simpson, d. July 29, 1881; 68y. 2m. 18d. fNUsanna Sproul, wife of John, d. July 29, 1870: 73y. 6m. John A. Todd, d. Nov. 21, 1877; 6Sy» 5m. 4d. ^ \ Martha Todd, wife of Robert, d. Aug. \ 15. 1870; 70v. ' Mary Todd, wife of J. A., d. Dec. 9, ' 1863; 61 V. Robert Todd, d. Oct. 13, 1882; S5y. 20d. 71y. roy. Nov. BURIALS IN DEERSVILLE GRAVEYARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) .Tames Abraham, d. Nov. 16, 1857; 70y. Sarah Abraham, wife of James, d. Nov. 11, 1844; 58y. Hannah Adams, wife of Thomas, d. :\Iay 22, 1836; 39y. Thomas Adams, d. Oct. 20, 1842; 11m. 19d. George Baker, d. Jan. 12, 1877; 9m. 9d. Jane Baker, wife of George, d. 10, 1867; 58y. 9m. 7d. Dr. .L P. Barnes, d. April 6, 18.52; 47y. Jane Billing-sley, wife of J. J., d. Oct. 1. 1881; 71y. Deborah Bartlett, wife of Philip, d. Dec. 7, 1862; 41y. Elizabeth Birney, wife of William, d. Nov. 3, 1871: 84y. 6m. 12d. Hannah Birney, wife of .John, d. Feb. 13, 1872; 6.5y. Im. 2Sd. .Tolm Birney, b. Sept. 9, 1S08; d. Sept. 20, 1882. ?»largaret Birney, wife of Wesley, d, Feb. 24, 1877; 63y. 4m. 7d. Nancy Birney, wife of Letchworth, d. Oct. 4, 1885; 68y. 10m. 16d. Wesley Birney, d. Feb. 3, 1864; Sly. 4m. 19d. William Birney, d. Feb. 17, 1865; 83y. 7m. lid. Keziah Bliss, wife of Zadock, d. May 31, 1851; 65y. Im. 17d. Zadock Bliss, d. July 8, 18."3; 65v. 4m. 12d. Hannah Burcher. wife of Cliristopher, d. March 17, 1844; 34y. 2m. 3d. 382 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Willinm ^af^■v^'oll, d. Dec. 27, 1850; 33y. 4m. 2GrI. Leonard Carpenter, d. Feb. 11, 1842; 50y. 4m. 3d. Marv Carpenter, wife of Leonard, d. Nov. 22. 1850: 57y. 7m. ]8d. Wilson Cawood, d. June 3. 1804; 72y. William Clark, d. Oct. 1, 1847; 66y. Wi'llam Clendeninc:, d. Sept. 15, 1867; 78y. Elizabeth Coleman, wife of John, d. Au??. 1, 1850: 71y. 7m. 29d. Finley Coleman, d. Dec. 19, 1887; 66y. Im. 15d. Ruth Conaway, d. April 16, 1845; 20y. 10m. 21d. James Connel, d. Nov. 21, 1836; GOy. 5m. Od. Jemima Connel, wife of James, d. Oct. 10, 1850; 72y. 15d. Soi^hia Crablree. wife of G., b. July 31, 1828: d. Nov. 27, 1885. John P. Cramblett, d. Dec. 22, 1858, 59y. 7m. Sd. Margaret Cramblett, wife of John P., d. April 18, 1882; 81 y. 10m. 4d. Ellenor CraAvford. wife of Josiah, d. Mav 8, 1883: 79y. Josiah Crawford, d. Dec. 24, 1889; 80y. 8m. 23d. John H. Curtis, d. March 2, 1880; 51y. 11m. 2d. Sarah Czatt, wife of John, d. April 30, 1865: 36y. 4d. Robert Dawson, b. Dec. 28, 1818; d. Dec. 14, 1883. Thomas Dawson, d. Sept. 24, 1855; 39y. Mary Dickey, wife of Benjamin, d Sept. 28, 1861; 01 y. Arnetta Donnell, d. June 14, 1878; 75y. 3m. Biddy Donnell, d. Sept. 6, 1872; 93y. Lvdia Donnell, d. Nov 17, 1886; 79y. Im. 15d. Rachel A. Donnell, wife of Zaza, d. Oct. 20, 1864; 44y. Anne Dunham, wife of Nathaniel, d. Aug. 4, 1890; 78y. Nathaniel Dunham, d. June 18, 1809; 84y. Jehile Eaton, d. April 6, 1852; 42y. 7m. 18d. c?arah Eaton, wife of Jehile, d. Feb. 12, 1803; 75y. 10m. 24d. Henry J. Edney, son of Robert and Mary. d. Oct. 18, 1845; 24y. 4m. 0.1. Marv Edney, wife of Robert, d. Sept. 0, "l8G0; 04 V. 4m. Robert J. Edney, d. Sept. 29, 1800; 74y. 2m. 3d. Elizabeth Erwin, wife of Henry, d. Dec. 20, 1873; 5Gy. 10m. 25d. Henrv Erwin, d. April 20, 1897; 82y. 17d. James Erwin, d. Oct. 28, 1845; G8y. Louise Erwin, second wife of Thomas, d. May 9, 1803; 38y. Om. Rebecca Erwin. first wife of Thomas, d. Dec. 9, 1844; 27y. . William Fitzgerald, d. Feb. 8, 1850; 20v. 8m. 15d. Claton Ford, d. Feb. 12. 1856; 60y. 23d. Rachel A. Foust, wife of Elias, d. Feb. 21, 1854; 18y. 8m. 9d. Eliza Jane Gardner, wife of Samuel, d. ,Lan. 28, 1845; 21y. 2m. 13d. Elizabeth Garner, wife of James, d. April 15, 1898: 81 y. 3m. 3d. James Garner, d. March 19, 1888: 78y. 12d. Elizabeth Gladman. wife of David, d. Feb. 22, 1895; 71y. 6m. 8d. David Gladman, d. Jan. 26. 188S; 77y. 4m. 22d. Marv J. Goodwin, wife of George, d. July 27, 1863: 4.3y. Im. 28d. Thomas Grandfell, d. April 23, 1845; 51y. 7m. 5d. Benjamin Guthrie, d. March 9. 1886; 63y. Om. Jane Guthrie, second wife of Robert, d. June 3, 1870: S3y. 3m. Nancv Guthrie, wife of Robert, d. Aug. 10. 1853: 30y. 24d. Nancv Guthrie, wife of Nathaniel, d. ]\Iav 21, 1859; 25y. 11m. 25d. Robert Guthrie, d. Feb. 1, 1854; G8y. 3m. 21 d. Augustus Guyton, d. July 28, 1850; Sly. 10m. 5d. Benjamin Guyton, b. June 7, 1820; d. April 3, 1890. Catherine Guvton. wife of Elisha, d. Feb. 20, 1877; SOy. 3m. Elanor Guvton, wife of Benjamin, b. May 24, 1823; d. March 28, 1896. DEERSVILLE BURIALS 383 Elishn Onyton, d. Mnrcb 25, 1873; OOy. jNevian Irwin, h. 1S25; d. 1899; 73y. 7m. 30(1. Om. Gd. Clmrlos Hardinc:, d. Mny 7, 1845; 59y. Rioh.ard Irwin, d. Sept. IS. 1804; 41y. Ill"- Sil- 10m. 20d. Margaret W. Hardin-, wife of John William Johnson, d. Jan. 6, 1857: 7Cy. D., d. Jan. in, 1824: 23y. .r-,ni. I7d. Levi Hayes, d. Oct. 14, 1884; 84y. 3ni. Catlierine Jumps, wife of John, d. '•••l- Feb. 6, 1885; 47y. Gm. 17d. ^'Vc^.o ^F% ^^''^^ ^^ ^^^'' ^- ^'^^- -^' -^f^li" Jumps, d. Feb. 13, 1877; 50y. Jo lUr^opf Vn. 0-.1 Marg:aret Karr, wife of O. C, d. Aug. _'U. iNib; o(>.y. bra. 2.>a. 5 1850' 20v Im lod Edward Heath, d Jan. 10. 1845; 85y Eli'zabeth Lee. wife of John, d. May . m. -Id ^^ Jonathan Leo, d. April 30, 1885; GOy. f'''^^^ '' ' • ' ^^^- ^''"iam ^^insley, d. July 2, 1834; 43y. im -5a. jjj^.Qlj Q Lukens, b. Jan. 30, 1805; d. Fieldinc: Heflmir. son of John and jjjiy 94 J8S4 Lousinah. b. Deo. 2G. 1799; d. July j^,,;^ Lukens, 'wife of Eli, d. April 3. John Heflmg:. d. Jan. 13, 18o9; Sly. Im. 18GG- 94v > 1 . -. : . ^ ^ „. .„ ^ T 1 ^ Sarah Lukens, wife of Jacob C, d. Lousmah H Hefl.ng.^wife of John, d. j,^^ 04, 1886; 75y. 10m. lid. Ar t, tV fl * '"•^•;- '"I'^T T, /. T , Margaret McCulIough. wife of Wil- jVIartha Heflmg, wite of Noah, d. July ii„,,, ^ «,ent oq iq4p;. hqv 3 1844- "^Sv 2m Od ii.nu, u. ofpi. _u, ±o-±o, uo^. Vonh TTpfl'mi d np^ ^ is Joseph Allen, d. April 27, 1863; G3y. Rebecca A. F. Allen, wife of Josepli, d. Jan. 9, 1859; 62v. 11m. .-"id. Thomas Barrett, d. Nov. 19. 1874; 60y. Rebecca Bover, Avife of William, d. AprU 13, 1S50; 4.5v. 4m. 21 d. AVilliam Bover, d. April 2, IS-'jl; o3y. Im. Eliza Carver wife of Abnor, d. Tuly 23, 1855; 54v. 10m. 2d. Samuel Colvin. d. Sept. \ 1872; S2y. Elijah W. Cree, son of J. and S., d. Oct. 1, 1843; 17y. 6m. 8d. Elizabeth Cree, wife of R., d. Mai'ch 7, 1841; 78y. 5d. John Dewitt, d. Sept. 13, 1836 ; 75y. Ann Hatton, wife of William, d. Aug. 7, 1845; 31y. Clarissa Hollett. wife of George, d. March 13, 1845; 31v. Im. 24d. John J. Hudson, b. Dec. 1, 1822; d. March 4, 18.30. Hannah Kelly, wife of S. W., d. Dec. 31, 1853; 28y, 27<1. Mnrv Ann Lakin,wife of Thomas N., d. Aug. 19. 1843; 27y. 4m. 3d. Hannah Madden, daughter of E. and S., d. April 7, 1835; 5y. 8m. 18d. Ann Miller, d. Feb. 1, 1852: 32y. Rachel Miller d. Aug. 13, 1847; 49y. Thomas P. Moore, b. Feb. 11, 1765; d. Jan. 20, 1844; 78y. 11m. 22d. Susan Parsons, wife of B. L., d. Oct. 14, 1873; 65y. 5m. 29d. Comfort Phillips, wife of Richard, d. Oct., 1835: 60y. Jacob Romans, d. March 6. 1876; 67y. I'riscilla Shugart. wife of J. M., d. Oct. 20, 1879: 53v. 10m. ]5d. Andrew S. Steele, d. Feb. 2. 1887; 78y. 10m. 15d. Elizabeth Steele, wife of .Andrew, d. Nov. 16, 1887: 73y. Im. 16d. Susannah F. Swaney. wife of Tim- othy, d. May 3, 1867: 64y. Timothy Swaney. d. May 1. 1864; 70y. Nancv Tallow, daughter of Stephen and" Katherine, d. .Ian. 16, 1829; ly. 4m. Id. Susannah Yallow, daughter of Stephen and Katherine, d. May 26, 1824; 16y. 6m. 15d. BURIALS IN GEORGETOWN GRAVEYARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) George Eli, b. Feb. 28, 1827: d. Oct. 4, 1885. Plieobe Eli, wife of George, b. Sept. 7, 1828; d. March 15. 1889. Beulah Furbav. wife of James, b. June 17, 1814; d. Jan. 8, 1889. James Furbay, b. June 23, 1805; d. July 5, 1883. Annie Jackson, wife of Cyrus, d. Sept. 22, 1876; 73 v. Cyrus Jaclvson. d. Feb. 20, 1876; 76y. Elizabeth .Tohnson. wife of Hugh, d. May 27. 1880: 9.5y. Hugli Johnson, d. Sept. 5, 1867; 79y. 6m. 17d. Stewart Johnson, d. July 26, 1871; 58y. 7m. 4d. Isaac Lewis, d. July Si, 1870; 57y. 8m. 6d. 388 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Lvdin Lewis, wife of Isaac, d. Jan. 12, ISSO: 65y. 9m. 15cl. JonaTlian Martin, b. June 11, 1825; d. Mav 19. 1886. .Tames Munts, d. Feb. 3. 1890: f.ly. Ceorsre Smyth, b. July 5. 1827; d. Sept. 189S. Sarah Smvth, wife of George, b. Jan. 6. IS.'^l; d. Oct. 12. 1894. Elizabeth Wright, wife of William, b. Auff. 30, 1822: d. May 20. 1892. William Wright, d. June 31. 188G; 71y. BURIALS IN HARRISYILLE GRAVEYARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) Joshua Adams, b. Oct. 26, 1813; d. May 2, 1876; 65y. 5m. 6d. Marv A. Anderson, wife of James, d. Dec. 2. 1861; 37y. 8m. 5d. ISIarv Barkhurst, wife of William, d. Jail. 5. 1882; 50y. Sarah Barkhurst, wife of Benjamin, d. Dec. 31, 1890: 86y. 10m. 2.5d. James W. Beck, b. Nov. 22, 1828; d. Mav 8. 1897. Martha Beck, b. Sept. 19, 1805; d. July 25. 1892. Sarah Boals, wife of William, d. April 8. 1SS7; 61y. 3m. Sd. Catherine Braden, wife of Robert, d. June 8, 1863; 74y. 7m. 24d. Eliza Braden, wife of William, d. Aug. 27. 1871; 53y. John Calderhead, b. Dec. 14. 1805; d. March 28, 1882. Nanev Calderhead. wife of John, d. Ai)ril 13, 1882; 82y. Lavenia Clawson, d. July 25, 1892; 76y. ilarv Ann Coulter, wife of Thomas, d. Dec. 6, 1887; 73y. 5m. 28d. Alarffaret Duff, wife of Thomas, b. Feb. 2, 1819; d. Aug. 25, 1890. Thomas Duff, b. Feb. 20, 1802; d. July 1. 1878. William L. DuflE, d. Feb. 5, 1856; 46y. 5m. Samuel Elliott, d. Feb. 6. 1884; 67y. Sarah H. Elliott, wife of Samuel, d. July 3, 1892; 64y. Dennis Fisher, d. ISIarch 5, 1878; 66y. 9m. 17d. Elizabeth Fisher, d. Oct. 19, 1884; 62y. Barnard Geesey, b. Feb. 15, 1816; d. Feb. 4, 1896. Julia Geesey, wife of Barnard, b. May 27. 1818: d. April 23, 1897. Catherine G. HawtJiorn, wife of John, d. Aug. 3, 1873; GOy. 8m. lOd. David Hawthorn, b. Jan. 24, 1821; d. Aug. 2, 1899. Jane A. Hawthorn, wife of Samuel, b. June 19. 1822; d. Jan. 19, 1885. John Hawthorn, b. Feb. 24, 1786; d. Nov. 7, 1874. Margaret E. Hawthorn, wife of David, b. June 19, 1828; d. Dec. 31, 1892. Mary A. Hawthorn, wife of William, b. Feb. 15, 1822; d. Dec. 3, 1892. Samuel Hawthorn, b. April 22, 1797; d. Aug. 16, 1883. William Hawthorn, b. March, 1817; d. Jan. 20, 1896. Alexander Henderson, b. July 24, 1797; d. Dec. 30, 1880. Hannah Henderson, wife of Alex- ander, b. Dec. 12, 1798; d. June 29, 1881. James Henderson, d. June 16, 1873; 46y. 9m. lOd. John Henderson, b. Sept. 14, 1815; d. April 21, 1898. Marinda Henderson, wife of Matthew, d. March 1, 1887: 75y. 3m. 28d. Matthew Henderson, d. Sept. 25, 1862; 95y. 9m. 21d. Samuel Hendei-son, b. April 25, ISll; d. Feb. 18, 1895. William Henderson, b. July 14, 1824; d. April 23, 1888. William H. Henderson, d. Oct 1, 1878; 57y. 6m. Id. William P. Henderson, son of Mat- thew and Marinda, d. May 16, 1809; 37y. 3m. 23d. Enoch J. Jones, b. Oct. 25, 1825; d. Nov. 24, 1879. Martha J. Jones, wife of Enoch, b. Dec. 27, 1826; d. July 14, 1890. William Kerr, d. Dec. 3, 1866; 50y. 11m. 22d. Eliza Jane Lemmon. wife of William, d. Dec. 31, 1884; 65y. HARRISVILLE BURIALS 389 Marpraret Lemmon, wife of Griffith, d. Doc. 1. 1S72; 7Gv. Ephraim McCleary, b. Oct. 19, 1810; d. April 28, 1874. Mary H. McCleary, wife of Ephraim, b. Au.s. 22. 1818; d. May 19. 1880. Jolm McLaughlin, d. April 25, 1874; 55y. Nancy McLaughlin, wife of .John, b. Oct. 2. 1824;^ d. Nov. 7, 1898. John A. Major, b. Oct. 3, 1812; d. June 6, 1885. Elizabeth Miller, wife of John G., b. .Tan. 20, 3830; d. Jan. 22, 1892. John G. Miller, b. June 22, 1822; d. April 12, 1894. Agnes E. ]\foore, wife of John, b. 1829; d. 1899; 70y. John Moore, b. 1818; d. 188G; 68y. Mary Moore, wife of Samuel, d. April 2, 1SG3; 62y. Nancy Moore, d. Jan. 13, 1881: 57v. Samuel Moore, d. Aug. 10. 1872; 82t. George G. Morgan, b. May 18, 1831; d. Oct. 9, 1809. Levi Morsran. b. March 1, 1829; d. April 7, 1892. Philip Morgan, b. Sept. 22, 1819; d. Feb. 7, 1892. Margaret J. Morris, wife of Thomas, b. Feb. 10, 1820; d. Nov. 18. 1887. Elizabeth Newlin, wife of James P., b. Nov. 7, 1820; d. Sept. 7. 1873. James P. Newlin, b. Dec. IS, 1817; d. Jan. 10, 1882. Julia A. Nibble, b. Nov. 14, 1830; d. May 7. 1884. Jane O'Hara, wife of John, d. Oct. 23, 1808; 79y. Ann B. Patton, wife of John W., b. July 25. 1820: d. Feb. 10, 1883. Jacob Peterman, b. March 25, 1827; d. May 21, 1890. Agnes Rea, wife of David, d. Aug. 5, 1875: OOy. John Robb, d. March 30. 1882: OSy. 3d. Eli Seebirt. b. 1827; d. 1899; 72y. Sarah A. Seebirt, Avife of Eli, d. Oct. 21, 1876; 48y. 7m. 17d. Jane Sloan, wife of William, d. Sept. 5, 1854: 69y. Mary Jane Sloan, wife of Samuel, d. Oct. 11, 1870; 48y. William Sloan, d. July 8. 1859: 73v. David Smith, b. June 8, 1819; d. Aug. 22. 1894. Henry T. Smith, b. Dec. 15, 1828; d. Feb. 21, 1872. Joshua P. Watson, b. March 21, 1802; d. July 27, 1882. Jemimia M. Webster, wife of Nayler, b. Jan. 31, 1800; d. Feb., 1883; 77y. Im. 3d. Navler Webster, b. Oct. 4, 1810; d. June 12, 1883; 82y. 8m. 7d. Andrew Wilkin, b. April 20, 1801; d. May 30, 1884. Dr. A. B. Wilkin, b. 1820; d. 1894. Mary Wilkin, wife of Andrew, d. Sept. 20, 1887: 86y. Elias Yost, d. Dec. 2. 1890; 91y. Kezia Yost, wife of Elias, d. June 12, 1887: OOy. Im. 17d Martha L. Yost, wife of Isaac, b. Sept. 9, 1800; d. April 20, 1891. Isaac Yost, b. July 5, 1799; d. Feb. 19, 1892. BURIALS IN HARRISVILLE METHODIST EPISCOPAL GRAVE- YARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) Harmon Anderson, d. Aug. 20, 1805; 40y. 1 m. 2 d. John Anderson, b. Dec. 27, 1815; d. Aug. 29, 1899. Marv Anderson, wife of John, b. Jan. 19, 1826: d. Sept. 2, 1890. C'—^es Barkhurst, d. March 19, 1851; 7Gy. Ma..v G. Comley, wife of Dr. J. W.. d. .June 27, 1803; 30 y. Hannah .1. Crawford, daughter of J. and R., d. Feb., 1833; 4y. 8m. Joseph Crawford, d. Sept. 22, 1829; 29 y. 4 m. 28d. Joseph CraAvford, son of J. and R., d. Sept., 1832; 2y. 4m. John N. Denny, d. March 23, ISSO; 69 y. 10m. 18d. James Drummond, d. Jan. 22, 1849; 48y. 2m. 20d. 390 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Lydia A. Druuimonvl, wife of James, d. March LH!. 1847; 42y. John Duukiu, d. Aug. 6, 1S29; 51y. 8m. Sd. Aleinda Button, wifo of Robert, d. Juno 21. lSo4; 23v. 2m. John F. Elliott, d. Fob. 20. ISSS: GGv. 7m. 9d. Sarah J. Elliott, wife of John F., d. Feb. 9. 1SS3; oOy. fun. lOd. John Graham, d. March 13. 1805; 83y. Mary Lovett, wife of (^oori;o. b. Jan. 30. 1814; d. May 4. 1840. Benjamin McCabe, d. June 27. 1840; 35y. Josiah Mercer, d. Sept. 27, 1804; 49y. 7m. 27d. Rebecca Mercer, wife of Jo.siah, b. Sept. 4, 1815; d. Jan. 31, 1881. Catherine Moore, wife of W., b. May 11. 1792; d. Sept. 13. 1840. Sarah IMowder, wife of Jacob, b. June 24, 1815; d. May 28, 1845. Marjraret W. Naylor. wife of D. K., d. Sept. 21. 1878; 51y. 5m. 15d. Frances Patterson, d. Oct. 12, 1833; y. 11m. 17d. Mary Ruth. Avife of F., d. Julv 8, 1848; 44y. 8m. lOd. Mary M. Ruth, b. Dec. 21, 1831; d. Aug. 12, 1854. Elizabeth Smith, wife of Ephraim. d. Sept. 0, 1872: 75v. 5ni. 23d. Ephraim Smith, d. July 11, 18-13; 50y. Om. 9d. John Summer, d. Feb. 18, 1850; Oliv. Elizabeth Toland, d. July 5, 1854; 35y. Im. ]3d. Jane Tolaud. wife of Joseph S.. b. June 20, 1820; d. Dec. 6. 1898. Joseph S. Tolaud. b. March 24, 1816; d. March 19, 1893. Snrah Toland, wife of John, d. May 31, 1840; OOy. 2 d. Harriet AValker. wife of Richard, d. April 9. 1877; 09y. 2m. 27d. Elizabeth Weaver, wife of G. M., d. :May 27, 1800; 03y. Charles White, d. Ausr. 27. ISSS; 7Gv. 4m. 29d. Thomas White, d. July 17, 1840; 02y. .1 nines H. Wilsou, d. Oct. 5, 1850; 29 v. 9m. 19d. BURIALS IN HOFEDALE GRAVE- YARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) Farkinson Betz, b. Jan. 7, 1822; d. JMarch 10, 1898. Lee S. Burton, d. May 27, 1882; 7.3y. Mary Burton, wife of Lee S., d. Oct. 30. 1802; 47y. Eliza J. Cassel, wife of John W., b. Nov. 20, 1825; d. May 5. 1892. John W. Cassell, b. Dec. 27, 1821; d. June 29, 1898. Alexander Deiuiins;. b. 1809; d. 1857. Maruaret Denning, wife of Alexander, b. 1808; d. 1878. Michael Fogle. d. Sept. 17, 1807; 75y. Om. Sarah A. Foirle. wife of MicUael, d. Feb. 27, 1877: 80y. John Frazier. b. June 15, 1822; d. March 7. 1895. Mary Galbraith, b. Nov. 9, 1824; d. Mav 28. 18S5. Charles Harrah. d. June 29, 1882; 74y. Marv Ilarrah. wife of Cl»arles, d. April 23. 1879: 09v. Joseph Holmes, b. May 12, 1815; d. March 7. 1891. W. B. Hunt, b. Sept. 12, 3815; d. March 31, 1900; 85 v. 5m. 12d. James Knox, d. April 19, 1870: 79y. Sarah Knox, wife of Jama's, d. July 31. 1805: 71 y. Andrew MeNeelv. b. Julv 10, 1774, in I 'a.; d. in TTone.iMle. ( ><•! 1. ISob. Jane Marchhank, b. Julv 21, 1812; d. Oet. 15. 1891. William Marchbank, d. Dec. 15, 1880; 05y. 11m. 8d. Ann :Miller. wife of Enogh, d. Dec. 23, 1871: 74y. Caroline Miller, daughter of Enogh, d. July 5. 1880; 52v. Enogh Miller, d. Sept. 15, 1874; S5y. Bethia Faul. wife of Samuel, d. March 0. 18.58: 45y. 2m. 18d. Samuel Paul, d. July 24, 1890; 77y. Im. ISd. Hannah Skelly. ■uife of Robert, b. 1797: d. July 27. 1878; 81 v. Robert Skelly, b. July 4, 1788; d. Aug. 31. 1868. MOOREFIELD BURIALS 391 Eliza J. Watson, wife of .lolm D., b. July 23, l.S-j:!; (1. March 4, ISD.'i. Siiniuel Young, d. Jan. 22, 1882; GOy, Im. BURIALS IN MOOREFIELD GRAVEYARD. (Those Born Bcfort- 1830.) Elizabeth Adams, wife of Samuel,; 77.y. 7ni. Id. .Tolin Auams, d. March 1, 1835; OOy. Rachel Adams, wife of John, d. Aug. 2.-,, 1851; 75y. 3m. 9d. Samuel Adams, d. Nov. 17, 1880; 74y. 10m. Id. Saiali Barlow, wife of Elisha, d. Juno 17. 1811: 40y. Ora. 23d. Richard H. Barnes, d. June 5, 1879; 01 y. Susan J. Barnes, wife of Richard H., d. July 21. 1874; 54y. Ilann.ih J. Biokaw, wife of Jesse, d. June 13, 1877: 47y. 10m. IGd. Harvev Butler, b. Aug. 27, 1829; d. Sept. 3, 1804. Marv E. Butler, wife of Harvey, d. Feb. 4. 1802; 59y. Elizabeth Caiupbell. wife of William, b. April 28, 1811; d. Sept. 11, 180.5. Frances Caves, wife of John, d. Nov. 28, 18.37; 42y. 7m. 8d. John Caves, d. Sept. 27, 1&37; 43y. 5m. 20d. Samuel Caves, son of John and Frances, d. Dec. 31, 1845; 28y. 8m. 26d. Peter Conner, d. Dec. 26, 1847; 56y. 7m. 2Gd. James Cooper, d. July 29, 1834; 30y. Leah Christv, wife of Richard B., b. Sept. 17, 182G: d. Dec. 7, 1808. Richard B. Christy, b. May 30, 1818; d. Dec. 13, 1808. Asa Crawford, d. Jan. 2G, 1852; 48y. 7m. 3d. Nicholas H. Familton, d. Jan. 2, 1852; 27y. Isaac Gardner, d. Aug. 20, 18.53; 58y. Nancy Gardner, wife of Isaac, d. April 2, 1838; 38y. wife of James, i; 71y. 3m. 27d. b. Jan. 24, 181G; Sr. James Harvey, Sr., d. Sept. 28, 18G1; 83y. Gui. 28d. Susanna Harvey, d. Sept. 24, 18G Wilton Harvey, Dec. 30, 1885. Henry .Johnson, d. Aug. 2.3, 1858; G7y. Catherine Johnson, wife of Henry, d. Aug. 23, 18G3; 77y. 7d. William Johnson, Sr., d. May 1, 1840; 79y. Absalom Jones, b. March 25, 1807; d. May 8, 1840. Edward .Tones, C. G. Kennedy, Feb. 11, 188G. Mary Kennedy, wife of C. G., b. May 8, 1812; d. May 11, 1800; R. M. Kennedy, d. June 8, 1887; 84y, d. b. May 22, 1874; GGy. March 2G, 1808; d. 3m. id. Taliitha Kinsev. wife of Charles, d. March IG, 1841; 34y. 7m. 18d. Nancey Knight Lamb, wife of John Knight, and later of John Lamb, d. Oct. 17, 1837; G7y. Anne Latham, b. July 2, 1814; d. Aug. 8, 1894. Francis Latham, d. March 21, 1853; 30 V. John Latham, d. March 4, 1830; G3y. Lucy Latham, wife of John, d. Nov. 8, 187G; KJOy. Alexander McBride, d. Feb. 12, 1854; 40y. 20d. Abigail McCoy, first wife of Francis, b. Oct. 10, 1821; d. Feb. 13, 1877. Catherine McCoy, second wife of Francis, b. March 4, 182G; d. Dec. 28, 1877. . Aug. 12, 1813; d. March 4, 1854; 3-1y. of John, d Ap) 11 1S3G; 1845; Francis McCov, b Alay 12, 1893. William McGee, d. 11m. Sarah Mace, wife IG, 1832; 33y. Abraham Mansfield, d. Jan. 10, 2Gy. Gm. Gd. Christopher Mansfield, d. Dec. 3, GGy. Sarah Mansfield, wife of Christopher, d. Sept. 24, 18G4; 77y. 5m. 21d. Maliuda Martin, daugliter of Samuel and Catherine Skinner, b. April 7, 1818; d. Sept. 15, 18G4. 392 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Elias J. INI ills, d. April .",, ]S;'.7; 70v. Elitis Mills, b. June 27, 1812; d. Oct. IS, 1803. Elizabeth L. Mills, d. Oct. 20, 1871; lOy. 10m. 20(1. Isiibcl Jiino Mills, wife of Elias, d. May 21, 1840; 20.y. Om. 14d. Mary T. Mills, wife of Elias, b. Ocv. 3. 1822; d. June 21, 180."). Nancy Ann Mills, wife of Elias J.; SGy. Reuben Mills, d. Auff. 7, 1884; (!7v. John J. Moore, d. July 24, IS^O; 2Gy. fhn. 8d. Jolin T. Moore, b. 1813; d. Oct. 2.3, ISOS. Lydia Moore, wif<' of William, b. Jutio (5, 1813; d. Oct. 13, ISO!!. Sarah Moore, wife of John T., b. 1819; (1. Sept. 4, 1801. William Moore, b. Oct. 4, 1811; d. Jan. 4, 1803. Elizabeth rickct, wife of I'eter, d. Oct. 31, 1857; 50v. Peter Picket, d. Jan. 14, 18.^,4; OGy. Om. 4(1. Mary Piuni)hrey, wife of Elijah, d. April 24, 1855; 71 y. Om. (id. Abram Riley, d. Dec. 1, 1880; 80y. 3m. 24d. (iemimah Riley, Avife of Ahram, d. Sept. 12, 1805; 02y. 5m. 17(1. Mary Riley, wife of John, d. Feb., 1844; 75y. Nancy Rilev, wife of Geoi-jfo d. Sept. 2, 1870; 4.5y. 3m. Id. Rebecca Rilev, wife of John C, d. Aiif? 12, 18(i0; 43y. Elizabeth Russell, wife of James, d Dec. 2, 18(i0; HCy. Harriett Russell, wife of Jolin, d. .rune 20, ISSO; fi8y. 1m. 2.3d. James Russell, d. Api'il 21, 18.3G; Oly. .Fohn Russell, d. Sept. 14, 184(5; {;5y. Cafherine Skinner, wife of Samuel, b. Auff. 14, 170(!; d. April 3, 1S,S5. Samuel Skiimer, b. Jan. 2(), 1794; d. .Fuue 2, 18(;(). Elizabelh Tliompson, Avife of Robert, (1. March 27, 18,S0; 87y. 10m. 22d. Robert Thomi)Son, d. March 18, 1870; 37y. 7m. K'.d. Chai-les Toner, d- Feb. 25, 18G2; G4y. 10m. Martha Toner, wife of Charles, d. July 14, 1874; 83y. 7m. 15d. Mary L. T'mstot, b. Au;?. 29, 1811; d. Oct. 11, 1800. Dr. James W. Whenv, b. May 23, 1821; d. Jan. 30, IS'.tO. Joseph Wherry, d. Feb. 9. 1802; 47y. Levi Wherry, d. Auj?. 3, 1808; 80y. Levi D. Wherry, d. Sept. 7, 1840; 24v. 11m. 2.3d. Susanna Wherry, wife of Levi, d. Auff. 21, 18.54; 04y. 4m. 20(1. Ann Williams, wife of William, d. Feb. 2, 1805; 70y. 8m. 17d. Renoni Williams, d. Aug. 11, 1803: 57y. Mary L. Williams, dauqliter of Wil- liam and Ann, d. July 1, 1845; 21y. 10m. 23d. William Williams, d. IM.-iy 0, 1857; 70y. Elijah Willisou, d. Aug *28, 1884; 73y. 7m. (id. Zilhih Willisou, lirst wife of Elilali, d. April 24, 1871; 8(]y. Mary Willisou, second wife of Elijah, d. May 4, 1872; (i2y. .lames Wilson, Sr., d. Aug. 7, 1850; (i(iy. Maria AVilson, b. Aug. 30, 1822; d. Juiu^ 17, 1807. Sai-ah Ann WoodCoi-d. wife of J., d. Feb. 23, 1870; 58y. 3m. 28d. " BURIALS IN SCIO GRAVEYARD (Those Born Before 1830.) Marcy A. Beatty, wife of Thomas, d. Mav 30. 1807; Oly. 11m. lid. William Biruey, d. July 2(5, 1800; 82y. 5m. 12d. T. M. Bradford, b. 1820; d. 1898. Elizabeth Evans, wife of James, d. Feb. Ki, 1800; 87y. 10m. 27(1. James Evans, d. Nov. 2, 1853; (jOy. 4m. 2(id. William Givin, b. Aug. 5, 1820; d. May 21, 1808. Fraiu-is Grace, b. Feb. 28, 1818; d. Mai'ch 3, 1805. Hettv Grace, wife of Francis, b. Feb. 15, 1825; d. Fel) 12, 1802. SCIO BURIALS 393 Elizabeth Groglian, wife of Jesse, d. BUniALS IN SCIO METHODIST April 12, 18TS; r.4.v. lOni. 4(1. EPISCOPAL GUAVEYAIID. Maryaret Heron, wife of Willium, tl. /„-,. ,, ,> -n <• „ ic".n\ March 24. 1874: 4T.v. llin. ^ ' >^«^^ ^^"™ ^^''"^^' ^^^-^"^-^ William Heron, d. Sept. 27, 1S!)4; 07y. Elizabetli Beadlo, wife of Joliii, d. lOiii. l!)d. .liin. 15, 1875; 84y. "Jiu. Elizalx-fli Hiiies, wife of Ceorge, d. -T''!"" I^><'!idle, d. Mareli 10, 18G2; 74y. .lulv 2r>, ISDl; 70v. 5iu. 24(1. '*'"• '•''>s, b. ,,,^*"*' ^''*'"*; T^':''*'\ ^ .,-, ,^,_„ -,> Sept. 12. 1824; k July 20. l.s-.i:;. Edward (atcott. d. Jan. 21, 18. Sept. 24. 17!M; d. Josepli McKlveen, b. 1^24; d. April 10, .June 8, 184!). "^^^"^ Jane Fosler, second wife of George, Mary McKlveon. b. March l[i, 1822; b. Oct. 14. 180!); d. June 16. 188!). d. Oct. 27, ]8!)7. Jerusha Poster, first wife of George. Mary J. McKiveeu, wife of Jos.pli, b. b. Oct. 2."), 1707; d. Sept., 1S3(>. Dec. 17, 1.s;jo; (1. Xov. !t. 181)1. Ellen Harrison, wife of Joseph, d. Nancy McKiveeu, b. 1828; d. Feb. 28, April 28, 18.i:{; 4.\y. 4m. 12(1. 18!»). Joseph Harrison, d. April i;^. 1878; Rachel McKlveen, wife of Thomas, d. 7(5y. 3m. 12d. Marcli 18. 185(); U8y. Christopher Hartley, d. Feb. 28. 18()4; Tlionias McKiveeu. il. May 4. 18(;8; ^i<>y. 85y. Mary Hartley, wife of Christopher, J. Kumsey. b. M.Tirch 14. 1825; d. <1- Nov. 1. 18(;4: 84y. March 28. LS!)G; 71y. 14d. Elvira Jolle.y. wife of Philip, d. Aug. Ke))ecca A. S(ei)lienson. wife of Wil- "• ^^"'^'^ ^^'y- I**'"- -'1- liani H. II., d. Dec. 18, 1888; 78y. William McCarroll, d. March 2, 1842; William II. H Stei)henson, d. March •'"'-■V- 5. 18l)(); 82y. 5m. 18d. John McDonaugh. d. Jan. 10. 1854; Bazil Th'omi)son, b. Aug. G, 181.3; d ^^Jj^^- V"* ^^iK , , , ,,■ ^ Vu"- 4 ]8't5 Elizabeth McLan(lsl)orouirh. wife of Peter ■ Trushel, b. Maq 21, 1831; d t''!^'",?''!-!" i?*)r'':.c.^''''^'''''ir-/'^"*^'-' Aug. 30, 1890. /• ^:?'\^'-/r"''' "•■'• J"'- J-:'- ,, , r, 1 rn 11 T » T» . I. .folm McLandshorough, Sr., b. in (Jn>- r;'!.M""\o iv'- i 'I '•.^c^ivo-' ^- I'^^^'^y. «'-otlan(I; d. March 14, 1857; A|)rd 10, 1S.!(; d. April 10, ]8!)(. ^j^ j^i^^ ^^1 ' Biddy G. Weiglit, wife of George A.. To,,."iH,'.,ii M-irklev d Mnv 24 1979- b. Sept. 10. 1821; d. Feb. 11. 1888. 71'' •'',,, '^'"'"^"y- "• ^^^^ "=*• ^^^^• George A Welglit. b. Nov. 25, 1823; ^,,,,;,;„-' Moore, d. April 9, 18GG; 80y. d. June 4, 18!)1. y^^^ ^r.d 1 . > j Arral)ella WliiUiker. wife of James, ^ary Ann Neighbors, wife of Henry. d. Jan. 20, 18G7; 81y. 8m. 25d. d. 'jan. 20. 18O0; 43v. Ora. 20(1. James Whittiker. d. April 10. 1800; .T.'inies M. Patlerson. son of .1. !tnd M., "'••y- ^>'ii- d. June IS, 1840; 18v. Oni. 28d. Tlionias Wliiltaker, b. Sept 20, 1823; Eunice Scott, wife of James F., d. d. March 5, 18!JG. Feb. 28, 1849; 21y. 9m. " 394 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Jane Scott, wife of W. H., d. Dec. 18, 1866; 18y. 7m. 12d. Christopher Somerville, d. Sept. 21, 1863; 50y. Gm. Jacob Wortman, d. Sept. 8, 1843; 74y. 10m. t^arah Wortman, wife of Jacob, d. Dec. 15, 1836; 66y. 11m. BURIALS IN SMYRNA GRAVE- YARD. (Those Born Before 1830.) Ann Baker, wife of Christian, d. July 5, 1852; 82y. Christian Balder, d. Aug. 20, 1832; 66y. uJehn Baker, b. Sept. 10, 1795; d. July 24, 1835; 39y. 10m. 5d. Rosanna Baker, wife of Joseph, d. June 1, 1880; 63y. 2m. 13d. David Bendure, d. Nov. 6, 1886; 72y. 7m. Id. Sarah Bendure, wife of David, d. Aug. 28, 1887; 71y. 7m. 7d. BranduB Beths, d. March 18, 1870; 64y. 24d. Sarah Beths, wife of Brandus, d. Nov. 27, 1880; 76y. Mary Brown, wife of John P., d. May 24, 1874; 74y. Elizabeth Campbell, wife of Robert, d. Nov. 18, 1875; 76y. 10m. 2d. Hiram Cecil, d. Jan. 25, 1882; 60y. Im. 13d. Susamia Cecil, wife of Hiram, d. Sept. 21, 1883; 61y. 8m. 18d. Israel Chandler, d. Oct. 8, 1872; 58y. . 6m. 2d. Abigail Criringer, wife of J. W., d. Oct. 30, 1873; 61y. 5m. 18d. Robert Davis, b. Aug. 27, 1830; d. Nov. 5, 1895. George Gray, d. Sept. 19, 1875; 80y. Matilda Gray, wife of George, d. Feb. 10, 1867; 70y. 24d. William Gray, d. Oct. 13, 1853; 35y. 6m. 29d. Barbara Hall, wife of Hiram, b. Jan, IS, 1824; d. March 21, 1897. Mary Hall, wife of Thomas, d. Oct. 15, 1872; 67y. 2m. 13d. Thomas Hall, d. July 21, 1876; 72y. Ini. 14d. Elizabeth Henry, d. April 5, 1876; 63y. Catherine Howser, wife of John G., b. 1806; d. Jan. 19, 1875. John G. Howser, b. 1801; d. Jan. 25, 1873. Ann Delina Lamb, wife of Lawrence, d. Nov. 21, 1872; 48y. 8m. 8d. Rachel Larrimore, wife of Warren, d. June 5, 1853; 34y. 5m. Id. Warren J. Larrimore, b. Jan. 4, 1816; d. Jan. 20, 1898; 82y. Jacob Lighten, d. Sept. 29, 1879; 76y. 5m. 4d. David McClelland, d. Feb-. 5, 1872; 61y. 10m. 12d. Mary A. M'cClelland, wife of David, d. Jan. 6, 1860; 37y. 10m. 17d. Isabella McCotter, b. Feb. 1, 1818; d. March 25, 1896. Sarah McCotter, d. Jan. 20, 1874; SOy. 7m. 2d. William McCotter, b. April 27, 1820; d. March 17, 1891. Francis Medley, June 6, 1874; 94y. Elizabeth Mollett, wife of Joseph, d. May 21, 1857; 36y. 11m. 17d. Jesse H. Mbore, d. Oct. 30, 1890; 70y. 2m. 2d. Margaret Moore, wife of Jesse H., d. June 18, 1875; 56y. James Passmore, d. Oct. 12, 1858; 44y. 8m. 2d. Catherine Phipps, wife of Elias, d. July 5, 1869; 39y. 5m. 24d. Therine Tipton, wife of WilMam, d. May 29, 1885; 76y. 6m. William Tipton, d. Sept. 1, 1881; 72y. 10m. 3d. Isaac Vickers, d. Jan. 4, 1875; 78y. Mary Vickers, b. Jan. 21, 1808; d. May 23, 1887. William Vickers, d. June 2, 1868; 72y. 5m. 27d. Eliza Ann Whitington, wife of Thomas, d. Feb. 28, 1872; 41y. 11m. 24d. Thomas S. Whitington, d. Feb. 4, 1892; 88y. NEW ATHENS AND NEW JEFFERSON BURIALS 395 BURIALS IN NEW ATHENS GRAVE- George * Burner, d. Jan. 19, 1892; 78y. YARD. 3m. 12d. Chastina H. Duffield, wife of Dr. G. W., (Those Born Before 1830.) b. Dec. 3, 1804; d. Jan. 21, 1881. Dr. George W. Duffield, d. April 19, Catherine Brown, wife of George, b. 1879; 87y. 3m. 24d. Nov. 1, 1829; d. Aug. 22, 1890. Samuel J. Ferguson, d. Nov. 14, 1866; George Brown, b. Jan. 8, 1827; d. June 50y. 2m. 6d. 6, 1893. Wingent Ferguson, b. July 25, 1812; d. James H. Covert, b. June 1, 1828; d. April 20, 1876. Jan. 6, 1895. Charles Galbraith, d. Oct. 13, 1873; 82y. Isabell Day, d. Jan/. 16, 1897; 76y. 8m. 12d. Rezin Holmes, d. Nov. 26, 1881; 54y. Isabell Galbraith, wife of Charles, d. 2m. Dec. 8, 1871; 73y. 5m. Edward Hughs, b. Oct. 30, 1814; d. Isabel Galbraith, wife of Samuel, d. April 5, 1889. March 29, 1883; 86y. Sarah Hughs, wife of Edward, b. July Samuel Galbraith, d. July 13, 1875; 85v. 14, 1824; d. April 2, 1894. Samuel Galbraith, d. May 18, 1891; 66y. James R. Peregoy, b. Oct. 28, 1822; d. 6m. 23d. Nov. 15, 1897. William Galbraith, d. Aug. 1, 1879; 61y Rebecca Watson, b. Sept. 15, 1817; d. 6m. 4d. April 3, 1893. James Gotshall, d. Aug. 16, 1890; 68y. John Webb, Sr., b. Feb. 5, 1806; d. Jan. 11m. 28d. 15, 1893. Dr. A. W. Guthrie, d. Feb. 21, 1862; 41y Martha Webb, wife of John, b. Jan. 8, Rev. J. Heller, b. Oct. 2, 1807; d'. Nov. 1811; d. Sept. 9, 1893. 3, 1876; 69y. Im. Jamesr White, d. April 19, 1890; 73y. Alexander Johnston, d. Feb. 10, 1869; Sarah White, wife of James, d. July 28, 97y. 7m. 17d. 1888; 69y. Eleanor Johnston, wife of Alexander, Elizabeth Wiley, b. Oct. 29, 1822; d. d. Aug. 31, 1863; 80y. March 27, 1895. John Johnson, b. July 12, 1814; d. July 2, 1878. Uriah Kail, d. April 19, 1873; 46y. 9m. 5d. BURIALS IN NEW JEFFERSON James S. Kerr, d. March 16, 1880; 76y. GRAVEYARD. Ruth Lee, wife of James, d. March 19 1882; 77y. 11m. 2d. (Those Born Before 1830.) James C. McClure, d. Feb. 2, 1878; 65y. 10m. 13d. James Aiken, d. Aug. 19, 1884; 83y. 6m. Margaret McClure, d. July 4, 1897; 73y lOd. 9m. lOd. Jane Aiken, wife of James, d. June 16, Margery McCreary, d. May 12, 1875; 1867; 61y. 73y. Jane Allender, wife of George, d. Sept. Mary J. E. McElroy, wife of Joseph, d 22, 1859; 31y. 11m. 16d. June 11, 1876; 49y. 25d. James Anderson, d. Aug. 23, 1866; 78y. Matthew R. McNary, b. Feb. 14, 1831; Margery Anderson, wife of James, b. d. Dec. 22, 1898. Dec. 17, 1794; d. May 9, 1886. Sarah J. Mikesell, wife of Samuel, d. Violet Anderson, wife of James, d. Oct. Dec. 25, 1867; 39y. 8m. lOd. 11, 1879; 68y. 3m. Catherine Miller, wife of George, b. Mary Bender, wife of Levi, b. Dec. 11, Nov. 22, 1820; d. Aug. 23, 1892. 1823; d. Jan. 12. 1881. George Miller, b. Jan. 3, 1823; d. May Thomas Brooks, d. May 11, 1859; 57y. 18, 1888. 396 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY M'ary Millor, wife of Johm, (l.'Fcb. 2, Sar.ih TlumipHon, wiff! of George, d, J 874; 7(;y. 7m. 14cl. May !). IKdC; !»ly. Marllui Moore, d. Sept. 13, 1869; 92y. 'I'lvomas TliompKon-, 1). Sept. 29, 1818; Elizabeth A. Orr, wife of Jolin, d. A|)ril d. S(ii)t. 17, IKKS. 4. ]H()3; 64y. Alexander Trotter, d. March 11, 1857; .loliii Orr, d. Junie 29, 1S64; GlJy. (i2y. Auiie I'atLon, wil'(! ot Joaepli, b. .Jan. Elizabeth 'I'rotter, wife of Alexander, 13, 1802; d. March 23, 1894. d. AuR. 13, 1890; SCy. Joseph Patton, b. March 22, ISO;?; d. .Tamos Wilson', d. Ajiril 29. 1888; r)9y. Dec. 4, 1887. .laiu' i{. Wilson, wile of Jtev. T., b. Ellen' M. I'eeples, b. March 7, 1828; d. ISOd; d. 18(11. June 10, 1898; 70y. 3m. 3d. Margaret Wilson, wife of W. 11., d. Enoch W. rhilUps, d. Dec. 7, 1881; 62y. March 8, 1884; 72y. 6m. 2(;d. 7m. lldi. Mary Wilson, b. Dec. 27, 1803; d. Nov. Robert L. Plummer, d. March 24, 1878; 10. 1886. .^)4y. Om. Kid. .Jacob II. Winin'^s, b. .July 29, 1828; d. Sarah J. Polen, wife of William, d. Sept. 4. 1894. Ai)ril 3, 1876; !'i9y. 8m. 3d. W. S. Wlninger, d. Veh. 19, 1878; 47y. William I'olen, d. Nov. 12, 1876; 61y. Sm. lOd. 7m. 20d. Elizabelb I'otta, wife of S. T>., d. March 17, 1 873; 74y. Samuel L. Potts, d. Aug. 31. 1867; 64y. BURIALS TN UNITED BRETIIERN Mary Reed, d. July 7. 1865; 95y. GRAVEYARD. RUMLEY. Margaret M. Ueid, d. Dec. 21, 1866; 76y. llin. 2 Id. " (Those Born. Before 1830.) Calberine Rider, wife of George, d. Oct. 26, 1879; S5y. 3m. 7d. Namcy Ager, d. July 7, 1871; 4.3y. 8m. (Jeorge Rider, d. May 8, 1880; 86y'. 7m. 21d. 2d. Sai-ah Ban-eit, wife of Edward, 1). April Kdmund Roberts, d. Feb. 27, 1895; 84y. 6, 1826; d. July 23, 1885; 59y. 3m. 74d. Im. 16d. Abigail Heck, wife of Leomard, d. Dec. Lydia Roberts, wife of Edmund, d. July 4, 1855; 72y. 2m. 15d. 2, 1895; 84y. 8m. 26d. Titus Beck, d. .Ian. 17, 1880; 78y. 15d. John. Scott, d. June 22, 1877; 77y. 21m. .John. Bislrop. b. Sept. 11, 1795; d. Sept. I4d. 7, 1891. Henry Smith, d, May 25, 1866; 45y. 9m. Naoma lUsliop, wife of John, d. May 27d'. 6, 1868; 68y. 7m. 2d. Mary Ann Smith, wife of Samuel; d. Catherine Bradley, d. May 20, 1882; 72v. April IS, 1899: 75y. 5m. 8d. Margaret Bradley, d. July 24. 1873; 91y. Polly Smith, wife of Samuel, d. March Henry Bricker, d. June 22, 1885; 72y. 9. 1866; noy. Im. 29d. lOm. ISd. Samuel Smith, d. Juud 3, 1895; 80y. 3m. Mary A. Hricker, wife of Henry, d. Oct. 23d. 22. 1860; 44y. 24d'. Sarah Smith, wife of Henry, d. Nov. 16, Cathcrinf> Burrier, d. Feb. 14, 1886; 1864; 33y. Im. 20d. 84y. 3m. 23d. Barbary Ann. Stinger, wife of William, Su.san Canaga, wife of Jacob, d. Oct. d. May 26, 1872; 48y. 8m. 2d. 22. 188S; 82y. Mary P. Thompson, d. April 17, 1899; Martha ('onstantine, wife of Pharer, d. 62y. March 11, 1858; 53y. 6m. Id. Samuel Thompson, d. Aug. 23, 1885; Isaac Daggon, son/ of L. ami S., d. 74y, Nov. 1, 1862; 31 y. 7 m. 4d. IIUMLEY BURIALS. 307 Sarah DaKRon, wife of Isaac, d. Nov. G, Lewis aalmon, d. Dor. 20. 1872; G4y. ISU:^; liSy. (Jiii. JGd. (ini. .14d. Sarah Dawson, b. March 25, 1822; d. Catherine ShamliauKh, wife of I'hilii). Oct. 9, J8'Jl. d. iVlarch 21. 1SG7; GUy. Dm. lUd'. Eliza Devore, wife of SUus R., d. Jan. CeorRe Slianil)augh, b. Oct. 28, 1813; d. 22, 1X91; 70y. 4m. 2d. July 2G, 1894. Silas R. Devore. d. May 24, 1891; G4y. lletta Sliainliaiigh, wife of Michaci, b. Susanna Graybill, d. March 14, 1851; April IG, JSlG; d. Oct. 21, 1884. G7y 7ra. Matilda Shanibaugh, wife of George, d. William Gundy, d. Nov. 21, 18S4; G7y. Nov. 23, 18G2; 43y. 3m. 2Gd. 8m. Michael ShanibauKh, b. June II, 1811; Eve A. Gntshall. wife of Joseph, d. Oct. d. March 20, 18G:!. 2G. 1871; Gr.y. 4(1. I'hilip Sliaml)aujih, d. May 28, 1895; Michael GutKlmll, d. June 24, 1847;' 33y. 8Gy. 3m. 8d. lira. IGd. Susanna Shumbaugh, second wife of Samuel lleidy, d. Juno 12, 18G4; 44y. George, b. l'\;b. 4, 1822; d. May 22, 8m. 1(1. 1894. Sarah lloidy, wife of Samuel, d. Aug. Saniuc! Snyder, d. Nov. 47, 1884; 59y. 20, 1877; .G3y. 4m. 13d. Gm. L'Gd. Susan' Heidy, wife of Tliomas, d. Aug. Nancty Tope, wife of Joseph, d. Aug. 21, 2G, 188S; 78y. 8m. Gd. 1873; G2y. 7m. Gd. Thomas lleidy, d. May 13, 1894; 83y. John West, b. Oct. 12, 1801; d. IJec. 28, Gm. 2Gd. 18G4. L. r. Jolly, d. May 20, 18G4; 34y. 4m. 20d. Thomas Lewis, b. March 27, 1820; d. March G, 1897. BURIALS' IN LUTHERAN GRAVE- Julia .^nn M'cfJavran, wife of Stepheni, YARD RUMLEY b. June 13, 1814; d. July 29, 1887. Stephen M(!(;avran, b. June 3, 1814; d. (Those Born Before 1830) Oct. 27, 1874. ' / Elizabeth Manbeck, wife 9: wife, Sarali; children, Alex- .audrr. (ieoru;e, Margaret, Ann His-eler, Flizabeth Lavengood; grandchildren, Enoch-W. and Christopher Abel, Alex- ander Blickenstaffer; execs., George Al)el, George Levengood; wits., Wil- liam K. Beckett, John Gruber. GEORGE ADAMS. Franklin town- ship: date of will, Jnlv 2!J, 1S31; date ■of i)robate, Feb. 18, 18.">2; wile, Mary; •exec, Mary Adams; wits.. Citizen J. Kennedy, Augustus Watters. JOHN ADAMS, date of will, May 6, ISHA; date of probate, March 30, 18;J.",; wife, Rachel; children, Samuel, An- thony-Q; granddaughter, Elizabeth I.anib: execs., Samuel Adams, Anthony Adams, Alexander Clark, Evan Ro- mans; wits., Holloway. THOMAS Aug. -1, 1842; Cornelius Barber, Asa ADAjNIS, date of will, date of probate, Nov. 1, 1847; wife, name not given; children, William, Joseph, George, Joshua, Nim- rod, James, John, Elizabeth; execs., names not given; wits., M. B. Lukens, Citizen J. Kennedy. THOMAS ADAMS, Nottingham township; date of will. May 4, 1852; date of probate, June 30, 1852; wife, Charit.v; children mentioned, names not given; exec, Matthew Adams; wits., Abriam Johnson, Rowland H. Rogers. WILLIAM ADAMS, date of will, not given; date of probate, Sept. 20, 183(5; wife, Mary; children, Samuel, William, George. John, Margaret, Nancy, Polly, Catherine, Ellen, Jane, Elizabetli; exec, Josiah Scott; Avits., Thomas Bingham, Josiah Scott, Mary Jane Scott. SARAH AFOLT. Fairfield county, Ohio; date of will, Sept. 16, 1830; date of probate, Nov. 10, 1839; niece, Sarah Hukill; legatee, Johnson Hukill; exec, Johnson Hukill; wits., M. Wilson, Josiah Scott, Samuel McP'adden. HENRY AIMES, date of will, March 9, 1840; date of probate, June, 1840; wife, ]\Iargaret; children, Catherine Swigert, Elizabeth Cheney, Sarah Anne Wolcott, Mary Ann William, Samuel, Daniel, Henry, Elisha; grand-son, Swigert; execs., Margaret Swigert Davis, George, James Aimes, William Aimes; Gruber. wits. Reed, John ROBERT ALEXANDER, township* date of will, Jan. 2. date of proliate, Feb. 21. 1856; Elizabeth; children, John-W., J.; Brice Cadiz 1856; wife, exec, Elizabeth Alexander; wits., Thomas Love, Joseph Ilea. ELIZABETH ALLBAUGH, date of will, Jan. 1, 1858; date of probate, Jan. 27, 1858; husband. James; exec, Wil- liam Beadle; wits., William Cuitis, Samuel AUbaugh. JOSLVH ALLEN, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will, Oct. 6, 1842; date of probate. May , 1843; son, David; grandchildren, Margaret Jane Allen, Josiah Allen; execs., Joshua Hamilton, A. F. Hanna; wits., John Hanua, I^evi Dickerson. JAIVIES ANDERSON, date of Avill, Sept. 5, 1845; date of probate, Oct. TO, 1845; wife, Violet; children, John, Ab- raham, Alary, Jane; execs., Jacob Gut- shall, Samuel Galbraith; wits., John Anderson, James Anderson. JOHN ANDERSON, date of will, Nov. 20, 1841; date of probate, May 2, 1812; Avife, Margaret; children, Elenor, Margaret, Isabel, Mary, John, James, Andrew, Richard, William; execs., .Tames Anderson, Samuel Gailbraith; wits., James Anderson, James Gail- braith. RACHEL ANDERSON, date of will, Aug. 20, 1849: date of probate, Sept. 14. 1819; children, James, MatthcAV, William, Alexaudei', Thomas, Martha; sons-in-law, Samuel Davis, Alexander Henry; exec, Hamilton McFadden; HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 403 wits., William Givin, Michael Vertue. TIIOiMAS ANDERSON, Shortcreek township: date of will, Feb. 8, 1844; date of probate, May 1844; wife, Nancy; exec, Samuel Anderson; wits. James F. Inskeep, Henry C. Brown, Rachel Anderson. WILLIAM ANDERSON, Archer township: date of will, May 13, 1822; date of probate, June 7, 1822; wife, Malila; children, Benjamin, James, Tliompson, Thomas. William. Oeortie, Ruth, Nancy, Jane, :Malila; execs., Ben- jamin Anderson, William Grimes; wits., Walter B. Beebe, Elizabeth Wil- liams, Nancy Anderson. JOHN ARBAUGII, Rumley town- ship; date of will, July 22, 1848; date of probate, Aug-. 21, 1848; wife. Rose Ann; children, James, Levi, John, Cath- arine, Margaret, Lavina, Lydia-Ann; exec., Philip Shambaugli; wits., Ephron P. Stewart, Samuel Dayhuff. SARAH ANN ARCHBOLD, date of will, Oct. 27, 1841; date of probate, Oct. — , 1843; grandchildren, Moses T. Spencer, John A. Spencer, John A. Robinson, Betty Gordon; exec, Jacob Richey; wits., J. Archbold, John Pearce. FRANCINAH ARNOLD, date of will, Nov. 3, 1850; date of probate, Nov. 8, 1856; legatee, Maria Poulson; exec, William Arnold: wits., William Ar- nold, Sarah Poulson. GEORGE ATKINSON, /Brooke co., Virginia; date of will, March 1, 1822; date of probate, May 28, 1831; wife, name not given; children, Thomas, James, Margaret, Mary, Eleanor, Sarah, Martha, Ruth, Elizabeth ;grand- pon, Richard Atkin^en: exec, Jeremiah Browning; wits., Thomas Hattery, William Atkinson. GEORGE ATKINSON. Phortcreek township; date of will, July 5, 1854; date of probate, Sept. 5, 1854; children, Mary Hllbert, Elizabeth, John, Ella Ross, Rebecca Ross, George-S., Sarah Kennard; n?nhew, Wilmer Atkinson; niece, Jullett Atkinson; execs., George Atkinson, David Hilbert; wits., Isaac Lewis, Joseph Wiley, Andrew Jaaii- son. JOHN ATKINSON, Shorrtriek tewn- ship; date of will, March 1, 18()1; date of probate, March 25, 1801; wife, Elza; exec, William McFarland; wits., George Atkinson, George A. Roberts. JANE W. AULD, Deersville town; date of will, April 1, 1853; date of probate, Sep. 21, 1858; legatee, Ed- ward Pittis: execs., names not given; wits., Lancelot Hearn, William A. Hearn. JOHN C. AULD, date of will, Jan. 8, 1834; date of probate, March 31, 1834; wife, Jane; son, Albert: brother, La- zarus Auld: exec, Alexander Hender- son; wits., Robert Dodds, H. Worstell. KATHERINE AULD, Franklin township; date of will, June 15, 1840; date of probate, April 12, 1841; broth- ers and sisters, John, Alexander, Sarah, Katherine; mentions father and mother; exec, Josiah Scott; wits., Za- dack Bliss, Josiah Scott. JOHN BAKER, date of will, Dec 20, 1841; date of probate March 13, 1847; wife, name not given; children, Rezin, John, George, Samuel, Elizabeth; exec, John Baker; wits., William Cobb, Jacob Dennis. OTTO BAKER, date of will, Sept. 14, 1848; date of probate, Feb. 27, 1855; wife, Mary; children, Elizabeth, Mary, Sarah Martin, Abraham, Catharine Kent, William, Agnes Cox, Melinda Young, Otto, Evan, Sheridan: execs.. Otto Baker, Charles Conaway; wits., William Tingley, Jeremiah Tingley, S. M. Cormick. MARY BANE, Green township, date of will, Nov. 18, 1828: date of probate, April 3, 1830; children, John, Hugh, William, Henry, Margaret Bane, Tar- bet Bane, Isabella, Jane, Elizabeth, Sarah; grandchildren, John McCoy Merideth, William AVallace Merideth, Mary Dawson; execs., Alexander Reid, Tarbet Bane; wits., Nathan John.son, John Reid. 404 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY SA:mT'EL RARliEH. dato of will. Nov. 11, 1851; dale of probato, April 19, lS."i2; wife, Ann; oliililion, Dorothy Halliaway, Elizaliotli LuUius. Aun Tlidinas;. .Tamos; oxoes., Townsoud Thomas. Wilson IMaddox; wits., Jobu Cope, ANilliam M. Hilligas. VALENTINE BARGER, dato of will, Nov. 7, 1S27; dato of probate, Nov. 28, 1827; wife, Eliscaboth; son, Ilonry; granddaughter, Mary Smith; cxocs., IVtor Bargor, .laoob Bargor; wits.. William Aau Oleso, Jr., lloury Bargor, Uoorgo Sipe. LEW^IS BARKIIURST, Shorterook tawnsliip; dato of will, :\:a:oh l:^, 182;;; dato of prubnto .Iiuk" 24, 1S23: wifo, Arminta; Pliildrou, William, .lohn. Elizabeth. Margaret, Sar.ih, Mary, .ler- minia; exee., Arminta Barkhurst; wits., .lohn Warliold, Charles Barkhurst, Bradway Thompson. ALEXANDER BARNES, Washing- ton township; dato of will, Eeb. 11. lS;r>; date of pmbate, Sept. 2). ISoO; wife, Elizabeth; execs., Robert Clark. Thomas Clark; wits., William B.iyd, John Elliot. JA:\fES r. BARNES, date of will, Mareh ll\ 18.")2; date of probate, April l.">. 18r>2; wife, name not given; ehil- dren. names not given; execs., wife, and W. G. Fiuuey; wits., John Smith, S. R. Magee. MARGARET BARNHILL, date of w-ill. INlay 21, 181,5; date of probate, Aug. 20, 1817: children. .Jenny. Mary, Robert, Hugh: ex(H'S., names uot given, wits., Robert Russel, lOlizabeth Russel, Robert Barnhill. WILLIAM BARR, date of will, Dec. 18. 1817; date of jirobate, Aug. G, 1S18; wife, ]\Iary; children, Easier, Jane, Agnes, Mary, Isaac, James, Andrew, Silas, W^illiani, Infant unborn; execs., Mary Barr, Alexander .Tohnston; wits., Henry Kail, Jacob Meed, Margaret Peoples. ARTHUR BARRETT. Cadiz town- ship: date of will. Oct. 27, 1^42: date of probate, Dec. 1!), 1844; wife, Eliza- jieth: children, Lewis, Meredith, Wil- liain-IL, Aeneas, .lohn-W., Mary-Ann; exec. Meredith Barrett; wits., William Arnold, Thomas Barrett. Aeneas Bar- rett. ISAAC BARRETT, Cadiz township; date of will. .luly 8, 185tt; date of pro- bate. Aug. 21, LS.'IS; wife, Hannah; children, Erasntus, Arthur, Hiram, Mary Ann White. Tabetha Ford; execs.. Erasmus Barrett, Arthur Bar- rett; wits.. William Arnold, Thomas McCrary. THOMAS BARRETT, date of will, Sept. 7, 1840; date of probate, Dec. 20, 1810: wife. Alaneda; children, Thoiuas, A\"artlen. Arthur, Esther Wilson, Em- ma Spurrier, Balinda Cadwalader, Anna ^Miller, Rachel Sears: exec, Joseph Rea: wits., Martin Wilson, Wil- liam ISlcFaddin. HENRY BARRICKLOW, date of will, Feb. 21, 1851; date of probate, May 24. 18.52; Avife. name not given; children. John. Joseph. Henry, Conrad, Gre.g.g: le.tratee. Rachel Ann Watson: execs.. Conrad Barricklow, Farrington Barricklow; wits., S. W. Bostwick, Frederick Barricklow. ELIJAH BARTOW, date of will. IMarch Hi, 18:57: date of probate. May — , 1844; wife, Sarah; children. Enos, George, Francis, Syrus, Eli, Samuel, Tebee Woods. Charetee Edgar; step- son, William Houser: execs., names not given; wits.. Robert Simpson, John MeCarroll. .JOHN BAXTER, date of will. July 25. 1815; date of probate. Sept. 2. 1815*; ■wife. Mary; childr(>n. James. William, Ro1)ert. John, Elizabeth, Mary; execs., sons. James Baxter. AVilliam Baxter; wits.. Thomas McGonegle. James Drummond. COL:\rORE BE ALL. West Bethle- hem towusliip. Washington co., I'a.; date of will. Dec. 10, 1820; date of probate. May 24. 1840; wife, Rebecca; children, .John. Alexander, James. Hil- lary. Daniel, Colmore. Thomas. Mary Ann Yarnell. Elizabeth McCoy. Re- HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 405 bt'cca Smith, Casanlm Taylor, Saiah, Niincy, M;iig;ii(t, Klizii, Jano, Miu- f-rva; execs., Alexander Beail, Jjuihs P. Peall; wits., ZepLa I'arker, Neal Bcall. JAMES KEAT'I'Y, date of will, Sr-pt. 7, 1S33; date of probate, Jan. Jd, ls.;4; wife, Jane; children, Martha Jamison. Miirfrarct, Jami s, Thomas,; crandsim, James Jamison; (!xecs., Walter Jami- son, Geoi'ge Atldnson; wits., William Wiley, Samuel Rogers. JANE BE ATT Y, date of will. Oct. 2f), 1S48: date of probate, Dec. 20, IS."/); grandchildren, Ann Jamiyon, Janie.s Jjimison, John Jamison; le/atees, Wil- liam Beatty, Uphrim Maxwell, Ameri- can Bible Society; exec, George At- kinson; wits., William Boggs, David Taggart. JOSEPH BEATTY, date of will, March 2.5, 18.34; date of probate, Ai)ril 2, 18;i4; wife, name not given; motlier, name not given; sister, Martha: broth- er, James; aunt, Ruth Wiley; cousins, .loseph Rogers, Rebecra Rogers, James Beatty; legatees, Amcrie;iii Bilde So- ciety, Board of Home Missions, and Board of Education of the I'resby- terian Church; execs., William Lee. William Boggs; wits., William Ilanna, Samuel Rogers. "SAMPSON BEATY, ' Archer town- ship; date of will, July 9, 1849; date of probate, Dee. 20. 1849; wife, Raclid; Sf)ns, Arthur, Johnson, Thomas, Jere- miah, John; exec, Arthur Beaty; wits., William Irwin, Josiah Scott. SAMUEL BECK, Freeport; date of will, March 2.5, 1821; date of probnle. Aug. 3, 1821; wife, Mary; children, William, I'nsley, Susanna, Rachel, Mnry, Ilnnnah, Eliabetli; exec, son, ^^'illiam Beck; wits., Henry David, James Evans. JACOB BECKLEY, Gernvin town- ship; will not dated; date of probate, Jan. 14, 18.32; wife, Mary; children, Henry, .^:icob, Lydia; gr.inddaugh'ers, Elizabeth Shawver, Susan Wagner, Mary Ann Abel; execs., Jacob Beckley, •Tehn Shober; wits., Willi.im Gillespie, Cliarles (jillespie. WALTER B. BEEBE, date of will, Feb. 25, 18.3<;; date of probate, Feb. 2."», 18;;;(j; wife, Nancy; sons, Butlei-, James, Stewart; execs., Nancy p.eebe, Chauneey I^ewey; wits., William Ting- ley, John McBean, John Olmstead. MARY BEEKLEY, date of will, July 5, 18.3."); date of probate, Oct. 2r>, IHrto; children, Henry, Jacob, John, (Jeorge, Lydia, Sally Abel, Susanna Burkhouse, Rachel McfJee, Bet.sey Hirsiifield; execs., Jacolj Bei kley, John W.'igiier; wits., John Wagner, Jacob Wining. DANIEL BELKNAP, date of will, Oct. 0, 18.31; date of probiite, March 12, 1832; Avife, Jane; children. Am- nifd'ct, Orville, Harriet, Horace, David, Sidney, Thomas, Charles; exec, Hor- ace Belknap; wits., Robert Gilbreath, James Davis. JOSEPH BERXHARD, Harrison CO.; date of will, June 28, 18."t2; date of proitate, Oct. 19, ]S.",3: wife, Sarah; childnn, Lewis, William, Joseph; granrl-dautrhter, Cyntliia A. Michaels; legatee, Ruth Ann Parmer; execs., Lewis Bernhard, William Bernhard, Joseph Bernhard; wits., James McMil- lan, Joshua P. Watson, Samuel H. Watson. SAMI'EL BIGGART, date of will, Dec. 30, 18.30; date of probate, Aug. 2, 1831; wife, name net given: children, R(»bert, Mordica, Samuel; exec, Gef)rge Brown; wits., George Brown, William Eagleson. THOMAS BINGHAM, Cadiz; date of will, April 7, 1853: date of probate, April 20, 18.")3: children, John-A., Em- ma'C, Martha B. Lee, Mary Jane Scott, Lucinda B. Wood, Amanda, Emma-E., Isabella. Belinda; grand- ciiildren, Thomas Olmstead, Bingham Scott, Thomas Scott, P.ingham Wood, Lucy Wood, Lucy Stewart Bingham, Emma Bingham, Thomas Bingham, Hugh Binu'ham, Lucinda Bingliam; execs., Josiah Scott, John A. Bingham; 406 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY witP., "William Tingley, .Tosiah Craig. DAVID BINNS, Fayette county, Pennsvlvania; date of will, July 2r>, l,St(>: "(late of probate. May 22, 1.S40; wife, Mary; ehiklreu, Jonathan, Wil- liam, Davifl, Mary, Sarah, Ann; execs., Jonathan Binrs, Chaile.s Kinsey; wits., Abraham Stanley, M. O. Jones. MARGARET BINNS, date of will, Nov. 11, 18.53; date of probate, Feb. 25, 1859; children, Jonathan, William, David, Mary Bracken, Sarah B. Kin- sey, Ann H. Cook; execs., Jonathan Binns, Charles Kinsey; wits., George R. Jenkins, Joseph Harris. HTTGH BIRNEY, date of will, Sept. 17, 18(i0: date of probate, Sept. 23, ]S(U; children, William, Wesley, As- bury, James. Rebecca Law, Martha, Elizabeth Hitchcock, Jane Lease; execs., William Birney. Wesley Bir- ney; wits., James J. Billingsley, John Birney. JOHN BIRNEY, Harrison CO.; date of will, March 15, 1853; date of pro- bate, Aug. 0, 1854; wife, name not given; children, Jane, John, Ann, Rob- ert, Nelson, Eleanor; exec, John Bir- ney; wits., Samuel Foreman, Hugh Birney. BUNNELL BLAIR, Brook co., Vir- ginia, date of will, April 11, 1813; date of probate, June 15, 1818; wife. Char- ity: children, John, Daniel, James, Robert, Jennett, Elizabeth, IMary; execs., wife, Charity Blair, !-ons, James Blair, Robert Blair; wits.. James Blair, Isabella Henderson, James Wil- son. DANIEL BLACK, Carroll co., O.; date of will. July 25, 1857; date of probate, July 22, 1859; wife, Mary; children. John, Henry, Daniel, Hatty- Ann. Isabella, Jane. Mary; exec, Rob- ert Cumminas; wits., John L. Hunt, J. M. Forrester. EDITH BLAKE, date of will, March 3. 1850; date of probate, March 17, 1850; brothers, Benjamin Parrish, James Parrish; legatees, Cara Boyd, .lohn Parrish. Elizabeth Davis, Susan- na Cloakley; execs., names not given; wits., Eli I'eacock, Forney Timmons. ZADOCK BLISS, date of will, Aug. 26, 1852; date of prubate, Dec. 13, 1853; wife, Nancy; children, John-Q.-A.; execs., Nancy Bliss, John Q. A. Bliss; wits., William B. Hunt, David Glad- man. JAMES BOALES, Green township; date of will, July 2, 1836; date of pro- bate, Aug. 16, 1847; wife, Margaret; children, Samuel, William, Robert. Jo.seph, John, David, Jame.-*, Margaret, Tabitha, Mary Strand, Nancy Francis, Esther Bell, Isabella McBirney, Fanny Leech, Jane Moore; grandson, James Boales; execs., Samuel McNary, Josiah Scott; Avits., Thomas Bingham, Josiah Scott, William H. Forker. JOHN BOGGS, date of will, Nov. 2, 1848; date of probate, Feb. 13, 1849; wife, Sarah; children, Thomas-M., John-M., Samuel-:\I., Robert-W., Sarah- Ann; exec, Samuel M. Boggs; wits., William Lee, James Tannehill. JOHN BOLIN, date of will, Dec. 22, 1843; date of probate, July 10, 1845; wife, Eliza; execs., Oliver nestings, Neri Longshore; wits., Andrew Martin, Thomas Joice, Sarah Davison, John Graham, Nicholas Myres. THOMAS BOOTH, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will, Feb. 3, 1841; date -gf probate, Aug. 1, 1842; wife, Susanna; children, John, Isaac, Aaron, Cath- erine, Ann; grandchildren, John T. Lar- kin, and heirs of deceased son, Jacob; execs., John Booth, Isaac Booth, Aaron Booth; wits., Samuel Lewis, Lewis Parker, James Mc^Nlillan. BERNHARD BOWER, date of will, Sept. 2, 1843; date of probate, Jan. 18. 1843; wife, Mary; children, Catherine, Henry, John, Jacob, David; grandsons, Ezekiel Bower, Barnard Bower; execs., Jacob Bower, David Bower; wits., Thomas McClintick, William Welch. FREDERICK BOWERS, Allegheny county, Maryland; date of will, April 3, 1835; date of probate, June 22, 1835; wife, name not given; legatee, Jacob HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 407 Wininss; exec, Ja<^ob Winiiifjs; ayU« . Jonathan Smith, George W. Duffield, Charles Burchhold. JOHN BOYD, Freeport township, date of will, Feb. IS, 1835; date of pro- bate, Oct. 2(5. 1835: wife, Mary; chil- dren, Samuel, William, Elizabeth Barnes, Martha Hamilton, Kosanna Allen, Sarah Allen; execs, Robert Clark, James McMath, Jr.; wits., .Joseph Fry, Horace Belknap, John H. Clapp. THO^NIAS BOYD, date of will, June 30, 184G; date of probate, April 20, 1847; wife, Catherine; sisters, Mary, Marsiaret McGonagal, Sarah, Elliza, Jane: brothers, Samuel, James, Albert, William: execs., Patrick Arohbold, Catherine Boyd; wits., James R. Myres, Catherine Rose. WILLIAM BOYD, date of will, Sept. 15, 1853; date of probate, Feb. 21, 1854; wife, Rebecca; children, Malinda Bra- den, Nancy Johnson. Mariali Warfel, Elizabeth Welch, Martha Ferguson, John; exec, Charles Warfel; wits., Nancy A. Reynolds, Thomas Lee. DAVID BRADEN, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will, April 14, 1814; date of probate, March 28, 1815; wife, Mar- garet; sons, James, Joseph; execs., Joseph Braden, John Fi'ancis; wits., James Fords, John R. Davison, Joseph Burwell. JOHN II. BRADEN, Shortcreek township; date of will, April 15, 1841; date of probate, :\Iay 21, 1841; wife, name not given; brothers and sisters, Robert, David, William, Ann, Mary- Jane; exec, Francis Grove; wits., Thomas Hanna, Charles Warfel. HENRY BRICKER, date of will. May 20, 184G; date of probate, Aug. — , 1846; wife, Lydia; children, Henry, David, John, Susanna, Sarah, Ann, Margaret; execs., .Tohn Bricker, Sam- uel Bell; wits., Joseph Clark, Samuel Bell. JOHN BRICKER, Green township; date of will, June 10, 1800; date of probate, April 22. ISGl; wife, Anne; children, John, David, Elizabeth, Martha, Ann Beadle; execs., David Bricker, John Bricker; wits., Jesse H. McMath, James Stewart. BEN.TAMIN BRINDLEY, date of will, Jan. 24, 1845; date of probate, Feb. 8, 1845; wife, name not given; children, Benjamin, Samuel, Zachariah. William, Nathaniel, Nicholas, John, Sarah Lewis, Elon Hill, Pricilla Low, Nancy West; exec, John Brindley; wits., John McComb, John Smith, Rob- ert McKee. ABRAHAM BROKAW, Cadiz town- ship; date of will, Sept. 22, 1824; date of probate, June 13, 1825; wife, Mar- garet; children, Abraham, Jane, Judith, Mary, Margary, Sally; exec, George Brown; wits., Josiah Thomp- son, James Tarbert, Robert Thomp- son. ANN BROWN, date of will, Oct. 29, 1824: date of probate, Feb. 28, 1825; children, Ruth, Mary, Hanna, Eliza- beth, Ellonor; grandchildren, Lydia Johnson (and her husl)and, Abirani), Sophia Turner; son-in-law, Benjamin Johnson; execs., names not given; wits., Alexander McCullough, John McMath. DANIEL BROWN, date of will, Feb. 16, 1818; date of prol ate, Nov. 13, 1823; wife, Marium; children, Elizabeth, William, David; execs., sons, AVilliam Brown, Isaac Brown: wits., Jonathan Worrall, Benjamin Worrall. HUGH BROWN, date of will, Oct 6, 1822; date of itrobate. Nov. 16, 1822; wife, Jane; cliildren, William, John, Mary, Ann, Relekah, EIizabeth;execs., John Baker, Hugh Birney; wits., Sam- uel Amspoker, John Patterson, Thomas Patton. JAMES BROWN, date of will, Oct. 23, 1856; date of probate, Dec. 24, 1856; wife, Jane; exec, Edward Hughs; wits., William Mills, George Brown. ROBERT BROWN, Shorti-reek town- ship; date of will. Jan. 20, 184!); date of probate. May 28, 1850; wife, Isabel- la; legatees, Nancy Johnson, Robert 408 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY B. Al£san(ler, William Brown, James P. .lolinsDii iuid wiftMlinmiah), Kobeoca Binns, Georse Brown, Mary A. Brown; execs., Samuel Keed, Samuel Kerr; wits., William Stringer, James Kerr. WILLIAM BROWN, North town- ship; date of will, Sept. 4, 1829; date of probate. April 13, 1830; wife, Jane; legatee, Jane Torter; exec, Jane Porter; wits., Walter B. Beebe, John Olmstead, Chauncey Dewey, William Arnold. WILLIAM BROWN, date of will, ^lay 31, 1S3G; date of probate, June 2S, 1S3G; wife, Mary: children, Jane, Mary, John; exec. James McGuire; wits., Abuer Hitson, James Shimer. EZEKIEL O. BRYAN, date of will, April 9, 1849; date of probate, Oct. 29, 1852; wife, Mary Patience; children, William-F., Beal-II., Nancy-Jane, Au- galine, Hannah, Caroline- Ann, Mary- Ann; execs., wife, Mary Patience Bryan, William F. Bryan. Beal H. Bryan; wits., Joseph R. Four- paugh, John R. Huffman, Joseph Mead. SA]MUEL BUCHANAN, Rumley township; date of will, Oct. 3, 18.i4'; date of probate, April 1, 1858; wife, name not given; childien, John. Joseph, Jacob Vasbinder; exec, Joseph Bu- chanan; wits., Thomas Finnicum. Jane Pittinger, Samuel, William John Smylie. ANN BUFFINGTON. date of will, July 7, 1848; date of probate, April 24, 1849; sisters and brothers. Eliza, Vea- kim, George, Simon; exec, Thomas Davidson; wits., Wesley M. Davidson, William R. Davidson. BEN.TAMIN BURROWS, Notting- ham township; date of will, March 3. 1822; date of probate, Sept. 30, 1822; wife, name not given; children, Jemi- ma, James, William, Benedict; grand- son, Richard Burrows; exec, Benedict Burrows; wits., Daniel Chicken; James Mc:Math. ABRAHAM BUSBY, Harrison CO.; date of will, April 4, 1855; date of pro- bate, July 2, 1855; wife, Deborah; children, Edward, Elizabeth Lay- master, Amanda Wood, Benjamin, De- borah Maxwell, Shadrach, Martin-Yan Buren. Sheriden: niece. Elizabeth; execs.. Deborah Busby, Sheriden Bus- by: wits., Lewis Ryan, Thomas S. Adrean. EDITH BUSBY, Harrison cc; date of will, June 30, 1825; date of probate, Oct. 30, 1830; daughters, Ureth Shcp- ler. Huldah; exec. John Busby: wits., Joseph Thompson, John Mattein, James W. Thompson. JOHN BUSBY, Archer township; date of Avill, Oct. 30, 1851: date of pro- bate, Dec. 10, 1853; wife, Agnes; children, Abraham-IL, Sarah Healea, Rachel Smith, Belinda, Betsey Ann Baker, Eda Baker, Mary Ann Mc- Combs, Dorcas Conaway, Deborah Singhaus, .Jane Strawbaugh, grand- children, John B. Busby, Nancy Jane Atkinson; exec, Abraham H. Busby; wits., Rudolph Mitchell, John Megaw. ELISHA BUXTON, date of will, April 28, 1835; date of probate, May 2G, 1838; wife, Nancy; legatees, William Buxton, James Buxton, Britain Jones. Sara Fryer, Elizabeth Barger, Mary Davis, William Welling, John Welling, David Welling: execs., William Wel- ling, Sr., Cyrus Holt; wits., Joshua Dickerson, Alexander Bonham, James McMillan. ISAAC CADWALADER, Nottingham township, Tuscarawas county; date of will, Feb. 19, 1811: date of probate, Aug. 25, 1813: wife Elizabeth: chil- dren, .Tolm, Sarah: exec., Israel Wil- son; wits., John Calwalader, Jr., Yalen- tine Creamer. MICHAEL CAIRNS, date of will. Dec. 17, 1844; date of probate, April 30, 1845: wife, Isabella: children, Mar- garet Thompson, Isabell Johnson, El- ian Gilison, William, Samuel, INIoscs, Michael-K., John; exois., Samuel Cairns, Moses Cairns; wits., James Slonaker, Alexander Gamble. MOSES CARINS, date of will, April HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 409 1, 18o2; date of probnto, April 7, isr)2; wife, Sarah Jane; sister, Mar.uaret Mack: execs., not piven; wits., Ken- nedy Cairns, Mathias Glass. SAMUEL CAIRNS, date of Avill, May 10, 1855; date of probate, June 13, 1855; wife, Maha!a; children, Moses, Elizabeth Kennedy, Marsartt. Alice; execs., Mahala Cairns, Sanniel Mack; Avits., Jacob AVeyanett, John Cairns. JOHN CALDWELL, Green town- ship; date of will. Oct. 18, 1859; date of probate, Jan. 9. 1800; wife, Sarah; children, John, Albert, James, Ank- rum, William-H., Martha: grandchil- dren, James, Elizabeth, Sarah David- son: execs., Sarah Caldwell, Ankruni Caldwell: wits., William Harrison, Re- zin B. Handley. ROBERT CALDWELL, Franklin tOAvnship; date of will, April 25, 1851; date of probate, June 24, 1851; children, Robert, Jam; s, Joseph, .John, William, Jane, Hannah, Isabella; jrrand-danirhter, Rebecca Johnson; wits., Gnenne Morrison, John Tenner. ERASMUS CANNON, Shorrcreek township: date of will, Sept. 3. 1814; date of probate, 1814-1815; wife, Mary: children, Rachel, Eliza- beth, Mariah, Effey, Harriet, Moses, John, Rasmus; exec, Moses Cannon; wits., Edward Vanhorn, Henry Pere- goy: .Joseph Strahl. THOMAS CAREN, date of will, March 17, 1820; date of probate, June 5. 182r.: wife, Elizabeth; execs., Wil- liam Dunbar, Elizabeth Caren; wits., James Conel, John Coalman, John Conel. SAMUEL CARNAHAN, SR., Cadiz township; dale of will, July 29, 1812; date of probate. May 28, 181G; wife, name not jjiven; brother.^, John, .Tames, Samuel: nephews and nieces, George, James, William, John, Samuel, George (2d) and Agnes: execs., Samuel Gil- more, John McMillen; wits., Samuel McFadden, John McFadden, Thomas Richey. SAMUEL CARNAHAN, SR., Cadiz township; date of will, Sept. 5, 1851; date of probate, Oct. 15, 1851; wife, Elizabeth; daughter, Nancy; exec, John McFadden; wits., William Ar- nold, S. McCormick. JOHN CROTHERS, [Cari-othersl; date of will, Oct. 24, 1832; date of pro- bate, April 9, 1833; wife, Elizabeth; legatees, Martha Ilea, Mary Rea, Elizabeth Rea, Robeit McConnell, W.I- liam INIcConnell, Margaret AlcConuell, Jane McCnnnell, Robert Henderson, .Johnson Dilworth; execs., John Croth- ers, Robert Kirk; wits., Bazaleel Slem- mens; .Joseph Harris, I. Watson. SAMUEL COROTHERS, Harrison CO.: date of will, Jan. 8, 1831; date of probate, April 11, 1831; wife, Debora; sons, -Tames, Samuel, .John, Jesse; daughters, Margaret Perkins, Eliza- beth Oliver, Mary Thrimpsju, Deborah; execs., John Auld, J amis Smith; wits., James C. Guthre, Robert Auld. MARY CARPENTER, Franklin township; date of will, Sept. 24, 1850; date of probate, Dec. 1, 18.5»i; children, Fleming, Albert, .Tolin, William, Jane Hoobler, May Hilton, Sarah Ann Ir- win: exec, Hiram Worstell; wits., H. AVorstell, Charles Scott. JOHN CARRICIC, date of will, Aug. 31, 1852; date of probate, Feb. 4, 18.54: Avife, name not given; brothers and sisters, David Carrick, ,Tani(^s Carrick, Laura AndrcAVS, Nancy Carr; legatee, David Andrews; execs., .Tames Adams, Jashead Adams; wits., .Tames Carrick. JOHN CARSON, SR., Nottingham township; date of will, Dec 22. 185(>: date of prolate. May 1.5, 1858; children. Elijah, Franklin, William, Walter. John; grandchildren, William F. Han- nah, Nancy Calvin, Barrett Rogers, and Finley, Lydia, John, Smith, Han- nah, Susanna, and Nancy Hines;exrcs., Franklin Carson; Avits., William Blair, Thomas Ramse.v. ROBERT CARSON, date of will. Alarch 13, 18.52: date of probate, Nov. 17, 1858; wife, name not given; broth- 410 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY ors, James. "NYUliam. Adam; niooos, Jano CouUor. Marcaivt l^ook; nophow. Robert lUn-k; locatiV. Kbby Carson: oxec. AVilllam LonuuoJi; wits.. ^Ia^• thow ITondoi-son. liritUth Louunon. HKNHY CARVKU. AYashinsrton to^Ynsh^p; dato of will. Doe. 12. 1S40; date of v^n>bate. April 12. 1S41: wif.\ Tetitha: ehildren. .lam s. Abner. ICliah. Rebeeea Thi iupnttly; date of will. Feb. 28. 181«^; date of probate. April 10. ISll; wife. Mary; ehildteu. JenMiilah. Jo>ihva, Kinsoy, Brieo Berry, Levi. Hazel. Adrin, Ann Andrews. Ell:'.abeth Ball. Tappa. Linttey Aiulivws; jrrand-sons. John and Philip t^eeil: extvs.. wife. Mary Ceeil, and son, Briet^ Berry Ceeil; wits., Thomas l^'iekeisou, >Yillir;ui I^nitlap, Samuel Uunlay. PAVIP CHAMI>1:KS. Green town- ship, date of will, .hnie S, ISl'o: date of pivbate. July IS, lS;r>: wife, name n/>t griveit: ehildren, John. 'NYilliam. Folly. Sarah. Naney. B.Hehel: exee., William Mtx^re: wits,. Waiter B, Beebe. Wil- liam C. Wilson. ELIZABETH CHANEY. date of will. July 7. lS6t>; date of probab'. Mareh 21. lSt»l; ehildivn. Sarah- Ann. •Tohn-L.: extx\. Jolm L. Chaney: wi s . John C. riowmau, Stephen J. Thomi>- son. AYILLTAM CHANEY. date of will. M.ty 17. 1S,U^; d;ite of pn>bate. Ausr. — , lS;iO; Mife. Elizabeth; ehildren. Sally- Ann. Polly. Thomas-A,. Nathan; ehil- dren by first wife, Charles. William B.. Naney Mielienor. Elsey, Joshua. Nauev Crane: exee.. Elizabeth Chaney: wits.. RidHM-t MeKee. Lenuiel Oreen. ILVXIEI. CHICKEN, date of will. Oet. S. 1S2;'.; date of probate. April . ISIS: wife. Marv; exee.. Mary Clark; wits.. .1. H. l>Iaek. lieorsre Tajrsrait. JAMES CLARK, date of will. Nov. o. 1S47; date of probate. April 21. IS4S: wife, name not sriven: fatiter mention- ed, name not jiiven: lejiaiee. widow of Uev. .1.>hn Walker; exees.. Johnson cTark. Imrram Clark; wits., C. l^ewey. Savnuel Moorhead. MATITIEW CLARK. Cadiz villasre; date of will. May ,< lSr>2: date of pro- bate. May 25>, 1S.-2: wife, Jane; ehil- dren. .lohn-B., Eleit::u r M.: exe,-., .]ohu B, Claik, wits., \MllIam Arnold. Joseph Clark, Rt^BERT CLARK. Washinsrton township: date of will. April S, isr»7; date of probate, Jtine 11, 18tit>; wife, name itot s;iven: ehildren, James. Thomas, William. Rol err. ^[atthew. Naney Me.Vilo.*. Mary. Mar.iraret: exee., Alexander Moore; wits., SanuielLogau. Alexander Moore. SAMUEL CLIFFORD, will not dated; date of pitUnite, April — . lS-'>0; wife, Naney: ehildreit. Edward. Katli- tvine: sirandehlldren. Washinsrton and Eliza .lane Clitlord; exees,. Edward Cliltord. Thomas Cliftord; wits,, John LatTerty. James MeAdams. WILLIAM COALTRAP, Harrison CO., date of will. Ans;-. 2o. 1821: date of probate Oet. lo. 1821: wife. Mary: ehildivn. Sarah MeCeel, ^laruaret Hall, Elizabeth Hall, William. Ma'- thew. Henry, l^avid: exees.. Matthew- Simpson. Joseph Johnson: wits., Rieh- ard Wasjner. Aquilla Tipton. HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 411 RORKRT roriTRAX, CaflJz villagf. (]iiU- of will, April 2'.), JS47: duU- of proliat/', .Marrh 2'.',, ]8f;i; wife, Sarah; frliildron, Samuel, I^avir], Rob(-rt-R., Klenor, Dorcas Wliitakcr, Sarah-Jane; execs., SariJiiel CoeJiran, Itoberf R. Cochran: wits., Jo.shua Ilarnilon, Josiah Scott. .7r)Sni;A COLE. Jeffer.Hon county; flafc of will, 2, IH",: date of pro- Imtc, Dec. 81, 18."*;; wife, name not given; r hildnn, Thomas R., Jo.seph, John, William, Mary Coj^eland, KUzn- befh Tipton; exec, William Cole; wits., William Merryman, James Reerl. JOHN COLEMAN, Nottingham townsliip; date of will, May 28, 18ri2; date of prohate, Sept. '.), i8.'j0; wife, Elizabeth; c)ii dren. Fin lly, William, John, .Afaiy Wyckoff, Saiah Eaton, Eliza Mcoie, Nancy Hefling, .Margaret Fuller, Elizabeth; exec, F'indly Cole- man. WILLIAM COLVIN, SR., Redstone, I-'ayette co.. Pa., date of will, April 2, 1842; date of probate, Sept. 3, l.'^2; wife, Marj-; children, David-C, Sam- uel, Levi, Will.am, Rebecca Dunn, Hannah Rrashear, Mary Shari*leiis, Harrfet Town«-e.id, Saiah Forsj'the; grands^jn. William Colvin; execs., Wil- liam Colvin, Levi Colvin; wits., John II. Tarr, Lsaac Lynn. JOHN CONAWAY, Stock township: dare of will, April 17, 1800; date of probate, Oct. 14, IHOl: wife, name not given: children, Elizibeth, Jemima, Suf-anna, Rachd, Cynthia Layfxjrt, Hannah Whitiker, Martha Patterson; exec, Charles Conawaj'; wits., Aaron Conaway, Joseph Shearer. CATHERINE CONNELLY, date of will, Feb. 8, 1H44; date of probate, Aug. If;, 1847; sister, Margaret; couHina, Jolin Connelly, I'arrick Connelly, De- vanna, wife of Patrick Devanna; exec, Samuel Thompson; wits., Samuel Thompson, John Cheney, Susan Cow- arden. JAMES COOK, Cadiz, Jefferson co ; date of will. May — , 1800; date of pro- bata. March 28, 181 o; wife, Nancy; daughters, .Mary Love, Elizabeth; sons mentioned, but names not given; execs., wife, Nancy Cook, son, Robert r;fKik, and John Patt^rs^jn; wits., John Love, John Patterson, Samuel G. Rerryhill. MARCARET COOK, will not dated; date of probate, April 2r», 18^51; sister, Sarah An^us; exec, Sara!i Angus; wits., Francis MofTet, Ephriam I>;wis. .FAMES COPELAND, date of will. Feb. 2.8, 18.^,9; date of probata;, May '50, 18.^0; wife, name not given; chil- dren, Thomas, Johi«, Leonard, Samuel, Matilda, Rachel. Maria, Amanda. Isa- bel, Nancy; exec, Thornas Copeland; wits., James J. Billingsley, Alexander Moore. JOSEPH COO VERT, Harri.son co.; date of will, April 18, 1843; date of probate. May fi, 1844; wife, Nancy; children, Harvey, Catherine; execs., wife, Nancy Coovert, and brother, Ab- raham T'oovert: wits., John R. Wal- lace, Ezra Thompson, James Deusen- berry. I^AVID CORBETT, date of will. May 17, 1830; date of probate, Nov. 11, 1836; wife, name not given: daugh- ter. Sarah Bicking: brother, William; nephew, David Corljct: legatees, William P.irney, William Fulton. Sarah Donaghey; exec, William Blr- ney; wits., .Joseph Wright, John M. Wright, John Biin'-y. SAMTEL CORBETT, Harri.son co.; date of will, April 1.5. 1841; date of probate, Nov., 1841; wife, Betsey; chil- dren, Mary Maxwell, Margaret Henry, Sarah, David; exec, David Corbett; wits., William Boggs, G*?orge Holmes. SARAH CORBETT, Harrison co.; date of will, April 28. 1^3; date of probate, Aug. 21, 1843: brother and si:ster, David Corbett. Mary Maxwell; legatee. David B. Atkin.son: exec. Wil- liam Lee; wits., John G. McCollough. Abram Acres. WILLIAM CORKHILL, Harri.son CO.; date of will, March 2. 1849; date 412 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY of probate, April 2G, 1849; wife, name not siven; children, Marinee, Elizabeth, William, Thomas: exec, Thomas Cork- hill: wits., James Fisher, William Max- well. SARAH COUZENS, Harrison co., date of will, Feb. G, 1820; date of pro- bate, Sept. 30, 1822; daughter, Ann; grandchildren mentioned, but names not given; exec, Bradw'ay Thomson; wits., James Roberts, Aaron Matson, Thomas Thorn. GEORGE COX, Archer township; date of will, June 19, 1849; date of probate, Nov. 9, 1849; wife, Sarah; chil- dren, John, Hiram, Obadiah, George, IMartin, jNIary Wilson, Rachel Breden, Sarah Cox, Judy Ann Smiley; exec, Josiah Scott; wits., John A. Bingham; Josiah Scott. .lOSHUA COX, Harrison co.; date of will, Feb. 10, 1854; date of pro- bate, March 31, 1854; wife, Editha: children, William. Ebenezer, James, John. Joshna-T., George-W., Rebecca. Sarah-.Taue: execs., wife, Editha Cox, and John Bell; wits., John Bell, James Bell, David Hanlin. ZEBEDIAH COX, date of will, June 12, 1825; date of probate. June 15, 1825; wife, Charlotte; children, Har- rison, Elijah, Ziporah, Zebediar: lega- tee, Ge.^sa Peppers: execs., JohnBusby, George Skippers: wits., Abner Hixsou, Abi'ahara Laport, Francis Gilmore. PETER CRABTREE, Harrison co.; date of will, March 22, 1821; date of probate, Dec. 7, 1827; wife, Sarah: chil- dren, Rohdia Dixon, Rachel House, Sarah, Ann, Amey, Elizabeth, Cor- nelius, Gabi'iel, William; exec, Cor- nelius Crabtree; wits., Abrim Johnson, John Lawrey. JOHN CRAIG, Han-ison Co.; date of will, Aug. 19, 1825; date of probate. Oct. 24, 1825: wife, Betsey; children, Johnson, William, Walter, John, Jane, Rachel, Polly, Ann, Rebecca; execs., brother, Walter Craig, son, Johnson Craig, and William Moore; wits., Chauncey Dewey, William Grimes, John McFadin. SUSANNA CRAIG, Cadiz township; date of will, ]May 22, 1820; date of pro- bate, July 15, 1820; children, Rebecca, Susanna, John, George, William, Sam- uel: execs., sons, Jolm Craig, George Craig; wits., Walter B. Beebe, J. Har- ris, J. W. Harris. ASA CRAWFORD, date of will, Dec. 13, 1851; date of probate. May 11, 1852; wife, Elizabeth; children, James, Mary- Jane, Edward, Catherine; exec, Eliza- beth Crawford; wits., John Hastings, William Williams. EDWARD CRAWFORD, date of will. May 20, 1828; date of probate, Oct. 24, 1831; wife, Mary; children, John, Thomas-W., Alexander, Josiah, Eleuor, Mary, Isabelle, Nancy, Mar- garet, Elizabeth, Harriet; exec, Mary Crawford; wits., AI ner Ilixson, George Bartow. TII0:MAS CRAWFORD, Athens township; date of will, June 12, 1820; date of probate, Oct. 17, 1820; wife, Jane; children, Jolm, William, James, Nathaniel, Margaret, Mary, Sarah; execs., Joseph Grimes, Edward Van- horn; wits., George Welch, James Grimes. WILLIA?iI CRAWFORD, Harrison CO.; date of will, Aug. 20, 1850; date of probate, Nov. 5, 1850; wife, Jane; children, Rosannah, Jane Wilson, Obira, Mary, Elizabeth, James, John, William, Robert: exec, wits., James Clements, ents. ELIZABETH CREE, date of Avill, May 21, 1831: date of pro- bate, April 12, 1841; son, James: exec, James Cree; wits., Moses Wright, Ebenezer A. Gray, Samuel Mossgrove. JAMES CREE, Harrison co.; date of will, Feb. 8, 18.59; date of probate, July 2, 1859; wife, Sarah; chiUlien, .John-W., William, George-AV., Robert, Thomas, Mary-M., Elizabeth- V., Saiah-J.; execs., names not given; wits., John Watts, Bazel Steel. THOMAS CRUMLEY, date of will, John Bethel; Daniel Clem- Harrison CO.; HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 413 Dec. 20, ISGO; date of probate, Aug. 6, 1S(51; wife, name not given; cliildren, Mary Diel^ersnn, Haunali Glazener, J]mil.v Barkhurst, Ira, Joseph, David, James, Aaron; s'randcliildren, SamiieJ, Barnch, and Thomas Diclierson, and Iillizabetli House; execs., Ira Crumley, David M. Crumley; wits., Robert L". Har.arave, Amon Lemraou. ROBERT CULBERTSON, Harrison CO.; date of will, .Tan. 13, 1840; date of probate, April 12, 1841; wife, Mary; children, Ann Crawford, Georqe, Gil- lespie; exec, Gillespie Culbertson; wits., John Webb. DAVID CUNNINGHAM, date of will, April 21, 1849; date of probate, Aug. — , 1849; wife, Ann; son, John; grandchildren, David and Mary Cun- ningham; brother, Robert; legatees. Rev. Samuel C. Baldridge, Thomas Hanna; execs., wife, Ann Cunningham, and son, John Cunnigham; wits., James McAdams, Jesse K. Thomas. DR. WILLIAM CUNNINGHAM, date of will, Feb. 1.3, 1842; date of pro- bate, April fi, 1842: wife, Nancy; chil- dren, Thnmas-H., William-C, .Tohn-AV., George-W., William, Elizabeth; father; mother; execs., Nancy Cunningham, Samuel Heidy; wits., Thomas Day; E. II. Custer. WILLIAM CUNNINGHAM, Wash- ington township; date of will, March 14, 1855; date of probate, Aug. 18, 18.55; wife, name not given; children. ]\Tary- Elizabeth, Emma-Jane, Isabella-Fran- ces, Margaret-Ella; exec, Alexander McCullough; wits., S. K. Billingsley, Alexander McCullough. JOHN CURBAY, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will, Sept. 9, 18o9; date of probate, Nov. IS, 18.39; wife, name not given; children, James, Mary; execs., James Curbay, Mary Curbay; ■wits., David Barrett, William Barrett, Josiah Scott. LEWIS DAVIDSON, date of will, Sept. 1, 1832; date of probate, April 8, 1833; wife, Mary; children, Mary, Jesse, Thomas, Joseph, Jonathan; execs., John L. Grubb, Lewis H. Davidson; wits., Ira Mitchell, L. Sp— , Joseph Fry. THOMAS DAVIDSON, date of will, Jan. 3, 185G; date of probate, Feb. 13, 185G; wife, name not given; children, Ruth-Ann, Hary-J., Harriett A. Boyer, Isaac-C, William-R., Nelson-R., Wes- ley-M., Alfred-A.; exec, William R. Davidson; wits., William Wright, Isaac N. Wright. JAMES DAVIS Harrison co.; date of will, Jan. 31, 1851; date of probate. May 11, 1852; wife, name not given; children, .Tohn, Martin, Ann Cecil, Y'orseth .Johnson, Ellen Crabtree, Eliza Buckingham, Elizabeth Crumley; lega- tee. Providence Crabtree; execs., .John Davis; wits., Michael Leard, John Poulson. JOHN F. DAVIS, date of will, Sept. 7, 1827; date of probate, Oct. 15, 1827; wife, Ann; niece, Catherine; children, names not given; execs., Ann Davis, Henry Carver; wits., Richard Price, Thomas P. Jenkins, William Davis. JOHN DAVIS, German township; date of will, Aug. 24, 1835; date of pro- bate, Oct. 28, 1835; family mentioned, names not given; execs., names not given; wits., A. Patterson, George W. Dutheld. JOHN DAVIS, Harrison co.; date of will, Jun. 2, 1855; date of probate, Dec. 27, 1855; wife, name not given; exec, Joseph Rogers; wits., Alexander Moore, William F. Hines. NICHOLAS DAVIS, date of will, Nov. 11, 182G; date of probate, Dec. 21, 182G; wife, Elenor; children, David, William, Elijah, George, Robert, Guyau Nicholas, Elenor, Nancy, Eliza, Cath- erine, Rebecca; execs., Elenor Davis, George Brown; wits., George Cook, Esther Morrison, George Brown. SAMUEL DAVIS, Harrison co.; date of will, June 14, 1840; date of probate, June — , 1840; wife, Sarah; children, Mary Knox, Sarah Brown, Margaret Welling, Jane Patterson, Elizabeth, Elenor, Barctia, Susan, 414 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Esther-Ann, John, Winia-ni; execs., John Davis, John Knox; wits, Ei:och Thomas, Robert McMillan, Wiliiam Boggs. WILLIAM DAVIS, Harrison cc: date of will, April 24, 1829; date of proliate, July 29, 1829; wife, Martha; children, John, George, James, Alfred, Polly; exec, Jacob Ream; wits., James Mathias, J. R. Kirkpatrick. NATHANIEL DAWSON, Jefferson county: date of will, Feb. 22, 1857; date of probate. May 15, 1857; wife, Amelia; children, Joseph, Nathaniel, Jolm, George-W., Rebecca McGrew, Martha Lewis, Eliza Jane Cramblet; exec, John Dawson; wits., James W. Parr, Joseph Meholin. TPIOMAS DAWSON, Cadiz; date of will, Feb. 16, 1858; date of probate, Feb. 2, ISGO; wife, nam'e not given; sister, Sarah Kerr; nephew, Thomas Dawson; sister-in-law, Rebecca Daw- son: legatees, William, James, Sarah, Elizabeth, Margaret, and Mary Stein; children of Margaret Stein; Josepli, Amanda, Salina, and Sarah Sharp; execs., William McFarland, Andrew McFarland; wits.. Bold Christy, Sam- uel Alexander, J. S. McCready. GEORGE DAY, Harrison co.; date of will, Feb. 24, 1855; date of probate. May 22, 1S55; wife, name not given; children, Uriah, Sally Blair, Charity Milligan, Mary Wells; legatees, Louisa- Jepsa, Margaret-Jane, Mandy, George, Mariah Barger; exec, Alexander Moore: wits. Jehu Poison, James Keesy. JOHN DEWITT, date of will, Aug. 25, 1850; date of probate, Dec 20, 1856; wife, Mary; childern, Thomas, George, Jacob, William, John, Jonathan, Ellen Suttles. Mary Vansickle, Rachel Cree, Catherine Steel; execs., Mark Hogue, ; wits., Thomas Ridgeway, John Knox. JOHN DICK, Washington township, date of will, Dec 22, 1829; date of pro- bate, March 30, 1830; wife, name not given; children, Mary Purviance, Sarah McGrew, Rachel Parks, Susan Max- son, Joseph, John, James, Samncl: execs., Elijah Covington, John Dick; wits., Isaac Fordice, Stokely Craig, Richard Price. THOMA.S DICKERSON, date of will, Sept. 16, 1851; date of probate. Feb. 19, 1S53: wife. Maiy; ohil :r. n, Hiram, John, Susanna Jones, Barrick, Thomas, Levi, Eli, Joseph; exec, Josepli Dickerson: wits., Eli Dicker- son, Levi Dickerson. JOHN DICKEY, Harrison co.; date of will, Jan. 15, 1847; date of probate, Aug. 16, 1847; wife, name not given; brother, Samuel; legatee, Benjamin Dickev: exec, Samuel Dickey; wits., Hiram Worstell, John S. McGill. MARGARET DICKEY, HaiTison CO.; date of will, July 3, 1844; date of probate, Nov. 9, 1846; legatee, Samuel Dickey; exec, Samuel Dickey; wits., Stewart Auld, John S. McGill. .JAMES DONAHEY, date of will, April 12, 1843; date of probate. May --, 1846; wife, name not given; chikhvn, John, James, Jesse, Margaret Kill- breath; execs., John Donahey, James Donahey, Jesse Donahey; wits., Rob- ert Pittis, Sr., Robert Pittis, Jr. THOMAS DRUMMOND, date of will, Feb. 1, 1838; date of probate. May 21, 183S; wife, name not given; chil- dren, Robert, James, Catherine, Mary, grandson, Thomas; execs., John T. Cramblet, Wiliiam McCullough; wits., James P. Barnes, John T. Cramblet. JOHN DRYDEN, Freeport town- ship; date of will, Oct. 9, 1832; date of pi-obate, April 8, 18.33; wife, Katherine; children, James, John, Samuel, Robert- C, William-K., Jane, Mary, Elizabeth, Martha; execs., Hugh McCullough, An- drew Isaac; wits., Robert Paisley, James McCullough. ADAM DUNLAP, Harrison co ; date of will, Oct. 24, 1829; date of pro- bate, March 30, 1830; wife, Rebecca; children, Samuel, Joseph, William, John, Robert, Sarah, Esther, Rebecca, Mary, Rachel; execs., Samuel Dunlap, HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 415 Heniy Ranicklow; wits., Uriah McMil- leD, William Jones, Edwar.l Laft'eity. ADAM DUNLAP, Harrison co.;(laro of will, Api-il 10, 1849; date of probate. May 22, lS-19; wife, name not given: fatlier, John Dunlap; execs., John Dunlap, Joim Watts; wits., Matthew H. Phillips, William Rankin. ROBERT DUNL.VP, Harrison CO.: date of will, Feb. 29, 1860; date of pro- bate, March 13, ISGO; wife, name not given; children, Adam, Hugh, Samuel, Nnncy, Rel)ecca. McFadden; exec, Samuel Punlnp: wits., John Dickerson, William Rankin. SAMUEL DUNLAP, date of will, Sept. 21, 1839; date of probate, Nov. IS, 1839; wife, Sarah; children, Rachel, Elizabeth, Susan, Rebecca, Polly, Sarah. Jane, Adam; execs., Adam Dun- lap, Edward Clifford; wits., Joshua Dickerson, Thomas Clifford. DAVID DUTTON, date of will, - 1S:5G; date of probate, Dec. 5, 1836; wife, Hannah; children, William, Rob- ert, David, Francis, Asa, Sarah Mat- son, Hannah Hensall, Susan Cow- ardan, Anna Mills; execs., Robert Dut- ton, John Heberling; wits., Thomns Carver, John Stradling, James McMil- lan. ROBERT DUTTON, date of wiK March 16, ISIo; date of probate, April — , ]S4."); wife, Anna; cliildron, Martha- Ann, Scynthia, Hannah, Ezra; execs., Samuel Griffith, David Dutton; wits., William Dutton, Levi Beck, James McMillan. WILLIAM EAGELSON, Shortcreek townshi]); date of will, June 20, 1829; date of porbate, July 28, 1829; wife, Margaret; children, William, John, Jane; execs., wife, INIargaret Eagleson, son, William Eagleson; wits., Joseph Cellar, Samuel Davis. MAGDALENE EASTERDAY, date of will. Jan. 20, 183S; date of probate, Dec. 17, 1838: nephew, David Bowers; niece, Catherin'^ Slrets; sister. Barbary Bowers: exec., Samuel Gonff; wits., Joseph Flory, Solomon Miner. HENRY EASTLICK, Archer town- ship; date of will, Oct. 28, 1853; dateof probate, Feb. 26, ISny; wife, Elizabeth; children, James, Henry, John, Pasco, Nancy, Rebecca, Jane, Polly Baker, Elizabeth Canaga; execs., James East- lick, John Atkinson; wits., Josiah Scott, Lawson Scott. JEHIAL E. EATON, Franklin town- ship; date of will, March 31, 1852; date of probate. May 17, 1852; wife, name not given; children, INIary, Elizabeth- Ann; execs., wife, and Fiudly Cole- man; wits., Robert Pittis, Daniel Palmer, ]MARY ECKLEY, Harrison co.; date of will, Nov. 11, 1825; date of probate, Jau. 28, 1826; sister, Ann Clark; nephew, Lewis; nieces, Mary-Ann. Hannah E. Clark, Sarah Williams, Ann Grey; wits., Jonathan Worrell, Eleanor Worrell, Lewis Beruhard. ADAM EDGAR, date of will, Oct. 16, 1848; date of probate, April 25, 1849; wife, name not given; sister, Elizabeth Edgar; exec, George Kid- well; wits., M. Crowl, Frederick Fur- ney. HENRY J. EDNEY, date of will, Oct. 17, 1845; date of probate, Nov. — , 1815; wife, name not given; mother, name not given; brother, Robert; sisters, Isabel, Louisa, Mary, Jane, Elizabeth, Adalade, Herriatta; exec, Robert Pittis, Jr.; wits., M. F. Mai- lernee, Isaac Talbott. AZARIAH EDWARDS, Cadiz town- ship; date of will. May 14, 1849: date of probate. May G, 1859; wife, Henri- etta; children, Azariah, William, Nancy, Mary; execs., Robert Lyon.^, .Tosiah Scott; wits., A. C. Turner, H. H. Paxton. HENRIETTA EDWARDS, Cadiz village; date of will, Feb. G, 1859; date of probate, March 21, ; brothers, Samuel Moore, Llezekiah Moore; exec, Josiah Scott: wits., W. G. Finney, H. G. Forker, .Tosiah Scott. JOHN ENDSLEY, date of will, Jan. IS, 1850; date of probate, Feb. 1, 1850; 416 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY wife, Barbara; brothers and .sisters, Tliomas, James, Mary Sliannon, Sarali McClain. Jane Mel'eck; exec, George INIcPeck; wits. .William Smylie, Robert Maxwell. ALEXANDER EVANS, date of will, June 4, 1830; date of probate, Aug. •+, 1831; wife, Jane; children, James, Wil- liam, Rebekah Givin; grandchildren, Alexander Elvans, John Evans, Mar- garet Evans, Caroline Evans; execs., William Evans, Michael ConaAvay; wits., Alexander Simpson, RoLert Simpson. aiARY EVANS, date of will, March 16, 1830; date of probate, Aug. 3, 1830; children, Alexander, John, Margnret; exec, William Evans; wits., Michael Conaway, Francis Grace, John Simp- son, Robert Simpson, Alexander Simp- son, Robert Given. ROBERT EYRE, date of will, April 26, 1826; date of probate, July 28, 3828; wife, .Jemima; children, Ann, Hannah; exec, John Grubb; wits., J. Harris, Charles Holt, Cyrus Holt. HENRY FEISTER, Nottingham township; date of will, JNIarch 19, 183tj; date of probate, Sept. 20, 1836; wife, Margaret; childi'en, John, Charles, Henry, Robert, Levi, Margaret, Han- nah, Charlotte, Sarah; execs., Margaret Feister, Charles Feister; wits., Philip Fulton, James Garner. CHARLES FERRELL, dat? of will, March 30, 1849; date of probate, March 10, 1852; wife, Mary; children, Isaac, William, James, Thomas, Charlea Isabella, INIargaret, Jane, Mary Eleanor, Milly-lNIaria; wits., Jacob Lewis, James Ferrell. ADAM FIGLEY, date of will, March 9, 1847; date of probate, April 2, 1850: wife, name not given; children, Deliha Dickson, Joseph, Jacob; exec, Joseph Figley; wits., James Kirkpatrick; George Nickels. JAMES FINNEY, date of will, Jan. 7, 1822; date of probate, Oct. 19, 1829; wife, Rebecah; children, Robert, John, Walter-B., Thomas, Martha, Francis, Elizabeth McMillen: legatee, Robert Braden; execs., William Hamilton, Baruch Dickersou; wits., Robert Ham- ilton, James Hamilton. PHEBE FINNEY, Harrison co.; date of will, Nov. 27, 1820; date of probate, March 19, 1820; daughter, Sarah Gillespie; friend, Amey Brown; legatee, Benjamin Brown; execs., names not given; wits., William Bald- win, .Tohn Dunlap. ELIZABETH FISHER, date of will, Sept. 9, 1827; date of probate, April 1, 1828; sister and brother, Sarah Everett, Joel Hancock; exec, John Everett: wits., Jonathan Worrall, Isaac Ady. GEORGE FISPIER, date of will, ]\Iarch 15, 1821; date of probate, July 31, 1821; wife, Esther; children men- tioned, no names given; execs., Samuel Buchanan, Thomas A. Biatty; wits., James Ferrell, John Archbold, Henry Easlick. GEORGE FISHER, date of will. Aug. 30, 1823 ;date of probate, Aug. 18, 1823; wife, Elizabeth; children, James, Thomas, Eva Gordon, Gi-ncy Snyder, Matilda Rouse, Elizabetli Custard. Sus- anna liCe, INIay Welch, Harriett Shray- er; grandchildren, George Fisher, George Custard, Elizabeth Lee, Eliza- beth Shrayer; execs., Elizabeth Fish- er, Thomas Fisher: wits., George Shri- er, Thomas Patton. JOHN FISHER, Hanison co.: date of will, April 17, 1815; date of probate, July 4, 1815; wife, Sarah; children mentioned, names not given; execs., Samuel Faucet, Joseph Faucet; wits., James Campbell, Jonathan Marsh Ellis. ANTHONY FISSEL, Harrison co.: date of will, Feb. 26. 1828; date of probate, March 31, 1825; wife, name not given; brothers, John, .Jacob; fath- er, .Jolm: mother, Ann: exec, Abiicr Hixon; wits., Abnor Ilixon, Jacob Pol- more. CHARLES FITZSIM:*I0NS. date of will. May 18, 1830; date of probate. HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 417 Aiig. 3, 1830; wife, Susanna-Catherine; children, Jacob, Charks, Elizabeth, Katy, Ann; exec, George W. Beli; wits., James Orr, Samuel McCollougb. WILLIAM FOOS, date of will. May 23, 1831; date of probate, Aug. 1, 183 1; wife, Catherine; son, John; execs., Catherine Foos, Peter Himebaugh wits., George Himebaugh, John Grub- er. .TOSIAH FORBES, Harrison oc; date of will, July 11, 1836; date cf pro- bate, Feb. 8, 1837; wife, Ellen; lega- tees. Church of Christ, Foreign Mis- *;ionary Society, Domestic Missionary Society; execs., names not given; wits., Samuel Dunlap, Sr., John Moore. ANN FORD, date of will, Dec. 23, 1820; date of probate, Aug. 3, 1821; children, Eleanor Chiclcen, Nancy Bricker, Heni-y David, Daniel David, Sarali Kinsey; grandchildren, Sarah Grewell, David Grewell, Mary Ann Grewell, Rachel Grewell, Thomas Grewell; exec, Henry David; wits.. Jonathan Sayrs, Isaac Whealdon. ISAAC FORD, date of will, Dec. 27; 18.30; date of probate, Oct. 27, IMHl; wife, Rachel; children, Claton, John, Lewis, Benjamin, Isaac, Nancy, Rachel; granddaughter, Rachel Bar- ber; legatee, Matilda Franks; exec, John Ford; wits., Joseph MteK, j,,hn Coalman. SAMUEL FORDYCE, date of will, Aug. 28, 18.50; date of probate. May 2, 1851; wife, Zelpah; legatees, Thom-is Crago, Mary Ann Rogers; [a boy and girl that he raised] : exec, Thoma.s <^-io-o; wits., John M. Brown, Moses Riley. ABRAHAM FORNEY. Cadiz town- ship; date of will, July 26, 1822: date of probate, Oct. 11, 1824: wife. Sus'in; children, John, Abraham, Frederick, Catherine, Polly, Susan, Sophia; execs., sons, Jolm Forney, Abraliam Forney; wits., Walter B. Beebe, John Pritcli- ard, J. Harris. SUSANNA FORNEY. Harrison co.; date of will, July 14, 1834; cate of pro- bate, June 28, 1842; children, Pollv Timmons, Susannah Rabe; friend, .John Maholm: exec, Jolin Malio)"!; wits., Walter B. Beebe, Jami s Smylie. GEORGE FOSTER, date of will, April 20, 1849: date of probate, Auji. — , 1849; wife, .Tane; children, George, Joseph, William, Madison, Davi of proha.Io. Oct. 21. 1825: \\\h\ nanif not jiivtMi: t'liildnii Pavid, Huiih, S>is- anna, I'dU.v; prautlson, .lames KtMlick; oxoi'S., llujih Fulton, l>avi(l Fulton; wits., Kobort Thompson, John MoCon- noll. Sr,, Adam Kobison. •lOIlN FFLTON, Harrison co.; dato of will. Sopt. '21, 1824; dato of probate, Sopt. 2, lS2r>; wifo, name not si-ivon; ihildron, Nancy, l\achcl. Mary. Cyn- thia, S;u-;ih. Thomas, Alexander. Rob ort: oxces.. .lohu Ualla.uher, .lohn M. Cannon; wits., Samuel Grabel, Rachel Crabel. IMIILIP FULTON, date of will, Sept. 7. IS-tl; dato of probate, Nov. — , 1S41: wifo, Sarah: children, John, Ah^x- ander. William, riiilip. Jane, Rowland. Hann.-ih Kirkpatrick. VAr/a Lantz, ts;;;a-Aun. .Alary-Ann, Jr.liana; .urand- son. Philii> Fulton; exec, Alexander Fulton; wits., Samuel Rowlnnl. Frank- lin Carson. WILLIAM CALLAIIFR, Harrison CO.: date of will, June Ki, 1S;U: date of probate, Nov. 8, 1832; wife, Jane; children. James, Thomas-B., AVilliam. John. ^larpiret, Julyau: execs., Jane Gallaher. .lames (Jallaher; wits., Wil- liam Holmes, Allen Jamison. SOLOMON GAISIBLE, Archer town ship; date of will Feb. 4, 18.VJ: dnte of probate, Nov. 1. 18r)2; wife, name not Riven; brother, John; legatees, Eliza- beth Calwell, Clarissa Gamble, Solo- mon Gamble; execs., James S. Mct^oy. AlexaudiM- Holland; wits., Willinm Arnold, James S. ISIcCoy, .lacob Lewis. JOB GATCHEL. Cadiz township; date of Avill. Feb. 10. ISl.''^; date of pro- bate, ;March 28, 181.">; wife, name not given; sisters. Ester Puuh. Rachel Perry; brothers, Thomas, Ja(>ob and Joseph; mother, Sarah (witchel; execs., Sarah Gatehel. ,Tohn Perry; wits., John Carson, AVilliam Rojj'crs. JAMES GEARY, date of will. Jan. 2n. ISir.; date of probate. Oct. 17. 1S2(): fatlier, "William (^earv: wits., William Wickoff, Abijah Robinett, Thomaa Crabtree. TllO.MAS GU5B0NS, Green town- ship; date of will, Feb. 24, 1834; date ol i)robate. May 28, 1838; wife, Sarah; niece, Eleanor Pairy; brother, Joshua; exei'., Sarah (.Jihbons; wits., Jam, s ll.nuilton, Eli llatiiillou, Alex, llauul- tou. JOSEPH GILBERT, date of will, Feb. 27, ]8;{2; date of prolate, Jui e 11, 1832; wile, name not ,uivcn; cousins, Gordon R. Hosy, Eli Hosy, John llosy, Levi Hosy, John \N arti'l, Joseph \\ eii.-, Jt)sei»h G. AlivinsiUi, Bazalci-l Wills, Esier Warfel. Jane Wells. .M;iry Wai- fel, Susanna Warfel, Marj;aret ^^■ells, Harriet Bell, yiary Jane Atkinson, exec. Samuel A\ artel; wits., Joseph Bradcn. Waller P.ianeu. THOMAS GILHA.M, date of will. July 21, 18.~)(>; date of probate, Auu'. T. 18r)(;; wife, Holly; nephew, William Reese Burr; execs., wile, Dully Gil- ham, and EUsey Moi)r; wits., J. \V. \\herry, Isaac Clevcni;er, Thomas Jones. WILLIAM (HLMORE. date of will, July K\ 18;>2; date of pro ate, Oct. 24. 18;>:>; wife. Rose; chililren, Nathaniel, Francis, John, James. William, Gor- ou. .lane. Rose; lirauililau.uhtcr, Eslei-; lej;ate(>, Jane McMul en; execs., Jauas iNL'Adams, .losliua Dickerson; wit;-.. Mat hew Steen, Samuel Duulap, Janus I'orter. JOHN GILLESPIE, Stock township; date o( will, Dec 20, 1831; date of \'i^< bate, April 2, 1834; wife, Jane; cli 1- dren, John, Thompson, James, Maria Lmsiey, Nancy, Mariiaret, Elizabitii, Sarah; exec, Jane Gillespie; wits., Richard Wagers. Henry Green. JOHN GILLIS, date of will, Jan. 12. 1832; date of probate. ISlarcIi 31. 18;M: wile, nauu> not jiiven; children, .lames Elizabeth; exec, dauiihter, Elizalteth McCamcss; wits., James Robertson, John Speedy, Samuel Kelly. JACOB (JLASENER, Harrison co.; date of will, Feb. 2, 183J»; dale of pn- bate, March 1), 1852; wife, Ruth; chil- HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 419 dren, Mary, Jacob, Ilauiiah Ilays, Nicholas, I'liidciice McJJiidc, Nancy Dickcrsoii; execs., Tlioujas (Jiviniolcy, TlKJiiias flo^^': wils., Isaac Lcw.s, WilliaiJi \\ ili'.N , (Jcor;^*; Aikinoi. JOHN OLAKENOK, (a e of will, Aug. 7, ]S.';i; (!at,b I'arker; exec, Jacob I'arker; wits., James Jud- kins, James Judkin, Jr., 'Jliomas Koss. JESSE GOODWIN, Harrison co.: date of will, Api-il U, 1854; date of probate, Oct. 9, 185!>; wife, Ruth; chil- dren, Kinsoy, ^^'ilson, Abi, Lydia I'ickett, Hannah Sinj^er, Lacy Sing -r, Mary Worley, Martha; exet prec., William Fulton; wits., Alexan der Patterson, William Tweed. THOMAS GRACE, date of will, April 28, 1839; date of probate, Nov. 18, 1830; wife, name not given: clii - dren, George, Francis, John, Matthew, Thomas, Jane; son-in-law, John Craw- ford; execs., Joha Grace, John Craw ford: wits., John Leeper, Charles Mc- Di\ it. EBENEZER GRAY. Green town- ship, date of will, Feb. 4, 1850; date of probate. Felt. V,, 18(;i: wife, Margaret; cliildi-i n, William, JoiiaMian, Joliu-l'., Samuel-R., Benoni, Rezin. l*h»;be; exec, Jonathan Gray. SAMUEL GREEN, Franklin town- ship; date of will, Feb. 14, 1850; date of iirobate, April 30. 18f;0; wife, Mary; childi-en, Nathan, John, Thomas, Rob- ert, Josei)li, Ellen Gallaher, Sarah Myers, lOlizabelli, Ann, Rufli Work, Mary Jane Gretm; execs., (Jiinningharu Gallaher, Samuel Work; wits., Dr. J. B. Ong, Josiah Scott. VALE.VTINE GREER, dat<' of will, B^eb. 18, 1827: date of i>robate, Sept. 3. 1827; wife, l-!elinda; childrc;n, Mary IMigli, Rebeccii Elliott, Nancy Dunlap, Hannah Dunlap, Actions, "William, John, <^;eorge; exec, William Gn^er; wits., \'an F.rovvn, Roljert I'>urnhill, James Brown. MARY (iREGG, date of will, April 18, 1847; date of probate, April 2<',, 1847; sisters, Hannah <^)regg, I^ydi.i Gregg; exec, Joseph Ilolloway; wits , Brandus Bethel, Aaron Holloway. I'1{ESLI':Y GREGG, Ohio co.; date of will, Sejit. 10, 1840: date of probate. Nov. 17, 1840; wife, Sarah; son, Pres- ley, and four other children, names not given: execs., Sarah Gregg. Henry Barricklow: wits., p:iizabeth W. Parks, Ann Cunningham. JOSEPH GRIMES, Wheeling town- ship, Belmont CO., O.; date of will, Jan. 11, 1837: date of probate. Feb. 20, 1810; wife, Martha-E.; children, William, .Joseph. George-D., John, Lucinda, Isa- bella, Juliann Cami>bell; execs., Martha E. Grimes, M'llliarn Grimes; wits., William Boggs, John Lyle. WILLIAM GRUMES, Cadiz town- ship; date of will, .May 18, 1840; date of probate, Aug. 27. 1840; wife, Re- becca; children, Willi.arn, Anderson. Thomas, Eliza Sloan, Nancy, M,irtha- .Tane; sister, .Tane; exec. Anderson Grimes; wits., Charles Pattirson. Thomas C. Vincent. ABRAHAM GRINE, date of will, March 10, 1842; date of probate, Aug. 420 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 18, 1842; wife, Catherine, children, Daniel, Jacob, John, Sophia Straiis- baugh, Hannah, Catherine; grandcliil- tlreu, George, Sophia, Catherine, Ab- raham, and Daniel Higgles; execs., Ja- cob Grine, Peter Strausbaugh; wits., Jacob Kail, Robert Orr. JAMES McC. GALBRAITH, Harrison CO.; date of will June 11, 1857; dale of probate, Aug. 1, 1857; wife, name not given: children, John-D., Elizabeth Moorehead, Mary, Nancy Paxtou, De- borah, Sarah, Jane, Tabitha Baldwin; wits., Samuel Foreman, Samuel Paul. JOSEPH GUNDY, date of will, June 28, 1820; date of probate, March IS, 1823; wife, name not given; children, Rebeckah, Christina, Mary, Reginah, Magdalena, Framia, Benjamin, Jo.-eph; exec, John Heastand; wits., John Crom, Jacob Crom. ALEXANDER GUNNING, date of will, Feb. 2, 1859; date of piobate, Nov. IG, 1859; wife, name not g.ven; son, John; exec, John Gunning; wits., S. R. Magee, Robert Hillis, SAMUEL GUTHENE, date of will, Sept. 16, 1851; date of probate, Oct. 10, 1851; wife, Elizabeth; daughter, Jane; execs., names not given; wits., M. R. Williamson, Daniel Garven. ROBERT GUTHRY, Cadiz town- ship; date of will. May 2, 1815; date of probate, July 5, 1815; wife, name not given: children, Robert, Nathaniel, John, Josiah, Samuel, AVilliam, David, Jame«, Joseph, .Fane, Nancy, Sally, Martha; execs., William Guthry, Roi)- ert Guthry; wits., George S. Broche, Charles Robison. ROBERT GUTHRIE, Harrison co.; date of will, Aug. 4, 1852; date of pro- bate. May 8, 1854; wife, Jane; children, Lidia, William, Margaret, Sarali, Mary, Rebecca, Elizabeth, Isabella, Sophia-M., Nathaniel-F., Robert-C; exec, Robert Pittis; wits.. James C. Guthrie, Robert Pittis. JONAS GUTSHALL, Harrison co ; date of will, Oct. 9, 1843; date of pro- bate, Aug. 12, 1844; wife, Mary; execs.. brother, Joseph Gutshall, and wife, Mary Gutshall; wits., George Shaffer, Benjamin Manbeck. HUGH GWYNN, date of will, Nov. 8, 1858; d.Tte of probate, Nov. 9, 18(n; wife, name not given; children, Hugh, Thomas, William, John, Mary Carter, Margaret Barcroft, Elizabeth Rowles, Susan Madden, Rachel Wilson, Sarah Ann Cope, Hannah Neely; execs., Ralph Barcroft, Hezekiah Rowles; wits., AVilliam Arnold, Jesse Arnold, W. H. Arnold. THOMAS HALEY, Cadiz village; date of will, Feb. 21, 1832; data of probate, March 15, 1832; Avife, nanu' not given; grandsons, Joseph S. Healy, Harrison Griffith; legatees, Henry Pep- per, Mary Ann Pepper; execs, Thomas Bingham: wits., Nathan Reiley, Cas- per Singhaus. JAMES HAMMOND, date of win, Aug. 22, 1850; date of probate, March 25, 1851; wife, name not given; chil- dren, Harvey, George, William, Sam- uel, Mary Ann Fowler, Deborah Ruby; execs., George Hammond, William Hammond; wits., II. AVorstell, Joseph McGonagle. JOHN HANES, Harrison co.: date of will, Sept. 13, 1824; date of probate, Nov. — , 1824; wife, Rachel; children, Sarah, Lewiza, Samuel, Israel; execs., Israel Hanes; wits., Joseph Fry, Ben- jamin Paisley, Robert Paisley. JOHN HAUN, German township; date of will, Feb. 20, 1827; date of pro- bate, March 31, 1828; wife, Elizabeth; children, Betsy, Polly, Catherine, Fanny, Susanna; exec, John Wagner; wits., Frederick Zollars, Benjamin Whitmore. ANN HANNA, German township; date of will, March 23, 1833: daie of probate, July 23, 1833; daughters Ann, Prudence; exec, Joseph McCollough; wits., .Toseph McCollough, John G. Mc- Collough. JAMES HANNA, Washington CO.; Pa.; probate. May 4, 1813; wife, Anne; HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 421 children, Moses, Matthew, William, Joseph, Robert, Samuel, Prudence, Jean, Anne, Martha; execs., James McNary, Robert Hanna; wits, Moses McWhirter, John Smith. JOHN HANNA, Harrison co.; date of will, May 13, 1847; date of probat", Aug. IG, 1S47; wife, name not given; son, Johu-E.; son-in-law, John Ogle- _iee; nephews, John-Kowlaud, James, and William Finley ' Hanna; grand- daughter, Mary Ann Small; execs., John Oglovee, Thomas L. Jewett; wits., M. Wilson, R. Teat. JOHN HANNA, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will, July 19, 1S49; date of probate, Aug. — , 1849; wife, Rachel; brothers, William, James, Ezekiel, Samuel, Archibald; grandsons, Sauuh:'! and John Hanna, and John H. Ham- mond; legatee, Levi Dickerson, exec-^., James Hanna, Alexander Hammond; wits., George Atkinson, Peter Thomas. MARY HANNA, Green township; date of will, June 21, 1853; date of pro- bate, Nov. 29, 1853: daughter. Prud- ence, and other children, not named; legatees, Foreign Missionary Society, American Bible Society, and Educa- tional Society of the Presbyterian Church; exec, James Hanna; wits., James Taggart, James Simpson. ROBERT HANNA. Mercer. Mercer county. Pa.; date of will, June 21, 1854; date of probate, Nov. 29, 1854: wife, Mary; grandchildren, Mary Hanna Small, Jennette Small, Robert Wilson Hanna Small, and Elizabeth Ann Small, all children of Edward anrittith. JOHN HEMRY, North township, will, not dated: date of probate, Sept. 3, 1827; wife. Catherine; children, John, Henry, Isaac, George, Abraham, Eliza- beth, Magdalin, Mary, Sarah, Anna; execs., Henry Hemry, Isaac Ilemry; wits., Maholm Stewart, John Hagey. JOHN HENDERSHOT, date of will, July 27, 1857; date of probate, June 17, 1851J; wife, Elizabeth; exec, Elizabeth Heudershot; wits., Thomas Fhillip.s, Lewis Lewtou. THO^SIAS HENDERSON, date of will, JMay 25, 1852; date of probate, June 21, 1852; wife, name not given; nephews and nieces mentioned, no names given; execs., Alexander Haver- tield; wits., William H. Watson, A. H. Burtch. ANDREW HENDRICK, date of will, Feb. 25, 1835; date of probate, March 30, 1835; wife, Elizabeth; chil- dren, Andrew, John, Jacob, James, George, Margaret Sickles, Susanna Ferrier, Mary Spangar, Rachel Hend- ricks; execs., Elizabeth Hendricks; David G. Meguire; wits., George Roush, Richard Lyons. JOHN HENDRICKS, Archer town- ship: date of will. ]May 29, 1818: date of prohate, Aug. 4, 1818; wife, Marga- ret; children, Peter, Andrew, John, Ja- cob, Joseph, Mary Picaly, Eve Gaili- ger, Sarah Leiser; execs., Margaret Hendricks, Peter Hendricks; wits., John Forsyth, Abraham Kail. ' JAMES HENRY, will, not dated; date of probate, Dec. 11, 1860; Avife. name not given; brother, Samutd; sister, Elizabeth Henry; nephew, Nicholas S. Heni\v; execs.,. Tames Kirk- pa trick; wits., John Beall, J. M. Estep. JANE HENRY, date of will, Nov.— , 1845: date of probate. May 19, 1857; sisters, Margaret, Elizabeth; execs., Margaret Henry, Elizabeth Henry; wits., William Boggs, James Simeral. MARGARET HENRY, date of will, Feb. 20, 1858; date of probate, June 30, 1858; legatee, Elizabeth Henry; execs., Elizabeth Henry; wits., Charles Cobbs. Hiram liafferty. VALENTINE HIBBS, date of will, April 17, 1845; date of probate, Aug. — , 1845; wife, name not given; children mentioned, names not given; execs., William Hibbs, Amos Smith; Avits., William C. Johnson, R. S. Hallaway; JOHN HILBERT, date of will, Feb. 25, 1838; date of probate, Dec. 7, 1840; wife, Elizabeth; children, Daniel, Henry, Jacob, I'eter, John, Catherine, liVdia, Sally, Mary, Elizabeth, Sophia; execs., Peter Hilbert, Daniel Hilbert; wits., Nathan Adams, John Wagner. PETER HILBERT, Shortcreek township; date of will, April 2, 1815: date of probate. April 28, 1815; wife, p]lizabeth; children, Susannah, Lydia, David; exec, brother, Daniel Hilbert; wits., James McNutt, Martin Snyder, Kbtnezer Gray. LITTLETON HILL, Cadiz tOAvn- ship: date of will, Oct. 10, 1845; date of probate, Nov. — , 1845; Avife, Elizabeth; children, Sarah, Bleuor, Saloame, Mary, Roland, Littleton, William-H.; execs., Thomas Hogg, John Bricker, Zepheniah Bayless; Avits., H. S. Mc- Fadden, William J. Fry. ANTHONY HILLER, date of will, June 14, 1840; date of probate, June 13, 1853; wife, name not given; chil- dren, Peter, Daniel, BoAven, Louisa; execs., names not given; wits., Daniel Black, Robert McCauley. PETER HIMERAUGH, Rumley toAvnship; date of Avill, April 21, 1848; date of probate, Sept. 4, 1855; wife, name not given; children, George, Margaret Gillespie, Peter, Daniel, Wil- 424 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY liani, .Tosopli: oxocs.. Daniel Hiiiie- bausli. Joseph Iliinebaush; wits., John G ruber, Fianlcliu M. (Jiiibor. JACOB IIINES, Archer township; date of will, Dec. 17, 1S4S; date of pro- bate. Jan. 3, 1840; wife, Susannahichil- dreii. .Jacob. Peter, .Vnios, John. Geor.tre. Elizabeth Buchanan, Margaret, Abigail; execs., George Hines, Josepli Buchanan; wits., Samuel Shaffer, Wil- liam Wilson, Hugh Cavan. RUDOLPH HINES, date of will, Sept. 4, 1823; date of probate, Nov. n. 18123; wife, Sarah; children, Daniel, William, James, Jolm. Isaac, Samuel. Joseph, Mary. ■Martha; execs., Jolm Hiues, Jolin :Mitchell; wits., Thomas Cl)rist.v, William Henderson, J. Harris. WILLIA:M IIINES, date of will. Feb. 4, 184.^: date of probate. April — , 1S45; wife, Sarah; children, Chris- topher, John, David, and two daugh- ters, not named: exec, .John Hines; wits., John Cramblett, William Lyport. FREDERICK HISELER, German township; date of will, Oct. 2, 1849; date of probate, Dec. 17, 1849; wife, name not given; children. Henry, Solo- mon. Frederick. John, Samuel, David, Catherine. Rachel, Susanna, Elizabeth] Nancy, Charlotte, Sarah; execs., David Easterday; wits., Frederick Abel, John G ruber. THOMAS HITCHCOCK, date of will, Oct. 23. 1823; date of probate, March 31, 1820; wife, Isabella; chil- dren, .Tohn. Samuel, Isaac, Naomie Ferrell. Jane Hill. Amelia Malion, Nancy Ferrell, Ann Leara; exec, John Hitchcock; wits., William Tingley, William Cavanee, William Lowery. ANDREW HOGGE, date of will, Feb. 12, 1.801; date of probate, March 2(1, 1801; sister, Phebe Hogge; nephcAV, Martin Yan Buren Hogge; exec, Mark Wilkin. JOHN HOGG, :Mount Pleasant, .Tef- forson CO., O.: date of will, Oct..">, 18r>.~; date of probate. Oct. 20, lSr)7; wife, Miriam; children. William, Georee-T.. Timothy-K., Sarah Ann Simeral, Mary Tipton, Ann, Elizabeth, Caroline; grand-cliildren. Mary-Ann, George-H., James-Y., and Ann Elizabeth Simeral; William-B., and John Hogg Tipton; John-T., Nancy-M., and Rachel Jane Mitchell; sons in-law, Robert C. Kir-, George W. Dihvorth, Joseph S. Chand- ler; niece, Ilaimah Bi-own; execs, Wil- liam Hogg, (Jcorge T. Hogg; wits., J. M. Estep, Jonathan Binns. PHEBE HOGGE, Washington town- ship, date of will, Sept. 7, 1844; date of pr()))ate, Nov. 9, 18G0; children, An- drew, Phebe; execs., Mark Hogge, Thomas Holliday; wits., Thomas J. Holliday, Nancy Holliday. ROBERT HOGGE, date of will, May 2, 1827; date of probate, Seiit. 4, 1827: wife, IMieby; children, Robert, Mark, INIatthew, James, William, An- drew, Jane. Polly, I'heby; execs., Robert Hogge. Mark Hogge; wits., Joseph Fry, Bazaleel Steel, Joseph Bigley. WILLIAM HOGG, Fayette county, Pa.; date of will, Sept. 5, 1830; date of probate, Feb. 8, 1841; wife, Mary; nephews, George, John, and Thomas Hogg, George Familton; niece, Doro- thy AYilson; legatee, Timothy Rogers; execs., George Hogg, John Hogg: wits., James L. Bowman, James Veech. JOHN HOLLETT, date of will, Sept. 7, 1859; date of probate, Oct. 1, 1859; wife, Elizabeth; children, William, George, Joseph, Benjamin, John. Han- nah Hibbs, Sarah Hibbs, Elizabeth Whitington; execs., Joseph Hollett, Jonathan Hollett; wits., Thomas Wil- son, John Knox. ROBERT HOLLIDAY, Freeport township; date of will, June 18, 185."); date of pi-oliate. July IG, 1855; wife, name not given; execs., R. K. Price, Eldred G. Holliday; wits., John Gree- walt, Yalentiue H. Romans, R. K. Price. JOSEPH HOLLIER, date of will, March 8, 18.58; date of probate, March 17, 1858; wife, name not given; lega- HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 42" tws, Robort Pitti?:, Amelia Hazlet; exec, Dr. S. R. Maj?ee; wifis., lioberl I'ittis. Henry Ilillyer. DANII:L IIOLLOWAY, date of will June 24, IHIW; date of probate, Maivli 2(, is;i7; Avife, Mary; eJiildren, Jonas, John, Mary; execs., wife, Mary Hollo- way, and Jonas Hollo way; wits., Isaac Jones, Enoch Jones, ZacLariah' Low- den. JACOB HOLLOWAY, date of will May 1. 1S48; date of probate, Jmie 0, ]S5]; wife, Martha; ohildren, Daniel, AVilliaiii. Jacob, Sarah: stepson, John A\:iiJi<'ld: nieces, Ann Rran^on, Eliza Wilson, Nancy l-"aucett; execs, Daniel Holloway, AVilJiam Hollowav, and Ja- cob Holloway; wits., Asa' Branson, Caleb Brockee. JONAS Iir>LLOWAY, date of will Jan. 24, 1S.j7; date of probate, Maich 11, IS-IT; wife, name not {,'iven; cJjil- dren, Williani-J., Daniel, John-F., Isaac-J., Maliahih-A.. Sarah-M.; exec.,' John Green; wits., James J. Billjn'^s- ley, Henry J. Randall. niARLES HOLT, Atliens township, date of will, June 7, 1841; date of pro- bate, March 2, 1842; wife, name not given; cliildren, Samuel, Cyrus, Thoma.-J, Amy; Kr;ind-b. 20, 1837; date of probate, March 27, 1837; wife, Christann; exec, Christann Johnson; wits., James Scott, Thomas Baird. BENJAMIN JOHNSON, Nottingham township; date of Avill, Nov. 4, 1841; date of probate, May 2, 1842; wife, Sarah; children, Abiram, Enoch, Joseph, Lemuel, Ephriam, Gabriel, Benjamin, Bershebas, Ellen, Druzilla; grand-daughter, Nancy Suddith; execs., Abiram Johnson, Ephriam Johnson; wits.. William Arnold, William Bar- rett, Thomas Phillips. EPHRIAM JOHNSON, date of will, Sept. 7, 1833; date of probate, March 31, 1834; wife, :Mary-: children, Epli- riam, Jane, Margaret, Eliza, Ann; exec, Mary Johuson; wits., Archibald McGrew, Ezekiel Hanna. HENRY JOHNSON, Moorefield townsliip; date of will, Jan. 25, 1850; date of probate, Nov. — , 1850; wife, name not given; children, William-C , Henry-M., Wesley, Astory-F., Baliuda ISIcBean, Juliann Tallman, Harriet Mc- Pherson, Catherine Price; execs., wife, and son, Henry Johnson; wits., John Hastings, John Beale. JOHN B. JOHNSON, Green town- ship; date of will, Jan. 21, 1845; date of probate, Aug. — , 1845; wife, name not given; uncle, Benjamin Johuson; exec, Henry Eagleson; wits., John Richardson, Lemuel Louden. NATHAN JOHNSON, Nottingham township; date of will, Oct. 17, 1841; date of probate, Oct. 20, 1844; wife, Mary; children, John-C, William-H., Nathan, IGlizabeth Perrine, Margaret, Jane, Emeline, Nancy, Rachel, Ciuthia, Harriett, Mary Johnson, widow of John, (his father); legatee, Wesleyan Cluu'ch; exec, Abiram Johnson; wits., Archibald Blair, Jonathan Perrin. NATHAN JOHNSON, Green town- ship, date of will, Oct. 1, 1825; date of probate, April — , 1845; wife, Mary; children, John-B., James-S., Samuel-P., Mary-Jane; execs., James Black, Sam- uel Jolinson; wits., Moses Uniuhnrt, Mary Black. WILLIAM JOHNSON, date of will. May 17, 1855; date of probate, June 15, 1855; wife, Agues; children, Mary-E., Susanna Fisher, Matthew, Bazzel, Temperance Neal, William, Elizabeth Arnell, Agnes Wilson: execs., Jam^^s Neal, Albert Johnson; wits., Juhn Davis. Robert McMiHen, Samuel M. Bog-gs. BENJAMIN JONES, date of will, HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 427 Aue:. 3, 3S51; date of probate, June 5, 1852; wife, name not given; brothers, Isaac, Thomas, Jolin, and Marslial .Tones; sisters. Caroline Hollo way, Mn- linda Suddnth, Lydia Lacy; exec, .Jonas Hollowny; wits., Nimrod Hut- son, John Barker, Lewis Jones. JOHN .TONES, date of will, Nov. 12, 1837; date of probate, Aug. 20, 1S3S; wife, name not given; children, Isaac, Benjamin, Alfred, Thomas, John, Cy- rus, Marshall, William, Caroline, Ma- linda, Lydia; execs., Prettyman Con- well, jMich.nel Brown; wits., Prettyman Conwell, Michael Brown; GABRIEL ICAIL, date of will, .Tan. 4, 1850; date of probate, Jan. 17, 1850; children, Jesse, Gahrial, Hyruni, Felicia, Terbitha; wits., Titus Beck, wife, Elizabeth; Joseph, Cridah, Stephen, Sarah, exec, Titus Beck; Joseph Buchanan. JOHN KAIL, date of will, March 1, 1821; date of probate. May 9, 1821; wife, Catharine; children, Henry, George, .John, Jacob, Frederick, Betsy, Folly, Peggy, Nancy, Anny; execs., Henry Kail, .Jacob Kail; wits., John Zellars, Solomon Arnold. WILLIAM KEEPP:RS, date of will INlay 11, 1842: date of probate. May — , 184i3; wife, Elizabeth; children, Cas- ander Fowler, Elizabeth Orr, Nancy Hogland, Jamima Maxwell, William, Isaac; grandson. William K. Maxwell; execs., wife, Elizabeth Keepers, aiid son, William Keepers; wits., .Tames Evans, Abraham Barger, Michael Con- oway. DANIEL KELLY, Union township, county; date of will, April 28, 18.30; date of probate, Aug. 1, 1831; wife, name not given; children, Wil- liam, Isaac, David, .Tonatlian, Anne, Charlotte, I\Iary, pjlizabeth; execs., William Cliamper, Jacob Hing: wits., William Champer, .Tohn S. McClean. JOHN S. KELLY, date of will. Nor. 5, 1847: date of probate, Nov. 11, 1847; wife, Esther; children, Alexander, Joseph, Mary Jane, and children of de- ceased daughter, Martha; exec, Sam- uel Moorehad; wits., C. Dewey, John McCrta, William Eagleson. WILLIAM KELLY, date of will, Jan. 9, 1849; date of probate, March — , 18.>1; wife, Sally; children, Daniel, Mary Woolf, Nancy Barnhouse, Sall;- Barnliouse, Elizabeth Sarbough, Philip, Christina; execs., Philip Kelly, Daniel Kelly; wits., Thomas Tomliuson. James Hanna. MOSES KENNEDY, Green town- ship: date of will, Oct. 26, 1855; date of probate, April 25, 1857; wife, Cath- erine: children. Alai'tin-S., Benjamin- F.-M.-B., Caroliue-:\r., Martha-A., Mar- garet F. Tiu-ncr, Isabella Clark: execs., Martin S. Kennedy, Benjamin F. Ken- nedy; wits., Jacob Snider, Ingram Clark. ABSALOM KENT, will, not dated: date of probate, Aug. 31, 1839; wife, name not given; children.' Elizabeth, Nancy, Sarah, .Tohn, Jo.seph, Absalom, William: grandsons. Absalom, .Tohn, .Jacob; execs., Michael Conaway, Aaron Conaway; wits., William Walker, John H. Kent. JOSEPH KENT, date of will. Aug. 25, 1S24; date of probate, Oct. 30, 1829; wife, Ann; children, William, Absa- lom, Sarah Worth, Mariam; grand- .sons, Richard Worth, and William Worth; execs., William Kent, Absa- lom Kent; wits., Thomas Patton, John Baker. JOSEPH KENT, Cadiz township; date of will. Oct. — , 1829; date of pro- bate, Dec 12, 1820; wife, Esther; chil- dren, Joseph, Absalom, Esther, Sarah, Kit; execs., father, Absalom Kent, John Poulson; wits., INIartin Wilson, Rachel, Mary, .Tane Green, Elizabeth Hezekiah Rowles, J. Ilarri-s- JAMES KERR, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will, Se])t. 8, 1824; date of probate, June 13, 1825; wife, Nancy; children, John, Janu>s, William, Sam- uel, :Mary, Jane, Betsey; grand-chil- dren, Alexander Morrow, Nancy Ann 428 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Morrow; execs., James Kerr, William Kerr; Avits., Isaac M. AVallace, Tbomp- sou Kea. HENRY KIMMEL, Rumley town- ship; date of will, Oct. 23, 1826; date of probate, Nov. 11, 182G; wife, Cliris- tena; children mentioned, no names given; exec, John Kimmel; wits., J. R. Kiikpatrick, Andrew Hendrick, Sam- uel Gutery. LENARD KIMMEL, date of will. April 9, 1823; date of probate, March 7, 182(5; wife, Susannah; children, Frederick, John, Henry, Adam, Len- ard, Nancy Harman, Susan Guttery; execs., names not given; wits., Jacob Mowrey, John Summermau, Jamts G. Ward. JOHN KING, date of will, April 13, 1836; date of probate, Oct. 31, 1842; wife, name not given; grand-son, Isaac Keepers; daughter, Nancy Barnes; son- in-law, William Keeiiers; exec, Wil- liam Keepers: wits., Matthias Lane, Jr., Michael Conaway, Thomas Moody. HANNAH KINSEY, Columbiana county; date of will, March 8, 1843; date of probate. May — , 1843; nieces, Aseneth Mendinhall, Hannah Singer, sisters, Alice McMillan, Jane Mat tliews, Ann Goodwin; brother, John Michner; sister-in-lnw. Mary Michner; execs., .Tolin C. Michner, Jesse Good- win; wits., Joshua Shinn, Robert Jor- dan, John Santee. JAMES KIRKPATRICK, date of will, April 1, 1840; date of probate, June — , 1840; wife, name not given; children, Hugh, Robert, James, John, William, Elizabeth McCollough, Polly; exec, John Kirkpatrick; wits., William Wallace, William Scott. JOHN KNIGHT, Nottingham town- ship; date of will, Nov. 21. 1829; date of probate, June 12, 1837; wife, Cath- erine; son, Hiram; exec. Catherine Knight; wits., Benjamin John:»on, .loseph Rogers, John ('arson. ARTHUR KNOX, Cadiz township; date of will, Nov. 20, 1856; date of pro- bate, Aug. 31, 1857; wife, name not given; children, William, Clara; exec, Jeremiah Knox; wits., Rachel Saxton, John A. Bingham. WILLIAM KNOX, Cadiz township; date of will, Jan. 8, 1850; date of pro- bate, Oct. 18, 1851; wife, Hetty; chil- dren, David, James, Jeremiah, John, William, Arthur, Sarah, Nancy; grand- son, James Allen; legatee, Matthew McColm; execs., names not given; wits., S. McCormick, William Arnold, S. V. Smiley. WILLIAM KYLE, date of will, Oct. 17, 1855; date of probate, Aug. 15, 1859; Avife, Mary; children, William, Thomas, Margaret Ramsey, Mary Atkinson, Martha Hobes, Jemima H. Taggart; exec, William Reed; wits., W. N. Har- rah, C. W. Reed. ROBERT LADD, date of will, Jan. 30, 1852; date of probate, Nov. 30, 185S; wife, Mary; grand-children, Mary Hardgraves, Mary, Elizabeth, Sarah- Ann, and Robert P. Ladd; execs., Wil- son Madox; wits., James Adams, Nathan Lupton, Joshua Adams. EDAVARD LAFFERTY, date of will, Nov. 4, 1836; date of probate, Nov. 23. 1836; wife, Margaret; children, Ed- ward, John, George, Joseph, Hiram, Finley, Elizabeth Grimes, Margaret, Mary-Jane, execs., Margaret Lafferty, John liafferty; wits., William Taggart, James Miller. SA:MUEL LAFFERTY, Moorefield township; date of will. Dec. 3, 18">6; date of probate, Jan. 13. 1858; wife, name not given; children, Jacob, Jo.seph, Jane Dickerson, Beliiah Dick- erson; grand-daughters, Eveline Fam- elton, Sarah Dickerson; execs., namfs not given; wits., T. R. Crawford, G. S. Rice. LAIZURE, see Lezear. THO]MAS LA KIN. Freenort town- ship,: date of Avill, Feb. 21, 18.35; date of probate, March 7, 1835; wife, name not giA^en; daughter. Rebecca Robin- son; grand-sons, William and Samuel HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 429 W. Lakin: execs., Thomas Lakiu, Wil- liam Lakin; Avits., Benjamin P. Fer- guson, Caleb Hibbard. JOHN LAMB, date of will, March 18, 1840; date of probate, April — , 18-10; wife, name not given; children, Laurence, Timothy, Jacob, Elizabeth, Max\v, Christina, Nancy, Hannah, Mar- garet, Catherine, Rachel, Sarah; execs., names not given; wits., John M. Uui- stot, Samuel Skinner. Elias Gotshel. JOHN LAVELY, date of Will, Nov. 6, 1841: date of probate, Dec. 25, 1841; wife, name not given; children, Na- than, Henry, Elias, John, Sally, Caro- line, Mary, Rachel, Eliza; execs., Henry Lavely; wits., James Hiues, EdAVard Martin, Thomas Wilson. ABRAHAM LAYPORT, date of will, Sept. 12, 18.50; date of probate, Nov. 5, 1850; wife, Sarah; extc. Sarah Layport; wits., Hamilton McFadd.n, William Layport. GEORGE LEEPORT, date of will, Sept. n, 1814; date of probate, Nov. 29, 1814; wife, Nancy; children. Mar- garet Hevlin, Mary Hevlin, Dianna Spiker, Nancy Wilson, Susannah Babb; grand-daughter, Jane Wilson; execs., Rurlolph Hines, Samuel Hevlin; wits., William Hall, Peter Moor. ISAAC LAYPORT, date of will, Aug. 8, 1825; date of probate, Oct. 24, 1825; wife. Sarah; children, mentioned, no names given; execs., Sarali Layport, Alexander Henderson; wits., James Shimer, George Waller. JOHN LAYPORT, date of will, Feb. 11, 1839; date of probate. May — , 1839; wife, name not given; children, Wil- liam, Abraham, Isaac; execs., William Layport, George W. Bell; wits., John Tipton, John Hines. JOHN LEE, Jefferson county; date of will, Jan. 4, 1813; date of probate, Aug. 24, 1813; wife, Hannah; brothers, Hugh, Roljert, William, and one other, not named; three sisters, not named; nephews, John, son of William, and John, son of Robert; mother mention- ed, but not named; execs., brothers, William Lee, Hugh Lee; wits,, John Timmerson, Nathaniel CraAvford. REUBEN LEE, date of Avill, Oct. 2, 1844; date of probate, Oct. 28, 1844; wife, Fjlizabeth; son, John; execs., names not glAen; AAits., David LeAvis, AVashington Ourant. THOMAS LEE, date of will, Oct. 28. 1854; date of probate, Nov. 7, 18.54; Avife, Nancy: children. Elizabeth Black, Mary E. Clark, Jane W. Patton, Hen- rietta ;M. Lee, Haas-W., James, Thomas; grandson, Thomas L. Moure; execs., wile, Nancy Lee, Alexander Clark; wits., John Caruahan, W. Wil- son, J. T. Thomas. JAiSlES LEECH, date of will, Aug. 27, 1859; date of probate, Jan. 25, 1801; wife, name not given; children, Rob- ert, ,Tohn, Elizabeth Wilkins, Mary Jane Parkinson, Margaret Host; exec, John Leech. Avits., John Parkinson, Thomas Parkin.son, John 0. Gour.ay. JOHN LEGGIT, date of will, Sept. .29, 1855; date of probate, Aug. 2.5, 1857; wife, Sophia; children, John, Le- vi, Jesse, William-A.-D., Sarah; execs., Sophia Leggit, Jesse Leggit; wits., Ju(rob W. Grisinger, Lewis Leggit. ISAAC LEMASTER, date of will, March 30, 3844; date of probate, May — , 1844; wife, Jane; children, Nancy Rogers, liiddy Sammonton, Jeuny Pit- tinger, Margaret Ferrell, Susannah Roberson, Elizabeth, Abraham, Isaac, John, Ebenezer, William; execs., wife, Jane Lemaster, William Lemaster; AVits., William Smylie, Abraham Bus- by. JOSEPH LEWIS, Archer township; date of will. Dec. 18, 1851; date of pr(bate, Sept. 8, 18.52; Avife, Rachel; daughter, Hannah; grand-daughte.;, M;;ry K. Foulks; Avits., Jonathan Gray, Jtimes McKee. MOSES LEWIS, North township; date of will, June 3, 1837; date of pro- bate, June 16, 1837; wife, Ann; execs., Ann Lewis, George Foster; avUs , Caleb Sherman, Thomas Tomlinsou. 430 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY TONATIIAN I.EZKAR, NottinsilKiui tovnsliii); date of will, Jan. 20, ISl;); date of probato, Jul.v ."). 181'.); wife, .lane; childron, William, Amos, Roily, Elijah, Isaac, .Tulianno. Hctsy, ]Mirali, Air.elia: oxoc. Jane l.(v.t'ai-; wits., John Feote, P.onjamin lUiby, Edward Rnli.r. ELIZA LIXDSEY, Sandusky co., O ; rtoto of will, Dee. 5, 1S4S; date of i)V() bate, Ans. -, 1819; children, Elizii-M., Levina-J., ISIai'saret-A., Christina It. Oiblis. Elntlirons-C, James-M., ^^■il- liamll.; exec, William H. Dufliehl; wits., George W. Dnffield, Andrew lij nch. SI^SAN LINDSEY, date of will, March 10, IStJO; date of itrobate, Oct. 10, ISlil; children, Eliza Jane Malcem, Ann Cnlbertson; exec, Eliza Jane Mal- com: wits., George Cook, Abram C. Dony. WILLIAM LISLE, Archer township; date of will, Dec. 8, 1837; date of pro- bate Aug. 20, 1838; wife, Jane: chil- dren, James, John, Willi;im, ]\Iary Bartow, Anna Edie, Hannali Winters, Isabella McGonagle, Elizabeth Mc- Conkey; exec, James Devore: wits., Robert Maxwell, James Devore. JOSEPH T^OWDEN. date of will. Sept. IS. 1828: date of probate. Mart-h 12. 1832; wife, Ruth; wife, sole heir; exec, Rnth Lowden; Avits., William Wyckoff, Jonathan Crossley, Philip Ci'abtree. JOHN L0W:MTLT>ER, date of will, Jnly S. 1853: date of probate. Jan. 12, IS.'S; Avife, "Mary; sons. Manasse. John, Joshna, Baalam, Henry: exec, Andrew Mikesell; wits., John Grnber, Samuel L. Potts. THOMAS LTTKE, date of will, May 15, 1832; date of probate. May — 1830; wife, Martha: cliildron, Rebecca Ann AVorstel, Mary, INlartha, Delila, Betsey, Fanny: exec, ^larlha Luke: wits.. Morgan Lewis, James Adams, William Kerr. ANDREW T>YNCTT. .Tefferson town- ship; date of will, April 17, ISGO; date of probate. May 20, 1800; wife, Isa- bella; children, William-C, James-A., Mary, Ellen; exec, Isabella Lynch; wits., John Miller, John Wilkin. JOHN LYNN, Cadiz, Jeff»>rson coun- ty; date of will, Nov. 4, 1814; date of probate, Nov. 29, 1814; wife, Mary; children, James, Hannah; exi-c, John McConnell; wits., John McCounell, Robert Eyre, Robert Eyre, Jr. MARY LYNN, date of will, March 20, 18l(j; date of i)r()bate. Jtnie 21. 1852; children. Tayloi-, William, James, Joseph, Eliza Shepaid; exec, Taylor Lynn; wits.. Hugh B. Hawthorn, Wil- liam McCracken. GEOR(JE McADAMS, date of will. April 21, 1848; date of probate, Nov. 0, 1S4S; wife, name not given; children, TlKHuas. James, John, (Jeorge, Wil- liam, Sarah, ^Margaret Burnside, Mari.v ('anii)bell; execs., James iMcAdams, (Jcorge McAdams; wits., Allan Wal- lace; John Kirkpatrick. JOHN McADAMS, Lee county, Iowa; date of will, Sept. 8, 1848; date of pro- bate, Nov. 2, 1848; wife, Harriett; ex(M'S., wife, Harriett ]McAdanis, and brother, James McAdams: wits., Solo- mon Jackson; Solomon Cowles, Jr. DENNIS McBARRON, date of Avill, April 10, 1844; date of probate, Aug. — , 184(); Avife, Polly: children, Rosan- nah. Betsey, John, Samuel, Dennis, Andrew; exec, John Hitchcock; wits., Thomas Bingham. Josiah Scott. THOMAS INIcCALL, Washington county. I'enn.; date of will, jNFarch 31, 1849; date of probate, May 19, 1851, wife, Mary; nephcAvs, David StcAvart, Adams, John, Thomas, James, Alex- ander, and INIarshall McCall; sisters, Jane Walker; legatees, lUHsey and Polly Ralston, Thomas Trimble, INIary McCall Stewart, Elizabeth Stewart, p:iizabeth Boon, Thomas McCall I'eii- ticost, Thomas iMcCall Pat erson, Thomas McCall INIiller, Thomas Mc- Call Adams, Thomas Tigner, and Jane, Clarissa, and Nancy Mcl'^adden; execs., James Thompson, Galbreath HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 431 .StcwnrI; wiis.. T. J. Otlenljaiij,'h, John Sampson. WILT.IAM >r(rAKI{OL, dato of will. Juno 2.S, ].S44: date of probate, Auirust — , 18-14: childron, Flcmniin:;, Ocortip, Jobn, Scalt, Ann, IMarj/aret, Catlioiine Firobaufjli, Elizabeth Leep- cr, Marirari't Ilonsor, .Martha Iloiiser; px'oc, James Kvans: wits., Rolicit Ilau- lin, James J. Maolean. DARCT'S .Mff'LE.VRY, (lat.> of will, Maroh 24, 1S1'.): date of probate, July (). ISIO: children, Polly, John, Join MeCaslin, Roberts; j?rand-chiUlreu James and JiUie MeCleary; execs., "William Kelly, William MoCasliu; wits., Robert Orr, William Kelly. Wir-LIA.M .MeCLELLAND, Monroe township: date of will, Deo. 2!), 1.S4!); date of probate, Aiifr. — , 1850; brother, Andrew: sister, ^lartha: exec., Andrew McClelland; wits., Robert Henderson, Joshua Brown. NOBLE W. McCLIXTOCK, Stock township: date of will, April 8, 1S48: date of probate, Feb. 13, 1840; wife, name not f;iven; daufihters, Margaret, Eliza: exec, Jr)siah Scott; wits., Aaron Conaway, William Walker. JOHN McCONNEL, date of will, Sept. 7, 1831; date of probate, Oct. 24, 18.31; wife, Mary; children, John, Mary, Margaret, Elizabeth; sister, Elizabeth McConnell: exec, Joseph Rea; wits., William L. Robisou, Wil- liam Kincaid. ItOBERT McCONNELL, date of will, July 20, 1845; date of probate, Nov. ('), 1850; wife, Prudb. 13, 18.54; sister, Nancy McCracken; mother, Martha McCracken: exec., William McCracken; wits., John McConnell, John Brokaw, ROBERT Mccracken, date of will, Felj. 1, 1841: date of probate, Aug. — . 1840; wife, Martha; children, John, William, Robert, Margaret Sleelh, Mary White, Jane Love, Martha, Nancy; execs., William McCracken, Robert McCracken: wits., I'eter Per- rine, Ira T. McMillan, James McMil- lan. JOHN McCREA, Cadiz township; date of will, Nov. 21, 1855: date of pro- bate, Aug. 10, 1858; wife, Martha; lega- tees. Board of Foreign Missions, Board of Domestic r^Iissions, and Board of Education of the Presbyterian Church; execs., James Taggart, John Kerr; wits., Robert Lyons, Josiah Scott. ALEXANDER McCULLOUGH.date of will. May 10, 18.52; date of probate, July 3, 18.52; wife, .Tane; children, David, .John, I^slie, Alexander, El- leannr, .Lone Cunningham, Susanna, Mozena, Reliecca: execs., Jane McCul- lough, David McCidlough: wits., Martha Milligan, Thomas S. Milligan. ALEXANDER McCULLOUGH. ^Monroe township; date of will, Oct. 11, 1857; date of probate, Nov. 19, 1857; wife, name not given; children, Hugh, 435 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Harriet, Rebecca, Elizabeth; wits., John C. Plowman, James Long. JOHN McCULLOUGH, date of will, Feb. 7, 1840; date of probate, April 2, 1842; wife, Esther; children, Esther, Hanna, William, John, Joseph, Samuel, Alexander, James, George; execs., sons, William McCullough, John McCul- lough: wits., Jolin Walker, William McFa viand. ROBERT Mcculloch, date of will. May 16, 1823; date of probate, Jime 24, 182.3; wife, Jane; children, Margaret, Mary, Robert, William, Alexander, James, .Tohn, Feter, George, Samuel; exec, Joseph Grimes; wits., James Grimes, William McCulloch. WILLIAM McCULLOUGH, date of will, Oct. 29, 1823; date of probate, April 11, 12, 13, 1831; wife, Isabella; sons-in-law, George Brokaw, Joseph Grimes; brother, Peter; two daughters mentioned, names not given; execs., Isabella McCullough, Joseph Grimes; wits., Alexander McWilliams, Samuel Welch. GEORGE McDIVITT, North town- ship; date of will, July 30, 1837; date of probate, Dec. 13, 1837; wife, Rachel; sons, Charles, George, Lyle, John, Samuel, Andrew; exec, Charles Mc- Divitt; wits., James Evans, James Hoagland. LYLE McDIVIT, North township, date of will, Jan. 23, 1838; date of pro- bate, March 13, 1838; wife, Nancy; children, William-E., Mary, Jane; exec, James Evans; wits., Charles Mc- Divit, Robert Givin. HUGH MCDONOUGH, date of will, Nov. 29, 1826; date of probate, Dec 4, 1833; children, Jane, Elizabeth Esliclt, Mai-y Queen, Helen Moony, Edward; grand-daughter, Isabelle; exec, Robert Maxwell; wits., Robert Maxwell, Mary Maxwell, Jane Maxwell. JOHN Mcdonough, date of win, March 19, 1853; date of probate, Feb. IS, 1854; wife, Mary; children, Matildi, Susan, Jane, Sally Sproul, Obediah, Aden, Jane, Mary ^IcLandsborough; exec, Joseph Harrison; wits., A. F. Croskey, J. Veirs. JAMES Mcdowell. Cadiz town- ship; date of will, June 2, 1815; date of probate, April 9, 1815; wife, name not given; -sister, Susan McDowell; brothers, Samuel, John, and William McDowell; nephew, James McDowell; execs., Samuel McDowell, William Mc- Dowell; wits., Robert M. Buruey, Joseph Cox, John Work. SAMUEL McDowell, date of will, Sept. 2, 1850; date of probate. May 4, 1852; wife, Jane; children, William, Susan- J., John, Samuel; legatee, Smilh R. Watson; exec, John McDowell; wits., C. Dewey, William Knox, Jr. GEORGE McFADDIN, date of will, not given; date of probate, March 2, 1844; wife, Ruth; legatee, John :M. Richey; exec, John M. Richev; wits., David Braden, S. B. Shotwell, G. Dewey. JOHN McFADDIN, date of will, June 23, 1829; date of probate, May 28, 18.33; wife, name not given; children, Samuel, George-W., John, Joseph, Mar- garet Tjafferty; grand-sons, Jobu I^af- ferty, John Sharp, John McFadden; execs., Samuel IMcFaddin, Joseph Mc- Faddin; wits., Asa McMillan, James McMillan. JOHN McFADDEN, Cadiz township; date of will, Oct. 23, 1854; date of pro- bate, Sept. 22, 1857; wife, name not given; children, Adam, .John, Samuel, George, Margaret, Mary, Esther, Re- becca, Rachel, Sarah, Jane; exe^s., Adam McFadden, John McFadden; wits., James McFadden, Samuel Cock- ran. SAMUEL McFADDIN, date of will. Feb. 20, 1837; date of probate, July 20, 1837; wife, Elizabeth; children, James, .John, Samuel, Alexander, Sally Kerna- han, Jane Dielcerson, Margaret; execs., James McFaddin, John McFaddin; wits., John Hanna, Alexander McFad- din, James JNliller. SAMUEL McFADDEN. Cadiz town- ship; date of will, April 21, 1857; date HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 433 of proliate, April 22, 18G2; wife, name not ETiven: children, George, Heury-S., Isabella Sliarji, Jane Johnson, Leticia Hunter, IMai'saret Craic;, Mary For- sythe: servant, I']llen Smith; execs., (leorge McFadden, Henry S. McFad- clen: wits., William Arnold, Alexander Wils!on. WILLIAM McKAIN. date of will. June 33, 1828; date of probate, July 28, 1828; children, William, James, Natty, Brice, Elisha, John, Polly, Nancy; execs., William McKain, James riements; wits., Israel Barnes, James Moffit. ROBERT McKEE, date of will, Jan. ].", 1851 ; date of probate, June 24, 1851; wife, name not triven; children, Thom- as, George, Archibald, James, John, Robert, Rebecca, Elizabeth, Hannah I'.ii'ney, Rachel Birney, Catherine Rey- nolds, ^Margaret Strong, Jane McCann; exec. .Tames McKee; wits., Rudolph Mitchell, Samuel Megaw. ALEXANDER McKEOWN, date of Avill, Feb. 8, 1852; date of probate, June 1, 18.52: wife, name not given; children, Alexander, Arthur, Adam, AVilliam, Mary, .Tane, Lavina, Margaret, Rosan- na; exec, wife; wits., Lewis B. Kings- bury, William L. Packer. GEORCE McKINNEY. date of will, July 2. 1845: date of probate, Feb. 13, 1840: wife, Mary; children, William, Jolm. Jamos, George, Mary, Elizabeth Downs, Jane Walker, Peggy Marshall, Nancy Gault; grand-children, George Downs, ISIary Downs, George Mar.'^hall, George Gaidt, George McKinney, Mary McKinney, and Agnes McKinney; execs., William Henderson, Michael f'onaway: wits., Evan L. Crawford, Hamilton IMcFaddin, William Ramsey. .TOHN McKINNEY, Stock township; date of will, .Lin. 6, 1S50; date of pro- bate, Feb. 1, 1850; wife, Nancy; daugh- ters, J]lizabetli Heavilin, Mary J. Rogers, Agnes Adams, Matilda, Mar- garet, Lydia, Sarah; father mentioned, name not given: exec., Aaron Cona- wav; wits., Richard Downs, William Walker. ELIZABETH McLANSBOROUGH, date of will, Nov. 24, 1839; date of pro- bate, May — , 18;')9; husband men- tioned, name not given; wits., Joseph Harrison, Lot Demming. JOHN McLANDSBOROUGH, date of will, ]March — , 1853; date of probate, March 18, 1857; wife, name not given; children, Andrew, John*, James, Janet; exec, John McLandsborough; wits., Jonathan IMarkley, Lot Deming. JOSEPH Mcl-EAN, Westmoreland CO., Pa.; date of will, July 11, 1828; date of probate, March 11, 1835; wife, name not given; children, P^'anny, Ann, Betsey, Margaret, Catherine, Samuel, .John, .Toseph; execs., Joseph McLean, John McLean: wits., Andrew Johnston, James Alexander. JOHN McMillan, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will, Feb. 25, 1838; date of probate, March 20, 1838; wife, Alice; children, Jane, Joanna Allen, Maria Kirby, Amos, Griffith; grand- cliildven, Ruth, John, Esther, Maria, Allen, Albert and Joseph Dew, and John McMillan; execs., Amos McMil- lan, Griffith McMillan; wits., Jesse Goodwin, Ellas Dew, Wilson Good- win. PATRICK McMillan, date of will. May 30, 1843; date of probate, Oct. — , 1843; wife, name not given; childfen, John, Martha, p]liza, Susanna: execs., Henry Lane, Riey Ma any; wits , Wil- liam ]\IcBeath, Samuel Ba: er, Samuel R. Johnston. ROBERT MCMILLAN, date of will, Sept. 13, 1851; date of probate. May 9, 1854; wife, name not given; children, AA^illiaui, John, Margaret Crabtree, Nancy Ross, Mary Johnson; exec, John McMillan; wits., Samuel Skinner, Return M. Kennedy. JAMES McNUTT, Green township; date of will, Jan. 29, 1822; date of pro- bate, May G, 1822; wife, Jane; chil- dren, Benjamin, James, Joseph, Sophia; execs., wife, Jane McNutt, and son, James McNutt; wits., Ebenezer Gray, James Cobean, John McCrea. 28 434 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY JAMKS :\tcNrTT, Cadi/ township: dale of will. May 1. ISoo: ilato of pro- bate. May 21. IS."); wife, natuo not jrivon: ohildron. .lohn. Arthnr: oxoos.. !lohn MoNntt. Arthur MoNutt; wits.. 11. S. McFaddon. William Arnold. Thomas V. ^"in^■ouI. .l.WK MADDOX. dato of will. Au.c:. 7. 1S.'>7: dato of pivhato. May «>. 1S.")'.>; jiranil-ohildron. Eliza and 'Phomts Maddox. William Aniorsm Wallac\ Marjxarot Tattorson; oxoo.. Wilson Maddox: wits.. Townsond Thomas. ]^avid S. Koppart. IlKNKY ^LVFFET. dato of wil'. Maroh [\0. 18;U>: dato of pn»hato. .Inno L'S. 18;><>: wifo. Ann: oxoo.. ,lamt>s Lot>: wits., William Ilavorliold. .lamos Mil- lor. .KHIX MAFFET. dato of will. Oot n. 1S;?0: dato of probato. Oor. 212, is;>0: wifo. Elizabeth: ohildi-(>n montiouol, namos not irivon: oxeo.. Francis (;il- nioro: wits.. Honry ^MalVot. William ^[oFaddon. .Tamos Millor. JOHN MAIIOLM, Cadiz township; date of will. Sept. 2, lSo4: date of pro- bate. (H't. 2, isr>4: wife, name not uiv- en: sister. ^laruaret Maholm: wits., A\illiam Arnold. J. K. MciJrew. Sam- uel Me(\>rmii k. MARTHA MAIIOLM. Cadiz town- sbi]i: date of will. Nov. ott. ISIT: date of iM'obate. Sept. 2. 1S47: dauirhter. Eliza-Jane; grauddanchter, Martha Lyons: ^^xee.. .Tohu liitehoy: wits.. C. Dewey. .Toiin MoRean. SAMUEL MAHOLM. Cadiz town- shijK date of will. Jan. 2r>. lSo2: date of luobate. Nov. — . 1S:^>S: wife. Jane: eh'.ldren. Sarah, ^raruaret. Jane Wil- son. Elizabeth ^leNntt. Naney Hoebe. Hannah riiilips. Polly Lysle. Elenor, l^oreas Rloaks. John: srrand-sons, Wal- ter H. Hoebe. Jr., John MeNutt; oxec. James MeXutt: wits.. Thomas Thomp- son. Joshua Hamilton. CHRlSTOrHER MAXSFIELD.date of will, Xov. 25. 1S4."»: date of probate. April — , 1840; wife, Sarah; ehildreu, John. T.ouiza: oxoos.. Sarah 'Mansrield, .lohn Mansiield, Milton Harvey; wits., Joseph Romans. James Hastings, Jr. H.W'IFL MARCKLEY. dato of will. Maroh 2".). 1S;V.»: date of probato. May 2. 1S42: wife. Catherine: ehildren. David, .lohn. Matthias. Mary. Eve-Ann. Sarah, Eliza. Elizabeth: exec., Cath(>r- ine Marekloy: wits.. Thomas Day, Huiih r>arr. JACOB MARSHALL, dato of will. M:ty 10, b^24: date of probato. Auir. ;'. 1S24: wife. Mary: ehildren. Elleanor. renelope: srrand-son. (Barrett Marshall: oxoo.. .lohn Marshall: wits.. Elish.t Nelson. William Marshall. WILLIAM MARSHALI-. Cadi', township: date of will. April 10. ISb".: dato of probate. May 21, ISKV. wifo, Mary: son. .lames: brothers, Thomas. John. James: exoe.. Mary Marshall: wits.. James ^leMillan. Joseph Tin?- ley. Thomas IMi.trh. ELLEX MARTIX. Green township: dato nf will. :Mareh 10. 1S.">S: date of probato. Maroh 18. isr>8: loi^ateos, Wil- liam C. Mitehell, Ellzabetlt Thompson. Eliza Rraden: exees.. names not jriven; wits.. .Toseph Havuer. Xaney Thomp- son. ELEXOR MARTIX. date of will. . — . 1.S4S; date of probate. Dee. 27; wife. Per- thonia; ehildren. Thomas. Xeliemiah. Raehel. Prudeme: exees.. Thomas ^latson. Will'am Biuns; wits., Isaac Lewis, Joshua Adams, Asa Holmes, Henry Ileberliu^. XEHEMIAH MATSOX, date of will, HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 435 Nov. 5, 1827; date of probate, Oct. 27, 1835; wife, Mary; children, William, Enos, John, I'eter, Abi,i^ail, Rachel; grand-daughter, Rachel JNlaison; execs., John Matson, Robert Button ; wits., Harmon Rhodes, Joseph Rhodes. WILLIAM MATSON, date of will, May 4, 184G; date of pi-obate, Aug. — , 184G; Avife, Sarah; sons, John, Nehe- tniali; execs., names not given; wits., Thomas Hinst, Samuel Thompson, David Button. JONATHAN MAX SON, date of will, Feb. 2G, 1825; date of probate, Oct. 24, 1825; wife, Mary; children, David, Nathan, William, Mary; execs., David IMaxson, John Calwalader; wits., John Calwalader, Jacob Milleson. JOHN MATTERN, Archer township, date of will, Sept. 23, 1850; date of probate, June 15, 18G1; wife, Nancy; children, Abraham, John, Jule Ann Smith, Anna Mariah Hanna; exec. Abraham Mattern; wits., John Rea, A. C. Turner. HENRY MAXWELL, Archer town- ship; date of will, April 14, 1829; date of probate, July 1, 183G; wife, name not given; children, Samuel. Agnes, Euphemy; exec, Henry Maxwell; wits., Robert Maxwell, Sr., Agnes Max- well. THOMAS MAXWELL, date of will, Jan. in, 18.32; date of probate, April 25, 1832; wife, .Jane; brother, AValter; exec, Henry Maxwell; wits., William Shipton, James Maxwell. JOSEPH MEEK, date of will, .Tuly 20, 1833; date of probate, July 25, 183:'.; wife, Rachel; children, Joshua, Alfred, James, Mary-Ann; exec, William Tingley; wits., Walter B. Beebe, M. Simpson, Jr., John Christy. JOSHUA MEEK, Cadiz township; date of will, April 12, 1847; date of probate. May 1, 1847; wife, nau)(> not given; sister, Mary-Ann; le.^atees, Mary Forker; John Conwell; exec, Mary Ann Meek; wits., Josiah Scott, J. P. Wood. name not given; Jane Billingsly, Roliert Meldrum, .Tames Billingsly RACHEL MEEKS, Cadiz township; da1<' of will. Aug. 23, 1843; date of probate, Oct. — , 1843; children, Joshua, Mary-Ann; exec, Tliomas Lee; wits., William Tingley, Wesley Smith, Thom- as Lee. JAMES MEGAW, date of will, Sept. 23, 1851; date of probate, Nov. 11, 1851; children, John, James-G., George- T., Martha-Matilda, Eliza-Jane, Elean- or, Sarah Ann Paterson; execs., Eliza- beth Gutherie. James H. Patton. WILLIAM MELDRUM, Washington townshi]); date of will, Sept. 30, 1853; date of prol)ate, April 11, 1854; wife, legatees, James and Thomas Meldrum, Jane Carson; execs., .John Burny; wits., Samuel Ixigan, John Burney. WILLIAM MELTON, Freeport town- ship; date of will, Aug. 2, 1820; date of pi-oliate, Dec. 20, 1820; wife, Sarah; son, Moses; grand-daughter, Fanny Holliday; stepdaughters, Mary Kln- sey, Ruth Calwalader: exec, Moses Melton; wits., John Calwalader, John Kinsey. ISRAEL MENDENHALL, date of will. May 18, 1837; date of probate, ]\Iay 21, 18:38; wife, Sarah; children, Phebe, Hannah, Isaac, Seneth, Milton, Israel, .John; execs., Sarah Mendenhall, Robert Dutton; Avits., John Woi'stell, Edward Morris, .Tr. CALEB MERRYMAN, date of will, A'lay 24, 1824; date of probate, Jan. 17, 1825; wife, name not given; son, John; exec, John Merryman; wits., Henry Wilkins, John Merryman, John Wil- kins. BARR MEUHIRTER, date of will. May 10, 182G; date of probate, June 5, 182G; wife, Mary; execs., names not given; wits., (Jarret Teatsorth, Daniel Grim, Robert Orr. GEORGE MIKESELL, date of will. Jan. 14, 18.54; date of probate, Jan. 28, 1854; wife, Mehala; childr(>n, :\Iary Jane; execs., Andrew Mikesell, Joseph 436 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Mikosell; wits., Abraham Biisby, Sam- uel Gutlirio. PETER MIKESELL, Rumley town- ship; date of will, June 24, 1S4G; date of probate, Aug. — , 1840; wife, Susan; children, Jesse, David, Samuel, Joseph, Audrew, George, Susey; execs., Joseph, Milrsou; sons, Barruch, Hugh, William, Jolin; execs., John McCouuell, Jacob Webb; wits., Solomon Smoot, James Corn- well. JOHN OLDSHOE, Fayette county. Penn.; date of will, Jan. 7, 1822; date of probate, Jan. 20, 1822; wife, Sopiva; cbildren, George, Daniel, Catherine. Margaret; niece, Margaret Barnes; execs., John McDole, John Hamilton; wits., Samuel Sbull, David Wheeler, Jobn Brown. I'ETER OLER, date of will, May 14, 1832; date of probate, June 11, 1832; wife. Elizabeth; sou, William; execs., Ii]lizabeth Oler, Samuel Bos- land; wits.. Lot Demming, Henry S, Snerry. JOHN OLiNISTEAD, Cadiz town- ship; date of will, ilay 10, 1S5G; date of probate, .Tune 23, 185G; wife, name not given; grand-children, Thomas, Elousia, John, and Henry Olmstead, and Jesse, Mary, Henry, and Martl:a Thomas; execs., .fobn McBeau, Jo.-epli S. Thomas, Martlia B. Thomas; wits.. William G. Finney, Jobn W. Gilles- pie. ROBERT ORR, will, not dat#d; date of probate, Nov. 20, 1857: wife, name not given; daughters, Martha Lindsey, Esther Maxwell, Jane INIaxwell, Mary Ann Hanna, Zaporab Smitb, Dorcus Reed, Elizabeth Baker; execs., Daniel Smith, John Reed; wits., Jacob Den- nis, John Fife. HIRAM PALMER, date of will. March 17, 185G; date of probate, April 8, 185G: wife, Mary; brothers, Daniel- B., Henry-H., Lewis-S., Jobn-W.; sisters, Elizabeth Wilson, Sarah Curtis; niece, Elizabeth Simpson; nephew, Hiram Palmer; execs., Mary Palmer, Israel Birney; wits., Aquilla Tipton, Nathan Wright. JAMES PALMER, Buchanan coun- ty, Iowa; date of will, .Tune 23, 1850; date of probate, Dec. 19, ISGl; wife, name not given; children, Mariah Edie, Levina f]die, Elizabeth Ramsey, Mar- garet Rankin: grand-son. Palmer Ram- sey: exec, .Tohn Edie; wits., James Clark, William liOgan. JOHN PARICER, Fairview, York CO., Pa.; date of will, June 12, 1843; date of probate, Aug. 21, 1850; wife, Susannah; exec,. Rudolph Graybill; wits., John Ilursh, Jacob Kirk, Jr. \ HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 439 THOMAS PARKINSON, date of will, March 22, 1S3S; date of probate, November, I808; wife, Elizabeth; chil- dren, John, Jacob, Edward, Margartt Miller, Elizabeth Smith. Mary Mi- chael; execs., Jacob Parkinson, James Leech; wits., George Conrley, James Johnston, Michael A. Dowden. MORDECI PARRISH, date of will, Ansr. 27, 182G; date of probate, Nov. 2, 1820; wife, Rachel; children, Edith Blake. Uareth Stnbbens, Leonard, Jlordecai, Benjamin, Peter, Jarett; grand-sons, Samnel Swan, John Par- rish, (son of Benjamin), John Parrish, (son of Leonard^ Mordecai Stubbins; exec, Benjamin Parrish, Mordecai Parrish; wits., Jam^s McMillan, Ben- jamin Michener, William P. L.Taylor. ARTHUR PATTERSON, Franklin township; date of Avill, Aug. 30, 1858; date of probate, Oct. 11, 1858; wife, Rebecca; children, Samuel, Obadiah, Arthur. Willinm, Mary A. Gilmore, Catherine Rntledge; execs., Rebecca Pattei'son. Willinm Patterson; wits.. John Markle, Lewis Lewton. JOSEPH PATTON, date of will, Dec. 21. 1840; date of probate, June 17, 1850; wife, n.Tme not given; children. Margaret. Poll.v Anderson, Ann Welv ster, Cintha-Jane, ^latthew-M., James, David; execs., Matthew M. Patton, James Patton; wits., George McCul- lough, Robert Scott. THOMAS PATTON, date of win. Feb. Ifi. 18.T2; date of probate, March 20, 1832; wife, Jane; children, Eliza- beth, Sarah, Mariah, David, James Joseph: exec, James Lee; wits., John Baker, David Parkhill. JOHN PAXTON, Cadiz township; date of will, April 1, 1840; date of pro- bate, Nov. 11, 1851; wife, Margaret; children. Henrv, Robert, INIary-S., Jane, Nancy. Sarah. Rebecca, Eleanor Rail- son. Margaret Johnson: execs.. Robert Paxton, Henry Paxton, Allen C. Turnei'; wits., Thomas Lee, John Mc- Bean. HANNAH PEARSON. Bucks CO., Pa.; date of will, Aug. 8, 1848; date of probate, Nov. 6, 1848; sister, Adah P. Lewis; brothers, Albert and Hiram Pearson; execs., Adah P. Lewis, Hiram H. Pearson; Avits., Aaron Packer, Mar- garet Ij. Packer. » JOHN PEEPLES, date of will, Sept. 6, 1854; date of probate, April 8, 185G; wife, Margaret; children, James, Mary, John, Rebecca McCally, Robert; lega- tees, American Bible Society, Presby' terian P'oreign Missions, Presbyterian Home Missionary Society; execs., John Ramsey, James Peeples; wits., Uriah Kail, Andrew Lynch. MARY PEOPLES, date of will, May 9, 18.5G; date of probate. May 22, 185i]; brothers, .Tames, Robert, John; sisters, Rebecca McColly, Mariah Linzy, An- drew Lynch; execs., John Wilkin, Wil- liam Stinger; wits., John Wilkin, Wil- liam Stinger. SAMUEL G. PEPPARD. date of «nll, Dec. 1, 1855; date of probate, Jan. 30, 1850; sister, Margaret; execs., George W. McCook, Josiah M. Estep; wits., Samuel McCormick, William Barrett. HENRY PERREGOY, date of will. Nov. 6, 1844; date of probate, Marcli 20, 1851; wife, Elizabeth; children, George, John, David, Jam^s, Sarah Worley, Rebecca Green, Elizabeth; execs., David Perregoy, James Per- ^ir^oy; wits., Joshua i'. Watson, George Kerr, James McMillan. JONATHAN PERRIN, date of will, Dee. 0, 1851; date of probate, June 9, 1852; wife, name not given; legatees, Ephraim and Nancy Johnson; exec, Abriam Johnson; wits., John Sloan, Joseph P. Wherry. SIMON PETERSON, date of will, .Lan. 27, 1852; date of probate, April 6, 1852; son. Temple; grandsDUS, Flem- ing Peterson, .lohn H. Peterson; wits., John Cramble, Edward Gibson. , GEORGE PFAFF, date of will, Jan. 9, 1845; date of probate, April — , 184ii; Wife, Rebecca; daughters, Lucy-Anu, 440 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Dilli-Ann; exoo., Robocca Pfaff; wits., Andrew Lj-ucli, Josiah Crawford. MICHAEL rrOUTS, date of will. Nov. 2, 1849; date of probate, May 17. 18.51; wife, name not siven; children, Mary Hnrloss, Elizabeth, Cathi^rine Waters, IMichael, Jonathan, ,7olm, Jacob, Cideon; execs., JouatlianPfouts, John Pfouts: wits., Jacob Bowers, David Bowers. JOHN PHILLIPS, date of will, March 14, 1857; date of probate, March 24, 1S57; wife, Kachel-M.; children, James, William, David, Knth, INIatilda, Martha, Jane, IMar.uaret Dayhoff, I'ri- cilla Stonebrook, Mariah Ha,i?ey, Eliza- b(>th Pahner, Rebecca Champer, Lydia Ijaii,sild)ridge, Sarah Sawvel; execs., Rachel M. Phillii)s, Joseph Harrison; wits., Emanuel Hendricks, Magery J. Hudson. JOHN PHILLIPS, Cadiz township; date of will, March 8, 1859; date of l)robate. May 17, 1859; wife, Eliza; children, Eliza Jane Hanna, Martha, Rachel-Ann, Samuel, William, Thom- as; execs., Eliza l'hillii)s, Samuel I'hll- lips; wits., W. G. Finney, J. P. Hunt- er. RICHARD PHILLIPS, Washington township: date of will, April 1, 184G; date of probate, Jan. 1, 1857; wife, Nancy; children, John, Joseph, Lewis, Hannah Horn, Margaret Coruthers, Lienor A. Quillau; execs., Joseph Philliiis, John Plullips; wits., James McMath, J. H. Mc:\Iath. AVILLIAM PHILLIPS, date of will, Sept. 29, 1810; date of probate, Oct. 9, 181(5; Avife, Fanny; children, Alexander, Reizen, jMaria; execs., John Pritchard, Robert Cochran, James Cobean; wits., John Philli|)s, (icorge Cox, Andrew McNeely, AValter B. Beebe. EDWARD PITTIS. date of will, Feb. IG, 18G1; date of probate, Feb. 20, ISGl; wife, Naonn; brothers, .John, Thomas, Robert, Henry; sisters, Jidia Reynard, Ann Worstell; exec, Henry Pittis; wits., Jacob C. Lukens, Nicho- las Merrj'man. JOHN PITTIS, Franklin township; date of Avill, Feb. 9, 1954; date of pro- bate, Nov. 22, 18.55; wife, Mary; cliil- dron, Edwai'd, Henry, Mary Edney, Ann Worstale. Julia Reynolds, Jolm. Tiiomas, Roliert; execs., Robert Pittis, Edward Pittis; wits., W. B. Hunt, S. ■R. Ma gee. ROBERT PITTIS, Deersville vil- lage; date of will, Sept. 25, 1847; date of probate, Jan. 21, 1859; wife, name not given; children, Robert, George, Jane Scott; execs., Roliert IMttis, George Pittis, John Pittis; wits., Joshua Wagner, S. R. Magee. JOHN POLLOCK, Green township: date of Avill, INIarch 29, 1819; date of probate, March 20, 1820; wife. Sarah; children. John, Samuel, Clement, Hugh. Ann Adrain, Elizabeth, Jane: exec, son. .Tohn Pollock; wits., Alexander Matthews, Alexander Laughlin. JOHN PORTER, date of will, Oct. 8, 18:50; date of proliate, Oct. 24, 18:51: wife, name not given; brothers, Sam- uel, David, .Tames, Smily, Arvis: sisteis, ^lary, Sarah: grand-son, John Portei': execs., names not given; wits., Joshua Dickerson, Sr., John Dicker- son. MARGARET PORTER, date of will. July 1. 1812: date of probate, Sept. 14. 1.852; children, .Tames, Augustus: exec, James Porter; wits.. George A. Win son. Samuel Porter. Davrd Porter. JAMES PAULSON, date of will. Jan. 22. 181 G; date of probate, April 9. 181G; Avife, Rachel; children. John, Samuel, .Tames, Jehu, Andrew, Ruthv, Mary, Rachel, Prudy, Anne: exec, Rachel Paidsim- wits., Rudolph Hines, Isaac Hines, William Phillips. SAMT^EL POTU.SON, date of will. April 15, 18:51: date of probate, Aug. 1, 1831: wife. Polly: children. James. Joshua. J.-W., Tliomas-J., Allen. Sam- uel, Sarah H. Baxter, Rachel-D. Susan-J., Pollv: execs., I'olly J. Poul- son, John Poulson; wits., Abiram .Tohn- son, James Poulson, Rachel Pou'son. HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 441 CHARLES PRATIIER, Bioo'p coun- ty, Vn.; date of will, Aus'. 2, ISdU; date of probate, Oct. 1."), ISl'.S; wife, name not siven; children, Elizabeth Wells, Henry, John; exec, John Prather; wits.. James McG ruder, George Hart- ford, S. Connell. JOHN PKATHEIt, Brooke county, Va.; date of will, Nov. 27, 183(J; daie of probate, Nov. 27, 1837; wife, Mary; execs., John C. Campbell, Adam Ku- hic; wits., Campbell I'arr, Robert Moore. P. Ratteuburg. JOHN PRITCHARD, Cadiz town- ship: date of will. June 20, 1844: datt; of prol)ate, Aug. — , 1844; wife, Sarali; children, lU'becca, Mary, Naui-y Dewey, Maria Lee, Eliza Houston, Isabella Douglas, Jane Anderson, Ben- jamin. Jesse; exec, Sarah I'ritchard; wits., S. \V. Bos L wick, James Kerr, S. B. Shotwell. MATTHEW PROVINES, Washing- ton countv. Pa.; date of will, Jan. 2."), 1821; date of probate, Sept. 5, 1821; wife, name not given; children, Nancy, Peggy, Jane, Charles, Matthew, Rob- ert; execs., son, Charles Provines, Henry Crooks, Jr.; wits., Andrew Clen- denniiig, INIoses Allen. JOHN PUGH, Nottingham town- ship; date of will, M:iy 17, 1828; date of probate, June — , 1840; children, Jesse, Thomas, Jolin. David, Mary Cope, Hannah Hamett; grand-daughter, Eva- lena Pugh; exec, David I'ugh; wits., John Heavilin, Philip Fulton. JOSEPH PTTGH, date of will, Dec. 4, 18;:!); date of probate, April 2i), 1849; wife, name not given; children, Levi, Ellis, Amos, Patience Tipton, Ann; execs., Tliomas Crumley, Robert Ilarryman; wits., William Boggs, Mary Brown. G. R. PUMPHREY, Moorefield town- ship: date of will, Jan. 11, 1851; date of probate, Mai'ch 25, 1851; wife, name not given; sole heir, wife, name not given; exec, ^^'illiam Cogill; wits., Samuel Skinner, James Wood, Brandis Bethel. JOHN RAMAGE, date of will.lMarch 1, 1S41); date of probate, April 24, 1840; wife, Elizabeth; ciiildren, William, Jdlin-C; Samuel, Louisa-Jane; execs.. Dr. Benjamin F. Bethel, William Ram- age; wits., James W. Slater, Joseph Lalferty. DAVID RAIMSEY, Cadiz township; date of will, March IG, 18.52; date of probate, Aug. 1, 1852; wife, Mary-i\ ■ n; children, Matthew-J., David, William- li., Moses; execs., wife, Mary Ann Ramsey, son, William L. Ramsey; Avits., John Mitchell, Thomas Love, Josei)h Rea. WILLIAM RAMSEY, Nottingha^n township; date of wdll, Jan. 10. 18.54; date of ])robate, March 11, 1856; wife, Mary; children, Samuel, Robert, Mary IMahanna, Margaret 1^'ord, .lane House, William; execs,, William Ramsey, Samuel Ramsey; wits., Aaron Cona- way, George McKinney. JAIMES RANKIN, date of will, Jan. 21, 1857; date of probate, Ai;g. IS, 1858; wife, Hester; children, Thomas, Wil- liam, Israel, Margaret Jones, Nancy Pearly, Sarah Gray; execs., William Rankin, .lames Kirkpatrick: wits., Wil- liam Kirkpatrick, Hugh Kirkpatrick. THOMAS RANKIN, date of will, Aug. 2, 1828; date of probate, March 12, 18;V2; wife, Mary; children, James, William, David, Elizabeth Porter, Nancy Matthews; execs., names not given; wits.. Alexander Moore, John A. Guttery, Benjamin S. Cowen. .TOSIAH RATCLIFF, date of will, Nov. 21, 18;3t); date of probate, Dec. 5, 1S30; wife, Mary; children, Robei't, John, Martha; execs., Mary Ratcliff, William Ratcliff; wits., Nathan Hale, Ttomas Wallace, .Lames McMillan. JAMES REA, Cadiz township; date of will. Jan. 10, 1845; date of probate, .Tan. 28, 1845; wife, Jane; children, Isabella, Sarah, Hellen, Albert; exec, AVilliam Knox, Jr.; wits., John W. Scott, Josiah Scott.. JOHN REA, Green township, date of 442 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY will, Jan. 9, 1855; date of probate, March 13, 1855; wife, name not given; c'liiklren, Joseph, John; nephews, Wil- liam Purdy Rea, John Rea. John M. Rea, Joseph Rea; niece, ElizabeCh Rea; Board of Foreign Missions; exec, Joseph Rea; wits., Thomas Jamison, S. R. Watson. WILLIAM P. REA, Green township; date of will. May 30, 1840; date of probate, Aus. — , 1846; wife, name not ijiven; brothers, John, Joseph; sister, Sarah Thompson; uepliews, John-M. and Samuel J. Rea; execs., brotlier, Joseph Rea, and Josiah Scott; wits., Nathaniel A. Wallace, William Porter, Josiah Scott. MATTHEW REAVES, date of will, Nov. 5, 1857; date of probate, Nov. 18, 1857; wife, name not given; step- mother, Celia Reaves; exec, R. K. Price. HENRY REDDIG, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will, Sept. 3, 1843; date of probate, May — , 1844; wife, Elenor; execs., wife, Elenor Reddlg. and brother, .John P. Reddig; wits., Thomas Carver, Jedediah Thorn. JOSEPH RHODES, date of will, May 5, 1836; date of probate, Oct. 31, 1842; wife, Mary; children, Harman, Moses, Amy Timberlake, Lydia Johns- ton: sister, Elizabeth Reed; execs., wife, Mary Rhodes, and son, Harman Rhodes; wits., Robert Sutton, James Anderson, James McMillan. MARY ANN RICHARDSON, date of will, Oct. 9, 185G; date of probate, Oct. 9, 1856; adopted son, Theodore F. Richardson; execs., names not given; wits., M. F. Mallernee, Amon Lemmou, A. C. Turner. ANDREW RICIIBY, date of will. April 20, 1859; date of probate, June 3, 1859; wife, Margaret; children. Alexander, Jane, Gussy Ann Haw- thorn, Hannah Bell, Elizabeth. Hester, Abigail, Catherine Bsaty, Margaret; exec, Andrew Richey; wits., John Campbell, William Dunbar. JACOB RICHEY, date of will, June IS, 183(»; date of probate. May — , 1839; wife, name not given; children, Ann, John, .Jacob, Samuel; execs., Jacol) Richey, James Devore; wits., James iJevore, Samuel Gamble, John Ross. RICHARD RIDGWAY, Berklay co., A'a.; date of will, March 24, ISOG; date of probate, July 22, 1847; wife, name not given: cliildren, David, Hannah Wright, Patience Beeson, Sally Ross, Buly Clevenger; sim-in-law, Jonathan ^^'rigllt; execs., David Ridgway, Jona- than Wright; wits., J. Stephenson, Joel Ward, Robert Wilson. JOHN RILEY, date of will, March 19, 1819; date of probate, Nov. 11, 1823; wife, Mary; children, Moses, Abram, William, Mary; exec, Joseph Johnson; wits., Abiram Johnson, Jonathan Per- riu. WILLIAM ROBB, Athens township; date of will, Jan. 8, 1858; date of pro- bate, Feb. 25, 1858; wife, Abigail; execs., names not given; wits., William McCall, Thomas B. Morris. JAMES ROBERTS, Shortcreek town- slii]i; date of will, Aug. 19. 1S2S; date of probate, Oct. 27, 1828; wife, Rachel; cliildren, William, James, Anna Wiley, Nancy Wheeler, IMatilda Gorsucli; grand-daughter, Rachel Armstrong; exec, William Roberts; wits., John Wartield, Eli Matson. JOSEPH ROBERTS, Athens town- ship: date of will, March 15, 1833: date of probate, April 8, 1833; wife, Mary- Ann; exec, William McFarland; wits., William McFarland, George Brown. ROBERT ROBERTS, date of will, April 4, 1830; date of probate, June 28, 1836; wife, Ruth; children, William, George, Ross, John, INIary, Elenor, Caroline; execs., Ruth Roberts, John Gruber; wits., William R. Lloyd, Joseph Smith. ELIZABETH ROBINSON, date of will, Aug. 29, 1837; date of probate, Feb. 2, 1838; children, P>rooks, Thomas, Christopher, Joseph, Elizabeth Willgus, HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 443 Hanuah, Jane; exec, Brooks Robin- son: wits., Michael Miller, David O. Meguire. JOHN ROBINSON, Cadiz township; date of will, .Tan. 11, l.s;]8; date of pro- l)ate, l*'eb. 2, 1S3S; wife, Susan; four cJiildien nientiimed, names not given; e.vec, Thomas Lee; wits., Josiah Scott, Andrew Taggart. WILLIAM ROBINSON, date of will, Fell. 0, 1840; date of proliate, April —. 1840; wife, Mary; children, William, Jane ^Marshall, I'olly; grand-daughter, Polly Marshall; exec, William Robin- son; wits., Solomon Gamble, Elenor Adams, INIargaret Adams. LESI;Y ROBY, Monroe township; date of will, Jan. Ki, 1835; date of probate, Nov. — , 1838; wife, Lenne; cliildren, John, Eli/ahetli; exec. Keno- ni Roby; wits., James Stonaker, Josli- ua Cheaney. MOSES ROMANS, date of will, April 8, lS4y; date of probate. May 22, 1849; wife, name not given; children, Elisha, Robert, INIoses, Lydia; execs., Joseph Romans, Elisli.a Romans; wits., Job Briggs, Josiah Brown. CHARLES ROSS. Archer township; date of will, Feb. 18, 183(5; date of pro- bate, Aug. — , 1845; wife, name not given; children, William, Nathcher, John, Eva Wagstaff, Susan Tipton; exec, William Arnold; wits., George McPeck, William McConkej-, John Heiss, William Arnold. ROBERT ROSE, Washington town- ship; date of will, March 1(J, 1840; datt- of probate, Pec. 7, 1840; wife, name not given; children, Amos, Hugh. Henry, Jacob, James, Gardner, Joliii Susanna Strahan, Martha Stephens Mary Vanhoru, Nancy Ankrim; exec, Amos Rose; wits., Jolin Auld, Willian Griffith, Thomas Griffith. JOHN ROWLAND, Moorelield town ship; date of will, Feb. 20, 1851; date of probate, June 15, 1855; wife, Rachel; son, Cyrus; exec, James Rowland; wits.. Anthony' Wood, Benjamin Ruby. JOHN RUBY, Franklin township; date of will. Feb. 7, 1834; date of pro- bate, June 23, 1834; wife, name nor given; children, Benjamin, Thomas, Betsy: exec, John Auld, Jr.; wits., Stewai-t Auld. Samuel H. Wilson, S. B. Scoles. .TAMES RUSSELL, date of will, Feb. 11. 1833; date of probate, June 28. 183G; wife, name not given; children. James, John, Elizabeth Carney, Mai-y Anderson, Nancy, Dorcas; grand-son, Riley Muskelly; son-in-law, Chris- toi)her; exec, William Henderson; wits., Samuel Skinner, Michael Moore, J. J. Moore. ADAM SABLE, Green township; date of will. May 12, 1821; date of pro- bat(\ March 0, 1S2(i; wife, Catherine; children, ]\Iichael, Jacob, Anna, Mary Schmick, Christinna Miller; exec, Johu Shober; wits., Thomas Fisher, Fred- erick Rohdes. JONATHAN SAYRS, date of will. Sept. 4. 1830: date of probate. Nov. 19, 1839; wife, Susannah; children, Hannah, Susannah, David, Jonathan; execs., wife, Susannah Sayrs, and son. Jonatlian Sayrs; wits., Jacob Lemmon, John Ivnox, Moses Lemmon. CHARLES SCOTT, date of will, June 10, 1845; date of probate, Aug. — , 1845; Avife, name not given; daugh- ter, Susanna; exec, William Pollock; wits., Isaac Sabbath, Zadoc Bliss. JOHN SCOTT, date of will, Aug. 23, 1880; date of probate, Oct. 19, 1830; wife, name not given; children, Jane, Steward, Thomas: sisters, Mary, and Eleanor; exec, William Scott; wits., .Tohn Watters, Bazzel Walters, Henry Barricklow. REBECCA SCOTT, Wells township, Jefferson co., O.: date of will, Feb. 2(5, 1849; date of probate, July 25, 1855; wife, name not given; children, Violet Simpson, Abraham-P., Samuel, Alex- ander-F., Nancy Marshall; execs., James Simjison, William Marshall; wits., John Daugherty, John V. Mc- Culley. 444 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY SAMUEL SHAFFER, Archer town- ship; date of will, Feb. 17, l&o4; date of probate, March 31, 1854; wife, Christina; execs., wife, Christina Shaf- fer, and Samuel Moorehead; wits., William McKittriok, Robert Johnson. SAMUEL SHANK, Cadiz township; will, not dated; date of probate, July 16, ISGO; wife, name not given; sons, George, John, Garrett; execs., names not given; wits., T. Phillips, W. M. Grimes, Dr. John Fearce. ISAAC SHANNON, date of will, IMarch 20, 1845; date of probate, April 24, 1849; wife, name not given; chil- dren, Mai-y Clark, Jane Reed, Leslie; execs., William Reed, James Taggart; wits., William Paxton, Henry Eagle- son. THOMAS SHARP, date of will, Oct. 15, 1825; date of probate, March G, 1826; wife, Jane; children, George, John, Joseph, Margaret, Rachel, Jane, Sarah; execs., George Sharp, John Sharp; wits., Charles Hirsey, Thomas B. Carter, Jnmes McMillan. CHRISTOPHER SHAWVBR, Green township; date of will, March 22, 1818; date of probate, Aug. 4, 1818; wife, Margaret: sons, John, Samuel, Jona- than, Elias, Jacob; execs., John Shaw- ver, .Jacob Shawver; Mits., Christopher Shawver, Jacob Beckley, John Wag- ner, Christopher Able. .TOSEPH SHEARER, date of will, Sept. 21, 1835; date of probate, Dec. 7, 1840; wife, Mary; children, John, Sam- uel, Ben.lamin, Henry, Joseph, Elias, Dewitt, Elizabeth, Mary, Catherine, Susanna, Ann, ]\Iargaret, Lydia; execs., John Shearer, Snmnel Shearer; wits., Jacob Ream, Richard Lyons. WILLIAM SHIPTON, Archer town- ship; date of Avill, March 4, 1854; date of probate, Juno 12, 1854; wife, name not given; children, Eliza, George, Sarah, John, Susanna, Mariah; exec, Hugh Cavan; wits., Samuel Adams, Hugh Cavan. HUGH SlIOTWELL, date of will. Jan. 3, 1840; date of probate, April IS, 1854; children, Arrison, Esther, Susan- na, Niincy, Jolm. AVilliam, Joseph; grand-cliildren, Nancy Sears, John Yendolah; exec, Arrison Shotwell; wits., John McBean, William Jones. CJEORGE SHUAF, Rumley town- ship; date of will, Nov. 8, 1842; date of probate, April — , 1845; wife, name not given; children, Margaret Camlo, Polly Miller, heirs of deceased daughter, Catlieriue, Sarah ]\Iikesel, Betsey Whit- more, George; son-in-law, Jacob Reed; execs., John Gruber, George Sharp; wits., Andrew Lynch, Samuel Am- spoker. GEORGE SHULTZ, Green town- ship: date of will, April 3, 1824; dato of i)robate, March 31, 1828; wife, Eliza- beth; son, Solomon; execs., Jacob Win- ings, John Shober; wits., John Wag ner, Adam Hoobler, Jacob Hoster- man. .L\MES SIMERAL, Green townshij); date of will. May 31, 1849; date of pro- bate, Nov. 6, 1849; wife, Mary-Anne; children, Martha, Amanda, Matilda, Robert; execs., Robert V. Simei-al, George Atkinson; wits., Josiah Scott, John Neely. ROBERT VINCENT SIMERAL, date of will, Jan. 1, 1851; date of pro- bate. April 22, 1852; wife Sarah- Ann; children, George, :\lary-Ann; mother, Mary Ann Simeral; legatee, Vincent Bocgs: exec. William Boggs; wits., John Beall, W. AVelch. ALEXANDER SIMPSON, Athens township; date of will, March 10,1841; date of probate, April 12, 1S41; wife, Jane: children, Thomas, James, Polly Gilmore, Betsy IMcCune, Eleoner Nox, Jane; exec, John IMcAdams; Avits., Nathan Tannehill, John ?dcAdams. JAMES SIMPSON, Cadiz township; date of will, June 8, 1812; date of pro- bate, (in Allegheny countv, Penn.), June 28, 1815; wife, Saiah; brother, Matthew Simpson; wits., George Boggs, .Tames Beaumont, Robert Mc- Elhiuuey. HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 445 NANCY SIMPSON, Athens town- ship: (late of Avill, Oct. P>, 1S;!9; date of probate, April — , 1840; sister, Jane Simpson; execs., names not given; wits., John Newell, Nathan Tannehill. JOHN SINGER, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will. July 18, 1840; date of probate, Aug. 1, 1842; wife, Eliza- beth; children, INIariah, Jane, James, Lard, John; grand-sou, George Now- nan; exec, Samuel Lewis; wits., Sam- uel Bonsall, Talason G. Elliott, Lewis Parlcer, John Ramick. SAMUEL SKINNER, Moorefleld township; date of Avill, April 21, 1800; date of probate, Nov. 15, I860;' wife, Catherine: children, C.-Adolphus, Me- linda Martin; exec, C. Adolphus Skin- ner; wits., James Sloan, Benjamin Wood. JANE SLEJIMONS, date of will, March 12, 1851; date of probate, July S, 1851; childi-en, Matthew, Alexander, Jane Almspoker, Susanna Lyle; step- daughter, Margaret Vasbinder; step- son, Thomas Slemmons; exec, Mat- thew Slemmons; wits., John Carnahan, A. H. Carnahan. WILLIAM R. SLEMMONS, date of will, Nov. 21, 1844; date of probate, Jan. 28, 1845; wife, Nancy; daughter, Henrietta; execs., Nancy Slemmons, Andrew F. Hanna; wits., Eli Peacock, C. Dewey, S. B. Shotwell. JAMES SLONAKER, date of will, April 27, 1853; date of probate, June 13, 1853; wife, Nancy; children, Mary- Ann, Elizabeth, Jane, Rebecca, Sally, Matilda, Louisa, Susanna; grand-chil- dren, David and John Wesley Slo- naker; exec, Nancy Slonaker; wits., Alexander Gamble. CAROLINE SMITH, Moorefleld township; date of will, Nov. 20, 1851; date of probate, March 29. 1852; hus- band, Thomas H. Smith; legatee. Mary Jane Mouser; exec, John Parrish; wits. William G. Smith, James Wood. JOHN W. SMITH, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will, Oct. 12, 1852; date of , James-T., Smith, and Martha Wor- McFarlaud; wits., John W. Watson, 57; date of probate, Nov. 19, 1858; name not given; father and probate, Oct. 19, 1852; wife, ^largaret; childi'i-n, Ellis; exec, falficr, .Tohu Smith; wits., Milton Mendenhall, Joseph Townsend, James McMillan. JOHN SMITH, Athens township: date of will, Dec. 4, 1854; date of pro- bate. July 29, 1856; wife, name not given; niece, Jane Worley, and her children, Robert-W. Isabella, Sara-Ann, ley; exec, William Robert S. Watson, William IMcFarlaud. JOSEPH SMITH, date of will, Sept 11, If wife, mother mentioned, names not given; brother. Pleasant; relatives, Adeline Smith. Samuel Smith, Perry Smith. Lucy Christian, Elir'abeth Eps, Michael M. Smith, Frederick D. Smith; exec, brother. Pleasant Smith; wits., Wil- liam Beadle, Samuel Christian. NANCY SMITH, date of will, Feb. 26, 1847; date of probate, Nov. 8. 1848; children, Mary Jane Cooper, John: execs., names not given; wits., John Cramblett, Thomas I'eterson. WILLIAM SMITH, date of will, Feb. 10, 1820; date of probate, July 31, 1820; wife, Olife; children mentioned, names not given; exec, Olife Smith; wits., Joseph Fry, Jolm Lyons, Polly Lyons. WILLIAM SMITH, Brooks CO., Va.; date of will, Aug. 20, 1846; date of pro- bate, July 31, 1855; wife, name not given; children, Andrew, Catherine Hunter; legatees, John and Sally Es- tep; exec, Andrew Smith. WILLIAM SMITH, Stock township; date of will, Aug. 13, 1858; date of pro- bate, Sept. 11, 1858; Avife, name not given; sons, James, George; execs., William Givin, Andrew Crawford; wits., George A. Givin, Jonas Turner. SOLOMON SMOOT, date of will. Fob. 20, 1828; date of probate, March 8, 1828; children, Betsy, Jolm, Barton; grand-son, Solomon Burke; exec. 446 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Honry BarrJcldow; wits., George W. Cranor, Isaac Ilolems. JOHN SNEDAKER, date of will. I\Iay IG, ISIG: date of probate, .Inly 1, ISIG; Avifo, Elizabetli; cliildron, "Re- boc'lvah, Saumel, (Jarret; exec, Tliomas Ford; wits., John Wilson, Jolin France. ADAM SNIDER, Green township; date of will, Nov. 9, 1848; date of pro- bate, Nov. L3, 1848; wife, Margaret; daughtei", Katherine Lewis; exec, Samuel Mooreliead; wits., John Thomp- son, Jesse Lewis. SAMUEL SNIDER, date of will, Dec. 11, 18.54; date of probate, Dec. 25, 1854; wife, name not given; execs., Daniel AToore, Walter Jamison; wits., William (L Finney, Joshua Cope. GEORGE SNODIGLE, date of will, Jan. 5, 18o7; date of probate, Marcli 27, 1SP.7; wife, Margaret; daughter, Catherine; exec, James Cummiugs; wits.. James Crumley, John Ford. JOHN SPEER, date of will, .July 20. 1831; date of probate, Oct. 24, i831; wife, Mary; children, John, William, Samuel, Robert, Sarah, Elizabeth; exec, Mary Speer; wits., Walter B. Beebe, David Smylie, John M. Lacey. ROBERT SPEAR, date of will, April 15, 1850; date of probate, June 27, 1853: mother, Mary Stubens; sister, Eliza1)eth Spear: exec, William Fry: wits., Samuel G. Sheppard, Matthais Bartelson. WILLIAM J. SPENCER, Notting- ham township: date of will, Sept. 3. 1855; date of probate, Jan. 4, 1858; wife, name not given; cliildren, Lo- renzo, Martha, Sarah, Hannah; exec, Abiram Johnson; wits., C. Dewey, William Arnold. JOSEPH SPIDEL, Tuscarawas co., O.; date of will, Oct. 11, 1841; date of probate, Nov. — , 1845; wife, name not given; legatees, Thomas and John Wil- son; execs., names not given; wits., John Gruber, Jacob Matterman. CHRISTIAN SPIKER, date of will, Dec 9, 1820; date of probate, Jan. 6. 1821: wife, Diana; children, Chri.-;tian, John, J()sej)h: execs., Henry Spiker, Joseph Johnson: wits., George Wall(>r, Edward IMoore, Malaslin I^ayport. ISAAC SPIKER. Stork township; date of Avill, July 2(;, 1855; date of pro- bate, Sept. 1, 1855; wife, name not given; mother, Sarah Ann Spiker; nephews and nieces, Henry M. Wells, William M. Spiker; Sarah- Ann. Emma, Virginia Spiker; and Abraham, John, Catherine, Isaac, IVIary, Margaret, and Elizabefh Patterson: execs., names not given; wits., James Keesy, J. C. Wells. JOHN W. SPIKER, Stock township; date of will, April 24, 1854; date of probate. May 3, 18.54: wife, name not given; nieces, Sara Ann Spiker, Emma Spiker, AMrginia Spiker; nephew, Wil- li.'im M. Spiker: legatees, Isaac Spiker, John-C, and Catlierine Wells, WiHiani and Mary Patterson, David and Cath- ei"ine Patterson. Samuel Gilliert; exec, Alexander Henderson: wits., James Kelly, Hester Ann Kent. SARAH A. SPIKER, date of will, Aug. 27, 1858; date of probate, Jan. 25, 1801; grand-children, Absolom, Joseidi- R., .Tohn, Catlierine, Isaac, Mary-M., Elizjibeth, Isaac, William, John, Aman- da, Alisolom, .Tos(>pli-B., Isaac, and John Patterson: legatees, Mary and Catherine Patterson; exec, .Joseph P. Patterson; wits., A. C. Nixon, Fryer McKinney. WII>LIAM SPIKER, Stock town- ship; date of will. July 3, 1853; date of probate. Sept. 5. 1S53: wife, Elizabeth; children, William-M.. Emma, Virginia; execs., John W. Spiker, Alexander Henderson: wits., Aaron Conawav, William Walker. FRANCIS SPRAUL, date of will, Nov. 25, 1840; date of probate, April 12, 1841: wife, name not given; sons, .Tames, Hugh; execs., James Spraul, Hugh Spraul: wits., James INIiller, .John Wilson, Tliomas IMiller. JAMES SPROUL, Moorefield town- ship; date of will. Julv 31, 18.50; date of probate, Nov. 24, 1850; wife, Eliza- HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 447 betli; execs., Hugh Sproul, Peter Compiler. JOHN SPROUL, Nottingham town- ship; date of will, April 23, 1S4G; date of probate, April 2i, 1S4G; wife, name not given; brothers and sisters men- tioned, names not given; exec, Epli- raim Johnson; wits., John Hastings, J. T. Conn. RALPH SPURRIER, date of will, Nov. 30, ISoS; date of probate, April 25, 184S; wife, Eleanor; children, John, Samuel, "Warner, William, Richard, Sarah, Matilda, Elizabeth, Mary-Ann, Aseneth; execs., Warner Spurrier, Richard Spurrier; Avits., John Heber- ling, Nathan AVilliams, Evan Hurford. JACOB STALL, date of will, Sept. S, 184.".: date of probate, Oct. 10, 1845; wife, Elizabeth; children, .lames, Wd- liam, John, Elizabeth, Margaret, Mary, Catherine, Susie; grand-children, John, Jacob, Samuel, filargaret; execs., John Stall, Jeremiah Coudo; wits., David Finicum, George Tedrow. BAZALEEL STEEL, date of will. May 11, 18.53; date of probate, Oct. 22, 1857:. wife, Rachel; children, Andrew, Bazaleel, Daniel, David, William, Jane Iloge, Mary Batton, Matilda I'hillip, Nancy Sparling; exec, Rachel Steel; wits., Jacob Lemmon, John Knox. HESTER STEPHEN, date of will, Jan. 27, 3830; date of probate, March 30, 1830; wife, name not given; sisters, Elizabeth Harmon, Mary Polar, Ann Walker, A'ila Chance, EUener Steph- anes; mother, Catherine Stephen; brother, Jonathan; exec, John Mer- cer; wits., William Stephen, Phebe Stephen. BENJAMIN STEVENS, date of will, July 9, 1843; date of probate, — , 1845; wife, INlaitha; children, Ruth Ir- win, Sophiah Barkas, Rachel Henry, David, Gaidner, Benjamin-K.; exec, Jonas Holloway; wits., Ely Smith, Amos Rose. ARCHIBALD STEWART, date of will. Feb. 4, 1854; date of probate. April n, 18.54; wife, name not given; children, Isabel, j\Iary Ann Guthrie, James, Samuel; grand-sons, James and William Helling; exec, Samuel Stew- art; wits., James Billingsly, Jacob Cox, JA^IES STEWART, date of Avill, Oct. 7. 1835; date of probate, April 4, 1830; wife, name not given; children, James, Erasmus, William, Robert, Charles, Thonjas, .lane, Mary; execs.. John Smith, William Stewart; wits., Josiah Scott, Robert Erwin. JAMES STEWART, Archer town- ship; date of will, Aug. 5, 1836; date of proliate, March 27, 1837; wife, name not given; legatee, Samuel McKit- terick; exec, William Ross; wits., Rob- ert ]\Iaxwell, James G. Maxwell. LYDIA STRATTON, date of will, Oct. 29, 18G0: date of probate, May 28, ISOl; mother, Hannah T. Stratton; exec, Hannah T. Stratton; wits., AV. H. McGavran, William T. Deming. MARTHx^ STRATTON, date of will, Oct. 29, 1800; date of probate. May 28, 1801; mother, Hannah T. Stratton; exec, Hannah T. Stratton; wits., W. H. IMcGaran, W. T. Deming. MICHAEL STULL, date of will, Oct. 8, 1842; date of probate, Nov. 2, 1842; wife, Peggy; children, mentioned, names not given; execs., Peggy Stull. George Stull, Samuel Berrier; wits., John Wagner, Daniel Hilbert, George IMiller. JOHN T. SUMMERS, date of will, March 14, 1837. date of probate, July 4, 1837; wife, Jane; children, Andrew- J., John, Nancy Bishop, TarasMuckel- roy, Rebecca; grand-son, John AV. Bishop; grand-daughter, Rebecca Sum- mers: exec, Elienezer A. Gray; Avits., James Carruthers, AAMlliam Maxson. JOHN SUM^IERS, Shortcreek town- ship; date of Avill, Nov. 27, 1855; date of probate, Feb. 23, 18,56; wife, Eliza- beth; children, Amy I<]step, Reuben-P. ; grand-children, John, Hester, xVnn- Eliza, Benjamin, Abraham, and Cyrus 448 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Sopor; legatee. Adolphus DeWitt; exec, Renbon Summers; -\vits., Wil- liam Buchanan, William Cams, Rob- ert Wnde. JOSHUA SWAYNE, date of will, Feb. 2S, ISaO; date of probate, Sept. 10, ]S;52; wife, INIary; execs.. Mary Swayne, James Kinsey; wits., Thomas Hall, William Matson, Nathan P. Hall. JOHN TAGOAKT, date of will, June 21, 1S?.9: date of probate, Aug. 14, 184.3; wife, INIarsaret; children, James, John, George, Alexander, David, INIarsaret, Mary, Jane; exec., James Taggart; wits., John II. Jelly, C. Dewey. WILLIAM TARBET, Belmont co.; date of will, Sept. 20, 1817; date of pro- bate, March 27, 1818; wife, name not given; cousins, James Tarbet. Martha Tarbet; aunt. Insoy Gordon; exec, James Tarbet; wits., Alexander Bu- chanan, Benjamin Wilson, Samuel Wilson. .JONATHAN TAYLOR, Mt. Rleas- ant, .Tefferson county; date of will, April 1, 1831; date of probate, May 4. 1S?.2; wife, Ann; daughter, Rebecca; grand-sons, Jonathan T. Updegraff, David I'pdegraff; son-in-law, David Ui^degraff; execs., David Updegraff, Ben.iamin Wright; wits., L. Walker, Samuel Steer, Lemuel Jones. MARGARET TAY'LOR, Cadiz town- ship; date of will, March 7, ISoi!; date of probate, Nov. 16, 1859; daughtvrs, Margaret, Jane; execs., Margaret Tay- lor, Jane Taylor; wits., Sarali Mills, Josiah Scott. THOMAS TAYLOR, SR.. Cadiz township: date of will, Oct. 23, 184."i; date of pi'obafe, Dec 4, 184.^1: Avife. Margaret: children, Josiah, Thomas, ITrijah, Peggy, .Tane; exec, Thomas Taylor; wits., William Tlngley, Sam- uel Amspoker. Jr. ENOCH TEDKOW, Gorman town- ship: date of Avill, March 24, 18.">7; date of probate, Jidy 28, 1857; wife, July- Ann; niece, Christeny Ann Tedrow; exec, July Ann Tedrow; wits., John R. Kail, Andrew Lynch. GEORGE TEDROW, date of will. Sept. 15, 1815; date of i)robate, March 22, 1819; wife, Racliel; children, Mar- garet, Rachel, George, Isaac, Washing- ton, Enoch; execs., wife, Rachel Ted- row, and brother, John Tedrow; wits., Nicholas Wheeler, John Heridy, Philip Biddiuger. WASHINGTON R. TEDROW, Ger- man township; date of will, Sept. 27, 1849; date of probate, Dec. 17, 1849; wife, name not given; son, Reuben; legatee, servant, Elizabeth Ann Little; exec, John Gruber; wits., Michael Mil- ler, Peter R. Miller. HUGH TEES, date of will, .July 23, 1827; date of probate April 1, 1828; wife, Mary; execs., names not given; wits., Archibald ^IcGrew, Walter B. Beebe, John Maurdy. MATTIIEAV TENANT, date of will, Dec. 28, 1852; date of probate, Jan. 29, 1853; wife, name not given; children, Robert, William, (icorge, David, Isa- belle; execs., John Long, Samuel Richey; wits., John S. Yandolah, .lohu liong. ISAAC THOMAS, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will, Aug. 14, 1824: dale of probate, Jan. 28, 1S2G; wife, Susan- na; children, Isaac, Peter, Hannali, Sarah, Rheuanna; execs., Peter Thom- as, Jonathan Taylor; wits., Thomas Gibbons, Nathaniel Worrall, Isaac Cope. DANIEL THOMPSON, date of will, March 20, 1810: date of probate, April 11, ISIG; wile, name not given; sifters, Anne W. Kenny, Jane Wilson, Mar- garet Burns; nephews, Samuel Burns, Matthew Thompson; execs., Samuel Thompson, John Burns; wits., Natcher Ross, Jonathan West. JOHN THOMPSON, date of will, Oct. 22, 1830; date of probate, April 11, 1831; wife, Nancy; children, George, William, David, Elizabeth; execs., Nancy Thompson, James Evans; wits., John Leeper, Andrew Thompson, Alexander Simpson, William Evans. HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 449 JOSIAII TIIOMrSON. AtlH'Jisfown- shii): (late of will, March 7, ISiii;; date of pi-ohate, Juno G, 3S2G; wife, Eliza- lietlj; (la lighters, Margaret, Jane, Eliza; exec, John Lyle; wits., John Tarbert, John W. Kibbens, James Hood. KE]?ECCA THOMPSON, dnte of will, March 30, 1S54; date of probate, Aug. 5, 1854; children, Mary- Ann, Hugh; exec, John Brindly, wits., Hugh Birney, John L. Brown. EI>I TIMMONS, Cadiz town; date of will, December 10, 1828; date of pro- bate, July 28, 3829; wife, name not given; brothers, Benjamin, Forney, Samuel; mother, Mary Timmons; execs., Samuel Leach, Adam Junkius; wits., Henry Stubbins, Chauncey Dew- MARY TIMMONS, Cadiz town.?hip; date of will, Nov. 15, 1845; date of pro- bate, Aug. 13, 18.50; children, Furney, William, Samuel, Abraham, Benjamin, Catherine; grand-children, heirs of de- ceased son, Frederick; exec, Benjamin Tinimnns; wits., William Arnold, Sam- uel Bell. AQUILLA TIPTON, date of will, Aug. 14, 1826; date of probate, Oct. 17, 1820; children, Rebecca Wollan, Char- ity Gugan, Nancy, Koziah, Ketura Cox, William, Shederick, Samuel, John; execs., John Tipton, Joseph Johnson: wits., George W. Wallar, Aquilla Tipton. JOHN -TIPTON, date of will, Aug. 5, 1823; date of probate, June 11, 1m;;2; wife, Ketura h; legatee, William Tip- ton; exec, William Tipton; wits., George McCoUough, William Tiugley. MARY TIPTON, date of will, Nov. 7, 1825; date of probate, Sept. 3, 1827; children, John McCiuire, Patience, Sarah; grand-daugliter, Jerity Tiiiton; exec, John Dugan; wits., James Worth, Sr., Thomas Patton. RACHEL TITUS, date of will, June 20, 1800; date of probate, Jan. 21, 1801; sisters., Abigail Hooper, Sarah Co.x; exec, Saiatliael J. Hooper; wits., Wil- liam .Johnson, J. M. Johnson. TIMOTHY TITUS, date of will, June 2, 1S57; date of probate, Jan. ]!), 1859; wife, name not given; children, Uriah, AVilliam-L., Samuel, Jonathan, r^liza, Timothy, Jane Irons, Susanna Middleton, Mary Ann Wallace; wits., W. S. Granfell, Anion Lemmon. SOLOMON TRUSHEL, date of will, Dec 3, 1845; date of pro])ate, Feb. 28, 1840; wife, name not given; children, Mary Ilomerichouser, Susanna Guthry, Elizabeth Bearer, John, Valentine, P<4er; grand-children, Solomon, David, Mary-0., Delila, and Zel)adee Staples, execs., Robert P. Simpson, William Gulhry; wits., W. H. McGavran, Jos- eph Masters. CHRISTOPHER TUCKER, date of will, Feb. 12, 1842; date of probate, May 4, 1842; wife, Rachel; children, Janies-W., Greenberry-W., Levi-J.,Wil- liam-W., Christopher, Stephen, Re- becca, Rachel, Eliza, Sarah, Edgama- nan; exec, Rachel Tucker; wits., John Knox, Jacob Lemmon. NATHAN R. TURNER, date of will. March 7, 1845; date of probate, April — , 1845; wife, name not given; chil- dren, John, Nancy; exec, Thomas Merchant; wits., Gideon Seymour, An- drew Lynch. ALEXANDER URQUEHART, date of will, Jan. 17, 1814; date of probate, June 28, 1814; wife, Frances; sons, Syrus, John, Moses; exec, Thomas Dickerson; wits., Samuel Paulson, Isaac Allen, Baruch Dickerson. EDWARD VANHORN, New Athens township; date of will, Dec 30, 1844; date of probate, July 12, 18.56; wife, name not given; daughters, Martha, Jane, Jermima Downey; execs., names not given; wits., Alexander Nelson, James Wilson. ROBERT VINCENT, date of will, Jan. 14. 1828; date of probate. Awf:. 18, 1841; wife, name not given; children, Thomas-C. Jane Chambers; exec, Thomas Vincent; M'its., Walter B. Beebe, John Maliolm, George Mehoo(]. 29 450 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY THOMAS VINCENT, date of will, Feb. 27, 1840; date of probate, Nov. -, 1841; wife, Jane; children, Joseph, Thomas-W., Robert, James, Amanda, Sarah. Martha Milligan, Jane Holmes; execs., Jane Vincent, Josepli Vincent; wits., William Holmes, William Smiley. JOHN WAGNER, Jefferson town- ship; date of will, Oct. 10, 1857; date of probate, Feb. 17, ISoS; wife, name not given; children, George, John, Levi, Daniel, Henry, Catherine. Sarah, Rachel, Polly, Susanna, Drusilla; execs., John Winings, Jr., Samuel Smith; wits., Jolm Gruber, Milton Burchfield. WILLIAM WAGSTAFF, date of will, Dec. 22, 18:58; date of probate, June — , 1840; wife. Charity; children, Jame.?, Joseph, William, Daniel, Jolm, Robert, Elizabeth, Edie, Matilda An- derson; execs., James Wagstaff, Rob- ert Wagstaff; wits., John Beal, Henry Maxwell. JAMES WALKER, Cadiz township; date of will, Dec. 27, 1858; date of pro- bate. May 30, 1859; ^ife, Margaret; niece, Margaret McKitrick; sister, Martha Hutchison; legatees, Isaac Lawrence, John Rolston; execs., names not given; wits., Samuel N. Clifford, Samuel Nash. JOSEPH WALKER, Stock town- ship; date of will, Feb. 18, 1839; date of probate, April 12, 1841; children, William, John, George, James, Eliza- beth Parker, Mary Kent; exec, Samuel McFadden; wits., Jacob Wright, John McKenney. ROBERT WALKER, date of will, Nov. 8, 1858; date of probate, Jan. 22, 1859; wife, name not given; children, James, Charles, John-W., David-A., William-M., Robert- A., Margaret-J.; exec, Wesley Birney; wits., James Billingsley, Alexander Moore. ROBERT WALKER, date of will, March 12, 1855; date of probate, April 29, 38.59; children. Nelson, Lorenzo, Nancy Davis; exec, Nelson Walker; wits., Alexander Moore, John Poulson. JOHN R. WALLACE, date of will, June 10, 1846; date of probate, April 20, 1847; wife, Elizabeth; children, Amanda, John, William; exec, Robert Davidson; wits., Samuel Kincaid, Wil- liam Buchanan. NATHANIEL A. WALLACE Moorefield township; date of will, March 20, 1855; date of probate, April 5, 1855; wife, Julianu; children, Mary- Mc, Tliomas-C; wits., T, R.Crawford, James Kirkpatrick. WILLIAM WALLACE, Moorefield township; date of will, Aug. 23, 1841; date of probate. May 2, 1842; wife, Polly-W.; children, John, Nathaniel-S., Willlam-A., Samuel-M., Wilson-E., Sarah- Ann, Elenor-S., Margaret-J.; execs., Polly W. Wallace, Thomas J. Holliday; wits., Thomas J. HoUiday, John W. Milligan. WILLIAM WALRAVEN, Jefferson county; date of will, Sept. 25, 1810; date of probate, May 3, 1813: wife, name not given; children, William. Elias, John, Hester, Harriett, and five other daughters, not named; sisters, Sarah, Mary, and Susannah Walrav- en, and Margaret Guyton; execs., son, John Walraven, and Joseph Holmes; wts., Richard .Tones, Andrew Eagle- son, Thomas Dickerson. JACOB WALTERS, date of will. Jan. 25, 1849; date of probate, June 21, 1854; children, Jacob, John, Sam- uel, George, Martin, David, Joseph, Abraham, Elizabeth; exec, Abraham Walters; wits.. Lot Deming, William Deming, Thomas Lyons. ISAAC WARNER, Moreland, Mont- gomery CO., Pa.; date of will, Feb. 3, 1824; date of probate, Dec 25, 1820; wife, name not given; children, Isaac, Thomas, Joseph, Ruth, Martha, Mary; grand-son, Isaac Jeams; execs., Thom- as Warner, Isaac Warner, Joseph Warner; wits., Elias Booskirk, Sr.. Benjamin Briggs. ANN WATERMAN, Short Creek township; date of will, Nov. IG, 1S55; HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 451 date of probate, Dec. 15, 1855; chil- dren, Leona Dickey, Rebecca Jane Cliamberlaiu; execs., Milton R. Pettot, Ezra Cattell; wits., John Nicholson, John S. Reddig. JOHN WATKINS, date of will, Nov. 23, 1847; date of probate, Dec. 16, 1847; wife, Margaret; legatees, Silas H. Amos, and children of his brothers and sisters, names not given; exec, Spencer Webb; wits., Joseph Harri- son, John Creal. JOHN W. WATSON, date of will, July 17, 1859; date of probate, July 29, 1859; wife, Rebecca; children, Rachel- Ann, Nancy-A., Adam-D.; exec, S. R. Watson; wits., John Webb, Joseph Dunlap. ALLEN WATTERS, date of will, July 1, 1821; date of probate, March 18, 1823; wife, Jane; children, John, Allen, William, Anna, Fanny, Eliza- beth; exec, John Watters; wits., Thomas Graham, James C. Hutchin- son, Michael Grable. THOMAS WEAVER, date of will, Oct. 25, 1822; date of probate, April 3, 1827; wife, Mary; nephews, James and Thomas Weaver; Jane Beeabout, and Thomas Weaver; brother, Rob- ert; sister-in-law, Betsey; legatees, Jane Beeabout, Jane Wilson; execs., brother, Robert Weaver, and nephew, James Weaver; wits., S. Conuell, James Burson, Isaac Jones. JACOB WEBB, date of will. Feb. 5, 1834: date of proliate, April 12, 1834; wife, Hannah; children, Robert, Ezekiel, Joseph, Jacob, Hannah, Ann, Sarah, Esther. Edith, Mary; execs, John Webb, Sirus Holt; wits., Rob- ert McCracken, William McFarland, James McMillan. JOSEPH WEBB, Athens township; date of will, Feb. 7, 1850; date of pro- bate, Oct. 22, 18.50; wife, Susan: exec, Smith R. Watson; wits., William Royer, S. B. Shotwell. DANIEL WELCH. Green township; date of will, Sept. 3, 1819: date ol probate, Nov. 15, 1819; wife, Eliza- beth; children, Daniel, Reasin, Ben- jamin, Jacob, William, Cyrus, Rodey; grand-daughters, Elizabeth and Rach- el Welch; execs., sons, Daniel and Reasin AVelch, and daughter, Rodey Welch; wits., William Kyle, James Cobean. SA]\IUEL WELCH, date of will, May 4, 1849; date of probate, April 5, 1850; wife, name not given; children, John, James, William, Nancy Johnson, EUenor Dunbar; grand-daughters, Eliz- abeth Fisher, Catherine Welch; execs., John Welch, James Welch; wits., Fry- er McKinney, Michael Conaway. WILLIAM WELCH, date of will, Feb. 9, 1S5G; date of probate, March 11, 1856; Avife, Isabelle; children, George, Thomas; exec, Isabelle Welch; Avits.7 John W. McClaren, Steward Price. JOHN WELLING, date of will, ■ — , 1818; date of probate, Jan. 22, 1821; wife, Mima; children, William, John, David, Thomas, Henry, Nancy, Polly, Elizabeth; execs., William Welling, John Welling; wits., John Maholm, Connel Abdit, J. Harris. JOHN WELLS, date of will, Aug. 15, 1824; date of probate, June 5, 182G; wife, Catherine; children, Isiah, Eliza- beth, Susannah Gray; grand-son, John Morris; execs., Isiah Wells, William Lewis; Avits., Joseph Rhodes, Samuel Lewis. Edwin Patterson. JOHN W^EYANDT, date of will, July 19, 1845; date of probate, April 24, 'l848; wife, Motlena; children, Dan- iel, Jacob, Abraham, Polly Heller, Teny Warner; daughter-in-law, Nancy; execs., Jacob Weyandt, Daniel Wey- andt, Abraham Weyandt; wits., Thom- as McClintock, John Plowman. JOHN WHAN, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will, Oct. 25, 1855; date of probate, April 9, 18.59; wife, Mar- garet: children, James-B., Sarah, El- len, Hannah; grand-children, Martha Stewart, William Twinnam, Mary Twinnam, William McCollough, Mary Bell, William Morgan; execs., James 452 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY B. Whan, Marshal Morgan; wits., James Hanna, John Hauna. ISAAC WHEALDON, date of will, April IG, 1S3G; date of probate, May 21, 1S41; wife, Elizabeth; children, Ann, and others, names not given; execs., Avife, Elizabeth Whealdon, Joseph Whealdon; wits., Abel Picker- ing, Jonathan Sayers. BENJAMIN WHEELER, Baltimore CO., Md.; date of will, Jan. 25, ISOG; date of probate, Aug. 22, 1807; wife, name not given; children, Nichola.^;, William, Benjamin, Mordicai, James, Richard, Rachel, Elizabeth, Keziah, Isabella; exec, William Wheeler; wits., Samuel Price, Daniel Basley, John Price. JOHN WHITE, Shortcreek town- ship; date of will, Jan. 1, 1835; date of probate, Dec. 7, 1840; wife, Jane; children, Ann Tribby, Rachel Thorn, James; grand-son, John McMillan; execs., John Tribby, James White; wits., John Howard, John C. Thomp- son, Thomas Hirst. ANDREW WYLIE, Green town- ship; date of will, June 2, 1832; date of pi-obate, Oct. 25, 1833; wife, name not given; brothers, Samuel, William; sisters, Jane Wilkin, Elizabeth, and Nancy; execs., David Watts, William Wylie; wits., William Watts, William Fulton. JOHN WILEY, Green township; date of will, April 3, 1816; date of pro- bate, April 10, ISIG; wife, Margaret; children, Elizabeth, Nancy, Jean, Wil- liam, John, Sanniel, Andrew; execs., Daniel Welch, William Watts, Mar- garet Wilev; wits., John Miller, James Black, William Waddle. MATTHEW WILKIN, date of will, April 10, 1830; date of probate, Aug. 24, 1833; wife, Jane; children, John, Matthew, Robert, Betsy, Fanny Pol- lock, Peggy Day, Jane Orr; exec, .John Patterson; wits., Thomas Patton, Edward Lletcher. ELIZABETH WILLIAMS, date of will, Dec. 2, 1847; date of probate, Feb. 26, 1S.-0; children, Rachel War- wick, Elizabeth Wagstaff, Mary Henry, Jane McKinney, Susanna Rockey, Martha Brown, William, Samuel; exec, William Williams; wits., Daniel Mcllrevy, Charles Coua- way. NATHAN WILLIAMS, date of will. May 19, 1841; date of probate, Aug. 10, 1841; wife, Sarah; execs., Wilson Maddox; wits., Evan Hurford, Asen- ath Si)urrier, Amelia Stephens. THOMAS WILLIAMS, Archer town- ship; dale of will, April 13, 181(); date of probate, Nov. 27, 1816; wife, Bet- sey; children mentioned, names not given; execs., Robert Maxwell, Thom- as MaxAvell; wits., Robert Maxwell, Thomas Maxwell. WILLIAM WILLIAMS, Moorefield township; date of will. May 2, 1857; date of probate, Aug. 8, 1857; wife, Ann; sons, Isaac-AV., James-A.; exec, Ann Williams; wits., John Sloan, Rob- ert C. McConnell. JANE WILLIAMSON, date of will, July 4, 1849; date of probate, Aug. — , 1S49; children, Frances-T., Pliebe-M., Lusia, Mary-J.-G., William McKnight; exec, Robert Woods; wits., David T. Robe, John Campbell. CHARLES WILLISON, Moorefield township; date of will, Aug. 14, 1830; date of probate, Oct. 19, 1830; wife, Zillali; children, Eli.iah, Amos, Jere- miah, Charles, Gerusha, Abijah, Anne, Rosilla; exec, Zillah Willison; wits., William Wyckoff, Ephriam Johnson, Benjamin S. Cowen. JANE WILSON, date of will, Feb. 12, 1831: date of probate, June 28, 1834; children, Sai-ah Grain, Joseph, Robert; wits., William L. Robison, William Russel. JOHN WILSON, date of will, Oct. 27, 1810; date of probate, Nov. 15, 1819; wife, Hannah; children, men- tioned, names not given; execs., Han- nah Wilson, Jacob Kiser; wit.^., John Wagner, John Waind, John Winings. HARRISON COUNTY WILLS 453 SAMUEL WILSON, Freeport town- ship; will, not dated; date of probate, April 24, ISnO; wife, name not given; children, William-P., Samuel-C, Lydia Halliday; grand-daughters, Ann-Eliza and Eveline Wilson; legatees, Sarali A. Irvin, Sarah A. Wilson; exec, William P. Wilson; wits., E. K. Trice, Joseph AA'healdon. THOMAS WILSON, Cadiz town- ship; date of will, Nov. 30, 1829; date of probate, March 30, 1830; wife, Le- vinah; children, John, William, Isaac, Thomas, Levinah, Rebecca, Mary, Elizabeth, Rachel; execs., John Wil- son, Thomas Wilson; wits., Alexander Henderson, Joseph Burwell, William Crom. JACOB WININGS, date of will, June 28, 1843; date of probate, Oct. — , 1844: wife, Elizabeth; children, John, Jacob, Catherine; son-in-law, James McClnre; legatee, W. D. Stringer; exec, John Winings; wits., Alexander Patterson, Samuel S. Wining-s. JOHN WININGS, German town- ship; date of will, June 19, 1829; dale of probate, April 8, 1833; wife, Bar- bara; children, Margaret, Elizabeth, Catherine, 3Iary; execs., Jacob Win- ings, John Winings; wits., John Shober, John Coyl. LOVINA WINROD, date of will, Nov. 7, 1861; date of probate, Nov. 18, 18G1; children, Rachel-E., Lewis-D.; exec, Milton Harvey; wits,, John Winrod, James W. Wherry. WILLIAM WOOD, date of will. Jan. 13, 1830; date of probate, April 11, 1831; wife, Margaret; children, Hugh, Thomas, John, William, Jane Pool, Margaret Chance, Effey Chance, Marget Prane, ]\Iary Beall; exec, Mar- garet Wood; wits., Samuel Cope, John Suddith. ZACHARIAH WOOD, North town- ship; date of will, Sept. 9, 1831; date of probate, Oct. 24. 1831; wife, Mary; children, Charles, ,Tohn, Isaac, Lisha, Zachariah, Benjamin, Joseph. Henry, William, Nancy Lowry, Salle Low; execs., names not given; wits., Peti^r Rutan, Jonas Gutshall, John Creal, Jonathan Shotwell. ALEXANDER WORK, date of will, Jan. 25, 1845; date of probate, Aug. 27, 1801; wife, Jane-T.; children, Anderson-D., Alexander-T. ; adopted daugter, E. W. Wileott; execs., John A. Work, James T. Work; wits., John Adams, Anderson D. Work. THOMAS WORLEY, date of will, July 3, 1834; date of probate, May — , 18r)9; wife, Mary; children, David, Thomas, Daniel, James, Susanna Mar- tin, Julianna~B'onum, Margaret, Eliza- beth; execs., Thomas Worley, James Worley; wits., Benjamin Gudgen, David Worley, James McMillan. ISAAC AVRIGHT, date of will, March 27, 1852; date of probate, July 31, 18.52; wife, Hannah; children, Mary-Jane; legatee, Hannah Jane Hurles; execs., Hannah Wright, Jacol) Reigal: wits., Thomas Underbill, Rob- ert Wright. JAMES WRIGHT, date of will, Sept. 10, 1830; date of probate, Nov. 4, 1842; wife, Barbary; children, Jacob, Thomas, Eliza, MetJlda Whit- ney; execs., names not gi^en; wits., Peter Crabtree, Cornelius Crabtree. JONATHAN WRIGHT, Frederick CO., Va.; date of will, Jan. 28, 1819; date of probate, March 5, 1838; wife, Hannah; children, Richard, Thomas. David, Esther Lupton, Alargaret Cat- tle, Sally Smith, Bulah, Ruth, Tacy; execs., wife, Hannah Wright, and son, David Wright; wits., William W. Hutt, Martha A. Lupton, Micagah Beeson, Margaret Wolf, Jonathan JPic- kering. MOSES WRIGHT, date of will. April 11, 1854; date of probate. Juno 14, 18.54; wife, Ann; children, Isaac, John-C, Thomas, Nathan, Benjamin, William, Moses, Nathan, Pricilla Stu- gert: execs., Nathan Wright, William Wright; wits., Isaac Cope, John Knox. AARON YARNELL, Nottingham township, date of will, June 15. 1851; 454 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY date of probate, Nov. 18, 1S53; wife, Mary Ann: cliildren, no names given; exec. Micliael Crowl; wits., William Jolmsou, M. Crowl. MARY ANN YARNELL, Notting- ham toAvnsliip; date of will, May 2, 1855; date of probate, Oct. 2, 185G; children, Zeba, William, Aaron, Col- mer, John, Nelson, Lydia, Mary-Ann; exec, M. Crowl; wits., M. Crowl, Cy- rus Rowland. HENRY YEISALY. date of will, Oct. 18, 1828; date of probate, April 12, 1841; wife, Barbary; son, John; exec, Adam Hubler; wits., Christopher Able, Wil- liam Abaugh, Frederick Able. DENTON YOUNG, date of will, July 22, 1831; date of probate, Jan. 4, 1831; wife, name not given; children, Den- ton, Mark. John, McKiuzie, Marandie, Manervy; exec, Andrew Keys; wits., Thomas Patton, Hugh Birney. JOHN YOUNG, date of will, March 14, 1861; date of probate, June 19, 1861; wife, name not given; children, Mary Sproul, Jane Moore, Sarah Ann Wages, Elizabeth Mcllroy, William, Jared, Robert-G.; execs., names not given; wits., R. M. Coultrap, G. W. Spiker. WILLIAM YOUNG, Brooks county, Va.; date of will, May 18, 1812; date of probate, Aug. 24, 1813; wife, name not given; children, .Jean Eagleson; nephews, William Hervey (and his daughter, Margaret) .Tames Hervey, David Hervey, Henry Hervey; sisters, .Tean Young, Agnes Young; legatees, Andrew P^agleson, Isabella Hervey; execs., William Hervey, Andrew Eagleson; wits., John McComb, John Henry. MATTHIAS ZIMMERLY, date of will, Aug. 24, 18.39; date of probate, Nov. — , 1847; wife, name not given; children, Jacob, John, George, Cath- erine Kaylor; execs., names not given; wits., William L. Packer, Thomas Davidson. PART THIRD HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 30 PART THIRD HAKRISON COUNTY GEXEALOGIES * JOHN ADAMS, a native of Ireland, William and Nancy Stalson Johnson, settled in Short Creek township, Har- early settlers in Moorefield township; rison county, Ohio, about 1805, where had issue; 1. John, b. January 17, 1831, he d. 1812; m. , d. 1846; had is- in Moorefield township; m. January 13, sue: 1. William; 2. James; 3. Samuel, 1853, Mary E. Swearingen, b. December b. Dec. 1, 1809; m. (1st) 1842, Sarah 30, 1835, daughter of John and Nancy Chambers, d. February 7, 1851, daugh- Pumphrey Swearingen, natives of Vir- ter of David Chambers, of Green town- ginia (had issue; i. Henry-T.; ii. Annie- ship ; m. (2d) April 2, 1857, Mary Clark, E.; iii. Albert-D.; settled in Chicago, daughter of James Clark, of Athens 111.; iv. W.-S.; v. Emma-V.; vi. Sadie; township (had issue by first wife: i. vii. Mary-E.); 2. Rachel-A., m. Joshua, b. August 2, 1842; ii. Rachel, b. Romans; 3. Mary, m. Johnson; September 3, 1844; iii. John, b. Decem- settled in Washington, Davis county, her 11, 1850; d. April 27, 1882; had issue Ind.; 4. William; 5. Samuel, d. young; by second wife: iv. Clark, m. Novem- 6. Rebecca, m. J. Moore. V. John, b. ber 26, 1884, Dora Copeland, daughter June 20, 1808. VI. Julia-A., b. Decem- of Henry Copeland, of Green township; ber 13, 1811, YII. Anthony, b. October V. Sarah-Elizabeth); 4. Hannah; 5. 4,1815. Joshua; 6. John. THOMAS ADAMS, b. in Pennsyl- JOHN ADAMS, a native of Pennsyl- vania, about 1790; removed to Cadiz vania, b. November 13, 1774; settled in township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1815; Freeport township, Harrison county, settled in Nottingham township, in Ohio, about 1807, where he d. 1835; m. 1846, where he d. 1855; m. Charity May 2, 1799, Rachel Asher; b. in Penn- Blair, a native of Ohio, b. 1792, d. sylvania May 16, 1776; d. August 25, 1866, daughter of John Blair; had is- 1851; had issue: sue: 1. John, d. in infancy; 2. Maria- I. Rebecca, b. February 29, 1800. II. Rogers; 3. Percival. b. September 10, Elizabeth, b. April 16, 1801. III. Rachel, 1820, in Cadiz township; m. March 27, b. December 18, 1803. IV. Samuel, b. 1845, Mary J. Downs, b. August 26, 1822, January 16, 1806, in Erie county, Penn.; daughter of Richard and Elizabeth, came with his parents to Ohio; settled McKinney Downs (the former b. 1797, in Moorefield township, Harrison in Carroll county, Ohio; the latter b. county, 1828, where he d. November 17, January 22, 1797, in Lancaster county, 1880; m. January 24, 1828, Elizabeth Penn.); (had issue: i. John-F.. b. Johnson, d. May 19, 1883, diaughter of March 20, 1846; ii. Albert-B., b. May 23, * In the family rpoordp given in the following pages, the iiamep of the children of the first on'" of the family to settle in Harrison county arc nsnally preceded by roman capital numerals ll., II.. III., IV., etc.) : the names of the grandchildren, by arable numerals (1. 2, 3, 4, etc.) ; and the names of the great- grandchildren by roman lower-case numerals (i., ii., iii., iv., etc.). 458 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 1849; iii. Eliza-J., b. March 14, 1851, d. November 14, 1887; iv. Richard-M., b. August 27, 1853; v. Thomas-P., b. De- cember 3, 1857; vi. James-B., b. July 12, 1860; vii. Margaret-B., b. December 13, 1865); 4. James, d. in Nottingham town- ship. October 8, 1888; 5. Matthew, settled in Cadiz; 6. Albert, settled in Missouri; 7. Isabelle, m. Thomas Rogers, settled in Crawford county, Ohio; 8. William, settled in Cadiz; 9. John, settled in Uhrichsville, Tuscara- was county, Ohio; 10. Sarah-E. WILLIAM ADAMS, a native of Penn- sylvania, of Scotch-Irish descent, m. Mary , b. in Pennsylvania; set- tled in Archer township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1819; had issue, among others: 1. Samuel, b. January 20. 1808; d. June 13, 1874, in Archer township; m. 1833, Jane C. Stewart, b. in Pennsyl- vania, daughter of James Stewart, a native of Ireland who settled in Phila- delphia July 4, 1811, thence removing to Washington county, Penn. (had is- sue, among others: 1. Samuel-W., b. November 18, 1839, m. Flora J. Gray, daughter of Samuel and Eliza Gray, residents of Findlay). WILLIAM ADAMS, b. September 5, 1799, in Fayette county, Penn.; re- sided in Short Creek township, Harri- son county, Ohio, until 1880; thence removed to Freepoit township; d. Janu- ary 8, 1881; m. in Pennsylvania. Eliza- beth Clark, d. December 10, 1869, daughter of Joshua Clark; had issue: 1. David, settled in Short Creek town- ship; m. (1st) November 10. 1855, Lu- cinda Marsh, of Iowa, d. December 9, 1865; m. (2d) March 14, 1867, Mary Ann Moore (had issue by second wife: i. , d. in infancy; ii. William- Moore; iii. Robert-C). JAMES AIKEN, a native of Ireland, emigrated to America and settled, about 1803, near Hickory, in Washington county. Penn.; had issue: 1. James, b. 1802, in Ireland; came to Washington county, Penn., with his parents; re- moved in 1826, to Jefferson, German township, Harrison county, Ohio, and in 1870 to Jewett, Rumley township, •where he d. 1885; m. in Jefferson. 1829. Jane Scott, b. 1806 in Washington county, Penn.. d. 1867. daughter of Josiah Scott (had issue: i. Elizabeth; ii. John, a minister, settled in Wayne county, Ind.; iii. Martha; iv. Jane, m. John Roberts; v. Annie, m. James Den- nis, settled at Wellsville. Ohio; vi. Robert, settled in Amsterdam, Jeffer- son county, Ohio; vii. James, b. June 19, 1840; m. March 11, 1865, Maria Mikesell, daughter of Joseph and Mag- dalene Hoobler Mikesell; viii. Samuel- B.; ix. Josiah; x. Alexander, served in the Civil War; xi. Benjamin; xii. George); 2. John, settled in Chester county, Penn.; 3. William, settled in Baltimore, Md.; 4. Alexander, settled in Pittsburg, Penn.; 5. David, settled in Washington, D. C.; 6. Margaret, m. Agnew, settled in Washington county, Penn. JOHN ALEXANDER, a native of County Antrim, Ireland, emigrated to America and, about 1826, settled in Pennsylvania; two years later removed to Freeport township, Harrison county, Ohio, where he d. June, 1869; m. in Ireland Mary Allen; d. 1838; had issue: I.Eleanor; 2. Thomas; 3. Jesse; 4. Mary- Ann; 5. John, settled in Kansas; 6. James, b. March 8, 1829; m. May 27, 1852, Margaret Forsythe. daughter of Matthew Forsythe, of Freeport (had issue: i. Matthew, settled in Freeport township; m. November 20, 1888. Nancy Harbison; ii. Mary; iii. John; iv. Mag- gie-E.); 7. Hannah-J.; 8. Elizabeth, settled in Kansas. JAMES ALLEN, a native of Mary- land, d. 1792; m. Rebecca Miller; had issue, among others: I. Reuben, b. in Maryland, 1783; removed in 1812 to Cadiz township. Harrison county, Ohio, where he d. July 8, 1875; m. 1812. Jo- hanna McMillan, d. 1869. daughter of John McMillan, a resident of Harrison county; had issue: 1. Isaac, b. Septem- ber 16. 1813; m. 1841. Sarah Barrett, daughter of David Barrett, of Cadiz township (had issue: i. Reuben: ii. Rebecca-J.. m. R. M. Black; iii. Albert; iv. Winifred); 2. Rebecca; 3. Esther; 4. Amos; 5. Mary- Jane; 6. Ruthann; 7. Johanna; 8. James. JAMES ALLISON, a native of Ire- land, b. 1790; d. at Hopedale. Ohio, 1881; emigrated to America and first settled in Philadelphia. Penn.. about 1805; removed to Pittsburg. Penn.. and thence to Cadiz, Harrison county. Ohio, where he resided until about 1818: re- moving thence to Stark county, where he resided until about 1825; m.in Cadiz, Margaret Hervey, d. 1837; daughter of HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 459 William and Margaret Hervey; had issue: 1. Margaret, m. John Galbraith; 2. John-Rea; 3. David, b. in Starlc county, Ohio, April 20, 1820; m. (1st) 1854, Mary Crouch, d. 1865, daughter of Levi Crouch, who settled in Green township before 1817, where he d. 1862; m. (2d) 1867, Martha-E. Smith, daugh- ter of Joel Smith (had issue: i. Henry- F.; ii. Willard^R.; iii. Howard-Smith); 4. Henry; 5. Sarah; 6. James, d. 1859; 7. Mary- Jane, m. John Hammond; set- tled in Athens township, Harrison county; 8. Joseph; 9. Elizabeth, m. Daniel Eaton; settled in Jefferson county, Ohio; 10. Isabella, d. 1830. SAMUEL AMSPOKER, see Family of Henry Ferguson. ROBERT ANDERSON, b. in Ireland, 1753; d. September 2, 1838, in Clays- ville, Washington county, Penn.; emi- grated to America and first settled in Maryland about 1780, where he re- mained until 1786, and then removed to Washington county, Penn.; m. 1781, in Maryland, Margaret Johnson, b. in Ireland, 1760; d. September 13, 1827; had issue: I. Samuel, b. 1783, in Maryland; d. February 22, 1866; removed to the Still- water Valley, in Stock township, Harri- son county, Ohio, about 1838, locating seven miles west from Cadiz; m. 1813, Catherine Forbes, daughter of John Forbes, of Scotch-Irish ancestry; had issue :^LRobert, b. in Claysville, Penn., Octobfpll, 1815; came with his father to Harrison county, in 1838; located in North township; m. July 1, 1840, Esther McCollough, a native of Archer town- ship, of Scotch descent (had issue: i. Sarah-A., b. May 23, 1842; m. Thomas McDivitt; ii. William-B., b. in Stock township, Dec. 29, 1843; served in the Civil War; m. Sept. 6, 1870, Mary Buchanan, b. near Jewett, Ohio, Dec. 19, 1845; of Scotch-Irish descent, daugh- ter of Joseph and Elizabeth Hines Buchanan; iii. Samuel-L., b. in Harri- son county. January 22, 1846; iv. Isabel- J., b. in Harrison coimty, January 12, 1848; m. S. J. Rippeth, who d. Dec. 19. 1883; V. Joseph-M., b. in Carroll county, Feb. 20, 1850; a Presbyterian minister; settled in Cincinnati; vi. Mary-E., b. in Carroll county, March 5, 1852; m. Thomas Brough; vii. Thomas- H.. b. in Carroll county, August 23, 1854; viii. Martha-F., b. in Carroll county, December 30, 1856, d. Feb. 17, 1888; m. Thomas Whittaker; ix. John- B., b. August 15, 1862; d. March 25, 1864); 2. J ohn; 3. James; 4. Samuel; 5. Hugh;'^rWilliam; 7. Jane; 8. Thomas, II. Richard, b. in Maryland; III. John, b. in Washington county, Penn., as were also his younger brothers and sisters; IV. William; V. Robert; VI. Mary; VII. Hugh; VIII. James; IX. Jane; X. Margaret; XI. Thomas; XII. , d. in infancy. WILLIAM ARBAUGH, a native of Maryland, of German descent, and a soldier of the Revolution, had issue: I. Jacob; II. Daniel; III. Rachel; IV. Margaret; V. John, b. in Maryland, where he m. Rosanna Wentz, a native of that State; removed to Rumley township, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1820; had issue: 1. Sarah; 2. Margaret; 3. Lavina; 4. Lydia; 5. John; 6. James; 7. Adam; 8. Levi, b. October 28, 1825; m. (1st) December 23, 1858, Elizabeth Reid, d. 1885; daughter of Hugh and Margaret Fulton Reid, pioneers of Archer township, Harrison county; m. (2d) April, 1889, Louisa Hilbert, of Defiance, Ohio. JONATHAN ARNOLD, of Welsh de- scent, removed probably from Virginia to Luzerne township, Fayette county, Penn., before 1786, there settling " at a place called the West Bend of the Monongahela River, six or seven miles above Redstone Old Fort (now Brownsville); " d. 1799 (before July 5th); m. Sarah Scott; had issue: I. Jonathan; II. Benjamin, d. about 1804; m. Comfort (or Mary) Cullum (her father of Scotch-English descent; her mother, Dutch), b. about 1758; d. in Archer township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1856, having removed there with her children from Fayette county about 1810; had issue: 1. Rezin, b. in Luzerne township, Fayette county, Penn., Feb. 25, 1786; d. at Manhattan, Kan., Nov. 23, 1858; served in the War of 1812; m. (1st), Dec. 24, 1821, Anna Arrison, b. July, 1794; d. Feb. 16, 1823; m. (2d) at Cadiz, Dec. 9, 1824, Maria Eleanor Robertson, b. Aug. 25, 1802; d. Nov. 15, 1869; daughter of Robert and Beulah Stanley Robertson (the latter descended from George Maris, a Quaker preacher who emigrated to Pennsylvania in 1683; the former, son of John and Eleanor Dick Robertson) ; (had issue: i. Joseph- 460 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY ine-A., b. Sept. 30, 1825; m. J. H. and Elizabeth. Of these: George b Brouse; ii. Marion, b. April 25, 1827; m. May 1, 1778; d. Aug. 27, 1854; m. Sarah Mary 0. Borden; iii. William-Stanley, Snodgrass, b. Dec. 1, 1786; d. Dec. 23, b. March 16, 1829; d. at Los Angeles, 1854; had issue: 1. Mary, b. Oct. 7, 1812; Cal., Sept. 7, 1870; m. Katharine David- m. David Hilbert; 2. Elizabeth, b. Dec. son; iv. Maria-Louisa, b. May 3, 1831; 12, 1813; m. 1833, James Roberts; 3. m. Dr. S. Whitehouse; v. Laura-Anna, Elenora, b. March 5, 1816; m. James b. June 19, 1833; m. D. W. Lane; vi. Ross; 4. Samuel, b. Nov. 30, 1817; d. Benton, b. March 7, 1835; vii. Amanda- Oct. 30, 1821; 5. Rebecca, b. Oct. 17, Tingley, b. March 18, 1837; viii. Robert- 1818; d. March 17, 1860; m. Andrew Robertson, b. in Morgan county, Finley Ross, son of Reynolds and Ohio, Feb. 15, 1839; d. March 5, Martha Finley Ross, of Westmoreland 1863; ix. John-Hanna, b. July 18, 1841; county, Penn.; 6. George-S., b. Nov. 14, d. Nov. 7, 1862; x. James-D., b. May 5, 1819; m. Matilda Simeral, b. Dec. 25, 1844; d. Jan. 8, 1891; xi. Charles-Robert- 1818; daughter of James and Mary Ann son, b. Aug. 15, 1846); 2. Jonathan; 3. Vincent Simeral (had issue: i. James- James; 4. Comfort, m. Jonathan West, S., b. Aug. 8, 1845; d. March 11, 1895; ii. (see West Family); 5. Aneka (Axie), Frank-H., b. Oct. 12, 1847; m. Mary Bell m. James Mehollin; 6. Sophia, m. 1815, Shauf; iii. Charles-D., b. Jan. 24, 1851; Nathan Ross, of Richland; 7. Frances, d. June 18, 1885; iv. Anna-Amanda, b. m. 1819, Charles Conaway; 8. William, Nov. 5, 1853; d. Nov. 16, 1855; v. Emma- b. 1798; d. at Cadiz, 1874; m. May 17, Caroline, b. Nov. 5, 1853; d. Sept. 24, 1831, Jane C. Hoyt, b. 1806; d. 1872; 1855); 7. Sarah, b. March 1, 1823; m. daughter of Jesse and Sarah Hoyt, Levi J. Kennard; 8. Francis, b. June 28, natives of New York (descendants of 1825; d. April 11, 1854; m. Eliza Bost- Simon Hoyt, who emigrated from Eng- wick; 9. Leann, b. Feb. 1, 1827; d. Oct. land to Massachusetts about 1638); (had 1. 1840. issue: i. John, d. in Kansas, 1855, while SAMUEL ATTLD, see Family of serving as a Government Surveyor; ii. Archibald Stewart. Mary-A., m. John W. Simmons; iii. TrvuM tj a t^-c^o i f r u -o -, ^ Sarah, d. in Washington, Guernsey JOHN BAKER (son of John Baker) county, Ohio, 1869; m. James Knox, of }>: '^ Pennsylvania, 1777; came with Cadiz; iv. Jesse, settled in Washington, ^"^ l^^^^^ts to Green township Harri- D. C; V. William-H., m. (1st) 1866 ,'°f/°^"S' ^^^^'/^ ^^^'-' ^- ^.^^'J!' Lydia Hunter, d. Feb. 28, 1886, daugh- l^^l'. ^^- ^^'^^^.^ Buchanan; d. 1829; ter of Judge Joseph R. Hunter, of ^^'^^ '^!.''!i 1- Delilalid. in infancy; 2. Cadiz; m. (2d) Caroline Thompson J^^n; 3. George; 4. Ehzabeth; 5. Rezm, daughter of James Thompson, of Cadiz ^- ^°y^°'''^^^i^\l^ol*^= ^- ^^l^^^' ^^'^^^ township; vi. George, settled at Colum- "^- ^f^^^'^^l'^ F' 1835. Sarah Thompson, bus, Ohio; vii. Jane, settled at Port- t^aughter of Thomas Thompson, of Cadiz land, Oregon). III. Levi. IV. William township (had issue: i. John-L., b. V. Jemima, m. Rezin (?) Virgin Vl' November 20, 1836; ii. Thomas-J., b. Rachel, m. William (?) Hammond. VIl" January 9, 1838; iii. Weston, b. Novem- Hannah. VIII. Sarah. ^^i" ^^' ^^^l; iv. , d. aged twenty- two months; v. Elijah-W., b. January GAVIN ARTHURS, see Family of 4, 1847); 6. Samuel; 7. William, d. in Jonathan West. infancy. THOMAS ATKINSON, d. in Amwell DAVID BARCLAY, b. May 18, 1790, (now Franklin) township, Washington in county Derry, Ireland; emigrated to county, Penn., June-September, 1784, Baltimore, Md., in 1826, thence re- leaving children: Mercy, m. moved to Pittsburg, Penn., where he Ellet; Eleanor, m. Charles (^) Cracraft; remained two yeai's, and came to Not- Elizabeth, m. Ellet; Jean, m. tingham township, Harrison county, Sargent; William; George; Ohio, where he d. April 9, 1876: m. in Thomas; and (probably) John. George Ireland, September 26. 1822, Elizabeth Atkinson, probably the son of Thomas Kissick, b. in County Derry, March 17, Atkinson first named above, died in 1801; d. January 9, 1871; had issue: 1. Brooke county, West Virginia, 1824, James, b. in Ireland; 2. William, b. in leaving children: Thomas, Mary, Mar- Ireland; 3. Barbara, m. Love; 4. garet, Eleanor, Sarah, Martha, Ruth, Eleanor, m. McAdams; 5. David; HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 461 settled in Allegheny County, Penn.; 6. John; 7. Joseph, b. September 3, 1846, in Nottingham township, where he set- tled; m. April 30, 1872, Sarah Scott, b. December 28, 1846, in Athens township, Harrison county, daughter of Thomas and Sarah Hogg Scott; 7. Elizabeth, b. Feb. 18, 1841; m. Joseph M. Easter, b. 1841; d. 1871; son of James and Sarah Mehollin Easter; 8. Ann, m. Lee; settled in Jefferson county, Ohio-; 9. Jane, d. in childhood. ARTHUR BARRETT, a native of West Virginia, b. 1743; removed to Harrison county, Ohio, in 1803, settling on Brushy Fork Creek, in Cadiz town- ship, where he d. 1828; had issue: I. Nancy. II. Susan. III. Hannah. IV. Rachel. V. Sarah. VI. Thomas, d. Sept.-Dec, 1849; m. Alaneda ; had issue: 1. Thomas; 2. Warden; 3. Arthur; 4. Esther, m. Wilson; 5. Emma, m. Spurrier; 6. Belinda, m. Cadwalader; 7. Anna, m. Miller; 8. Rachel, m. Sears. VII. Arthur, b. in Virginia, 1780; came to Ohio with his father; settled in Cadiz township, where he d. 1845; m. (1st) Mary Huff, d. 1814; daughter of William Huff, a famous Indian scout and fighter, who was a pioneer in Ohio; m. (2d) Elizabeth Wolf, d. 1887; had issue by first wife: 1. Meredith; 2. Lewis; 3. William-H., b. June 10, 1812; m. May 25, 1837, Eliza V. Betz, of Jefferson county, Ohio, b. 1817, daughter of William and Elizabeth Betz (had issue: i. Meredith-Mc; ii. Marion-B.; iii. Brice-W.. a Methodist Episcopal minister, d. 1866, in Mount Union, Ohio; iv. Mary-E., m. Henry Haverfield; v. Margaret-E., m. William Birney; vi. Emma-E., m. Samuel Craw- ford; vii. William-F.; settled at Mar- tin's Ferry, Ohio; viii. Plora-M.); 4. Mary; had issue by second wife: 5. Louisa; 6. Aeneas; 7. John; 8. David. VIII. David. IX. Aeneas. X. Isaac, d. before Aug. 21, 1858; m. Hannah ; had issue: 1. Erasmus, m. Keesey; 2. Arthur; 3. Hiram; 4. Mary- Ann, m. White; 5. Tabitha, m. Ford. CONRAD BARRICKLOW, b. in New Jersey, where his emigrant ancestor, a native of Holland, had settled before 1671, emigrating with a brother, who located on Long Island; d. in Franklin township, Fayette county, Penn., 1802, where he had settled about 1790; served in the Revolutionary War; m. Sarah Farrington; had issue: I. Henry, b. 1771; d. April 27, 1851; m. about 1802, Meriba Oglevee, b. 1773; d. May 15, 1848; re- moved to Harrison county about 1809; had issue, among others: 1. John, b. in Fayette county, Penn., Oct. 18, 1803; d. July 21, 1875; m. (1st) 1836, Rachel Watson, b. 1819; d. 1839; daughter of Robert S. and Rachel Wilson Watson; m. (2d), 1853, Ann Johnston, d. 1875; daughter of Nicholas Johnston (had issue by first wife: i. Henry, b. March 2, 1837; d. Feb. 28, 1873; served in the Civil War; m. 1869, Rebecca J. McFad- den, daughter of Samuel McFadden; ii. Robert- Watson, b, March 6, 1839; m. Aug. 20, 1867, Isabella Alice Moore, daughter of John Moore, of Cadiz); 2. Sarah; 3. Joseph, b. in Fayette county, Penn.; d. April 13, 1875; m. 1846, Phoebe Bartow, b. May 21, 1813 (had issue: i. Henry-S., b. Dec. 10, 1847; m. Oct. 11, 1883, Elizabeth B. Haverfield, d. Sept, 13, 1884, daughter of James and Eliza- beth Haverfield; ii. Maribah-Anne, b. April 22, 1849; iii. Joseph-B., b. July 1, 1855; m. Oct. 10, 1883, Mary L. Walker, daughter of Isaac and Angeline Walk- er); 4. Anna; 5. Henry; 6. Julia; 7. Conrad; 8. Farrington, b. in Athens township, June 6, 1817. II. Daniel. III. John. IV, Farrington. V. Anne ("Nancy"), b. 1778; d. Oct. 16, 1845; m. 1790, Joseph Oglevee, a native of Cecil county, Maryland, who had set- tled in Franklin township, Fayette county, Penn., about 1788-89; b. 1760; d. Sept. 14, 1835; had issue: 1. Jesse, b. 1804; d. Jan. 26, 1876; m. 1826, Elizabeth Galley, b. 1807; d. 1858; daughter of Philip Galley (had issue, eight children, of whom: i. Joseph, b. June 2, 1827; m, 1850, Rebecca Stoner; ii, John; iii. Philip); 2. John; 3. Farrington. William Hoese von Barkeloo and his brother, Harman Jansen von Barkeloo, with his wife and two children, landed in New York, where Harman died be- fore 1671. William m. Elizabeth Jane Cloessen in 1666. and d. in 1683. His son, Direk, m. Jamelia (or Janetjie) Van Arsdale, Sept. 17, 1709. and settled at Freehold, Monmouth county, N. J, Conrad, b. Dec. 4, 1680; d. 1714; settled at Raritan, and m. a daughter of Jacob Loes. of Monmouth county. Their son, Conrad, removed to Bucks county, and was the ancestor of the Barkalows 462 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY there. The family came from Borkelo, in Zutphen, Province of Guilderland, Holland. The name is variously spelled in America, Barkalow, Barcalow, Bar- icklo, Barricklow, Borcelo, etc. FREDERICK BARRICKLOW, son of Henry, b. Dec. 3, 1794; d. May 1, 1858; m., 1826, Nancy Dugan, b. 1800; d. Oct. 17, 1881; daughter of John and Cather- ine McClelland Dugan, of Fayette county, Penn.; removed to Harrison county in 1832; had issue: 1. John-D., b. Nov. 6, 1828; m. Mary Dunlap, daugh- ter of Adam and Martha Thompson Dunlap; served in the Civil War; 2. Henry, b. March 10, 1829; m., October, 1878, Mary Henderson, of Jefferson county, Ohio; 3. Alexander; 4. Mar- garet-A.; 5. George-W., b. Aug. 7, 1837; m. 1869, Ruth Emily Gregg, daughter of Presley and Sarah Gregg, of Indiana. JAMES BEALL, b. 1778; d. Dec. 29, 1834; removed from Washington (?) county, Penn., to Wheeling township, Belmont county, Ohio; m. Jane Baird, b. 1783; d. Nov. 11, 1883; had issue: 1. John, m. (1st) Mary A. Hield, b. 1817; d. March '2, 1842; m. (2d) Agnes T. Vincent, daughter of Thomas C. and Jane McCurdy Vincent, of Green town- ship (had issue by first wife: i. Amanda-M.,m. James Paul; ii. William- R.,m. Laura Clark; had issue by second wife: iii. Jane-C, m. Wesley B. Hearn; iv. Mary-Q., m. Jesse W. Grimes; v. Thomas; vi. Ida-F.; vii. Laura-A.; viii. Emma-A., m. Henry H. McFadden; ix. Anna, m. R. N. Dodds, and settled at Springfield, 111.; x. John-A., a physi- cian, m. Ocena Billinghurst; settled at Detroit, Mich.); 2. Isabel; 3. James, m. Sarah Jamison; 4. Eleanor, m. John McDowell; 5. William, b. 1822; d. Oct. 4, 1856; m. Mary Culbertson, b. 1823; d. May 15, 1889; 6. Jane, m. George Mc- Kibbon; 7. Mary-A., b. Dec. 19, 1807; d. May 30, 1834; m. George McKibbon; 8. Josiah, m. Martha Anderson. JAMES P. BEALL, a native of Penn- sylvania, removed before 1826 to Not- tingham township, Harrison county, Ohio, where he resided until 1857; thence settled in Crawford county, Ohio, where he d. February 24, 1869; m. (1st) ; m. (2d) Minerva Huff, d. January 14, 1875, daughter of William Huff (whose sons William, Reuben, Jackson, and Johnson Huff were Indian scouts in eastern Ohio, Jackson being killed by the Indians) ; had issue by first wife: 1. Jane, settled in Crawford county; 2. Zenas; had issue by second wife: 3. Elizabeth; 4. Cassandra; 5. Colmore-C, b. June 5, 1826, in Notting- ham township; d. March 15, 1880; m. January 24, 1850, Hannah Rogers, b. in Nottingham township, August 19^ 1830, daughter of Barrett and Nancy Carson Rogers, natives of Ohio; 6. James-P.; 7. Cyrus; 8. John (Cyrus and John served in the Civil War, dying in the service); 9. Rebecca; 10. Susan; 11. Minerva; 12. Zephaniah. SAMPSON BEATTY, a native of Ire- land, b. 1786; d. November 27, 1849, in Archer township, Harrison county, where he had settled in 1826; m. April 20, 1826, Rachel Johnson, d. June 25, 1850, daughter of Samuel Johnson, a resident of Pennsylvania; had issue, among others: 1. Arthur, b. January 25, 1827, in Archer township; m. March 27, 1851, Susan McDivitt, daughter of Sam- uel McDivitt, of Stock township, Harri- son county; 2. John served in the Civil War; d. 1862, in Knoxville, Tenn.; 3. Jeremiah, served in the Civil War. STEWART BEEBE, whose paternal ancestor came from England to Massa- chusetts about 1623, d. at Wilbraham, Hampden county, Mass., 1825; m. Hul- dah ; d. 1803; had issue, among others: I. Walter-Butler, b. at Wilbraham, Mass., 1785-86; d. at Cadiz, Jan. 24, 1836; m. Nancy Maholm, b. 1779-80; d. Oct. 13, 1856; daughter of Samuel and Jane Maholm, of Cadiz; had' issue: 1. Walter-Butler, m. 1841, Maria Bayless Welch, b. 1812; d. Aug. 10, 1891; daugh- ter of Rezin and Eliza Bayless Welch, of Cadiz (had issue: i. Eliza-Bayless, m. E. Z. Hays; ii. Nancy- Jeanette, m. John A. Norris, and settled at Columbus; iii. Stuart; settled at Columbus); 2. Stew- art, removed to Iowa; 3. James, re- moved to Coshocton, Ohio (had issue, among others: i. James; ii. Stacy). II. Rhoda, b. in Hampden county, Mass., June 19, 1792; d. at Cadiz, March, 1876; m. 1819, William Shotwell, son of Hugh and Rosetta Arrison Shotwell (see Shotwell Family). EDWARD BETHEL, a native of Vir- ginia, removed in 1813 from Loudoun county, that State, to Flushing town- ship, Belmont county, Ohio; had issue: HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 463 I. Simpson, a native of Loudoun county, Va.; removed to Attiens township, Har- rison county, Oliio, about 1810,wliere lie died; m. in Virginia, Nancy Holloway; d. in Harrison county; had issue: 1. John, b. June 29. 1806, in Loudoun county, Va.; removed with his parents to Athens township, Harrison county, where he d. April 4, 1887; m. in Harri- son county, Elizabeth Oglevee, a native of that county, b. 1804; d. December 5, 1881; daughter of John and Agnes Pass- more Oglevee (had issue: i. Simpson, b. Dec. 29, 1828, in Athens township; m. September 23, 1858, Frances Clemens, d. October 26, 1884, daughter of James Clemens, a resident of Athens town- ship; ii. Agnes, m. John Price; iii. John-H.; iv. Sarah-Jane, m. Monroe Dunn; v. Mary-E., m. Samuel Dunlap; vi. Caroline, m. Samuel Compher; vii. Hiram ; viii. Isaac-H., b. in Athens town- ship; ix. Elizabeth, m. W. J. Dunlap) ; 2. Mary; 3. James; 4. Caroline; 5. Hiram. II. James, b. in Virginia about 1795; m. Mary Brock; had issue: 1. Edward; 2. Benjamin; 3. Alfred, m. Margaret Mc- Call (had issue: i. John-A.; ii. James- O., b. December 19, 1848; removed to Moorefield township, Harrison county, 1869; m. June 30, 1870, Nancy M. Slater, b. October 1, 1846, daughter of James Wells and Margaret Dunlap Slater; iii. Jesse-B.; iv. Franklin; v. Mary; vi. Jane; vii. , d. in infancy; viii. -, d. in infancy); 4. Abner; 5. Marion; 6. James-S., settled in Bel- mont county; 7. Sarah; 8. Lucinda, set- tled in Kansas; 9. Elizabeth-A. ; 10. Mary, b. April 25, 1826; m. August 18, 1844, Joseph Lafferty, b. October 26, 1819, in Virginia; d. March 29, 1886, in Moorefield township, son of Samuel and Margaret Figley Lafferty (had issue: i. , d. in infancy; ii. , d. in in- fancy; iii. James; iv. Elizabeth; v. Mary-E.; vi. Sarah-E.; vii. Laura-L. ; viii. George-P.); 11. Mary; 12. Eliza-J.; 13. Quintery. III. Anne-Katherine. IV. William V. Henry, had issue, among others: 1. Broudus, b. in Lou- doun county, Va.; removed from Bel- mont county to Harrison county; d. March 17, 1870; m. June 14, 1827. Sarah Smith, d. November 28, 1876, daughter of William Smith (had issue: i. James; ii. Anna; iii. Mary-E.; iv. Henry- Matthess; settled in Moorefield town- ship; v. William-S., b. September 3, 1834; settled in Freeport township, Harrison county, where he m. October 19, 1858, Phebe Ann Price, d. December 11, 1890, daughter of Reynolds K. and Mary Michnor Price, residents of Har- rison county; vi. Louis-B.; vii. Sarah- E., m. W. C. Smith; viii. Barnett; ix. David-R., settled in Freeport; x. Ruth- Ann; xi. Celinda, m. Niblock). VI. Thompson. VII. John-Thornton, b. in Virginia, February 11, 1802; removed about 1834 from Belmont county to Harrison county, and settled four miles from Freeport, in Freeport township, Harrison county, where he d. March 1, 1877; m. September 14, 1824, Mary Jack- son Billingsby, a native of Virginia; d. August 15, 1870; had issue: 1. Lorinda; 2. Vitura; 3. Celestine; 4. Melinda; 5. Ruth; 6. George-W., b. February 21, 1833, in Belmont county; removed to Harrison county with his parents; settled in Freeport, Harrison county. VIII. Elizabeth. ^ JOHN, HUGH, ROBERT, and WIL- LIAM BINGHAM (Hugh and Robert, at least, brothers, and thought to be the sons of Richard Bingham, of Scot- tish descent), emigrated to America between 1736 and 1760, and before 1774 settled in the Manor of Maske, now Cumberland, Liberty, and Hamil- tonban townships in Adams (formerly York) county, Penn.; John Bingham died there Dec. 18, 1739, aged twenty- six years; William Bingham's name appears on a petition from the settlers in Cumberland township in 1755; the names of Hugh and Robert Bingham appear on the tax-list of Hamiltonban township for 1767 (the earliest one now extant), together with the names of Samuel and Thomas Bingham, in the same year. It is possible that John or William Bingham, first named above, may have been the father of Samuel, Thomas, Hugh, and Robert, the last three of whom, at least, were brothers; of these: A. Samuel, may have been a brother to Hugh. Robert, and Thomas above; or, possibly, the son of Hugh above (see IV. below). B. Thomas, see below. C. Robert, probably the same who died in Hamiltonban township, Novem- ber-December, 1798, and who had issue: 1. Samuel; 2. Abraham; 3. Eve; the executors mentioned in his will were William Bingham, James Agnew, and 464 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Barnabas McSherry; the name of Catharine Bingham appears as witness to will of Barnabas McSherry in 1823. D. Hugh, d. in Hamiltonban town- ship, September-October, 1777; m. Martha Armor, daughter of Thomas (?) and McKinley Armor, and prob- ably sister or aunt to Thomas Armor, an active Revolutionary patriot, who died in Yorktown, Penn., February- March, 1785 (he mentions in his will " cousins " Robert and Thomas Bing- ham); had issue: I. Samuel; settled in Metal township, Franklin county, Penn., where he d. September, 1801; m. Mary ; had issue: 1. Elizabeth; 2. Jean; 3. M[ary; 4. Catharine, m. Anderson; 5. John, possibly the same who d. in Green township, Franklin county, Penn., August, 1818 (leaving a wife, Hannah, and children: i. Elizabeth; ii. Eleanor, m. Furrey; iii. David; Iv. John; v. James; vi. Samuel); 6. Hugh, m. his cousin, Jean Bingham, daughter of Hugh (IV. below); 7. Samuel; 8. Thomas. II. William, b. 1748; d. Feb. 2, 1816; m. (probably) Ann , b. 1760; d. April 9, 1838; had issue: 1. James; 2. Thomas; 3. Hugh; 4. Charles-W., served as an officer in the "War of 1812; m. Margaret Agnew, of Emmitsburg, Md. (had issue: 1. Sophia; ii. William; iii. Agnew; iv. Albert; v. Martha; vi. Margaret, m. 1866, Samuel McFarland, of Smith township. Washington county, b. June 11, 1812; d. June 29, 1829; vii. James, a physician, settled at Clinton, Allegheny county; viii. Emma, m. Dr. W. V. Riddle; ix. Mary; x. Charles- Carroll); 5. John; 6. Armor; 7. Anna- Eliza; 8. William. III. Robert, possibly the Robert who d. in 1798, whose will is given in con- nection with his iincle, Robert (C, above) ; but more probably the Robert Bingham who died in Hopewell town- ship, Washington county, Penn., June, 1804; m. Mary ; had issue: 1. Hugh; 2. James; 3. Robert; 4. John; 5. Joseph; 6. Elizabeth; 7. Jane; 8. Mary; 9. Phebe. IV. Hugh, d. in Hamiltonban town- ship, May 11-15, 1793; had issue: 1. John-Armor, d. at Natchez, Miss., 1824; 2. Jean, d. at Freeport, Penn., 1857; m. her coiisin. Hugh, son of Samuel (I. above) ; 3. Hugh, d. at New Wilming- ton, Lawrence county, Penn., 1865; m. (1st) Oct. 13, 1807, Esther Bailey, daughter of Captain William and Mary Ann Duncan Bailey, of York, Penn.; m. (2d) Ellen Junkin Galloway; settled in Mercer, Penn., soon after 1800 (had issue by first wife: i. John-Armor, b. at Mercer, Penn., Jan. 21, 1815; settled in Ohio about 1841, and later, at Cadiz; served as a representative in Congress from 1854 to 1873, with the exception of one term; served as United States Min- ister to Japan from May, 1873, to 1885; d. at Cadiz, March 19, 1900; m. 1844, at Cadiz, his cousin, Amanda Bingham, daughter of Judge Thomas and Lucinda . Stuart Bingham [had issue: Lucinda- \/ Stuart, m. 1869, Rev. Samuel Robinson Frazier; Emma; Marie-Scott, m. at Tokio, Japan, 1876, James Robert Wasson] ; ii. Marian; iii. William, a Baptist minister; iv. Martha, m. Patterson, and settled at Pittsburgh; v. Hugh-Mason; had issue by second wife: vi. Thomas, settled in California; vii. Ellen-Mary, settled at Canton, Ohio). William Bailey, father of Esther Bailey Bingham, served, in 1775, as second lieutenant of the Independent Light Infantry Company of the first battalion of York county (Penn.) Militia, formed in Yorktown, December, 1775; the company was commanded in 1776 by William Bailey as captain, and was captured by the British at the fall of Fort Washington; settled in York- town after the Revolution; m. Mary Ann Duncan, probably daughter of and Margaret Mason Duncan, the latter a native of Scotland, who d. Nov. 16, 1802, leaving funds with which to build the second United Presbyterian Church of Philadelphia; 4. Thomas, d. at Cadiz, April, 1853; m. Lucinda Stuart, d. at Cadiz, Nov. 6, 1844; daughter of James and Mary Ann Mcllvaine (or McElwain) Stuart, of Newville, Cumberland county, Penn. (had issue: i. Martha- Armor, m. [1st] 1832, Henry Olmstead; m. [2d] Van Rensselaer Lee; settled at Cincinnati; ii. Lucinda, m. Joseph P. Wood; settled at Omaha, Neb.; iii. Mary- Jane, m. 1833, Josiah Scott; iv. Thomas-M.. m. 1844, Rachel Sheets; v. John-Stuart, d. at Shippensburg, Penn., 1891; vi. Amanda, d. 1891; m. 1844, John Armor Bingham, her cousin, son of Hugh and Esther Bailey Bingham; vii. Emma-E., m. 1870, Judge John Stoneman Pearce, of Cadiz; viii. Isabella; ix. Belinda). HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 465 James Stuart (or Stewart), father of Lucinda Stuart Bingham, m. near Newville, Penn., Mary Ann McIIvaine (or McElwain) ; he was probably son of Alexander or Archibald Stewart, of Cumberland county; had issue: 1. Lucinda, m. Thomas Bingham, as above; 2. Mary, m. Samuel Patterson, of Newville, and settled at Cincinnati. V. Elizabeth. VI. Mary, m. McKinley; had issue: 1. Mary; 2. John; 3. Hugh. Thomas Bingham, a soldier of the Revolution, lived in Mercer county, Penn.. as late as 1816; probably brother or son to Hugh, who d. 1777, although not mentioned in his will; but de- scribed in will of Thomas Armor, of Yorktown, who died 1785, as his " cousin," and brother to Robert. Patrick Bingham, d. in Mount Joy township, Adams county, 1796, leaving a wife, Mary, and children: 1. Samuel; 2. Hugh; 3. Bryan; 4. Eleanor; 5. Agnes. Agnes Bingham, d. in Manor of Maske, Adams county, Dec. 18, 1749, aged fourteen years. Margaret Bingham is mentioned by her father, Alexander McVear, of Ham- iltonban township. Adams county, in his will, dated April 13, 1799. HUGH BIRNEY, a native of Ireland, son of John Birney, emigrated to America and settled' in Chester county, Penn., in 1815; removed in 1819 to Green township, Harrison county, Ohio, where he d. September, 1862; m. 1800, Brown, a native of Ireland; had issue: 1. William, settled in Rumley township; 2. Wesley; 3. Rebecca-,. 4. Martha, m. Samuel Hitchcock; settled in Indiana; 5. Jane, m. George Leese; settled in Coshocton, Ohio; 6. James, settled in Nebraska; 7. Elizabeth, m. Jacob Hitchcock; settled in Iowa; 8. Samuel, settled in Colorado; 9. Asbury, b. March 15, 1815; m. April 23, 1840, Ellen McCclloiigh, b. May 29„ 1821, daughter of Hugh and Isabella Cun- ningham McCollough, natives of Ire- land, who settled in Jefferson county, Ohio, in 1810 (had issue: i. Isabella, d. May 22. 1863; ii. Oliver, settled in German township; iii. Almond, settled in Labette county, Kan.; iv. Hugh-W., b. March 17, 1849; m. (1st) June 15, 1883, Estella Montgomery, d. 1884; m. (2d) February 9, 1886, Hadassah Jack- man, la native of Washington county, Penn., daughter of Andrew and Eliza- beth Gaddis Jackman, natives of Ire- land; V. Elizabeth, m. Joseph McCol- lough; settled in Archer township; vi. Rebecca-J., m. Henry K. Ford; settled in Salem township, Jefferson county). ISRAEL BIRNEY, a native of Ger- man township, Harrison county, Ohio, removed to Nottingham township, where he d. May 11, 1862; m. in Franklin township, Martha Hedges, d. August 30, 1870, daughter of Samuel Hedges, of Cadiz township; had issue: 1. Samuel-H., b. October 28, 1838; m. March 3, 1863, Cynthia Johnson, daugh- ter of Nathan Johnson, of Nottingham township; 2. Prudence, m. Slemmons Welsh; 3. William; 4. Elizabeth; 5. Israel. JOHN BIRNEY, b. in Green town- ship, Harrison county, Ohio; d. in Washington township, September 9, 1885; m. (1st) in Green township, Han- nah McKee, d. 1872, daughter of Robert McKee; m. (2d) Sarah Eaton; had issue by first wife: 1. Rachel, m. Henry Pittis; 2. Nelson; 3. Robert-M.; 4. James-N., b. in Washington township, August 27, 1847; m. 1869, Anna R. Mc- Padden, daughter of Robert McFad'den, of Harrison county; 5. Rebecca-J., m. Matthew Simpson; 6. John-T. ROBERT BIRNEY, b. in Ireland, about 1787; emigrated to America and about 1801 settled in Chester county, Penn.; removed with his family in 1807 to German township, Harrison county, Ohio, where he d. 1874; m. in Chester county, Penn., Margaret Northhammer, b. 1795. d. 1871; had issue: 1. Mary; 2. Zilla; 3. Wesley; 4. John; 5. Asbury; 6. Lot, settled in Washington county, Iowa; 7. Elizabeth, b. March 3, 1822; rn. December 26, 1843, Robert W. Endsley, b. 1813, son of James and Elizabeth Walker Endsley; settled in Jewett, in Rumley township, Harrison county (had issue: i. Mary-M., m. William C. Adams: settled in Archer town- ship; ii. Melissa; iii. Lucinda-J.. m. Eli Caven; iv. Elizabeth-A., m. R.H. Fresh- water, a minister, of Steubenville.Ohio; V. Rebecca-Frances, m. Charles A. Naylor, a minister) ; 8. Rebecca, settled in Washington county, Iowa; 9. J.-S. b. May 23, 1824; m. March 10. 1847. Susan Mummey, daughter of Charles and Rebecca Hedges Mummey, of Cadiz 466 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY township (had issue: i. Margaret; ii. Mary, m. John B. Busby; iii. William- Asbury, settled in Cadiz; iv. Robert- M.; V. Charles-R., a minister, settled in New Philadelphia, Ohio; vi. Maria- B., m. Goliath Tedrow). James Endsley, father of James Endsley, who married Elizabeth Bir- ney, was a son of James Endsley, a native of Lancaster county, Penn., where he died; the son came with his widowed mother to Archer township before 1817, where he d. 1869; m. in Pennsylvania about 1815, Elizabeth Walker, d. 1865, a native of Columbiana county, Ohio; they were the parents of four children, three sons and one daughter, of whom: 1. Robert-W., b. 1813, m. Elizabeth Birney; 2. James, b. Sept. 7, 1817. JANET BLAIR, see Family of Thomas Phillips. JOHN BLAIR, a native of Ireland, emigrated to America, and d. about 1840, in Cadiz township, Harrison county, Ohio, where he had settled' be- fore 1804; had issue: I. John. II. Daniel. III. James. IV. Charity. V. William, b. March 14, 1804; d. January 29, 1867; m. Sarah Day, b. April 26, 1808; daugh- ter of George and Margaret Moore Day, natives of eastern Pennsylvania, who were early settlers in Cadiz township; had issue: 1. George; 2. John-W., b. May 15, 1831, in Cadiz township; settled in Stock township; m. January 19, 1853, Melissa A. Carson, b. June 19, 1831, daughter of Elijah and Catherine Knight Carson; 3. Albert; 4. Mary. JAMES BLACK, a native of Ireland. b. 1756; emigrated to America and first settled in Pennsylvania; removed to Green township, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1806, where he d. 1846; served in the Revolutionary War; m. about 1783, Jane Stewart, b. 1753; d. Aug. 22, 1835; had issue: 1. James, b. in Adams county, Penn., 1785; m. 1812. Isabella Hervey, b. 1785; d. Dec. 30, 1865; daugh- ter of Margaret Hervey, an early settler in Harrison county, coming there after death of her husband (had issue: i. John-Hervey, b. in Green township, 1813; d. March 26, 1885; m. Feb. 22, 1838, Mary K. Work, daughter of Alex- ander Work, a resident of Green town- ship; ii. James-S., b. June 20, 1816; iii. H.-Stewart, b. Nov. 22, 1819; d. Jan. 22, 1890; m. Oct. 31, 1843, Jane Thompson, daughter of Samuel Thompson, of Green township; iv. Margaret-J., b. March 21, 1845; m. William Dunlap); 2. Mary; 3. Elizabeth; 4. Margaret; 5. Jane. WILLIAM BOGGS, b. in the North of Ireland, 1716; removed to America about 1728, and afterward settled in Chester county, Penn., where he died; m. Jane Stein, a native of Ireland; had issue: James, b. July 21, 1735; John, b. February 19, 1737; Margaret, b. Feb- ruary 23, 1739; Robert, b. April 9, 1741; William, b. March 14, 1743; Jane, b. April 10, 1745; Elizabeth, b. July 31, 1747; Rebecca, b. January 31, 1749; Agnes, b. February 17, 1752; Mary, b. May 24, 1753; Joseph, b. October 1, 1754; Moses, b. May 6, 1757. James Boggs (b. 1735) settled in New- castle county, Del.; served in the Revo- lutionary War; removed about 1790 to Washington county, Penn., settling near the present site of Cross Creek Village; m. (1st) in Newcastle county, Del., Han- nah Rice; m. (2d() Sarah Brown; had issue by first wife: 1. William; 2. Rice; 3. Jane; had' issue by second wife: 4. James, b. April 27, 1778; 5. Margaret; 6. Robert (twin brother to Margaret), b. November 17, 1779; 7. John, b. June 28, 1782; 8. Rebecca; 9. Mary (twin sister to Rebecca), b. February 15, 1784; 10. Sarah, b. April 21, 1786. John Boggs (b. 1782), son of James, in 1839 removed from Washington county, Penn., to Harrison county, Ohio, where he d. December 21, 1848; m. September 17, 1812, Sarah Marshall, d. January 6, 1849; had issue: 1. Thomas- Marshall, b. June 26, 1813, in Washing- ton county, Penn.; a Presbyterian minister; removed to Marietta, Lancas- ter county, Penn., thence to Mount Joy, in the same county, where he d. 1850; m. A. J. Cunningham, of Chester county, Penn.; d'. January 6, 1849 (had issue: i. Elizabeth, m. Rev. Edgar, Presi- dent of the Wilson College for women, in Chambersburg, Penn.; ii. John-C; iii. William-M.. settled in Chicago); 2. James-Brown, b. January 20, 1815; d. in infancy; 3. William, b. November 5, 1816; d. 1836; 4. John-M., b. October 20, 1818: a Presbyterian minister; served Paxtang and Derry congregations, near Harrisburg, Penn., thence removed to Millersburg, Ohio., and from there to Independence, Iowa, where he d. Sep- 1 HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 467 tember 1, 1872; 5. Samuel-M., b. Decem- ber 6, 1820, removed to Short Creek township, Harrison county, where he remained until 1884, when he settled in Athens; m. September 1, 1854, Margaret Paries; 6. Sarah-Ann, b. February 3, 1823; m. William H. Watson; settled in Belmont county (had issue: seven chil- dren); 7. Robert-W., b. August 1, 1825; removed to Short Creek township, ■where he remained until 1884, then set- tled in Athens; 8. James, b. July 23, 1828; d. February 13, 1840. WILLIAM BOGGS, see Family of James Simeral. SAMUEL BORLAND, a native of Ire- land, emigrated to America and before 1785 settled near the present Manor Station, in Westmoreland county, Penn., where he m. Lydia Cary; both died in Pennsylvania; had issue: I. Samuel, b. in Westmoreland county, 1785; d. 1862, in North township, Harri- son county; m. (1st) Mary Little; m. (2d) Elizabeth Hevlin, daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth Hevlin; had is- sue, by first wife: 1. William, settled in Tuscarawas county, Ohio; 2. Washing- ton, settled in Carroll county, Ohio; 3. Lydia, m. James Waddington, of Nebraska; had issue by second wife: 4. Mary, m. James Mackey; her family settled in Dennison, Ohio; 5. David, b. January 27, 1831, in North township; m. December 24, 1857, Ann Havnar, b. 1833; d. October 26, 1890; daughter of Dominick and Elizabeth Havnar, both of whom died in Monroe township. JOHN BOYD, b. in Ireland; d. 1832; m. (2d) McMillan; emigrated to America about 1812 and settled in Free- port township, Harrison county, Ohio; had issue: 1. Samuel; 2. William, b. 1798; d. April 12, 1867; m. about 1864, Anne White, b. in Ireland', 1802; d. at Freeport, Jan. 7, 1879 (had issue: i. John, m. Sarah Fulton; ii. Hannah, m. William Williams; iii. George, b. 1827; m. Eliza Vail Markee, daughter of Wil- liam and Hannah Norris Vail; iv. Sarah, d. young; v. Eliza, m. William Fulton: vi. Mary, m. James Fulton; vii. Margaret, m. Likes; viii. Belinda, m. James Carr; ix. William, m. Mary Phillips: X. Martha, m. R. Niblick; xi. Melancthon, d. young). HENRY BOYLES. b. 1770; d. 1834; removed from New Jersey to Virginia, where he m. (1st) Rachel Barkhurst; m. (2d) in Chester county, Penn., Jane Filson, d. 1854; daughter of Robert Filson; removed to Bedford county, Penn., and thence, in 1821, to Steuben- ville, Ohio; had issue by first wife, three children; had issue by second wife: 4. John; 5. Samuel; 6. Elisha; 7. Margaret; 8. Henry, b. in Lancaster county, Penn., Jan. 5, 1814; d. July 8, 1892; removed to Harrison county, 1843; m. at Cadiz, Martha Grimes, b. May 12, 1826; d. April 4, 1874; daughter of William and Rebecca Grimes (who had settled in Harrison county about 1802), and both died at Cadiz, 1840; 8. Joseph-Filson, d. at Rockport, Ind., 1889. GETTYS BRADEN, see Family of Jacob Stahl. ROBERT BRADEN, of Irish descent, b. 1773, in Pennsylvania, of which State his paternal grandfather was a native, removed in 1800 to Short Creek town- ship, Harrison county, Ohio, where he d. 1837; m. (1st) in Pennsylvania, Finney, daughter of James Fin- ney, who settled in Short Creek town- ship 1800; m. (2d) 1815, Catherine Hay, b. about 1775; d. 1845; had issue by first wife: 1. ; 2. ; had issue by second wife: 3. John, d. aged twenty- four years; 4. David-B., b. August 21, 1818, in Short Creek township; m. (1st) November 5, 1851, Susannah M. Groves, b. 1813; d. October 19, 1885, daughter of Francis and Jeanette Groves, of Cadiz township; m. (2d) in Canonsburg, Penn., September 2, 1886, Melissa Don- nell, a native of that place; d. May 14, 1889; 4. Anna, m. Walker Patton; 5. Robert, settled in Washington, Iowa; 6. William, settled in Iowa; 7. Eliza- beth, d. aged eight years; 8. Mary- Jane, m. Casper Devilbiss, and settled in Iowa. JAMES BRADFORD, of Scottish de- scent, b. in Washington county, Penn., 1790, a son of James Bradford, a native of Lancaster county, Penn.; removed about 1800 to Cadiz. Harrison county, Ohio, where he d. 1830; m. Mary Mor- rison, who after her first husband's deal'h returned to Washington county, Penn., where she m. (2d) David Wat- son, of Pennsylvania; she d. aged eighty-one years; daughter of James Morrison, of Washington county, Penn.; had issue (surname Bradford) : 1. 468 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY James-M., b. February 28, 1821, in Cadiz; settled in Scio, about 1874; m. 1844, Julia Ann Lewis, of Jefferson county, Ohio, daughter of William and Mary Lewis (had issue: i. Ann-Eliza, ni. (1st) Dr. Kennedy; m. (2d) Marian Coates; settled in Pratt county, Kan.); 2. David, settled in Washington county, Penn.; 3. Eliza, settled at Scio. ABRAHAM BRANSON, a native of "Virginia, of English descent, removed from near the vicinity of Winchester to central Ohio, about 1800; had issue: I. Reese, located in St. Clairsville, Belmont county, Ohio, where he died; had issue: 1. Abraham-Dow, b. June 13, 1806, in Belmont county, Ohio; lo- cated, 1831. at Kinsey's Mills, Bel- mont county, on the National Pike; set- tled near Georgetown, in Short Creek township. Harrison county, Ohio, about 1833, where he d. January 16, 1867; m. June 2, 1831, in Jefferson county, Ohio, Ann W. Wilson, b. 1806, near Mount Pleasant, Ohio; d. February 3, 1888, daughter of Jonathan and Hannah Wil- son, pioneers of Jefferson county (had issue: i. Lindley-M., b. September 26, 1832. at Kinsey's Mills. Belmont county, Ohio; m. May 7, 1874. Anna M. Fox, daughter of Charles J. and Esther Cooper Fox, of Harrison county; ii. Elizabeth-S.. m. Isaac Thomas; iii. Abraham-Wilson, b. December 9. 1846, in Short Creek township; m. May 25, 1875, Lucy Thomas, daughter of Isaac and Annie Ladd Thomas; iv. Rachel, settled in Iowa; v. William, settled in Kansas; vi. Jonathan, d. in infancy; vii. John-C. d. young); 2. William; 3. Maria; 4. Eliza. Isaac Thomas, father of Annie L. Branson, was b. June 1, 1813; settled in Short Creek township; afterward re- moved to Mount Pleasant. Jefferson county, Ohio; m. January 1, 1834. Mary Ladd. b. near Richmond. Va.. August 14. 1812; d. 1872; daughter of Robert and Mary Ladd. ANTHONY BRICKER. of German ancestry, removed from Pennsylvania to Green township, Harrison county, about 1804, where he d. 1813; m. Mar- garet ; had issue: 1. Henry; 2. George: 3. John, b. May 9. 1793; d. March. 1861; m. Anna Busby, b. 1812 (had issue: i. David; ii. John. m. Holmes; iii. Elizabeth, m. Dr. William Beadle); 4. David; 5. Elizabeth, m. Hilbert; m. (2d) (1st) Warfel. JESSE BRINDLEY, a native of Ger- many, settled in Maryland about 1775, where he died; m. (1st) in Germany, ; m. (2d) Julia Kent; had issue, among others: I. Benjamin, b. in Maryland; re- moved from Harford county, that State, to Archer township, Harrison county, Ohio, in 1825; afterward settled in Green township, where he died; m. in Maryland, Ellen Cooper, b. about 1759; d. 1824; had issue, ten children, of whom: 1. Priscilla, m. Caleb Low; set- tled in Steubenville, Ohio; 2. John, b. in Harford county, Md., March 16, 1806, came to Harrison county with his- parents; settled in Cadiz, about 1873; m. 1830, Ann Brown, b. 1809; d. October 6, 1889; daughter of Hugh and Jane Brown, residents of Archer township (had issue: i. Hugh, settled in Kansas; ii. Benjamin; iii. Ellen, m. James Craw- ford; iv. Frank; v. Albert; vi. David; vii. Nathaniel; viii. Wesley; ix. Sarah, m. J. Rea Finney; x. John; xi. , d. in infancy; xii. , d. in infancy; xiii. Thomas, b. March 16. 1846; m. November 11, 1869, Hester A. Birney, daughter of Hamilton Birney, a resi- dent of Archer township). GEORGE BROKAW, of Huguenot descent, emigrated to America before 1775. with his brother, John, both of whom served' in the Revolutionary War: located in Pennsylvania; re- moved about 1802 to Green town- ship. Harrison county, Ohio, and afterwards settled in Athens township; m. about 1777 (?), Jane Custard (or Custer); had issue: 1. Abraham, b. April 8, 1778; 2. Benjamin, b. Sept. 28, 1779; -3. Sarah, b. Feb. 20. 1782; 4. George, b. March 27. 1784; 5. William, b. Feb. 10, 1786; 6. Judah. b. March 19, 1788; 7. Jane, b. July 15. 1790: 8. John, b. Sept. 23. 1793: settled in Athens township, where he d. March 25, 1876; m. July 10. 1823, Sarah Burwell. b. 1802; d'. April 5, 1883. daughter of Job Bur- well, a resident of Harrison county (had issue: i. Catherine, b. April 18, 1824; m. Benjamin Covert; ii. Jane, b. August 22. 1825; m. William Smith; iii. Mary. b. November 29, 1827: m. Isaac Fitch; iv. Margaret, b. November 19, 1829: m. William Price: v. Nancy, b. October 21, 1831; vi. George, b. Decem- HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 469 ber 5, 1833; settled in Iowa; vii. John- P., b. April 25, 1836; m. December 25, 1867, Mary E. McGrew, daughter of William McGrew, a resident of Green township; viii. Sarah, b. July 29, 1843; m. Wesley Van Horn; ix. Martha, b. September 1, 1845; m. Abraham At- zinger); 9. Mary, b. February 14, 1796; 10. Isaac, b. April 30, 1798; 11. Jacob, b. October 31, 1800; 12. Peter, b. December 25, 1802. Some families of the name of Brocaw are found in the early records of Somer- set county, N. J., and Adams county, Penn. BASIL BROWN and THOMAS BROWN, two brothers, settled in Luzerne (then Springhill) township, Fayette county, Penn., about 1768. Thomas, b. about 1746, settled on the site of the present town of Brownsville about 1776, and began to lay out town- lots in 1785; he died in 1797, before March 27th, leaving issue: Ignatius, Thomas, Levi, Zachariah, Simeon, Elizabeth (m. Cox), Eleanor, Ann, and Ruth; two of his daughters married William Crawford and Ewing. Basil left issue: Thomas, m. (1st) Dorcas Goe, daughter of William Goe; m. (2d) Mrs. Philip Worley; Basil, d. unm.; Sarah, d. unm. Possibly de- scended from one of the above was Basil Brown, said to have been a native of England, who resided in Browns- ville before 1800; had issue, among others: 1. Basil, b. at Brownsville, 1801; d. at Cambridge. Ohio, 1851, where he had settled in 1844; m. Nancy Johnson, b. 1809, d. 1888, a native of Pennsylvania (had issue, seven chil- dren, among whom: i. Turner, m. Mary E. Price; ii. Melford-J., b. in Brownsville, Jan. 16, 1832; removed to Ohio about 1850, and in 1853 settled at Cadiz; m. 1855, Martha Robinson, daughter of John Robinson, an early settler, who came from Pennsylvania). JOHN BUCHANAN, a native of Londonderry, Ireland, settled in Car- lisle, Penn., before 1776; served in the Revolutionary War, and after the close of that war located in Washington county, Penn.; m. Ross; had is- sue: I. John. II. Jonathan. III. Mary. IV. Ross. V. Samuel, b. in Maryland, March 4, 1773; d. March 23. 1858: re- moved to the Connotton Valley, Harri- son county, Ohio, before 1806; m. (1st) in Washington county, Penn., 1799, Mary Neiper, a native of that county; d. July 15, 1818; m. (2d) Mrs. Mary Stanley Buchanan, b. 1778; d. January 21, 1838; of Mt. Pleasant, Ohio, widow of John Buchanan, who was a second cousin to Samuel Buchanan; had issue by first wife: 1. Jane; 2. Maria; 3. John, b. 1807; 4. Margaret; 5. Joseph, b. April 23, 1814; d. July 11, 1883; m. February 8, 1838, Elizabeth Hines, b. 1819; d. Jan. 5, 1883; daughter of Jacob and Susanna Brough Hines, of Archer township (had issue: i. Margaret, b. October 28, 1839; m. Johnson Montgomery; set- tled in Jefferson county, Ohio; ii. Susan, b. October 9, 1841; m. John Stringer; settled in Harrison county; iii. Samuel, b. October 25, 1843; d. Sep- tember 5, 1863; iv. Mary, b. Dec. 19, 1845; m. William B. Anderson; v. John, b. March 11, 1848; settled in Pueblo, Colo.; vi. Thomas, b. November 8, 1850; a Presbyterian minister; settled at Ida Grove, Iowa; vii. Malinda, b. April 6, 1854; m. John Patterson; settled in Archer township; viii. James, b. Octo- ber 5, 1856; d. December 11, 1857; ix. Albert, b. May 1, 1859; d. in infancy; X. Elizabeth, b. 1861; d. in infancy); 6. Nancy. VI. Thomas. VII. Joseph. VIII. George. IX. Margaret. X. Mary. XI. , m. Harvey. WILLIAM BUCHANAN, b. in Penn- sylvania, 1790, of Scotch descent; served in the War of 1812; settled in Harrisville, Harrison county, Ohio, be- fore 1853; m. in Ohio, Abigail Mercer, d. May 30, 1857, a descendant of Edward Mercer, of Anglo-Irish descent, who settled in America about 1720; had is- sue: 1. David; 2. Wilson; 3. William, b. May 1, 1853; settled in Hopedale, Har- rison county; m. June 29. 1880, Virginia W. Maddox, a native of Short Creek township, daughter of Wilson and Mary Ladd Maddox. Wilson Maddox, father of Virginia Maddox Buchanan, came to Harrison county in 1826, where he d. April 30, 1859; his wife d. January 17, 1875; came from Virginia and settled in Harrison county in 1833. JOHN BI'SBY, a native of Maryland; settled in Archer township, Harrison county, Ohio, in 1805; m. Agnes Wis- ner; had issue, fourteen children, among whom: 1. Abraham-H.. b. in Archer township, Jan. 18, 1814; m. May 18, 470 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 1848, Marshall, daughter of James and Elizabeth Marshall, natives of Pennsylvania, of Irish descent (had issue: i. John-B.; ii. Nancy-Jane, d. March 5, 1885; iii. Isaac-Jackson; iv. William-R.; v. James-W.; vi. Anna- Mary, m. Delmar Robinson); 2. Sarah, m. Healea; 3. Rachel, m. David Smith; 4. Belinda, m. 1819, Nathaniel Baker; 5. Elizabeth-Ann; 6. Eda, m. Zachariah Baker; 7. Mary-Ann, m. 1834, John McCombs; 8. Dorcas, m. 1833, Aaron Conaway; 9. Deborah, m. 1838, Albert Singhaus; 10. Jane, m. 1840, Wil- liam Strawsbaugh. JOHN CADY, a native of county Tyrone, Ireland (son of Joseph Cady, who settled in Reading, Penn.,in 1783) , settled in Washington county, Penn., and thence removed to Cadiz township, where he died, 1824; m. Margaret Parr; had issue, among others: 1. James, b. in Washington county, Penn., March 2, 1812; removed to Virginia in 1832, and thence to Flemingsburg, Ky., in 1838; returned to Cadiz, 1842, and settled at Cadiz Junction, 1856; m. October 2, 1834, Caroline T. Purdy, a native of New York City (had issue: i. Isabel; ii. William-H.; settled in Dennison, Ohio; iii. Dorcas-C, m. William H. Randall, of Southern California; iv. Adaline-E.; V. Caroline-T.; vi. Elizabeth-A.; vii. Ella, m. R. J. McCarty; viii. Lucinda- M., m. John S. McKay; settled in Mem- phis, Tenn.; ix. John-E., settled at Cadiz Junction; x. James-R.); 2. Mary, b. 1790; d. July 8, 1865; m. Hiram Con- well; 3. William, settled at Cadiz (had issue, among others: i. James; ii. Isa- bel, m. Lupton; iii. Ida). JOHN CALDWELL, b. near Red- stone Creek, Fayette county, Penn., 1781, of Scotch-Irish descent; in 1808 removed to Green township, Harrison county, Ohio, where he d. Dec. 10, 1859; m. (1st) in Pennsylvania, Elizabeth Birney; d. in Harrison county; m. (2d) Sarah Reed, b. 1791; d. Feb. 16, 1871; daughter of Robert Reed, a pioneer in Harrison county; had issue by first wife: 1. Robert-Reed, settled in Wood county, Ohio, where he died aged seventy-five years; had issue by second wife: 2. Samuel-Mitchell, settled in Clarke county, Ohio; 3. Elizabeth-Rea, m. James Davidson; 4. Ankrum; 5. Wil- liam-H., b. Aug. 22, 1825; settled in Cadiz township; m. 1856, Mary-Ann Cochran, daughter of Robert and Sarah Cochran, of Harrison county; 6. John, settled in Marshall, Kan.; 7. Isaac- Shannon; 8. Martha-McCrea, m. James English; 9. James, settled in Fort Wayne, Ind.; 10. David-Hilbert; 11. Albert-Hamilton. David and Albert Caldwell settled in Guernsey county, Ohio. JOHN CAMPBELL, see Family of Samuel Patton. JOHN CAMPBELL, a native of Scotland, had issue, among others: I. John, probably b. in Pennsylvania; removed to Guernsey county, Ohio, be- fore 1818, where he resided for four years; then settled in Green township, Harrison county, where he died; m. (1st) Margaret Fogle; d. 1844; m. (2d) , of Tuscarawas county; had issue by first wife: 1. George; 2. Nathaniel; 3. Andrew; 4. Elizabeth; 5. Margaret: 6. Abraham; 7. Frederick; 8. John, b. Feb. 26, 1822; m. Malinda Dennis, daughter of Jacob Dennis, a resident of Green township (had' issue: i. William; ii. Rebecca, m. William Ford; iii. Jennie, m. James Rutledge; iv. Margaret, m. Merchant Ault; v. John; vi. Laura, m. William Abraham; vii. Edward; viii. Josiah-P. -Scott; ix. , d. in infancy; x. James; xi. Nellie); 9. Hester; 10. Robert; 11. Henry. JOHN CAMPBELL, d. in Windsor township, York county, Penn., 1775 (before Sept. 18), leaving a wife, Anna, and children, William, John, James, Charles, and Ann; of these: John Campbell, b. 1744; d. Aug. 13, 1807; served in the Revolutionary War (probably as a militia lieutenant) ; re- moved with his family to Washington county, about 1780, and settled in Cross Creek township, where he died: m. March 31, 1772, Mary Hammond, of York county, b. 1752-53; d. March 18, 1817; had issue: I. Ann, b. March 27, 1773; probably d. young. II. Griselda (" Gracie ") b. Feb. 19, 1775; m. Major Benjamin Bay, and removed to Belmont county, Ohio, about 1812. III. John. b. Jan. 22, 1775; d. July 24. 1844: m. Elizabeth Lyle, and removed to Wheeling township, Belmont county, Ohio. IV. William, b. Aug. 11, 1779; m. HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 471 Eleanor (?) Smith, and removed to X. Elizabeth, b. Oct. 9, 1793; m. Wil- Wheeling township, Belmont county. Ham Mason Rea, brother to Ann and Ohio. Elizabeth Rea. V. James, b. Dec. 29, 1781; d. July 17, CHRISTIAN CANAGA (originally 1842; m. Margaret Smith, b. Oct. 16, spelled Gnaegi), emigrated from Berne 1784; d. Oct. 8, 1878; removed to Wheel- province, Switzerland, to America be- ing township, Belmont county, Ohio, fo^e the Revolution (1750-70), and in 1803; served as a captain in the War afterwards settled in Somerset county, of 1812; had issue, among others: 1. Penn., whence he removed to North John, a physician, b. Nov. 21, 1804; d. township, Harrison county, Ohio, about Sept. 17, 1882; m. May 11, 1830, Jane igg?, where he died 1812; had issue, Irwin, b. 1808; d. 1883 (had issue: i. among others: I. Jacob, b. Feb. 23, Mary, b. Jan. 24, 1833; ii. Margaret-A., iysq. ^^ 1372; m. 1804, Susanna Living- b. Feb. 17, 1836; iii. James-B., b. Nov. gtong^ d. 1830, daughter of Christian 14, 1839; iv.Rachel-J., b. April 14, 1842; and Anna Livingstone, of Somerset V. Maria-L., b. March 29, 1848; vi. county; removed to North township, Martha-E., b. Jan. 18, 1852); 2. William- Harrison county, about 1806; had is- M.,b. 1808; m. (1st) Mary Kerr, b. 1820; g^g. i_ Anne-D., b. May 19, 1805; d. d. Dec. 13, 1874; m. (2d) Louisa Dixon, ^^^^.^ ui_ 1523, Rev. D. Strayer; 2. b. May 8, 1835; d. July 19, 1889. Catharina, b. May 23, 1807; m. Michael VI. David, b. March 25, 1784; m. Ann Firebaugh; 3. Levi, b. Aug. 29, 1809; Rea, daughter of William and Jane 4. Joseph, b. Feb. 21, 1811; 5. Jacob, b. Mason Rea, of Lower Mount Bethel jan. 15, 1813; d. 1837; m. Sarah Fisher; township, Northampton county, Penn. g. Salome, b. Aug. 10, 1814; 7. Elias- (theformerb. Sept. 13, 1762; d. in Cross Greene, b. April 23, 1816; d. Sept. 4, Creek township, Washington county, 1888; m. June 27, 1844, Jane McClin- Penn., Sept. 28, 1835; son of theRevolu- tock, b. 1818; d. 1894; daughter of tionary Col. Samuel [b. 1732; d. 1813] Thomas and Elizabeth McClintock, of and Ann McCracken Rea). Carroll county (had issue: i. Silas- VII. Charles, b. Oct. 31, 1786; d. June Wright, b. June 2, 1845; m. 1868, Eliza- 4, 1832; m. Feb. 22, 1810, Esther Mason, beth Wight, daughter of George Adam of Cross Creek township; had issue: 1. and Biddy Gordon Wight; ii. Orlando- Lucinda. b. 1811; 2. Mary, b. 1812; 3. Loomis, b. July 11, 1846; iii. Milton- Elizabeth, b. 1813; 4. John. b. 1815; 5. Addison, b. 1848; d. young; iv. Alfred- William-Mason, b. Nov. 10, 1816; m. Bruce, b. Nov. 2, 1850; v. Elizabeth- (1st) 1842, Isabella Ramsey; m. (2d) Ellen, b. June 21, 1852; vi. Melissa- 1856, Anna E. Mcllvaine; 6. Louisa, b. Anna, b. Feb. 18, 1854; vii. Josephine, 1818; 7. David, b. 18213; 8. Hannah, b. b. Dec. 14, 1855; viii. Emma-Jane, b, 1822; 9. Esther, b. 1824. June 9, 1857; ix. Heber-Edson, b. Jan. VIII. George-H., b. June 5, 1789; m. 3, 1860; x. Thomas-McClintock, b. Elizabeth Rea, sister to Ann Rea; had March 12, 1863; xi. Barton Livingston, issue: 1. Jane, m. John Wilson, of b. Dec. 19, 1865; xii. Ira-Atilla, b. Jan. Noble county, Ohio: 2. John, m. Eliza 31, 1867; xiii. b. Sept. 25, 1870); 8. Moore, of Hickory. Penn.; 3. Mary, m. Lydia, b. Aug. 1, 1819; m. Napoleon B. John Graham, of Knox county, Ohio; 4. Fisher; 9. Manassas, b. May 17, 1821; William, m. Elizabeth Nichols, of 10. Susanna, b. June 5, 1823; 11. Mary, Greene county, Penn.: 5. Elizabeth, d. b. 1825; 12. John, b. Feb. 10, 1830. unm., aged fifty-eight; 6. Samuel- ERASMUS CANNON, b. in Maryland, Scott, b. 1822; d. 1895; removed to Har- March 3, 1763: settled about 1815, in rison county, Ohio: m. (1st) Athens township, Harrison county, Wright; m. (2d) Ann E. Wallace, of Ohio, where he died; m. Mary Bowman, Washington, Penn.; m. (3d) Mrs. Mary (j. aged ninety years, a native of Mary- Law Long, of Harrison county; 7. land; had issue: I. Mary. II. Rachel. George-W.. b. 1826; d. 1885: 8. Esther- ui. Maria. IV. Euphemia. V. Harriet. I., removed to Cadiz, Ohio (three other yi. Moses, b. in Maryland, Oct. 15, 1794; children died young). settled in Athens township, where he IX. Mary, b. Feb. 4, 1792; m. William d. Aug. 26, 1851; m. October 15, 1819, Fulton, of Mount Pleasant township, Rachel Turner, d. December 11, 1864, Washington county. daughter of Joshua and Priscilla 31 472 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY Turner, of Moorefield; had issue: 1. Sarah-Ann, m. Joseph Dickerson, and settled in New Athens; 2. William, set- tled in Cadiz; 3. James, b. March 31, 1824; m. Oct. 21, 1848, Mary Trimble (daughter of John Trimble, whose father was killed while serving in the Revolutionary War; his mother, Eliza McCall Trimble, settled in Belmont county, Ohio, in 1805); (had issue: i. Mary-E.; ii. Sarah-T.; iii. Rett-A.; iv. John-A.; v. Hayes, settled in Butte City, Mont.; vi. Jeanette; vii. A. -A.); 4. John; 5. Rachel- Jane; 6. Thomas; 7. Moses; 8. Allen; 9. Caroline, m. Basil Bowers; settled in New Martinsville, W. Va. VII. Ewell. VIII. John. IX. Erasmus. X. Thomas. JOHN CARNAHAN, a native of the North of Ireland, d. at Cadiz, May 20, 1806, being the fourth person buried in the old graveyard at that place; had issue, among others: I. George. II. Samuel, b. 1764; d. Oct. 13, 1851; m. Sarah . III. Joseph, b. 1770; d. Feb. 21, 1852; m. Slater; had issue: 1. Joseph; 2. Samuel; 3. James; 4. John, b. 1806; d. 1882; m. 1831, Martha Henderson, b. 1800; d. 1880, daughter of Alexander and Mary Bell Henderson (had issue: i. Mary-Belle, m. Lawson Scott; ii. Andrew-Hender- son, m. 1860, Elizabeth Wood, daughter of Sylvanus and Amanda Tingley Wood; iii. Elizabeth, m. Dr. William T. Sharp; iv. Thomas-Lee, m. Sarah Emerson; v. Martha, m. George Black); 5. Margaret; 6. Sarah; 7. Isabel, d. May, 1816. IV. John. V. James. JAMES CARRICK,a native of Adams county, Penn.. of Scotch-Irish descent, removed to Harrison County, Ohio, about 1811, settling in Short Creek township, where he d. 1820; m. in Adams county, Penn., 1775; his wife d. 1833; had issue, among others: I.David, b. April 1, 1782; d. Dec. 25, 1863; served in the War of 1812; m. Elizabeth , b. 1794; d. Nov. 15, 1873 (had issue, among others: i. Agnes-E., m. 1845, John Hanna Hammond) ; 2. John, d. 1854; 3. Laura, m. Andrews; 4. Nancy, m. Carr; 5. James-W., b. Octoher 14, 1799; removed with his parents to Short Creek township, where he d. March 10, 1885; m. (1st) 1825, Martha Fennel, d. Jan. 7, 1833; m. (2d) 1834, Mrs. Sarah Campbell Boggs, a native of Belmont county, Ohio, d. 1870, daughter of William Campbell, an early pioneer of Belmont county (had issue by first wife, three children; had issue by second wife, eight children, of whom: i. Ezra-L., b. December 15, 1843; served in the Civil War; m. 1872, Martha Jamison, daughter of Andrew Jamison). GEORGE CARROTHERS, b. in Ire- land, 1784; emigrated to America and first located in Washington county, Penn., 1803; removed, about 1813, to Nottingham township, Harrison county, Ohio, and in 1836 to Moorefield town- ship, where he d. December 4, 1863; m. (1st) in Pennsylvania about 1810, Jane Hall, b. in Ireland, February 2, 1791; d. February 2, 1828; m. (2d) 1828, Ann Hastings, a native of county Ferman- agh, Ireland, b. May 1, 1798; d. Janu- ary 14, 1886; had issue by first wife: 1. James; 2. John; 3. George; 4. William; 5. Margaret; had issue by second wife: 6. Sarah, m. James Wilson; 7. Beatty, b. March 14, 1832, in Nottingham town- ship; settled in Moorefield township; m. (1st) Nov. 26, 1856, Martha J. Mc- Clintock; d. March 26, 1859; m. (2d) June 21, 1860, Elsie Johnson, b. July 10, 1839; 8. Eliza, m. Jackson Kennedy; 9. Mary; 10. Christopher; went to Japan as a missionary in 1869. JOHN CARSON, a native of Mary- land, b. 1780; d. May 13, 1858; settled in Nottingham township, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1800; m. Hannah Rogers, also a native of Maryland, b. 1777; d. Nov. 2, 1852; had issue, among others: I. Franklin, b. July 8, 1808; d. June 16, 1874; m. (1st) Oct. 20, 1829, Sarah Hines; d. 1844; daughter of John and Rebecca Deacon Hines, who were among the early settlers in Harrison country, coming from Westmoreland county, Penn.; m. (2d) Nov. 25, 1852, Tabitha Hines, sister of his first wife; had issue by first wife: 1. Louisa-A., b. September 2, 1830; 2. John, b. November 2, 1831; settled in Lucas county, Iowa; 3. Hannah, b. December 6, 1833; 4. William-F., b. August 4, 1835; settled in Lucas county, Iowa; 5. Elijah-R., b. June 13, 1837; m. Drucilla P. Johnson, b. Sept. 13, 1840, daughter of Abiram and Lydla Turner Johnson, pioneers of Nottingham township; 6. Walter-B., b. August 20, 1838; 7. Rebecca, b. Decem- ber 8, 1839; 8. Harvey-L., b. September HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 473 19, 1841; served in the Civil War and ship; m. (2d) March 20, 1878, Nancy died in that service; 9. Isaac, b. Febru- E. McCulIough, daughter of Jonathan ary 15, 1844; settled in Lucas county, McCulIough, of Tippecanoe; 2. Mary- J., Iowa. m. Thomas Sloan. Elijah Carver had II. Elijah, b. 1810; d. November, 1887; issue by second wife: 3. Anna; 4. Thad- m. 1832, Margaret Mahaffey, b. in deus. Washington county, Penn., 1803; d. jqhn CASSELL, a native of Ger- 1884; had issue among others: 1. many, emigrated to America and settled —— -. m- Joseph G. Rogers; 2. Elm ira- j^ Frederick county, Maryland, where Thn^;. R . ^„Hi^«^: 2- ' °^- he married and died; had issue, among HT wmt.i ?v wT; .r T 1. «tbe^«- 1- J'-^^^b, b. April 15, 1799; d III. William. IV. Walter. V. John, ^ear Hopedale, 1881; m. in Maryland, JOHN CARSON, see also Family of 1821, and removed from Unionville, that Rudolph Hines. State, to Green township, Harrison WILLIAM CARSON, b. in Ireland, ^il"^,^^' ^^°^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ ^s^"^" *• J^^^" 1803; d. there, 1865; m. Jane Noble, b. ^^f^.^' m 1893 Elizabeth Jones; ii. 1792; d. 1812; had issue, among others: Chelnissa d. 1888; m. Decker; 1. William-N., b. 1822; d. 1899; m. in "^- ^^r^' ^'- you^g). Ireland, 1845, Margaret Tiernan, b. PHILIP CECIL, born in Maryland, 1821, d. 1885, daughter of Henry and son of Kingsbury Cecil, also a native Jane Abram Tiernan. of Maryland, who afterward settled in JOHN HENRY CARVER, b. in Ger- Kentucky, where he died; the son re- many; came to America as a drummer moved to Harrison county, Ohio, before boy with a regiment of Hessian soldiers 1823, where he died in 1850; m. Mary who served on the British side in the Logan; d. 1845; daughter of John Revolutionary War; about 1779 m. Logan; had issue: 1. Richard, b. in Talitha Mitchell, d. March 14, 1845, a Harrison county. May 23, 1823; m. Feb. native of North Carolina; he settled in 25, 1847, Jane E. Bliss, daughter of Mt. Pleasant, Jefferson county, Ohio, Zadoc Bliss, of Franklin township (had about 1798, removing thence to Flush- issue: i. Sarah-Jane, b. April 16, 1848; ing township, Belmont county, where m- A. Oliphant; ii. George, b. July 17, he resided until 1812, and then located 1850; iii. Mary-K.. b. May 19, 1853; iv. at Freeport, Harrison county, where he Emma-L., b. April 9, 1856; v. John-B., died March 15, 1841; had issue: I. b. Dec. 11, 1858; vi. Jesse-F., b. March John. II. Rebecca, m. Thomp- 21, 1861; vii. Clara, b. Sept. 10, 1863; son. III. Henry. IV. Elizabeth, rii. viii. , d. in infancy; ix. Clarence- Carrington. V. Jane. VI. Ann, A., b. June 8, 1867; x. Merritt-R., b. m. Bailey. VII. Abner, b. Jan. March 31, 1870); 2. John, m. Dec. 10, 23, 1805; d. May 13, 1884; m. (1st) 1829, 1846, Susanna Donahey; 3. William; 4. Eliza Norris, d. July 23, 1855, daughter Kingsbury; 5. Margaret; 6. Jesse, m. of Thomas Norris, of Freeport; m. (2d) 1838, Elizabeth Goddard; 7. Wesley. Rachel Cullen, d. Aug. 14, 1882; had Zadoc Bliss, father of Jane E. Cecil, issue, among others: 1. Thomas-P., b. was a native of Connecticut, b. Feb. 26, Sept. 19, 1843; served in the Civil War; 1788; d. July 8, 1850; settled in Frank- m. November 15, 1868. Mary A. Johnson, lin township, about 1826, having re- daughter of William Johnson, of moved thither from Columbiana county, Smyrna. VIII. Mary, m. Cox, Ohio; m. Keziah Hoskins, b. April 4, and settled in Iowa. IX. Elijah, b. 1'786; d. May 31. 1851; had issue: 1. July 17, 1810. in Belmont county; set- Ralph; 2. Sarah-C; 3. Mary; 4. Emily; tied in Freeport; m. (1st) Nov. 26. 1835, 5. James; 6. George-W.; 7. Zebulon; 8. Nancy Boals, d. Jan. 24, 1854; dau. of John: 9. Keziah; 10. Jane-E., m. Rich- James Boals, of Freeport; m. (2d) April ^rd Cecil. 25, 1871, Narcissa E. Bevan, daughter of NATHAN CHANBY, d. 1837: a native Joseph Bevan; had issue by first wife: of Maryland: removed from Virginia to 1. Henry-B., b. October 17, 1836; d. June Cadiz township, Harrison county, Ohio, 25, 1890; settled in Washington town- about 1805; m. in Virginia, Sarah ship: m. (1st) April 8, 1858, Sarah Mansfield; d. 1847; had issue, among Phillips; d. Aug. 20, 1876; daughter of others: John Phillips, of Washington town- I. Thomas, b. Oct. 28, 1803, in Vir- 474 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY ginia; d. July 1, 1890, in Archer town- one! of the 193d Pennsylvania Volun- ship; served in the War of 1812; m. teer Infantry in the Civil War; m. (1st) Sept. 25, 1836, Elizabeth Clark, had is- Lydia Collins; m. (2d) Frances Flor- sue: 1. James; 2. John; 3. William; 4. ence; ii. Eleanor-Margaret, m. John C. Sarah; 5. Martha; 6. Samuel, b. Dec. 14, Jamison, of Cadiz, Ohio); 3. Samuel, m, 1846; m. Aug. 5, 1875, Clarinda Ed- Jane Hawthorne; 5. John; 6. Thomas, wards, daughter of John .Edwards, of m. Ellen Barr; 7. Sarah, m. James- New Athens, Harrison county; 7. Mary- Hunter; 8. Elizabeth, m. James Carna- Ann; 8. Elizabeth-Ann; 9. Mary-Ellen; han; 9. Rebecca, d. young; 10. Anne, d. 10. Thomas-W.; 11. Hannah; 12. Nancy, young. James Clark, father of Elizabeth ir^ax^n ^ r^r x-ojr *• « t^ 4.^ Chaney, was a native of Fayette county, JOSHUA CLARK a native of Fayette Penn., where he married Sarah Wat- S.""^,^^' P^'^^"' °^ ^^"^ I^^'^l of Walter son; served in the War of 1812; had is- ^^^^■^' ^-emoved, m 1804, to Belmont sue: 1. Martha; 2. Elizabeth, m. county, Ohio and. in 1808 to Short Thomas Chaney; 3. Mary; 4. John; 5. ?^^^^ township, Harrison county, William. thence to Freeport, in the year 1839, where he d. Jan. 17, 1868; m. in Penn- ROBERT CHRISTY, of Scottish de- sylvania, Susannah Flaugh, of English scent, b. about 1732-35; emigrated to descent; d. July 6, 1853; had issue: 1. America and first settled in New York Elizabeth; 2. John; 3. Abisha, settled City; removed to Jefferson county, in Maynard, Ohio; 4. Mary; 5. James; Ohio, before 1800, and later located in 6. Hannah; 7. Margaret, m. Augustus Archer township, Harrison county, Harris; 8. Susan, m. James Reeves, and Ohio, where he d. 1830; served in the settled in Washington township; 9. Indian wars; m. Margaret Marshall, a Joshua, b. April 9. 1823; settled in Free- resident of New York; had issue: 1. port; m. Feb. 28, 1862, Sarah Coving- George, d. aged eighty-four years; ton; d. July 5, 1887; daughter of Elijah served in the War of 1812; 2. William; Covington. 3. Robert, b. in Jefferson county, 1799; ^^^^^^ ^t Ar,T^ i -.^o<. • t , ^ settled in Nottingham township, Har- , ROGER CLARK, b. 1726. m Ireland; rison county, about 1832, where he d. ^- ^^^^' settled in Cumberland county, Oct. 9. 1853; m. 1831, Jane M. McCleary, ^^nn.; m. (1st) in Pennsylvania, b. 1812, daughter of Andrew McCleary f^new; m. (2d) — — ; had issue by (d. in Jefferson county, 1812) and sister ^^l^ 7^^^^' Elizabeth, James, Nancy, to James McCleary (b. 1809) (had is- ^^^ 1^"®'^ x^? ^^^^^^ ^^ second wife: sue: i. David, b. Nov. 12, 1832; settled J^f^ph and John ^ in Stock township; m. April 7, 1864, James Clark, the second child by the Elizabeth Spiker, daughter of Christo- first wife^ was b. 1751, m Cumberland pher Spiker; ii. Elizabeth, m. John R. county, Penn., removed^ to Westmore- Hines; iii. Margaret: iv. James; v. i^"^ ^°"^t^' T''''J[y.^^l^'J?^^^^l''' Sarah-A., m. Meredith Barrett; vi. Jefferson county, Ohio, in 1810, where George; served in the Civil War; vii. ^^'^i^^' ^^^ 1^33; served m the Indian Jane-Anne; viii. Mary, m. Qeorge ^^^,^^^°^"5'«°^7^ar^; m. 1775, Jane Garver; ix. Lydia-C, m. Elias Hines; x. ^^^J' ^ J^^^iye of Cumberland county, Joanna-Matilda, m. Pinckney Moore); t)-l'5<5. had issue. 4. David; 5. John; 6. Sarah, d. aged , I- John. II. Joseph b in Westmore- eighty-three years; 7. Nancy, d. aged ^^"^ ^^°""^y; P^""- ^f' 12, 1778_; re- over eighty years; 8. Margaret. °^°^f nT,-"^ ?^nc^''°'^^ tn'T^^ county, Ohio, in 1808, and settled in JAMES CLARK, b. probably in Vir- Green township, where he d. Oct. 3, ginia; d. in Pennsylvania; m. Margaret 1861; m. March 4, 1811, Rachel John- Trimble; had issue: 1. James; 2. Mat- son; b. Dec. 31, 1793; d. Sept. 3, 1854; thew, b. 1800, in Virginia or Pennsyl- had issue: 1. James, b. 1812; d. 1847; vania; d. in Cadiz township, 1852; m. in removed to New Philadelphia; 2. Mary, Washington county, Penn., Jane Barr, b. Aug. 22, 1813; 3. Johnson, b. Aug. 31, b. 1801; d. Oct. 5. 1865; daughter of 1814; settled in Cadiz; 4. Ingram, b. John and Sarah Galley Barr, of Scotch- Sept. 21, 1816; d. Feb. 18, 1876; served Irish descent (had issue: i. John-Barr, in the Ohio Legislature, 1866-68; m. b. Oct. 9, 1827; d. Jan. 13, 1872; a United Feb. 16, 1842, Sarah Moore, daughter of Presbyterian minister; served as col- William Moore, a resident of Green HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 475 township (had issue: 1. Rachel, b. Nov. 10, 1842; d. April 22, 1865; ii. Alfred- W., b. Aug. 27, 1845; settled in Ne- braska; iii. John, b. April, 1849; d. April 12, 1871; iv. Joseph-A., b. Nov. 16, 1852; settled in Nebraska; v. Clara- J., b. Feb. 27, 1855; d. April 22, 1880; m. Lee Johnson; vi. Charles-G., b. July 10, 1860; settled in Nebraska; vii. Ella-B., ^). December 5, 1862; m. George Mills); 5. Jane, b. Sept. 26, 1818; m. David Moore (had issue: i. James-Clark, set- tled in Cadiz); 6. Rachel, b. March 4, 1824; 7. Ephraim, b. Feb. 19, 1826; di at Cadiz, Oct. 10, 1885; served in the Ohio Legislature, 1855-57; m. Isabella Ken- nedy, daughter of Dr. Moses and Catherine Snyder Kennedy (had issue: 1. Oliver, removed with his parents to Cadiz, in 1871; m. (1st) Sept. 13, 1871, Clara S. Cochran; d. Jan. 20, 1878; daughter of Samuel Cochran; m. (2d) March 20, 1879, Elizabeth Agnes Kerr, daughter of James Kerr, of Cadiz; ii. Frances, d. aged six years; iii. Ida, m. George D. McFadden, of Cadiz; iv. •Cora-V.,d. aged seven years); S.Joseph, b. June 4, 1830; settled in Cadiz; 9. Oscar, b. March 10, 1833; m. Margaret Hamilton; settled in Walton, Kan.; 10. Albert, b. Jan. 16, 1836; m. Amanda Kerr, daughter of John C. Kerr, of Har- rison county; settled in Nebraska. III. William. IV. Mary. V. James. VI. Andrew. VII. Thomas. VIII. Robert. IX. Francis. Samuel Kerr, grandfather of Eliza- iDeth Kerr Clark, was b. Oct. 25. 1792; d. in Short Creek township, Harrison county, where he was among the pioneers; served in the War of 1812; m. (1st) Sept. 28, 1815. Annie Smith; m. (2d) September 8, 1835, Agnes Hamil- ton; had issue by first wife: 1. Sarah-J., m. James McLaughlin; 2. James, b. April 19, 1818; d. in Cadiz, Jan. 21, 1886; m. Julia Ann Carrick (had issue: i. Samuel-Mason; ii. David-Ramsey, a minister; iii. Elizabeth-Agnes, m. Oliver Clark: iv. James-A.; v. Adda-Zilla, m. Charles G. Clark, and settled in Ne- braska; vi. Mary-M.; vii. Julia-Ella, m. ■ Matson, and settled in Short Creek township); 3. Mary, m. William Campbell, of Belmont county, Ohio; 4. Jospph-S. ; 5. Ellen, m. Stewart Car- rick; 6. Robert, a Presbyterian minis- ter; had issue by second wife: 7. Thomas-H.; 8. Samuel-C, a Presby- terian minister; 9. Margaret-Ann, m. John Calderhead; 10. William- J.; IL Effie-J. JAMES CLEMENTS, a native of Maryland, settled in Cadiz township, Harrison county. Ohio, before 1819; later removing to Athens township, where he died'; m. Plessey Merritt, a resident of Belmont county, Ohio; had issue: 1. Nancy; 2. Josiah; 3. Daniel, b. in Athens township, Dec. 24, 1819; d. Sept. 1, 1872; m. 1842, Elizabeth Dickerson; d. Jan. 22, 1888; daughter of Baruch Dickerson, a resident of Cadiz township (had issue: i. Thomas- W., b. June 14, 1846; m. June 19, 1883, Josephine Smith, a resident of Harrison county; ii. John-M., b. June 4, 1848; m. June 20, 1888, Mary Sloan, daughter of John Sloan, a resident of Moorefield township; iii. Samuel; iv. Jane-Eliza- beth, m. Robert Bartow; v. Josiah; vi. Louisa; vii. Clara-P., m. Dunlap; settled in Belmont county, Ohio) ; 4. John; 5. Esther; 6. Eliza; 7. Mary; 8. Merritt; 9. James. JOHN CLEMENS, a native of county Tyrone, Ireland, died aged one hundred years, his wife also having attained the same age when she died; first settled in Eastern Pennsylvania; removed from Raccoon Creek, Washington coun- ty, Penn., to Harrison county, Ohio, about 1837, and later to Tuscarawas county, where he died; m. in Ireland, Frances Scott, a sister of Alexander Scott, later of Scott's Mills, Tuscarawas county, Ohio; had issue: 1. David; 2. John; 3. Joseph; 4. William; 5. James, d. aged seventy-two; first located in Washington county, Penn- sylvania; removed to Harrison county, Ohio, in 1836, and subsequently settled in Athens township: m. in Pennsyl- vania, Mary Campbell, a native of that State, d. aged seventy years, daughter of James Campbell and wife, of Scotch descent, who died in Pennsylvania (had issue: 1. John, m. Elizabeth Moore; ii. Eliza-Jane: iii. Frances, m. Simpson Bethel: iv. Samuel-C, b. June 28, 1833, in Washington county, Penn.; removed to Athens township, Harrison county. Ohio, and later to (3adiz town- ship: m. May 12, 1864. Sarah J. Dunlap, daughter of Hugh B. Dunlap, of Athens township; v. Mary- J., m. Thomas Fur- bay, of New Athens, Ohio; vi. Alex- ander-S., settled in Newport, Tuscara- was county; vii. Rebecca; viii. Gilles- 476 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY pie); 6. Samuel, d. 1887, in Iowa; 7. Emmett; iii. Mary-Eleanor; iv. Frank Elizabeth; 8. Mary; 9. Frances; 10. McClellan; v. Rees-Burchfield); 7. Rebecca. Sarah-Jane, b. Oct. 9, 1825. SAMUEL COCHRAN, of Scotch-Irish descent, b. in Lancaster (now Dauphin) county, Penn., 1738; d. 1818; served in the Revolutionary War; located on the Monongahela River, ten miles above Pittsburgh, before 1800; m. 1770, Mary Shearer, b. 1754; d. 1805; had issue, among others: I. Robert, b. in Lancaster (now Dauphin) county, Penn., Sept. 15, 1771; d. Feb. 1, 1861; settled near Cadiz, Ohio, about 1801; m. (1st) 1800, in Pennsyl- vania, Dorcas Neal, d. 1801; m. (2d) 1807, in Allegheny county, Penn., Sarah Calhoun, b. Jan. 8, 1787; d. April 4, 1867; daughter of David and Eleanor King Calhoun; had issue by first wife: 1. Dorcas, b. 1801; d. 1853; m. Isaac Whittaker; had issue by second wife; 2. Eleanor, b. Feb. 11, 1808; d. Sept. 17, 1867; 3. Samuel, b. March 30, 1811; d. September, 1899; m. (1st) 1839, Sarah J. Hedges, d. 1841; m. (2d) 1849, Margaret Thompson, b. July 11, 1820, daughter of Samuel Thompson, of Green township (had issue by first wife: i. an infant, d. 1841; had issue by second wife: ii. Clara-S., d. 1878; m. Oliver Clark, of Cadiz; iii. Robert-Byron, m. 1886, Flora Morgan, daughter of M. Morgan, of Short Creek township; iv. Belle, m. William Morgan, of Cadiz township; V. Martha); 4. David, a United Presby- terian minister; b. Aug. 1, 1814; d. Oct. 30, 1883, in Leavenworth, Kan.; m. Martha Shearer (had issue, three sons and six daughters, of whom: i. Wil- liam; ii. Martha — both removed from Leavenworth with their mother to San Jose, Cal., after 1883; iii. James, settled in Oregon; iv. , m. Shearer, and settled in Kansas City, Mo.; v. , m. Bissett, and settled in Leavenworth, Kan.; vi. George; settled in Kansas City, Mo.; vii. , m. Pierson, and settled in Tong- anoxie, Kan.; viil. . m. Monks, and settled in Chicago: ix. Elizabeth, settled in Lawrence, Kan.); 5. Mary, b. Dec. 11. 1817; d. July, 1899; m. W. Harvey Caldwell, and settled near Cadiz; 6. Robert-Reed, b. Sept. 14, 1822; m. Oct. 10, 1867, Rachel Hedges, daughter of William and Mary Jane McClellan Hedges, of Cadiz township (had issue: i. John-William; ii.Robert- DAVID COLLINS, m. Mrs. Ann Work- man Glasgow; had issue: 1. John, m^ Ellen Patterson (had issue: i. Patter- son; ii. David; iii. Jane; iv. Elizabeth; V. Ellen); 2. Martha, d. 1847; m. (1st) James Rowland; m. (2d) 1822, John Maholm (had issue, by first husband,, surname Bowland: i. Robert, b. 1798; d. 1880; ii. Anna, b. April 18, 1810; d. May 16, 1844; m. Robert Lyons; had is- sue by second husband, surname Maholm; iii. Eliza-Jane, m. 1848, Joseph Sharon; iv. Martha-Matilda, m. 1845,. Rezin J. Bennett; v. James-B.); 3. Elizabeth, m. Robert Gilmore (had is- sue: i. Ephraim, m. Julianna Dennison; ii. John; iii. Arabella, m. Theodore Jennings; iv. Joseph, m. Letitia A. Brady; v. Ann-W., b. April 16, 1817; d. Oct. 30, 1880; m. John M. Richey; b. Nov. 2, 1808; d. Jan. 30, 1897); 4. Ruth, m. George McFadden. GEORGE COLLINS, b. in Maryland, about 1796; d. in Moorefield township, Harrison county, Jan. 1, 1870, where he had settled' in 1832; m. in Frederick county, Maryland, Eliza Johnson, b. 1803; d. 1890, daughter of Joseph and Bain Johnson; had issue: 1. Elizabeth; 2. Israel; 3. William; 4. Amanda; 5. Mary; 6. Zachariah, b. in Maryland, 1828; d. 1884; m. Rachel Wil- loughby (daughter of Henry Willough- by), b. in Knox county, Ohio, 1831 (had issue: i. George-H., m. Elizabeth A. Hil- bert; ii. William; iii. Nicholas-B.; iv. Elizabeth, d. young; v. Ann-Eliza, m. David N. Reynolds; vi. Parley-A., m. Frank J. Mead); 7. Catharine; 8. George-P.; 9. Nicholas; 10. Battelle; 11. John-W.; 12 Cyrena; 13. Eliza; 14. Thomas-L. DAVID COMLY, b. in Washington county, Penn., Aug. 8, 1798; removed in 1814 to what is now Carroll county, Ohio; settled near Mount Pleasant, Jefferson county, about 1817, where he d. 1886; m. 1821, Sarah Whinnery, a native of Pennsylvania; had issue, among others: 1. John-W., a physician; b. June 24, 1823; settled in Harrisville, Harrison county; m. 1849, Mary C. Armstrong, a native of Ohio, of Scotch- Irish descent; d. 1863; daughter of Charles and Sarah Armstrong (had is- sue: i. Sarah-J., m. Dr. N. R. Coleman, HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 477 and settled in Columbus; ii. Marietta; iii. William-J., d. in infancy). CHARLES CONAWAY, see also Family of William Johnson. MICHAEL CONAWAY (brother to Charles [1751-1837] and Samuel Cona- way) b. 1737, near Baltimore. Md., of Scotch-Irish descent; m. 1779, Elizabeth Davis, a native of Scotland; had issue: I. Michael-C, b. near Baltimore, Md., 1780; removed about 1800 to Pennsyl- vania; in 1805 settled with his parents in what is now Stock township, Har- rison county, Ohio; m. in' Pennsylvania, 1805, Martha Hoagland, daughter of James and Mary Hooey Hoagland; had Issue: 1. Eli, b. 1806; d. 1832; 2. Aaron, b. Oct. 13, 1807; settled in Archer town- ship; m. March 28, 1833, Dorcas Busby, daughter of John Busby, of Archer township (had issue, fourteen children, of whom: i. Michael; ii. ; killed in the Civil War; iii. ; iv. John- B., settled in York. Neb.; v. Henry-0., settled in Omaha, Neb.; vi. Alpheus-B., settled in New Sharon, Iowa; vii. , m. R. M. Welch; viii. , m. C. B. Burrier); 3. Elizabeth, m. 1828, George McKinny (had issue, five chil- dren) ; 4. Henry, m. Rosanna Mosholder (had issue, three children) ; 5. Susanna, m. Joel Smith (had issue, three chil- dren); 6. Rachel, m. Alexander Picken (had issue, seven children) ; 7. Enoch, d. 1861, in West Virginia; m. (1st) Amanda Granfel; m. (2d) Charlotte Lo- man (had issue by both wives) ; S.Mary, d. 1855; 9. Moses-H., b. Aug. 6, 1817; d. Oct. 3, 1890; m. (1st) July 15, 1856, Mary J. Crozier, b. Feb. 15, 1829; d. Nov. 19. 1862; m. (2d) Sept. 13, 1883, Kate Gallaher.b.Sept.28. 1843. II. John, b. 1790, in Kent county, Md.; came with his parents to Stock township, Har- rison county, where he d. 1861; served in the War of 1812; m. Elizabeth Hoaa;- land, b. 1797, in Pennsylvania; d. 1886, in Stock township; had issue, nine chil- dren, of whom: 1. Charles, b. Sept. 12, 1819; m. April 1, 1847, Mary Given, b. Sept. 1822, daughter of Robert and Re- becca Evans Given, pioneers of Har- rison county (had issue: i. Rebecca-J., d. aged fourteen years; ii. Robert, set- tled in Conneaut, Ohio; iii. .John-W. ; iv. Ella-E..m. Samuel Milliken. and set- tled in Tuscarawas county. Ohio; v. Mary-Martha); 2. Elizabeth: 3. Jemima; 4. Susanna; 5. Rachel; 6. Cynthia, m. Layport; 7. Hannah, m. Whitaker; 8. Martha, m. Patter- son. III. Charles, m. Frances Arnold; had issue, nine children. IV. Catharine, m. Henry Barnes. V. Susan, m. Ga- briel Holland (see Holland Family). VI. Elizabeth, m. Archibald Virtue. James Hoagland, father of Martha Conaway, was of Dutch descent; settled in Harrison county; his wife, Mary Hooey, was of Irish descent; had issue, among others: 1. Martha, m. Michael Conaway (b. 1780); 2. Mary, m. Harvey Tumbleson; 3. Jane, settled in the South; 4. Ann, m. Piatt Martin. James Hoagland's brother, Aaron Hoagland, settled in Ashland county, Ohio; an- other brother, Moses, settled in Holmes county, Ohio. PATRICK CONNOR, b. in Ireland, 1807; d. in Pennsylvania, 1890; m. Mar- garet Gallagher, b. 1813; d. 1889; hadi issue: 1. Bryan, b. 1835; settled at Salineville, Ohio, 1871; m. in England, Mary Morris, daughter of James Morris (had issue: i. James-V.); 2. Mary, m. Cordy; 3. Margaret, m. Whalen; 4. John, m. Mary McCann, HIRAM CONWELL, a native of Vir- ginia, of Scotch descent; settled in Har- rison county before 1816; about 1830 he went to New Orleans, and never re- turned, having died, it is thought, of cholera, which was epidemic at that time; in Ohio he had married Mary Cady (b. 1790; d. July 8, 1865), a daugh- ter of John and Margaret Parr (1761- 1864) Cady; had issue, among others: 1. John, b. 1827, in Cadiz; served as an officer in both the Mexican and Civil Wars; he was one of a party that went to the gold fields of California in 1849, returning to Cadiz in 1851; m. (1st) October, 1848, Mary J. Gordon, a native of Ireland (had issue: i. Jesse-L.; ii. Frances-May; iii. William-Henry, who died in infancy; iv. Charles-Emmett; V. Minnesota, m. Wesley Holmes, of Harrison county; vi. Caroline, m. John F. Kennedy; vii. Ella, m. (1st) Charles B. Pearce; m. (2d) Dr. Campbell); John Conwell m. (2d) Elizabeth McConnell, of Cadiz. Mrs. Mary Cady Conwell mar- ried (2d) Joseph Forker, by whom she had issue, surnamed Forker: 1. Isa- bella-Belinda, m. John Shauff; 2. Henry-G.. settled in Cadiz; 3. Mary- Jane, m. Dr. C. Thomas; settled in Des Moines, Iowa. 478 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY JAMES COOKE, a native of Ireland (son of Robert Cooke, a native of Scot- land, who removed to Ireland), emi- grated to America and, about 17S8, set- tled in Washington county, Penn., thence removed to Athens township, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1805; d. 1815; m. in Ireland, Nancy Moore, d. 1829; had issue: I. Mary, m. John Love. II. Elizabeth, m. John Henderson. III. Robert. IV. William, V. James. VI. John. VII. Thomas. VIII. George, b. in Washington county, Penn., May 5, 1804; settled in Athens township; m. July 10, 1824. Nancy Anderson, daugh- ter of Col. William Anderson, an early settler in Cadiz township; had issue: 1. Nancy, m. William Gillespie, and set- tled in Guernsey county; 2. Melila. m. James Crossan; 3. Ruth-E.. m. David McConaughey; 4. Mary; 5. Jane, m. Thomas Morrow; 6. James, b. Dec. 28, 1835; m. March 4, 1858, Jane McCracken, daughter of William McCracken, of Belmont county; 7. William; 8. George; 9. John, settled in Bridgeport. Ohio; 10. Thomas, twin brother to John; 11. Mary-N., m. John H. Rourk; 12. Ma- tilda, m. William Walker. JOSEPH COOK, b. in Pennsylvania; settled in Freeport township about 1820; had issue: 1. Jesse, b. 1810; d. 1898; m. 1825, at Westchester. Ohio, Susanna Wilson, b. 1814; d. 1896; daughter of James Wilson (had issue: i. William, b. 1837; removed to Bloom- ington, 111.; m. Temperanc? Per;goy; ii. T.-H.; settled in Scio); 2. Joseph, b. 1812; 3. David, b. 1815; 4. Jane. WILLIAM C. COOPER, a native of England, emigrated to America and first settled in Pennsylvania; later re- moved to near Deesville. Harrison county, Ohio, where he died; his widow d. in Cadiz township; had issue; 1. Sarah, m. Laffe'-ty. and settled in Cadiz township; 2. William, settled in Carrollton. Ohio; 3. Benjamin; 4. Stephen, settled in Ore"Ton; 5. John, settled in Rising Sun. Ohio; 6. Thomas, d. in the army; 7. Michael, removed to Indiana; 8. Louisa, m. John S. Cleven- der. and settled in Dakota; 9. Mary. JOHN COPE, a native of Virginia (great grandson of Oliver Cope, who emigrated from Wiltshire. Eneland. to Pennsylvania. 1687, and d. 1701). re- moved from Virginia to Belmont coun- ty, Ohio, in 1812; located in Short Cresk township, Harrison county, in 1813, where he died; m. in Virginia. Grace Steer, b. 1763; d. March 30, 1885; had issue; I. William, b. Aug. 1, 1796; d. in Iowa, Sept. 27, 1869. II. Joseph, b. in Vir- ginia, Jan. 9, 1799; d. April 22, 1885; m. in Fayette county, Penn., 1825, Ruth Griffith, of Welsh descent, b. in West- moreland county, Penn., Jan. 1, 1801; daughter of William and Sarah Cooke Griffith; had issue; 1. Amos-A., settled in Powesheik county, Iowa; 2. Benja- min-T., b. May 15, 1828; m. 1855, Rachel Lukens, b. 1834, in Guernsey county, Ohio, daughter of Moses and Elizabeth Barber Lukens; 3. Israel, d. in infancy; 4. Oliver-G., b. Aug. 11, 1830; served in the Ohio Legislature. 1880-18S1; m. March 6, 1856. Sarah Williams, d. May 19, 1859, daughter of Nathan and Sarah Williams, of Harrison county; 5. , d. in infancy. III. Isaac, b. Feb. 1, 1801; d. Dec. 19, 1883. IV. John, b. in Vir- ginia, April 25, 1803; m. 1832. Mary Lukens, b. in Pennsvlvania. Nov. 4, 1804; d. July 19. 1876; daughter of Moses and Sarah Lukens; had issue; 1. Sarah-T., b. June 2, 1833; 2. Lemuel, d. young; 3. Hiram, b. Dec. 16, 1843; m. 1872, Martha Thomas, daughter of Isaac and Anna Thomas, early settlers in Harrison county. V. James, b. Nov. 9, 1806; d. in Hopedale, Jan. 17. 1868. Moses and Elizabeth Lukens. parents of Rachel Cope, removed to Harrison county from Guernsey county, in 1838. The father of Elizabeth Lukens was Samuel Barber, b. 1777; d. in Harrison county, in Januarv, 1851; m. Ann Schooley, b. 1766; d. Oct. 1, 1863. SAMUEL COPE, b. in Frederick county, Va., 1762; d. November, 1854; settled in Green township, 1823; m. in Frederick county. Va., 1797. Sarah Steer, b. Feb. 27. 1778; d. 1828; daughter of James and Abigal Steer; had issue: 1. John, b. 1799; 2. Elizabeth, b. 1801; 3. Susannah, b. 1S03; m. 1830. Lloyd. Case of Pennsylvania (had issue: i. James; ii. William; iii. Thomas; iv. Sarah-Elizabeth; v. Rhoda-Jane) : 4. Abigail, b. 1805; 5. .Toshua. b. 1808; 6. Jane. b. 1811 ; 7. Sarah, b. 1814; 8. Anna, b. 1816; 9. Mary, b. 1819; 10. Rachel, b. 1823. JAMES COPELAND. a native of Ire- land, emigrated to Pennsylvania and settled in Westmoreland county, thence HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 479 removing to Wayne township, Jefferson county, Ohio, in 1800; had issue: I, Thomas, b. in Westmoreland county, Penn., 1795; settled in Green township, Harrison county, Ohio, in 1814, where he d. 1879; m. Nancy Shepler; had issue: 1. Christina; 2. Mary; 3. Jacob; 4. Lucinda; 5. James, b. Sept. 4, 1823; settled in German town- ship; m. 1846, Margaret Gutshall, daughter of Daniel and Mary Hospel- horn Gutshall, who settled in Harrison county, in 1800 — the father served in the War of 1812 — (had issue: i. Mary- M.; ii. Thomas-D.; iii. Nancy-J.; iv. Elizabeth-A.; v. Christina-L. ; vi. Re- becca-S.; vii. Sarah-S.; viii. James-A.; ix. Emma-A.; x. Adaline; xi. Evaline, twin sister to Adaline last named; xii. Laura-B.; xiii. Samantha-M.) ; 6. Sam- uel; 7. Peter; 8. Joseph-L. ; 9. John-M.; 10. Henry; 11. Thomas-F.; 12. George. 11. James. III. Susan. IV. Samuel. V. Mary. VI. Jennie. VII. Joseph. VIII. Nancy. IX. John. X. Iba. JOHN COPELAND, a native of Ire- land, emigrated to Americarand settled in Maryland or Pennsylvania, whence, in 1805, he removed to Jefferson county, Ohio; d. 1840; m. Isabelle Leach, a native of Pennsylvania; had issue: 1. Samuel; 2. Thomas, b. in Jefferson county, Ohio; removed to Franklin township, Harrison county, Ohio, be- fore 1837, where he d. July 4, 1877; m. in .Harrison county, Nancy A. Dick; d. April 1, 1880. daughter of William Dick, a resident of Harrison county (had is- sue: i. Jane, m. John Hilton; ii. Isa- belle, m. Nathaniel Lukens; iii. John; iv. Mary; v. William, b. Sept. 4, 1837; m. 1863, Mary Cruin, daughter of George Cruin, of Franklin township ) ; 3. Joseph ; 4. James, b. in Maryland, Aug. 7, 1801; settled in Washington township, where be d. April 30, 1859; m. 1837, Mary A. Walters, daughter of Leonard and ■Rachel Ruby Walters, of Jefferson county (had issue: i. Thomas-W., b. in Franklin township, Aug. 25, 1838; settled in Washington township; served in the Civil War; was a prisoner at Andersonville; m. Aug. 29, 1869, Mary E. Ramsey, of Washington township; ii. Matilda; iii. Rachel; iv. Amanda; v. Isabelle; vi. Leonard; vii. S.-S.; viii. Nannie-E.; ix. John, served in the Civil War; d. about 1865); 5. David; 6. Wil- liam, settled in Franklin township. where he d. 1870; m. 1833, in Harrison county, Mary Dempster, daughter of Robert and Elizabeth Hunter Dempster, of Jefferson county (the former a native of Pensylvania; the latter a daughter of John Hunter, who settled in Jefferson county in 1820); (had issue: i. John-W.; ii. William-D., b. Jan. 8, 183G; m. March 10, 1867, Lucy Burns, daughter of John M. and Elizabeth Hilbert Burns; iii. Joseph; iv. Albert; V. Elizabeth; vi. Isabelle; vii. Mary- M.; viii. Margaret-J.) ; 7. Archibald. John M. Burns, father of Lucy Burns Copeland, was a native of Westmore- land county, Penn.; removed to Smith- field, Jefferson county, Ohio; afterward settled in German township, Harrison county; m. Elizabeth Hilbert, daughter of John Hilbert; had issue: 1. Frances- Samantha, m. Alexander Henderson; 2. Letitia, m. Joseph Courtright; 3. Lomida, m. Henry Taylor; 4. Lucy, m, William D. Copeland. Leonard Walters, father of Mary Walters Copeland, was an early settler in Jefferson county; m. Rachel Ruby; had issue: 1. Thomas; 2. Joseph; 3. Mary-A., m. James Copeland; 4. Catha- rine; 5. Martha; 6. Maria. ROBERT COULTER, a native of county Antrim, Ireland; emigrated to America and settled with three brothers in Chester county, Penn., 1780-1790; thence removed to Lancaster county, Penn.; m. Isabella Mayes, a native of the North of Ireland, daughter of Joseph Mayes, who after the death of her first husband, m. Robert McCoy; removed in 1816 to Jefferson county, Ohio; thence in 1828 to Perry township, Tuscarawas county, Ohio, where she d. June, 1849; had issue: 1. Andrew, b. June 14, 1796, in Lancaster county, Penn.; d. Sept. 30, 1872, at Smithfield, Ohio; removed in 1816 to Jefferson county, Ohio; m. (1st) Jane Reed, a na- tive of Jefferson county: m. (2d) June 9, 1844, Nancy Mayes, b. Sept. 15, 1815; d. June 17, 1859; had issue, among others: 1. Robert-McCoy, b. March 19, 1849, near Bethel, Ohio; a Presbyterian min- ister; m. S'^'pt. 27. 1881. .Janet E. McCoy, daughter of Matthew McCoy, of Archer township, Harrison county. Joseph Mayes, father of Nancy Mayes Coulter, was b. June 6, 1785, in Wash- ington county, Penn., of Scotch-Irish descent; settled near Folks' Station, 480 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY Green township, Harrison county, where he d. Dec. 29, 1845; m. Sarah Mil- ler, daughter of John Miller, of Beech Spring, Ohio. WILLIAM COULTRAP, a native of Virginia, of Scottish descent, settled in Stock township. Harrison county, Ohio, in 1816, where he d. 1823; m. in Virginia, Mary Woods; d. 1842; had issue: 1. William, b. in Virginia, 1800; d. 1845; m. in Jefferson county, Sarah Moore; b. 1796; d. Sept. 8, 1889 (had issue: i. Nathaniel; ii. Nancy; iii. Mary; iv. Richard-M., b. 1840; m. Mary E. Moore; v. David; vi. Ruth; vii. Oliver; viii. Nathan; ix. William; x. Susannah; xi. Margaret; xii. Charles); 2. Henry; 3. David; 4. Matthew; 5. Elizabeth, m. Hall; 6. Sarah, m. Hall. McGeel; 7. Margaret, m. JOHN COURTRIGHT, b. in New Jersey, Sept. 7, 1774; removed to Wash- ington county, Penn., and thence to near the present site of Salineville, Co- lumbiana county, Ohio, before 1809; had issue: I. Jacob-V. II. James. III. Samuel, b. April 30, 1809; removed in 1829 to Carrollton. Ohio, later to Short Creek township. Harrison county, and in 1856 to Smithfield, Jefferson county; m. (1st) 1829, Frances Zollars; d. 1862; daughter of Frederick Zollars, of Har- rison county; m. (2d) 1867, Mary B. Stonebraker; had issue by first wife: 1. James; 2. Franklin; 3. Z.-Z., b. July 12, 1832; settled in Freeport in 1875; m. 1858, Mary A. Crew; 4. Vail, settled in Illinois; 5. Mary-Jane, m. George D. Walcott; 6. Charles; 7. Ann-Rebecca, m. Thomas Penny; 8. John; 9. Sarah, m. William Carrick; 10. William, set- tled in Franklin; 11. Joseph-W., b. Jan. 6, 1847, in Short Creek township; set- tled in Freeport township; served in the Civil War; m. (1st) Sept. 28. 1866, Letitia Burns; d. Aug. 17, 1875; daugh- ter of John M. Burns; m. (2d) Oct. 15, 1881, Laura Steadman, of Freeport; 12. Melissa, m. Wilson Lugar. IV. Isaac. V. William. VI. Milo. VII. Judith. VIII. Rebecca. GEORGE COX, see Family of David Smylie. PETER CRABTREE, a native of England, emigrated to America and first settled in western Pennsylvania; removed to Rush Creek, Jeffersoa county, Ohio, where he remained until about 1812, and then settled in Not- tingham township, Harrison county, Ohio, where he d. 1829; had issue: I. Rhoda. II. Sarah. III. Rachel. IV. Ann. V. Amy. VI. Cornelius. VII. Gabriel. VIII. William, b. in Penn- sylvania, about 1795; m. Rachel Moore, b. about 1811; daughter of Loami Moore, who served in the Revolution- ary War; had issue: 1. Sarah; 2. Keziah; 3. John-D., b. June 12, 1825; m. May 27, 1847, Elizabeth Moore, b. Feb. 6, 1829, in Moorefield township, Har- rison county, daughter of David and Sarah Kidwell Moore (had issue: i. William; ii. Sarah; iii. Martha; iv. Gabriel; v. Mary; vi. Edmond; vii. Elmer); 4. Loami; 5. Gabriel; 6. Shepard; 7. James, served in the Civil War; 8. William, served in the Civil War; 9. Peter; 10. Mary-A. WALTER CRAIG, a native of Ire- land, of Scotch descent, settled at West Middletown, Washington county, Penn., about 1791; m. in Ireland, Jane Mc- Cleon; had issue: I. David. II. Thomas. III. Ann, b. 1780; d. Aug. 30, 1847; m. John Jamison (see Jamison Family). IV. Rebecca. V. William. VI. John, b. in Ireland,^ Aug. 1, 1775; emigrated to America with his parents, and afterwards set- tled at Hardscrabble (now West Alex- ander), Penn., removed in 1803 ta Green township, Harrison county, Ohio, where he d>. Aug. 22, 1825; m. in Penn- sylvania, Elizabeth Johnson, b. June 23, 1781; d. Feb. 28, 1864; had issue: 1. Jane, b. June 14, 1802; d. 1890; m. Joshua Hamilton; 2. Johnson, b. in Green township, Dec. 19, 1803; d. 1888; m. 1834, Martha Thompson, b. 1810; d. July 16, 1890; a daughter of Samuel Thompson of Green township (had is- sue: i. John, d. in infancy; ii. Thomp- son; settled in Nebraska; iii. Rachel- A., m. George W. Brown; settled in Nebraska: iv. Eliza- J., m. M. K. Turner, and settled in Nebraska; v. William-S.; settled in Nebraska; vi. John-A., b. May 6, 1852; m. Oct. 20, 1881, Elizabeth J. Mills, daughter of James and Nancy Davis Mills); 3. Rachel, b. Sept. 16, 1805: d. Aug. 22. 1825; 4. Mary, b. July 16. 1808; m. Nathaniel Gilmore; settled in Ford county. 111.: 5. Ann. b. Feb. 22, 1811; d. Feb. 27, 1887; m. James Tag- HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 481 gart; 6. Rebecca, b. July 27, 1813; m. township. Alexander Wiggins, the Andrew Patterson, of Pickaway county, father of Edward Wiggins, was of Ohio; 7. William, b. March 15, 1816; Scotch descent, having come to Amer- d. Feb. 8, 1872, in Fulton county, Illi- ica from the North of Ireland a short nois; 8. Walter, b. July 4, 1819; m. (1st) time before Edward was born. Edward 1844, Jane Moore, b. 1824; d. 1859; Wiggins died in Virginia, daughter of William and Sarah Moore, rqBERT CREE. a native of Penn- ofGi-een township; m (2d) 1860 Han- i^^nia, m. Elizabeth Villars, b. in nah Hendei-son d. 18<9; m. (3d) Flor- Pennsylvania, Oct. 12, 1763; daughter of ^Il^'f u ^ru""^' ■ ^^"Shter of William j^^^ ^^^^ ^ Villars; had issue: Welch (had issue by first wife: i. j ^^^ ^ -^^^ ^3 -^r^^g Sarah- Jane, d. aged thirteen years; ii. jj_ ^^^ ^^ ^^'^ -^^ -^^gg^ Amanda m Cassius M Nichols; in. jjj_ j^^^^ ^ p^^ 5 ^^790 John, settled 111 Nebraska; iv Eliza- jy_ j^^^^^^ ^ ^ jj ^2 ^^^^^ beth, m. W. H. Oglevee, and settled m ^ (. ^ ^^^ 28, 1793. Illinois; had issue by second wife: v. ^j_ Eleanor, b. April 20, 1795. ?^1"'T\^'- ^^^oo'^-^'V ."""l^/liol- VII. John, b. Sept. 18, 1796. ^.°Tr''v.^ J"^^ ^Wr^^r' '^^ ^^^^ o ' ^^ VIII. James, b. in Pennsylvania, May VII. Walter. VIII. Jane. IX. Susan. ^3, 1798; d. May 16, 1859; removed to T^x^TTTAT^T^ ^ Ti A TTT T^/^Ti T^ 1 • Tf Freeport towushlp, Harrison county, EDWARD CRAWFORD, b. m Vir- qj^j^^ ^^^^^^ I8I7. ^ ^ec. 27. 1817, ginia, about 1^60; d m Archer town- g^^^j^ Woods, b. March 10, 1803; d. ship, Harrison county, 1831; removed g j_ 33, 1860; had issue: 1. William- there froni Brooke county. West Vir- ^ ^ ^ec. 31, 1818; d. Oct. 17, 1881; 2. i'^l^k'^^.^onf'^^^^L'^-^.Z^.^^'^f'''^; Elijah-W., b. April 22. 1826; d. Oct. 17, b.l770; d 1864; daughter of Edward and ^g^g 3^ james-H., b. Aug. 29, 1829; d. CharityWiggins.of Brooke county; had j^^^ g ^^355; 4. John-W., b. Jan. 30, issue: 1. Ellen, m James Hagerty; 2. ^^32 5^ ^ ^ April 24, 1833; d. in Mary m. James Harper 3. Alexander, infancy; 6. Thomas-M., b. April 24, d. m Carroll county; 4 Thomas, b. Dec ^^35 ^ ^^^^^ g ^^859 Caroline A. 3, 1804, in Brooke county, Va.; removed ^^^^^ ^ ^o^_ 20, 1839; daughter of with his parents to Archer township; ^^^^^ ^^^ Elizabeth Grant, of Carroll m. (1st) 1829 Jane Kelly, daughter of county, Ohio; the former d. June 7, Hugh and Mary Kelly, residents of iggS; the latter d. Feb. 8, 1886; 7. Sarah- Cadiz; m. (2d') March 5, 1839 Mrs. j ^,_ ^ 20, 1837; 8. George-W., b. Eleanor Forbes, widow of Joseph ^ .jj ^^ -^ggg. 9 Robert-B., b. Nov. 5. Forbes, a former resident of Harrison ^3^^ ^^^,^^^^ -^ ^^^ (.j^il ^^j.. ^ j^^y 10. county (had issue by first wife: _ 1. -^ggg -^ ^^^ ^ 10_ Mary-M., b. Sept. Hugh; 11 Edward; 111. Isabella; iv. r^ ^g^^ ^^^ Elizabeth-V., b. June 16, Thomas; had issue by second wife: v. ^'^^^ John-A.; vi. Elizabeth; vii. Jane; viii. Robert; ix. James-P.; x. Jason); 5. ROBERT CROSKEY, a native of Ire- Isabella, m. William Welch; 6. Char- land, emigrated to America and later, lotta; 7. Josiah; 8. Nancy, m. William in 1802, removed to Green township, Lewis; settled in Holmes county; 9. Harrison county, Ohio; had issue: Margaret; 10. Elizabeth, m. Joseph I. William. II. John, b. in New Jer- McGonigal; 11. John, b. in Archer town- sey. Oct. 7, 1775; d. March 16, 1862; m. ship, Nov. 29. 1816; m. in 1849, Eliza- in Pennsylvania, Feb. 9, 1801, Catherine beth Hedges, b. 1827; d. 1877; daughter Fry, b. June 25, 1781; d. in Iowa. Jan. of Samuel and Prudy Hedges (had is- 22, 1863; daughter of Samuel Fry, a sue: i. Mary, m. Hamilton Lisle, of resident of Pennsylvania; had issue: 1. Archer township; ii. Samuel-E., b. in John, b. April 19, 1802; d. Oct. 20, 1867; Archer township, 18.53; settled in Cadiz m. Esther ; 2. Christina, b. Feb. township: m. 1874, Emma E. Barrett, a 13, 1804; 3. Rachel, b. Feb. 22. 1806; 4. native of Nottingham township, daugh- Samuel-F., b. Dec. 11, 1808; 5. Sarah, b. ter of William H. Barrett: iii. Alex- Jan. 12, 1811; 6. Jackson, b. Feb. 6, ander; settled in Archer township: iv. 1815; d. Feb. 7, 1890; 7. William, b. Oct. Harriet, d. 1878; v. Martha, m. John 11, 1817; m. Jan. 16, 1840, Susan Baxter, Holland, of Cadiz; vi. Margaret); 12. b. May 11, 1822, daughter of Samuel P. Harriet, m. Matthew McCoy, of Archer Baxter, a pioneer of Green township 482 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY (had issue: i. Nancy- Jane, b. June 25, 1841; m. Edward Hall; ii. Clarinda, b. Oct. 9, 1846; m. Rezin B. Mansfield; iii, Louisa-Caroline, b. Sept. 9, 1848; d. June 28, 1869; iv. Susan-Amanda, b. Feb. 7, 1856; m. William F. Houser) ; 8. Abraham, b. Jan. 24, 1820; settled in Chicago; m. Mary Phillips, daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth William Phil- lips (had issue: i. Thomas, m. Martha Osburn). WILLIAM CROSKEY, b. in Ireland, 1795; d. 1873; son of Robert Croskey, who emigrated to Maryland, in 1775; removed to Washington county, Penn., and thence, in 1812, to Green township, Harrison county, Ohio; m. 1848, Mar- garet Crabb, of Jefferson county, Ohio; had issue: 1. Robert; 2. Margaret, m. James Thompson; 3. Henry, settled in McLean county. 111.; 4. Anna, m. John Clifford, and settled in Green township; 5. Mary, m. George McFadden; 6. Sarah, m. Thomas Groves, of Jefferson county; 7. John, died in infancy; 8. ; 9. THOMAS CRUMLEY, a native of Virginia, b. Dec. 31, 1776; d. July 3, 1861; settled near what is now the village of Harrisville, Harrison county, Ohio, in 1802, coming into Ohio with the Dickersons and Dunlaps; m. in West Virginia, Elizabeth Gardner, of English descent; d. 1856; had issue: 1. Samuel; 2. Sarah; 3. Mary, m. Joshua Dickerson; 4. William; 5. Thomas; 6. Ira, b. Oct. 7. 1809; settled near Free- port, in Washington township; m. Jan. 31, 1840, Jane Dickerson (had issue: i. Mary-E., m. David McFadden, and set- tled in Iowa; ii. Sarah, m. William Wilson, and settled in Freeport, Har- rison county; iii. Hiram; iv. Clara; v. Thomas, m. Oct. 9, 1888, Abbie Kirk- patrick, daughter of G. W. Kirkpatrick, of Moorefield township, Harrison county); 7. Elizabeth; 8. John; 9. Han- nah, m. Glazener: 10. James; 11. Aaron-W.; 12. Emily, m. Bark- Tiurst; 13. Joseph; 14. David. ROBERT CULBERTSON. b. in Ire- land, 1743; emigrated to Ohio in 1811, and settled one mile northeast of New Athens, in what is now Harrison county, Ohio, where he died Dec. 22-24, 1840; m. (1st) in Ireland, ; m. (2d) in Ireland, ; d. aged sixty- seven; had issue by first wife: I. James. II. John. III. Samuel. IV. Ezekiel; had issue by second wife: V. Thomas. VI. Robert. VII. Ben- jamin. VIII. William. IX. Hugh. X. Joseph. XI. George, settled in Muskingum county, Ohio. XII. Annie, m. Thomas Pollock, and settled in Guernsey county, Ohio. XIII. Mary, d. aged eight. XIV. Gillespie, b. in Athens township, October, 1816; m. (1st) Dec. 17, 1840, Dorcas Holt, of Guernsey county, b. 1818; d. Aug. 15, 1865; m. (2d) Nov. 8, 1866, Eliza J. Duncan, a native of Guernsey coun- ty, daughter of James Duncan (d. 1835), and Elizabeth McKinney Duncan (d. 1861); had issue by first wife: 1. John, b. Sept. 20, 1841, in Athens township; m. Nov. 8, 1866, Sarah Jane McDowell, b. 1845; d. 1890; daughter of William and Hannah Watters McDowell, early settlers in Athens township; 2. Mary, m. Jeremiah Brown, of Monroe town- ship; 3. Sarah-Ann, m. P. M. Cooper, and settled in New Athens; 4. Robert, d. aged seventeen; had issue by second wife: 5. Dorcas-Eliza, m. Samuel A. Kirkland. JOHN CUNNINGHAM, a native of Ireland, of Scottish descent, emigrated to America, and first settled at Balti- more; thence removed to Fayette and Westmoreland counties, Penn.; d. in Westmoreland county, April 19, 1797; m. Elizabeth , d. in Westmore- land county, March 2, 1816; had issue: I. James, b. 1780; d. at Mansfield, Ohio. 1870; served as a captain in the War of 1812. II. Ezekiel, m. Feb. 25, 1813, Mary Dregoo; settled near Chillicothe, Ross county, Ohio. III. David, b.May 6, 1783; d. May 27, 1849; m. (1st) Dec. 23, 1806, in Fayette county. Penn., Mary Mc- Laughlin, b. Sept. 28, 1782; d. April 6, 1829; daughter of John and Elizabeth McLauehlin; m. (2d) Ann Barrick- low, b. May 8, 1808: d. Aug. 13, 1887; had issue bv first wife: 1. John, b. Oct. 29, 1808; d, Aug. 18, 1870; m. Feb. 3, 1829, Nancy Sharp, b. 1810; d. Oct. 10, 1875; daup-hter of William (d. 1835) and Mary McFadden Sharp, who removed from Hopewell township (?), Washing- ton county, Penn., to Harrison county (had issue: i. Mary, m. 1850, Eldred Glencairn Holliday, son of Robert and Eliza White Holliday; ii. David, b. March 1, 1837; m. 1859. Laura Phillips, dauehter of Thomas and Elizabeth Williams Phillips, natives of Chester HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 483 county, Penn., who settled at Cadiz about 1820-25. IV. Joseph, d. May 18, 1807. V. Robert, d. in West Virginia. EMANUEL CUSTER, d. at Jessups, Maryland, of which State he was a native, aged over one hundred years; removed to Harrison county, Ohio, early in the century, afterwards return- ing to Maryland; had issue: I. John, a native of Frederick county, Md., d. at Cresaptown, Alle- gany county, that State, 1830; had issue, among others: 1. Emanuel-H., b. at Cresaptown, Dec. 10, 1806; re- moved to Rumley, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1824, and later, to Monroe, Mich.; m. (1st) Aug. 7, 1828, Matilda Viers, d. July 18, 1834; m. (2d) Feb. 23, 1836, Mrs. Mary Ward Kirkpatrick, b. near Burgettstown, Washington coun- ty, Penn., May 31, 1807; daughter of Thomas and Sarah Ward, of Cross Creek township (she m. 1st, Israel R. Kirkpatrick, and by him had issue: i. David; settled in Wood county, Ohio; ii. Lydia-A., m. David Reed, and settled at Monroe, Mich.) (had issue by first wife, three children, of whom: i. Brice-V., settled at Columbus, Ohio; had issue by second wife: iv. George- Armstrong, b. Dec. 5, 1839; served as general' in the Civil War, and after- wards killed by the Indians at the bat- tle of the Little Big Horn, June 25, 1876; m. Feb. 9, 1864, Elizabeth Bacon, daughter of Judge Daniel S. Bacon, of Monroe, Mich.; v. Nevin, b. July 29, 1842; settled near Monroe, Mich.; vi. Thomas-Ward, b. March 15, 1845; lieu- tenant U. S. A.; killed at battle of the Little Big Horn. June 25, 1876; vii. Boston, b. Oct. 31, 1848; killed at the battle of the Little Big Horn, June 25, 1876; viii. Margaret-Emma, b. June 5, 1852; m. Lieut. Calhoun, killed at the battle of the Little Big Horn, June 25, 1876). II. Jacob, b. 1790, at Jessups. Md.; d. 1862, in Rumley township, Harrison county, where he had' settled before 1816; m. Sarah Webster, b. 1798; d. 1835; daughter of William Webster, a pioneer of Ohio; had issue: 1. William- Webster, b. in New Rumley. July 1, 1816; settled at Scio, about 1850; m. in New Hagerstown, Frances Amelia Phelps, b. in Massachusetts, daughter of Eben and Mary Kibbee Phelps, who settled in Franklin (now Kent), Portage county, Ohio, when Frances was five years old; (had issue: i. Mary-E., m. Dr. D. J. Snyder; ii. Caroline-A., m. W. N. McCormick; settled in Florida; iii. James-A., served in Civil War; killed at Mount Sterling, Ky.; iv. Albert-0., b. 1850; d. April 1, 1870, in Steuben- ville, Ohio; v. Clarence-P.); 2. Alex- ander, d. aged four years; 3. Stewart- F., settled in Connotton, Harrison county; 4. John; 5. Henry-L., settled in New Philadelphia; 6. Robert, settled in Scio; 7. Isaac, settled in Westerville, Ohio; 8. Vincent, d. in infancy. III. Emanuel, d. in Maryland. IV. Charlotte, b. 1796; d. 1854; m. Robert Cummings, b. 1789; d. 1823. V. Susan, m. John Hendricks. VI. Mary, m. Joseph Cummings. ROBERT DAVIDSON, a native of Pennsylvania, removed to Green town- ship, Harrison county, in 1802; m. about 1804, Croskey, sister of John Croskey, with whom he came to Ohio; had issue: 1. Margaret; 2. Eliza- beth; 3. Robert; 4. James; 5. Rachel; 6. William, b. 1822; removed to Iowa in 1877; m. Oct. 10, 1849, Christian Shepler, daughter of Samuel Shepler, of Green township (had issue: i. Samuel- F., b. March 19, 1850; m. Nov. 18, 1869, Caroline M. Bell, daughter of Francis Bell, a resident of Wayne township, Jefferson county, Ohio; ii. James-H.); 7. Mary. SAMUEL DAVIDSON, b. in Allegany county, Md., 1771; was one of a family of thirteen children; his father was a native of Ireland', who emigrated to Maryland; settled in Washington town- ship, Harrison county, Ohio, in 1812, where a cousin had preceded him; m. Mary Drake, a native of Pennsylvania; had issue: I. Lewis. II. Jesse. III. Jonah, b. iu Allegany county, Md.. July 4, 1804; d. June 16, 1889; m. 1829, Sarah Joice, d. 1859; had issue: 1. Eliza, b. in Washing- ton township, Oct. 26, 1832; m. Aug. 4, 1864, James Wilson; d. 1873; son of James and Sarah Brock Wilson, natives of Virginia, who were among the early settlers of Moorefield township. IV. Mary. V. Hannah. VI. Nancy. WILLIAM DAVIDSON, b. Nov. 20, r 1747, son of William Davidson, a native of Ireland, who settled in Pennsylvania before the Revolutionary War; m. (1st) Rosanna Hutchinson, a native of 484 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY (^ales; ,m. (2d) Barbara McDale (by whom he had issue, five sons and three daughters) ; had issue by first wife, three sons and two daughters, of I whom : v^ I. Lewis, b. March 23, 1773, in Fayette county, Penn.; removed in 1801 to the present site of Catlettsbui-g, Kentucky; a year later located on the French grant, in Scio county, Ohio, where he remained until 1809, and thence re- moved to Freeport, Harrison county, Ohio; served in the War of 1812; m. his cousin, Mary Davidson, b. in Alle- gany county, Md., Sept. 23, 1778, daughter of Lewis and Nancy Todd Davidson; the former was a brother of William Davidson, Jr.; the latter a native of England. Lewis and Mary Davidson were m. in Fayette county, Penn., in July, 1798; had issue: 1. Wil- liam; 2. Nancy, d. in Scioto county, Ohio; 3. Rosanna, d. in Scioto county; 4. John-S.; 5. Mordecai-W.; 6. Lewis- H., b. 1809, in Scioto county; removed with his parents to Harrison county; settled in Freeport township, Harrison covmty; was licensed to preach Feb. 8, 1845; m. Jan. 7, 1830, near Moorefield, Harrison county, Lucinda Latham, b. Sept. 18, 1810, in Fauquier county, Va. (had issue: i. Isaiah, d. in infancy; ii. Lixcy, d. in infancy; iii. Sarah, d. in in- fancy; iv. James-M., killed Sept. 20, 1863, in the battle of Chickamauga; v. Mary, m. McPeck, and' settled near Jewett, Harrison county; vi. Latham-A., settled in West Milford, Harrison county, W. Va.; vii. Alex- ander- J., settled in Tucson, Ariz.) ; 7. Susanna; 8. Mary; 9. Jesse; lO.Thomas- L.; 11. Joseph-C.; 12. Jonathan-S. JESSE DE LONG (son of Solomon De Long), of French descent, b. about 1776, on Short Creek, Jefferson county, Ohio, where his parents came from Pennsylvania; d. near Dennison, Ohio, May 8, 1882; his family served in the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812; removed to Tuscarawas county, Ohio, where he m. Nancy Wagner; afterward settled near Dennison; had issue, among others: 1. Espy, b. May 11, 1832; removed to Monroe township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1872; served in the Civil War; m. March 6, 1864, Sarah A. Carmack, b. May 1, 1847. in Canal Dover, Ohio, daughter of Jacob and Clarissa Carmack, natives of Maryland. DANIEL DEWEY, b. in Lebanon, Conn., June 19, 1731; d. March 9, 1816; served as ensign, lieutenant, and cap- tain in Company 4, Twelfth Connecticut Militia, 1767 to 1772; a personal friend of " Brother Jonathan " Trumbull (Governor of Connecticut); m. Feb. 22, 1753, Temperance Bailey, b. Feb. 2, 1731; d. March 31, 1795; daughter of Isaac and Abigail Hunt Bailey; had is- sue, nine children (Temperance, Esther, Daniel, Eliphalet, Philena, Ebenezer, Joshua, Experience, and Anna), of whom: I. Eliphalet, b. at Lebanon, Conn., Dec. 13, 1762; d. at Cadiz, 1838; re- moved to Hartwick, Conn, 1798, where he was instrumental in building Hart- wick Seminary; emigrated to Ohio in 1835, where he joined his son, Chaun- cey, who had preceded him; m.'at Le- banon, Conn., Aug. 25, 1793, Rachel Ann Hyde, b. Dec. 3, 1761, at Norwich West Farms, Conn.; d. at Cadiz, 1847; daughter of Silas and' Martha Watei'- man Hyde; had issue, nine children (Eliphalet, Susan, Lucy-Williams, Martha, Chauncey, Josiah, Henry, Har- riet and Silas), of whom: 1. Chauncey, b. March 27, 1796, at Norwich West Farms, d. Feb. 15, 1880; removed to Ca- diz, September, 1821; m. Feb. 11, 1823, Nancy Pritchard, b. Oct. 27, 1804, at Uniontown, Pa.; d. Sept. 6. 1897; daugh- ter of John and Sarah Bromfield Pritch- ard (the former a native of Wales, b. 1775; d. 1844; the latter b. 1782); (had issue: i. Eliphalet-C, b. Dec. 16, 1823; d. 1886; m. 1845, Virginia Affleck; ii. Harriet-Eliza, b. 1825; d. 1831; iii. Henry, b. 1828; d. 1830; iv. John-Henry, b. 1830; d. 1848; v. Orville-C, b. Nov. 12, 1833; m. 1868, Elizabeth Good Tingle; vi. Mary-Pritchard, b. March 6, 1836; d. 1869; m. 1857, Edward Fulton Moffett; vii. Martha, b. 1839; d. 1840; viii. Charles-Paulson, b. Oct. 24, 1843; m. (1st) Emma Scott; m. (2d) Mrs. Ger- trude Osborne Jewett; ix. Albert-B., b. 1846; m. 1880, Louise Shufeldt, of Chat- ham, N. Y.; X. Clara-Hyde, m. Charles Mather Hogg. Daniel Dewey (1731-1816) was the son of John (b. 1700; d. at Leb- anon, Conn., 1774) and Experience Woodward Dewey (m. 1726) ; grandson of Josiah (b. 1666 at Northampton, Mass.) and Mehitable Miller Dewey (m. 1691) ; and great-grandson of Josiah (b. at Windsor, Conn., 1641, where hewasa fellow-townsman of President Grant's HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 485 immigrant ancestor, Matthew Grant) and Hepzibah Lyman (daughter of Richard and Hepzibah Ford Lyman) Dewey. Josiah Dewey, last named, was the son of Thomas Dewey (b. about 1597, at Sandwich, Kent county, Eng- land) who immigrated to Dorchester (now South Boston), Mass., in 1630, on the vessel, " Mary and John," with Matthew Grant and others, whence he removed to Connecticut, in 1635, and helped to found the town of Windsor. ASA DICKERSON, b. 1814; d. 1864; a native of Washington county, Penn., probably of the immediate family of John or Henry Dickerson; removed to Harrison county, Ohio, where he m. Jane Dunlap, b. in Harrison county, 1814; d. 1873; had issue: 1. Samuel-D.; settled at Peabody, Kan.; 2. William- H.; 3. Sarah-J., m. Adam Dunlap; 4. Lydia-E., m. J. E. Carnahan. and set- tled in Pawnee county, Neb.; 5. Dunlap, d. in the army during the Civil War; 6. Granville, settled at Maryville, Mo.; 7. Rebecca-Caroline, m. Joseph McFad- den Hamilton; 8. Adam-J., settled in Lyons, Kan. JOHN DICKERSON and HENRY DICKERSON settled in Amwell (now Franklin) township, Washington coun- ty, before 1780, John apparently having come from Dunbar (now Tyrone) town- ship, Fayette county, where his name appears on the tax-list in 1772, and where Joshua Dickerson (1740-1827) had settled about 1770; Joshua and John were doubtless brothers, and Henry may have been a third brother, although more probably the son of John. John Dickerson d. in Washington 'county in 1785 (before March), leaving a widow, Ruth (d. before December, 1807), and children, of whom the fol- lowing were mentioned in his will, written more than seven years before his death: 1. Susannah; 2. Henry (may have been the Henry mentioned be- low) ; 3. Gideon, d. unm. September- November, 1789; 4. Baruch; 5. Asa, d. January. 1794; m. Lydia (had is- sue: i. John; ii. William, d. 1860; m. (1st) Sarah Jolly; m. (2d) Martha Clark); 6. Drusilla. Henry Dickerson, of Morris township, d. before Aug. 13, 1825; m. Ann ; had issue: 1. Joshua, b. in Washington county, May 3, 1781; d. April 30, 1853; m. (1st) Margaret McPherson; m. (2d) Cornelia Craig (had issue: 1. Joshua- D.; ii. Nancy; iii. Alexander; iv. John, b. April 13, 1810; d. April 10, 1865; m. [1st] Mary Adams, daughter of Robert; m. [2d] Mary Johnson; v. Jane, m. Samuel Walters; vi. Ruth, m. Lewis Barker; vii. Henry; viii. Lydia, m. Howard Trusell; ix. Margaret, m. Wil- liam Hazlett; x. Matilda); 2. George; 3. Gideon, m. Eliza Gunn, and removed to Ohio; 4. Henry, m. Catharine Beck, and removed to Illinois; 5. Leonard, m, Susan Wolf, and removed to Ohio; 6. Asa; 7. Margaret, m. McLaugh- lin; 8. Ruth, m. Reynolds. JOSHUA DICKERSON, b. 1740; d. in Fayette county, Penn., Oct. 10, 1827; came from New Jersey; settled on what is now called Dickerson's Run, in Dun- bar township, near East Liberty, Fay- ette county, Penn., about 1770; here, in 1780, he built a grist-mill on the site of the mill now owned by the Oglevee brothers; from this settlement and its vicinity emigrated to Harrison county the families of Dunlap, Oglevee, Bar- ricklow, Rankin, and others; Joshua Dickerson had six sons, Thomas, Wil- liam, John, Joshua, Levi, and Eli, all of whom removed to Ohio near the be- ginning of the present century. Joshua Dickerson also had, among other daughters, one, Sarah, who m. Samuel Dunlap; of the sons: Eli, b. 1768; d. in Harrison county, Nov. 24. 1834; m. Marv , b. 1776; d. April 28, 1831. Thomas, b. May 19, 1764; d. Dec. 24, 1852; m. in Fayette county, Mary Curry, b. Jan. 16, 1766; d. March 30, 1853; emigrated to Harrison county about 1802, and settled at the present site of Dickerson's church; had issue: I. Baruch. b. May 21. 17S6; d. Oct. 2, 1824; m. in Harrison county, Elizabeth Holmes, b. near Wellsburg, W. Va., daughter of William Holmes and sister of Joseph Holmes: served as a captain in the War of 1812; had issue: 1. Joshua, b. Nov. 9, 1808; m. (1st) 1834, Elizabeth Crumley (d. 1839), whose parents removed from Western Vir- ginia to Harrison county early in the century; m. (2d) Mary Elliott, b. Dec. 10, 1820, daughter of Samuel (d. 1828) and Nancy Grimes (d. 1830) Elliott, of Belmont county (had issue by second wife: i. Aaron-M., b. 1845; d. 1875; ii. 486 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY Baruch, b. 1846; d. 1864; iii. Thomas; settled near Flushing, Ohio; iv. Sarah; V. Elizabeth; vi. Theodore; vii. Samuel, d. in infancy; viii. Hiram, settled near New Athens; ix. Charles, settled in Colorado) ; 2. Susanna, m. Edward Laf- ferty; 3. Mary, d. in infancy; 4. Thomas; 5. Mary, m. Arrison Shotwell, and settled at Glenville, Ohio; 6. Jane, m. Ira Crumley, and settled in Wash- ington township; 7. William-Wilson, b. April 12, 1818; settled in Athens town- ship; m. Oct. 17, 1839, Susan McCoy, daughter of Thomas McCoy, of Athens township (had issue: i. Baruch, d. in infancy; ii. Thomas, d. in infancy; iii. Hannah; iv. Granville; v. Winfield; vi. William; vii. Elizabeth; viii. Clara; ix. Alvin); 8. Elizabeth, m. Daniel Clemens; 9. Baruch, d. in infancy. II. Joshua, b. in Fayette county, Penn.; d. April 12. 1850; m. Sarah Dun- lap, b. 1779; d. Feb. 25, 1871; had issue: 1. Rebecca, m. Samuel Porter; 2. Joshua; 3. Adam; 4. John, b. Aug. 10, 1810; d. Feb. 20, 1878; m. Elizabeth Mc- Fadden, d. March 21, 1887, daughter of Samuel McFadden of Cadiz township (had issue: i. Joshua; b. Dec. 15, 1832; ii. Elizabeth, b. March 2, 1834; m. Thompson McFadden; iii. Sarah, b. Sept. 24, 1836; m. Jacob Webb; iv. Jane, b. April 24, 1838; m. Hiram Laf- ferty; v. Samuel-C, b. May 19, 1840; vi. John- J., b. April 29, 1842; vii. Rebecca, b. Nov. 16, 1843; m. Joshua Dickerson; viii. Margaret, b. March 20. 1845; m. Samuel B. Porter; ix. William-N., b. Dec. 3. 1846; settled near New Athens; m. Oct. 14, 1880, Mary B. McFadden, b. July 19. 1857. daughter of Robert and Rebecca Dunlap McFadden; x. James- M., b. Dec. 2, 1848; xi. Susan-C, b. Dec. 26, 1851; m. Gilmer Richey; xii. Mary- A., b. May 2, 1853; m. Watson Dunlap) ; 5. Susan; 6. Sarah; 7. William, b. Oct. 7, 1815; m. (1st) 1838, Jane Lafferty, b. 1817; d. Sept. 11, 1864; daughter of Samuel Lafferty, of Moorefield town- ship; m. (2d) Mary McMillan; m. (3d) 1881, Margaret Bartow (had issue by first wife: i. Samuel; ii. Joshua, b. Sept. 2, 1842; m. 1864, Rebecca Dickerson, daughter of John and Elizabeth Mc- Fadden Dickerson; iii. William, settled in Moorefield township; iv. John, set- tled in Illinois; v. Joseph-B., b. Oct. 30, 1848; m. 1874. Mary Barrett, daugh- ter of Erasmus Barrett, of Cadiz town- ship; vi. Margaret, m. John Dickerson. and settled in Kansas; vii. Sarah, m. ■ — — Scott; viii. Mary, m. John Laf- ferty; ix. Edward) ; 8. Mary, m. Wil- liam Knee; 9. Jane, twin sister to Mary. III. Thomas, settled in Harrison county. IV. John. V. Joseph, b. 1796; d. in New Athens, a 1877; m. (2d) Mrs. Sarah Ann Cannon j/^ Mills, b. July 27, 1820. VI. Eli. VII. Levi. VIII. Hiram. IX. Jane. X. Susan. JOHN DOWNS, a native of Ireland; settled in Pennsylvania before 1800; removed to Carroll county, Ohio, where he died; had issue, among others: 1. Richard, b. in Pennsylvania, 1800; d. 1860, in Stock township, Harrison coun- ty, where he came from Carroll county, before 1832; m. in Stock township, Elizabeth McKinney, b. in Ireland; d. Jan. 19, 1886; daughter of George Mc- Kinney (had issue: i. Mary-J., m. Percival Adams; ii. George-M.: iii. John; iv. James; v. John-F., b. March. 2, 1832; m. Nov. 9, 1860, Sarah West; d. May 18, 1879; daughter of Amos West; vi. Richard; vii. Margaret). George McKinney, father of Eliza- beth McKinney Downs, was a native of Ireland; settled in Stock township, Harrison county, before 1832, where he d. 1845; his wife d. 1841; had issue: Elizabeth, John, Nancy, Jane, George, Fryer, James. ADAM DUNLAP, b. 1752; d. Jan. 10, 1830; removed from Dunbar township, Fayette county, Penn., to Athens' town- ship, Harrison county, before 1809; m. Rebecca Work, b. Dec, 1745; d. March 9, 1846; had issue: I. Samuel, b. Sept. 11, 1772; d. Oct. 2, 1839; settled in Athens township, Harrison county, Ohio, before 1805; m. about 1800, Sarah Dickerson, a native of Fayette county. Pa.; d. Nov. 11, 1858; daughter of Joshua Dickerson; had issue, among others: 1. , m. Nelson Pearce, and settled in Cadiz township; 2. Adam, b. April 8. 1805; d. Feb. 20, 1883; m. (1st) Margaret Thompson; b. 1824; d. 1863; daughter of David Thompson; m. (2d) Elizabeth J. Sprott, b. 1829; d. 1871 (had issue by first wife: i. Sarah, m. John Porter; ii. Martha, m. Samuel Porter; iii. Mary, HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 487 m. J. D. Barricklow; had issue by second wife: iv. Nancy, m. A. Farrell, and removed to West Virginia; v. Samuel, d. Jan. 4, 1859; vi. Elizabeth- J., m. Robert Holliday, and settled in Moorefield township; vii. Amanda- Adaline, m. Henry Barto; viii. John- A., b. Dec. 11, 1859; m. Mary H. Chaney, daughter of James and Margaret Chaney; ix. William-S.; x. Clara-B., d. young). II. William, b. 1780; d. Feb. 24, 1865; settled on the Brushy Fork of Still- water Creek about 1812-13, later re- turning to Fayette county, Penn., and thence removing to Belmont county, Ohio; m. Margaret Rankin, b. in Fay- ette county, Penn., 1787; d. May 19, 1838; had issue: 1. Adam, settled in Missouri; 2. James; 3. William, settled in Missouri; 4. Samuel, b. June 25, 1825; removed to Belmont county, Ohio; m. (1st) 1844, Elizabeth Jane Bethel, b. 1827; d. 1858; daughter of James and Mary Brock Bethel; m. (2d) 1859. Mary E. Bethel; d. 1872; daughter of John and Elizabeth Oglevee Bethel (had issue by first wife: i. William- J.; ii. Margaret, m. A. Dunlap; iii. Lycur- gus-M.; iv. Thomas-A.; v. Joseph-C; had issue by second wife: vi. O.-B.; vii. Eliza-J., m. Compher; viii. Isaac-E.; ix. Samuel-A.; x. Cora-B.); 4 Margaret; 5. Rebecca. III. John, b. Jan. 28, 1787; d. Feb. 24, 1874; m. Nancy Dickerson, a native of Fayette covmty, Penn.; had issue: 1. Adam; 2. Susan: 3. Mary; 4. Rebecca; 5. Joshua, b. 1822; d. Sept. 4, 1879; m. 1847, Nancy G. Watson; d. 1884; daugh- ter of Robert S. Watson (had issue: i. Watson, b. Oct. 13, 1849; m. Sept. 4, 1874. Mary A. Dickerson; ii. Adam-C; iii. Rachel-A., m. J. L. Scott, and re- moved to Missouri; iv. Mary-J., m. Winfield Scott, and removed to Mis- souri; V. Louisa-B.. m. John Webb; vi. Susan, m. John P. Dunlap) ; 6. John. IV. Adam, b. Sept. 15. 1790; d. Sept. 20, 1863; m. 1817, Jane Patterson; had issue: 1. Joseph, b. June 29, 1818; m. February. 1846. Julia Ann Hayes, d. Sept. 3,' 1878; daughter of John and Hannah Hayes, natives of Pennsyl- vania (had issue: i. Adam-B.; settled in Freeport township: ii. .Tohn-A.; iii. Harriet-J., m. Israel Howells; iv. Pat- terson; V. William-H.; vi. Harriet-F., m. Israel Shepard; vii. Mary, m. John Stephenson; viii. A.-M., b. 1860; m. 32 Laura J. Moore, daughter of R. L. and Sophia Moore; ix. James-V.; x. Cora- B.; xi. Robert-S.; xii. LeGrand-E.); 2. Hugh-B., b. Feb. 15, 1820; m. Feb. 15, 1844, Elizabeth Dunlap, daughter of Joseph and Sarah Gilmore Dunlap (had issue: i. Sarah-J., m. Samuel Clemens; ii. Joseph-G.; iii. Mary-E.; iv. William- A.; V. John-P.); 3. Rebecca, d. in in- fancy; 4. Nancy; 5. Mary-J.; 6. Sarah- A., b. 1828; 7. Adam, b. 1834; 8. Patter- son; 9. Samuel; 10. John; 11. Robert; 12. William. V. Joseph, b. in Fayette county, Penn., Oct. 12. 1792; d. March 23, 1878; m, (1st) 1819, Sarah Gilmore, b. Jan. 14, 1800; d. May 18. 1837; daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth Buchanan Gil- more; m. (2d) Mary Anne Roberts, d. 1856; m. (3d) 1859, Susan Webb; had issue by first wife: 1. Samuel, b. May 20, 1820; d. Oct. 19, 1889; m. Oct. 22, 1844, Mary Rea, b. Dec. 14, 1821, daugh- ter of Joseph and Jane McConnell Rea, of Green township (had issue: i. Martha, m. J. McKibben; ii. Sarah, m. Dickerson; iii. Mary. m. H. Dunlap, of Athens township; iv. Clara- B.); 2. Joseph, b. May 30, 1834; m. 1855, Elizabeth Dickerson, daughter of Adam Dickerson (had issue: i. Sarah, b. 1856; ii. Jane, b. 1858; iii. Lee-D., b. 1861; iv. Crittenden, b. 1862). VI. Robert, b. May 11, 1794; d. March 2, 1860; m. 1819, Mary Patterson, d. Sept. 29, 1852; daughter of Hugh and Nancy Patterson, natives of Ireland, who emigrated to Pennsylvania, where the father died; had issue: 1. Adam. b. Oct. 2, 1820; d. 1895; m. (1st) 1845. Mar- garet McFadden, d. 1863, daughter of Samuel McFadden; m. (2d) 1874, Sarah Jane Dickerson, d. 1875 (had issue by first wife: i. Robert, b. Nov. 14. 1845; m. April 20, 1871, Margaret McFadden, daughter of John J. McFadden, of Athens township; ii. Samuel, b. Nov. 13, 1847; m. March 16, 1876. Annie R. McFadden, daughter of John J. Mc- Fadden; iii. Mary: iv. Elizabeth; v. A.-J.. b. June 14, 1859; m. June 9, 1887, Annie McAdam) ; 2. Hugh-Patterson, b. Oct 17, 1822; d. March 29. 1894; m. 1856, Sarah .Tane Kennedy, b. 1832; daughter of Napoleon B. and Mary Gilmore Ken- nedy (had issue: i. Robert-Kennedy; ii. Mary, m. William B. Scott, and re- moved to Missouri; iii. John-A., d. young; iv. Joseph-B.; v. Amanda-B.; vi. Samuel-P.; vii. Albert-C); 3. Sam- 488 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY uel, b. Dec. 24, 1825; d. June 29, 1882; m. 1857, Mary J. Dunlap; d. 1900; daughter of Adam Dunlap (had issue: i. William-F., b. Aug. 2, 1858; m. Oct. 29, 1885, Mary H. Dunlap, daughter of Samuel Dunlap, of Nottingham town- ship; ii. Emily-J.; iii. James-P.); 4. Nancy; 5. Rebecca; 6. Mary; 7. Robert. VII. Mary, b. 1788; d. March 22, 1858; m. John McFadden, son of John and Margaret Sharp McFadden (see McFad- den Family). VIII. Sarah, b. De'c. 31, 1779; d. Feb. 25, 1871; m. Joshua Dickerson (see Family of Joshua Dickerson). IX. Esther, m. Rankin. X. Rebecca, b. March 31, 1786; d. March 24, 1864; m. (1st) Rankin; an. (2d) Alexander (?) Hamilton. JXI. Rachel, m. Baruch Oglevee. JAMES EDGAR, of Scotch-Irish descent; removed from Washington county, Penn., to Wellsburg. Va., and thence to Nottingham township, Har- rison county, Ohio, where he died in 1845; had issue: I. James, b. in Washington county, Penn., Feb. 22, 1794; d. March 16, 1882; m. Charity Bartow, b. in Washington county, N. Y., July 24. 1798; d. March 16, 1882; daughter of Zenas and Eliza- beth Carpenter Bartow (the former born about 1750, was an officer, in the Revolutionary War, and settled about 1809 at Connotton, Harrison county, Ohio); had issue: 1. , d. in in- fancy; 2. Elizabeth; 3. Adam; 4. Cyrus, settled in Monroe county; 5. Margaret; 6. James, killed in the Civil War; 7. PhcBbe, m. Petty; 8. Francis; 9. Matilda, m. Kidwell; 10. Elijah- G.; 11. Charity, m. Hanlon; 12. Samuel-D., b. Aug. 30, 1842, in Monroe county, Ohio; settled in Nottingham township, Harrison county; served in the Civil War; m. Jan. 14, 1869. Susan Poulson, b. March 14, 1852, in Notting- ham township, daughter of John and Rachel Rogers Poulson. II. Jane. III. William. IV. Adam. V. Elizabeth. VI. Nancy. ANDREW EKEY, see Family of Obediah Holmes. JOHN ELDER, see Family of Wil- liam Scott. SAMUEL ELLIOTT, a native of Ire- land, emigrated to America, and, about 1800, settled in Belmont county, Ohio; m. (1st) Mary Grimes; m. (2d) ; had issue by first wife: 1. Joseph, set- tled in New Athens, Harrison county; 2. Samuel, b. in Belmont county, about 1817; settled in Short Creek township, Harrison county, in 1847, where he died Jan. 15, 1884; m. 1845, Sarah Thomas, b. Oct. 28, 1828 (had issue: i. Mary- Elizabeth, settled ill Guernsey county, Ohio; ii. Hameline, settled near Cadiz, Ohio; iii. Martha-J., m. Thomas, and settled near Mount Pleasant, Jef- ferson county; iv. Susann-A., m. Anderson, and settled in Short Creek township; v. Reason-Wilson, settled near Harrisville, Ohio; vi. Malinda, m. Samuel Brokaw, and settled in Belmont county; vii. Aaron, settled in Short Creek township; viii. Harvey, b. 1864; d. 1883; ix. Taylor); 3. James; 4. Mary, m. Joshua Dickerson; 5. Nancy, m. Joshua B. Dickerson, and settled in Short Creek township. Isaac Thomas, a native of Virginia, father of Sarah Thomas Elliott, was one of the first settlers of Short Creek township, Harrison county, Ohio, lo- cating there in the early part of the century; had issue: 1. Peter; 2. Isaac, b. 1785; d. 1867, in Washington county, Iowa, where he had settled in 1843; m. Elizabeth Holmes, b. 1800; d. 1852 (had issue: 1. Aaron; ii. Asa; iii. Abram, a Methodist Episcopal minister; iv. John, settled in Iowa; v. Taylor; vi. William, settled in Colorado; vii. Sarah, b. Oct. 28, 1828; m. Samuel Elliott; viii. Susan, m. David Twinand): 3. Susan; 4. Ruth; 5. Anna; 6. Sarah; 7. Aaron. JOHN ENDSLEY, see Family of George McPeck. PATRICK ENGLISH, a native of Great Britain, served in the Revolu- tionary War, and afterwards settled at Redstone, Fayette county, Penn.; thence removed to Cadiz, Harrison county, Ohio; from there he went to Coshocton county, where he died; had issue, among others: I. James, b. Oct. 17, 1791, either in Virginia, or Baltimore county, Md.; d. in North township, Harrison county, Ohio, June 6, 1869; m. (1st) Jane Pick- ens, d. 1842; m. (2d) Ann McCarroll, b. Jan. 25, 1809; d. Oct. 17, 1884 (daughter of John McCarroll. a native of Scotland, who died in Harrison county) : had is- sue by first wife: 1. Talitha; 2. John, settled in Tuscarawas county, Ohio; 3. HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 489 James, d. aged seventeen; 4. Matthew, settled in New Philadelphia, Ohio; 5. Thomas, served in the Civil War; d. at Nashville, Tenn; 6. Susannah; 7. Alpha, settled in Iowa; 8. Nelson, d. in Iowa; 9. Nancy, m. William Donaldson, and settled in North township; 10. William, settled in Kansas; 11. Jane, m. Samuel McLean, and settled in Iowa; 12. Alexander, settled in Harri- son county; 13. James (second), settled in Brilliant, Ohio; 14. Mary-E., m. John Morgan, and settled in Iowa; had issue by second wife; 15. Martha, b. July 2, 1845; m. James Price; settled in Lees- ville, Carroll county, Ohio; 16. George, b. Feb. 11, 1847, settled near Scio; m. Sept. 4, 1877, Julia A. Lewis, daughter of Griffin Lewis, of Jefferson county, Ohio; 17. Isaiah, b. Dec. 5, 1848; settled in North township; 18. Malida, b. Aug. 17, 1850; m. T. W. Smith, and settled in North township; 19. Scott, b. Aug. 13, 1852, in North township, where he settled; m. Oct. 29, 1879, Ida Masters, daughter of Isaac and Ann Overholtz Masters. JAMES ERVIN, a native of Mary- land, settled in Short Creek township, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1812; afterward removing to Franklin town- ship, Harrison county, where he d. 1850; m. in Maryland, Elizabeth Bann, d. 1870; had issue: 1. William; 2. James; 3. John; 4. Henry, b. April 6, 1815; settled in Washington township; m. 1840, Elizabeth Watts, of Harrison county (had issue: i. James; ii. John; iii. Mahala; iv. Ann; v. Margaret-H.; vi. Sarah-J.; vii. Isabelle; vlii. Thomas; ix. Actia-A.); 5. Phoebe; 6. Isaac; 7. Nancy. JOHN ESTEP, d. aged about eighty- four years; removed from Pennsyl- vania to Short Creek township, Har- rison county, Ohio, before 1826; m. in Pennsylvania, Sarah Smith; d. aged about eighty-four years; daughter of Edward Smith: had issue: 1. Harrison, settled at Lloydsville, Ohio; 2. William, a physician, settled in Lloydsville; 3. Robert; 4. Harriet, m. Taylor Lynn; 5. Andrew, b. 1826; settled in Kansas City, Mo., where he d. 1884; m. 1850, Sarah Henderson, daughter of Andrew and Martha Nichol Henderson. The Nichol family was of Scotch origin; during the religious persecu- tion in Scotland they passed from Scotland to county Derry, Ireland, thence emigrated and settled in Cum- berland county, Penn., 1789; afterward located in Westmoreland county, Penn.; and about 1800 removed to Colerain township, Belmont county, Ohio; the parents of Martha Nichol Henderson were Andrew (1798-1861) and Jeanette (b. 1801) Nichol. Andrew and Martha Nichol Henderson had issue: 1. Martha; 2. John-N.; 3. Anna; 4. Agnes, m. Thomas Love, and settled at Aledo, 111.; 5. Margaret, m. Robert C. McCon- nell, and settled at Brady, Ohio; 6. Mary- J., m. John Mintier, and settled at Shepherdstown, Ohio; 7. Andrew-Jack- son; 8. Sarah, m. Andrew Estep; 9. Isabelle, m. John Anderson, and settled in Iowa; 10. Andrew, settled at^Hardy, Neb.; 11. Elizabeth, m. R. W. Castle, and settled in Iowa; 12. Harriet, m. John Sweeney, and settled in Iowa; 13. William-T.; 14. Thomas- Jefferson; 15. M.-N. ROBERT ESTEP, a native of New Jersey, settled in Peters (now Union) township, Washington county, Penn., before 1784; had issue, thirteen chil- dren, among whom: 1. Nathan, died without issue; 2. William (had issue, among others: i. Joseph); 3. Ephraim (had issue: i. Elmira); 4. James-S., a Baptist minister; m. Sarah Gaston (see ^ Gaston Family), b. about 1808; d. 1875; daughter of Samuel and Margaret Penny Gaston, of Peters township (Samuel, b. 1772; d. 1853; son of John and Charity Cheeseman Gaston, who removed to Washington county from Upper Freehold township, Monmouth county, N. J., before 1783) ; (had issue, at least six children, of whom: i. Josiah-Morgan. b. Feb. 19, 1826; d. May 5, 1888; settled in Cadiz, Ohio, about . 1853; m. 1857, Amanda J. Crabb, b. ^ September, 1837; d. March 23, 1898; daue-hter of Jacob and Jane D. Crabb; (^ ii. Harrison, removed to Marion, Ind.; iii. James, removed to Marion, Ind.). ISAAC FINICAL, a native of Penn- sylvania, of German descent, b. 1779; removed from Washington county and settled in Cadiz township, Harrison county, Ohio, in 1831; afterwards re- moved to Short Creek township, where he d. 1854: m. in Pennsylvania. Mar- garet Anderson, b. 1797; d. 1885; daugh- ter of Robert Anderson, of Washington 490 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY county, who served in the Revolution- ary War; had issue: 1. Eliza-May, m. William Spiker; 2. Margaret, m. Alex- ander Henderson; 3. Jane, m. William Miller; 4. Frances-C, m. David Stew- art; 5. Mary-B., m. Calvin Rodgers; 6. Rachel-A., d. in infancy; 7. Robert; 8. John, b. in Washington county, Penn., April 4, 1829; m. April, 1856, Martha Irwin, daughter of William Irwin, who afterwards removed to Iowa (her mother was a native of Ireland, her family having settled in Harrison county when she was six years of age) ; 9. Thomas. MICHAEL FINLEY, b. in Scotland or Ireland about 1680-90; emigrated from county Armagh, Ireland, to America, landing at Philadelphia Sept. 28, 1734, with his wife and seven or eight sons; first settled on Neshaminy Creek in Bucks county, Penn., after- wards in New Jersey, and later in Sadsbury township, Chester county, Penn., where he lived from 1737 to 1747 or later; had issue, among others: 1. John, b. in county Armagh, Ireland, killed by Indians about 1757-59, in Lur- gan township, Cumberland county, Penn., where he had settled near Middle Spring Church before 1744; m. Martha Berkley; had issue: 1. James, settled in upper South Carolina; 2. Mary, m. (1st) John Thompson; m. (2d) James Leon- ard, d. in South Huntingdon township, Westmoreland county, Penn., 1791; (had issue by first husband: i. Martha, d. unm., aged twenty-eight years; ii. Anthony, m. Rachel Henley, d. in Davis county, Ky., aged seventy-five years; iii. Jane, m. Charles Foster, and both d. 1796 in Cincinnati; iv. Mary, d. 1806; m. Adam Carnahan; had issue by second husband; v. Catharine, m. Wil- liams; vi. Elizabeth, b. March 4, 1772; d. June 25, 1863; m. (1st) March 3. 1796, Capt. Alexander Buchanan, b. 1760; d. May 8, 1810; m. (2d) Nov. 19, 1811, David Compton, of Meadville, Penn., had issue by first husband: Robert; James; Mary; Thomas; Alexander; Sarah; John; and by second husband: Rebecca and Nancy-Hanna; vii. Ann, or Nancy, b. June 7, 1775; d. at Cadiz, Ohio, March 23, 1818; m. Dec. 6. 1796, John Hanna, of Greensburgh, Penn., son of John Hanna, and had issue: James-Leonard, 1797-1820; Catharine, 1799-1801; Mary Leonard, 1800-1820; John-Evans, 1805-1894; Jane-Finley, 1811-1833; Andrew-Finley, 1813-1847, and David-Wilson, 1843; viii. John- Berkley (or Barclay), b. 1777; m. Austin, and removed South; ix. James- Finley, m. Sarah Barber, and settled at Bath, Summit county, Ohio) ; 3. Michael, b. about 1747; d. near Chillicothe, Ohio; 4. Ann, m. Thomas Johnston, who lived in Westmoreland county, Penn., in 1775; 5. Elizabeth, b. about 1748; m. (1st) John Prebles (or Peebles), m. (2d) William McCracken; m. (3) Capt. Wil- liam Rippey, of Shippensburg, Penn.; 6. Andrew, b. 1750; d. July 5, 1829, in South Huntingdon township, West- moreland county, Penn.; served as first lieutenant in the Revolution (8th Pennsylvania, 1777) ; m. Jane Jack, daughter of John and Eleanor Jack, of Westmoreland county (had issue: i. John, m. Mary Stokeley, daughter of Nehemiah Stokely, of Westmoreland county, and had issue: Nehemiah and Stokeley; ii. Andrew, removed to Indiana; iii. Mary, m. Bell; iv. Nancy, m. Bell; v. Jane); 7. Samuel, b. April 15, 1752; d. April 2, 1829; served as major of a Virginia Cavalry regiment during the Revolu- tion, and as a brigadier-general in the War of 1812; m. May 5, 1789, at New- ville, Cumberland county, Penn., Mary Brown, daughter of James Brown (had issue: i. Martha, b. March 16, 1792; m. Rev. W. L. McCalla, of Philadelphia; ii. James-Brown, b. June 7, 1794; d. May 14, 1851; m. (1st) Mary Theresa Brown; m. (2d) Mary E. Moore; lived in Chilli- cothe, Ohio, until 1829, and at South Bend, Ind., in 1836; iii. Clement-Alex- ander, b. May 11, 1797, at Newville, Penn.; d. Sept. 8, 1879, at Philadelphia; surgeon-general U. S. A., 1861, and brig- adier-general, 1876; m. (1st) Elizabeth Moore, daughter of Samuel Moore, of Philadelphia; iv. Samuel-Berkley, b. Feb. 10, 1800; d. about 1877; thrice married; v. John-Knox, b. Jan. 13, 1806; d. about 1885; m. Margaret Nevin) ; 8. John, b. 1754; d. 1837 or 1838, in Fleming county, Ky. ; served as lieu- tenant and captain in the Revolution (Pennsylvania Line, 2d, 5th, and 8th regiments, and as major in Wayne's army, 1793) ; settled at Upper Blue Lick, Ky., before 1800; m. Hannah Duncan, daughter of David Duncan, of Ft. Pitt (had issue: i. David-Duncan, lived in Nicholas county, Ky., as late HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 491 as 1871); 9. Clements; settled in South Carolina (?). (See Clements, VI.) II. Samuel; a minister; b. in county Armagh!, Ireland, 1715; d. in Pliiladel- phia, July 17, 1766; m. (1st), Sept. 26, 1744, Sarah Hall, b. 1728; d. July 30, 1760; m. (2d), Ann Clarkson, daughter of Matthew Clarkson, of Philadelphia; President of Princeton College, 1761 to 1766; had issue: 1. Rebecca, b. about 1743; m. about 1760, Samuel Breese of New Jersey (had issue, among others: Elizabeth-Ann., b. Sept. 29, 1766; m. May 14. 1789, Rev. Jedediah Morse, of Connecticut, and among their children was Samuel Finley Breese Morse, of Connecticut, the inventor of the telegraph); 2. Joseph, b. about 1745; d. unm.; 3. Sarah, b. about 1747; m. Isaac Snowden, of Philadelphia; 4. Samuel, b. about 1748; d. unm.; served as sur- geon in the Revolution (Massachusetts Line); 5. John-Hall, b. about 1750; served as first lieutenant in the Revo- lution (Fifth Pennsylvania Battalion, 1776); 6. Ebenezer, b. about 1754; served as captain in the Revolution (on staff of General Smallwood, Maryland Line, 1777) ; 7. James-Edwards-Burr, b. May 15, 1758; d. June 3, 1819; served as surgeon in the Revolution (Massachu- setts Line, 4th, 5th, and 15th regi- ments), m. Jan. 2, 1798, Mary Peron- neau, daughter of Arthur Peronneau, of Charleston, S. C. (had issue: i. Samuel-Benjamin-Rush, a physician; h. Dec. 13, 1801; d. without issue. 1833; m. Mary Ancrum; ii. William-Peron- neau. ta. Jan. 3, 1803; d. April 9, 1876; m. (1st) Nov. 14, 1833. Clelia Peron- neau; m. (2d) Anna M. Harris Gibson; iii. Mary-Hutson, d. young; iv. Sarah- Anna, d. young; v. James-Edwards- Burr, a physician; b. June 28. 1808; d. May 11. 1844; m. Feb. 14, 1832. Maria Ancrum) ; 8. , d. in infancy. III. William, d. 1800; lived in Sads- bury township, Chester county, 1737 to 1747, in West Cain township. 1750 to 1764, or later: removed from Chester to York (now Adams) county, Penn., after 1764, and thence to Augusta county, Va.: m. (1st) ; m. (2d) Catharine Culbertson (mother of William and Michael Finley), daughter of Samuel Culliertson. of Londongrove township, Chester county; m. (3d) Ann Cowan, daughter of David Cowan, of Lancaster county; m. (4th) Eleanor ; had issue by first three wives: 1. William, lived in York county (now Adams county) in 1771; 2. Michael, b. 1744; d. Aug. 13, 1821; m. Nov. 29, 1772, Mary Waugh, daughter of William and Mary Waugh, and removed to Rockbridge county, Va. (had issue: i, William, b. Oct. 4, 1773; m. (1st) June 28, 1796, Margaret Horner; m. (2d) Elizabeth Christian, and had issue: David- Horner; John-Horner; Matilda, m. Rev. James Paine; Drusilla, m. John S. Leech; Elizabeth, m. James Johnston, and Margaret, m. Joseph Bell; ii. Sam- uel, b. June 9, 1775; m. Sept. 22, 1796, Mary Tate, daughter of John Tate, of Virginia, and had issue: Maria-Waugh, 1779-1849, m. Rev. Isaac Jones; John-T., 1801-1848; Jane-Tate, 1803-1854, m.John B. Christian; George-W., 1806-1834; Nancy McClung, b. 1807; William, 1812- 1871; Lavinia, 1812-18; Caroline-Ellen, m. James Harper; Samuel-B., 1818-1874; and Mary McClung, d. 1829; iii. John, b. Sept. 2, 1778; m. April 21, 1807, Ellen Tate, and had issue: Clarinda-J.; Eliza, d. 1856; m. Dr. Thomas S. Bouchelle; Augustus-Washington, 1813-1889; Wil- liam-Waugh, 1815-1874. and John Tate, b. 1817; iv. Mary, b. Sept. 2. 1778; d. Dec. 29, 1804; m. Aug. 22, 1797, Samuel Patterson, of Rockbridge county, Va.; V. Elizabeth, m. Jesse Scott, and re- moved to Indiana; vi. Esther, b. Sept. 30, 1780; d. unm., July 26, 1804; vii. Catharine, b. Sept. 30, 1780; d. in in- fancy; viii. Michael, b. March, 1783; d. June 6, 1823; m. April 26, 1808, Ruth Irvine, and had issue: Augustus-C, 1809-1858; Maria-Waugh, 1812-1891; m. Jonathan Brooks; Caroline-E., 1812- 1832, m. Samuel Patterson; and Harriet- Newell, 1822-1842, m. David C. Gilke- son); 3. Aaron, d. before 1794; m. Mar- garet Withrow; 4. Andrew, b. Feb., 1764; d. May 8, 1844; m. (1st) Ann Mc- Clain, of Pennsylvania; m. (2d) Jane Lyle, of Virginia; 5. James, d. young; 6. Samuel, d. young; 7. (a daugh- ter), m. Morrow (?); S.Margaret, m. 1770. D. C. Humphreys, and settled in Augusta county, Va.; 9. Elizabeth, m. David Blythe, of York county, Penn.; 10. Anna, d. before 1794; m. Robert Campbell, of Berkeley county, West Va.; 11. Susan, m. Robert Rowan, and removed to Ohio; 12. Mary, living in 1794: m. John Martin. IV. Michael, of Chester county, lived in Sadsbury and West Cain townships about 1737-1758, and in Londonderry 492 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY township, 1764; m. Ann Lewis, of Jan. 7, 1892; xiii. Robert, b. April, 1809; Chester county; had issue: 1. Joseph- d. October, 1874; m. Ann ; xiv. Lewis, b. 1760 (?); d. May 23, 1839; Margaret, b. Nov. 29, 1810) ; S.Hannah, served as lieutenant, captain, and b. June 20, 1764; d. before 1820; m. major in the Revolution (Miles' Rifle John Robinson; 6. Joseph, b. Dec. 13, Battalion, and 13th, 8th, and 2d regi- 1766; d. June 3, 1860; m. (1st) ments, Pennsylvania Line); lived in Veech; m. (2d) Frances Moore; 7. Adams county, Ohio, in 1833 (had issue: James, b. Jan. 14, 1769; d. Nov. 17, i. John-Blair, lived in Lewis county, 1772; 8. William, b. June 10, 1772; d. Ky., in 1841); 2. Ebenezer; a merchant Aug. 20, 1857; m. (1st) Sarah Patter- of Baltimore; m. (1st) Jane, daughter son; m. (2d) Margaret Wilson; 9. of Rev. John McKnight, of Franklin Michael, b. March 24, 1774; d. July 29, county; m. (2d) Mrs. Catharine (Allen) 1850; m. (1st) Eleanor Elliott, daughter Marshall, of Kentucky. of William Elliott; m. (2d) Mrs. Mary ./ V. James, a minister; b. in county Plumer Smith. Armagh, Ireland, February, 1725; d. in VI. Clements, b. March, 1735; d. Aug. Rostraver township, Westmoreland 11, 1775, in South Huntingdon town- county, Penn., Jan. 6, 1795; minister of ship, Westmoreland county, Penn.; m. Rock or East Nottingham Church, Cecil Jan. 12, 1761, Elizabeth Carnahan (sis- county, Md., 1752 to 1783; and of Reho- ter of John Carnahan); had issue: 1. both and Roundhill churches, West- Elizabeth, b. April 9, 176—; 2. John, b. moreland county, Penn., 1783 to 1795; May 18, 1766 (had issue: i. James- m. 1752, Hannah Evans, b. 1715; d. Power, b. Aug. 6, 1792; ii. Jane, b. July April 1, 1795; daughter of Robert 16, 1794; iii. Clements, b. Nov. 17, 1796; Evans; had issue: 1. John-Evans, a iv. Mary, b. Jan. 28, 1799) ; 3. Martha, b. minister; b. July 6, 1753; d. in Ohio June 12, 1775; d. May 27, 1847; m. 1793, after 1813; pastor of Fagg's Manor Reynolds Ross, of Westmoreland coun- church, 1781 to 1793, when he removed ty; b. in Ireland, April 2, 1755; d. Feb. to Bracken, Mason county, Ky., and 11, 1847 (had issue: i. Clements, b. June thence to Red Oak, Ohio; m. 6, 1795; ii. John, b. Aug. 31, 1797; iii. Ruston, daughter of Job Ruston. of Elizabeth, b. Feb. 21, 1800; m. Londonderry township, Chester county, Boyd; iv. William, b. Aug. 15, 1803; v. Penn.; 2. Samuel-Robert, b. Dec. 19, Samuel, b. Sept. 11, 1805; vi. Mary, b. 1758; d. Oct. 25, 1839; 3. Margaret, b. Nov. 29, 1807; m. McCurdy; vii. Sept. 5, 1756; d. May 10, 1836; m. Col. Jane, b. April 5, 1809; viii. Martha, b. John Power, of Westmoreland county, March 12, 1811; m. Wallace; ix. Penn., b. 1757; d. July 29, 1805; 4. Andrew-Finley, b. June 4, 1813; d. ; Ebenezer, b. Dec. 30, 1758; d. Jan. 18, x. James, b. Jan. 27, 1816). It is possi- 1849; settled on Dunlap's Creek, Fay- ble that this Clements Finley was a son ette county, Penn.. in 1772; m. (1st) and not a brother of John Finley (I.), Jane Kinkaid, b. 1762-4; d. June 5, 1793 m. (2d) Violet Lowrey, d. Nov. 11, 1804 m. (3d) Margery Cunningham, b. 1770 who married Martha Berkley. John's son removed to South Carolina, but there are many circumstances leading d. Jan. 27, 1822; m. (4th) Mrs. Sarah to the conclusion that he may after- Jones, b. Sept. 14, 1769; d. Jan. 24, 1848 wards have settled in Westmoreland (had issue: i. John-Evans, b. Novem- county, Penn., and died there in 1775. ber, 1783; d. March, 1793; ii. James, b. November, 1784; d. 186i; iii. Elizabeth, HENRY FERGUSON, of Scotch- b. December. 1786; d. July, 1860; iv. Irish descent, settled in Indiana county, Joseph, b. March, 1788; d. December, Penn., about 1778; removed in 1802 to 1848; V. Hannah, b. October, 1791; d. Green township, one mile west from March, 1793; vi. Rebecca, b. October, Hopedale, in Harrison county, Ohio; 1795; vii. Hannah, 2d, b. Oct. 10, 1796; had issue: I. Samuel. II. John. III. viii. William, b. August, 1798; d. Janu- Joseph. IV. Thomas. V. Henry, b. in ary, 1865; m. RTioda Harris; ix. Samuel, Indiana county, Penn., 1788; d. in Green b. July, 1800; d. in Ohio; x. Jane, b. township, 1863; served in the War of 1802; d. August, 1890; m. Hibbs; 1812; m. 1810, Elizabeth Johnson; d. xi. Ebenezer, b. Oct. 24, 1804; d. Dec. 1856; had issue: 1. Vincent, b. July 12, 28, 1891; m. Feb. 9, 1826, PhcBbe Wood- 1812; d. May 20, 1876; removed to Ger- ward; xii. Eli-H., b. April 6, 1807; d. mano, Harrison county, in 1835; m. HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 493 March 19, 1835, Mary Amspoker, b. Dec. 21, 1816; daughter of Samuel and Mary Norris Amspoker (had issue: i. Amelia; ii. John-H., b. Jan. 20, 1838, in Ger- mano; served in the Civil War; m. Oct. 6, 1881, Addie Plummer, b. July 18, 1849, in Washington county, Ohio; daughter of Robert L. and Charlotte Faires Plummer; iii. Elizabeth, m. Martin Overholt; settled in Custer county. Neb.; iv. Samuel-J.; v. Mary- Jane; vi. Rebecca-A.; vii. Susan-P., m. Henry Redman; settled in Iowa; viii. Mary-L; ix. Margaret-A., settled in Iowa; X. Henry-W., settled in Colorado; xi. Sarah-C; xii. Etta-R.); 2. Samuel; 3. John, settled in Kansas; 4. Isabelle; 5. Mary; 6. Eliza-A., m. Fergu- son, and settled in Archer township. Samuel Amspoker, father of Mary *A.mspoker Ferguson, settled in Harrison county, Ohio, in 1803, locating five miles north from Cadiz; had issue: 1. John; 2. Alexander; 3. Samuel; 4. Elizabeth; 5. Susan; 6. Mary, m. Vincent Fergu- son; 7. Sarah; 8. Charles-N.; 9. James. DANIEL FIERBAUGH, a native of Germany, settled in Pennsylvania about 1779; removed to what is now North township, Harrison county, Ohio, but afterward returned to Pennsylvania, where he died, his widow settling in Ohio after his death; had issue, among others : I. David, b. either in Pennsylvania or Maryland, 1787; settled in North township, where he d. June 14, 1864; m. in Harrison county, Magdalena Gundy, b. 1797; d. 1878; daughter of Rev. Joseph and Fannie Coffman Gundy (the former a Mennonite minis- ter, who settled in Harrison county, in 1804); had issue: 1. Frances, m. John Weimer, and settled in Austin, Neb.; 2. Daniel, b. April 27, 1817; d. Oct. 14, 188.5; m. 1841, Elizabeth Boor, daughter of Michael and Caroline L. Barence Boor (the former came to Harrison county with his parents in 1838; d. in Defiance, Ohio) (had issue: i. Caroline- L., d. Jan. 26. 1866; m. Rev. B. F. Rinehart; ii. Mary-M., m. Ebenezer W. Laughridge; iii. Michael-B., b. Aug. 7, 1845; served in the Civil War; m. Nov. 18, 1869. Sarah E. Smith, b. 1852; d. Feb. 10. 1890; daughter of Thomas and Mary Smith; the former b. 1809; d. February, 1881; the latter b. 1813; d. 1882; iv. David-G., d. April 13, 1870; v, Clara-E., d. Oct. 27, 1879). JOHN FIREBAUGH, a native of Pennsylvania, of German descent, b. 1786; d. April 8, 1872, in North town- ship, Harrison county, Ohio, where he had settled before 1825; served in the War of 1812; m. Elizabeth Friend, b. 1793; d. Feb. 19, 1872; daughter of Jacob and Bowers Friend; had issue: 1. Mary, m. John Shiltz; 2. Jacob, m. Catherine McCarroll, and settled on the Kanawha River, Virginia; 3. John, m. (1st) Nancy Capper, a native of Ohio; m. (2d) Amanda Rippeth, also of Ohio; 4. Elizabeth; 5. Catherine, m. (1st) Joseph Heaston; m. (2d) J. Over- holtz; 6. Margaret, m. Isaac Heaston; 7. David, b. March 11, 1825; served in the Civil War; m. 1854, Christina Heas- ton, b. in Monroe township, daughter of John and Christina Heaston, pioneers of Harrison county, both having died in Monroe township (the former a native of Maryland; the latter born in what is now a part of Philadelphia) ; 8. Samuel, settled in Southern Kansas; m. (1st) Julia True, of Ohio; m. (2d) Jemima Schooly, of Iowa; m. (3d) Emily Tucker, of Kansas; 9. Susan, m. David Addleman; 10. Frances, m. John Heaston; 11. Elias, settled in Nebraska; m. Mary Boor, of Ohio; 12. Sarah, m. Andrew Hale, of Carroll county, Ohio; 13. Joseph, b. 1838; d. Jan. 26, 1879, in Uhrichsville, Tuscarawas county, Ohio. JOHN FORD, removed from Red- stone, Fayette county, Penn., and set- tled in Nottingham township, Harrison county, Ohio, before 1827; had issue, among others: 1. Lewis, b. in Washing- ton or Fayette county. Penn., 1794; d. in Nottingham township about 1846; m. Rebecca Dodd, b. about 1795 (had issue: i. Slemmons; ii. William; iii. Lewis; iv. Emily; v. Piety-A.; vi. Ruth; vii. John- E., b. in April, about 1832; m. Dec. 2, 1870, Viney R. Hudson, b. in Indiana, June 3, 1843. ADAM FORKER, b. in Scotland, 1793; d. in Mercer, Penn., 1837; m. Jane Green, d. 1836; had issue: 1. Jacob, b. 1786; d. July 19, 1842; 2. George, b. 1788; 3. Hannah, b. Oct. 21, 1791; 4. .Joseph, b. Dec. 30. 1799; d. at Cadiz, 1841; m. Mrs. Mary Cady Conwell, b. in Reading, Penn., 1792; d. 1865; daughter of John and Margaret Parr Cady (had issue: i. 491 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Belinda, m. John Shauf; ii. Mary-Ja.ne, m. Dr. Chalkley Thomas, and settled in Des Moines, Iowa; iii. Henry-O., b. Nov. 19, 1838; d. Jan. 25, 189(5); 5. Samuel, b. 1805; d. Sept. 5, IStJG; 6. James, d. July 18, 1852; 7. John. d. Jan. 17, 1865; 8. Mary, d. June 14. 1856; m. ■ Harris; 9. Israel, d. April 28, 1866; 10. William, d. April 6, 1871. ABRAHAM FORNEY, b. 1740; d. Aug. 27, 1824; a native of Germany; m. Susanna , b. 1752; d. May 28, 1842; emigrated to America about 1798, and in 1801 settled in Cadiz township, Harrison county, Ohio; had issue: I. John. II. Abraham, ill. Catharine. IV. Mary, b. 1775; d. Aug. 5, 1850; m. about 1793, probably near Martinsburg, West Va., Charles Timmons, b. 1751; d. 1820 (see Timmons Family). V. Sus- anna, m. Rabe. VI. Frederick, b. Aug. 28, 1787, in Germany; removed to Nottingham township, 1827. where he d. 1854; served in the War of 1812; m. Oct. 29, 1812, Deborah Harris, d. June 21, 1873, whose parents were pioneers in Harrison county; had issue: 1. Sophia, b. Sept. 6, 1813: 2. Susanna, b. Nov. 3, 1814; 3. Mary-Ann, b. Aug. 6, 1817; 4. John, b. Nov. 29, 1820; settled at Deers- ville; m. Nancy Johnson, daughter of Ephraim Johnson, of Moorefield; 5. Eliza-M., b. July 6. 1825; 6. Catherine, b. July 8, 1827; 7. Alice, b. July 4, 1829. VII. Sophia. JOHN FORSYTHE. a native of Ire- land, of Scotch descent, emigrated with his wife and settled in Fayette county, Penn., before 1800: had issue: I. John. II. Robert. III. Jesse, b. in Fayette county. Penn.: d. in Washing- ton township, Harrison county, Ohio. Nov. 5, 1857: m. (1st) Mahala Patter- son, in Pennsylvania, where all his children but the youngest one, were born; m. (2d) 1811. Sarah Colvin, d. June 24. 1854; had issue by first wife: 1. William, b. March 10. ISOO: 2. Maria, b. Sept. 25, 1801: 3. Elizabeth, b. Sept. 21, 1803; 4. Matilda, b. Sept. 21. 1805; had issue by second wife: 5. Samuel, b. Jan. 19, 1812: 6. Harrison, b. Jan. 15. 1813; 7. Joseph, b. Dec. 22, 1814; 8. Nancy, b. Nov. 19, 1816; 9. John, b. June 15, 1818; 10. Benlamin-F.. b. March 15, 1820; 11. Levi-C, b. Aug. 2, 1822; 12. Rebecca, b. Dec. 1, 1824: d. Aug. 19, 1872; m. Judge Amon Tjpm- mon; 13. Jesse, b. Nov. 6, 1826, in Wash- ington township, Harrison county, Ohio; served in the Civil War; served as a member of the Ohio Legislature, 1877; m. Oct. 26, 1854, Eliza Dean, b. 1829; d. Jan. 17, 1890; daughter of Sam- uel and Mary Dean, of Cross Creek township, Jefferson county, Ohio. IV. Eli. V. Nancy. VI. Elizabeth. GEORGE FOSTER, a native of Eng- land, b. Sept. 24, 1794; settled near Scio, Harrison county, Ohio, 1816, where he d. June 8, 1849; m. (1st) Jerusha Wort- man; m. (2d) 1837, Jane Shouse, a na- tive of Pennsylvania, of German de- scent, b. 1810; d. June 16, 1889; had issue by first wife: 1. George; 2. Jane, m. Joseph Cummings; 3. Jerusha, m. Custer; 4. Sarah, m. Reed; 5. Elizabeth, m. Kent; 6. Lavina; had issue by second wife: 7., Joseph-B., d. Aug. 18, 1889; 8. William, settled in Superior, Neb.; 9. Madison- J., b. June 22, 1842; settled in North township; m. July 9, 1863, Margaret J. Somerville, daughter of Christopher and Jane L. Somerville; 10. John, d. in infancy; 11. David-C, settled at Uh- richsville, Ohio. JOHN FOWLER, a native of Mary- land, whose father was killed in the Revolutionary War, removed to West Virginia in 1800, settling opposite Steubenville, Ohio; afterward located near Hopedale, Harrison county, Ohio, and, before 1819, settled near Hanover, where he died about 1840; m. in Mary- land, Mary Huff; had issue, among others: 1. Garrett, b. in Maryland, Feb. 28, 1799; settled in Monroe township, Har- rison county, Feb. 15, 1828, where he d. March 21, 1867: m. April 23, 1819, Han- nah H. I'-agleson, b. near AVaterford, Erie county. Penn., March 21, 1805; daughter of John and Mary Simpson Eagleson (the former a native of Maryland: served in the War of 1812, settling near Cadiz, in Harrison coun- ty, in 1S13: the latter a native of Ireland, her parents having settled in Allegheny City, Penn., where she was married): Garrett and Hannah Fowler had issue: 1. Mary-Ann. m. Joel Cramb- let, and settled in Franklin township, Harrison county: 2. John-E., settled in Columbus. Ohio; 3. Asenath-T.: 4. Thomas-E., b. Dec. 6. 1830: served in the Civil War: m. Nov. 27. 1856. Maria McBeth, a native of Harrison county. HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 495 daughter of John and Mary McBeth (had issue, seven children) ; 5. Richard- P., settled in California; G. Isaiah, set- tled in Brown county, Neb.; 7. Jere- miah, b. July 10, 1837; m. 1S59, Cath- erine Auld, of Franklin township, daughter of Stewart (b. in Pennsyl- vania, 1792; d. September, 1883) and Sarah McConnell (d. 1844) Auld; set- tled in Scio; 8. Joseph-C, b. Aug. 30, 1841; served as an officer in the Civil War; m. Oct. 14, 1869, Maria C. Sim- mons, daughter of George and Sophia Simmons (had issue, nine children); 9. Malachi, d. in infancy; 10. Joel-C, d. aged four years; 11. Garrett-H., set- tled in Dennison, Ohio; 12. Clarissa, m. John Spray, and settled in Franklin township. II. John. d. April, 1847; m. Elizabeth ■ ; had issue: 1. Andrew; 2. James; 3. John; 4. Mary, m. Cells; 5. Sarah, m. Leaters; 6. Nancy; 7. Hannah. III. Benjamin, b. in Pennsylvania, Oct. 31, 1802; d. May 15, 1891; settled in Monroe township; m. Jane Whit- taker; b. 1793; d. April 20, 1880; had issue: 1. Mary; 2. Jane; 3. John; 4. James-W., b. Oct. 12, 1829; settled in Stock township; m. June 7, 1852, Eliza- beth Crawford, daughter of Andrew Crawford, of North township (had is- sue, nine children); 5. Rebecca; 6. Francis; 7. Benjamin-B.; 8. William; 9. Arabella. IV. Francis, d. 1838; m. 1830, Mary Giles; had issue: 1. Francis. V. Joel, m. 1836, Esther Fisher. VI. Jeremiah. VII. Cena. JOSIAH FOX, b. at Falmouth, Eng- land, 1763, son of John and Rebecca Steevens Fox; d. in Colerain township, Belmont county, Ohio, 1847, where he had settled in 1814; m. at Philadelphia, 1794, Anna Miller, b. 1768; d. 1841; of German descent; daughter of Peter Miller; had issue: 1. Charles-James, b. in Washington, D. C, 1805; d. 1895; settled in Short Creek township, Har- rison county, Ohio, about 1839; m. Feb. 7, 1837, at Flushing, Ohio, Esther Cooper, b. near Baltimore, April 10. 1810; d. 1896; daughter of Nicholas and Sarah Balderson Cooper (had issue: i. Anna-Miller, m. T.,indlev M. Branson; ii. William-Spicer. b. 1839; m. 1876, Esther J. Moore, daughter of Jeremiah and Sarah Moore; iii. Sarah-C; iv. Francis-C); 2. John, d. young; 3. Elizabeth-Miller, m. Moses Chapline; 4. Anna-Applebee, m. Robert I. Curtis; 5. Rebecca-Steevens, m. Elijah Picker- ing; 6. John-Charles, d. young; 7. Sarah-Scantlebury, m. B. E. Dungan; 8. Francis-Drake. JOHN FULTON, b. Aug. 26, 1777, near Havre de Grace, Maryland, of which place his parents were residents, re- moved in 1816 to Green township, Har- rison county, where he d. Oct. 2, 1856; m. Dec. 12, 1799, Lydia Mitchell, b. Aug. 26, 1777; d. July 18, 1844; daughter of Samuel Mitchell, a resident of Mary- land; had issue: 1. Mary, b. Sept. 13, 1800; 2. Margaret, b. Feb. 21, 1802; 3. William, b. July 29, 1803; d. July 30, 1884; 4. John, b. Nov. 26, 1805; 5. Eliza- beth, b. Dec. 2, 1808; 6. Susannah, b. Jan. 1, 1811; 7. Miriam-Jane, b. Jan. 29, 1813; d. April 13, 1886; 8. Sophia, b. March 6, 1816; d. July 27, 1889; 9. Phoebe, b. July 13, 1819; 10. James, b. Jan. 25, 1825; m. (1st) April 4, 1855, Maria Louisa Simpson Gibson; d. Sept. 30, 1875; daughter of William Gibson, a resident of Holmes county, Ohio; m. (2d) Oct. 12, 1889, Charlotte Branson Pittis, daughter of George Pittis, of Scio (had issue by first wife, eight children). PHILIP FULTON, b. in Cecil county, Md., June 24, 1777; d. Sept. 14, 1841 (his father, of Scottish descent, had settled in Maryland before the Revolution) ; about 1805 he removed to Washington county, Penn., thence to Steubenville, Ohio, in 1810, and in 1814 settled in the southeastern part of Nottingham town- ship, Harrison county; served in the War of 1812; m. in Maryland. April 2, 1801, Sarah Hanna, b. in Harford coun- ty, Md.. May 8, 1782; d. Sept. 3, 1845; had issue: 1. Jane-S., b. Dec. 15, 1801; 2. Alexander, b. in Maryland, Sept. 12, 1803; d. March 1.5, 1881; m. Nov. 2, 1826, Sarah Ramsay, b. in Maryland, Feb. 12, 1804, only child of Samuel and Elizabeth Cochrane Ramsey (had is- sue: i. Samuel, b. Aug. 17, 1827; m. March 13. 1860, Caroline Wat?on. b. Oct. 11, 1838, in Marion county, Ohio, daugh- ter of William and Sarah Kennedy Watson [the former born in Ireland, 1798; d. in Illinois, 18701: ii. Elizabeth, m. Yarnall, and settled in Moore- 496 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY field township; iii. Alexander; iv. Al- bert; V. Philip, settled in Nottingham township; vi. Mary-J.; vii. Sarah-A.); 3. William, b. April 28, 1806; 4. Philip- S., b. July 10, 1808; 5. Hannah, b. Feb. 4, 1811; m. Kirkpatrick; 6. Har- rison, b. May 11, 1813; 7. Elizabeth, b. Feb. 9, 1815; m. Lantz; 8. Sarah- Anne, b. July 20, 1818; m. Davi- son, and settled in Freeport township; 9. Mary-Ann, b. April 14, 1821; m. Moore, and settled in Moorefield township; 10. Julianna, b. May 3, 1823; m. Pickering, and settled in Moorefield township; 11. John, b. March 2, 1827; settled in Nottingham town- ship; 12. Calvin, b. Aug. 19, 1833. Samuel Ramsey, father of Sarah Ramsey Fulton, was a son of Charles Ramsey; b. in Chester county, Penn., May 23, 1780; d. in Harrison county, Ohio, March 14, 1858; m. 1802, Eliza- beth Cochrane, b. in Chester county, Penn., Oct. 28, 1768; d. Nov. 18, 1857; in 1804 the Ramsey family removed to Allegheny county, Penn., remaining there until 1814, when they settled in Harrison county, Ohio. JOHN GASTON, b. about 1600, in Scotland (or France), of Huguenot de- scent; m. in Scotland, and had, among others, three sons: John, William, and Alexander, who emigrated to county Antrim, Ireland, about 1660-1668; of these, probably John (whose name ap- pears on hearth-money rate list for Ire- land in 1669, is of Magheragall, county Antrim) had issue, among others, sev- eral sons, some of whom remained in Ireland, and some emigrated to Amer- ica, as did also the sons of other brothers; of the emigrants of that gen- eration the names of eight are known (and the children of William, son of John last named), viz., Hugh of New Jersey, Joseph of New Jersey, Joseph of Pennsylvania (probably a son of Hugh), William of Pennsylvania (probably a son of Hugh), John of New Jersey (probably a son of Hugh), James of New Jersey (probably a son of Hugh). John of Connecticut, Alexander of Massachusetts. Of these, the last two were brothers, and are said by Marshall Gaston's account to have first landed in New Jersey, with one or more other brothers, who re- mained there; it is probable that they may have been brothers of Hugh and Joseph of New Jersey; they have also been identified in part as brothers of the William who remained at home, his residence being Caranleagh (Carn- lough?), Cloughwater, county Antrim (near Ballymena), Ireland. In the ac- count given below, these nine progeni- tors of the Gaston family in America will be designated as follows: William Gaston of Antrim (whose children emigrated to South Carolina). Hugh Gaston (1st). William Gaston (1st). Joseph Gaston of Pennsylvania (1st). John Gaston of New Jersey (1st). James Gaston (1st). Joseph Gaston of New Jersey (1st). John Gaston of Connecticut (1st). Alexander Gaston (1st). Another of the Gastons who re- mained in Ireland (living at Gaston- town, Killycowan, county Antrim), had a daughter, who m. Gavin Mac Arthur; their son, William, b. 1796, emigrated to America after 1818, settling in Ver- mont; m. Malvina Stone (had issue, among others: 1. Chester Alan Arthur, twenty-first President of the United States). First will be given the family of Wil- liam Gaston of Antrim, who remained in Ireland, but whose children all emi- grated to America and eventually set- tled in South Carolina. William Gaston of Antrim, b. at Caranleagh, Cloughwater, county An- trim, Ireland, about 1680-90; d. about 1770; m. Lemon; had issue: I. John, d. 1782; m. Esther Waugh, d. 1789; emigrated to Pennsylvania, and thence removed about 1751-52 to Chester District, South Carolina, set- tling on Fishing Creek; served as King's Justice before 1776; and as leader of the patriots of his vicinity during the British incursion, 1780-81; had issue: 1. Margaret, b. Aug. 29, 1739; m. James McCreary (had issue: i. John, served in the Revolutionary War, and as a member of Congress; ii. Samuel; served in the Revolutionary War; be- came a Baptist minister) ; 2. Martha, b. June 11, 1741; m. her kinsman, Joseph Gaston, great-grandson of the first Irish William (had issue, among others: i. Alexander, m. Mary Blair); 3. William, b. June 5, 1743; served as a captain in the Revolutionary War (had issue: i. William; ii. James); 4. John, b. June 24, 1745; d. about 1806, leaving HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 497 descendants, who emigrated to Illinois (had issue, among others: i. William); 5. James, b. April 15, 1747 (had is- sue: i. Stephen; and several daughters, who removed to Ohio about 1801-02); 6. Robert, b. March 11, 1749; served in the Revolutionary War; killed at the battle of Hanging Rock (S. C), Aug. 6, 1780; 7. Hugh, b. March 12, 1751; m. his cousin, Martha McLure; removed to Wilcox county, Ala., 1826, and thence to Mississippi (had issue: i. John; ii. Ebenezer; iii. James; iv. William; v. Hugh; vi. Mary; vii. Martha; viii. Esther; ix. Margaret); 8. Alexander, b. Aug. 24, 1753; killed at the battle of Hanging Rock; 9. David, b. July 7,1755; killed at the battle of Hanging Rock; 10. Ebenezer. b. Sept. 15, 1757: killed at the battle of Hanging Rock; 11. Esther, b. Oct. 18, 1760; m. her kinsman, Alex- ander Walker, son of and Jane Gaston Walker (the latter a great- granddaughter of the first Irish Wil- liam); (had issue: i. John-Gaston) ; 12. Joseph, b. Feb. 22, 1763; d. Oct. 10, 1836; m. 1790, Jane Brown, b. 1768; d. 1858; served in the Revolutionary War, and wounded at the battle of Hanging Rock (had issue: i. John-Brown, b. Jan. 23, 1791; m. Mary Beaufort McFadden; ii. Narcissa, b. Nov. 17, 1792; m. ' Lewis; iii. Eliza, b. Sept. 20, 1794; m. i-^^ ' 1 '^^ Beecher, natives of New Haven-the f °Jf 1^? Cadiz m 1874, where he died former k descendant of John Beecher, ^i\^,'^..^'frT.;n?3n.Hln Tnw. -f" , • J. J 1 1 1 J! T^ i souri; 11. Jason, settled in Iowa; 111. Z''^ Ti'^I^\ r^ ^/t M i^T^irn ^aoi' Sarah-Jane, m. John Adams, and set- 38 fiad issue Sarah SL^rdb WU ^^"^ ^ ^^cher township; iv.' Amanda. OQ icIq wMi! v.^ A Iv^^^L 1. ^/rt,^ 1 m- Samuel F. Ross, a Methodist Epis- 23, 1853 William-Alexander, b. May 1, 1 „• • j. \ ^^i j • tv% 1859; m 1892, May D. Lockwood; and ITf^Tf n\ .^^'\^f^^^^ V^, ^ew Theodore-Beecher. b. Feb. 8, 1861; d. Philadelphia, Ohio) ; 3 John, settled in July 16, 1869]; 2. Margaret, b. Dec. 13, O^kaloosa Iowa; 4. Thomas settled m 1781- d voun°- Iowa; 5. Samuel, settled in Iowa. NATHANIEL GILMORE. of county Alexander Gaston (1st), b. 1714; m. Cavan, Ireland; d. about 1771; m. Sarah Mary Wilson, b. 1716; emigrated to McFadden, b. about 1748, at Coote America with his brother. John about Hill, county Cavan, Ireland; d. Dec. 1720-26; said to have had a third brother 29, 1835, near West Middletown, Penn. in New Jersey; settled at Richmond, (Sarah McFadden Gilmore m. [2d] Mass.; had issue: I. William, b. Aug. 9, John Jamison, and emigrated to Amer- 1744. II. John, b. March 3, 1746. III. ica about 1780-83, first settling in Shear- Robert, b. Dec. 28. 1747. IV. Mary, b. man's Valley, Cumberland [now Perry] Sept. 20, 1749. V. Janet, b. Dec. 27, county, (?) Penn.. thence removing to 1750; m. Robert Kasson. VI. Margaret, Independence township, Washington b. Jan. 5, 1753. VII. Alexander, b. Oct. county, Penn.); had issue: 1. Jane, b. 28, 1754; had issue, among others: 1. 1768; m. John Parr; removed first to John, b. 1746, d. at Stockbridge, Mass., Jefferson county, Ohio, and later to Illi- Sept. 6, 1834 (had issue, amona; others: nois (had issue: i. John. m. • i. John, b. 1786; d. March, 1873). VIII. Wheeler; ii. Mary; iii. Elizabeth, m. David, b. Jan. 13, 1757. IX. Thomas, b. John Leech); 2. Samuel, b. 1770; d. March 16, 1759. X. Phebe, b. April 22, Sept. 8, 1814; served as ensign in the 1765; m. Bacon. (Mr. Marshall War of 1812 (Capt. Baruch Dickerson's HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 505 company, 2d Ohio Militia) ; m. Eliza- betli Buchanan, b. 1777; d. Sept. 16, 1829; daughter of William land Nancy ?) Buchanan, of Washington county, Penn.; removed to' Cadiz township, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1800-1 (had issue: i. Sarah, b. Jan. 14, 1801; d. May 18, 1837; m. Joseph Dunlap; ii. Samuel; iii. Nathaniel, m. Mary Craig; iv. Cyrus, b. 1811; d. April 14, 1883; m. Hannah Moore; v. William; vi. Mary, m. Napoleon B. Kennedy; vii. Eliza, b. Feb. 2, 1807; d. Jan. 14, 1873; m. May 1, 1828, John Phillips, b. June, 1797; d. at Cadiz, Ohio, May 5, 1859; son of William and Rachel Hamilton Phillips, of West Nottingham township, Chester county, Penn. JOSIAH GLOVER, b. in Baltimore, Md.; removed to Smithfield, Jefferson county, Ohio; had issue: I. Josiah, m. 1833. Mary Barkhurst, a native of Maryland, b. 1817-18; d. February, 1872; had issue: 1. Sarah, m. Augustus Cai'- ter, of Jefferson county; 2. Nancy; 3. Susan, m. William Comly; 4. George- W.; 5. Josephine, m. John C. Brown; 6. Jefferson-C, b. March 3, 1845; m. 1869, Caroline I. Snyder, daughter of Samuel Snyder; 7. Elizabeth, m. Milton Hall, of Jefferson county; 8. Esther; 9. Quincy; 10. Leonora, m. John C. Brown (his second wife); 11. William-L. JONAS GOTSHALL, emigrated from Perry county, Penn., to Harrison coun- ty before 1823; m. Mary Laler; had is- sue: 1. Jeremiah, m. Mary Long; 2. John; 3. Anna, m. William Arbaugh; 4. Jacob: m. (1st) Eliza Long; m. (2d) Ruth Hendrix; 5. Daniel, b. in Rumley township, 1831; m. (1st) Amanda Wort- man, b. 1835; d. 1869; daughter of John and Rebecca Wortman; m. (2d) Eliza Wood; 6. Samuel, m. (1st) Margaret Carr; m. (2d) Harriet McClain; 7. Matilda, m. Alpheus Lowmiller; 8. Elizabeth, m. John Wood; O.Katharine, d. young. ALEXANDER GREEN, a native of Ireland, settled in Belmont county, Ohio, 1808; m. (1st) in Ireland, Eleanor Chambers; m. (2d) Mary Bell; had is- sue by first wife: 1. Thomas; 2. John; 3. Samuel, b. in Ireland. Dec. 5, 1799; came to Ohio with his parents; settled in Washington township, Harrison county about 1829, where he d. June 2, 1879; m. Oct. 29, 1829, Ann Thompson, b. in Jefferson county, June 13, 1808; daughter of Aaron and Sarah Balderson Thompson (had issue: i. William, b. Oct. 29, 1830; ii. James, b. in Washing- ton township, Sept. 16, 1833; m. March 20, 1881, Clara M. Pittis, daughter of George Pittis, of Harrison county; iii. Aaron, b. May 6, 1836; iv. Sarah, b. Oct. 31, 1838; d. Sept. 16, 1844; v. Samuel- H., b. Dec. 5, 1840; d. Feb. 2, 1869; vi. Ruth-T., b. June 18, 1843; vii. Israel- J., b. Nov. 11, 1845); 4. James; 5. Eliza- beth; 6. Abbie; had issue by second wife: 7. Isaac; 8. Alexander; 9. Samp- son; 10. William; 11. Sarah; 12. Ellen; 13. Mary-Ann; 14. Maria; 15. Ruth. Aaron Thompson, father of Ann T. Green, was a native of Ireland, b. Jan. 26, 1775; d. June 22, 1838; first settled in Chester county, Penn., 1790; removed to Jefferson county, Ohio, in 1802; son of William Thompson and Esther Chalfant; the former b. in Ireland, March 26, 1747; d. in Chester county, Penn., July 7, 1806; Aaron Thompson, m. in Chester county, Penn., 1797, Sarah Balderson, b. March 5, 1778; d. Sept. 26, 1846; had issue: 1. Esther, b. Nov. 19, 1798; 2. William, b. Jan. 3, 1801; 3. John. b. June 28, 1803; 4. Aaron, b. Sept. 13, 1805; 5. Ann, b. June 13, 1808; m. Samuel Green; 6. Ruth, b. Oct. 4, 1810; 7. Lewis, b. Nov. 21, 1813; 8. Israel, b. Jan. 4, 1818. JOSEPH GRIMES, see Family of William McCullough. WILLIAM GRIMES, removed from Washington (?) county, Penn., to Har- rison county, Ohio, before 1805, and about 1810 settled at Cadiz, where he d. May-August, 1840; m. Rebecca ; d. about 1840; had issue: 1. James, b. 1817; d. July 10, 1841; 2. Wil- liam, b. 1822; d. April 30, 1850; 3. Thomas-D.. m. 1835, Margaret Laffer- ty (?); 4. Martha, b. May 12, 1826; d. April 4, 1874; m. Henry Boyles; 5. Elizabeth, m. 1830, Matthew M. Sloan (had issue, among others: i. William- Grimes, settled at Omaha; ii. Rebecca, m. Asbury F. Johnson, son of Henry and Catherine Johnson, of Moorefield township; settled at Laramie. Wyo- ming; iii. Elizabeth-J.. b. 1838; d. 1843); 6. Nancy; 7. Anderson. EDWARD HALL, b. March 4. 1760; son of Joshua Hall, of Howard Hill, Baltimore, Md.; an English sea-cap- tain who served on the American side in the Revolutionary War; removed to 506 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Jefferson county, Ohio, about 1803, set- tling near Sniithfield; had issue: 1. Richard; 2. Harry; 3. Christopher- S.; 4. Edward-Thomas, b. Dec. 25, 1795, in Hallsboro, Baltimore county, Md.; settled with his parents near Smithfield, Jefferson county, Ohio; afterwards located in Washington, Guernsey county, Ohio, where he d. March 9, 1891; m. at York Haven, Penn., Dec. 20, 1827, Henrietta Catherine Rob- erts, b. April 12, 1804, at Fells Point, Baltimore, Md., daughter of Francis Cateby Roberts, an English sea-captain, who was drowned 1803, and Elizabeth Snyder Karg, a native of Baltimore (Edward and Henrietta Roberts Hall had issue: i. Francis-Spry, b. Oct. 3, 1828; settled in Washington, Guernsey county, Ohio; ii. Charles-Grafton, b. July 24, 1830; d. in California, Dec. 8, 1859; iii. Wilson-Roberts, b. July 8, 1832; d. March 16, 1849; iv. Thomas- Henry, d. in infancy; v. Sarah- Virginia, b. Oct. 6, 1835; m. William L. Houser; vi. Eliza-Jane, b. Feb. 9, 1838; d. Jan. 12, 1865, in Harrisburg, Penn.; vii. Edward-Harrison, b. April 12, 1840; served in the Civil War; d. Sept. 26, 1878; viii. Richard-Montgomery, b. Jan. 27, 1842; settled in Washington, Guernsey county; ix. George-Alfred, b, Dec. 9, 1843; d. March 31, 1849; x. Hen- rietta-Frances, b. Oct. 28, 1852; m. Dr. H. H. Harrison; settled in Wheeling, W. Va.). After the death of her first husband, Elizabeth Snyder Karg Roberts, mother of Henrietta Hall, m. 1808, Charles Merrill Poor, a native of Greenland, N. H., of Puritan ancestry, son of John Poor; had issue, among others: Sarah- Ann, b. 1814; d. 1892; m. Robert Jack- son Fleming, of Harrisburg, Penn.; George-A., settled in Vallejo. Cal.; Frances-Isabella, m. Henry S. McFad- den, of Cadiz. JOSEPH HALL, settled in the west- ern part of Jefferson county, Ohio, about 1802, having come from North Carolina; d. 1825, in Jefferson county; m. in North Carolina, 1773, Christiana Peel; d. 1803; had issue, ten children, among whom: I. Jesse, d. in Jefferson county, 1806; his wife died the same year; had issue, among others: 1. William, b. in Jeffer- son county, 1804; d. Dec. 14, 1883; m. April, 1826, Hannah Wharton, b. in Bucks county, Penn., 1807, daughter of Ezra and Martha Terry Wharton (who settled in 1818 on the present site of Harrisville, Harrison county, Ohio, where they died; the former b. Aug. 26, 1773; d. May, 1847; the latter b. May 19, 1778; d. Dec. 19, 1866; they were m. April 19, 1797); (William and Hannah Hall had issue: i. Ezra, d. 1852 in Min- nesota; ii. Nathan-L.; iii. Penina; iv. Parker, b. June 6, 1829; settled in Short Creek township, Harrison county, Ohio, in 1853; m. [1st] August, 1853, Rebecca Hobson. a native of Belmont county, Ohio; d. 1866; m. [2d] 1872, Mrs. Tabitha D. Bundy, a native of Belmont county; v. Tilman, settled in Mahoning county; vi. Linton, settled in Colum- biana county; vii. Martha, m. Thomas Dewees; settled in Morgan county, Ohio). SAMUEL W. HAMILL, b. in county Antrim, Ireland, about 1787; d. in Monroe township, Harrison county, Ohio, Sept. 20, 1870; emigrated to America about 1820, first settling in New York City, where he remained for seven years; in 1824 m. Eliza Graham, b. in New York City, 1803; d. 1876; daughter of George and Rebecca Graham (the former a native of New York, the latter a native of Ireland); removed to Leesville, Carroll county, Ohio, in 1827, and located in Monroe township, Harrison county, in the spring of the following year; had is- sue: 1. Rebecca-J.. m. William B. Ed- wards, of Plymouth, 111.; 2. Catherine- A., m. Edward Greenlus, of Tuscarawas county, Ohio; 3. Samuel-S., b. June 22, 1840; settled in Monroe township; served in the Civil War, and as sheriff of Harrison county; m. March 21, 1872, Mary E. Heller, a native of Monroe township, daughter of Henry B. and Mary-A. Heller, early settlers in Har- rison county; 3. Lindley-M., settled in Monroe township; served as an officer in the Civil War; 4. Wallace-S., served in the Civil War, and died in service August, 1861; 5. Robert-Emmet, served in the Civil War; d. in Sibley. Kan., Nov. 9, 1884; 6. Benjamin-G., settled in Kentucky; served as an officer in the Civil War. FRANCIS H. HAMILTON, b. in Ire- land, 1766; d. 1844; emigrated to Amer- ica and first settled in Noblestown, Penn., about 1800; removed to Canons- HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 507 burg, and afterwards to Mercer, where lie remained until 1820, and then settled in Cadiz, Ohio; served in the War of 1812; m. 1806, Ruth Williams, b. 1788; ■d. 1842; of Scotch descent; had issue: 1. John, d. in Pennsylvania; 2. James, d. in Illinois; 3. David; 4. Jane; 5. Francis, b. Dec. 13, 1815; d. Jan. 28, 1887; m. Matilda , b. 1813; d. 1888; 6. William, b. Sept. 29, 1818; d. Nov. 14, 1892; 7. Samuel, b. in Ca- diz, April 19, 1821; m. (1st) Aug. 6, 1843, Margaret J. Miller, of German descent, b. Aug. 10, 1826; d. Feb. 7. 1857; •daughter of Michael Miller, of Harrison county; m. (2d) Bridget Downey, b. in Ireland, 1839 (her parents came to Vermont about 1842; her father d. in Kansas City, Mo., 1889) ; (had issue by first wife: i. , d. in infancy; ii. Samuel-D., settled in Harrisville, Ohio; iii. Henry-C, b. Dec. 29,1850; iv.Bloisa- B.; had issue by second wife: v. Emma- Frances, m. William C. Leslie) ; 8. Sarah; 9. Mary, m. Jacob H. Herdman, and settled in New Concord, Musk- ingum county, Ohio; 10. Thomas. JOSHUA HAMILTON, a native of Pennsylvania, of Scotch-Irish descent; settled in Harrison county, Ohio, before 1825; d. in Springfield, Ohio, Dec. 17, 1870; m.in Harrison county, Jane Craig, •d. Nov. 9, 1889; had issue, eleven children, among whom: 1. Craig, b. April 16, 1825; d. in Cadiz township, Oct. 5, 1880; m. (1st) Feb. 21, 1850, Margaret McFadden, b. 1825; d. 1853, in McLean county. 111., daughter of Joseph McFadden, of Harrison county; m. (2d) Jan. 28, 1858, Elizabeth Mc- Fadden, b. Oct. 29, 1836. daughter of Samuel and Margaret Rankin McFad- den, of Cadiz township (had issue by first wife: i. Joshua, d. in infancy; ii. Joseph-McFadden, b. March 8, 1851; m. Dec. 25, 1873, Rebecca Caroline Dicker- son, daughter of Asa and Jane Dunlap Dickerson; had issue by second wife: iii. Margaret-Jane, b. March 5, 1859; m. Eugene M^atson, and settled in Belmont county: iv. Samuel-Rankin. b. March 17. 1863: m. Sept. 1, 1886, Georgianna Dickerson, a native of Noble county, Ohio, daughter of .John and Catherine Lowe Dickerson; v. William-Sherman, b. Sept. 1. 1865). The father of Craig Hamilton's second wife. Samuel McFadden, was b. 1815; d. 1863; his father, Samuel Mc- Fadden, was a native of Ireland, who settled in Harrison county, where he d. 1837; Margaret Rankin McFadden, the mother of Elizabeth McFadden Hamil- ton, b. 1813; d. July 5, 1890, was a daughter of Robert Rankin, a native of Pennsylvania; the children of Samuel and Margaret Rankin McFadden were: 1. Robert; 2. Rebecca-J., m. Henry Barricklow; 3. Elizabeth, m. Craig Hamilton; 4. Sarah, m. Albert Moore; 5. Margaret, m. Thomas Richey; 6. Samuel. ROBERT HAMILTON, d. before 1790; m. in West Nottingham township, Chester county, Penn., before 1770, Martha McMillan, b. 1748-49; d. March 18, 1831; daughter of John and Rachel McMillan; his widow removed with her four children to Buffalo township, Washington county, Penn., about 1795- 98, in company with her brother-in-law and sister (John and Jane McMillan Perry), and, about 1803, settled at St. Clairsville, removing thence to Morris- town, both in Belmont county, Ohio, where she died; had issue: 1. Rachel, d. 182—; m. about 1787, William Phillips, d. July 18, 1854; son of Thomas and Jane Blair Phillips, of West Notting- ham township (had issue: i. Robert; il. Martha, m. James Ross; iii. Thomas; iv. Jane, m. Samuel Lee; v. John; vi. William; vii. Mary, m. Jacob Grist; viii. Margaret, m. John Johns; ix. Eliza, m. Keatley) ; 2. Margaret, b. Nov. 26, 1776; d. Oct. 14. 1839; m. Edward Van Horn, b. 1777; d. Aug. 19, 1855; settled at New Athens, Harrison county, Ohio (had issue: i. Anne, b. 1803; d. 1815; ii. Martha, b. 1805; d. 1869: iii. Jemima; iv. Robert, d. 1895; V. .Jane, b. 1809; d. 1888); 3. Martha, m. Alexander Morrison, and settled at Morristown, Ohio (had issue, among others: i. Robert, b. 1802; d. July 9, 1895); 4. John-Blair, d. about 1806; m. Mary Perry, b. ; d. ; daughter of John and Jane McMillan Perry (had issue, among others: i. Robert; a physician: b. Nov. 14, 1803; m. 1836, Margaret Wilson) ; 5. Jane, d. 1798; m. McClure (had issue, among others: i. Martha, b. Dec. 23, 1795; d. April 15, 1870; m. June 6, 1819, Robert Gaston, b. Jan. 10, 1797; d. Sept. 23, 1834; removed to Morgan county, Ohio. 1828, and thence to Knox county in 1831. 508 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY ROBERT HAMMOND, b. in county Tyroue. Ireland. 1T(J5; d. in Belmont county. Ohio, lS-15; m. Jane Cassell. b. iu county Down. Ireland, 17G4; d. 1S52; emigrated to America and first set- tled iu Fenusylvauia, removing to Bel- mont county before 1S09; both were members of the Secedor Church; had issue: I. Marv. b. July 30. ITSS. II. Alexander, b. May IG, 1790; d. in Harrison county. 1ST4. where he had settled iu 1S09; in 1S12 he located in Short Creek township, subsequently removing to Harrisville; was a member of the Seceder Church, and his house was a station on the '• underground railroad." many slaves having been given shelter in his home before being taken to Canada; m. in 1S12. Elizabeth Hanna. b. 1793; d. ISSG; daughter of SamueUb.in Cumberland county. Penn. 17G3) and Elizabeth Duncan (.b- in Scot- land, 176G) Hanna. of Short Creek township; had issue, among others: 1. Esther, m. Robert Porter Hanna: 2. Margaret, m. S. J. Hawthorne, of Har- risville; 3. John-Hanna. b. in Harrison county. Ohio; settled in Cadiz in 1S72; sei-ved as an officer in the Civil War; m. 1845, Agnes E. Carrick, daughter of David and Elizabeth Carrick. early set- tlers of Harrison county, the former having served in the War of 1S12 (had issue: i. Alexander-James, b. Aug. 14. 1846; served in the Civil War; settled in Cadiz in 1S7S: m. in Cadiz. 1870. Charlotte Hunter, daughter of Joseph and Letitia ^IcFadden Hunter: ii. An- derson-N.. b. in Short Creek township. Harrison county. Ohio. 1S4S: settled in Cadiz. 1S6G; m. in Cadiz. 1870, Nancy Jane Moore, daughter of John Moore; removed to Chicago). III. David, b. June 26. 1792. IV. William, b. Aug. 2. 1794. Y. IMars-aret. b. July S. 1795. VI. Elizabeth, b. Oct. 24. 1797. VII. Esther, b. Feb. 1. ISOl. VIII. John. b. March 10. 1803. IX. Robert, b. :March 20. 1805. X. James, b. May 13. 1808. ALEXANDER HANNA. b. in Ire- land. 1737: d. in Somerset county. Penn., 1809: his son. James, b. in Ire- land. 1770: emigrated to America when young: d. in Somerset county. 1819: served in the Pennsylvania Legisla- ture; m. Ann Leech; had issue: 1. John, served in the Pennsylvania Leg- islature; 2. Mary; 3. Thomas; 4. James: 5. Alexander, b. 1802; d. 18S1; G. William; 7. Philo; 8. Jane; 9. Martha; 10. Anna. ANDREW HANNA, settled in Pax- tang township, Lancaster (.now Dauph- in) county. I'enn., before 1737; d. iu . Hanover township. 17GG; had issue: 1. "^ Samuel, b. in mid-ocean; probably set- tled in Hopewell township. Cumber- laud county, see Samuel Hanna below; 2. Andrew, settled in Hopewell town- -^ — ' ship. Cumberland county. Penn., about 17GG: removing thence, 1772-75, to Guil- ford county. N. C; m. Mary : 3. Margaret: 4. Isaac, b. 1743; d. in Aron, — Livingston county. N. Y., 181G; m. April 15, 17GG, Martha Bell. b. August, 174G; d. 1811; sister of Thomas. Iaicv. Anna, and Walter Bell; removed from Dry Valley. Union county, Penn., to Livingston county, N. Y.. about 1810 Uiad issue: i. Andrew, b. 17G9; d. at Aronsburg. Centre county. Penn.. Jan 24, 1S35; m. Margaret Cook. b. 1776; d. 1841; their son Andrew settled in Canal township. Venango county, Penn.; ii. Samuel, m. McPher- son; iii. Elizabeth, m. Levi Van Fos- sen; iv. Matthew, b. 1780; d. at Aron. N. Y.. Nov. 12. 1813: m, July 23, 1807. Catharine Pearson, b. Feb. 19. 1791: d. Sept. 9. 1882; v. Thomas, settled in Chautauqua county. N. Y.; m. Nancy Pearson, sister of Catharine, b. Feb. 11. 1797: d. :May 8. 1817; vi. John, removed to Livingston county. N. Y.: vii. Anna, m. Alexander tor James) Beatty; viii. Martha, m. (1st) McPherson; m. (2d) Briggs; removed to Liv- ingston county, N. Y.: and from there to Hyattsville, Ohio; ix. Isaac, m. Sarah ) : 5. Mary. m. William ^ Woods; 6. John, removed to South Car- ^ olina: 7. Elizabeth, m. Moses Carson; ^ 8. IMatthew. settled in Hopewell town- " ship. Cumberland county, before 1771. where he resided as late as 1781. JAMES HANNA. settled in Little Britain township, Lancaster county. Penn.. before 1738. where he was living after 17G9; had issue, among others: 1. James. JA:\IES HANNA and his wife. Martha, emigrated from the North of Ireland, and settled in Pennsylvania; removed thence to Berkeley county. West Va.. and from there to Mercer UARRIHON COUNTY OKNKALOOIRS 609 county, Ky., whoro ho d. a1>oiit, M'.fH; had Ihhu*,', hIx hoiih and hIx daughtcrH, four of whom wer« born In Ireland; amoHK othfTH wfjro: 1. Htf;i>h*!n; 2. Jani<;H; .'i. Adam, r<;movr;d to Shclhy county, Ky.; 4. Hannah, in. John MyloH; .V. ThomaH, m. Miiinnri-A. Smith; removed to Shelby county, Ky. (had iHKUf;, amont;? others: I. .John-Smith, b. In Mercer county, Ky.. March 27, ]T.)H; d. ; m. Auk. U. l>2; Hettled In German township, HarrlHon county, Ohio, 18J0, wherf! he d. .Jan. H, 1S77; m. in Penn- Kylvanki, 1810. Mary McCleary, b. ]7f^:j; d. Oct. :'.], 1H72; had JKKue: 1. Mary, m. Robert iJerron, a mlnlHter, and Hettled In Sdo; 2. EHther, m. Robert Smiley, and settled In Archer townHhIp, Harrlg- Kon county; 3. Tabitha-.Jane, rn. .James J^av/tbers, of JJowerstown, and Hettled in Oerman township; 4. .JeruKha- Ellzabeth, m. Wesley Brlndley, and settled In Oreen t/jwnship; 5. Ann, b. Aug. 27, 1818; settled in .Jewett, 1877; C. Alexander; 7. Winiam-.I.; 8. Sarah; '.). Dorcas. .JOHN HANNA and WIJJ>JAM HAN'NA, probably brothers, emigrated from the North of Ireland, about 17'il, and settled in East ?'allowfield town- ship, Chester county, Penn., about 17.^3, .John first having located on Nesham- iny Creek, in I3uckK county, and about IT-'/.), removed from Fallowfleld town- ship to West Nantmeal fnow Honey- brookj township; of these two: .John Hanna, b. about 1700; d. March 8-13, 1770: m. .Jane Andre, d. December, 1774; had iHHue: ^ I. .John, a physician and minister, b. in mid-ocean. 1731; d. Nov. 4, 1801; m. about 1700, Mary McCrea, daughter of Rev. .James and Mary Graham Mc- Crea; served as minister of the PrcH- byterlan churches of Bethlehem. King- wood, and Alexandria, N. .J.. ]7(;]-1801: had issue, thirteen children, six of whom died In infancy: 1. .James, set- tled at Newtown, liucks county; re- moved to Frankfort. Ky.. after 1793; m. Mary JJarris. of Newtown, daughter of .John and Jfannah Stewart Harris fhad Issue: i. .John-JJarris; 11. Sophia; lii. Charles-Stewart; Iv. A daughter; one of the daughters m. .John .J. Crit- tenden, of Kentucky); 2. .John-Andre, b. 1701; d. at Uarrlsburg, i'enn., .July 23, ]80.0; m, Mary Read Jiarrls, b. Oct. I, 1770; d. Aug. 20, 18:'/!; daughter of .John JIarrlH, the founder of Harris- burg Oiad Issue: 1. .Mary-Read, b. April 30, 1788; d. March H, J820; m. April 2'.f, 1817, John Tod, of Bedford; II. Juliana- Catharine, b. Nov. 8, MH'.r, (]. without issue, April, 1801; rn. Jan. 14, 1812, John Fisher; 111. Frances, b. April 27, 1701; d. 1808; m. Oct. 27, 1812, John Carson McAllister; Iv. Caroline-Eliza- beth, b. Feb. T,, 1794; d. Jan. 29, 1872; rn. Dec. 8, 1812, Joseph BrlggH, of Sil- vers' Spring, Cumberland county; v. Henrietta, b. Aug. 23, 1790; d. unm., Nov. 18, 1840; vl. Sarah-Elder, b, June 20, 1798; d. April 2, 1829; m. April 18, 1820, Jtlchard Templin; vll. Eleanor, b. Feb. 22, 1800; d. 1802; vlll. I':Hther, b, July, 1801; d. 1801); 3. Catharine, rn. Dr. Samuel Tolbert, of New York (had Issue: I. Catharine, m. Brooks; II. Jane, m, Sanfordj; 4. Mary, m. J;r. Holmes, of Mansfield, Sussex county, N. J.; 5. WIlIIam-R.; 0. Sarah, m. Payne, of Mansfield, N. J.; 7. Jane. II. William, a minister, settled at Albany, N. Y., about 170.^, where he served as the first pastor of the I'res- byterlan Church of that place; became an Episcopalian clergyman and settled in Culpeper county, Va., about 1774, from whence, on account of his Tory- ism, he was obliged U) remove U) Mon- treal, Canada, at the breaking out of the Revolutionary War. HI. James, b. 1722; d. .Jan. 21, 1807; m. Elizabeth , b. 1740; d. Df^c. 12, 1821; had Issue: 1. .Tohn, m. probably, Jane Guthrie, daughter of Adarn Guth- rie; 2. William, resided in Huntingdon county, I'enn., in 180.=i; 3. Mary, m. Gault; 4. .lane, m, William Ir- win; 5. .James; 0. Agnes. IV. Robert. V. Atrnes. m. Culbertson. VI. Elizabeth, m. McCool. VII. Margaret, d. November, 1802; m. .Jame« Gait, of Salisbury township, Lancaster county; d. June. 1773. William Hanna, d. after Sept. 22, 1700; had issue: I, John. d. March-April. 1784; m. Abigail Wilson, b. 17.39; d. 1833: daugh- ter of Thomas Wilson, of Newlin town- ship: had issue: 1. Elizabeth; 2. Mary, b. after 1700; 3. John, b. after 1703; 4, 610 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Abigail, b. after 1766; 5. Margaret, b. after 1766; 6. Phoebe, b. after 1766; 7. Jacob, b. 1771; d. Aug. 13, 1839. II. William, m. Esther Wilson, daughter of Thomas Wilson, of New- lin township; settled in Newlin town- ship, about 1776. JOHN HANNA, b. in county Derry, Ireland, 1752; d. in South Hunting- don township, Westmoreland county, Penn., June 9, 1832; m. 1789, Elizabeth Miller, b. 1762; d. Oct. 4, 1835; daughter of John and Elizabeth Lindsey Miller; had issue: 1. Thomas, b. March 6, 1790; d. Dec. 29, 1855; m. Feb. 29, 1816, Esther Trout, b. Nov. 13, 1796; d. Oct. 24, 1876; daughter of Henry and Cath- arine Bossart Trout; 2. Martha, b. 1791; d. Sept. 18, 1862; m. 1817, Henry Lake, b. 1777; d. Jan. 10, 1839; 3. Alexander, b. Feb. 15, 1796; d. Jan. 4, 1883; m. May, 1824, Eliza Hamilton; 4. John; 5. Eliza- beth, m. Peter Broadsword; 6. James, b. 1800; d. 1829; 7. Margaret, b. May, 1803; d. Feb. 7, 1866; m. Dec. 30, 1830, John Hanna (a cousin) ; 8. Robert, b. 1806; m. 1833, Priscilla Hamilton. JOHN HANNA, of Hopewell town- ship, Cumberland county, Penn., d. after probably 1809; had issue: I. John, d. Oct. 10, 1792 (or 1802). II. Samuel, b. Nov. 29, 1763; m. Eliza- beth Duncan, b. July 27, 1766; removed to Canton township, Washington coun- ty, Penn., about 1785; thence to Warren county, Ohio, about 1799-1800, and from there to Short Creek township, Harri- son county, Ohio, 1801; had issue: 1. Jeanette, b. Feb. 22, 1786; d. young; 2. John, b. June 26, 1787; d. in Harrison county, Ohio, Aug. 12. 1849; m. 1826, Rachel Fulton; 3. Archibald, a minis- ter; b. Feb. 12, 1790; d. in Wayne coun- ty, Ohio, June 9, 1875; m. April 4, 1816, Mary Ramage, daughter of William and Mary Ramage; 4. Elizabeth, b. Jan. 26, 1792; d. April 24, 1884; m. 1812, Alexander Hammond; 5. Samviel, b. Sept. 2, 1795; d. in Richland county, Ohio, June 2, 1862; 6. Isabella, b. June 25, 1797; d. 1846; m. Benjamin Ram- sey; 7. Ezekiel, b. June 1, 1799; d. near Beech Spring, Harrison county, Ohio, May 10, 1861; m. Aug. 30. 1821. Eliza- beth Anderson, b. Oct. 21, 1796; d. Jan. 24, 1845; 8. Robert, b. April 26. ISOi; d. in Mansfield, Ohio, Dec. 2, 1886; 9. James, b. March 13, 1803; d. Harrison county, Ohio, Aug. 25, 1859; m. 1824, Margaret Fulton, b. in Fayette county, Penn., 1803; d. Aug. 10, 1859 (had issue, among others: i. John-Newton, settled in Short Cheek; m. [1st] 1861, Margaret A. Finley; d. March, 1871; daughter of Dr. Robert Finley, of Mount Pleasant, Ohio; m. [2d] 1878. Mahala Narragan, a native of Ohio) ; 10. William, b. Feb. 24, 1805; d. in Savannah, Ohio, Dec. 19, 1886; 11. Margaret, b. April 27, 1807; d. June 3, 1888; m. Levi Dickerson; set- tled near Malta, Ohio; 12. ■ ; 13. HI. Ann, m. Hugh Wylie. IV. Esther, m. James Pitts. V. Ezekiel, d. in Indiana county, Penn., 1817. JOHN HANNA, removed from east- ern Pennsylvania (probably from Cum- berland county) and settled on Hen- dricks' Run, Fairfield township, West- moreland county, before 1772; d. about September, 1788; had issue, among others: 1. John, b. in Fairfield town- ship, Dec. 23, 1773; d. near Cadiz. Ohio, June 2, 1847; removed to Harrison county about 1814; m. (1st) Dec. 6, 1796, Ann (or Nancy) Leonard, b. June 7, 1775; d. March 23, 1818; daughter of James and Mary Finley Leonard (the last named a daughter of John and Martha Berkley Finley, of Lurgan township, Franklin county); m. (2d) Mrs. Margaret Wylie; had issue by first wife: 1. James-Leonard, b. Oct. 5, 1797; d. June 11, 1820; m. June, 1819, Mary Craig (had issue: i. Mary-Ann, m. 1839, Rev. Edward Small, of Mercer, Penn.); 2. Catharine, b. March 6. 1799; d. June 5. 1801; 3. Mary-Leonard, b. Feb. '5, 1800; d. unm. Sept. 11, 1820; 4. John- Evans, b. Dec. 19, 1805; d. Aug. 30, 1894; m. (1st) June 8. 1826. Susanna Robert- son, b. March 9. 1804; d. April 15. 1865; daughter of Robert and Beulah Stanley Robertson, of Loudoun county, Vir- ginia; m. (2d) Sarah E. Swayze, b. Sept. 4. 1819; daughter of Rev. William and Frances Peck Swayze (had issue: i. Neri- Augustus, b. April 3, 1827; m. June 7, 1849, Eliza Jane Phillips, b. Feb. 22, 1829; daughter of John and Eliza Gil- more Phillips; ii. James-Leonard, b. Aug. 25, 1829; m. Dec. 22, 1853. Harriet N. Wood; iii. Maria-Eliza, b. March 9, 1832; d. March 2. 189S; m. July 1, 1857, Sharon S. Heskett; iv. John-Edward, b. Aug. X2, 1834; d. Aug. 11, 1892; m. [1st] May 12, 1860, Harriet E. Perkins; m. HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 511 [2(1] Elizabeth m. [3d] Alice Hill; V. Finley Robertson, b. Feb. 3, 1837; m. June 18, 1871, Ada M. Bevel- ing; m. [2d] Mrs. Mary Hyatt; vi. Mary-Ann, b. March 2(5, 1839; d. Aug. 26, 1840); 5. Eliza-Ann, b. Jan. 8, 1S08; d. March 31, 1863; m. 183—, John Ogle- vee, b. in Cadiz township, Harrison county, Dec. 14, 1810; d. March 12, 1865; son of John and Agnes Oglevee, of Fay- ette county, Penn., who emigrated to Harrison county, the father dying in 1815 (had issue: i. Mary-Ann, b. May 16, 1837; d. July 21, 1874; m. S. A. Osburn; ii. William-Hamilton, b. Sept. 10, 1838; m. June 20, 1867, Elizabeth A. Craig, daughter of Walter and Jane Moore Craig; iii. John-Finley, b. May 16, 1840; m. [1st] Jean Eagleson; m. [2d] Euphe- mia [EfRe] Eagleson. sister of Jean; iv. Baruch-Francis, b. June, 1842; d. June 12, 1844; V. James-Wilson, b. May 11, 1842; d. May 23, 1863; served in the Civil War, and died from disease con- tracted in that service; vi. George- Hopkins, b. February, 1847; d. April 12, 1857; vii. Nancy- Jane, b. February, 1849; d. June 25, 1865; viii. Susanna- Elizabeth, b. July 23, 1858; d. Feb. 10, 1880); 6. Jane-Finley, b. June 2, 1811; d. April 13, 1833; 7. Andrew-Finley, b. Feb. 21, 1S13; d. April 12, 1847; m. Jan. 13, 1835, Susanna Craig (had issue: i. John-Rowland, . b. Oct. 17, 1836; m. June 13. 1861, lone Theresa Munger; ii. James-Wilson, b. April 13, 1843; m. May 30, 1867, Anna E. Carter; iii. William- Finley, b. March 23, 1846; d. Aug. 1, 1864; iv. Mary- Ann, d. in infancy; v. George-Edward, d. in infancy) ; 8. David-Wilson, b. Aug. 22, 1815; d. July 2, 1843). JAMES HANNA, of Washington county, Penn. (probably of Hopewell or Strabane township), b. 1749; d. near Canonsburg, April 6, 1813; m. Anne , b. 1760; d. in German township, Harrison county, April 27, 1833; had is- sue: I. Moses. II. Matthew. III. Wil- liam, b. 178(71; d. April 6, 1830; settled in Green township, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1805: m. Mary , b. 1782; d. Nov. 19, 1853; had issue: 1. Robert; 2. John: 3. Esther; 4. Anne; 5. .lames, settled in German township, where he remained until 185S, thence removed to Monroe county, Ind., where he d. Oct. 12. 1886: m. 1835, Cynthia Shannon, daughter of William Shan- non, of Jefferson county, Ohio (had issue: i. William, served in the Civil War; ii. Isaac; iii. James, served in the Civil War; iv. Robert- Porter, served in the Civil War; d. 1863, near Atlanta; v. John-N., b. about 1845; re- sided in Indiana until 1875, and then returned to Hopedale, Harrison county, where he settled; served in the Civil War; m. Dec. 30, 1872, Nancy J. Cope- land, daughter of Jacob Copeland, of Hopedale; vi. Samuel-T.; vii. Moses- K. ; viii. Delmar-H.; ix. James-S.; x. Mary; xi. Jennie); 6. Martha; 7. Mar- garet; 8. William, b. 1812; d. Jan. 8, 1839; 9. Sarah, b. 1822; d. Jan. 13, 1842; 10. Louisa, b. 1823; d. April 27, 1834; 11. Samuel, b. 1824; d. May 6, 1834; 12. Prudence; 13. Mary; 14. Jane. IV. Joseph. V. Robert. VI. Samuel. VII. Prudence. VIII. Jean. IX. Anne. X. Martha. XI. John. XII. James. PATRICK HANNA, of Hopewell township, Cumberland county, Penn., d.in Monaghan township, York county, about November, 1758; probably the same whose name occurs on tax-list of New Garden township, Chester county, Penn., 1739; had issue: 1. John (prob- ably one of the two Johns last named above); 2. Joshua; 3. Samuel, d. in Hopewell township, about April, 1789; m. Mary Brady, daughter of Hugh and Hannah Brady; after his death, his widow removed, about 1790, with her family to Fairfield township, West- moreland county, settling near her brother-in-law and sister, Archibald and Margaret Brady Hanna (had issue: i. Joseph; ii. Margaret; iii. Samuel; iv. Elizabeth; v. Mary; vi. Ebenezer, b. after 1770; vii. [a daughter], b. about May, 1785) ; 4. Archibald, d. in Fairfield township, Westmoreland county, June, 1794; m. Margaret Brady, daughter of Hugh and Hannah Brady (had issue: i. Hugh: ii. William; iii. Mary, m. Robert Williams; iv. Hannah); 5. Martha; 6. Rosanna; 7. William: 8. , m. Moses Stuart, son of Andrew and Mary Stuart, of Hopewell township; removed to Peters township, Franklin county, before 1763. ROBERT HANNA, died in Hemp- field township, Westmoreland county, Penn., about April-May, 1786: m. Eliza- beth Kelly, daughter of John Kelly, of Donegal township, Lancaster county; settled in Hempfield township, about 513 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 1769-70, and founded Hannastown (which was attacked and burned by the Indians and British, July 13, 1782; when some of the inhabitants were killed and many carried to Canada as prisoners, among the latter being Elizabeth Hanna and her daughter, Jane, who were released at Montreal and returned home the following De- cember; had issue: 1. Jane, b. May 13, 1764; d. June 11, 1816; m. Lieut. David Hammond, an officer in the Revolution; b. about 1749; d. April 27, 1801 (had issue: i. Elizabeth, b. June 21, 1786; d. May 5. 1822; m. John Wat- son, of Watsontown, Pa., b. Dec. 13, 1779; d. Jan. 13, 1856; ii. Mary, m. John Montgomery, and settled at Muncy, Penn.; iii. Grace, m. — Montgomery, of Paradise, Penn.; d. without issue: iv. Robert-Hanna, b. 1791; d. 1848; major and paymaster, U. S. A., m. Elizabeth Clark Gloninger; V. Jane); 2. Elizabeth, b. about 1773; m. about 1797, her cousin, James Kelly, b. 1776, son of Col. John and Sarah Polk Kelly, of Buffalo Valley. Union county. Pa. (had issue: i. Eliza, m. John Bates; removed to Perrysburg, Wood county, Ohio; ii. John-Robinson, d. young: iii. Robert-H., d. unm.; iv. James-Andrew, d. unm.; v. Susan- Robinson, d. without issue; vi. Jane, d. unm.; vii. Maria (or Margaret), m. Hutchison, and settled in Hun- tingdon county, near Altoona, Penn.); 3. Susanna, m. William Robinson; d. without issue; 4. Margaret, d. young. ROBERT HANNA, of Westmoreland county, Penn. (probably of Fairfield township); had issue: 1. William, set- tled on Chartiers Creek, three miles north of Canonsburgh, Washins;ton county, before 1800; removed to Ohio, 1802 (had issue, among others: i. John; ii. Thomas; iii. Isaac). ROBERT HANNA, settled in Lower Smithfield township, Northampton (now Monroe) county, Penn.. before 1748, where he d. June-July, 1777; m. Margaret ; had issue, among others: 1. Benjamin. Robert Hanna mentions in his will grandchildren. Robert Hanna and John and Eleanor Sealv. ROBERT HANNA, b. about 1754; settled in what is now Greene county, Penn.. before 1780, with his brother, Benjamin; had issue, among others: 1. Joseph, b. about 1786; m. Elizabeth Hammer; removed about 1818-19, to Greene county, Ohio; and in 1820 to Jackson county, Indiana; 2. John; 3. Samuel; 4. Robert. SAMUEL HANNA, probably son of Andrew Hanna, of Paxtang (above), d. in Hopewell township, August-Septem- ber, 1808; m. Agnes ; had issue: I. Samuel; 2. Jean, m. White; 3. Martha, m. James Sharp; 4. Mary, m. James Sterret, son of James Sterret, of Donegal township, Lancaster county (had issue: i. James; ii. Samuel); 5. Elizabeth, m. Sterrett; 6. Rachel, m. Trimble; 7. Nancy, m. Williamson; 8. Sarah, m. White. _THOMAS HANNA, of county Mon- aghan, Ireland (probably from Bally- bay), m. Elizabeth Henderson, and em- igrated to America about 1763, sup- posed to have settled in Pennsylvania; d. about 1764-5; had issvie: I. John, d. about 1763; when th& family reached Newcastle, Del. II. James (twin), b. March 7, 1753; d. Oct. 31, 1827; m. (1st) in Maysville, Ky., Hannah Bayless, b. Aug. 13, 1761; d. Aug. 14, 1804; m. (2d) in Dayton, Ohio, Elizabeth ; removed from Pennsylvania to Georgetown, Scott county, Ky., and about 1803 settled near Dayton, Ohio; had issue by first wife-: 1. Thomas, d. in Massachusetts, without issue; m. three times; 2. James; a minister; set- tled in Crawfordsville, Ind. (had issue, among others: i. Bayless-W., U. S. Minister to Argentina, 1884-88); 3. Sam- uel, b. in Scott county, Ky.. Oct. 18, 1797; d. at Ft. Wayne, Ind., June II, 1866; m. Eliza Taylor, b. Feb. 2, 1803; d. Jan. 12, 1888; in 1819, settled at Ft. Wayne, Ind.; 4. Hugh, b. July 24, 1799; settled in Ft. Wayne, 1824, and, in 1835, laid off the town of Wa- bash, Ind,.; 5. Elizabeth, m. (1st) John Johnson; m. (2d) McCorkle; set- tled at Thorntown, Ind.: 6. Martha, m. Andrew Telford (or Tilford), and set- tled in Troy, Ohio; 7. Sarah, m. Har- vey Ward, and settled in Lafayette, Ind.; 8. Nancy-W., m. James Barnett, and settled in Ft. Wayne, Ind.; 9. Joseph-S., b. in Dayton, Ohio. Dec. 7, 1803; d. Aug. 4, 1864; m. (1st) ; m. (2d) Hester Ann Sumwalt. James Hanna had issue by second wife: 10. Amos; 11. Harriet, m. McClure; 12. Benjamin; 13. Deborah. HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 513 III. Robert (twin), b. March 7, 1753; b. April 10, 1792; d. Dec. 6. 1849; d. at New Lisbon, Ohio, July 17, 1837; m. Ctiarles Hole, a Quaker minister; m. Jan. 31, 177G, Catherine Jones, b. (had issue, nine children); S.Catherine, Aug. 27, 1754; d. Sept. 28, 1835; dau. b. Nov. 25, 1794; d. May 3, 1881; m. of Benjamin Jones (b. in the Great John Hole (had issue, eight children) ; Valley, Chester county, Pa., d. 1754) 9. Ann, b. July 30, 1797; d. 187—; m. and his wife Esther Evans Jones, b. Benjamin Hambleton (had issue, living in Chester county about 1734; d. about in Iowa); 10. Joshua, b. Feb. 16, 1802; 1816 (m. 2d, John Jones). Robert d. Sept. 11, 1834. Hanna and his wife became Quakers ^V. Hugh, d. August, 1820; m. Rebecca about 1780; removed from Pennsyl- , and settled on Ten Mile creek, vania to Lynchburg, Va., and about Morris township, Washington county, 1802-10 to Columbiana county, Ohio; Pa., about 1790; had issue: 1. John- had issue: 1. Thomas, b. May 2, 1777; Vance, m. Lydia McCollum (had issue: d. Sept. 17, 1828; m. Anna ; 2. i. Thomas; ii. Matilda, m. John Braden, Benjamin, b. June 14, 1779; d. July and settled at Rankinville; iii. Marga- 16, 1853; m. (1st) Dec. 15, 1803, Rachel ret, m. Mathias Minton, and settled in Dixon, b. July 19, 1785; d. Feb. 28, the village of Prosperity; iv. 1851; m. (2d) 1851-2. Hannah Kersey, v. ; vi. ); 2^ James, m. (had issue by first wife: i. Joshua, b. Phoebe, daughter of Benjamin Day; Nov. 8, 1804; d. July 7, 1881; m. Feb. removed to Carrollton, Ohio; 3. Eliza- 3, 1830, Susan R. Lathrop, b. June 24, beth, m. Samuel Clutter; 4. Rebecca, d. 1803; d. Dec. 17, 1875; ii. Leonard, b. num.; 5. Nancy, m. Jacob Hathaway; March 4, 1806; d. Dec. 15, 1862; m. 6. Eleanor; 7. Martha, m. Dr. Spen- Sept. 10, 1835, Samantha M. Converse, cer Blachly, of Waynesburg, Pa.; b. April 3, 1813 [and had issue, among Hugh, settled at Connellsville, Fayette others: Marcus-A., b. July 11, 1838]; county; 9. Thomas, d. young. iii. Levi, b. Feb. 7. 1808; m. March 21, V. Martha, b. Jan. 7, 1758; m. 1833, Nancy Watson, b. July 11, 1808; Saunders, and settled on Ten Mile d. April 1, 1879; settled at Greeley, Creek, Washington county. Pa. Col.; iv. Zalinda, b. Feb. 23, 1810; d. VI. Thomas, b. 1760; d. April 9, Dec. 4, 1854; m. Feb. 28, 1828, Charles 1839; m. Jane Cowden, b. 1759; d. near D. Hostettor, b. April 29, 1802; d. Aug. Cadiz, Ohio, April 4, 1839; settled in 26, 1872; v. Robert, b. Aug. 15, 1812; d. Buffalo township, Washington county, April 3, 1882; m. March 16, 1837, Har- Pa., before 1793; removed to Harrison riet A. Brooks, b. March 8, 1815; d. county, Ohio, 1835; had issue: 1. John- July 27, 1882; vi. Tryphena. b. June 12, C, d. Sept. 13, 1865 (had issue: i. 1814; d. Dec. 28, 1893; m. Sept. 4, 1833, James-Rankin; ii. Maria, m. W. G. Samuel Nicols, b. Jan. 21, 1807; d. May Maxwell and settled in Buffalo town- 23 1873; vii. Rebecca, b. Sept. 21, ship; iii. Elizabeth-M.,m. Leiper, 1816; d. Oct. 15, 1847; m. May 31, 1837, and settled in Denver, Col.; iv. Jesse Holmes; viii. Thomas-IB., b. May Thomas, d. young; v. Thomas-H., a 22, 1818; d. Nov. 9, 1885; m. March 2, minister; settled in Monmouth, 111.; 1843, Sophia T. Tabor, b. May 24, 1822; vi. Margaret-M.; vii. Jaue-C; viii. d. Oct. 20, 1895; ix. Anna, b. March 3, James-M.; ix. Hugh-Allison; x. , 1821; d. Jan. 26, 1846; m. March 27, died in infancy) ; 2. James, settled near 1845, Hiram T. Cleaver; x. Benjamin, Cadiz, Ohio (had issue: i. Martha, m. b. March 14, 1823; d. April 3, 1881; m. Rev. George C. Vincent); 3. Thomas, d. March 26, 1845. Catherine M. McCook, young; 4. Thomas, a minister: d. Feb. b. Nov. 24. 1823; xi. Kersey, b. Oct. 6, 9, 1864; settled in Cadiz, Ohio, about 1824; m. March 15, 1849, Mary A. Mc- 1821; removed to Washington, Pa., Cook, b. Jan. 7, 1826; d. Feb. 7, 1891); about 1848: m. (1st) Jemima , b. 3. Esther, b. Aug. 6, 1781; d. Nov. 3, Oct. 30, 1805; d. at Cadiz, July 14, 1791; buried in South River graveyard, 1847; m. (2d) Sept., 1848, Sarah R. Fos- Va. ; 4. David, b. Jan. 9, 1784; d. Oct. ter, of Washington, Pa., b. in Hebron, 24. 1791; 5. Caleb, b. Sept. 4, 1786; d. Washington county, N. Y., Nov. 10, July 15, 1790; 6. Robert, a portrait 1802 (had issue by first wife: i. Robert- painter of Virginia; b. June 28, P.; m. Esther Hammond, and settled 1789; m. Roxanna (had issue: 1. at New Athens, Ohio; ii. Thomas-B.; Raphael; ii. Fletcher); 7. Esther (2d), a minister; d. 1850-60; iii. Sarah-J., set- 614 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY tied at Salem, Washington county, N. Y.; iv. Mary, m. Dr. J. B. McMichael, of Monmouth, 111.; v. Maria, m. An- drew J. Sweeney, of Wheeling, West Va.; vi. Martha, m. Dr. W. A. McKen- zie; settled at Salem, N. Y.; vii. Joseph, d. young); 5. Elizabeth, m. Mc- Cune; 6. Mary, d. July 29, 1848; m. Rev. Joseph Scroggs, b. near New- ville. Pa., March 1, 1793; d. in Fair- field township, Westmoreland county, Pa., April 21, 1873 (had issue, ten children, among whom: i. Joseph, a United Presbyterian minister, b. July 28, 1836). W^ILLIAM HANNA. b. 1720; d. in Frankford township, Cumberland coun- ty, Penn., Oct. 3, 1807, where he had settled before 1764; had issue: I. John, d. June, 1824; had issue: 1. William; 2. John. d. October, 1839; m. Jane (had issue: i. William, d. August, 1861; ii. Eliza); 3. Mary, m. Mitchell; 4. Eliza. II. (possibly) Samuel. WILLIAM HANNA, settled in An- trim township, Franklin county, Penn., before 1762, where he d. November, 1785; m. Elizabeth ; had issue: 1. John; 2. , m. James Morrow; 3. , m. Henry Morrow; 4. , m. John Wherry; 5. , m. Samuel Adams. HEZEKIAH HARRISON, of English descent, b. in Maryland, 1804; d. June 3, 1877; settled in Green township, Harri- son county, Ohio, about 1820; m. 1829, Lydia Hilbert, b. 1813; d. May 28, 1869; daughter of David Hilbert; had issue: 1. David, settled in Marion county, Kan.; 2. Albert-J., d. May, 1889; served in the Civil War; m. Susanna Holmes, daughter of Asa and Mary McCoy Holmes; 3. Henry-H., m. (1st) ; m. (2d) Henrietta F. Hall; settled in Wheeling, W. Va.; 4. William, b. in Short Creek township, Nov. 21, 1842; served in the Civil War; m. 1867. Sarah A. Hargrave, daughter of Joseph and Margaret Hargrave, of Harrison coun- ty; 5. Milton, d. in infancy; 6. Arabella. JAMES HARRISON, b. in Ireland; m. Elizabeth Addy; d. 1872; had issue: 1. James; 2. Hugh; 3. Matilda, m. Seth Munn; 4. Sarah, m. Samuel Poulson; .5. Margaret, m. Richard Duncan: 6. Elizabeth, m. 1856. Patrick Lynch, b. in Ireland, 1833; d. 1887; settled in Cadiz, Ohio, 1856. JOHN HARRISON, a native of Eng- land, b. 1758, emigrated to America and first settled in Pittsburg, Penn., about 1814; settled in North township, Har- rison county, Ohio, about 1816; d. in England, 1833; his wife also d. in Eng- land; had issue: I. Joseph, b. near Otley, Yorkshire, England, 1800; came to Ohio with his parents in 1816, and settled in North township, where he died April 13, 1878; m. (1st) 1828, Ellen Hartley, a native of Carlton, England, b. 1806; d. 1853; daughter of Christo- pher and Mary Hartley, also natives of England (the former b. 1778; d. 1864; the latter b. 1789; d. 1867); m. (2d) 1857, Sarah Herron, b. 1813; d. 1890; had issue by first wife: 1. John, b. July 10, 1830; m. April 22, 1852, Euphe- mia Patterson, daughter of John and Isabella McMillan Patterson, early set- tlers of Carroll county, Ohio, who were m. 1824 (the former d. 1859; the latter, who was a daughter of Robenia Mc- Kelvey, and a granddaughter of Ann Shearer, a native of Scotland, d. 1846) ; (had issue, eight sons and four daugh- ters); 2. William, b. Oct. 29, 1837; set- tled near Scio, m. 1860. Elizabeth Wad- dington, a native of Harrison county, daughter of William and Ann Wallace Waddington (had issue, ten children); 3. Joseph, b. 1840; d. 1847. William Waddington, father of Eliza- beth Harrison, was a native of York- shire, England, b. 1815; settled in Har- rison county about 1S35, where he m. 1839, Ann Wallace, a native of Penn- sylvania who had settled in Harrison county; later they removed to Tuscara- was county, Ohio: had issue: 1. James; j^pttled in Christian county, 111.; 2. Elizabeth, m_. William Harrison; 3. John; 4. William; 5. Henry; 6. Mary- Jane; 7. Sarah; 8. Amos; 9. Isaac; 10. David. JAMES HAVERFIELD. of Scotch- Irish descent, emigrated to America and settled in Huntingdon county, Penn.; located in what is now Harrison county after 1800; m. Nancy ; had issue: I. William, b. in Pennsylvania, 1774; d. in Harrison county. .June 14. 1859; m. in Pennsylvania. Elizabeth Stitt, a native of that State; d. 1858; served in the War of 1812; had issue, ten chil- dren, among whom: 1. John, b. 1811; d. May 9, 1873; settled In Cadiz town- HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 515 ship; m. 1836, Nancy Richey, daughter of Thomas Richey, a native of Ire- land, who had located in Harrison county (had issue: i. William-S., b. in Cadiz township, Oct. 2, 1838; served in the Civil War; m. 1865, Mary Haver- field, daughter of Alexander Haverfield, d. in Harrison county; ii. Eliza- Jane, m. R. A. McCormick, of Cadiz; iii. Alvin; iv. John; v. Mary; vi. Jessie, m. John S. Thompson; settled in Carroll county, Ohio). II. John, b. 1788; d. 1855; served in the War of 1812; m. Agnes Henderson, b. 1771; d. 1848; settled in Harrison coun- ty, Ohio; had issue: 1. Alexander, b. 1805; settled 1825, in Cadiz township, where he d. in January, 1875; m. Catherine Shimer, b. in Ohio, 1813; of Scotch descent; d. May, 1879 (had issue: i. Eliza, m. James M. McGaw; ii. James-H., killed at the battle of Snicker's Gap; iii. J. Calvin, b. March 12, 1842, in Cadiz township; served in the Civil War; m. 1870, Martha G. Thompson, daughter of R. G. and Jane Thompson, residents of Carroll county, Ohio; iv. Mary-H., m. W. S. Haverfield; V. Clarence-H.); 2. Jane, m. Clark; 3. Nancy; 4. James, b. 1814; d. April 2, 1880; m. Elizabeth Barr, b. 1829; d. Aug. 6. 1895; daughter of Hugh and Agnes Henderson Barr (had issue: i. Agnes, m. B. F. Oglevee; ii. Hugh; iii. Martha-Jane; iv. Caroline, m. C. O. Hines; v. Elizabeth-B., m. Henry S. Barricklow; vi.Ella; vii. John-Harvey; viii. Rheta-May; ix. Lulu-Irene). III. Joseph, b. April 28. 1790; d. March 31, 1852; served in the War of 1812; had issue: 1. Gillespie, b. 1820; d. near Cadiz, March 17, 1882: m. May — , 1860, Sarah J. Hines, b. Oct. 29, 1830, daughter of William and Isabella Hitchcock Hines. of Cadiz township; (had issue: i. William-H., a minister, b. near Cadiz, March 14. 1861; ii. Mary- Belle, m. John Keesey; iii. Catherine- May, m. John Barger; iv. Gillespie- Sherman; v. Ida-Alice; vi. Melissa- Jennette; vii. Martha-Alberta); 2. George-L.: 3. Mary-Ann. IV. James, served in the War of 1812. V. Nathan, b. 1797; d. 1873, near Wheeling. W. Va.; came with his father to Harrison county, Ohio; m. in Pennsylvania, Harriett Barnett, d. 1877; had issue: 1. John-N., b. May 17. 1820, in Cadiz township: settled in Stock township, 1861; m. Oct. 27, 1842, Emeline Laveley, b. April 30, 1822; daughter of John and Annie Gorsuch. Laveley, natives of Maryland (had is- sue: i. Henry-L., b. July 29, 1843, in Cadiz township; served in the Civil War; m. April 17, 1866, Mary Eliza- beth Barrett, a native of Harrison county, Ohio, daughter of William H. and Eliza Barrett; Ii. Harriet-A., m. Birney; removed to Tuscarawas county; iii. William-Kinsey, b. Jan. 23, 1854; m. 1875, Anna Humphrey, daugh- ter of William and Jane Law Humph- rey; settled in Jewett; iv. Emmet-N., b. December, 1859; settled in Cadiz; m. 1875, Mary A. Finical, daughter of Robert Finical); 2. James-Nathan, b. Oct. 14, 1821, in Cadiz township; m. (1st) 1844, Martha Hitchcock, d. 1856; daughter of Samuel and Isabella Moore Hitchcock, of Harrison county; m. (2d) 1857, Eliza McDougall.born in Harrison county, daughter of Moses McDougall, who had married in Ireland before emigrating to Harrison county (had is- sue by first wife: i. Nathan; had issue by second wife: ii. Sarah-Alma, m. George P. Hanna; iii. Amanda, m. Wil- liam H. Wiley; iv. Nancy-Estelle; v. James-Lloyd ) ; 3. William-B. ; 4. Thomas- H.; settled in Indiana; 5. Sarah-Jane; 6. Jemima-H., m. Jeremiah Weaver; settled in Franklin township. Harrison county; 7. Joseph, b. Nov. 15, 1832, in Cadiz township; m. March 15, 1855, Mary Jane Johnston, daughter of Sam- uel Johnston, of Harrison county (had issue: i. Harriet-Elizabeth, m. James A. Mitchell, of Cadiz township; ii. Kersey- Wood; iii. Bertha- Virginia) ; 8. Nathan-B., b. Jan. 29, 1835, in Cadiz township; served in the Civil War; m. Nov. 15, 1865, Mary A. Harper, daugh- ter of Samuel and Cassandra Harper, who were among the early settlers of Harrison county; 9. Samuel-Patterson; 10. George-A., served in the Civil War; 11. Nancy-E., m. Neal McCaffrey; set- tled in Iowa. JAMES HAWTHORNE, b. in Ire- land, 1788; settled in Harrison county, Ohio, before 1819, where he d. 1844; two of his brothers settled in Jefferson county, Ohio; m. Rosanna Stewart, d. aged ninety-two years, daughter of Robert Stewart; had issue: 1. Hannah, m. Mcllroy, and settled in Wash- ington county, Iowa; 2. Margaret-Ann. m. John McNary, and settled near New 516 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Athens, Harrison county; 3. Nancy- Jane; 4. Arabella, d. aged twelve years; 5. Robert-Creightou, b. Oct. 5, 1819; re- moved to Muskingum county, Ohio, in IStJl, where he d. 18(54; m. 1842, Mar- garet J. Grove, b. in York county, Penn., Aug. 26, 1817, daughter of Francis and Jeanette Grove (had issue: i. Arthur-Allison, b. Feb. 27, 1845; m. Jan. 3, 1878, Jane Eliza Maxwell, a native of Jefferson county, daughter of Samuel and Isabella McMillan Max- well; ii. Francis-Grove, b. Jan. 25, 1847; iii. Emily-Arabella, b. Oct. 20, 1849; m. James Holmes; settled in Greene coun- ty, Ohio; iv. James-Stewart, b. Aug. 2, 1852; settled in Adena, Jefferson coun- ty); 6. Samuel-E.; 7. William; 8. Rosanna. The parents of Margaret J. Haw- thorne, Francis and Jeanette Grove, set- tled in Cadiz township, Harrison coun- ty, in 1833, where they resided until the time of their death; the former b. 1782; d. March, 1844; the latter b. 1789; d. 1873; had issue: 1. Emily; 2. Susan; 3. Maria; 4. Charlotta; 5. Mar- garet-Jane, m. Robert C. Hawthorne; 6. Eleanor-R., m. Oliver R. McNary, and settled in Leavenworth, Kan.; 7. Thomas-Cross, settled in Jefferson county, Ohio; 8. Sarah-Elizabeth, m. Samuel Kyle, and settled in Muskingum county, Ohio; 9. Francis-Pringle, set- tled in Cadiz township; 10. William- Scott, settled in Kansas. LANCELOT HEARN, b. in Balti- more, Md., 1794, of Scotch-English de- scent; removed to eastern Ohio in 1815; settled in Cadiz, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1849; m. Barbara Sutherland Urquhart. daughter of Alexander and Francis Tucker Urquhart, who had set- tled near Cadiz in 1813 (the former was a native of Scotland, and served in the Revolutionary War; the latter, a native of West Virginia); had issue: 1. Eliza, b. 1829; d. Feb. 25, 1879; m. Samuel Slemmons; 2. Wesley-Browning, b. in Jefferson county, Oct. 6, 1840; settled in Cadiz; served in the Ohio Legisla- ture. 1890-92; m. 1868, Jane C. Beall. daughter of John and Agnes Vincent Beall. of Cadiz; 3. Albert, settled at Dodgeville, Wis. JOHN HEASTAN,a native of Somer- set county, Penn.; removed to Harrison county before 1827 and settled in Mon- roe township; m. 1833, Mary Hines, a native of Westmoreland county, Penn., daughter of Christopher and Jane Jeffers Hines, who settled near Cadiz; had issue, among others: 1. John-Wes- ley, b. Jan. 8, 1840; m. 1863, Mary J. Bower, daughter of Jacob and Anne Bower. JOHN HEBERLING, b. 1777; d. in Short Ci'eek township, Harrison coun- ty, Ohio, 1864, where he had settled in 1823; served in the War of 1812; son of Andrew Heberling, a native of Ger- many, who settled in Virginia before 1784; m. in Virginia, Mary Crumley, b. 1780-83; d. 1864-67; had issue: I. Henry, d. in Jefferson county, Ohio. II. Eliza, m. James Ady, and settled in Muscatine county, Iowa. III. John, set- tled in Miles, Jackson county, Iowa. IV. Hiram, settled in Osage county, Kan. V. William, settled in Greene county. 111. VI. George-H., b. in Berke- ley county. West Va., Feb. 6, 1814; set- tled in Short Creek township; m. 1835, Matilda Spurrier, a native of Maryland, d. Dec. 23, 1890; daughter of Ralph and Eleanor Cleary Spurrier; had issue; 1. Thomas; 2. William, served in the Civil War; killed at the battle of Perry- ville, Ky.; 3. Mary-Ellen, m. J. R. Wat- kins; 4. John; 5. Warner, m. Rosanna Hagan, d. 1881; 6. Andrew, settled in California; 7. Henry, m. Mary J. Stevens, of Short Creek township; 8. Hazlett; 9. Martha. VII. James, settled in Howard county. Mo. VIII. Andrew, settled in Iowa. IX. Rebecca, m. Thomas Lewis, and settled in Dubuque, Iowa. X. Mary, m. Joseph Holmes. Ralph Spurrier, father of Matilda Heberling, was a native of Maryland, b. 1773; d. April 2, 1848, in Short Creek township, having settled there in 1801; m. March 3. 1801, Eleanor Cleary, b. Dec. 18, 1784; d. June 2, 1869; had issue: 1. John, b. April 3, 1802; 2. Samuel, b. Feb. 21, 1805; 3. Warner, b. Aug. 19, 1807; 4. Sarah, b. Nov. 10, 1809; 5. Richard, b. Sept. 5. 1812; 6. Ruth, b. March 24. 1815; 7. Matilda, b. Sept. 15, 1817; 8. Elizabeth, b. March 7, 1820; 9. Mary-Ann, b. Dec. 5, 1822; 10. Asenath, b. Sept. 20, 1824; 11. William, b. March 22, 1827. SAMUEL HEDGES, b. in Virginia, Dec. 26, 1783; d. 1865; settled in Cadiz township about 1805; m. in Virginia, 1789, Prudence Dunlap, b. at West Lib- erty, (West) Virginia, Dec. 20, 1873; d. HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 517 Jan. 15, 1850; had issue: 1. Abraham, b. June au, 1811; d. young; 2. William- Duulap, b. 1812; d. June, 1867; m. Mary Jane McClelland, b. at Ballanahinch, Ireland, 1824; d. 1897; daughter of John and Jane Beatty McClelland (had is- sue: i. Rachel, b. 1844; m. Robert Reid Cochran; ii. Norwood, b. 1849; d. 1896; iii. Sarah-Jane, b. 1851; m. Alexander Osburn; iv. Margaret-Anne, b. 1854; v. .Sarauel-Beatty, b. 1857; vi. Martha- Ellen, d. 1864; vii. Clara, d. 1864; viii. Cora, d. 1867; ix. Mary-Emma, m. Beatty Osburn; x. Infant; xi. William- Francis, b. 1867; d. 1870); 3. Sarah, b. Oct. 14, 1814; d. young; 4. Martha, b. April 27, 1816; d.l854; m. Israel Birney; 5. Rachel, b. Oct. 10, 1817; d. 1896; 6. Sarah, b. 1819; d. 1839; m. Samuel Cochran; 7. Margaret, b. January, 1820; d. young; 8. Prudence, b. Nov. 9, 1822; d. 1840; 9. Samuel, b. Jan. 20, 1825; d. 1886; m. 1851, Mrs. Sarah Rowley Welsh, b. in Carroll county, 1827; daughter of Luther Rowley (had issue: i. Martha, m. Samuel Richey; ii. Luther-R.; iii. William-P., b. 1858; m. 1879, Susan Ross, daughter of Aaron Ross; iv. Mary-E., m. William Boyles). JOHN HENDERSON, a native of Ire- land, d. February, 1862, in Rumley township, Harrison county, Ohio, where he had settled in 1817; after emigrating to America, first settled in Maryland, thence removed to Indiana county, Penn., and afterwards located in Har- rison county; m. in Hagerstown, Md., Henderson, d. May 13, 1877; daughter of George Henderson; had issue, among others: 1. James, b. in Indiana county, Penn., Sept. 10. 1813; d. Nov. 1, 1889; m. October, 1838, Susanna McClintock, a native of Monroe town- ship, daughter of Thomas and Eliza- heth Fisher McClintock (had issue, among others: i. John-C, b. July 21, 1839; m. (1st) 1862, Hester Fisher, of North township, d. Jan. 4, 1865; m. (2d) April 2, 1866, Mahala P. Fisher, sister of his first wife, d. Oct. 8. 1877; m. (3d) March 27. 1879, Sarah McPeck, daugh- ter of George McPeck, a resident of Archer township; ii. Thomas; iii. Alexander; iv. Elizabeth- Jane; v. George; vi. Lavina; vii. Barbara; viii. Henry; ix. Walter; x. William-Homer). WILLIAM HENDERSON, a native of Pennsylvania, removed to Ohio, and, before 1813, settled in Cadiz township. Harrison county, where he died; m. Nancy Wilkins, a resident of what is now Carroll county, Ohio; had issue, among others: 1. Sarah, m. Love; 2. Jane, m. Patterson; 3. Cath- erine, m. Trimbull; these three sisters settled near New Athens, Har- rison county; 4. Alexander, b. Aug. 9, 1813; settled in Cadiz township; d. March 17, 1883; m. 1843, Margaret Finical, a native of Washington county, Penn., daughter of Isaac and Margaret Finical, who were early settlers in Har- rison county (had issue: i. William, b. May 11, 1844; served in the Civil War; m. Dec. 7, 1871, Rachel H. Robison, daughter of James and Mary Barnes Robison, of Archer township, Harrison county; ii. Alvin, a physician, settled in New York; iii. James-0., b. Feb. 26, 1847; m. 1874, Belle Wells, daughter of Charles Wells, of Cadiz township). JOHN HILBERT, emigrated from Adams county, Penn., to German town- ship, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1833; had issue: 1. Peter; 2. John: 3. Daniel; 4. Henry, b. in Adams county, Penn., 1819; m. (1st) 1845, Anne Waddington; m. (2d) 1853, Margaret Finnicum, daughter of David and Elizabeth Low- miller Finnicum; 5. Jacob, m. Mary Lowmiller; 6. Elizabeth, m. John Burns; 7. Mary, m. Frederick Trump; 8. Sarah, m. Jacob Bosley; 9. Lydia, m. Edwin Robinson; 10. Katharine, m. Jacob Unger; 11. Sophia, m. Edwin Robinson. JOHN HINES, see Family of James Ramsey. RUDOLPH HINES, b. in Germany; d. September-November, 1823, aged ninety; son of John Hines, who came to America before the Revolutionary War; removed to Steubenville, Ohio, in 1796, thence to Virginia in 1806; settled in Harrison county, Ohio, 1814; served in the Revolutionary War; m. Sarah Huff; had issue, twelve children, among whom: I. William, b. in Allegany county, Md., March 19, 1800; d. September. 1887; m. Feb. 15. 1827, Isabella Hitch- cock, b. Jan. 24, 1806; daughter of John and Jane McMahon Hitchcock (the former a native of Maryland, of Irish descent; the latter born in Ireland); had issue: 1. John-R., settled in Clark county, Iowa, 1879; m. 1853, Elizabeth Christy, d. at Murray, Iowa, 1880; 518 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY daughter of Robert and Jane Christy, natives of Harrison county; 2. Sarah- Jane, m. Gillespie Haverfield; 3. , d. in infancy; 4. Lemuel-Browning, settled in Redfield, Cal.; 5. William- Fletcher, b. February, 1839; served in the Civil War; m. Feb. 7, 1867, Chris- tina Spiker, a native of Harrison coun- ty, daughter of Christopher and Ara Carnes Spiker, early settlers in Harri- son county (the former d. 1879; the lat- ter 1870); 6. Mary-Bllen, m. Joseph Mc- Beth, and settled in Deersville; 7. Samuel-Montgomery, settled in Not- tingham township; 8. James-McMahon, b. March 5, 1844; settled in Cadiz town- ship; served in the Civil War; m. Nov. 3, 1868, Elmira J. Carson, a native of Harrison county, daughter of Elijah and Margaret Mahaffey Carson; 9. Thomas-Hogg, d. in infancy; 10. Ezra- Lawson, d. aged fourteen years. II. Daniel. III. James. IV. John. V. Isaac. VI. Samuel. VII. Joseph. VIII. Mary. IX. Martha. John Carson, d. in Nottingham town- ship, was among the early settlers of Harrison county; Elijah, his son, father of Elmira Hines, was b. 1810; d. November, 1887; m. Margaret Ma- haffey, b. in Washington county, Penn., 1803; d. 1884; her mother was a native of Maryland, of Welsh descent; had issue, seven children, of whom: 1. , m. Joseph G. Rogers; 2. Elmira- J., m. James M. Hines; 3. , m. T. B. Huffman. THOMAS HITCHCOCK, a native of Maryland, removed to Jefferson coun- ty, Ohio, about 1792; settled in Archer township, Harrison county, after 1800; had issue, among othei's: I. Samuel, b. in Maryland, 1787; re- moved to Cadiz township before 1812, where he d. Feb. 3, 1879; m. Isabella Moore; had issue: 1. Margaret; 2. Jane; 3. Isabella; 4. Harriet; 5. Maria; 6. Elizabeth; 7. Mary; 8. Martha; 9. John, b. March 12, 1812; settled in Franklin township, 1841; m. Jan. 8, 1835, Sarah Kelly, d. Sept. 10, 1889; daughter of Hugh and Mary Kelly, of Short Creek township (had issue: i. Isabella, m. Sept. 24, 1862, S. M. Birney; ii. John-A., settled in Cleveland, Ohio; iii. Mary-E., m. A. J. Lever, a minister; iv. Johnson, settled in Washine:ton township; v. Mary; vi. Samuel, twin brother to Mary, m. 1875, Nancy Mc- Gill, daughter of John McGill, of Franklin township) ; 10. Thomas. JAMES HOAGLAND, see account of Michael Conaway. GABRIEL HOLLAND, a native of Maryland, of English descent, settled in Archer township, Harrison county, Ohio, before 1814; m. in Maryland, Sarah Harriman; had issue, eight chil- dren, of whom: I. Gabriel, b. in Maryland, 1789; d. in Archer township, 1871; m. Susannah Conaway; b. 1784; d. 1861; daughter of Michael and Elizabeth Conaway, of Archer township, pioneers of Harrison county; had issue: 1. John, b. Septem- ber, 1814; he settled in Cadiz town- ship; m. 1840, Esther West, of Cadiz township, b. 1820; d. April 13, 1889; daughter of Jonathan and Mary Com- fort West (had issue: i. Sarah-Jane, m. J. Welling, and settled in Guernsey county, Ohio; ii. Samuel; iii. Elizabeth, m. D. B. Harrison, and settled in Iowa; iv. Martha; v. Susan, b. 1854; d. Feb. 22, 1889; m. C. McCune; vi. Gabriel, d. 1889; vii. Jonathan; viii. Amanda); 2. Sarah; 3. Elizabeth, m. A. Pickens, and settled in Iowa; 4. Mary- Jane; 5. Ellen; 6. Nancy, m. Martin Maholm, and set- tled in Archer township; 7. Harriet, m. Lewis, and settled in Archer township; 8. Samuel, settled in Archer township. ROBERT HOLLIDAY, son of Arthur Holliday, b. in the North of Ireland, 1758; d. at Martin's Ferry, Ohio, 1851; emigrated to America about 1793, first settling in the Cumberland Valley, and thence removing to Westmoreland county. Penn.; located in the western part of Harrison county, Ohio, about 1815; m. in Ireland, Rebecca Ramsey, d. 1826; had issue, nine children, of whom: 1. Nancy, m. Cooper, and settled in Henry county, Indiana: 2. Robert, b. Aug. 1, 1792; d. July 5, 1885; served in the War of 1812; settled in Freeport about 1830: m. (1st) March 25, 1817, Frances Melton, b. Nov. 22. 1795; d. Dec. 22, 1818; m. (2d) March 29, 1821, Elizabeth White, b. Dec. 25, 1800; d. Aug. 16, 1872 (had issue by first wife: i. Frances-Melton, b. Nov. 28, 1818: had issue by second wife, thirteen children, of whom: ii. Theodore-Oscar, m. Susan Reaves; iii. Anne. m. 1846, David Winder; iv. Eldred-Glencairn, b. Jan. 19, 1822; m. Jan. 10, 1850, Mary Cun- HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 519 ningham, daughter of John and Nancy Sharp Cunuingham). LEVI HOLLINGSWORTH, a Quaker, great-great-grandson (through three ancestors, each named Thomas Hol- lingsworth) of Valentine Hollings- worth, who emigrated from Belfast, Ireland, to Pennsylvania, about 1683; removed to Flushing township, Bel- mont county, in 1804; had issue: 1. Elihu, b. in Belmont county, 1813; m. 1839, Lydia Ann Fisher, daughter of Barrack Fisher, of Pughtown, Va. (had issue: i. David, b. at Flushing, Ohio, Nov. 21, 1844; m. April. 1875, Belinda McBean, daughter of Dr. John Mc- Bean). REV. OBADIAH HOLMES, h. in Manchester, England, about 1G06; m. 1636; emigrated with his wife, Cath- arine, from Preston, Lancashire, and settled at Salem, Mass.. 21st of 11th month, 1638; removed about 1643-44 to Rehoboth, R. I., as he was a Baptist and not allowed to live in the Puritan col- ony; publicly whipped by the Puritans at Boston, in September, 1651, on ac- count of his religious opinions, and "for holding meetings on Lord's Day from house to house; " served as minister of the Baptist Church at Newport, R. I., from 1652 to 1682; d. Oct. 15, 1682; had issue: 1. Jonathan, b. about 1637; 2. John. b. about 1639; 3. Martha, b. 1640; 4. Samuel, b. 1642; 5. Obadiah. b. 1644; '6. Hope, m. Taylor; 7. Mary. m. John Browne; 8. Lydia, m. Captain John Browne. Of these, Jonathan, d. 1713; m. Sarah Borden; settled at Mid- dletown, Monmouth county, N. J., 1667 (had issue: i. Obadiah; ii. Jonathan; iii. Samuel; iv. Joseph; v. Sarah, m. • Oulde (?); vi. Mary, m. Easton; vii. Catharine, m. Whit- man; viii. Martha, m. Tilling- hast). Obadiah m. Cole; settled at Middletown. N. J.. 1663 (had i.ssue, two sons and two daughters, of whom: i. Samuel, d. young; ii. Jonathan, d. Sept. 8, 1715). Rev. Obadiah Holmes, the emigrant, had about 5.000 descen- dants living in America as early as 1790. Descended from one of the above was. Obadiah Holmes, b. at Trenton, N. J., 1721; settled in the Virginia Valley; livine: in Rockingham county, Va., about 1768: in Jefferson county, West Va., about 1771; in Bedford coun- 34 ty, Penn., about the time of the Revo- lution; in Strabane township, Wash- ington county, Penn., 1784-85; and later in Brooke county, West Va., where he d. about 1796; m. in New Jersey, Mary Clum, d. in York town- ship, Jefferson county, Ohio, 1812; had issue: I. John; served in the Revolutionary War; was taken a prisoner and died in service. II. William. III. Obadiah. IV. Isaac, b. in New Jersey, April 29, 1764; removed with his parents to Vir- ginia; served in the War of 1812; set- tled in what is now Carroll county, Ohio, 1814, where he d. June 9, 1851; m. in Virginia, 1794, Elizabeth McNabb, b. July 24, 1772, in Shepherdstown. Va.; daughter of George and Martha Mc- Nabb and sister to Sarah McNabb; had issue: 1. Martha, d. in Kenton, Ohio, aged eighty-seven years; m. (1st) Jos- eph Wilson; m. (2d) William Leaper; 2. Clum, d. aged twenty-three years; 3. Sarah, d. in Ottumwa, Iowa, aged eighty-five years; m. Jacob Millisack; 4. Nancy, d. in infancy; 5. Mary, m. James Price, and settled at Leesville, Carroll county, Ohio; 6. Susannah, m. Joseph Masters, and settled at Connot- ton, Harrison county; 7. George-Wash- ington, b. Dec. 30. 1807; settled in North township, 1843, where he d. June 26, 1887; m. (1st) 1837, in North township, Mary Cripliver; m. (2d) Amanda Jenkins; m. (3d) Emily Strat- ton (had issue: i. Jacob-M.; ii. Isaac- C, settled in Columbus, Ohio; iii. Samuel-W., settled in Kansas; iv. John-D.; v. Luther-L.; vi. Edward-S.; vii. Martha-E.; viii. Phoebe- A.; ix. Mary-Alice; x. Ora-A.. m. J. M. Har- rison, and settled in Washington State; xi. Emma.m. Charles Crawford; settled in New Philadelphia, Ohio) ; 8. Samuel, settled in Leesville. Carroll county; 9. Elizabeth, m. Sampson Jenkins, and settled near Salem, Jefferson county, Ohio; 10. John-McNabb, d. in Connot- ton, aged sixty-five years; m. Emily , who settled near Des Moines, Iowa. V. Jacob, b. in Rockingham county, Virginia. Dec. 8. 1768; d. at Kenton, Ohio. Oct. 14. 1841; m. on Buffalo Creek, Brookp countv. West Va.. 1791. Eliza- beth Huff. b. May 22, 1772; d. Jan. 27, 1857; shortly after his marriage he was 520 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY employed by the Government as an Indian scout, and in company witli his brother-in-law, Kinsey Dickerson, and another man, was thus employed for three years, receiving for his services a section of land in Short Creek town- ship, Jefferson county, near Mt. Pleas- ant; here he settled in 1796; had issue, among others: 1. (a daughter), m. Wilkin; 2. , m. Augustine Bickerstaff, of Steubenville, Ohio; 3. , m. Nathaniel Moore, of Little York, Jefferson county. VI. Joseph, b. in Shepherdstowu, Jefferson county. West Va., Jan.- 27, 1771; removed to what is now Jefferson county, Ohio, before 1799; settled in Short Creek township, Harrison coun- ty, about 1800, where he d. April 20, 1868; served in the Indian Wars, and as an officer in the War of 1812; served in the Ohio Senate, 1832-34; m. in Jeffer- son county, Sarah McNabb, b. 1783; d. Feb. 10, 1862; sister to Elizabeth Mc- Nabb and daughter of George and Martha McNabb, of Scotch descent, early settlers near Mount Pleasant, Ohio; had issue: 1. George, b. 1799; d. 1886; m. (1st) Hannah Lynn; m. (2d) 1824, Tacy Thompson; m. (3d) 183—, Hannah Mansfield, daughter of Thomas and Mary Hill Mansfield (the former a native of England, b. 1757; d. 1844; the latter b. 1767; d. 1854) (had issue by first wife: i. Joseph, b. 1825; d. 1889; m. Mary McConnell; ii. Rezin, b. 1827; m. Emeline Mansfield; had issue by second wife: iii. Emma, m. 1864, Ker- sey Wood Kinsey) ; 2. Mary, m. John Glazner; 3. Elizabeth, m. (1st) William Dickerson; m. (2d) Isaac Thomas; 4. Cynthia, m. John Styres; 5. Asa. b. in Short Creek township, Dec. 4. 1806; d. Jan. 3, 1891; m. 1837, Mary McCoy, daughter of Thomas and Hannah Mc- Coy, of Athens township, Harrison county (had issue: i. James-Taylor, served in the Civil War; settled in Columbus, Ohio; ii. Susanna, m. Albert Harrison, and settled in Cadiz; iii. Abram, served in the Civil War; settled in New Philadelphia; iv. Eme- line; V. Sarah-Elizabeth, m. Henry Stringer, of Short Creek township; vi. Wilson; settled near Smithfield, Jef- ferson county; vii. Mary-Ellen, m. Sam- uel Dickerson, and settled in Athens township; viii. Henrietta, m. C. A. Mc- Cleary, and settled at Cadiz; ix. Oliver-Wendell, a Methodist Episcopal minister, settled in Kent, Ohio; ix. Clifton-A.); 6. Abraham, b. in Short Creek township, Dec. 1, 1808; d. May 3, 1880; m. (1st) 1836, Rachel Mansfield. b. 1814; d. Feb. 12, 1854; daughter of Thomas Mansfield, of Jefferson county; m. (2d) 1856, Phcsbe Ann Ekey, a na- tive of Jefferson county, daughter of Andrew and Ann Howden Ekey (had issue by first wife: i. Joseph-M., b. 1847; d. 1871; m. 1870, Chloe A. Mc- Cleary, b. 1850, daughter of Ephraim and Mary A. Gillespie McCleary; ii. William; had issue by second wife: iii. , d. in infancy; iv. Wesley-A., b. in Short Creek township, Aug. 19, 18^9; m. 1884, Minerva Conwell, daughter of John and Mary Conwell, of Cadiz); 7. Martha, m. John Webb, and settled at New Athens; 8. Joseph, m. Sarah Moore, and settled at Hopedale; 9. Sarah, m. James Haverfield; 10. Susan, m. (1st) Joseph Webb; m. (2d) Joseph Dunlap; 11. John, d. aged eight years. VII. Samuel. VIII. Elizabeth. IX. Margaret. Andrew Ekey, father of Phoebe Ekey Holmes, was b. in Pennsylvania, 1791; d. 1873; was of Irish descent; settled in Jefferson county, Ohio, 1801; m. Ann Howden, b. 1799; d. Feb. 5, 1890; had issue: 1. Andrew; 2. Margaret; 3. Mary-Ann, m. Benjamin Barkhurst, and settled in St. Clairsville, Ohio; 4. Phoebe-Ann, m. Abraham Holmes; 5. David; 6. Edward, settled in Jefferson county; 7. John-H.; 8. James, settled in Jefferson county; 9. Wesley. WILLIAM HOLMES, b. 1782, son of William Francis Holmes, a native of Ireland, who settled in Pennsylvania, removed to Green township, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1802, where he d. Jan. 22, 1861; m. (1st) in Pennsylvania, Elizabeth Crouch, b. 1790; d. 1849: m. (2d) Matilda Thaker, d. in Mount Pleasant, Jefferson county; had issue by first wife: 1. Isaac, b. in Green town- ship, where he d. Feb. 12, 1884; m. 1833, Jane Vincent; d. July 17, 1884; daugh- ter of Dr. Thomas Vincent, of Green township (had issue: i. Sarah; ii. Wil- liani-F., b. Dec. 25, 1836; m. (1st) Oct. 10, 1860, Amanda S. Baxter, b. April 25, 1836; d. Oct. 13, 1881; daughter of Samuel Baxter, of Green township: m. (2d) Dec. 24. 1884, Hannah J. Starr, daughter of William Starr, of W^ayne HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 521 township, Jefferson county, Ohio; iii. Thomas-V., b. March 14, 1840; m. Oct. 21, 1869, Melissa Jane Harrah, b. Feb. 13, 1847, daughter of Jolm Harrah, of Jefferson county; iv. Eliza-Jane; v. Martha; vi. Matilda; vii. Mary; viii. Josephine; ix. Amanda; x. , d. in infancy; xi. , d. in infancy; xii. Winfield-S.); 2. Susan; 3. Sarah; 4. Elizabeth. HARVEY HOST, a native of Ger- many, emigrated, before 1800, to Penn- sylvania, where he died; m. Nancy Fulton (b. 1776; d. Jan. 11, 1845), who after the death of her hus- band, married (2d) John Moffat, and removed to Harrison county, Ohio: had issue by first husband (surname Host) : 1. Harvey; 2. Samuel, b. in Pennsyl- vania, Dec. 20, 1801; settled in Green township, Harrison county, where he died Nov. 2, 1889; m. (1st) Aug. 27, 1825, Louisa Oxley; d. June 12, 1834; m. (2d) April 5, 1838, Jane Hines, a daughter of William Hines, of Harri- son county (had issue by first wife: i. Henry; ii. James; iii. Mary-Ann; iv. John, b. in Jefferson county, Sept. 27, 1831; m. April 22, 1858, Ruth A. Mc- Millan, b. Aug. 31, 1835; a daughter of John McMillan, of Carroll county, Ohio; V. Louisa; had issue by second wife; vi. William-H.; vii. Sarah; viii. David; ix. Amos; x. Eliza-Jane); 3. James; 4. John; 5. William; 6. Eliza. HENRY HOUSER, b. in Kentucky, 1786; settled in Cadiz, Harrison coun- ty, Ohio, before 1825; d. Sept. 23, 1855; served in the War of 1812; m. at Ben- nett's Creek, Frederick county, Mary- land, 1824, Susannah Ramsower, b. 1791; d. 1867; had issue: 1. William- Lambdin, b. June 17, 1825; m. Sept. 24, 1857, Sarah Virginia Hall, of Washing- ton, Guernsey county, Ohio, daughter of Edward and Henrietta Catherine Roberts Hall (had issue: Prancis-E., Mary-Virginia. Ellsworth-Wilson, Wil- liam-Henry, Thomas-Edward, Isabel- McFadden, and Henrietta-Katharine); 2. Wilson- Lee, b. April 1, 1828; 3. War- netta, m. William Stroud. MICHAEL HUFF, of Brooke county, Va., m. Hannah Doddridge; had issue: 1. Joseph, an early Indian scout and fighter of Harrison county, d. in Short Creek township; 2. Michael, killed by the Indians , on the Mississippi; 3. Elizabeth, b. May 22, 1772; d. at Ken- ton, Ohio, Jan. 27, 1857; m. 1791, Jacob Holmes, b. in Rockingham county, Va., Dec. 8, 17G8; d. at Kenton, Ohio, Oct. 14, 1841; 4. William, an early Indian scout and fighter of Harrison county, d. in Short Creek township; 5. John, m. Sarah Johnson; d. at Columbia, near Cincinnati, Ohio, 1842; 6. Samuel, d. in Highland county, Ohio, about 1846; 7. Eleazer, d. in Highland county, Ohio, about 1833. EDWARD HUGHES, of Scotch-Irish descent, settled before 1800 near Ris- ing Sun, in Cecil county, Md., where he died; had issue: 1. Robert-M.; 2. Sarah, m. Smith; 3. Rebecca, m. Poole; 4. Edward, b. Oct. 30, 1814; re- moved about 1834 to Port Deposit, Md., thence to Philadelphia; located in Cadiz, Harrison county, Ohio, in 1839; afterwards settling in New Athens, where he d. April 5, 1889; m. in New Athens, Sarah Ann Brown, daughter of James and Jane Welch Brown (had issue: i. Hester-A.; ii. Eliza-Jane, m. Prof. Thomas M. Sewell, of New Athens; iii. Oliver-P.; iv. John-W., settled in Springfield, Ohio; v. George- W., settled in Hopkins, Mo.; vi. Mary- E., m. Rev. Oliver Holmes, and settled in Kent, Ohio; vii. James-C; viii. Edgar; ix. Theodore, settled in Iowa; X. Vandorn; xi. and xii. Twins, d. in infancy. James Brown, father of Sarah Ann Hughes, was b. in county Derry. Ire- land, in 1785; settled near New Athens, Harrison county, about 1814: d. 1860; his wife was b. 1788; d. 1865; had issue: 1. George, settled in St. Clairsville, Ohio; 2. Joseph, settled near Flushirjg, Belmont county, Ohio; 3. Mary-Ann; 4. Jane: 5. Margaret, m. James Rankin, and settled in Missouri; 6. Sarah-Ann, m. Edward Hughes. THOMAS HUNTER, d. in Newberry township, York county. Penn., before Nov. 19, 1777; m. Mary Canon; had is- sue, Nancy, James, Ephraim, Jane, Mary, of whom: James, b. Dec. 6, 1738: d. Jan. 27, 1809; settled on Fourteen Mile Run, Unity township, Westmoreland county, Penn., about 1768-70; served in the Revolutionary War. and was one of the founders of Unity Presbyterian Church; m. Elizabeth McDonald: had issue: I. Ephraim. II. Joseph. III. Sarah. IV. William. V. Mary. VI. James, b. in 523 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Westmoreland county, Penn., Feb. 4, 1777; d. in Wayne county, Ohio, Sept. 16, 1829; m. Agnes (Nancy) Sloan, b. March 28, 1777; d. Aug. 15, 1858; daugh- ter of Sloan; had issue: 1. Elizabeth; 2. Samuel; 3. Joseph-R., b. in Westmoreland county, Penn., May 26, 1804; d. at Cadiz, April 4, 1886; m. March 16, 1835, Letitia McFadden, b. 1812; d. April 13, 1883; daughter of Samuel and Lydia Stafford McFadden, of Cadiz (had issue: i. Cyrus- James; a Presbyterian minister; settled in Uhrichsville, Ohio; ii. Samuel-McFad- den; settled at Newark, Ohio, where he became a judge; iii. Mary, b. 1840; d. 1858; iv. Lydia, d. Feb. 28, 1886; m. William H. Arnold, of Cadiz; v. Char- lotte, m. Alexander J. Hammond, of Cadiz; vi. William-Henry; settled at Chillicothe, Ohio; vii. George-Fred- erick; settled at Chillicothe, Ohio); 4. Isaac; 5. John-Sloan; 6. James; 7. Nancy-Sloan. VII. Thomas. VIII. Samuel. IX. Ralph. JOHN HURFORD, b. in Culpepper county, Virginia, son of Samuel Hur- ford, whose father, John Hurford, was an English Quaker; m. in Virginia, Sarah Hayes, a native of that State; removed to Harrison county while it was still a part of Jefferson; had issue: 1. Evan, b. in Virginia; m. in Jefferson county, Sarah Hall, a native of North Carolina, who was a member of the Friends' Church; settled about five and one-half miles southeast of Cadiz, where they died, both in their ninety- first years (had issue: i. Aquila; ii. Joseph, b. in Cadiz township, 1809; m. Rebecca Ann Welsh, of Washington county, Penn.; d. in New Brighton, 1885; settled in Pittsburgh; had issue, one daughter and one son, both of whom died in infancy; iii. Mary-Ann; iv. Christian; v. Sarah; vi. John; vii. Hannah; viii. Rachel); 2. John; 3. Samuel; 4. Rachel; 5. Sarah; 6. Mary; 7. Ann. SOLOMON INSLEY, b. in Maryland about 1770; d. in Guernsey county, Ohio; m. Britannia Dean, b. in Mary- land; had issue: I. Jemima. II. Sarah. III. Rebecca. IV. Eunice. V. Hudson. VI. Micajah, b. in Maryland, 1791; d. 1845, in Nottingham township, Har- rison county, Ohio; came to Ohio with his parents; m. Clarissa Hawse, b. in Maryland, 1801; d. 1885; had issue: 1, Asbury; 2. Eunice; 3. Sarah, b. March 18, 1829; m. Jan. 1, 1857, James Barclay, b. in county Derry, Ireland, Sept. 23, 1823; d. April 21, 1885 (had issue: i. Joseph; ii. David, settled at Dennison, Ohio; iii. John; iv. Clara; v. William; vi. Benjamin, settled at Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; vii. James; viii. Annie); 4. Maria, m. Kennedy, of Tuscara- was county, Ohio; 5. Robert, settled in Kansas; 6. John, settled in Uhrichs- ville, Ohio; 7. Rachel, settled in Tus- carawas county; 8. Benjamin, served in the Civil War; killed at the battle of Petersburg, August, 1864. JOHN JAMISON, b. in Ematris Parish, near Coote Hill, gounty Cavan, Ireland, 1743; d.near West Middletown, Washington county, Penn., Jan. 28, 1811; m. (1st) about 1765, ; d. before 1772; m. (2d) about 1772, Sarah McFadden Gilmore, d. Dec. 29, 1835 (widow of Nathaniel Gilmore), of Coote Hill, county Cavan, Ireland; emigrated to America with his family and his wife's two children by her first marriage (see Family of Nathaniel Gil- more, p. 504) about 1773 (?), first locat- ing in Shearman's Valley, near New- port, Perry county, Penn.; removed to Washington county and located in Chartiers Creek about 1782, afterwards settling near Buffalo Creek in Inde- pendence township, three miles south- west of West Middletown; with his second wife; buried in Mt. Hope grave- yard, near West Middletown; had issue by first wife: 1. Andrew, b. 1766; d. at Cadiz, Ohio, March 30, 1859; m. about 1792, Nancy McKee, b. 1775; d. at Cadiz, Ohio, April 18, 1855; removed from Washington county, Penn., to Harrison county, Ohio, about 1830 (had issue: i. John, d. in Huron county, Ohio; m. Sarah Mul- holm; ii. Barkley, b. 1795; d. Oct. 23, 1869; m. Margaret Patterson, d. 1875; iii. Elizabeth, d. about 1861; m. John Forbes and removed to Illinois; iv. Isabel, m. Levi Hamilton, b. 1805; d. April 6, 1881; v. Mary, d. about 1860; m. James Hutchison, and removed to Illinois; vi. Samuel, d. about 1825; vii. Isaac, b. 1808; d. Jan. 7, 1840; viii. Alexander, d. in Belmont county. HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 523 Ohio, March 18, 1856; m. Mary Mc- Dodds; iii. John, m. [1st] Elizabeth €onahy). Rogers; m. [2d] Emily Rogers, sister 2. Samuel, b. 1768; d. Nov. 4, 1855; m. of Elizabeth; settled near Morristown, (1st) about 1797, Martha Barber, d. Belmont county, Ohio; iv. Ann, b. 1796; about 1823; emigrated to America m. Lewis Lunsford; settled near Wheel- about 1801; m. (2d) Mrs. Sarah Cope, d. ing. West Va.; v. Mary, m. George about 1850, all buried at West Middle- Bushfield; settled in Illinois; vi. Mar- town (had issue by first wife: 1. John, garet, d. 1873; m. Joseph Lane; vii. b. 1798; d. Feb. 14, 1875; m. [1st] about Barbara, b. 1817; d. Dec. 13, 1876; m. 1819, Mary Nealy, m. [2d] Ann Smith; Jeremiah Driggs, b. 1804; d. May 25, ii. Elizabeth, m. John Dinsmore, and 1867; both buried at Iliff's Church, settled in Jefferson county, Ohio, near Perry county, Ohio; viii. Nancy, b. Steubenville). 1806; m. about 1831, Robert Scott; set- John Jamison had issue by second tied in Iowa; ix. Eliza, d. Nov. 5, 1885; wife: m. Ephraim Knoowy; settled in Perry 3. Mary, b. 1773; d. 1850; m. about county, Ohio; x. Martha, m. De- 1793, Robert Law, b. 1771; d. 1860; set- Long; xi. Joseph, m. Alexander; tied at New Lexington, Perry county, settled at Olathe, Kan.; xii. Samuel, Ohio, about 1835, where they are buried m. Wylie; settled in Perry coun- (had issue: i. Thomas, b. 1794; d. 1878; ty, Ohio; xiii. William, m. Hol- m. Mary Buchanan, and removed to lenbach; xiv. Jane, m. John Yost). Iowa; ii. Sarah, b. 1795; m. about 1812, 6. Nancy, d. 1862; m. about 1798, Aaron Johnson; settled in Perry coun- Robert McBroom, d. 1856; both buried ty, Ohio; iii. John, m. Mary Perry, set- at Lower Buffalo, Brooke county. West tied in Perry county, Ohio; iv. Jane, Va. (had issue: i. John, b. March, 1799; b. 1797; d. March 16, 1882; m. Robert d. Feb. 25, 1895; m. [1st] about 1827, Welch, b. Feb. 26, 1787; d. Aug. 21, Elizabeth Griffa, d. Sept. 21, 1858; m. 1866; settled at Bloomfield, Muskingum [2d] 1860, Margaret Moore, b. 1808; d. county, Ohio; v. Robert, d. about 1825; August, 1866; all three buried at Iliff's vi. William, d. 1883; m. Sarah Dodan; Church, Perry county, Ohio; ii. Mary, settled at Xenia, Ohio; vii. Mary, m. m. John Dickey; iii. William, d. in about May, 1829, James McFadden, b. Ohio; iv. Andrew, d. in Brooke county, 1804; settled near Cadiz, Ohio; viii. West Va., about 1850; v. Thomas, m. James, b. 1809; d. May, 1884; m. [1st] [1st] Margaret Anderson; m. [2d] Rebecca Patterson; m. [2d] Griffa; vi. Samuel, m. about 1834, Skinner; settled at Monmouth, 111.; ix. Henry; vii. Sarah, m. about 1835, Samuel, m. Hannah Brown; settled in Christopher Hootman, d. in Brooke Iowa; x. Andrew, b. June 16, 1816; m. county. West Va.; viii. Jane, d. about [Ist] Hull; m. [2d] Smith, 1838; ix. Nancy, d. 1863; x. Robert, m. d. 1895; settled in Perry county, Ohio), about 1846, Rebecca Haggarty; xi. 4. .John, b. 1774; d. Oct. 16, 1848; set- David). tied near Cadiz, Ohio, about 1801; a 7. William, b. 1782; d. unm.. May 26, soldier of the War of 1812; m. about 1860; buried in Mt. Hope graveyard. 1800, Ann Craig, b. 1780; d. Aug. 30, 8. Elizabeth, b. 1785; d. Dec. 24. 1857; 1847. both buried at Cadiz (had issue: m. 1803, Samuel McFadden, b. 1778: d. i. Walter, b. Feb. 24, 1801; d. at Cadiz, July 2, 1837; settled near Cadiz, Ohio, Ohio. 1883; m. [1st] 1828, Martha Beat- where both are buried (had issue: i. tie. daughter of James and Jane Rey- James, b. 1804; d. June, 1874; m. May, nolds Seattle, of Short Creek township, 1829, Mary Law; ii. Sarah, b. 1807; d. b. 1807-8; d. Jan. 21, 1835; m. [2d] 1837, Oct. 14, 1841; m. Samuel Carnahan; iii. Mary Snyder, daughter of Martin Eliza, m. John Dickerson; iv. John, d. Snyder). July 4, 1881; m. about 1835, Margaret 5. Margaret, b. 1775; d. .Tuly 17, 1873; McFadden; v. Samuel, d. March. 1863; m. about 1792, Thomas McKeaver. b. m. about 1834, Margaret Rankin; vi, 1768; d. June 27, 1861: removed from Jane, m. Adam Dickerson; vii. Alex- Washington county, Penn., to Perry ander, d. in California; m. about 1842, county. Ohio, 1834; both buried at Mary McFadden; viii. Margaret, m. Iliff's M. E. Church, Perry county, Dunlap). Ohio (had issue: i. Thomas, d. young; 9. Robert, b. 1788; d. Aug. 3, 1832; m. ii. Sarah, b. 1798; m. about 1815, John (1st) 1812, Jane Hill, b. 1787; d. March ^3( HISTOUIO.VI. OOI.UKOTIONS OF U AKKISON OOl'N rv Andorson. b. 175>S: vl. May 2;>. IS71. all luuiod at Mt. Uvn*<^ Kvavoyard. Wash- ington oounty (^had isv^uo: I. John, h. April S. ISIS; d. Sopt. 1\?, IST:'; m. Fob. S. IS40, Sjwah Kalston; b. May i':\ ISI:\ li. May :\'». ISSl; sotUod at UKHunnoUl. Muskinjiiuu oounty. Ohiiv tl. Thomas, b, Auj;, ;^^. iv'
  • ; m. April IS, IS4S, >:anoy Mooiv, b. Wb. l», IS15>; tli. Sarah, b. May i;>, lSli>: d. Sopt. 15, IS1>1?; l\ , Sanmol, b. IVo. U. ISl'L*: m. list) Au- Kiist, IS4(>, Susannah Horron, d, Sop- totubor, lSr»0; n\. l-d) Maroh r>, IS»;;5. Mrs. Nanoy [Uawronool Pat torsion; v, William, b. Oot. ii. IS24: d. Jan, 2(5, ISiK?; ni. llstl Oot, S. 1S;>1, Mary Stowart; m. U\il Marj;arot Ai\dorsvM». b. 1TS>S: d. ISTl; sottlod at KooknU, Iowa; y1. Uobort, b. Juno H. ISSi; ni. Maroh, lSr>S, KUaaboth Hutohinsonl. llX Sarah, b. 17S5>; d. Juno .:>. ISSO; n\. ISIS, Kobort i^rahanu b. 177S; d. IVoombor, IStJS; both buriod in Si>uth r>utYalo ,»iravoyard ihad issuo: i. John, b. May. ISU; ii. Kobort, b. July, IS15; d. May IS, IS7S; iii. Mary. d. Novombor. 1SS7; n\. about lSr>0. Kobort Noblo; iv, William, m, April, 1S4(">. Susannah Jamison; sottlod at Indlauola, Iowa; v. Sarah, m. Uuohanan; sottU\l noar WtH^t .-Vloxandor. I'onn.; vi. Mar- S^^rot. m. about lSt'>0, Ohambors; Yii. Jano. d. youns;-; vlll. San\uol, d. younjjl . VHU.ir JAKVIS, of c^M-man dosoont. b. in Haltimoro oounty, Md., l«S;>; d. In Harrison oounty, Ohio, lStU>; sottlod in I'ohnont oounty. Ohio, about ISU; n\,tn I'altimoro oounty, Md,, Mary l?arnott, b. "l7vS»J; d. lS:»r»; had issuo: t. Jaoob, b, January, 1S15; sottlod in Moorotlold township, >larrison oountv, 1S45; n\. Oot. f., 1S42, Eli/a M. O^rion. b. 1J^14; danjihtor of Ezokiol t">'r>rion (had is- suo; i, Frank; ii. ^lary. m. Samuol Mo- Oonnoll; iii. Ja»\o, n». Albort Quii^lov; iv. FUi-a-A.. m. John Forryl. Al.FXANOKK JOHNSON, b. in ooun- ty Tyrono. Irotand. 177J; omicratod to .\morioa and sottlod at Wilmins;ton. Hoi,, in 17SS, thonoo romovod to l^utlor oounty, rouii.. and in 1S14 sottlod noar JotTorson. Oormat\ towi\ship, Harrison oo\inty. whoro ho d, ISiJi^; m. in rittsburs, Mrs, Floauor Hrown Work (Widow of William WorkK b. 17S7. in Baltimoro. Md.; d. lSt>2; had issue: 1. Androw, d. in Sparta. Ill,; "J. John, b. IS14; d. 1875; S, Nanoy; 4, Aloxandor. b. .Vu.;;. IS. ISIS; sottloil in Kumloy town- ship about ISSS; m, Ooo. 7. lSi>2, Mar- ,»;arot Oalbraith. dau.k^htor of San»»iol Oalbralth. wh»> with his wifo. w;»s a natlvo o( lrohn\d, and who rtMuovod friMU Ponnsylvaui;» io llarrtso»\ oounty (had issuo; i, Jolu\; 11, Samuol; ill. Aloxandor, sottlod U\ Ooh»mb>is, Ohio; iv. Kllou-JaT\o; v, Isabolla .\nu, n\. Miohaol Fiuio.'iO; ;>. Mary, m. Josoph Hiuniltoi\, HKNKV JOHNSON, b. — ; d. isr»(^: ronu^vod from .\ll«\i;hony oounty, Foni\., tv» llarrisv>ti oounty. 0\\\o. bofvuv ISl-. and sottlod in Moorotlohl township; n\. Oathorino , b. ; d, ; hiul issuo: 1, Honvy-M,. m, 1824. Mar- Karot tJibson (?H 2. WiUiam-O,; a physioiiuv; m. 1S;U>, Jano Mol'addou." danghtor of Samuol and Kydia StatYord MoFaddon; 15, Wosloy; 4, Asbury-F., m. >\oboooa Sli>an, dau^htor of Matt how M. and Klii-.aboth l«rimos Sloan; ro- n\ovod to l.aramlo, Wyomiu?;; r>. Uo- linda. m. 1S2!>, Or. John MolVan. of Oadii',, b. 17*J7: d. Jan. 7. lS7r>; (5. JuUanna (?"», m. Jamos Tallman; 7. Hiuriot, u\. 1S;U?. Ooor^^o W, MoFhorson. b, ISll; d. Jan. U\ ISSO: S. Oathorino. m. Price. WH.T.TAM JOHNSON, b. in Ponnsyl- vania. May l'(>, 177(1: romovod, IS04, to Short (.""rook tinvnship. Harrison oi>un- ty, (ihio, whoro ho d, Jan. 7. lSr>r>; m. .Vgnos IMokons, b. in Fonnsvlvanla.May 15. 17SI; d. Fob. 24, IStH; had issuo: 1. Susanna, m. FIshor; 2, Mary-L.; .'x. Marjiarot; 4, John: 5. Martha; (>. Josljvh; 7, Hasil; S, Tomporauoo, m. Noal: l>. William; 10, Flizaboth. .\r»\ohl; 11. Aii'uos. m, m, Wilson: 12, Koboooa: IS. Abram; 14. Albort, b. Nov, :U\ 1S2:?: d. Ooo, 1(\ 1SS(!; ni. 1S0>1, Kaohol C'onawjiy, dau,»;h- tor of Oharlos and Franoos Arnold Oonaway. Oh,Mrlos Oonaway, fathor of Kaohol Oonaway Johus^m. romovod front Maryland a»\d looatod ii\ .\rohor town- ship. Harrison oonuty, about 1S(V5: ro- movod with his wifo to Kiohlat\d ooun- ty, Ohio. IStU. whoro ho d, 1S70; m. Ooo, 17. 1S1!>, Franoos Arnold, d. 1S72. daughtor of luMijamin and l\Mufin't Arnold, rosidonts of Maryland; had Is- suo: 1. Bonlan\in; 2. Ji>hn; Iv Sophia; 4. Ann; 5, William; (?. Eli /.a both; 7. I\Iiohaol: S. Mary; !\ Oharlos; 10. jjAicJtJHO.s' coi;;."! y OKNKAf/>';/KH 020 Itfi'lK), lit. Al\)t'.tt Aul^ltnion^, 11, Hii- f.tinnii\i; \2. Fniin'Mn-.fnin:; \'A, \Cuf n:\i- W , f.i-iwft\ In l\n'. ('Ay\\ War; kWU-A Ai)K'iK»., J8).'t^J f.iXiU-ii ill J 802; fn, Jn Wi02, I/, VVmiani. Ml, KIchard. IV, Al'-xan'ln, b, JnJv ,v, 1822; m. Jun^, 2>,. j --../'>, ,/ohn ])U:k'trmn, d, Af/rll 12, 18^/-', {huA Hatut: J. Jarn'r>}-H., b. May «, 18r>.<'>; rn, O^^t, 1, 187ft, Kva J'H.rkihK'tn: 11. Anna-M„ b, Nr/v, )«}, 18-v<5; m. F«ib, I, 1><82, William H, Hunt/^r; 111. Ruth, b, D>wl»( b .fan, K, 18r,ft: '1. Fr-b. 4, 18^4; v, I )1, b, Oct. ].',, ;><;.'; rrj, ,/an, 1, 1' ->/; H, HV'.tt); 4, Harah, b, D'i^;, ^50, 182r,; d, Ai;rn 8. 1887; rn. Oc*-, 8, 184^, Wllllarn Jjo^Ih <^had iKjeuf;: J. Jamtiti, h. April 24, 1> ;<, 11, 187^/, Mary WaJk^fr/r ;' b, 0^;t. 1)5, 18J;0; c,. WII- ham-H,. b. May 4, 182J;; rn, fVrt. 11, 1877, Mary Ann I'arVAuiviu. 'Uxtr-''- *<■■ '/f TttornaM ParkJn>;on. r< 1,' Ohio: d. Nov. T> ]5;^^; rn. Jujy ^'^ i>;2<>, R^b*^-/:a iHtn.hiU. b, 1W/7, ' '^ -Hfy/n cr/tifitv: d. Au^. iZ. 1*72; r of V ' ■ li ■ \.'j , >j;i') ih^.iic, cl<;vcn cbiJ'J;cn, of •Mii'tiii: i, Wlillanj I'/,, tH'.iUt'A at '/'o«- tioWjh, Ohio; 2, ,Mary, n<. .ioin-yU M<>- K«tlv«rcn, and wcttlcd In H^ilo, Uniiinftn county; ;«, Jr/»^;pb-K„ b, Auif, Jl, 1*;«2; Kcrvcd In lh<; Civil War; in, Jan, 2'}, 18«»-', Hannah H. K»ilth, l< nb SorrU'M; Ht'j.lU'.d In ,..-;,ay t'/,iiiiiy, Mo.; fi, IMif^r.d, rn. Hiniht/n Hrniiti, and «wrttb74 at Tappan, Ohio; ''/. KllzabMI ,n- Id HniJth, and n<-^*\<-<) at I/;. .«<; 7, O'ccllla, nj, n Manb'-/:k, an/J ti'diUtn at 0->-;/, /70; had J»x»jc; I, H'^nry. li. v,< '',.,', \,^ /(/, ./,yhn, IV, Mary, V, M VI, Nan/jy. VH, Anna, V/H, I', / ' ': ■ :.'t,„ X. Ja/'y;b b fn !'< /J, In O'rrr- ■ y, (Alio, ]> .. . .z; rn. Mary WhiUitort'., h, 17ft«; d, 1*52; ba4 ijwsiji;; 1, Klizsihtrt.h. m. .fa/'/tb i't'fiiii'.y; 2, (U'/irif*:'. 'A. \AU'SmS-A vMiit'A In th«i W'rft; 4. H--: Jt„ b. Jan, 12, 182*;- '^ ;/; m, Nov- J, )> Tt'Arow, (ft r t/f fihi/ric*', H.116 / 'h ' '/SiviriH. ':n ■ • I. I - ■ 1 ' / . J, 3>-2ft; VA .7j r.'j. Auj< , . . ,, ,,./.., .: ,. ,, . , . . b. May 2, 18-',^;; d, 0^;t. 1, 188ft, dau^btitT ^rf •'• ■;/ i-jifiuXy, tovfu. '/ Ca/)j« • 4; d. fn m In 52o HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Carmen; vi. Mary-Maritia, m. William McGrew; vii. Jessie-Lee); 2. Hugh; 3. Margaret, m. Josiah Craig; 4. Martha- Anne, b. 1817; d. 1897. MATTHEW KENNEDY, b. in Scot- land, 1765-67; d. 1847; emigrated to America, and settled in Georgetown, D. C, before 1802, where he m. Chris- tina Hines, d. 1836; removed to Harri- son countj^ about 1811; had issue: 1. William-C, m. Sarah Wyckoff; 2. Citizen- J., m. Maria Moore; 3. John-L., m. Matilda Ourant; 4. Mary-A., d. young; 5. Napoleon-Bonaparte, b. November, 1801; d. 1889; m. 1826, at Cadiz, Mary Gilmore, b. 1805; d. 1873; daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth Buchanan Gilmore (had issue: i. Samuel-Gilmore, b. 1827; m. Mary Ens- ley; ii. Elizabeth, b. 1829; d. 1851; m. Levi Morris; iii. Sarah -Jane, b. 1832; m. Hugh Patterson Dunlap; iv. Chris- tina, b. 1834; d. 1883; m. Levi Morris (his second wife) ; v. Martha-A., b. 1836; m. John Heller; vi. Matthew-L., b. 1839; m. (1st) Haley; m. (2d) Mrs. Kramer; vii. Mary-P., b. 1844; d. 1863); 6. Return-Matthew, b. March 15, 1803; d. June 16, 1888; m. Feb. 19, 1824, Jane Moore, b. Sept. 20, 1792; d. Sept. 25, 1866; daughter of Robert and Margaret Armstrong Moore (had issue: i. Mary-A.; ii. Howard; iii. Robert; iv. Jackson, b. June 18, 1828; m. (1st) April 3, 1851, Eliza Carrother^, b. March 2, 1835; d. Sept. 4, 1876; daughter of George Carrothers; m. [2d] June 21, 1877, Mrs. Lucy Kennedy Hefiling, widow of Walker Heffling, and daucrhter of Carroll and Mary Latham Kennedy; v. Maria; vi. Sala- thiel); 7. David-W., m. (1st) Buckington; m. (2d) Gibson; 8. Ahio-H., m. Elizabeth Harvey; 9. Thomas-J.; 10. Elizabeth, d. young; 11. Philip-H., m. Susan Jones: 12. Jacob-J., m. Matilda Smith; 13. Abra- ham-H. ; 14. Christian-H., m. Matilda Todd: 15. Daniel, m. Mary Jane John- son; 16 and 17. died in infancy. ABSALOM KENT, h. in Vir<2:inia. 1777: son of Absalom Kent, a native of that State; removed to Stock towiiship, Harrison county, Ohio, before 1810; d. in Illinois, 1875, where he had settled; had issue: I. Absalom, b. in Stock township, 1810; d. 1876; m. (1st) Marv Walker, d. 1848; m. (2d) Sarah Traub; m. (3d) Margaret Worman; had issue by first wife: 1. Absalom, settled in Notting- ham township; m. Jane A. Lee, b. July 17, 1837, daughter of Jesse and Harriet Mason Lee, natives of Virginia; 2. John-H.; 3. Joseph-W.; 4. Stewart; 5. William; 6. Tabitha; had issue by second wife: 7. Sarah-J., m. Toole; had issue by third wife: 8. Mary, m. Grimes, and settled in Cadiz. II. Abner. III. John. IV. Jacob. V. Jane. VI. Mary. AARON KERR, see Family of Wil- liam Scott. JAMES KERR, see Family of Roger Clark. JAMES KERR, b. 1751; d. June 2, 1825; emigrated from Adams and West- moreland counties, Penn., settling in Short Creek township, Harrison county, Ohio, in 1805; m. Agnes (Nancy) , b. 1751; d. June 18, 1836; had issue, eight children, among whom: I. James, b. 1787, in Adams county, Penn.; d. 1846, in Bellefontaine. Ohio; m. (1st) 1807, Catherine Duff; d. Sep- tember 21, 1827; m. (2d) 1829, Martha Morrison, of Belmont county, Ohio; had issue by first wife: 1. John-C, b. April 15, 1811, in Short Creek town- ship; settled in Belmont county; from whence he served as a member of the Legislature in 1846; m. (1st) March 23, 1836, Mary Henderson; d. 1847; m. (2d) Jan. 14, 1854, Sarah Newell; d. 1862; m. (3d) Nov. 3, 1863, Grizelle Taggart, daughter of Rev. William Taggart, of Cadiz, Harrison county (had issue by first wife: i. Martha-A.; ii. Amanda-K.; iii. James-H.-H.; had issue by second wife: iv. George: v. John; vi. Gilland; vii. Bentley; viii. Thomas-Corwin; ix. Vance-C); 2. James; 3. William; 4. George; 5. Margaret- Ann; 6. Joseph; 7. Thomas-L. II. Samuel, b. in York, now Adams county, Penn., Oct. 25, 1792; d. Feb. 27, 1882, in Short Creek township, where he had settled; served in the War of 1812; m. (1st) Sept. 8. 1815. Anne Smyth, d. 1833; m. (2d) September, 1835, Agnes Hamilton, a native of Ohio; d. March 28, 1885; had issue by first wife, seven children; had issue by second wife: 8. , d. in infancy; 9. . d. in infancv: 10. Thom_as-H., b. Aug. 15. 1836. in Short Creek town- ship, where he settled; m. Nov. 7, 1861, Letitia A. Calderhead, a native of Har- HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 527 rison county, daughter of William and Nancy McLaughlin Calderhead 11. Samuel-C, a Presbyterian minister, b. in Short Creek township, Sept. 9, 1838; settled in Franklin county, Kan., 1S89; m. March 11, 1871, Elizabeth N. Rowley, daughter of Luther Rowley, of Bowerston, Harrison county; 12. Margaret-A., m. Calderhead Hanna. III. John. IV. William. V. Mary. VI. Jane. VII. Elizabeth. JOHN KERR, d. in Wigtonshire. Scotland, at the age of ninety-four; m. Grace McCracken, who d. aged ninety- six; had issue: 1. James, a Presby- terian minister, b. at Kirkcolm, Scot- land, 1805; d. April 9, 1855; emigrated to America and first settled at Win- chester, Virginia, removing to Cadiz, Ohio, in 1839; m. 1837, at Pittsburg, Margaret McWhirter, b. in Scotland, 1816; d. Nov. 1, 1890; daughter of David and Mary Fleming McWhirter, of Whithorn, Scotland (had issue: i. Mary; ii. Joseph; iii. David; iv. Wil- liam; V. John, m. Ora Price; vi. James- W., b. 1850; m. 1881, Martha Lewis; vii. Eliza, m. Rev. Cyrus J. Hunter; viii. Agnes, m. J. W. Slemmons) ; 2. Grace; 3. Agnes; 4. Mary; 5. John; 6. Stair. CONRAD KEESEY, b. in Pennsyl- vania, 1790; d. in Harrison county, Ohio, 1874, where he had settled 1816; m. (1st) in Pennsylvania, Burkett; m. (2d) in White Cloud, Iowa, Ellen Brooks; had issue, among others: 1. , m. Erasmus Barrett, of Cadiz township; 2. James, b. 1821, in Har- rison county; d. Jan. 6, 1884; settled about five miles northwest of Cadiz, Ohio; m. May 30, 1846, Margaret Lay- port, b. Dec. 22, 1826. daughter of John L. and Verlinda Harrison Layport (had issue: i. Jane-Ann; ii. Conrad, settled in Uhrichsville, Ohio: iii. Mary- Verlinda; iv. Amanda-V., m. (1st) A. Johnson; m. (2d) D. D. Bowman; v. John-L., b. Oct. 23, 1852; settled four and one-half miles from Cadiz; m. Nov. 24. 1881, Mary Belle Haverfield, daughter of Gillespie and Sarah J. Hines Haverfield; vi. Susan-H.. m. James Milliken; settled in Cadiz; vii. Charles-W., settled in Peabody, Kan.; viii. Ella. m. Edward Trenner; settled in Areola, 111.; ix. Frankie, d. in in- fancy; X. Jessie-F., m. Elmer Bowers; settled in Areola, 111.; xi. Margaret-B.; xii. Bert-Q.). DANIEL KILGORE, see Family of John Pritchard. LEONARD KIMMEL, b. in Germany, 1741; d. in Rumley township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1825; emigrated to Amer- ica, 1758, and later settled at The Glades, Somerset county, Penn., thence removed to the Cheat River, West Vir- ginia about 1800, and settled in Rumley township a short time afterward; m. Susan Zimmerman, of The Glades, Penn., b. 1748; d. 1828; had issue: I. John, emigrated from Somerset county, Penn., and settled in Rumley township, Harrison county, Ohio be- fore 1814; m. Eve Turney, of Stone Creek, Penn.; had issue: 1. Susan, m. Wallace; 2. Mary; 3. Sophia; 4. David, b. 1816; d. 1882; m. 1839. Eunice Belle Moore, b. March 17. 1818; d. Nov. 5, 1874; daughter of Thomas and Bonnell Moore, of Pennsylvania (had issue: i. Maria, b. 1840; d. 1873; m. Frank Jamison; ii. John, b. 1842; d. 1863; iii. Daniel- Moore, b. 1843; d. 1865; iv. Royal, b. 1845; d. 1875; v. Thomas-Moore, b. 1848; m. 1872, Sarah Gotshall; vi. Steven, b. 1850; d. 1850; vii. Eunice-Mehitabel, b. 1851; d. 1852; viii. David-Patton, b. 1854; m. 1881, Sarah Schultz); 5. Adam; 6. Claytus; 7. Katharine. II. Adam. III. Henry, b. in Pennsylvania, 1789; settled in Rumley township; m. 1814, Christina Gidinger, b. at The Glades, Somerset county, Penn., 1794; daughter of Martin and Elizabeth B. Gidinger, natives of Germany, who settled in Harrison county, in 1808; had issue: 1. Susan; 2. Jonathan, b. July 15. 1815, in Rumley township; m. January, 1836. Mariah Catharine Nupp. daughter of John P. and Catharine Wolf Nupp, na- tives of Gettysburg, Adams county, Penn. (had issue: i. Sarah-Jane, m. Jacob Condo, of Germano, Ohio; ii. Elizabeth, m. .Jacob Stall, and settled in .Jewett, Ohio; iii. Nimrod, served in the Civil War; killed at the battle of Fisher's Hill; iv. Christina; v. Titus; vi. Simon-P. ; vii. Jonathan: viii. George: ix. Isaac; x. Mary-Magdalena; xi. Martin). IV. Leonard. V. Frederick, b. in West Virginia, 1800; d. in Rumley township, March 24, 528 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY 1885; m. 1826, Elizabeth Yingling; had issue: 1. Sarah, m. John Knoff, of North township; 2. Mary-Ann; 3. Re- becca; 4. Joseph, settled in North township; 5. Lydia-Ann, m. Jacob Binker, and settled in North township; 6. Henry; 7. William, b. Feb. 11, 1838; settled near Scio; m. Feb. 16, 1860, Louisa Sneary, b. May, 1844, daughter of Jacob and Mary Turney Sneary; 8. John; 9. Barbara; 10. Mahala; 11. Delila, m. Samuel Webb, and settled in Cleveland, Ohio; 12. Amos; 13. Joshua. VI. Nancy, m. Harmon. VII. Mary. VIII. Susanna, m. 1819, Samuel Guth- rey. JOHN KINSEY, an English Quaker, native of London, emigrated to Amer- ica, arriving at New Castle, Delaware, in the ship " Kent," June 16, 1677; one of the Commissioners for the settle- ment of New Jersey, under the pur- chase by Edward Byllinge; made selec- tion and bargain with Peter Cock, the Swedish deputy, for purchase of 300 acres of land, situated above the mouth of the Schuylkill, near the place which afterwards became known as the site of Penn's Treaty and of the city of Philadelphia. John Kinsey, Jr., came to America in 1678, and settled on the tract of land purchased by his father, where he reared a family; his son John, was Chief Justice of Pennsylvania; Edmund Kinsey, another of his sons, removed in 1715 to Buckingham town- ship. Bucks county, Penn., where he settled; was one of the founders of the Buckingham Monthly Meeting in 1720; m. Nov. 21, 1708, Sarah Osburn; his children were Samuel, David, Mary, Elizabeth, John, Joseph, Sarah, Ben- jamin, Jonathan. Of these, Benjamin, b. Oct. 22, 1727; m. (1st) 1749, Susanna Brown; m. (2d) 1776, Martha White; had issue, among others: I. George, m. Dec. 22, 1773, Mary Gil- lingham; had issue: 1. Sarah; 2. Su- sanna; 3. Edmund; 4. James; 5. Aaron; 6. John; 7. George; 8. Charles, b. in Bucks county, Penn., May 19, 1786; re- moved with his parents to Mount Pleasant, Ohio, in 1798; located in the western part of Cadiz township, Harri- son county, about 1815, thence, in 1832, removed to Moorefield; afterwards set- tling in Flushinar, Belmont county, where he d. Feb. 11, 1884; m. (1st) in Philadelphia, June 1, 1815, Ann Wor- rall, b. 1793; d. Oct. 26, 1832; m. (2d> in Moorfield, Talitha Gatchel; d. about 1838; m. (3d) 1842, Rhoda Boone, of Kentucky (had issue by first wife: 1. Gillingham, d. aged twenty-two years; ii. Kersey-Wood, b. in Cadiz township, Nov. 2, 1823; settled at Cadiz, in 1847; m. (1st) May 6, 1847, Sarah Jane Haver- field; d. February, 1864; daughter of Nathan Haverfield; m. (2d) Nov. 9, 1864, Emma Holmes, b. Jan. 20, 1839, daughter of George and Hannah Mans- field Holmes; iii. Sarah-Jane, d. in in- fancy; had issue by second wife: iv. , m. David Comly, and settled in Adena; v. ; vi. ; had issue by third wife: vii. Emily, m. Eli Davis, and settled in Pittsburg; viii. Charles- Wesley, m. Isabel McFadden, daughter of Henry S. and Isabel Poor McFad- den; settled in Oakland, Cal.); 9. Ann. George Holmes, father of Mrs. Emma. Holmes Kinsey, was a son of Col. Joseph Holmes, a pioneer of Harrison county; m. (1st) Hannah Linn; m. (2d) Tacy Thompson; m. (3d) Jan. 7. 1834, Hannah Mansfield, daughter of Thomas Mansfield, of Jefferson county, Ohio; had issue by second wife: Joseph and Rezin, and two others; had issue by third wife: William, d. aged six years; Mary, d. aged three years; Emma, m. Kersey Wood Kinsey. JAMES KIRKPATRICK, b. in Cecil county, Maryland, June 14. 1770; re- moved in 1801 to Washington county,, Penn., where he remained until 1821, and then settled in Athens township, Harrison county, Ohio; settled. 1823, in Moorefield township, Harrison coun- ty, yhere he d. May 26, 1840; m. in Maryland, Mary Cochran, a native of Cecil county, b. Jan. 31, 1771; d. July 25, 1836; had issue: 1. Hugh, b. Sept. 21, 1795; 2. Robert, b. April 29, 1797; 3. Elizabeth, b. July 26, 1799; 4. Wil- liam, b. in Cecil county, Dec. 11. 1801; d. in Moorefield township. May 1, 1888; m. Dec. 25, 1823, Sarah Guthrie; d. Jan. 14, 1885 (had issue: i. James, b. Nov. 21, 1824; m. (1st) Feb. 25. 1847. Ellen S. Wallace, b. June 17. 1827: d. Nov. 8, 1882; daughter of Rev. William and Mary McWilliams Wallace [natives of Pennsylvania, who settled in Ohio about 1817]; m. (2d) Oct. 12, 1886. Belle Guthrie, b. Dec. 10, 1835; daughter of Robert and Jane Cunningham Guthrie; ii. Robert-G.; iii. Joseph-C, b. Jan. 6, HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 529 1828; settled in Moorefield township; m. March 7, 1854, Margaret J. Wallace, b. Dec. 23, 1834, daughter of Rev. Wil- liam and Mary Mc Williams Wallace; iv. Hugh; settled in Iowa; v. Mary-J.; vi. Adeline, m. Kirk, and settled at Flushing, Ohio; vii. Sarah, m. Hays; viii. Elizabeth, m. W. E. Wal- lace; ix. John, b. 1839; d. 1845; x. Nancy; xi. Margaret, m. Hays); 5. Mary, b. March 4, 1804 (had issue: i. Mary, m. Douglas) ; 6. James, b. Jan. 10, 1807; 7. John, b. June 11, 1809. WILLIAM KNOX, a Methodist minister, probably born in Ireland, 1767, of Scottish descent, settled in Maryland, about 1790; removed after 1800 to Harrison county, Ohio, where he d. June 16, 1851; m. Esther , b. 1785: d. March 2, 1863; had issue: 1. Jeremiah; 2. William; 3. David; 4. Sarah; 5. John, b. in Maryland; settled in Freeport; served in the War of 1812; d. May 16. 1863; m. about 1815, Mary Davis, a native of Ireland; d. April 12, 1887, daughter of Samuel Davis, who settled in Athens township (had issue: i. William; ii. Samuel; iii. Margaret; Iv. Ann; v. Matthew-M.; vi. John-D.; vii. Sarah- J.; viii. James; ix. George- M.; X. E.-M., b. Aug. 16, 1840; settled in Freeport; m. (1st) Nov. 20, 1862, Abbie H. Bendore; d. April 25, 1884; daughter of John and Nancy Bendore, of Smyrna, Ohio; m. (2d) July 24, 1889, Mrs. Elizabeth Tipton Robinson; xi. Theodore); 6. James; 7. Arthur, d. Aug. 23, 1857 (had issue: i. William; ii. Clara) ; 8. Nancy. WILLIAM LACEY, b. in Sussex county, Del., 1764; d. May 17, 1828; m. Elizabeth Stinson; removed to Ross county, Ohio, and thence to Harrison county; had issue: I. Robert, d. 1812; a soldier of the War of 1812. II. Anderson, removed West: had issue: I.Joseph. III. John-Stinson, b. 1793; d. Jan. 16, 1873; m. Dec. 31, 1820, Anna Jeanette Hoyt, b. in New York City, July 21. 1802; d. Sept. 29, 1885; daughter of Jesse and Anna Hoyt; settled at Cadiz, Ohio, about 1816: had issue: 1. Elizabeth, b. Nov. 22, 1821; d. Feb. 16, 1823; 2. Wil- liam-B., b. Dec. 11. 1820: d. .Tan. 14, 1867; 3. Jesse-Hoyt, b. July 8, 1826: d. Sept. 29. 1899: 4. Henry-Brush, b. Nov. 11, 1828; m. (1st) Oct. 4. 1855. Frances Rebecca Stuart; m. (2d) Oct. 5, 1865, Mary Ann Beardsley; 5. John-S., b. July, 1831; d. Dec. 22, 1832; 6. Robert- S., b. Sept. 22, 1833; 7. Anderson- Parker, b. Dec. 11, 1835; d. Jan. 21, 1895; 8. Lewis, b. Oct. 2, 1837; d. Jan. 22, 1843; 9. Anna-Jeanette, b. April 5, 1842; d. Jan. 4, 1866; m. Rev. W. B. Watkins. EDWARD LAFFERTY (originally Lafetra), removed from Washington county, Penn. (probably Peters town- ship), to Moorefield township, Harri- son county, Ohio, some years before 1810, where he died; m. Elizabeth Ramage, b. 1733; d. 1844; had issue, among others: I. Samuel, b. April 14, 1782; d. Nov. 29, 1857; m. Jan. 1. 1807, Margaret Fig- ley, b. 1782: d. April 4, 1842; had issue: 1. Belijah, b. 1807; d. Aug. 11, 1887; m. 1830, Joshua Dickerson; 2. Jacob, b. Dec. 1. 1809; 3. Edward, b. March 14, 1812; 4. Elizabeth, b. Aug. 7, 1814; 5. Jane, b. Dec. 4, 1817; d. Sept. 11, 1864; m. 1839, William Dickerson; 6. Joseph, b. Oct. 26, 1819; 7. Margaret, b. March 15, 1822; d. May 22, 1847; m. Nicholas Familton. II. Edward, b. in Pennsylvania, 1789; removed to Moorefield township with, his parents, and afterward settled in Athens township, where he d. Nov. 8, 1836; m. Margaret McFadden, b. 1789; d. Sept. 14, 1864; sister of Joseph Mc- Fadden: had issue: 1. Samuel; 2. John; 3. Elizabeth, d. 1847; m. Thomas Grimes; 4. Margaret, m. Luke Vorhees, and settled at Loraine, Ohio; 5. George, d. 1860; 6. Joseph, settled in Belmont county; 7. Edward, b. Nov. 25, 1826; d. April 2, 1886; m. Sept. 7, 1865. Sarah A. Cooper, daughter of William C. Cooper; 8. Hiram, b. April 15, 1831; d. Aug. 31, 1875; m. 1857, Jane Dickerson, daughter of John Dickerson, of Athens township; 9. Finley, settled in Ne- braska: 10. Mary-.Jane. The Laffertys may have removed to Washington county from Bedminster township. Somerset county. N. J., where a number of them lived during the Revolution. Edmund Lafetra. of Huguenot origin, settled in Monmouth county, N. J., in 1667; d. 1687: m. Frances ; had issue: 1. Edmund; 2. Elizabeth, m. John West. SYLVANUS LAMB, b. in Massachu- setts, removed from Pittsburg, Penn., to Georgetown, Ohio, and thence in 1843 to Athens county, Ohio, where he ,/ 680 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY d. 1818; m. in l'iUKl)iir>,'. iHiibnlla Whito. a native of Uiat piacc, dauKlitcr ol' Ham- uol White, a native of Ireland, who aftrsrwarrl settled in Short Creek town- Hhlp; had iHKiie, fd^ht (diil(lr(;n, ji.tiionf? ■whom: I. Lrjonard, HC!t,Mcd in A(l;i,lisH;i., Iowa; 2. SylvanuH, Hottled in Kliif-kicy, Neb.; 3, L B , b. In Short Creek township, Jan. 27, 18.';3; removed to Athens eoiinty with his pnrciiits in ]84.''; snl)Ke(|iictit iy relumed to Short Creek townsliiit; served in the (^ivil War; m. 1854, Catherine Brooke, a na- tive of Martin's Ferry; d. Mareh 15, 1887; daughter of Uenjatnin and M.'irtha 1'ii-ook(!, enrly settlers in Bel- mont connty, wherr; they eamc; from Pennsylvania,. (Henjjuiiin Brooke; served in the War of 1812.) PKTPIR LANTZ, a native of I'enn- ftylvanla, d. In .lefferson eoiinty, Ohio, 1821, where he had settled beforr; 1809; m. Mary Patterson, a native of Penn- sylvania, of Seotcli-Irish deseciit,; had Issnt!: 1. Chi'istoi)li('r-l'.; 2. Willi;un; .'}. • Jolin, b. May 24, 1809; d. Nov. 7, 187fi; settled In Moorefleld township, Har- rison county, Ohio, ahont 1822; m. 18:^7, JOiizM, l''iilton, b. Feb. •), 181.5; d. Feb. 8, 1887 (li.'id issne: i. I)ewey-S., sctthid in Belmont eonnty, Ohio; 11. R.-W.; iii. Jasper-N., 1). Jan. 22. 184.'?; served in the Ohio Legislature from 188.3 to 1889; m. April 27, 1871, Sarah Sloan, b. April 20, 1848, dnuKhter of John and lOli/.a. Wherry Sloan; Iv. A.-R., killed in the Civil War; v. Samuel-M., settled at Piedmont, Ohio; vl. Albert-C); 4. Abr;ih;un; 5. AblCTll; Ci. Mary, m. Benll, ;iiid settled at f'oslux'ton county, Ohio; 7. S;ir;i,h, m. Cramer, and setth^d in Medina county, Ohio. EDWARD TiATTCHRlDCE, a native of Tr(dand. emiu;rated to America and settled at Wilmington. Delaware, 1809; removed to Brooke county, Va., and thence to Jefferson county, Ohio; m. In Ireland, Mnr^arcit McC-onnrdl; IkuI is- sue: 1. Robert; 2. I'^lward, b. in county Tyrone. Ireland, Sept. 10, 180.3; d. In Green township, Hfirrlson county. Ohio, June 10. 1«89; m. (1st) Mnrjory McCon- n(dl,d. Aup:. 20, 1808; m. f2d) Susannah Conaway of Sfofd< township, d;iuf:;)iter of John C!onaw;iy (h;id issue by first wife: 1. .Lane, b. Nov. 24, 1824; 11. .Tos- eph, b. Sept. 20. 1820; 111. Marparet, b. Sept. 25. 1828; Iv. Thomas, b, Feb. 2. 1831; v. Robert, b. Nov. 21, 1832; vl. Edward, b. Aur. 10, 1834; vli. Elizabeth, b. May 2, 1830; vili. Nancy, b. April 21, 1838; Ix. John, b. Sept. 27, 1840; x. Wil- liam, b. Feb. 28, 1843; xi. Samuel, b. June 7, 1847; had Issue by second wife: xii. Jamr-s-II., b. Dec. 14, 1809; xiii. Susann;ih, b. Jan. 12, 1872); 3. James; 4. Matthew; 5. Joseph; 0. Jane; 7. Elizal)eth; 8. Margaret. .lAMIOS LAIIfJIlRIDCIO, I), in Ire- L'liid, 1800, r-omiuK the same year with his p;u'(^nts to Nortli townshij), II;i,rrl- son county, (Jhio, wherf; he d. in 1800; m. Dec. 19. 1830, Aniui, Ib^rulerson, dauKhter of William and Sarah Hf!n- derson, of Harrison county (both of whom died In Tuscai'Mwas county, Ohio, the former in 1852, the l;i,tt(!r in 18,50); h.'ul issu(;: 1. S!ir;i,h-Ann, m. Elins Stonebrook, and settled near Carroll- ton, Ohio; 2. E.-W., b. February 2, 1840; m. May 2, 1807, Mary M. Fier- baugh, dnuKhter of Danbd and lOliz.-i- beth FierbnuKh, of Noi'th township; 3. Ellza-Janf!, m. Htmry Lutz, and settled near Cai-rolKon; 4. James-Wesley, set- tled in Carroll county. JOHN LAW, a native of Ireland, of Scotch descent, b. about 1705; d. about 1859; settled in Monroe township. H;ir- rison county, Ohio, Jiliout 1820; m, in lrrd;ind, lOlizjibf^th Lynn, b. about 1781; d. about 1800; hnd issue, ;i,monj< f)f,hers: I. Matthew, ii. in Irchuid, 1800-8; d. In Monroe townshii), Ser)t. 9, 1878-79; m. March 31, 1830, Rel)ecc;i. Biruey. of Creen township, b. 1810; d. Septemlier, 1804; had Issue: 1. .lohn, b. Auk. 20, 1837; m. Feb. 20, 1802. Sarah Jane Trimble, daup;hter of Robert and Snruh EvJiiis Trimble; 2. Willi;irn-B,. b. F-l). 22, 1841; settled in North township; m. (1st) Octolx^r. 1802. Rrdiffca .1. Forbes; m. (2d) 1888. Florence Donald- son. dau"-hter of Will In m and N;incy Emrlish T)ou;i,ldson; 3. Robert -I?., set- tled in North township; 4. Jane, d. in infancy. H. .Jane, b. In Ireland. March 1. 1813; came to Harrison countv with her parents; m. April 10, 1834. William Humphrev, b. In Ire1;md. June. 1812; settled with his mr)tlier and sister in Stock township. Harrison county, in 1832. where he d. 1884; had Isstie; 1. Elizabeth: 2. Thomns. d. March 31, 1880. In S;i1i''ie county. Mo., where he had sr'ttled in 1805; 3. MarKaret. m. Joseph Patterson, and settled In Mis- ilAUlllSON COUNTY (HONIOALOOIIW 581 sourl; 4. Mary-.J., in. \Villi;iiii I'litUn*- Bon, and scM.lcd in (Ircciivvood coiiiity, Kan.; T). C'atlicrini!, m. William I'^ostor, a physician, and H(>lt,Icd in SnpiTicn', Nol).; li. Jolin, soLllcd in JialxiLU;, Kau,; 7. l']lli!ii. m. Almond J5irni-llcl(l, and ntU.(l(id at Jovvctt. III. Homy. IV. Cluirlotto, m. William Beatty, and sottlcMl in LiclcInK county, Ohio. V. i^'ninccs, m. .lolin McMillan, and Hottlod in Washin/.',t()n townHliip. VI. Uobcc.ca, m. Ilohcil, Irvine VII. Margaret, m. .lolin Sinii)S(>ii. iind hcI- tlcd iu Stock townHliij). VIII. Mary, ni. Slmi)son; d. in Illinois. IX. Eliz.-ihclli, in. Robert Hiriiey. Ilobert 'rrimble, fallK^i- ol' S.irali Trimble Law, Ktdtied in Monroe tovvn- sliip, about IX:'.;!; ni. Anj,'. 7, lX'2r>, Siirali Evans, of .Jol'ferHon county, Ohio; had Ibsuo: 1. Mary; 2. Ann; .'{, fjiicy; 1. John, Hottl(Hl in Union county, Olilo; .^>. M.'iitlia; (i. (JcrorKo; 7. Jlf'becca., m. Frank Conrtwrij^ht; settled in li'mnk- lln; 8. Sarah-./an(!, m. .John Law. r,P]ORC;i'] LAVroilT (or Loporth, as ori)j;in!illy fixdleil), ol' h'reiicli \\u^^n<\' not descent, (^migraJcd from M;iryland to tho Bnoch Flats, near Steuben vl Ho, Ohio, before 1800; thence removed to Cadiz township, Tfarrlson county, b(v fore IKOd, sedliiiK on the farm now used as the county Infirmary; bis Hettlenudit at the first was on tin; frontier, anrl dur- InK tho bf)rderw!irswlth the Indians, his cabin was burned by them, and his son Thomas, ai,'ed ei^litr-en, killed; jifter peace wiis decbired, oik? of tlui Indians who had taken piirt in this attack, boasted f)f It in the? presence of .John Ijayport (Thomas's brotlier), during a general muster held In New Phlbulel- phla. The brother attempted to kill the Indl.'ui on llu! spot, but was r(i- Htralned. lb' fifterw;i,rdH followed him from New Philadelphia across Jfnrrl- flon county, to S;ilt Run In .Teffersfiu county, find then desp.ilclir'd him while the Indian wns stof)pinK down to take a drink (from account of Rev. F. Lay- port; SCO also paRo HI, for a slmll;ir Incident). Oeorpe TjCporth was one of the famous hunters of Harrison county in pioneer d;iys, Ji.ll kinds f)f wild K-'irne, turkeys, deer, wolves, and bears then being plentiful In his nelghborhof)d. lie was also a skilled trapper; and sot largo stool traps for boar. " On ono occasion." says Howe, in Ills " History of Ohio," "two of his sons, having trapped a wolf, skinned it alive, and tlHMi turiuMl It loose," as an awful gx- ampio to Its fciliows of wliat was 111 store for them in caso they molested the settler's i'old. (b-orge Liportli oiic.o set a trap for a. benr, wliicli was a,c l)i'!ii-. Not being strong enough to releiiso the trap l)y himself, till- minister was ol)lir;ed to wait until Lepoith (■a.ino along before ho could i)ro(;ee(l. fbiorge Lejiorth, or Layport. d. before Nov. 2!). IH14, leav- ing a, wife, Nancy, and (rhlldren, ,Iolin, Mai-garet llevliii, Ma.i'y Ib-vlln, l)l;iiina Sidker, Nancy Wibum, Isaai'. and Sus- anna, Ua,l)b; of theses: 1. .lolin. d. |i'(d)- rmiry-May. IS:',!); settled In Kt,o('k town- ship (had" Issue: i. William, b. .June 12, ISO.r,; d. March 20. lS(i7; II. Abraham, d. September-November, 1K.''(0; m. S.arali ; III. Isaac, b. Aug. 'ZC, ISM; d. Aug. ."., 1SK2; m. Cynthia ,1). 1X15; d. May 2. ISOr.); 2. Isaac, d. August- October, 1S2r.; m. Sn,rah (loft issue). .TACOn LICMMON, a Methodist EplR- copal minlst.'r, b. 17X!»; d. Mjiy 21, 1H71; rport township, Harrison county, before 1S2I; m. Sarah Ilosley; luul IssiU!: 1. Hosloy; 2. Amon. m. 1Sr)2, Rebecca, Forsytho, b. 1S2'1; d. Aug. 10, 1H72; daughter of .Tesso and Sarah Colvin l0: d. Sopt. 20. ISI;>: settled in \Vashini;ton emuity. Tenn.. near the close of the last eentury: n\. in Anier- iea. Marjiaret Oom\er. h. in Ireland, Oet. 2r>. lTr.r<; d. "Mareh ..'^ lSir>: had Issne: 1. John. II. :yiarj;aret. HI. Wil- liam. IV. Klii-.abeth. V. James, b. in Washington eonnty. Tenn.. Jnly 14, ITSM: d. in Oreen township. Harrison eonnty. IVe. S. ISTt; tlrst settled in r>el- mont eonnty. abont ISIO. removing; to Harrison eo\»nty in 1S20; m. in Wash- insiton eonnty. 1SI(>. Violet Seott. d. Jnne oO. 1S55; danghter of Rev. .\bram Seott. a Presbyterian nvinister, had issne: 1. Mar>;aret-l\ebeeea. b. Pee. -'<. ISIS; d. Jnly 21?. 1S43: L\ Abram-Seott. b. in Belmont eonnty. Jan. S. lS2r. d. Nov. S. 1SS4: m. March 20. 1S57. Celia Pavis. danchter of John Davis, of Ger- man township; S. John-McHowell. b. Oct. 4. 1S22; d. April Hi. 1S2^: 4. Wil- liam, b. April :'0. 1S25: settled in Oreen township; 0. Josiah-^larshall. b. Sept. 15. 1S2S: d. May ;U\ 1S:^nO; 7. Sarah- Mariah. b. Doc. 20. 1S;^^3. YI. :Mary. Vn. "Robert. VHl. Sarah. THOMAS SnirSON. a native of the North of Ireland, of Scottish descent, emigrated from eonnty T.ondonderry to Baltimore. Md.. in 1701?. and thence re- moved to Jetferson eonnty after ISOO; had issne: 1. Andrew, settled at Chil- licothe. Ohio; 2. John, a native of conntv Tyrone. Trelatul. emisxrated to America, and settled in Washinsiton eonnty. Penn.. where he m. ^lar>iavet (or Mary^ T^lcElroy: removed to Harri- son eonnty. Ohio, abont ISOO. and set- tled in Stock township, where he d. lS;^t?: had issne. amonsr others: 1. .Tohn. b. 1S14; d. 1S77; m. ^S:^9. Marsraret T aw. b. in eonnty Tyrone. Ireland. 1S20. dansrhter of John and Bessie Tdnn T aw. who settled in Harrison eonnty. ISJ^O (had issne: i. Mary-.\nn. b. 1S41: m. Joseph C. Patterson: il. Martha, b. 1S42. m. Robert Birney: iii. "Marcaret. b. 1S44. m. Francis Welch: Iv. Matthew- W.. b. Ang. 20. 1S40; settled in Wash- in.i^tiMi township; served in the cMvil War; m. Sept. !("•. IStiO, Kebeeca Hiniey, daii.uhter of .lohn lUrney of Tippv>canoe, 0\\'hi\ v. James, b. isr>0; vl. Henry, b. 1S;M; vii. William, twin brother to Henry, b. IS.M; vlil. Klla. b. ,isr>7: ix. Hotner, b. KMiO; x. Frank-H.. b. IStJO; m. Pec. 7, ISS;!. Pha>be Taylor, b. lSii;>. danghter of Samnel Taylor, of Tnscara- was eonnty (,of Knglish descent), who n\. Melissa Laken, and removed to Stock tmvnship): 2. William, settlsni at Watertown. lOrie cmmty. Penn.. before ISi;?; ;!. Matthew, b. .Ini\e. I77t;: d. ii\ .VUenheny. Penn.. 1S71; en\igrated to America, 17l>;5, and settled at Cadiz; served in the (">hio l-e.iiislatnre: 4. James, d. at Pittsbnri;-. Jnne. 1S1.">; eniitrrated to .Vmeiica. 17i>;%. and settled at Cadi/.: m. June 10, ISOi!, Sarah Ting- ley, b. in New Jersey. May 2;?, 17SI; danghter of Jereniiah Tingley. who served in the Revolntion. and abont 17;H> ren\ined fron\ Sonth .\mboy. N. J., to Winchester. Va.. thence to War- ren township. JetYerson cimtUy, Ohio, abont ISOl ihad issne: i. Matthew, b. at Cadiz, Jnne 20, ISll; d. at Philadel- phia. Jtme IS. 1SS4, bishop in the Meth- odist Episcopal Chnrch. m. Kllen II. Vernerl; 5. Mary. m. John Eagleson, and settled in Harrison eonnty. WILLIAM SKKLLEY.a native of Ire- lai\d. emigrated to .Vmerica and settled in the l.igonier Valley. Westmorelai\d eonnty. Penn.. abont 1702; m. in Ire- land. Fergnson; both died at the place of their tlrst settlement: had is- sne: 1. John, settled in tureen township, Harrison cor.ntv; 2. William: Iv Robert, b. in Ireland. 17SS: d. ISt'S: removed to Stark eonnty. Ohio, in L<;20. and thence to Green township. Harrison eonnty. December. L^42: served in the War of L'sl2: m. in Pennsylvania (IstV L^H>, Ivli/.abeth Creinhton; b. in Pennsyl- vania, abont 1700: d. in Stark eonnty, Ohio. 1S;?S; daxiiihter of Patrick and Fllzabeth Creighton. who were both born in Ireland: m. (2d') lS4r>. Han- nah Miller (h:id issue by first wife: i. Sarah; ii. Elizabeth; iii. John: iv. Elinor; v. Elizabeth: vi. Jane; vii. Rob- ert; viii. William, b. in Stark eonnty. .\ng, I?, 1S;%1; removed to Green town- ship: served as an othcer in the Civil War: m, in Hopedale. 1S02. Mary Frances Moore, a native of Harrison conntv, danghter of James and Ellen HAJtlMHON COUNTY (IKSKALOdlEH Moorf;; Ix. ,iafn<;K, Hi-Mli-.d at MJIfor'J, KoH';iiJHko county, InMlaria;. JOHKI'H HKINN'KK. b. In Kranc«s, Jun<; J 4, )70C; (:tiiiifnit.fA Ut Am<:rl';a an'l flfHt K<;ttl':'J n<;ar thwnKhlp, JfarrlHon county, Jun'j 2, IS^;0, whcf; h'; had locat';d in P,20; m. July 22, 1817, ( lath n.r\ tic ('A'-.rn-.nV,'., h. Auii. 14, nf^fJ; d. April «. J 88.'.; daui-^h- tf;r of Abraham CMuic.n^M, of Ou<;rn>i';y r<:iS<-\<\ t/>wnHhip, Aug. 18, 182Ii; m. July .'i, 1^,.'/;, Ivucy A. ThompKon, b. Jan. 8, 1820, dauKht'jr of IloU^rt and Kllzab. VII, Charles. VIII. Nancy, m. Hull. IX. Lucy, m. Willl«, WILLIAM 8LP:M.M0NS, settled Jn Canton tov/n8hip, Wtuihini^/jn c/fimiy, Penn., about 178f;, then well advanced In yearH, probably reTnovIng from Ha.m- Ut/jnban • " 'p, York <^r county; fter 1800, , 0onK, TtiornaK and WJlHam, of v>nnm: J. TYiornnK, h. MiH-i'j; A. April 9, 1826; m. EHza^K^th , b. \VA''>u; d. April 17, 18.^' ' " ' '':ue; 1. " ' 2. WIJHamr '?>. T '-. rn, J binder, ' of W Buchanfc.-. , ..nder, ', Ujvirn, H^'/pewell trjwnship, WaHhlnstr^n comity (■who had removed from Car- IlHle. Penn.); 4. .John rn. Marjraret Va»- bind'^; .0. Z'dmf^A (: - a; 7. Eliza; 8, .Jane; 9. Mar?j£» John Va:4- Wnder: 10. Mary, II. William ^probably the Hon of Wil- liam and hufthfnr fjf Thomas aV/ve), b. 1761; d. .Jan. 27. 1827: ' '» ; m. ^2d) Jane Or- 177r,-7«: d. .July 4. 1851; had inane: 1. R, ("*). b. 1780; d. Dec. 6, 1 Nancy ^had iH/jue: 1. John-D.. b. 1S07; d. 1821; ii. H' ; 2. Marera- T*^. h 1782-84; d. F' "^' ni. Jacob ^• r; 2. Jr/»^.h-J., o. I>^- 4 ..,., ;.n. S'Ltanna ^; d. Oct. 2'.), 1802; 4. i '.n-.M L'-.f. , in. H. Oiad Iv.hiie, urnoiar others; 1. William, b. 1 821); d. 1848; II. Obedlahj; .''/. Thotiiiin; f). Hatini'-A, b. 1808-09; d. July 26, 1867; m. riKti 1829, Hu«anna <^>»- burn, b. 1810; d. Oct. 22, 1851; m. (M) FAW.a Hearn, b. Feb. 22, 1829; d. Keb. 2.'», 1879; ') of Launcelot and Harbara Hir- l ','r'juhart Ilearn; 7. .Matthew-ih, i'/)n of Hamuel and Catherine Coult*?r Welhh, of Archer tz/wnj-blp. MATTHKW .M. HI/JA'.' "• F'amlly of William Orlmw,, IMNIKL K,Mrnf, b. In ;/ '!, 1774; d. in Kf/>ck t/yv/nf.hip, ; -a r:/^unty, Ohio, July 14, 1856; remov Hun*'- ' ■ ' "' Penn,, \>",fffr,27; rn. <"-'• B*^t, ?;0, 1817, Anna Crarnblet, d- 21, 1876, tlsitiiihtMr frt John Cramt>- 1877 t/jTynjihip; iJ, >iar»iel, "' '^-■'.Ji, rn. C-^'-rr''- P,. b. t; . K. J a 18^2; rn. Nor, n ix. Him eon. twin r/r^/tber '- ' -' '■-'-■> "■ Tvn, 20. r of Vsixih'khl ii. ix:.''. iU;.v>':-';a ii^i.-^ ;.;..*: John- Ktoni. JOHN 8MITTI, a native of Ireland; ,.- ■ ■ - - ' - ■ --••* ^--'«t, n './ year*; had iKKwe: 1. Thomas, b. in Ir«!' ]; - ' "^.7 6, IHOi*: «H:t.Ied In North t ;;r d. Feb. 22. 1881; m. 1828. fn Irelarid. Marv • ' " ' 'L Ausr. 27, 1812; .'', 573 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY June 5, 1882, sister of Dr. Abram Hop- kins, d. 1882, who settled in Canada (had issue: i.Joseph-J., settled in Cleve- land, Ohio; ii. Robert-H., d. in Pitts- burgh, Dec. 12, 1885; iii. Edward-A., d. 1861; iv. Theodore-W., b. March 17, 1846; settled in North township; m. Dec. 8, 1870, Malila English, a native of North township, daughter of James and Ann McCarroll English; v. Alice- J., d. in Leesville; vi. Sarah-E., m. M. Fries- baugh); 2. Robert; 3. William; 4. John; 5. Sarah, m. F. T. Simonton, of Deers- ville. WILLIAM SMITH, see Family of William Ramage. DAVID SMYLIE. a native of Ireland, emigrated to America and first settled in Washington county, Penn., before 1794; removed to Westmoreland coun- ty, Penn., and in 1815 located at Cadiz, Harrison county, Ohio, where he died Sept. 13, 1843; m. in Ireland, Sarah Jane Coon, d. 1843; had issue, among others: 1. William, b. in Washington county, Penn., 1794; settled in Archer township, Harrison county. 1825, where he re- mained until 1855, and then located in Washington county, Iowa, dying there February, 1858; m. 1820, Rachel Bor- land, d. March, 1875, daughter of James Borland, of Butler county, Penn. (had Issue: i. David; ii. James; iii. Marga- ret; iv. John, b. Nov. 9, 1826; m. May 1, 1849, Julia A. Cox, daughter of George and Sarah Titus Cox; v. Samuel; vi. Robert; vii. Matthew; viii. Hugh; ix. Thomas; x. Sarah-Jane; xi. William; xii. Joseph; xiii. Rachel; xiv. David). George Cox, father of Julia A. Smylie. was b. 1784; d. Sept. 12, 1849; son of Richard Cox, of Dutch descent, who came from New Jersey to Steuben- ville, Ohio, before 1800, and later set- tled in Archer township; m. 1808, Sarah Titus, b. 1786; d. 1877, daughter of Jonathan Titus and wife, who were na- tives of Wales, and settled near Cadiz, before 1812; had issue: 1. Mary; 2. Hiram; 3. Rachel, b. in Steubenville; 4. Jeremiah; 5. George: 6. Jonathan; 7. Sarah; 8. Obediah; 9. John; 10. Julia- A., m. John Smylie; 11. Martin. GARRETT SNEDEKER, settled in Washington county, Penn., before 1789; removed to Harrison county, Ohio, about 1800; had issue: I. John, b. in Washington county, 1789; settled in German township, 1816, where he died the same year; m. ia German township, Elizabeth Cutshall, b. in Pennsylvania; d. Sept. 19, 1875; daughter of Nicholas Cutshall, who set- tled in German township, 1800; had issue: 1. Rebecca, m. Jacob Dunmire, and settled in Jasper county, Iowa; 2. Samuel, b. in Wayne township, Jeffer- son county, Feb. 9, 1812; settled in Ger- man township; m. Oct. 30, 1849, Mary J. Glasener, daughter of Garrett and Ann Maholm Glasener, natives of Pennsyl- vania, who settled at Cadiz, 1800; 3. Garrett, d. in infancy; 4. Elizabeth. II. Jacob. III. Elizabeth. IV. Mary. MARTIN SNYDER, a native of Ger- many, b. 1728; d. Nov. 7, 1810; emi- grated to America and first settled in Adams county, Penn., before 1775, where he married Catherine Amon, b. in. Pennsylvania, 1759; d. Aug. 29, 1821; settled in Green township, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1802; had issue: I. Martin, b. in Adams county, Penn.,. 1775; d. in Green township, April 12, 1819; m. 1803, Ruth Tipton, b. near Bal- timore, 1779; d. Feb. 5,1850; daughter of Samuel and Nancy Tipton (the former, after the death oif his wife, located in Jefferson county, Ohio, about 1802) ; had issue: 1. Catherine; 2. Martin, b. 1805; d. 1882; 3. Mary, b. in Green township, Sept. 7. 1808; m. July 13, 1837, Walter Jamison (his second wife), b. Feb. 24, 1801; d. July 1, 1883; son of John and Ann Craig Jamison, who settled in Cadiz town- ship, about 1802 (had issue: i. Martin- S., settled in Cadiz; ii. Jane-A., m. George W. Glover; iii. Ruth-Ellen, d. in infancy; iv. William-Walter, b. 1849; d. 189—); 4. Amon; 5. Jacob, b. July 5, 1814; m. June 24, 1847. Eliza- beth Bradford, daughter of Thomas Bradford, of Green township (had is- sue: i. Martin, b. March 7, 1848; m. (1st) Mary J. Carson, d. August, 1857; m. (2d) Nancy Jane McGuire; ii. Mary- Catherine, m. Leander Bigger, of Ca- diz; iii. Sarah; iv. Caroline; v. Isabella^ m. Finley Mattern); 6. Nancy; 7. Zachariah; 8. Samuel. II. Adam. III. Henry. IV. John. V. Catherine, b. in Ireland, 1794: d. Feb. 5. 1869; m. 1820. Dr. Moses Kennedy, b. Dec. 24, 1797; d. April 7, 1857: son of Michael and Margaret Thompson Kennedy, of the North of Ireland; had issue: 1. Margaret, b. 1821; d. 1871; HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 573 m. 1837, Allen G. Turner (had issue, among others:' i. Moses-Kennedy, m. Eliza J. Craig, daughter of Johnson and Martha Thompson Craig; settled at Columbus, Neb.); 2. Elizabeth-Ann, b. 1822; d. young; 3. Michael-Butler, m. Lucinda Crossan; 4. Isabella, b. 1837; m. 1847, Ephraim Clark (see Family of Roger Clark); 5. Martin-Snyder, b. 1829; m. Martha McKee; 6. Caroline-M., b. 1832; 7. Martha-A., b. 1834; m. John McConnell; 8. Benjamin-F., b. 1836; m. Mary Jane Harrison. VI. Mary. VII. Eve. VIII. Elizabeth. IX. Magdalene, m. Pumphrey. CHRISTIAN SPIKER. of Dutch de- scent, emigrated from Pennsylvania, and settled in Stock township, before 1806; d. December, 1820; m. Diana ; had issue: I. Christian, or Christopher, b. in Stock township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1806; d. 1879; m. Aerie Carnes. b. 1804; d. March 1870; had issue: 1. William, b. 1826; settled at Deersville; m. 1845, Mary Cottrell, daughter of Adam Cot- trell, a native of Scotland (d. 1842; his wife d. 1886) (had issue, among others: i. George-D., b. Dec. 26, 1846-; settled at Scio, Harrison county; m. 1871, Eliza- beth Gibson, daughter of Edward and Catherine Gibson (both of whom died in Harrison county); 2. George-W. ; 3. Mary-J., m. Cornelius Vickers; 4. John- W.. b. July 31. 1833; m. 1859, Nancy Crawford, daughter of Josiah Crawford, of Stock township; 5. Henry-C; 6. Henrj^ 7. Elizabeth, m. David Christy; 8. Christiana, m. William Hines; 9. Catherine, m. Samuel Hines; 10. Sarah- Ann. II. .John. III. Joseph. THOMAS SPROULL, b. in Ireland, 1799, son of Robert Sproull; emigrated to America, and. about 1819, settled in Short Creek township, Harrison coun- ty. Ohio: removed in 1823 to Moorefield township, where he d. April 19, 1872; m. (1st) in Ireland. Mary Hastings; d. about 1822; m. (2d) Elizabeth Cald- well; bad issue by first wife: 1. Wil- liam, settled in Coshocton county, Ohio; had issue liy second wife: 2. Andrew; 3. Robert; 4. John, b. Sept. 23. 1842; m. Amanda White, b. .Inly 26. 1854. daugh- ter of Joseph and Sarah Lee White, of Nottingham township; 5. Hugh; 6. Thomas. RALPH SPURRIER, see Family of John Heberling. , JACOB STAHL, b. in Maryland, Aug. 13, 1784; d. 1845; settled in Rumley township, Harrison county, Ohio, in 1816; had issue: 1. William, b. in Charles county, Md., 1810; d. 1876; m.in Rumley township, Susanna Canaga, b. 1811; d. 1872 (had issue: i. Sarah, m. Abram Busby; ii. Maria, m. James Shambaugh; iii. Elizabeth, m. A. L. Ridenaur; iv. James, b. Oct. 6, 1845; m. Oct. 11, 1866, Sarah Jane Braden, b. Feb. 2, 1844, daughter of Gettys and Rachel Cox Braden); 2. Elizabeth, m. George Simmons; 3. John, b. in Fred- erick, Md., June 12, 1810; d. Aug. 27, 1881; m. March 18, 1832, Mary Ann Condo, b. in Penn., Feb. 28, 1813; d. Feb. 9, 1896; daughter of Jacob and Mary Ann Shuss Condo (had issue: i. Jacob, b. 1833; d. 1872; m. (1st) Cath- erine Knauf; m. (2d) Elizabeth Kim- mel; ii. Margaret, b. July, 1835; m. Thomas Lucas; iii. Catherine, b. 1837; m. Arnold Wheeler; iv. Mary-Ann, b. 1839; m. David Hazlitt; v. Susan, b. 1841; d. young; vi. Samuel, b. 1846; d. in infancy; vii. Samantha-Jane, b. Jan. 20, 1854; m. Albert Houck); 4. Marga- ret, m. Peter Manbeck; 5. Catherine, m. Abraham Gotshall, and settled in Meigs county, Ohio; 6. Mary, m. Daniel Hilbert, and settled in Defiance county, Ohio; 7. Matilda, d. young; 8. Susanna, m. Abraham Kimmel; 9. James, m. Elizabeth Shuss; 10. Lydia, m. Jere- miah Condo. Gettys Braden, d. April 13, 1851, iu Crawford county, Ohio, father of Sarah Jane Braden Stahl, was a son of Thomas and Jane Braden, of Gettys- burg, Penn.. m. May 2. 1842. Rachel Cox, d. at Baxter Springs. Cherokee county. Kan.. Feb. 7. 1883. daughter of George and Sarah Cox; had issue: 1. Sarah-Jane: 2. Rachel-Ann, b. 1846; d. 1867; 3. George-Thomas, settled at Caney, Kan.; 4. William-Wilson; set- tled at Conneaut, Ohio. JAMES STEEL, a native of Virginia; had issue: I. John. II. Basil-E., b. in Berkeley county. West Va. ; removed to Pennsvlvania, and thence, about 1815. to Washington township. Harrison county, Ohio; d. 1857; m. in Pennsylvania, Rachel Spaulding, d. 1874; had issue: 1. John; 574 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY 1 2. Sarah; 3. Marj" 4. Matilda- Jane; 5. Nancy; 6. Andrew; 7. Basil; 8. Wil- liam; 9. Daniel; 10. David, b. Oct. 31, 1822; m. (1st) April 10, 1845, Elizabeth Vermillion, of Guernsey county, Ohio; d. Dec. 17, 1885; m. (2d) Feb. 11, 1890, Mrs. Comfort Lindsey, of Flushing (had issue by first wife: i. John-B.; ii. Andrew-J.; iii. Joseph-M.; iv. Frank- lin; V. William; vi. Henry; vii. Spauld- ing; viii. Amanda; ix. Matilda; x. Olive). SILAS STEPHEN, settled in Short Creek township, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1808 or 1810; had issue among others: 1. Jonathan, b. June 5, 1799; d. 1880; m. Feb. 24, 1825, Elizabeth Salo- mons, b. Jan. 22. 1808 (had issue, among others: i.Zachariah, served in the Civil War, and died in that service; ii. Silas, b. Dec. 23, 1841; served in the Civil War; m. May 7, 1889, Sarah R. Bar- croft, daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth Hunter Barcroft (the former b. in Jef- ferson county, 1814; d. in Hopedale, Nov. 6, 1886; the latter, a native of Westmoreland county. Penn.. who came with her parents to Ohio in 1835). /i, ARCHIBALD STEWART, a native of eland; emigrated to Pennsylvania with his parents, and about 1816 re- moved to Harrison county. Ohio, set- tling near Cadiz, where he d. March 18, 1854; m. in Pennsylvania, 1805, Marga- ret Donaldson; d. Nov. 13, 1849; had is- sue: 1. James; 2. Samuel, b. June 25, 1809; settled in Washington township: m. June 2, 1840. Maria Auld, daughter of William and Mary McAdoo Auld (had issue: i. Mary, b. April 6, 1841; ii. Archibald, b. Jan. 10, 1843: iii. William- Alexander, b. Aug. 16, 1845; iv. Marga- ret, b. Sept. 10, 1847; v. James-M., b. Jan. 25, 1850; vi. Samuel-D.; vii. Thomas-M.. b. Nov. 3. 1855); 3. Mary; 4. Isabelle; 5. Margaret. Samuel Auld, grandfather of Maria Auld, was a native of Ireland; emi- grated to Pennsylvania and thence re- moved to Nottingham township. Harri- son county; had issue: 1. .John; 2. Samuel; 3. Mary; 4. James; 5. William, 6. Eliza; 7. Diana; 8. Robert; 9. Stew- art: 10. Grace; 11. William, d. .Tan. 11, 1880; m. (1st) Mary McAdoo; d. 1820: m. (2d) Elizabeth Todd (had issue by first wife: i. Maria, m. Samuel Stewart; had issue by second wife: ii. .Tames; iii. George-T.; iv. Alexander-T.). JACOB STONER, b. near Hagers- town, Md., Dec. 25, 1815; son of Jacob and Mary Stoner, the former of whom died in Maryland in 1817; settled in Colerain township, Belmont county, Ohio, 1818, thence removed to Deers- ville, Harrison county, some years afterward, and later located in Mon- roe township; m. April 26, 1838, Honor Sneider, b. in Washington county, Penn., June 25, 1820, daughter of David and Christina Sneider, of Monroe town- ship; had issue: 1. Mary-E., m. Urias B. Hite, and settled at Dennison, Ohio; 2. Sarah, m. Michael Lynch, and settled at Dennison, Ohio: 3. William, settled in Monroe township: served in the Civil War; 4. David, b. Sept. 23, 1845; served in the Civil War; m. (1st) March. 14, 1867, Mary Fowler; d. March 31, ]874; daughter of John E. Fowler; m. (2d) Sept. 26, 1879, Susan Winrod, b. in Belmont county, Ohio; 5. Jacob-S., set- tled in Franklin township; 6. James-M., settled at Tippecanoe, Ohio; 7. Ella-C, m. James M. Evans, and settled at Auburn, Sangamon county. 111.; 8. George-W., served in the Civil War; d. March 30, 1865, at Camp Chase. JOHN STRINGER, b. in Chester county, Penn., 1776; removed to Jeffer- son county, Ohio, about 1800; settled near York, Ohio, 1811, where he d. July 10, 1845; his wife, whom he had mar- ried in Pennsylvania, d. May 12, 1850; had issue: 1. William, b. in Jefferson county, Au-. 19. 180?.; d. Aug. 16. 1S59; m. (1st) March 19, 1829, Jane .Johnston; d. June 5, 1838: daughter of Richard Johnston, a resident of Harrison coun- ty, Ohio; m. (2d) 1839. Isabella Fergu- son; d. Oct. 15, 1888, daughter of Henry Ferguson (had issue by first wife: i. Jane; ii. John-M.. b. March 4, 1832; set- tled in Green township, where he d. May 4, 1889; m. Sept. 5. 1861, Susanna Buchanan, b. Oct. 9, 1841, daushter of John Buchanan, a pioneer in Harrison county; iii. Johnston; iv. Ann-E.; had issue by second wife: v. Henry; vi. Thomas- J.; vii. Joseph-E.; viii. Fred- erick-M.; ix. Sarah: x. Maria); 2. James; 3. John; 4. Sarah; 5. Elizabeth; 6. Mary; 7. Rebecca. JAMES TAGGART. a native of Penn- sylvania, m. Mary Ferguson; had is- sue: I. John. b. in Washington county, Penn., 1778; d. June 4, 1843; removed to HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 575 Green township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1803, where he died; m. in Penn- sylvania, Margaret Miller, b. March 12, 1779; d. Aug. 31, 1861; had issue: 1. James, b. July 22, 1806; d. Oct. 15, 1890; m. March 12, 1835, Anne Craig, d. Feb. 24, 1887, daughter of John Craig, an early settler in Ohio (had issue: i. Margaret, b. April 23, 1836; m. Dr. J. B. Crawford, and settled at Gillespie, 111.; ii. John. b. May 28, 1839; d. Dec. 31, 1842; iii. Milton-J., b. July 19, 1842; served in the Civil War; m. Oct. 25, 1887, Anna Patten, of Sidney, Shelby county, Ohio, daughter of H. T. Patten; iv. Elizabeth-A., b. March 10, 1845; m. J. B. Mansfield, and settled in Jefferson county; v. James-A., b. Jan. 8, 1848; d. Mav 7, 1849; vi. Mary-R., b. Mav 27, 1850; vii. Luella-K., b. Oct. 26, 1856; m. W. H. Eagleson, and settled in Green township) ; 2. Margaret; 3. Mary; 4. John; 5. Geoi'ge; 6. Jane; 7. David; 8. Alexander. II. James. III. Samuel. IV. Robert. V. Jane. VI. Elizabeth. ISAAC THOMAS, see account of Abraham Branson. AARON THOMPSON, see account of Alexander Green. DAVID THOMPSON, a native of county Tyrone, Ireland, b. 1772; d. 1868; son of .Joseph Thompson, who emigrated to America and settled near Chambersburg, Penn., in 1792 (Joseph Thompson d. about 1819) ; David m. in Pennsylvania, Martha Gift, of German parentage, b. 1778; d. 1843; settled about one mile north of Cadiz, Harri- son county, Ohio, in 1814; had issue: 1. Joseph: 2. Elizabeth, m. William Mc- Fadden, and settled in Iowa; 3. Mary, m. Joseph McFadden, and settled in Cadiz township; 4. David; 5. John, d. in Washineton county, Iowa; 6. Kath- erine. m. John Sharp, of Holmes coun- ty, Ohio: 7. Martha, m. Adam Dunlap: 8. Rachel, m. S. Atkinson, and settled in Holmes county, Ohio: 9. James, b. March 3, 1818; m. 1848. Margaret Cros- key. daughter of William and Mary Crabb Croskey, of Harrison county; re- moved to Cadiz, 1889 (had issue: i. Mary-Emma, d. aged sixteen years; ii. Martha-Elizabeth, m. A. W. McDonald, of Pittsburg, Penn.; iii. Anna-Caroline, m. William H. Arnold, of Cadiz; iv. David); 10. Sophia, m. John Hitch- cock. GABRIEL THOMPSON, b. in Har- ford county, Md.; d. at Jewett, Ohio, February, 1879; m. in Carroll county, 1830, Elizabeth Allen, d. in Carroll county, Aug. 26, 1866; daughter of Jos- eph and Sarah Allen, of Otsego county, N. Y.; had issue: 1. Gilbert, m. 1854, Elizabeth A. Carr; 2. H W., m. 1865, Catherine Kirby; 3. Lydia-A., m. 1848, Henry Pittenger; 4. Antoinette, m. 1848, Samuel Pittenger; 5. Bath- sheba, m. 1860, Henry Mook; 6. Harvey- L., b. in Perry township. Carroll coun- ty, June 7,1842; settled in Archer town- ship, Harrison county, 1878; m. Aug. 3, 1871, at New Rumley, Maria Sham- baugh, b. Aug. 22, 1844; daughter of Michael (b. in Penn., 1811; d. 1863) and Hetta Hazlett (b. in Penn., 1816; d. 1884) Shambaugh; 7. Sarah-A.. m. 1873, Josiah Long; 8. Joseph-W.,d. May. 1882. THOMAS THOMPSON, b. in Penn- sylvania, 1780; d. Jan. 18, 1875; re- moved to Harrison county, Ohio, 1816 (his father, who was twice married — Eleanor Lindsey, of Scotch descent, having been his first wife — was a na- tive of Ireland who had settled in Half Moon Valley. Centre county, Penn.) ; m. May 4, 1803, Catherine Wes- ton, b. 1785; d. May 29, 1860, of German descent, daughter of Thomas Weston, whose family were pioneers in Penn- sylvania; had issue: 1. Nancy; 2. John, b. in Half Moon Valley, Penn.. Aug. 8, 1808; removed to Green township, Har- rison county, about 1831. where he set- tled; m. (1st) Elizabeth Baker, d. 1851; m. (2d) Sept. 27, 1859, Hannah Lewis, daughter of Jof=eph Lewis (had issue by first wife: i. Thomas; ii. Margaret; iii. John-B.; iv. Mary: v. Rezin: vi. Jos- eph-M.: vii. Sarah-C; viii. Nancy-E.; ix. Eliiah); 3. Sarah; 4. Thomas: 5. Mary: 6. Catherine: 7. Elijah: 8. Elea- nor; 9. Joseph; 10. Rachel-.Tane. WILLIAM THOMPSON, of Scotch- Irish descent, a native of Franklin county, Penn.; removed from Cham- bersburg to Westmoreland county, Penn.. about 1780. whore '-"e di^d; served in the Revolutionary War; had issue, among others: I. Samuel, b. Nov. 6, 1781: d. June 6. 1866: settled in Har- rison county. 1813: m. in Pennsylvania, 1810, Elizabeth Stewart, b. Dec. 14, 1785; d. Aug. 29. 1873; daughter of John Stewart, of Scotch descent, who had settled in Butler county, Penn.; had is- 576 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY sue: 1. Samuel, b. Sept. 18, 1822; m. Sept. 18, 1851, Sarah Jane Moorhead, daughter of Judge Moorhead, of Archer township; settled In Green town- ship; 2. Jane. m. H. Stewart Black; set- tled in Green township; 3. Eliza, m. Gray, and settled in Delaware county. Ohio; 4. Ellen, m. Moor- head, and settled in Delaware county, Ohio; 5. Martha, b. Dec. 26, 1810; d. Julv 16, 1890; m. 1834. Johnson Craig, b. Dec. 3, 1803; d. July 14, 188S; 6. Maria, b. Jan. 13. 1813; d. Aug. 25, 1875; m. Jonathan Gray, b. 1807. d. July 14, 1873; 7. Isabel, m. — Rea; 8. Margaret, b. July 11, 1820; m. Samuel Cochran. CHARLES TIMMONS. b. 1751; d. 1820; removed from Martinsburg. West Va., to Cadiz. Ohio, about 1812; m., probably in West Virginia, Mary Mag- dalene Forney, b. 1775; d. 1850: daugh- ter of Abraham (1740-1824) and Susanna (1752-1842) Forney, all of German de- scent: had issue: 1. Abraham, b. Aug. 11, 1794; m. Martha Dent; 2. Eli, b. Aug. 18, 1796; 3. William, b. June 15, 1798; 4. Charles, b. Sept. 28. 1800; d. 1801; 5. Catherine, b. Oct. 27, 1802; 6. Frederick, b. July 15, 1805; m. Eliza Lacey; 7. Emanuel, b. May 9, 1808; 8. Benjamin, b. at Martinsburg, Nov. 17, 1810; d. June 3, 1898; m. at Mount Pleasant, Ohio. 1854, Mary Ann Meek, daughter of Joseph (1798-1833) and Rachel Cuppy (1784-1843) Meek; 9. Samuel, b. 1813; 10. Forney, b. March 3, 1817; d. 1886; m. at Cadiz. 1839. Eliza- beth Stinson Lacey, b. June 8, 1818; d. 1898; daughter of and Mary Clifton Lacev (had issue: i. Caroline, b. 1840; m. 1864. Charles N. Allen; ii. Milton- J., b. 1841; served in the Civil War; m. Josephine B. McLean; settled at Peabody. Kan.; iii. Benjamin-F., b. 1844; served in the Civil War; m. Frances Jones: settled at Peabody, Kan.; iv. Robert-Lacey, b. January, 1850; m. 1879. Isabel Amanda Howard, daughter of John M. and Elizabeth Edna Howard, of Barnesville, Ohio). WILLIAM TINGLEY. b. in New Jer- sey, 1787; d. at Cadiz. Ohio, 1863; re- moved to West Virginia, and thence, about 1806. to Cadiz: m. Rachel Paul- son, b. in Maryland. 1789; d. 1876; daughter of James and Rachel Durbin Paulson, of Harrison county (the former d. 1816); had issue: 1. Amanda, b. 1816; d. 1888; m. 1836, Sylvanus Wood, b. 1805; d. 1845; son of James and Elizabeth Steel Wood, from Wash- ington county, N. Y. (had issue: i. Elizabeth, m. Andrew Henderson Carn- ahan; ii. Tingley-Sylvanus, m. Leonora Chestnut, and settled at Leadville, Colo.); 2. Joseph, b. 1822; 3. Jeremiah, b. 1826; 4. TempeiWce, b. 1830. Wil- liam Tingley's fathei^ (Jeremiah Ting- ley) and grandfather (Joseph Tingley), both natives of New Jersey, both served in the Revolutionary War. AQUILA TIPTON, removed from Jef- ferson county, and settled in Stock township, Harrison county, about 1800, where he died October, 1826: had issue, among others: 1. Aquila. b. June 1. 1800; d. May 30. 1875; m. Nancy Waller, b. in Maryland, Dec. 26. 1802; d. May 4, 1871; daughter of George Waller, a native of Maryland (had is- sue: i. Benjamin, b. Jan. 5. 1823; ii. Mary-J.. b. Aug. 22. 1824; settled in Missouri; iii. Sarah-A., b. Aug. 24. 1826; iv. Ruth, b. Jan. 15. 1829; m. Hines; settled in Uhrichsville. Ohio; v, Rachel, b. Aug. 10. 1830. m. Abrams. and settled in Oregon; vi. Charlotte-H.. b. Aug. 4, 1832; vii. Jared, b. Sept. 4, 1834; viii. Ephraim. b. May 4. 1836; ix. Aquila, b. May 24, 1838: settled in Nottins;ham township; m. April 28, 1861. Maria Scott, b. July 25, 1840. daughter of Charles and Margaret Dodds Scott [the former a native of Jefferson county, Ohio; the latter a na- tive of Ireland]; x. Martha, b. 1840; xi. Nancy, b. Aug. 31, 1841; xii. George- W., b. Sept. 7. 1844; settled in Archer township; xiii. Thomas-B., b. Sept. 15, 1856; settled in Illinois); 2. Rebecca, m. Waller; 3. Charity, m. Gugan; 4. Nancy; 5. Keziah; 6. Ketura, m. Cox; 7. William: 8. Shad- rach; 9. Samuel; 10. John. DAVID TOWNSEND, d. near Harris- ville. 1874, where he had settled in 1812, having removed from Bucks county, Penn.. with his father, Joseph Town- send (d. about 1815); m. in Ohio. Cath- erine Cherry, d. 1872; had issue, among others: I. Joseph, b. June 2. 1818: m. 1842. Albina Strodes. a native of Har- risville. d. 1874; had issue: 1. David-C, b. March 13, 1846; m. 1870, Adeline Morris. ROBERT TRIMBLE, see Family of John Law. HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 577 JOHN TRUSHEL, b. 1802; d. 1884; son of Solomon Trushel, an old settler in Harrison county, Ohio; m. Frances Little, b. 1796; d. 187G; had issue: 1. Solomon; 2. Eli, settled in Tuscarawas county, Ohio; 3. Peter, settled in North township: 4. David, settled in Car- roll county; 5. William; 6. Valentine, b. Oct. 17, 1846; settled in North town- ship; m. 1875, Rebecca Stearns, daugh- ter of William and Susan Stearns, of Carroll county, Ohio; 7. Abraham; 8. Joshua; 9. Mahala; 10. Elizabeth, m. James Morgan, of Carroll county; 11. Susanne; 12. Mary, m. Thomas Rea, of Monroe township; 13. Sai'ah. ROBERT VINCENT, d. 1841; emi- grated from the North of Ireland, and about 1801, settled in Green township, Harrison county, Ohio; had issue, among others: 1. Thomas-C, m. 1820, Jane Macurdy, daughter of John Ma- curdy (had issue: i. Agnes-T., m. John Beall — see Beall Family; ii. Jane-C, m. James Deary; iii. Thomas-M., m. Laura Lancaster; iv. Albert; v. Mary, m. Thomas Craig; vi. Sarah; vii. Oliver); 2. Jane, m. William Chambers. THOMAS VINCENT, a physician, b. 1754; d. Aug. 31, 1841; settled in Green township before 1827: m. Jane , b. 1783; d. Oct. 11, 1858; had issue: 1. Joseph; 2. Thomas-W.; 3. Robert; 4. James; 5. Amanda; 6. Sarah; 7. Martha, m. 1827, Thomas Milligan; 8. Jane, m. 1834. Isaac Holmes. JACOB VOORHEES. a native of New Jersey, b. 1767; d. July 4, 1876; son of Jacob Voorhees fof German descent, the family having first settled in Amer- ica about 1670) ; removed to Wellsburg, Va.. thence to Jefferson county, Ohio, with his father, before 1803; settled in North township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1833, where he died; m. in Fayette county, Penn., Elizabeth Gaskell, b. 1795; d. Jan. 16. 1876; daughter of Budd and Hannah G. Gaskell (the former served in the Revolutionary War, and d. in Crawford county, Penn.); had is- sue: 1. Samuel-Sickles; 2. Andrew- Linn; 3. Charles-F., settled at Millers- burg. Ohio; 4. John-Alexander, b. Oct. 20, 1823, in Jefferson county; settled in North township; m. 1864. Ann Doyle, b. in Ireland. 1842; d. .July 2, 1890; daugh- ter of Patrick and Honora Hickey Doyle (the latter d. in Ireland. 1848; the former settled in America, 1853) ; 5. Crawford-B., settled at Scio; 6. Louise, m. Benjamin Simms, and settled in Missouri; 7. George-W., b. 1830; d. in Coshocton county, Ohio, Nov. 11, 1890; 8. Jacob-Ogden, settled at Uhrichsville; 9. Richard-Marion, settled in Coshoc- ton, Ohio. WILLIAM WADDINGTON, see Fam- ily of John Harrison. JOSEPH WALKER, b. in county Derry, Ireland. 1757; emigrated to America and settled in New York City, 1813; a short time later removed to Greensburg, Penn., and in 1822 to near Laceysville, Stock township, Harrison county, Ohio, where he d. 1842; m. in Ireland, Constancia Stewart, b. 1755; d. 1846; had issue: 1. John; 2. James; 3. George; 4. William, b. in Ireland, 1806; settled in Stark township, where he d. April 27, 1886; m. June 10, 1834, Jane McKinney, b. in Washington county, Penn.. July 14, 1802; d. July 5. 1878; daughter of George and Mary McKin- ney (had issue: i. Joseph, b. June 24, 1836; m. Feb. 12, 1863, Agnes Gibson, b. Jan. 4, 1843, daughter of James B. and Lillian Maxwell Gibson, natives of Pennsylvania; ii. Mary, m. An- derson, and settled in Auglaize county, Ohio); 5. Mary; 6. Elizabeth. JOHN WALLACE, a native of York county, Penn., b. 1760: d. May 1, 1832; removed to Washington county. Penn., about 1804, and a year later to Putney township. Belmont county, Ohio: set- tled in Moorefield township, Harrison county, 1822; m. Margaret Anderson, b. in York county, Penn.. 1767; d. March 25, 1848; had issue: 1. William, d. 1842; m. Mary W. (had issue: i. John; ii. Nathaniel-S.: iii. William-A.; iv. Samuel-M.; v. Wilson-E.; vi. Sarah- Ann; vii. Eleanor-S.: viii. Marscaret-J."* ; 2. Allen, b. in York county, Penn.. April 15, 1793: settled in Moorefield township, where he d. Feb. 21. 1880; m. in Bel- mont county, Mary Brown (had issue: i. John; 11. Andrew; iii. William; iv. Marv; v. James; vi. Elijah-R.. b. March 16. 1828; m. Jan. 23. 1868. Eliza- beth Brokaw, b. March 25. 1842, daugh- ter of Abraham and Mary Guthrie Brokaw, natives of Ohio; vii. Anderson, settled at Wooster, Ohio; viii. Samuel, settled at Wooster, Ohio); 3. Nancy; 4. Jane. 578 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY THOMAS WALLACE, of Scotch- Irish descent; resided in York county, Penn., about 1775; had issue, among otliers: I. John, b. in York county, Penn., May 8, 1774; removed to Warren township, Jefferson county, Ohio, 1796, where he remained until 1804, tlience located in Green township, Harrison county, Ohio, where he d. June 4, 1863; m. in York county, Oct. 6, 1795, Eliza- beth McCleary, b. Sept. 23, 1776; d. Feb. 19, 1855; daughter of Abel Mc- Cleary, a resident of York county; had issue: 1. William, b. Oct. 3, 1796; 2. Isaac, b. Oct. 9, 1798; 3. Thomas, b. Sept. 20, 1800; 4. Robert, b. Oct. 26, 1802; 5. Rebecca, b. June 6, 1804; 6. Mar- garet, b. July 16, 1806; 7. John, b. May 5, 1809; 8. Nathaniel- Anderson, b. July 16, 1811; d. Dec. 28, 1892; m. (1st) March 4, 1834, Jane Watson; d. Feb. 18, 1868, daughter of Robert Watson, of Athens township. Harrison countv; m. (2d) Sept. 2, 1869, Sarah Goodrich; d. Oct. 9, 1873, daughter of George Good- rich, formerly a resident of Carroll county, Ohio; m. (3d) June 24. 1875, Elizabeth Marsh, daun;hter of Oliver Marsh, a resident of Pennsylvania; 9. Abraham, b. Aug. 24, 1813; 10. Eliza- beth, b. March 22, 1821. JOSHUA P. WATSON, of Scotch- Welsh descent, b. near West Libertv, West Va., March 21, 1802; son of Aaron and Nancy Watson, who settled in West Virginia about 1800; removed, about 1831, to New Athens. Harrison county, Ohio; settled in Harrisville, Harrison county, 1835, where he d. July 27, 1882; m. (1st) in West Virginia, 1823, Martha Humes, b. May 29, 1804; d. Feb. 27, 1836; m. (2d) Sarah M. Mc- Millan, a native of Harri=?ville. d. Ausr. 8, 1844; m. (3d) Louise M. Rimby, had issue by first wife: 1. Samuel-H., set- tled at Vinton, Iowa; 2. Martha- Ann, m. Collins, and settled at Vaca- ville, Cal.; 3. Louis-W., b. March 2, 1827; d. May 25, 1861; m. March 16, 1848. Julia Carver, b. Nov. 14, 1830, daughter of Thomas and Tomson Gray Carver, the former b. in Bucks county, Penn.. 1788; d. Oct. 13, 1855, having come there from Downingtown, Penn., 1815; the latter b. 1797; d. Feb. 4, 1843; daughter of Thomas Gray, who settled in Harrisville, 1803 (had issue: i. Wil- liam, b. June 29. 1848; d. in infancy; ii. Albert, b. July 30, 1849; d. in infancy; iii. Thomas-Wesley, b. Sept. 21, 1850; settled in Harrisville; m. Nov. 22, 1876, Nancy J. King, b. Aug. 28, 1848, daugh- ter of Charles Edward and Hannah Mary Hanna King, of Mount Pleasant, Ohio (the former b. near Baltimore, Md., 1808; d. March 27, 1857; the latter a native of Loudoun county, Virginia, b. Sept. 17, 1815; d. Jan. 8, 1872); iv. Florence, b. July 11, 1853; d. Oct. 10,- 1873; V. Mary-Narcissa, b. March 25, 1856; m. Aug. 30, 1875, J. W. Adams, and settled in Short Creek township) ; 4. ; 5. ; 6. ; 7. ; 8. ; 9. ; had issue by second wife: 10. James-M., settled at Vinton, Iowa; 11. ; 12. ; had issue by third wife: 13. -, m. Dr. R. D. Wilkin; settled in Atlantic, Iowa; 14. Charles-N.; 15. George-W.; 16. Frank, settled at Chicago; 17. Harvey, settled at Chicago. WILLIAM WATSON, emigrated from Scotland and settled at Baltimore; re- moved to Pennsylvania about 1790; had issue: I. Robert, b. in Scotland or in Baltimore, March 3, 1786; removed to Athens township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1831, where he d. Nov. 19, 1872; m. in Washington county, Penn., Oct. 25, 1810, Rachel Wilson, d. May 18, 1866, daughter of Robert Wilson; had issue: 1. James, b. March 2, 1812; d. Aug. 15, 1815; 2. John-W., b. in Wash- inaton cotrnty, Feb. 7, 1814; d. July 22, 1859; m. (1st) Julia Barricklow; m. (2d) March 16, 1848, Rebecca Dunlap, daughter of John Dunlap, of Athens township (had Issue by first wife: i. Rachel; had issue by second wife: ii. Robert, b. May 7, 1849; d. Aug. 28. 1849; iii. Adam-D., b. March 24, 1850; iv. Nancv-A., b. March 28, 1853); 3. Jane, b. May 1. 1815; d. Feb. 9. 1868. m. N. An- derson Wallace; 4. Alexander, b. July 3, 1817; d. Nov. 7, 1817; 5. Rachel, b. Jan. 30. 1819; d. March 30. 1839; m. John Barricklow; 6. Smith-R., b. Oct. 12, 1821; d. April 30, 1877; served as a member of the Ohio Legislature, 1864; m. Dec. 9, 1847, Susan J. McDowell, daughter of Samuel McDowell, of Athens township; 7. Nancy-G., b. Jan. 30, 1823; m. Joshua Dunlap. WILLIAM WATTBRS, a native of Maryland, of Scotch descent, settled in Harrison county, Ohio, before 1813, where he died; had issue, among others: 1. Nathan, b. in Harrison coun- HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 579 ty, 1813; d. April 29, 1887; m. Catherine Foutz, b. in North township, Harrison county, 1813; d. April 28, 1874; daugh- ter of Michael Foutz, a pioneer of Har- rison county (had issue: i. John; ii. Elizabeth; iii. Jonathan; iv. Elijah; v. William, b. Sept. 12, 1848; settled in North township; m. March 23, 1882, Mrs. Sarah A. Clemens, widow of Jephtha Clemens (who d. in Youngs- town, Ohio), daughter of George W. and Sophia Simmonds, of Monroe town- ship; vi. Isaiah, settled in Tuscarawas county, Ohio). JACOB WEBB, a native of Maryland, b. 1773; removed to Brownsville, Penn., before 1800, where he m. Hannah Kirk, b. 1775; d. 1858; daughter of Adam Kirk, a native of Pennsylvania; settled in Athens township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1809, where he d. 1833; had issue: I. Sarah; 2. Esther, m. Joseph Huff, and settled in Athens township; 3. Edith, m. John Major, and settled in Athens township; 4. Hannah, m. Cyrus Holt; 5. John, b. Feb. 5, 1806; settled In Athens township; m. Nov. 11, 1830, Martha Holmes, b. in Short Creek township, Jan. 8, 1811. daughter of Col. Joseph Holmes (had issue: i. Joseph, b. 1833; ii. Jacob, b. Nov. 8, 1833; m. 1860, Sarah Dickerson, daughter of -John Dickerson, of Athens township; settled in Athens township) : 6. Mary, m. Robert Eanos, and settled near Columbus, Ohio; 7. Jacob, d. in western Illinois; 8. Ann, m. John Perrego, and settled in Athens township; 9. Ezekiel, m. Mary Corbin (had issue: i. John, settled in Athens township; ii. Rebecca, m. Joseph Fig- ley, and settled in Indiana); 10. Joseph; II. Robert, settled in IllinoTsr 12. Phcebe, d. aged seven years. JOHN WEBSTER, removed from Maryland to Rumley township, Harri- son county, Ohio, before 1824; d. before 1824; m. Mary , b. April 30, 1775; d. March 1, 1848; had issue, six chil- dren, of whom: I. John, b. March 20, 1811; d. Oct. 28, 1876; m. (1st) 1832, Margaret Buchanan, d. 1841, a resident of Rumley township; m. (2d) 1847, Ann Patton, daughter of Joseph Patton. of Rumley township; had issue by first wife: 1. Maria; 2. David, b. Oct. 3, 1836; settled in Archer township: m. (1st) 1870, Susanna Devore, d. Feb. 20. 1875; m. (2d) April 15, 1884, Rosella Work, daughter of Alexander Work, of Ger- man township; 3. Sarah; had issue by second wife: 4. John; 5. Joseph; 6. Mary-M.; 7. Catherine- Jane; 8. Mat- thew; 9. Florence; 10. Robert; 11. Mansfield; 12. Cora; 13. Ira-B. JOHN WELLING, d. about 1821; m. Mima ; had issue: 1. William, m. Dorcas , b. Aug. 15, 1778; d. April 24, 1848; 2. John; 3. David, b. Feb. 1, 1779; d. June 19, 1864; settled in Athens township before 1817; m. (1st) Marga- ret ; m. (2d) Nancy Elizabeth Black, of Guernsey county, b. 1823; d. Feb. 18, 1873 (had issue by first wife, six children; had issue by second wife: vii. Margaret-Jane, m. Finley Butler; viii. William-W.; ix. Nancy-Jane; x. Martha-A., m. Joseph White; xi. George-W., b. June 15, 1855; xii. Har- riet-C; xiii. John); 4. Thomas; 5. Henry; 6. Nancy; 7. Mary; 8. Elizabeth. Other Welling families in Harrison county, are those of the following, most or all of them probably descended from John and Mima: John Welling, m. 1821, Mary McCul- lough. John Welling, b. 1814; d. 1887; m. Jane McFadden. David Welling, m. 1834, Jane Sharp, b. 1812; d. 1844. William Welling, m. 1830, Margaret Davis. DANIEL WELCH, a native of Ire- land, of Scottish descent; emigrated to America and probably first settled at Carlisle, in Cumberland county (as the name, Daniel Welch, appears on the Carlisle tax-list from 1767 until after 1776); had issue, among others: I. Daniel, b. 1763; d. Sept. 7, 1819; set- tled in Cecil township, Washington county, Penn., as early as 1786 (prob- ably accompanied by his father, for the names of two Daniel Welches appear on the tax-lists of that township for 1787 and 1788); m. Elizabeth Waits, b. 1770; d. March 29, 1844; daughter of John (d. before 1786) and Sarah (d. 1818) Waits; removed to Harrison county, Ohio, about 1801, and settled at Beech Spring, on the head waters of Short Creek, in Green township; es- tablished here a horse-mill, probably the first in Harrison county; organized Beech Spring Church; had issue: 1. John, served in Captain John Allen Scroggs' company of Colonel .John An- drews' regiment of Ohio Militia in the 580 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY I War of 1812; died in that service, un- married; 2. Daniel, b. 1790; d. Aug. 9, 1868; m. (1st) Margaret Bayless, b. 1796; d. Sept. 9. 1833: m. (2d) 1834, Mary Gray, b. 1806; d. Feb. 5. 1848 (had issue, among others, by first wife: i. Elizabeth, d. aged fifteen years; had issue by second wife, among others: ii. E.-Gray, b. 1842; d. Nov. 30, 1877); 3. Rezin, b. in Cecil township, Washing- ton county, Penn., April 27, 1795; d. at Cadiz, Nov. 24, 1881; where he had set- tled in 1833; m. (1st) at Steubenville, 1818, Eliza Bayless, b. 1801; d. Aug. 6, 1842; daughter of Elias and Margaret Barclay Bayless, natives of Maryland; m. (2d) 1846, Maria Bayless, b. Sept. 12, 1807; d. Aug. 19, 1886; sister to his Eliza Bayless (had issue by first wife: 1. Maria-B., b. 1822; d. Aug. 10, 1891; m. Walter Butler Beebe, of Cadiz; ii. Rachel-Anne, m. William R. Allison, and settled at Steubenville; iii. Caro- line, m. Thomas C. Rowles, and settled at Topeka, Kan.; iv. David-Barclay, b. at Smithfield, Ohio, Nov. 23. 1830; m. 1857, Martha Collins Lyons, daughter of Robert and Ann Rowland Lyons, of Cadiz: V. Eliza, m. H. Parks MacAdam, and settled at New York Mills, N. Y.); 4. Benjamin; 5. Pressley; 6. William, m. 1835, Adaline Phillips, daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth Williams Phil- lips, of Cadiz; removed to Mount Pleas- ant, Iowa, where he died, and his widow removed thence to Osceola, Neb. (had issue, eight children, four of whom died in infancy, of the others: i. William; ii. Thomas; iii. Daniel-P., b. 1839; d. May 6, 1864; served in the Civil War, and died in that service; iv. John- Ross, m. Anna Sherwood; settled near Osceola, Neb.) ; 7. Jacob, m. Charlotte Pumphrey; 8. Cyrus; 9. Samuel, m. Martha Moore, b. 1815": d. April 13, 1836; 10. Mary, m. 1829, Dr. Jacob Voorhes: 11. Rhoda, m. 1828, John Mansfield. Elizabeth Waits Welch, wife of Dan- iel Welch, was the daughter of John Waits, whose name appears on the tax- list 'of Springhill township. Fayette (then Bedford, and later, Westmore- land) county, Penn., in 1772, the first year after the organization of Bedford county, and in 1783: he settled in Cecil township, Washington county, on the head waters of Chartiers Creek in the sprinp- of 1785: and died before April 5, 1786, at which date his land was pat- ented to his widow, " in trust, for the use of his heirs; " he m. Mrs. Sarah Blair, d. 1818, a widow (who had three grown sons by her first husband living in Cecil township in 1788 — Joseph, Samuel, and William — who later re- moved to Kentucky); had issue: 1. Elizabeth, m. Daniel Welch, and re- moved to Ohio; 2. Richard; 3. Reuben; 4. Mary, m. Phillips; 5. Sarah; 6. Jacob. JOHN WELSH, b. in Ireland, 1782- 83; d. Dec. 30, 1871; removed to West- moreland county, Penn., about 1797, and thence to Archer township, Harri- son county, Ohio, before 1822, where he remained until 1860, and then settled in Stock township; m. Jane McClellan, b. in Pennsylvania, 1793; d. Feb. 17, 1872; had issue: 1. Mary; 2^ Elizabeth; 3. Ann; 4. Samuel; 5. John-K.; 6. Jane; 7. Matthew; 8. James-M., b. Oct. 11, 1832; settled in Stock township; 9. David; 10. William-A., b. April 5, 1835; settled in Washington township; m. April 7, 1859, Margaret McFadden, daughter of Robert McFadden. SAMUEL WELSH (or Welch), b. in Ireland, 1772; d. March 30, 1850; emi- grated to Ameri.ca and settled in West- moreland county, Penn.; removed before 1814 to Archer township, Harrison county, Ohio; m. (1st) Catherine Coul- ter, d. 1842; m. (2d) 1846, Mrs. William Keepers, of Stock township; had issue by first wife: 1. John, b. Nov. 20, 1808; settled at Cadiz; d. Nov. 10. 1881; m. 1833, Margaret Gilmore (had issue: i. Samuel, settled in Missouri; ii. Jason, settled in Iowa; iii. Sarah-Jane, m. John Adams, and settled in Archer township; iv. Amanda, m. Samuel P. Ross, a Methodist Episcopal minister, and settled at New Philadelphia) ; 2. James, b. July 9. 1815; settled at Deers- ville; m. (1st) March 28, 1833, Martha Slemmons, b. Sept. 7, 1812; d. June 15, 1845, daughter of William and Jane Osburn Slemmons; m. (2d) Nov. 17, 1860, Mrs. Louisa Cope, b. June IS, 1826. daughter of Barrett and Nancy Carson Rogers (had issue by first wife: i. Catherine, settled in Nottingham town- ship; ii. Samuel-S.. settled in Franklin township; iii. William-C, settled in Kansas: iv. Martha- J., m. .John- son; settled in Nottingham township; V. John-M., a physician, b. Dec. 19,1842; HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 581 settled in Deersville; m. Aug. 28, 1862, Martha Moore, b. in Nottingham town- ship, Oct. 12, 1841, daughter of Samuel and Margaret Given Moore, natives of Ireland; vi. James-Cameron; had issue by second wife: vii. Flora-J., m. Wagers, of Deersville; viii. Emmet-A., & physician; ix. Bingham, d. in infancy); 3. William, b. in Archer township, Sept. 18. 1818; m. (1st) Oct. 22, 1840, Agnes Fisher, b. 1820; d. Feb. 14. 1845; daugh- ter of Geoi'ge Fisher, of Rumley town- ship; m. (2d) Sept. IS, 1845, Emily Jane Nixon, of Archer township; d. Feb. 28, 1887 (had issue by first wife: i. Susan, m. William Sampson, and set- tled in Stock township; had issue by second wife: ii. James-W., b. July 1, 1847; m. May 25, 1869, Kate M. Cona- Tvay, daughter of Aaron Conaway; iii. Rebecca-Jane, m. A. J. Palmer and set- tled in Stock township; iv. John-N., set- tled in North township; v. A.-C, a Methodist Episcopal minister; settled in Youngstown, Ohio) ; 4. Mary, b. 1811; •d. Dec. 15, 1844; m. 1833, George Fisher, b. 1792; d. 1872 (had issue, among others: i. Elizabeth; ii. Samuel, d. in infancy; iii. Jacob, d. in infancy); 5. Eleanor, m. 1839, Joseph Dunbar; 6. Nancy, m. 1840. Matthew Johnson. Francis Gilmore. father of Margaret Welsh, was a native of Ireland; emi- grated to America and settled in Archer township, Harrison county, Ohio, before 1815; m. Sarah McBride, a native of Ireland; d. March 30, 1840; Tiad issue, eight children, of whom: 1. William; 2. Margaret, m. John Welsh; ■3. John, settled in Oskaloosa, Iowa; 4. Thomas, settled in Iowa; 5. Samuel, settled in Iowa. JAMES WEST, b. in Kirkcaldy, Fife- shire. Scotland, June 11, 1791; d. in Pox township, Carroll county, Ohio, 1851. where he had located in 1828; son of John West; emigrated to America, and first settled in Maryland, 1815; re- moved to Wood county. West Virginia, in 1817, and thence, in 1825, to Summit county. Ohio, whence he came to Car- roll county; m. in Wood county. W.Va., 1825, Isabella Douglass, b. Sept. 15, 1802. in Akeld, Northumberland, Eng- land, daughter of .John and Susan Howey Douglass, natives of Scotland (the latter a daughter of Andrew and Mars'aret Mitch ison Howev: and the former a son of Anna Davidson Doug- las); had issue: 1. Susanna, m. Robert Philpot, of Humboldt, Neb.; 2. John- Douglass, a physician, b. in Carroll coun- ty, Ohio; settled at Hopedale, Green township, Harrison county, Nov., 1866; m. (1st) 1853, Martha Jane Merrick, b. June 9, 1832; d. April 12, 1884; daughter of Israel J. Merrick, a native of Mary- land (b. 1802; d. 1881), and Sarah Ar- buckle (b. 1812); m. (2d) November, 1886, Mrs. Josephine M. Mansfield, widow of Thomas Mansfield, and daugh- ter of Isaac Holmes, an early settler in Green township; 3. Katherine, m. John Hunter, of Delroy, Carroll county; 4. Margaret-Ann, m. John Bebout, of Mechanicstown; 5. Isabella, m. William A. Frater, of Douglas county, Oregon; 6. James-D., settled at East Liverpool, Ohio; 7. Mary-Elizabeth, m. (1st) John Smalley; m. (2d) William Kerr; settled near New Lisbon, Ohio; 8. , d. in infancy; 9. , d. in infancy. JONATHAN WEST, a native of Pennsylvania, of Scotch-Irish descent, settled in Cadiz township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1811; m. Comfort Arnold, daughter of Benjamin and Comfort Arnold, of Fayette county, Pennsyl- vania; had issue: 1. Amos, b. in Penn- sylvania; settled in Franklin township. Harrison county; m. 1832, Margaret Baker, daughter of Otto Baker, of Archer township (had issue: i. Mary; ii. Samuel; iii. Wilson-S.. b. Aug. 7, 1842; m. 1868, Susannah Renshaw; iv. Sarah; v. Naomi, m. John Renshaw); 2. Rezin, b. April 19, 1812; m. Dec. 10, 1835, Nancy Arthurs, daughter of Gavin Arthurs, of Harrison county (had is- sue: i. Jonathan; ii. Comfort; iii. Rachel; iv. Amos, m. Melissa Cope- land; V. Japheth, m. (1st) Lucinda Yant, of Tuscarawas countv. Ohio; d. Sept. 21. 1883; m. (2d) Martha J. Baker; vi. Sarah-E.; vii. William-G., m. April 15, 1881, Rebecca Wright, daughter of Sylvanus Wright; viii. James-M., m. Elizabeth Rinehart. of Franklin town- ship; ix. Esther); 3. Samuel: 4. Jona- than; 5. Mary; 6. Esther; 7. Actia; 8. .Tames; 9. Elizabeth; 10. Comfort; 11. Sarah. Gavin Arthurs, father of Nancy Arthurs West, was a native of Ireland: settled in Harrison countv. where he d. Feb. 1, 1876: m. Rachel Hall, of Mary- land; d. 1845: had issue: 1. Robert: 2. William; 3. James; 4. Eliza; 5. Mary- 583 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY J.; 6. Amelia; 7. Nancy, m. Rezin West; Wharton, settled near Tippecanoe, 8. Sarah; 9. Louisa. Harrison county, Ohio, before 1S30; m, JOHN WEYANDT, of German de- in Pennsylvania, Martha Huffman; had scent, removed probably from Pennsyl- i^sue: L George; 2. John; 3. Michael; 4. vania or Marvland to Monroe town- Samuel; 5. Philip; 6. David; 7. Berlin; ship, Harrison county, before 1817; d. 8. Eliza; 9. Catherine; 10. Rachel; 11. 1848; m. Motlena ; had issue: 1. James. Samuel Myers was b. 1802; d. Daniel; 2. Jacob; 3. Abraham, b. 1821; i^ Franklin township, June 3, 1879; m. d. 1899; m. (1st) Roxanna Warner; m. 1830, Mary Connell (had issue: i. Je- (2d) Margaret Gamble (had issue: i. mima; ii. David; iii. Martha, m. Ezra Amadilla. m. E. M. Long; ii. Eleanor, Wharton; iv. Jonathan; v. Wesley; vi. m. M. Rohan; iii. Martha-Ann, m. Wil- George; vii. Catherine; viii. Sarah-J.; liam B. Penn; iv. Webster, m. Ruth ^^- Amanda: x. Sansom; xi. Mary- J.; Myers; v. Olive, m. L. D. Price; vi. xii. Samuel-S.; xiii. John). Melinda, m. Oscar Price); 4. Mary, m. JOSEPH WHITE, of Scotch descent; 1837, Henry B. Heller; 5. Christina, m. settled in Frederick county, Md., before Warner. I775, where he d. about 1818; served in JOHN WHAN. b. in Chester county, the Revolutionary War; m. Mary Ful- Penn., Sept. 25, 1776; removed to Harri- ton, of Scotch-Irish descent; b. 1756- son county, Ohio, 1815; m. Aug. 21, 1804, 1766; d. in Franklin township. Harri- Margaret Boggs, b. Nov. 17, 1779; had son county, Ohio. Feb. 20. 1856; had issue: 1. William, b. July 7, 1805: d. issue: 1. Catherine; 2. William; 3. March 18, 1833; 2. Sarah, b. Jan. 7, 1807; Joseph, b. in Frederick, Md., Sept. 12, d. in New Athens, Dec. 9, 1875; m. 1798; removed with his mother to Har- George McCullough, b. 1803; d. April 3, rison county in 1819, and first located 1845 (had issue: i. Margaret, m. S. K. in Nottingham township; later settled Kane, of Darlington, Penn.; d. in Mis- in Franklin township, where he d. Sept. sissippi; ii. Martha, m. James Stewart; 29, 1877; m. April 12, 1828. Hannah d. in Pittsburg, Penn.: iii. John. b. Rogers, d. May 17, 1866, daughter of 1834; d. 1855; iv. Robert, settled in Mil- Joseph and Pamela Rogers, early set- waukee, Wis.; v. William, b. 1840; set- tiers in Harrison county, who came tied in New Athens): 3. Hannah, b. Oct. from Maryland (had issue: i. Jackson- 16, 1808: 4. Mary, b. Dec. 1, 1810; d. Aug. R- "• William-P.; iii. Pamela [or 6, 1851: 5. Ellen, b. May 13, 1813; m. Pamalah]; iv. Joseph-T.: v. Benjamin- Michael Morgan, and settled in Short F.; vi. Warren-R.; vii. Mary-Ann; viii. Creek township; 6. James, b. Jan. 9, Joshua-P., b. Nov. 15, 1840; served in 1816: d. Sept. 19, 1856; 7. John, b. May the Civil War fas did also three of his 10, 1821; d. July 19, 1849. brothers]; m. Sept. 29. 1870. Agnes C. EZRA WHARTON, removed from S^^""^?."/ "^^"S^^^^, «^. William and Bucks county, Penn.. to Harrison coun- ^^'^^ Glandon, early pioneers m Har- ty, Ohio, about 1820. and settled in "son county: ix Charles-W.; x. Han- Short Creek township: had issue, nan-i*..) ; 4. ethanes, among others: I. Joel, settled in Wash- WILLIAM WILEY, b. in Washington ington township, before 1833. where he county. Penn.. 1776; d. in Short Creek d. 1863; m. about 1822, Abigail Bundy, township, Harrison county. Ohio. 1853, d. 1874; had issue: 1. Martha; 2. where he had settled about 1804; son of Bethia; 3. Josiah; 4. Rachel; 5. Tabi- Thomas and Rebecca Lytle Wiley, na- tha-A.; 6. Matilda; 7. Ezra. b. June 21, tives of Lancaster county, Penn.; m. in 1833; m. Feb. 22, 1859. Martha Myers. Pennsylvania, 1804. Elizabeth Vance; of Franklin township, daughter of had issue: 1. Joseph: 2. Thomas, m. Samuel and Mary Connell Myers (had Mary Tendeley; 3. Anna, m. Hugh Mar- issue: i. Olive, m. William Laizure; ii. tin: 4. John; 5. David, m. Laura J. Samuel-M.: iii. David-B.; iv. Oscar-E.; Stanley; 6. James, m. Harriet Wight; 7. V. Arthur-B.); 8. Abigail; 9. Susannah. William, b. in Short Creek township; 11. Anna. III. Hannah. IV. Daniel. V. m. Nov. 3, 1864. Olive M. Stanley, Lynton. VI. Amos. VII. James. VIII. daughter of Noah Stanley (b. in Trum- Silas. IX. Levi. bull county, Ohio, where he d. 1873), Michael Myers, a native of Pennsyl- and Sarah Bowman Stanley (b. in vania, grandfather of Martha Myers Columbiana county, Ohio); S.Rebecca; HARRISON COUNTY GENEALOGIES 583 9. Mary- Jane, m. N. W. Shannon; 10. Elizabeth; 11. Clarissa, m. Joseph Jamison; 12. Wilson, m. Eliza Mc- Gowan; 13. Priscilla. ROBERT WILKIN, settled in Penn- sylvania, 1770; removed to near the present site of Cadiz, Harrison county, Ohio, about 1802, and a few years later settled at Londonderry, Guernsey coun- ty; m. in Pennsylvania, Mary Hyde; liad issue: I. Elizabeth. II. Nancy. III. Jane. IV. Rebecca. V. Mary. VI. Samuel. VII. Thomas. IX. Archibald, b. in Pennsylvania; settled in Wash- ington township, Harrison county, be- fore 1818, where he d. 1870; m. Hannah Davidson, d. 1856, daughter of Samuel Davidson, of Washington township; had issue: 1. Samuel, b. in Washington township. May 23, 1818; m. (1st) April 18, 1843, Margaret Poraker, of Guernsey county; d. Oct. 22, 1864; m. (2d) Aug. 6, 1866, Jeanette McCormick. of Guern- sey county (had issue by first wife: i. Ellis; ii. Mary- Ann; iii. Archibald; iv. Hannah; v. Samuel; vi. Margaret-S.) ; 2. Mary-Ann; 3. Jane; 4. Angelina. X. William. XI. James. XII. Robert. CHARLES WILLISON, settled in Moorefield township, Harrison county, Ohio, before 1818; had issue: 1. Amos; 2. Jeremiah, b. in Moorefield township, -where he d. 1850; m. 1847, Rebecca Fig- ley (had issue: i. Rachel-A.; ii. John- M., b. July 3, 1850; m. Jan. 8. 1879, Julia McCullough, daughter of William and Julia Laizure McCullough); 3. Elijah; 4. Abijah; 5. Charles; 6. Rosilla; 7. Annie; 8. Rusha; 9. Rachel. JOHN WILSON, a native of Wash- ington county, Penn.; removed to Short Creek township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1806; and in May, 1834, settled in Rum- ley township; m. in Pennsylvania, Esther Fisher; had issue: 1. William- H., b. Sept. 22, 1803; d. in Rumley town- ship, August, 1887; m. Margaret A. Mc- Comb, d. March, 1884 (had issue: i. Eliza- J., m. C. N. Coulter, and settled in Michigan; ii. John-A.; iii. Hadassah, m. .Tames V. Thompson, and settled in Richland county, Ohio; iv. R.-M.; v. W.-L., b. Oct. 29, 1841; m. August, 1880," M. A. Mehaffey, of near Mount Hope, Washington county, Penn.; vi. Mary- E.; vii. James-R., settled at Arkansas €ity. Ark.: viii. David-Mc; ix. T.-H., m. S. G. Phillips, and settled at Arkan- sas City, Ark.); 2. James; 3. Hugh; 4. 38 John; 5. Samuel; 6. David; 7. Esther; 8. Margaret; 9. Elizabeth, d. in infancy. GEORGE WORK, a native of Ire- land; emigrated to America, and, before 1800, settled in Hopewell township, Washington county, Penn., where he d. 1830; m. in Ireland, Martha Dunlap; had issue, among others: 1. Alexander, b. in Ireland, 1781; settled in Pennsyl- vania with his parents; removed to German township, Harrison county, Ohio, 1818, where he d. May, 1851; m. in Pennsylvania, April 10, 1809, Jane Taggart, a native of Washington coun- ty; d. April, 1851 (had issue: i. George; ii. James; iii. John; iv. Mary-K., m. John Hervey Black; v. Samuel; vi. Anderson-D.; vii. Jane; viii. Margaret; ix. Alexander). THOMAS WORLBY, b. in Pennsyl- vania; removed to Harrison county, and settled in Athens township, about 1802, where he d. May, 1859; m. Mary Walker, daughter of Gabriel Walker; had issue: 1. Thomas; 2. Daniel, b. 1792; d. 1887; m. 1849, Mary Goodwin, b. 1827; daughter of Jesse and Anne Michner Goodwin, of Short Creek town- ship (had issue: i. William, m. Eliza Morrison; ii. Jesse, m. Ella Skouten; iii. Emory, m. Mary Morrison; iv. Martha, m. Samuel Parks; v. Emma; vi. John-Brough, m. Auta Groves; vii. Alice, m. Edwin Aukerman; viii. La- fayette, m.Ella McManus): 3. David, m. 1836, Mary Jane Luke; 4. James, b. May, 1782; d. April 7, 1857; m. Susanna , b. 1766; d. Feb. 4, 1839; 5. Susanna, m. 1822, Samuel Martin; 6. Julianna, m. 1827, Smith Bonham; 7. Margaret, m. 1840, Ichabod Ross; • 8. Elizabeth, m. Yarnell; 9. Mary (?), m. Jacob Figley. Other Worley families of Harrison county: Wesley J. Worley, m. 1823. Jane Vir- tue, b. Jan. 13, 1804; d. March 18, 1857. Daniel Worley, m. 1834, Sarah Pere- goy. .Tosiah Worley, m. 1836, Mary Ann Minor. Michael Worley, m. 1828, Eve Ann Mark ley. Mary Goodwin Worley (b. 1827) is the daughter of Jesse Goodwin, b. in Pennsylvania, Oct. 11, 1784; d. in Harri- son county, Ohio, Oct. 2, 1856; m. (1st) Anne Michner, b. 1789; d. Feb. 27, 1843; m. (2d) Ruth McMillan; had issue by 584 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY first wife: 1. Lydia, b. 1810; 2. Hannah, d. Dec. 28, 1898; m. 1860, Jane P. Jami- b. 1812;, 3. Lewis, b. 1813; 4. Wilson, b. son, daughter of Barkley and Margaret 1816; 5. Elisha, b. 1818; 6. Tace, b. 1820; Jamison; 2. Jonathan-Washington, set- 7. Alice, b. 1821; 8. Anne, b. 1824; 9. tied in Zanesville; 3. John, settled in Kinsey, b. 1826; 10. Mary, b. Nov. 27, Kansas. 1827; m. Daniel Worley; 11. Abi, b. May . . t^^t.. ,, . „^^ . ^ ^ „ _, 22, 1829; m. Jackson Shields; 12. AARON \ARNALL son of Thomas Martha, b. 1830; 13. Jesse, b. 1834. i^'^^"\ ^^ ^^..^^f.^f "P^ JT,''^^' Anne Michner Goodwin was the Penn about 1783; settled m Notting- daughter of Baruch and Jane Wilson \fP} township, Harnson county Ohio, Michner, who were married in Penn- if 11, where he died 18t>l; m. Mary A. sylvania, and removed to Harrison ^ell, of Washington county; d. 1857; county; had issue: I.Anne; 2. John; 3. ^/^ ''T'-c.?- ?'^^^ ^^ ^'"t""^' T TTanTiflh- 4 Sarah- '^ AlirP- fi TanP Aaron; 4. Eli; 5. Colver; 6. John. b. Hannah, 4. barah, 5. Alice, b. Jane. ^^^ ^7, 1827; m. (1st) April 24, 1850, MATTHEW WORSTELL, b. in " Nackkey " Rogers, d. 1861; m. (2d) Bucks county, Penn.; a descendant of 1863, Mrs. Elizabeth Ross, b. June 28, James Worstell, who emigrated be- 1833, widow of Thomas Ross, and fore 1700; removed to Philadelphia, daughter of Alexander and Sarah before 1804, and in 1805 settled near Ramsey Fulton, of Nottingham town- Steubenville, Ohio; m. Rachel Price; ship (had issue by first wife: i. Henry- had issue: 1. Ceneath; 2. Hiram, b. in H., settled in Tuscarawas county, Ohio; Philadelphia, Sept. 7, 1804; settled in ii. Sylvester-F., settled at "oberlin, Franklin township, Harrison county, Kan.; iii. Jasper; had issue by second Ohio, where he d. in January, 1884; m. wife: iv. Mary-R.; v. Ida-B.)'; 7. Nel- near Steubenville, Ann Pittis, d. 1873, son; 8. Lydia; 9. Mary-A. daughter of John Pittis, of Deersville t,tt-^tt a t-it -i-z-vcm 4.- « tt- (had issue: i. John; ii. Mary; iii. .^"^?^^^ \°^,T;/ T^^T ^Mfo" Thomas; iv. Robert; v. Edward; vi. ^V"'^' b. Nov. 3, 1766; d. Feb. 2, 1849. Elizabeth; vii. Jane; viii. William; ix. °% ^^™%^ , J^^^^^A ^t 7"^^. ^^^° ^^^ Julia; X. Henry-P., b. in Tuscarawas wife; the fathers of both having served county, May 18, 1836; settled in Frank- m the Revolutionary War; removed to lin township: m. Jan. 5, 1860, Eleanor Short Creek township, Harnson coun- Scott, daughter of Charles Scott, of *^\?^"°' .^^^lUn™-^ I';''? lo fcli^^; i Harrison county); 3. Martha; 4. Smith; ^^ Virginia. 1780; d. Feb. 19, 1849; had 5. Matthew; 6. Sarah; 7. John; 8. issue among others: 1. Elias b. near Rachel; 9. William; 10. James. ?^\''±^'^''';vf 'f'^-'^"^ «o;^^ty,Va Dec. 2, 1805; settled m Short Creek town- LOT WORTMAN, b. in New Jersey, ship; m. (1st) Dec. 30, 1834, Kezia Kith- about 1779; d. 1839; probably a de- cart, b. in Pennsylvania, April 25, 1812; scendant of John Wortman, who emi- d. 1878; dau;ghter of Joseph Kithcart grated from Holland to America in (d. in Pennsylvania; his wife settled in 1750, and settled in Bedminster town- Harrison county, 1824); m. (2d) March ship, Somerset county, N. J.; m. in 7, 1880, Ann Macklin, b. in county Westmoreland county, Penn., Margaret Armagh, Ireland, Dec. 2, 1842, daughter Metzlar, d. 1860: removed to Muskin- of Samuel and Ann Benson Macklin gum county, Ohio, about 1808; had is- (both of whom died in Scotland, the sue, twelve children, of whom: 1. Jesse- former in 1847; the latter in 1858) (had David, b. in Muskingum county, 1824; issue by first wife, eleven children). SUPPLEMENT. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES. SUPPIJ-.Mf;NT. ADDITIONAL IIAIiKLSOX COUNTY MARRIAGES.* 1841 U) 1850, Inclusive, Edward Abraman and Rachel Tipton, Oct. 31, 1850, by Rev. A. Magee. William Abraham and Maria Arnold, Oct. 7, 1841, by R. Brown. George Adams and Mary Carothers, April 4, 1848, by Rev. Pardon Cook. Henry Adams and Sarah Arbaugh, Dec. 2, 1841, by Rev. Benjamin Pope. James Adams and Rachel Hines, Sept. 15, 1844, by Isaac Talbott, J. P. James Adams and Nancy McKinney, Jan. 19, 1847, by John Blair, J. P. John Q. Adams and Chilnissa D. Carrell, March 2, 1847, by Rev. D. S. Welling, Nathan Adams and Hannah Black, Dec. Zl, 1850, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Perceival Adams and Mary Jane Downs, March 23, 1845, by John Blair, J. P. Samuel Adams and Sarah Chambers, May 12, 1842, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. David Addleman and Susanna Firebaugh, Jan. 24, 1850, by Rev. Eli Slutes. John Addleman and Charity Jones, Dec. 14, 1843, by David Bower, J. P. John W. Adron and Nancy Jane Swallow, June 28, 1849, by B. Herron, Alexander Ager and Susan Bishop, Dec. 2fi, 1850, by L. B. Lukins. Elisha Aimes and Agnes Gibson, Oct. 2f;, 1848, by Rev. D. S. Welling. Joseph Akin and Elizabeth Baxter, April 10, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Jesse Alexander and Jane Forsythe, March 18, 1845, by Rev. James Love. John Alexander and Esther Alexander, April 8, 1841, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. John Alexander and Nancy Andrews, Feb. 1, 1848, by Rev. .John Marshall. Aaron Allen and Sarah A. Stephenson, May 27, 184G, by C. C. Riggs. Isaac Allen and Sarah Barrett, June 24, 1841, by Elijah Carson, J. P. Isaac Allen and Sarah Ann Lemmon, May 12, 184(5, by Rev. J. J. Covert. William R. Allison and Rachel Ann Welch, Dec. 29, 1842, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Charles N. Amspoker and Jane Slemmons, April 9, 184G, by Rev. James Cameron. Andrew Anderson and Mary Patton, March 29, 1849, by Rev. C. C. Riggs. Elijah Anderson and Mary E. Sparkman, June IC, 18.50, by Thomas PhllllpB, J. P. James Anderson and Ann P. .Johnson, April 30, 1848. by Michael Carrol, J. P, .John S. Anderson and Esther Ann Davis, July 3, 1840. by Wesley Smith. Richard Anderson and Susan Tedrow, Dec. 10, 1840, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Robert Anderson and Esther McCollough, July 1, 1841, by .John Rea, V. D. M. Samuel Anderson and Martha A. Bryant. Dec. 10. 1845, by Rev. Ebenezer Hayg. David Andrews and Ruth McFadden, Oct. 23, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. • The fcpellinp ''f 'h'- orij-iii-jl record- fia* }^<^i. pr44, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. Harrison Cox and Eliza Jane Harper, Aug. 12, 1845, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. Elisha Cox and Elizabeth Vansickle, Oct. 5, 1845, by J. J. Covert. John Cox and Easter Caven, Dec. 17, 1850, by R. Herron. Joshua Cox and Elizabeth Lockman, Aug. 13, 1848, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Isaac Crawford and Louis J. Jackson, March 22, 1845, by T. T. Larkin, J. P. John Crawford and Elizabeth Hedges, May 17, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John Crawford and Sarah Hunt, Nov. 21, 1850, by Rev. J. M. Bray. John C. Crawford and Catherine Shadran, Aug. 4, 1842, by Robert P. Simpson, J. P. Lemuel Crawford and Sarah Henderson, March 27, 1850, by R. Herron. William H. Crawford and Henriette Brown, Jan. 6, 1845, by Robert Wade, J. P. Washington Crabb and Sarah J. Carnahan, Sept. 8, 1846, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Gideon Crabtree and Sarah Jane Carothers, March 14, 1850, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Cornelius Crabtree and Sophia Poulson, Nov. 25, 1846, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Samuel Craig and Margaret Ann McFadden, June 14, 1841, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. William Craig and Elizabeth Wallace, Feb. 9, 1843, by James Kerr, J. P. Walter Craig and Jane Moore, Jan. 9, 1844, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Jacob Cramblett and Sarah McClintick, April 25, 1845, by R. Brown. Joel Cramblett and Mary Ann Fowler, May 30, 1844, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Frederick Cramer and Phebe Ann Parker, April 14, 1842, by Reynolds K. Price. Wesley Creal and Diana Manbeck, March 8, 1849, by Rev. Lemuel B. Perkins. W^illiam Cree and Rachel Jewell, April 2, 1848, by R. K. Price, J. P. John H. Creger and Margaret Dolby, April 18, 1847, by Rev. A. C. Hunger. Reuben Creger and Mary Ann Middleton, May 20, 1849, by James Hoover, J. P. Abraham Croskey and Mary Jane Phillips, Sept. 29, 1842, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Alexander Crossan and Rebecca Oglevee, May 14, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Andrew Crouch and Malinda Crouch, April 24, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Samuel Crouch and Su;=anna J. Harvey, Oct. 18, 1848, by Samuel Cunningham, J. P. Wilson Crouch and Margaret Campbell, Nov. 22, 1849, by John Wilkin, J. P. Joseph Crumley and Elizabeth A. Crabtree, Oct. 10, 1850, by Rev. A. Magee. Solomon Crumrine and Franney Kerr, Sept. 12, 1844, by David Bower, J. P. William Crumrine and Susan Kimmel, April 4, 1844, by William Arnold, J. P. Samuel H. Culbertson and Esther J. Clements, Feb. 1, 1849, by Rev. Joseph Gordon. . William T. Cullin and Rachel Grewell, Sept. 27, 1846, by R. K. Price, J. P. James Cummings and Rebecca Edwards, Oct. 25, 1841, by John Graham. Samuel Cummings and Margaret Thomas, March 25, 1847, by Rev. D. S. Welling. Philip Cummins and Mary Ann Trimble, Jan. 12, 1847, by G. A. Lowman. David Cunningham and Ann Barricklow, March 18, 1841, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. John Cunningham and Sarah A. Bone, June 17, 1847, by Rev. Richard Gray. Samuel Cunningham and Margaret Lewis, May 27, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Robert F. Custer and Margaret Baker, Oct. 10, 1850, by Rev. A. Magee. William Custer and Margaret Welch, Nov. 4. 1847, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Leslie Cutshall and Carolina Gibson, Nov. 28, 1850. by W. D. Webb. John Czatt and Sarah J. Johnson, Jan. 1, 1846, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Bazel Danbow and Ruth Tenner, Jan. 2, 1845, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. y Aaron Davis and Mary Ann Busby. Nov. 29, 1846, by Rev. D. S. Welling^r^^^ Henry Davis and Catharine Renniker, Sept. 6. 1848. by .John Adams, ^^r James Davis and Elizabeth Parrish, May 29, 1845, by William Tipton.'*^ y/ James Davis and Sidney Marshall, Oct. 4, 1843, by Wesley Smith.v^ y John Davis and Rhoda Emily Townsend, Oct. 4, 1849, by Cyrus McNeely, 594 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OP HARRISON COUNTY /: Nicholas Davis and Susannah B. Barrett, Sept. 1, 1848, by Rev. Harvey Brad- shaw. Robert Davis and Nancy Pritchard, Nov. 14, 1850, by Thomas Jones. Alfred A. Davidson and Catharine A. Covert, Dec. 19, 1850, by Rev. Samuel W. Day. Faris Davidson and Nancy Myers, April 8, 1841, by Rev. Benjamin Furgason. Jacob L. Davidson and Dorcas A. Derry, April 19, 1846, by R. K. Price, J. P. William Davidson and Sarah Petty, April 16, 1846, by Elijah Carson, J. P. William Davidson and Christina Shepler, Oct. 7, 1849, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. William R. Davidson and Sarah A. Fulton, Oct. 9, 1847, by Rev. Jacob Lemmori. Zera Davidson and Nancy Johnson, Jan. 28, 1841, by Rev. Benjamin P. Ferguson. James Day and Isabella Crabb, Oct. 3, 1841, by James E. Taylor. James A. Day and Emily Walcutt, Aug. 29, 1850, by R. Herron. Milton Dearth and Matilda Rankin, May 7, 1846, by Rev. J. J. Covert. Jesse De Long and Eleanor Watson, Oct. 29, 1841, by Jesse Merrill, J. P. Albert Demster and Lucy Trimble, April 24, 1849, by Rev. Pardon Cook. Silvester S. Demuth and Isabella A. Miller, Aug. 25, 1849, by William Reed, J. P. William T. Demming and Mary Wilson, Dec. 25, 1850, by Rev. J. M. Bray. Jacob Depue and Rebecca Bishop, March 1, 1849, by Rev. Lemuel B. Perkins. Lewis Devault and Margaret Straughbaugh, March 23, 1843, by William Cobb, J. P. Jacob Devault and Margaret Gutshall, April 4, 1844, by Henry H. Beckett, J. P. Casper Devilbiss and Mary Jane Braden, Jan. 25, 1849, by Cyrus McNeely. Andrew Devore and Sarah Holland, June 3, 1841, by William Arnold, J. P. Elisha Devore and Mary Ann Petty, April 6, 1849, by W. C. P. Hamilton. Jeremiah Devore and Letticia Shimer, July 21, 1842, by James Welsh, J. P. John Devore and Mariah F. Petty, Nov. 16, 1843. by Rev. Elijah Carson. Silas Devore and Eliza Bishop, Oct. 10, 1850, by Rev. John Burns. Ellas Dew and Elizabeth Craig, April 15, 1841, by John H. Brown, J. P. Joseph Dew and Mary Ann Gray, Dec. 12, 1844, by F. T. Larkin, J. P. John Dewitt and Polly Mountz, July 16, 1849, by James J. Mcllgar. William Dewitt and Nancy Swaney, Aug. 4, 1844, by Reynolds K. Price, J. P. James H. Dicks and Mary Davis, Jan. 14, 1848, by Rev. Asbury W. Simpkins. William Dicks and Eliza Cullin, Aug. 24, 1845, by R. K. Price. J. P. Joshua Dickerson and Nancy Elliott, Dec. 30, 1841, by Rev. William F. Lauck, Joshua Dickerson and Mary Jane Elliott, Feb. 8, 1844, by Wesley Smith. Benjamin Dickey and Mary Riley, Dec. 30, 1847, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Samuel Dickey and Catharine Irvin, Jan. 27, 1848, by Isaac Falbeth, J. P. Frederick Dinger and Margaret Naregong, May 29, 1842, by Henry H. Beckett,. J. P. Sampson Dinger and Mary Ann Stall, Jan. 4, 1849, by Henry H. Beckett, J. P. Robert Dodds and Rebecca McCartney, Oct. 10, 1842, by Isaac Talbott, J. P. William Donaldson and Nancy English, Sept. 29, 1848, by Rev. Jeremiah Phillips. Zaza Donnell and Nancy Boon, Sept. 11, 1845, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Henry Dool and Mary Clifford, Dec. 16, 1846, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. James Dooling and Lucinda Davis, May 6, 1841, by Rev. E. Smith. Samuel Dougan and Ellen Dougan, March 5, 1842, by George Cook. J. P. Lemuel Dowden and Catharine Monciff, July 31. 1845. by Cyrus McNeely. Thomas B. Dowden and Elizabeth Drummond, April 14, 1847, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. George Downs and Mary Jane Anderson, July 1, 1847, by Hamilton McFadden, J. P. William Drummond and Margaret Fulton, April 15, 1847, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Robert M. Duncan and Mary Ann Alexander, Oct. 10, 1850, by Rev. John Marshall. Joshua Dunham and Matilda Nelson, Jan. 15, 1841, by Robert Givin, J. P. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES 595 Adam Dunlap and Margaret J. Buchanan, Aug. 20, 1845, by Rev. Moses Allen. Hazard Dunlap and Rebecca Brown, Sept. 28, 1850, by David Hanliu, J. P. Hugh Dunlap and Elizabeth Dunlap, Feb. 15, 1844, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Joseph Dunlap and Julia Ann Hays, Feb. 12, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Joshua Dunlap and Nancy Watson, Oct. 16, 1847, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. William Dunlap and Margaret Millikin, Feb. 14, 1850, by James Kerr, V. D. M. James H. Duswald and Sarah Shook, Dec. 9, 1847, by B. W. Viers, J. P. George Easterday and Mary M. Warner, April 3, 1848, by Rev. A. N. Bartholo- mew. Presley Edwards and Elizabeth Glass, Oct. 18, 1842, by David Bower, J. P. Richard Edwards and Sarah Ann Quillan, March 7, 1850, by David Hanlin, J. P. George Eli and Phebe M. Corey, Oct. 28, 1848, by William Arnold, J. P. George Elliott and Adeline McCormick, April 4, 1849, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. James Elliot and Sarah Jane Howser, Sept. 5, 1848, by Rev. James C. Merryman. Joseph Elliott and Amelia Catherine Ely, April 15, 1843, by Wesley Smith. Samuel Elliott and Sarah H. Thomas, March 4, 1845, by Rev. E. Hays. Jeremiah Bnlowes and Hannah Corbin, July 3, 1840, by Wesley Smith. John Endsley and Barbara Knouff, June 29, 1848, by James Kerr, J. P. Robert W. Endsley and Elizabeth Birney, Dec. 26, 1843, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Alpheus English and Nancy M. McCarroll, Oct. 7, 1847, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. James English and Ann McCarroll, Aug. 19, 1844, by Rev. James W. Walker. John Epley and Rebecca Kimmel, Feb. 17, 1848, by Rev. A. Bartholomew. James Eslick and Eliza Ross, Oct. 8, 1847, by B. W. Viers, J. P. John Evans and Sarah Stewart, Dec. 22, 1842, by Rev. W. T. Adams. William Evans and Margaret Brown, Oct. 17, 1844, by Rev. Israel Archbold. Edward Exbee and Melina Moore, Nov. 6, 1849, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. Thomas Familton and Elizabeth Middleton, Aug. 13, 1848, by John Graham, J. P. David Farmer and Polly Jamison, Dec. 27, 1849, by William Larimer. John W. Farnsworth and Margaret Jane McConnell, April 2, 1843, by John L. Layport, J. P. Jackson Fawcett and Mary Guyn, Nov. 9, 1841, by Samuel Lewis. J. P. Brice Felingberger and Sarah M. Reed, Aug. 9, 1849, by Thomas Finnicum, J. P. William Fell and Elizabeth A. Fields, May 5, 1847, by Rev. Charles Thorn. Andrew Ferrell and Mary A. McCurdy, May 18, 1846, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Curtis Ferrell and Philand Packer, Nov. 28, 1850, by Rev. John Knox. Isaac Ferrell and Elizabeth Conaway, Aug. 22, 1844, by Rev. Ebenezer Hays. John W. Ferrell and Cynthia Burrier, Oct. 3, 1848, by William Arnold, J. P. Henry Ferrensworth and Susanna Strahan, March 8, 1848, by R. K. Price, J. P. R. P. Finney and Mary Hitchcock, Dec. 11, 1844, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Robert P. Finney and Lydia Ann Jenkins, Nov. 8, 1846, by John Graham, J. P. Thomas Finney and Susanna Cocherel, May 2, 1847, by R. K. Price, J. P. Thomas Finney and Margaret Nash, May 4, 1848, by John Blair, J. P. George Finicum and Lydia A. Hilbert, Sept. 6, 1846, by E. H. Custer, J. P. Robert Finnical and Sarah M. Hines, Nov. 14, 1850, by Rev. John Moffitt. David Finnicum and Rebecca Gibler, Aug. 19, 1847, by Rev. Thomas N. Megaw. David Firebaugh and Elizabeth Boor, June 10, 1841, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. Albert M. Fisher and Nancy McKittrick, June 28, 1816, by James Cameron. George Fisher and Emily Russel, Sept. 9, 1843, by Rev. Thomas R. Buckle. John Fisher and Margaret Robison, July 19, 1846, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Joseph Fisher and Mary Covert, Oct. 15, 1842, by Wesley Smith. Wilson Fisher and Catharine A. Middleton, Sept. 7, 1848, by James Moore, J. P. George Fivecoats and Frances Ann Lee, June 13, 1850, by Samuel Ramsey. J. P. William Fivecoats and Lucinda Lee, June 24, 1841, by Rev. Elias Gotshall. George Fogle and Mary A. Mosgrove. Nov. 22, 1849, by Cyrus McNeely. John M. Folks and Mary E. Taylor, .July 4, 1848, by Rev. James Henderson. Joseph Foot and Catherine Linard, Feb. 15, 1844, by Alexander Barger, J. P. B. Slemmons Ford and Margaret Ramsey, Jan. 20, 1842, by Robert Clark, 596 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Edward Ford and Catharine Minney, Dec. 11, 1844, by Reynolds K. Price, J. P^ John C. Ford and Rebecca Vasbinder, Feb. 19, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Lewis Ford and Mary Matilda Simes, Sept. 6, 1849, by Rev. William P. Hunt. William Ford and Tabitha Barrett, Sept. 26, 1846, by Rev. Josiah Gibson. Aaron Forman and Jane Ann Ferry, Sept. 16, 1849, by Rev. John Burns. Reason Foreman and Sarah Penn, Oct. 7, 1841, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Rezin Foreman and Sarah Ann Thompson, May 3, 1849, by Rev. John Burns, Samuel Foreman and Susanna Copeland, March 24, 1842, by William Argo. John Forsyth and Eliza Allen, Sept. 10, 1844, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Levi C. Forsythe and Emma Abrams, Dec. 9, 1848, by Rev. E. Vilton. David Fortner and Margaret Beck, Aug. 18. 1844, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. Caleb Foster and Malila J. Picken, July 10, 1846, by R. Brown. Gideon Fonts and Delila Ann Jones, Jan. 18, 1843, by Rev. Jacob Brill. John Fonts and Margaret Sprowls, Dec. 19, 1850, by Rev. James M. Bray. Jeremiah Fowler and Mariah Fisher, May 25, 1842, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. John E. Fowler and Ingalia Spray, Nov. 17, 1844, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. Thomas Fox and Rebecca Stewart, Jan. 7, 1845, by Nathan Tannahill, J. P. James B. Frazer and Elizabeth Farmer, April 19, 1847, by Rev. Robert Andrews. John Frazier and Sarah Ann Ferguson, Oct. 24, 1850, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Robert Freshwater and Elizabeth Thompson, March 23, 1848, by Samuel Cunningham. John Fulton and Christianne Leinard, April 27, 1849, by James J. Mcllgar. William Fulton, Jr., and Eliza Boyd, July 4, 1848, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John Furney and Nancy Johnson, Sept. 26, 1844, by Rev. Robert Cook. James Galbreath and Agnes M. Stout, June 5, 1850, by McNight Williamson. John Gilbraith and Margaret Allison, March 20, 1845, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Joseph Galbraith and Mary Stevens, Aug. 19, 1841, by John Knox, J. P. Washington Gilbreath and Jemima Stull, Jan. 15, 1850, by Macknight W. Cleaverson. John Gallagher and Margaret Farmer, Jan. 9, 1845, by Rev. Joseph Cloaky. Samuel Gambel and Susanna Heavlin, Nov. 25, 1847, by Hamilton McFadden, J. P. William Gamble and Lecta J. Rowley, Dec. 11, 1845, by Rev. W. R. McGowan. John Gardener and Maria Jones, Sept. 25, 1850, by William Wilson, J. P. James Gardner and Jane Scott, Dec. 24, 1846, by Isaac Talbot, J. P. James Gardner and Tabitha Ann Cox, Oct. 10, 1848, by William Smith. Samuel Gardner and Mary E. J. Guthrie, Feb. 15, 1844, by R. Brown. Samuel Gardner and Elizabeth Leard, Jan. 8, 1846, by Samuel W. Day. Edward Garner and Julia Ann Merryman, Sept. 7, 1848, by Rev. Pardon Cook. Daniel Garvin and Catherine Davis, Sept. 15, 1842, by Rev. Moses Allen. William Garven and Martha E. McCullough, Jan. 25, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Hiram Gatchel and Sarah Moore, Sept. 5, 1842. by .John Blair, J. P. Jacob Gatchel and Elizabeth Barger, Aug. 1, 1844, by Elijah Carson, J. P. Jobe W. Gatchell and Frances Norris, July 17, 1844. by Rev. Elias Gatchel. John Geesey and Nancy Davis, March 28, 1844, by Asa Holmes, J. P. Jonas Geesy and Elizabeth Moore, Dec. 30, 1841, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Washington C. George and Sarah Currell, Oct. 7, 1848, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Obediah Gibler and Phebe Finnicum, July 16, 1848, by Rev. Lemuel B. Perkins. John Gibson and Mary Mills, March 8, 1841, by James Evans. J. P. John Giles and Charlott Hendrix, Dec. 1, 1842. by E. H. Custer, J. P. William Giles and Sarah Ann Coleman, Nov. 21, 1850, by Rev. John Burns. John W. Gillespie and Cornelia Ann Anderson, Nov. 29, 1842, by Wesley Smith. Thomas Gillespie and Isabella Jane Haverfield, Feb. 9, 1843, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. William Gillespie and Nancy Cook, June 9, 1846, by William Taggart, V. D. M. Samuel Gilmore and Elizabeth McMillan, Jan. 2, 1845, by Nathan Tannehill, J. P. William Gilmore and Margaret Carrothers, March 25, 1841, by James Kerr, V. D. M. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES 597 William C. Glasgow and Eliza Poulson, April 3, 1846, by John Layport, J. P. Solomon Glass and Nancy Snider, June 30, 1841, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Isaac Glazener and Mary Ross, Nov. 22, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. James C. Gleaves and Elmira A. McDonald, April 6, 1848, by Rev. J. C. Merry- man. John S. Goe and Catherine E. Colvin, Oct. 7, 1847, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. William Goff and Elizabeth Markley, March 23, 1848, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Francis E. Graham and Rose A. Barnhouse, Oct. 20, 1846, by Rev. C. C. Riggs. John Graham and Sarah Ann Dicks, May 26, 1842, by John Megaw. Thomas M. Granfell and Jane Shanks, Jan. 30, 1848, by Jonas Holloway, J. P. Andrew J. Gray and Nancy Brown, Dec. 6, 1849, by Rev. John Molfit. James A. Gray and Jane E. Junkins, May 17, 1842, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John Gray and Sarah Mays, June 27, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Samuel R. Gray and Eliza E. Moorehead, Feb. 4, 1846, by John Rea, V. D. M. Silas Gray and Sarah Rankin, June 16, 1842, by Rev. Harvey Bradshaw. William Gray and Sarah Ann Cartle, March 6, 1845, by F. T. Larkin, J. P. Jacob Graybill and Elizabeth Megunnell, Jan. 8, 1848, by Rev. Abraham Lemaster. George Green and Mary Ann Scott, April 7, 1844, by Wesley Smith. John Green and Sarah Ross, Nov. 30, 1848, by James Kerr, V. D. M. James Greenfield and Lovenia Hanshaw, April 14, 1842, by George Clancy, V. D. M. John Oliver Greenwalt and Hannah L. Packer, Dec. 2, 1846, by R. K. Price, J. P. Joshua C. Greenwalt and Eleanor Grover, Oct. 18, 1849, by James Taggart, J. P. Isaac Grewell and Eleanor Brown, Feb. 8, 1843, by Mark Hogge, J. P. William W. Griffin and Meriam Dunlap, Dec. 21, 1849, by Rev. Eli Slutes. Harrison Griffith and Deborah Carrothers, March 20, 1841, by Cornelius Crab- tree, J. P. Joshua Griffith and Eleanor Ann Oxley, Jan. 26, 1841, by Cornelius Crabtree, J. P. Thomas G. Grisinger and Sarah Jane Barrier, July 23, 1849, by Rev. Lemuel B, Perkins. John Grooms and Rachel Mansfield, Dec. 15, 1842, by Matthew H. Phillips, J. P. William Grubb and Elizabeth Latham, Nov. 24, 1842, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. John Gruber and Margaret Baird, Nov. 14, 1848, by Rev. C. C. Riggs. David Gundy and Rachel Hines, March 27, 1845, by Rev. Charles Carter. Jacob Gundy and Elizabeth Gutshall, April 13, 1843, by Rev. W. Simpkins. Michael V. Gundy and Christiana Overholtz, Jan. 27, 1848, by Rev. Andrew Klingle. Robert Grunning and Ann Hutchison. March 23, 1848, by T. T. Larkin, J. P. Alexander W. Guthrie and Elizabeth Potts, Sept. 5, 1850, by Samuel Langdon. Benjamin Guthrie and Harriett Fitzgerald, Oct. 28, 1841. John M. Guthrie and Caroline Crabtree, Feb. 10, 1846, by Samuel W. Day. William Guthrie and Isabella Leard, June 15, 1843, by Rev. Harvey Bradshaw. Abraham Gutshall and Catherine Stall, May 11, 1843, by Thomas Finnicum, J. P. Daniel Gutshall and Hannah A. Gibson, June 29, 1843, by Henry F. Brickett, J. P. Gideon Gutshall and Sarah Jane Welling, March 28, 1850. by Rev. John Hare. Jacob Gutshall and Mahabeth Snider, May 16, 1843, by E. H. Custer, J. P. Jacob Gotshall and Eliza Long. Oct. 3, 1850, by Rev. D. Sparks. James Gutshall and Catharine A. Reecer, July 10, 1844, by James Welsh, J. P. James Gutshall and Susanna Smith, Aug. IS, 1850, by George T. Jones. John Gutshall and Rebecca McClintock, Sept. 24, 1846, by R. Brown. Joseph Gutshall and Eve Manbeck, March 5, 1846, by Thomas Finnicum. Levi Gutshall and Catharine Kail, May 3, 1849, by Rev. Lemuel B. Perkins. Samuel Gutshall and Ruth Graham, March 19, 1842. by Thomas McClintock, Moses C. Guy and Marv Ann Fowler, Jan. 13, 1848. by William Arnold, J. P, Thomas Guynn and Mary Cope, April 12, 1846. by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William Guynn and Martha Ramsey, April 30, 1845, by William Arnold, J. P. 598 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Benjamin Guyton and Eleanor Fitzgerald, Oct. 2, 1845, by Rev. Abraham Wheeler. Francis A. Haines and Arabella Haines, Aug. 5, 1847, by Rev. William Knox. Hiram Haines and Terza J. Wilson, March 4, 1845, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Jesse Hall and Hannah Herford, June 6, 1844, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John Hall and Elizabeth Richard, Nov. 23, 1848, by John Ross, J. P. Lewis Hall and Margaret Kent, Dec. 14, 1843, by William Cobb, J. P. Reuben W. Hall and Sarah Jane Jones, Nov. 2, 1849, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Tipton B. Hall and Rachel Fife, March 24, 1847, by Rev. D. S. Welling. Henry Hallyer and Matilda Castell, Oct. 9, 1842, by Richard Gray. Alexander Hamilton and Nancy Hilton, Oct. 28, 1847, by Rev. T. A. Crawford. Craig Hamilton and Margaret McFadden, Feb. 21, 1850, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. John Hamilton and Rebecca Pritchard, Aug. 21, 1845, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Joseph H. Hamilton and Mary Johnson, Dec. 3, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. William Hamlin and Julia Jackson, Jan. 7, 1845, by Rev. George Coleman. Harvey Hammond and Margaret A. Feigley, May 27, 1847, by Rev. J. Lester. John H. Hammond and Nancy Carrick, Nov. 11, 1845, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John Hancher and Priscilla Batten, June 4, 1843, by Wesley Smith. Rezin Handley and Calista R. Hurlbert, July 16, 1843, by E. H. Custer, J. P. Neri A. Hanna and Eliza Jane Phillips, June 7, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Samuel Hanna and Docia A. Boggs, March 16, 1847, by Rev. John Rea. Smith Hanshaw and Sarah Johnson, Feb. 20, 1844, by Asa Holmes, J. P. John Harbin and Providence Graden, Oct. 9, 1843, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Charles Harding and Pamelia Carnes, June 20, 1849, by Marshall McCall, J. P. Edward Harding and Sarah Tucker, Dec. 11, 1847, by Rev. J. W. Case. William Hardisty and Charlotte Hill, Dec. 24, 1847, by T. T. Larkin, J. P. Thomas Harmony and Sarah A. Neal, July 29, 1847, by John Graham, J. P. Ebenezer C. Harriett and Eleanora Norris, Oct. 11, 1848, by R. K. Price, J. P. Augustus C. Harris and Margaret Clark, March 14, 1844, by Reynolds K. Price, J. P. John Harris and Mary Jane Brown, Feb. 19, 1850, by Rev. John Moffitt. John Harrison and Rueann Ogden, June 5, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Thomas W. Harrison and Mary P. Robertson, Oct. 30, 1848, by Rev. Joseph Gorden. Walter Harshe and Catharine Carothers, April 5, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. James Harshee and Maria Carothers, May 22, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Thomas Hartley and Lydia Tomlinson, Oct. 11, 1849, by Rev. Lemuel B, Perkins. William H. Harton and Mary Marris, Dec. 8, 1841, by Rev. L. Janney. James Harvey and Margaret Clark, March 14, 1850, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. Milton Harvey and Elizabeth Bartlett, June 11, 1845, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. William Harvey and Catherine J. Baxter, Aug. 24, 1848, by John Graham, J. P. Philip Hatz and Martha McConnell, Jan. 17, 1848, by Rev. John Hattery. William Hatton and Margaret Rutledge, July 3, 1849, by Rev. John Burns, Joseph Havener and Rebecca Mitchell, Sept. 3, 1846, by James Kerr, V, D, M. Gillespie Haverfield and Mary Clifford, Jan. 18, 1844, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. James N. Haverfield and Martha Hitchcock, Nov. 28, 1844, by James Kerr, V. D. M. James N. Haverfield and Sarah Holmes, Nov. 3, 1841, by James C. Taylor. John Haverfield and Emeline Lavely, Oct. 27, 1842, by Rev. Harvey Bradshaw. Robert Haverfield and Sarah Moffett, Oct. 16, 1850, by Rev. John Mofiitt. Thomas H. Haverfield and Mary Ann Bell, March 22, 1849, by John Blair. .L P. William S. Haverfield and Ruhama Nash, March 13, 1842, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. William Hawthorn and Mary Stires, March 4, 1847, by Rev. Charles Thorn. Abriam Hayes and Anne De Long, April 8, 1845. by Robert Henderson, J. P. Daniel Hayne and Lorana Wharton. Sept. 10, 1848, by William Arnold, J. P. William Haynes and Martha M. Williams, Nov. 24, 1848, by Elijah Carson, J. P. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES 599 Andrew Hazlett and Margaret Jane Johnson, April 19, 1849, by Rev. John Burns. Thomas M. Hazlett and Amelia Bone, Aug. 15, 1850, by Rev. A. Magee. Joseph Healea and Polly Ferrell, April 27, 1843, by Wesley Smith. Samuel Healea and Sarah Ann Boils, Sept. 2, 1841, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Thomas Healea and Catharine Thompson, Jan. 21, 1842, by Rev. Wm. F. Lauck. John Heaston and Frances Firebaugh, Oct. 16, 1850, by Rev. Eli Slutes. Benjamin Heavlin and Sarah McPeck, Dec. 21, 1847, by James Hoover, J. P. Isaac Heavlin and Susannah Bricker, Aug. 20, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Stephen H. Heavlin and Elizabeth McKinney, Nov. 12, 1846, by Hamilton McFadden, J. P. Samuel Hedge and Mary Blair, Jan. 29, 1844, by Rev. James W. Walker. Chalkey Hefflin and Nancy Coleman, Jan. 7, 1847, by G. A. Lowman. John Hefling and Nancy Gardner, Sept. 12. 1846, by G. A. Lowman. John W. Hefling and Rachel Middleton, Nov. 11, 1848, by John Graham, J. P, Lindley Hefling and Elizabeth Gardner, Aug. 20, 1846, by John Graham, J. P. Samuel Heidy and Jane Hendrix, Jan. 6, 1842, by E. H. Custer, J. P. Israel Hemery and Eleanor Tomlinson, June 25, 1849, by Rev. Lemuel B. Perkins. Jacob Hendershot and Mary Welling, March 19, 1844, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. Alexander Henderson and Margaret Finical, June 15, 1843, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Elias Henderson and Sarah Crawford, June 10, 1847, by Rev. Charles H. Peters. Rev. James Henderson and Eleanor A. Thompson, July 12, 1848, by Rev. James C. Merryman. John Henderson and Mary J. Hammond, Aug. 27, 1846, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. John Henderson and Mary Ann Haverfield, March 28, 1850, by Rev. James R. Doig. Matthew Henderson and Isabella Maxwell, Sept. 3, 1844, by James Thornberg. William Henderson and Rosanna Dool, Dec. 29, 1842, by Rev. G. M. Hair. William H. Henderson and Julia Ann Bargar, March 22, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Meshec Hendricks and Margaret Darr, May 29, 1845, by Rev. Charles Carter. Peter Hendricks and Mary Elizabeth Weyant, March 28, 1850, by Abraham Busby, J. P. Jacob Hennes and Sarah Medley, Sept. 3, 1845, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. Andrew Henry and Elizabeth McGuire, April 26, 1850, by Thomas McClintock, J. P. Thomas Henry and Hannah Chaney, Jan. 27, 1842, by Robert P. Simpson. J. P. Jacob H. Herdman and Mary E. Hamilton, March 20, 1848, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. Lemuel Herron and Rachel Ann Lemaster, Sept. 21, 1848, by William Wilson, J. P. Hiram Herryman and Nancy Jane Bell, Feb. 14, 1849, by Rev. James C. Merryman. Joseph Hestand and Catharine Firebaugh, Sept. 16, 1841, by Rev. J. MofRtt. Samuel Heston and Lucinda Holmes, Nov. 24, 1842, by Rev. William Deveney. Hiram Hibbard and Sarah Hamilton, March 30, 1843, by George Clancey, V. D. M. Richard R. Higgins and Ann E. Branson, April 21, 1842, by George Atkinson, J. P. Daniel Hilbert and Mary Stall. March 11. 1841, by Benjamin Pope. Henry Hilbert and Ann Waddington. Feb. 5, 1846. by Amos Bartholomew. Reuben Hilbert and Margaret Ann Moore, Feb. 14, 1850, by Andrew W. Lynch, J. P. Philip Hill and Mary Ann Reed, June 12. 1850, by William Reed. Robert Hill and Elizabeth Rea, .Jan. 8, 1846. by .John Rea. V. D. M. Charles Hilliard and Angeline Andrews, Jan. 2, 1844, by Alexander Bangor, J. P. Conrad Hilligas and Mary Harris, July 27, 1845, by William Arnold, J. P. 39 600 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John Hilton and Nancy Davidson, Sept. 24, 1843, by Isaac Talbott, J. P. John H. Hilton and Icy Utterback, Oct. 11, 1842, by M. F. Burkhead, J. P. John W. Hilton and Mary Vasbinder, June 15, 1843, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Daniel Himebaugh and Charity Dowell, Aug. 1, 1850, by Rev. John Burns. Joseph Himbaugh and Jane Maynard, June 12, 1849, by B. Herrou. Daniel Hines and Lurana Myres, Sept. 27, 1849, by Rev. Isaac W. Baird. David Hines and Harriet Smith, Dec. Iti, 1847, by Rev. Pardon Cook. Jeremiah Hines and Elizabeth Irons, Nov. 4, 1847, by Rev. Thomas Guy. William Hines and Ruth Tipton, Aug. 31, 1847, by Rev. Verdon Waller. Aaron Hitchcock and Mary Lease, Jan. 15, 1850, by Rev. John Moffitt. Jacob Hitchcock and Elizabeth Birney, March 22, 1849, by Rev. James C. Merryman. John Hitchcock and Sophia Thompson, Oct. 6, 1847, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. Samuel Hitchcock and Christian Kimmel, April 20, 1844, by Thomas Finnicum, J. P. Amos Hixson and Sibby Palmer, June 21, 1849, by Henry Wisner, J. P. Henry Hoaglaud and Charity Moore, Sept. 25, 1847, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. John Hodgins and Isabella Lucy, May 4, 1843, by Rev. George Lucy. Joseph Hoffman and Hannah Kaufman, March 16, 1847, by Joseph Masters, J. P. Lewis Huffman and Catharine Collins, Oct. 10, 1844, by J. W. McAbee. Robert H. Hoge and Catharine De Witt, Dec. 29, 1842, by Reynolds K. Price. Alexander Holliday and Susanna Lawrence, Dec. 25, 1843, by John Knox, J. P. Eldrid G. Holliday and Mary Cunningham, Jan. 10, 1850, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. James P. Holliday and Ruth Greenell, March 22, 1842, by Reynolds K. Price. Robert Holliday and Robert Clark, Dec. 9, 1846, by Rev. John Hattery. Joseph Holloway and Ann Grigg, April 11, 1841, by John Knox, J. P. Rev. Charles A. Holmes and Tempe Tingley, Oct. 14, 1850, by Rev. John Moffitt. Isaac Holmes and Sarah Plummer, Sept. 19, 1844, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. James Holmes and Eleanor Edwards, Sept. 30, 1841, by Jesse Merrill, J. P. Joseph Holmes and Mary Jane Heberling, Feb. 10, 1842, by Rev. William P. Lauck. Joseph Holmes and Mary McConnel, Jan. 7, 1850, by Rev. Charles A. Holmes. Samuel Holmes and Emily E. Pumphrey, Dec. 8, 1841, by Rev. William Knox. John Hoobler and Sarah Miller, March 5, 1846, by Rev. Adam Stump. Thomas N. Hooper and Sarepta Woodruff, Jan. 24, 1847, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Thomas Hoops and Ann Gray, Aug. 4, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. James Hoover and Parmelia Keys, March 17, 1842, by John Gruber, J. P. James Hoover and Nancy Sterling, March 10, 1849, by Rev. John D. Rich. John Hoover and Catharine Ann Hines, Nov. 28, 1848, by Rev. J. Rich. George Horn and Mariah Saxton. April 14, 1841, by Cyrus McNeely. George Horn and Sarah Spring, March 19, 1846, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. George P. Horn and Jane McGonagle, Sept. 2, 1841, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. William Horn and Sarah Christy. Dec. 16, 1848, by Rev. Edward Smith. Jacob Hosterman and Susan Naragong, June 27, 1843, by Henry F. Brickitt, J. P. Adam Hotz and Elizabeth Guyton, Oct. 2, 1845. by Rev. Abraham Wheeler. Michael Hotz and Ann Sincleare, June 13, 1850, by Rev. A. Magee. Robert House and Jane Ramsey, Feb. 23, 1846, by Samuel W. Day. Jacob Houser and Elizabeth Smith, March 13, 1842, by Alexander Wilson. Elisha Huston and Rebecca Arnold, Feb. 16, 1849, by Andrew Lynch. J. P. Robert Houston and Mary Ann Morris, July 21, 1848, by Rev. James C. Merry- man. Joseph Howard and Sarah Jane Moore, Oct. IS. 1849, by Rev. Charles A. Holmes. James Howell and Margaret Jamison, Dec. 5, 1843, by W. Lorimire. John Howell and Sarah Crouch. Oct. 12. 1841, by William Cobb, J. P. Nathan A. Howell and Sarah Smith, Oct. 24, 1848, by A. W. Simpkins. James Hoy and Margaret Browning, July 10, 1850, by James Taggart, J. P. John Hoy and Julia Ann Brown, May 21, 1843, by .John M. Brown, J. P. Edward Huebener and Sarah Haines, May 29, 1845, by Elijah Carson, J. P. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES 601 Andrew Huff and Pha?be Smith, Nov. 14, 1844, by David A. Scott, J. P. James Huff and Abby Weaver, Oct. 11, 1845, by James Holloway, J. P. Jesse Huff and Susanna Welch, Jan. 29, 1843, by Thomas McClintick, J. P. Richard Huff and Hester Green, June 13, 1844, by Rev. William Simpkins. Thomas Huff and Mary Edwards, Jan. 26, 1847, by Thomas McClintock. Edward Hughs and Sarah Brown, Jan. 21, 1841, by Jacob Coon. Thomas Hughs and Keziah Wheeler, Sept. 29, 1847, by Rev. D. S. Welling. John Hull and Elizabeth Straughsbaugh, March 9, 1842, by William Cobb, J. P. Amblin W. Hunt and Elizabeth Stiles, May 5, 1849, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Charles Hunt and Emilia Hays, Jan. 31, 1841, by John Knox, J. P. James F. Hunter anS Martha Jane Roby, Jan. 25, 1849, by Edward Smith. James Huntsman and Rebecca Hammond, Jan. 25, 1844, by Isaac Talbott, J. P. James Huntsman and Mary Jane Granfel, March 2, 1848, by Rev. Pardon Cook. Belden G. Hurlbert and Caroline Delany, July 4, 1850, by William S. Dool. Emanuel Hurless and Mary Heaston, Jan. 19, 1848, by Rev. Andrew Klingle. George Hurless and Elizabeth Palmer, Dec. 1, 1842, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. John Hurless and Sally Ann Wright, May 14, 1842, by Rev. Benjamin Wood. John Hurless and Mary Jane Wright, May 11, 1846, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. Michael Hurless and Hannah Tennar, May 22, 1849, by Rev. Jeremiah Phillips. Zephus Hurless and Elizabeth Green, Oct. 29, 1841, by Robert P. Simpson, J. P. Alexander Huston and Amanda M. Collins, May 7, 1843, by Israel Archbold, V. D. M. Caleb Irwin and Elizabeth Cams, Aug. 23, 1845, by John Cramblett. J. P. Ninian Irwin and Sarah Ann Carpenter, Sept. 28, 1848, by Isaac Talbot, J. P. Robert Irwin and Louisa Vickers, Aug. 21, 1845, by Isaac Talbott, J. P. John Ish and Susanna Dinger, Dec. 18. 1843, by Henry N. Beckett, J. P. Nathaniel Jenkin and Mehala Smith, Feb. 22, 1849, by John Graham, J. P. William Jenkins and Mahala Jinkins, Jan. 5, 1843, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. Joseph E. Junkins and Elizabeth Hanna, June 11, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Zachariah Jewell and Mary Dool, Sept. 4, 1848, by T. R. Crawford, V. D. M. Elias Johnson and Matilda Campbell, Nov. 25, 1841. by Rev. Robert Clark. Elijah Johnson and Mary Cocherel, Jan. 14, 1847, by Rev. William B. Hunt. Joseph R. Johnson and Malinda Wright, Feb. 1, 1849, by John Graham, J. P. Lewis Johnson and Hannah S. West, Oct. 4, 1849, by T. R. Crawford, V. D. M. Samuel Johnson and Mary Shiery, Sept. 18, 1846, by James Cameron. Thomas Johnson and Eleanor Scott, Oct. 3, 1843, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Wesley Johnson and Elizabeth Roby, Dec. 30. 1846, by Rev. B. S. Johnson. Wesley Y. Johnson and Susanna Hamilton, Dec. 25, 1847, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. William Johnson and Hannah Dowell, April 1, 1841, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. William B. Johnson and Mary Gundy, March 16, 1848, by Rev. Andrew Klingle. William Johnson and Elizabeth Carpenter, Oct. 12, 1848. by Isaac Vallcott, J. P. Alexander Johnston and Matilda Hendricks, April 26. 1845, by R. Brown. George Johnston and Isabella Cairns, March 3, 1842, by R. Brown. John Johnston and Eleanor Cairns. Nov. 23, 1843. by R. Brown. John Johnson and Mary Hagan, Sept. 9, 1846, by T. T. Larkin. J. P. Thomas Joice and Elizabeth McCullough, June 22, 1845. by John Graham, J. P. Alexander Jones and Marinda McKnight, April 28, 1850, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. David Jones and Margaret Riggle, Aug. 22. 1844, by Rev. A. Bartholomew. Henry Jones and Ann .Jenkins. June 27, 1849. by Rev. .lacob Lemmon. John Jones and Edith Miller, Oct. 12, 1844. by .lonas Holloway. J. P. John .Jones and J^ydia Richards. March 23, 1848. by John Rea, V. D. M. T^ewis Jones and Elizabeth Brown, Nov. 14. 1843. by Wesley Smith. Samuel Jones and Nancy Quillan. Aug. 9, 1844. by Reynolds K. Price. J. P. William .Jones and Sarah Renicor, April 8. 1849, by William Arnold. J. P. William M. Jones and Lydia Hallett. .Jan. 12, 1845, by .John Knox. J. P. George .Joy and Sarah Fisher, July 13, 1841, by Nathan Tannehill, J. P. Abraham Jackson and Susan Thompson, Dec. 29. 1849. by Joshua Adams. John Jackson and Margaret Neill, Jan. 24, 1842, by William Ross, V. D. M. 603 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John James and Matilda Holmes, July 29, 1841, by Jesse Merrell, J. P. Andrew Jamison and Ann Jamison, Sept. 6, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Archibold Jamison and Mary E. Martin, Jan. 16, 1845, by James Cameron. Robert Jamison and Mary Welch, Oct. 25, 1845, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. William Jamison and Sarah Easter, Jan. 18, 1848, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. Jacob Jarvis and Eliza Matilda Bryan, Oct. 6, 1842, by Rev. William Knox. George Kail and Nancy Curran, Dec. 14, 1843, by Henry H. Beckett, J. P. Jackson H. Kail and Elizabeth J. Stonaker, June 18, 1847, by Rev. A. C. Hunger. Samuel Kail and Catharine Nofsinger, May 28, 1846, by Abraham Lemaster, V. D. M. Isaac B. Keepers and Mary Ann Hickson, Sept. 28, 1843, by Rev. Israel Arch- bold. David Keeser and Minerva Ruby, Sept. 23, 1843, by M. Crowl, J. P. Simon Keeser and Mary Ann Johnson, Sept. 15, 1843, by James McGaw. Conrad Keesey and Ellen Brooks, Jan. 14, 1841, by John Selby, J. P. James Keesey and Margaret Layport, April 30, 1846, by Rev. Samuel W. Day. William Kelly and Margaret Wood, Sept. 5, 1843, by Reynolds K. Price, J. P. Daniel Kennedy and Mary Ann Johnson, Feb. 14, 1850, by Rev. William B. Hunt. James Kennedy and Sarah E. Knox, July 23, 1846, by Rev. J. Drummond. Levi J. Kennard and Sarah Atkinson, Feb. 2, 1847, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Michael B. Kennedy and Lucinda Crossan, April 25, 1848, by James Kerr, J. P. Robert Kennedy and Eliza Jane McCullough, Aug. 16, 1848, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Absalom Kent and Sarah McColms, Oct. 30, 1849, by M. Crowl, J. P. Enoch Kent and Margaret Ramsey, April 10, 1848, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William Kent and Hannah Lewis, March 30, 1848, by Rev. James Henderson, James Kerr and Julia A. Carrick, Feb. 25, 1847, by James Kerr, V. D. M. William Kidwell and Sarah Crabtree, April 5, 1842, by J. Montgomery. Abraham Kimmell and Susanna Stall, Sept. 19, 1844, by Rev. Amos Bartholo- mew. Adam Kimmel and Martha Wallace, March 28, 1849, by Rev. Lemuel B. Perkins, J. P. Isaac Kimmel and Amanda Sawville, March 24, 1845, by James Cameron. Samuel Kincaid and Sarah Rea, Feb. 28, 1850, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John Kinsey and Nancy Strachan, Dec. 30, 1846. Kersey W. Kinsey and Sarah J. Haverfield, May 6, 1847, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Rees Kinsey and Tabitha Whealdon, April 19, 1843, by Reynolds K. Price, J. P. Reese Kinsey and Eliza Ridgway, Oct. 2, 1845, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. John Kirk and Mary Ann Nickels, Nov. 29. 1843. by T. M. Erwin, V. D. M. James Kirkpatrick and Ellen S. Wallace, Feb. 25, 1847, by James Kerr. V. D. M. Robert G. Kirkpatrick and Elvira Hays, March 13, 1850, by T. R. Crawford, V. D. M. Joseph Knight and Eliza Ann Jones, Feb. 10, 1842, by John Knox, J. P. Abraham B. Knittle and Harriet Boar, Jan. 18, 1844, by R. Brown. John Knoff and Sarah Kimmel, June 4, 1846, by Rev. Amos Bartholomew. George Knouff and Lettyann McKelveer, Dec. 18, 1844, by John Bryan. Arthur Knox and Amanda Winter, Aug. 1, 1844, by Wesley Smith. Robert Knox and Lucy Smith, Aug. 12, 1847, by Rev. Pardon Cook. Charles Koogler and Mary Welch, June 19, 1849, by Joshua Adams, J. P. Moses Kraus and Fanny Rothchild, April 14, 1846, by Andrew Lynch. J. P. George Lafferty and Margaret J. McConnell, April 14, 1847, by H. Parks. V. D. M. John Lafferty and Elizabeth Rea, March 1. 1842, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John V. Lafferty and Jane Walters, Sept. 7, 1843, by Rev. Harvey Bradshaw. Samuel Lafferty and Michael Geary, Jan. 17, 1849, by T. B. Crawford. V. D. M. Thomas J. Lafferty and Lucy Caves. Sept. 18, 1848, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Benjamin Laizure and Mary Ann Laizure, March 29, 1844, by George Cook, J. P. Moses Lakin and Jane Drydon, Feb. 15, 1842, by John Knox, J. P. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES 603 Samuel Lakin and Dorcas Colvin, June 22, 1843, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. Thomas N. Lakin and Mary S. Pickett, Jan. 28, 1847, by John Graham, J. P. Leonard Lamb and Rebecca Jane Stuart, Aug. 25, 1849, by Joshua Adams, J. P. John J. Lane and Lucinda Grimes, Oct. 18, 1847, by B. Mitchell, V. D. M. David Lanning and Mary McMath, Nov. 15, 1846, by R. K. Price, J. P. John Lathem and Elizabeth Clark, April 18, 1850, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. Joseph Laughridge and Lydia A. Phillips, Sept. 19, 1850, by Thomas Mc- Clintock, J. P. George Lavengood and Elizabeth Abel, March 8, 1849, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. James Law and Eleanor C. Nelson, Feb. 11, 1841, by M. B. Lukins, J. P. Freeman Lawrence and Emily Mitchell, July 14, 1841, by William Arnold, J. P. Ezra E. Lawson and Matilda Davis, July 4, 1844, by Daniel Scott, J. P. Abraham Layport and Sarah Heath, April 30, 1846, by Isaac Talbott, J. P. Reed Lewis and Maria Ferrell, Nov. 20, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. William Lewis and Selina Thompson, Feb. 17, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. William H. Lewis and Harriett Holland, Dec. 14, 1848, by James Kerr, V. D. M. George Lickey and Pheoebe A. Cramer, May 5, 1846, by R. K. Price, J. P. James Lightner and Elizabeth K. Hoagland, Dec. 23, 1847, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. Junkins Lightner and Susan Fisher, Nov. 3, 1842, by Hamilton McFadden. John Lightner and Eliza Jane Dickerson, April 7, 1842, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Samuel Lightner and Rachel Bingham, Dec. 31, 1846, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. William Lightner and Sarah A. Shipton, Dec. 21, 1844, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Joseph Lighten and Ester Morton, April 20, 1848, by Jonas HoUoway, J. P. James Linden and Deborah Davis, March 5, 1841, by John H. Brown, J. P. James Lindon and Mary Ann Garry. June 31, 1845, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. Joseph Lindsey and Hannah Teal, Aug. 10, 1843, by George Clancey, V. D. M. Francis Lindsley and Elizabeth Cecil, Nov. 16, 1848, by John W. Baker, J. P. John S. Lisle and Elizabeth J. Lightell, Oct. 11, 1849, by Rev. A. Magee. Thomas Lock and Mary Skipper, Dec. 29, 1846, by Thomas McClintock, J. P. Hezekiah Long and Sarah Jane Middleton, May 14, 1843, by Elder Jacob S. Hanger. James Long and Sarah Dunlap, Feb. 23, 1846, by Richard Brown. William Long and Mary Ann Stonaker, Dec. 21, 1843, by David Bower, J. P. John Love and Nancy Downing, Nov. 27, 1850, by McKnight Williamson. John Lowmiller and Rachel Haun, Oct. 1, 1846, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Joshua Lowmiller and Rebecca Sawville, Sept. 11, 1842, by Benjamin Pope. Aquilla Lukens and Jane Harding, Dec. 26, 1850, by Rev. Thomas Ferrell. George T. Lukins and Mary Whitten, Feb. 15, 1844, by John L. Layport, J. P. Nathaniel H. Lukins and Keziah Bliss, May 9, 1844, by Isaac Talbott, J. P. Francis S. Layport and Rachel L. P^ord, April 10, 1845, by Isaac Talbott, J. P. Isaac Layport and Rachel L. Johnson, Feb. 25, 1841, by Rev. Robert Cook. Isaac Layport and Cynthia Conaway, June 3, 1847, by Rev. Samuel W. Day. William Layport and Jane Laughridge, May 10, 1849, by Hamilton McFadden, J. P. Reuben Lee and Nancy Jane Laizure, Aug. 19, 1847, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Thomas Martin Lee and Mary L. McCullough, Feb. 11, 1847, by James Kerr, V. D. M. George Leece and Jane Birney. Jan. 9, 1849, by Rev. .Tames C. Merryman. Amon Lemmon and Rebecca Forsythe. Aug. 8, 1850, by Rev. A. Magee. Moses Lemmon and Mary Ann Allen, Nov. 19, 1846, by Rev. .Josiah Gibson. AVilliam Lenheart and Mary Harris, Dec. 22. 1846, by E. P. Jowle. Elisha Lewis and Catherine Snider, March 18, 1841, by William Arnold, J. P. Elias Lewis and Mary Trickle, Feb. 2, 1843, by Rev. Harvey Bradshaw. Jacob Lewis and Catharine Mattern, Aug. 4, 1841, by John Ross. Jacob Lewis and Sarah Kelly, Sept. 12, 1844, by Rev. Ebenozer Hays. William Lynn and Mary Butler, Oct. 11, 1842, by Matthew H. Phillips, J. P. David T. Lyon and Ann B. Miller, Sept. 12, 1850, by Cyrus McNeely. Ruben Lyoia and Eliza Ann Fogle, July 25, 1841, by Cyrus McNeely. 604 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY David W. Lyons and Sarah Ann Wallace, March 31, 1842, by James Kerr, V. D. M. James Lyons and Margaret Crouch, Aug. 31, 1841, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John G. Lyons and Martha T. Wycoff, April 27, 1847, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Samuel Lyons and Livonia Dunlap, Aug. 23, 1850, by R. Brown. Alexander Lytle and Maria aheldz, April 5, 1849, by Michael Oswalt. John McAdam and Harriett Butler, April 13, 1848, by Rev. Samuel Findley. Alexander McAdoo and Elizabeth Beclt, July 6, 1850, by James Taggart, J. P. William McAdoo and Nancy Clark, Oct. 10, 1844, by John Graham, J. P. James McAfee and Margaret Atkinson, April 4, 184U, by Rev. Thomas McGaw. William Macance and Michel Cramblett, Feb. 24, 1842, by John L. Layport, J. P. Dennis McBaines and Mary Jane Dickey, Sept. 30, 1847, by Rev. Job Lister. Andrew McBrean and Elizabeth Starr, July 29, 1846, by John Wallace, J. P. Robert McBride and Anne Jones, May 18, 1845, by John Knox, J. P. Thomas McCall and Mary Adams, Oct. 5, 1848, by Rev. Joseph Gorden. William McCamiss and Melisa Carrol, Jan. 17, 1844, by Rev. A. Bartholomew. William McCamiss and Barbara Palmer, Feb. 5, 1850, by Rev. C. C. Riggs. Thomas A. McCann and Jane McKee, April 1, 1845, by Rev. E. Hays. Isaac McCauley and Rebecca Peoples, May 28, 1850, by Rev. Alexander Swany. John McCleary and Emely Thompson, Nov. 17, 1842, by Wesley Smith. James McClintick and Catharine Walters, June 1, 1844, by John L. Layport, J. P. William McClish and Susanna Bell, Jan. 28, 1848, by James Hoover, J. P. James McCollam and Sarah Straub, Nov. 30, 1845, by John Ross, J. P. Matthew McCollom Knox and Hannah H. Romans, May 16, 1848, by Rev. J. C. Merryman. Johnson G. McCollough and Margery Brokaw, Feb. 21, 1850, by James Kerr, V. D. M. David McConkey and Margaret Reed, Feb. 22, 1843, by William Cable, J. P. William McConkey and Nancy Likes, Dec. 13, 1849, by Cyrus McNeely. John C. McConnell and Rachel Browning, April 9, 1848, by R. K. Price, J. P. Robert McConnell and Sarah Ann Pickering, May 25, 1843, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Wilson McConnell and Rachel Hooper, April 21, 1842, by M. Crawe, J. P. , Andrew McCormick and Jane Murdoch, May 24, 1843, by George Clancey, V. D. M. John McCormick and Priscilla Purviance, Sept. 3, 1843, by George Clancey, V. D. M. John W. McCort and Margaret Evans, Oct. 24, 1844, by Rev. Israel Archbold. Ebenezer McCoy and Hannah Dickerson, March 16, 1848, by Rev. James Henderson. Francis W. McCoy and Catharine Dudgeon, April 1, 1849. by James J. Mcllgar. Matthew McCoy and Harriett Crawford, Dec. 3, 1847, by James Kerr, V. D. M, Colmar McCoy and Elizabeth Corbin, Aug. 31, 1843, by James L. Clark. Thomas McCrary and Elizabeth Chapman, Dec. 25, 1843, by Rev. William Knox. Alexander G. McCullough and Evaline Tomlinson, Dec. 7, 1848, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Andrew McCullough and Rebecca McCullough, Dec. 10, 1847, by Rev. Israel Archbold. James McCullough and Mary Brown, Jan. 9, 1845, by Edwin H. Nevin, V. D. M. John McCullough and Martha J. Welch. April 26, 1849, by B. Herron. Jonathan McCullough and Ann E. Hill, Dec. 10, 1845, by John Graham. J. P. Joseph McCullough and Elizabeth Patton, Sept. 18, 1843, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Cyrus McCurdy and Peggy Ann Bowers, Feb. 20, 1849, by Rev. A. N. Bartholo- mew. David McCurdy and Mary McNamee, July 13, 1843, by James Simpson, J. P. Peter McCurdy and Mary Ann Bower, Sept. 6, 1848, by Rev. A. N. Bartholomew. Martin McDevitt and Jane Scott, May 20, 1847, by E. P. Jacob. Samuel McDivitt and Isabella Jeffers, Sept. 25, 1841, by James Evans, J. P. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES 605 James McDonough and Fanny Abbott, July 17, 1847, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. Obediah McDonough and Mary A. Shaffer, March 13, 1844, by Robert P. Simp- son, J. P. Alexander McFadden and Elizabeth Barger, June 29, 1847, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Benjamin McFadden and Margaret Cusick, Oct. 4, 1849, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. John W. McFadden and Hannah Hillhouse, Oct. 8, 1846, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. John McFadden and Catherine Haverfield, Dec. 17, 1847, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. Samuel McFadden and Jane Baxter, July 3, 1845, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. Thomas M. McGaw and Emily Ann Dicks, Feb. 10, 1842, by Rev. Samuel Loney. John McGill and Nancy Auld, Nov. 13, 1844, by Isaac Talbott. Robert McGill and Rachel Richerson, June 25, 1846, by Isaac Talbott, J. P. William McGrew and Cynthia Ann Corbin, Oct. 26, 1848, by Rev. James C. Merryman. Sampson McGuire and Nancy Hoover, Aug. 13, 1846, by Rev. Samuel W. Day. Joseph Mcllroy and Mary Jane B. Lee, Oct. 9, 1850, by William Lowmes. Joseph Mcllveen and Mary Johnston, May 23, 1850, by John Bryan. David H. Mackey and Margaret Harryman, Nov. 11, 1848, by Rev. James C. Merryman. Ebenezer McKinney and Ruhamah Drummond, Nov. 18, 1840, by Rev. Thos. Hanna. John McKinley and Elizabeth Morris, Aug. 8, 1848, by Rev. James C. Merryman. Andrew McLandsborough and Marcy McDonagh, Nov. 10, 1846, by Joseph Masters, J. P. John McLandsborough and Catharine Ann Ely, Aug. 16, 1849, by Rev. Lemuel B. Perkins. James M. McLane and Mary McFarland, April 3, 1850, by Rev. William Wishart. John McLaughlin and Nancy Kerr, Feb. 8, 1844, by Rev. John Rea. Goodnow McMillan and Margaret Glass, Dec. 8, 1850, by David Hanlon, J. P. James B. McMillan and Eva Glass. June 13, 1844, by Rev. Israel Archbold. Joel McMillan and Sarah M. Morris, Aug. 10, 1848, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. John McMillan and Jane Moore, Oct. 10, 1850, by T. R. Crawford, V. D. M. Matthew McMillan and Rosilly Willison, Nov. 22, 1849, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Robert McMillan and Mary Boyd, May 19, 1842, by Reynolds K. Price. Robert McMillan and Eleanor Moore, Aug. 27, 1850, by J. P. Work, J. P. Amzi McNamee and Mary E. Harvey, April 11. 1846, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Oliver McNary and Eleanor Grove, Sept. 16, 1846, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Thornton McNight and Charlotte Houston, Nov. 17, 1844, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Martin McPeck and Mary Jane Her, March 22, 1849, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. Arthur M. Maholm and Nancy Holland, March 23, 1848, by James Kerr. V. D. M. John Maholm and Elizabeth McFadden, Nov. 27, 1845. by H. Parks, V. D. M. James Mahood and Nancy Grimes, Nov. 31, 1843, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Joseph Maish and Sarah Ritchey, Sept. 18, 1845, by James Kerr. V. D. M. Archibald R. Major and Francis Lemmon, March 27, 1845, by B. Mitchell, V. D. M. Joseph Major and Sarah Jane Bell. Feb. 21, 1849, by Rev. James C. Merryman. Lewis C. Mallernee and Levina McFadden, March 3, 1846, by Michael Leard, J. P. William Mallernee and Susanna Walker, Nov. 18. 1848, by Michael Lard. John Manbeck and Phebe Beck. Sept. 18, 1847, by Rev. Abraham Lemaster. William Manbeck and Isabella Miller. Jan. 25. 1849, by Thomas Finnicum. J. P. James Manly and Ann Jordon. Aug. 25, 1848, by Rev. Joseph Gorden. Jerret Manning and Doratha Familton. Dec. 1. 1842. by Rev. Israel Archbold. Nathaniel Mansfield and Eliza Jane Pearce. .July 5. 1849. .Joshua Adams, J. P. James Markee and Eleanor Norris. Jan. 18, 1846. by M. F. Burkhead. J. P. John Markee and Parmelia Ann Davidson, April 7, 1841, by Rev. Benjamin P. Furgason. 60G HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY William Markee and Lucinda Smith, April 5, 1842, by J. Montgomery. David Markley and Eleanor Stevens, Dec. 24, 1846, by Andrew^ Lynch, J. P. John Markley and Mary Ann Manbeck, Feb. 20, 1848, by Rev. Abraham Lamaster. Matthias Markley and Rebecca Staphens, Jan. 24, 1850, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Thomas Markley and Mary Henderson, May 21, 1846, by Rev. James Cameron. Christopher Marshall and Catharine Shiver, March 6, 1845, by John Blair, J. P. Jacob Marshall and Sarah Jane McFadden, Feb. 12, 1846, by William Arnold, J. P. John G. Marshall and Nancy Sloan, Feb. 4, 1847, by H. Parks, V. D. M. John F. Marshbank and Elizabeth Wirick, Jan. 20, 1848, by T. R. Crawford, V. D. M. Alexander Mason and Nancy Ann Roper, Feb. 8, 1850, by Rev. J. W. Shrewe. William C. Mason and Mary Osbourne, Sept. 4, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Brice Masten and Lydia A. Hilbert, April 8, 1845, by Rev. Amos Bartholomew. Isaac Masters and Ann Overholtz, March 15, 1849, by Rev. Michael Oswalt. Morris Matson and Mary Mercer, March 12, 1845, by Robert Wade. Abijah Matthews and Nancy Ford, June 1, 1842, by John Knox, J. P. William Matthews and Margaret Ray, Feb. 6, 1845, by John Rea, V. D. M. William Matthews and Susanna Whitington, Oct. 11, 1849, by John Knox, J. P. James Maxwell and Mary Robison, Nov. 19, 1846, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. James Maxwell and Deborah Busby, March 21, 1850, by John Bryant, J. P, Robert Maxwell and Rachel J. Tompson, March 24, 1847, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Samuel Maxwell and Elizabeth Hager, April 4, 1844, by George Cook, J. P. Samuel Maxwell and Mary Ann Howser, Nov. 11, 1847, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Thomas Maxwell and Sarah Jane Miller, Oct. 6, 1850, by Rev. James R. Leig. Walter C. Maxwell and Mariah Shipton, Aug. 19, 1841, by W. D. McCartney, V. D. M. Thomas H. Mazend and Susanna McCullough, Oct. 14, 1845, by Rev. Samuel Langden. John Means and Mary Wilson, April 19, 1850, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. Isaac N. Meek and Sarah Foster, March 25, 1841, by Rev. E. Smith. John Melany and Martha McMullen, Aug. 18, 1843, by R. Brown. Thomas Meldrum and Rachel Billingsley, Jan. 27, 1848, by Pardon Cook. Thomas Merchant and Eliza E. Merchant, Oct. 10, 1844, by Rev. John R. Dunlap. Thomas Merrill and Elizabeth Jackson, Aug. 31, 1842, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Daniel Merryman and Mary Ann Yarnel, June 15, 1848, by Rev. Pardon Cook. John Merriman and Mary Shivers, Nov. 14, 1844, by John Blair, J. P. Henson Merryman and Mary Moore Hill, March 1, 1843, by Rev. Harvey Brad- shaw. Dennis Micheal and Cynthia Barnhart, Aug. 10, 1848, by Rev. J. Burns. Jesse Middleton and Susan A. Titus. Dec. 24, 1845, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. Andrew Mikesell and Sarah Ann Hilbert, June 1, 1843, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. George Mikesell and Mahala Hoobler, Jan. 9, 1845, by Rev. A. Bartholomew. Asa Miller and Matilda Wharton, Oct. 20, 1850, by James Taggart, J. P. Eli Miller and Mary Hollingsworth, March 6, 1846, by Jonas Hollaway, J. P. Elias Miller and Rebecca Foos. June 17, 1841, by Thomas Finnicum, J. P. George Miller and Catharine Lowmiller, Nov. 7, 1843, by Thomas Finnicum, J. P. Jacob Miller and Eleanor Cox, Oct. 7, 1849, by James Taggart, J. P. James Miller and Delila Cissel, June 30, 1842, by Hamilton McFadden, J. P, John M. Miller and Hannah Smith, March 28, 1841, by Samuel Lewis, J. P. John Miller and Jane A. Bryan, Nov. 22, 1844, by J. W. McAbee. John Miller and Susanna Mikesell. May 1, 1849, by Rev. D. Sparks. John Miller and Fanny Gordon, Feb. 28, 1850, by Rev. John Moffitt. John Miller and Elizabeth Shepherd, May 7, 1850, by William Wilson, J. P. Milton Miller and Jane Blackburn, Aug. 9, 1847, by Rev. D. S. Welling. Richard Miller and Elizabeth Jenkens, Feb. 6, 1850, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES 607 Rozel D. Miller and Jane Robisou, Feb. 6, 1850, by B. Brown, Solomon Miller and Elizabeth Long, March 8, 1849, by Rev. D. Sparks. James Milligan and Elizabeth Hays, May 31, 1845, by Robert Henderson, J. P. Mark Milligan and Joanna fcimith, Feb. 17, 1845, by John Blair, J. P. Alexander Milliken and Eliza Ann Lee, Dec. 30, 1841, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. Ellas Mills and Mary Brown, July ay, 1850, by Rev. Samuel W. Day. Reuben Mills and Elizabeth Parks, April 1, 1845, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. William Mills and Sarah A. Cannon, Sept. 3, 1844, by Rev. Ebenezer Hays. Harlin Milliner and Nancy Hooper, March 1, 1841), by Rev. Jacob Lenimou, Jacob Miner and Mary Kimmell, Dec. 9, 1847, by Rev. A. Bartholomew. John Minor and Catharine Gillespie, July 28, 1841, by E. H. Custer, J. P. Eli Minteer and Sarah Teel, Sept. 2(j, 1844, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. John Minteer and Ann Maftett, July 7, 1840, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Alexander Miser and Eleanor Roberts, April 9, 1848, by Rev. A. N. Bartholo- mew. Hugh Mitchel and Nancy Nash, March 19, 1844, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. Joseph Mitchell and Hannah Arthur, April 25, 1849, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. Joseph Mitchell and Susanna Thompson, Oct. 8, 1850, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Robert Mitchell and Eliza J. Atkinson, April 1, 1845, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Rudolph Mitchell and Nancy Ferrell, Feb. 18, 1841, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Samuel Mitchel and Mary Marshall, April 21, 1849, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. Hiram Mitchner and Eliza Long, Oct. 21, 1845, by Robert Henderson, J. P. Seth Mitchener and Elizabeth Ann Shannon, Sept. 3, 1850, by William Brown- ing. Adam Moffltt and Eliza Jane Means, Oct. 28, 1845, by Rev. George Lucy. Andrew Monroe and Loisa Mansfield, May 12, 1841, by Elias Gatchel, V. D. M. John Monroe and Rachel Mills, Sept. ]8, 1842, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Abriam Moore and Hannah Shivers, Nov. 13, 1841, by Rev. Robert Cook. Alexander Moore and Elizabeth Johnson, Nov. 27, 1842, by Rev. Harvey Brad- shaw. Alexander F. Moore and Susanna Hanna, July 26, 1848, by Rev. Joseph Gorden. Christopher Moore and Margaret Cameron, June 15, 1850, by William Arnold, J. P. David Moore and Jane Clark, March 11, 1841, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Elisha Moore and Rebecca Boutel, Dec. 4, 1845, by Nathaniel Linder. Enos Moore and Hannah Bargar, May 14, 1846, by John Blair, J. P. George Moore and Eliza Jane Christy, May 11, 1847, by John Graham, J. P. Gillespy Moore and Eliza Ann Patton, Oct. 5, 1842, by John Walker, V. D. M. Henry Moore and Mary A. Collins, April 8, 1845, by J. N. McAbee. Isiah Moore and Henrietta Reynolds, Sept. 25, 1847, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. James Moore and Julia L. Edney, Feb. 25, 1849, by Rev. Pardon Cook. Jeremiah Moore and (Catharine Davidson, Aug. 22, 1841, by O. N. B. Lukins, J. P. John Moore and Elizal)eth Figley, March 27. 1846, by Rev. J. J. Covert. John Moore and Ann Chandler, Oct. 12, 1850, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Samuel Moore and Isabella Birney, Oct. 22, 1845, by Samuel W. Day. Thomas Moore and Catherine Kimmell, June 15, 1841, by Rev. Benjamin Pope. Thomas Moore and Marv Dtigan, Dec. 15, 1847, by H. Parks. V. D. M. Uriah Moore and Mary Ann Fulton, Oct. 13, 1842, by Rev. G. M. Hair. William Moore and Emelina Brooks, Jan. 14, 1841, by .lohn Selby, J. P. William Moore and Susanna Carpenter, April 13, 1843, l)y E. H. Custer. J. P. William Moore and Harriett Wilson, Sept. 19, 1844, by John Blair. J. P. William Moore and Hannah Sanders, Dec. 31, 1850, by Rev. John Burns. John Morris and Lucinda Dowdell, Aug. 8, 1844, by Robert Wade. J. P. John Morris and Eliza Worley, Dec. 13, 1849, by William Arnold. J. P. John Morris and Elizabeth Porter. March 20, 1840, by William Arnold, J. P. Morgan Morris and Eleanor Smith. Dec. 27, 1843, by Matthew H. Phillips, J. P. Thomas Morris and .Lane Maxwell, March 25, 1846, by Matthew H. Phillips, J. P. Francis Morrison and Permilla Lawver, June 7, 18.50, by Henry H. Beckett, J. P. George Morrow and Nancy Bowland, June 11, 1846. by R. Brown. William J. Morrow and Joanah Easter, June 30. 1847, by Thomas Merrell. Jacob Mowder and Martha Gilbert, Aug. 2, 1846, by L. Liender. 608 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Allen T. Musgrove and Mary A. Gotshall, Jan. 6, 1850, by Marshall McCall, J. P, Daniel W. Mustard and Sarah Jane Young, April 30, 1842, by R. Brown. Samuel Myers and Sarah Layport, Aug. 5, 1845, by Samuel W. Day. Alexander Noragong and Deiila Waters, Jan. 1, 1846, by Rev. Cyrus Riggs. Samuel Naragong and Lavina Hoobler, June 22, 1848, by Henry H. Beckett, J. P. John M. Nash and Margaret Ann Mitchell, Dec. 20, 1849, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. Samuel Nash and Easter Ann Clifford, Jan. 25, 1849, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. Clark Neely and Sarah Ogdon, Nov. 5, 1844, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Neely and Mary Jane Skelly, March 22, 1842, by Thomas C. Vincent, J. P. John Neely and Hannah Guynn, Jan. 27, 1848, by James Kerr, V. D. M. George C. Nelson and Charlotte Carnes, April 7, 1842, by William Arnold, J. P. John Nelson and Jane Lawrence, Aug. 31, 1848, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Isaac Nichols and Jane Ferrell, Jan. 27, 1842, by Rev. William F. Lauck. Jonah Nichols and Elizabeth Herriman, March 16, 1843, by Wesley Smith. Jonah Nichols and Mary Ann Ritchey, Aug. 31, 1848, by A. D. Blank. William Nichols and Sophia Corbin, Feb. 11, 1845, by John Blair, J. P. Thomas Nicholson and Mary Jane Carver, June 8, 1848, by Rev. James. Henderson. Anthony C. Nixon and Sarah A. Jones, April 9, 1846, by Rev. Harvey Bradshaw. Daniel Noftzer and Elizabeth Crumrine, Jan. 20, 1848, by H. H. Becket, J. P. James Norman and Martha J. Walcutt, Nov. 16, 1848, by James Kerr, V. D. M, George Norris and Rebecca Tyler, Nov. 19, 1847, by William Smith. Jeremiah Norris and Ruth Ann Nevett, Oct. 11, 1849, by Rev. James W. Shreaver. James Norris and Nancy Mills, Feb. 19, 1846, by William Smith. John Norris and Ruth Rea, April 4, 1843, by Edwin H. Nevin. Otho Norris and Sarah Brokaw, Oct. 27, 1842, by James Kerr, V. D. M. George Nup and Margaret Rutan, Feb. 15, 1849, by Thomas Finnicum, J. P. David O'Donal and Elizabeth A. Lemaster, Aug. 4, 1844, by Joseph W. Spencer,. J. P. Samuel O'Donnel and Jane Forbes, June 3, 1841, by Richard Brown. -— Baruch Oglevee and Mary Evans, Sept. 16, 1841, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. Harry Oliver and Jane Ferrell, Jan. 2, 1845, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Augustus Orr and Levina Arbaugh, Aug. 30, 1849, by Thomas Finnicum, J. P. George Osborne and Mary Law, May 12, 1842, by J. Montgomery. George Palmer and Mary Jane Cox, Dec. 16, 1847, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. John Palmer and Elizabeth Fry, April 25, 1841, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. John W. Palmer and Hester Ann Blair, March 15, 1841, by Rev. William Deveny. Michael Palmer and Phoebe A. Campbell, Dec. 28, 1845, by Joseph Masters, J. P, John Pane and Anne B. Yancy, Aug. 1, 1850, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. James Parker and Matilda Louden, Dec. 26, 1848, by John Graham, J. P. John W. Parker and Jane Simpson. Feb. 25, 1843, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Robert Parker and Margaret Swaney, Dec. 26, 1843, by Reynolds K. Price, J. P. William H. Parkinson and Mary Jane Leech, Jan. 11, 1842, by Joseph Clokey, V. D. M. James Parks and Nancy Sudduth, May 13, 1847, by Rev. Elias Gatchal. Lewis Parmer and Mary Smith, Feb. 7, 1845, by William Tipton. Joshua Parrish and Rachel Brown, Jan. 30, 1844, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Arthur Patterson and Mary Fowler, Aug. 16, 1844. by Rev. Israel Archbold. John Patterson and Catharine Adams, March 21. 1849, by James Kerr. V. D. M. Joseph Patterson and Margaret Patterson, Sept. 19, 1844. by Asa Holmes, J. P. Obadiah Patterson and Rebecca Smith. May 14, 1850, by H. Worstell, J. P. Stephen Patterson and Mary Lamver, Nov. 29, 1842, by David Bower, J. P. William Patterson and Sarah Ann Megaw. Jan. 4, 1849, by R, Brown. James Patton and Mary Sloan, Aug. 25. 1847, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. James H. Patton and Mary Megaw, Feb. 17, 1845, by James Cameron. John W. Patton and Anne Braden, Dec. 31, 1846, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Robert Patton and Sarah Porterfield, March 26, 1850, by Rev. James R. Doig. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES 60d Jacob Pearce and Jane Dickerson, May 11, 1845, by Rev. George Lucy. John Pearce and Esther Jane Urquhart, Sept. 1, 1848, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William Pearce and Sarah Mansfield, July 16, 1844, by Matthew H. Phillips, J. P. William N. Pearce and Elizabeth Dunlap, Oct. 21, 1844, by Rev. George Lucy. James Peddicort and Mary Roby, Sept. 5, 1848, by Rev. Edward Smith. George Penu and Margaret Best, Aug. 27, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John Penn and Ellen Mercer, March 21, 1843, by George Clancey, V. D. M. John W. Penn and Margaret Simmons, Jan. 13, 1846, by John Wilkin. James Peoples and Ellen M. Hahn, March 10, 1846, by James Cameron. John Peoples and Eliza Gotschall, Aug. 5, 1847, by Rev. D. S. Welling. Joseph W. Peoples and Susanna Parmee, Jan. 6, 1847, by H. H. Beckett, J. P. John Casper Pepper and Mary Fisher, April 11, 1843, by Thomas McClintick, J. P. Harvey Perry and Rebecca Kincaid, Aug. 15, 1844, by Matthew H. Phillips, J. P. William Perry and Elbina Pugh, Oct. 11, 1843, by Elijah Carson, J. P. William Perry and Betsey Kelly, Dec. 18, 1845, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. James Perrygoy and Lucinda Smith, Nov. 13, 1842, by Matthew H. Phillips, J. P. Jacob Peterman and Susanna Ramsey, Nov. 14, 1850, by Henry Heberling, J. P. Arvin Peters and Permelia Swaney, Sept. 28, 1848, by John Adams, J. P. Alfred Petty and Rebecca Long, Dec. 25, 1845, by Elijah Carson, J. P. Thornton Petty and Mary Davidson, Oct. 2, 1846, by Elijah Carson, J. P. Michael Pfauts and Mary Jane Jeffers, Oct. 7, 1847, by Rev. Andrew Klingle. Bazaleel Phillips and Mary Pritchard, Feb. 25, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Enoch W. Phillips and Jane Gallbraith, Feb. 27, 1845, by John Bryan. Mitton Phipps and Orpha Minster, Aug. 31, 1848, by R. K. Price, J. P. John Pickering and Nancy Bleak, March 2, 1843, by Rev. William Deveney. Moses Pickering and Lydia Thornton, Jan. 1, 1846, by John Graham, J. P. Barton H. Pickett and Eliza A. Norris, Feb. 27, 1846, by Rev. William Smith. William Pilcher and Mary Jane Hamilton, May 5, 1842, by Rev. G. M. Hair. William Piles and Phosbe Barkhurst, Sept. 27, 1845, by Rev. Robert Scott. Jacob Pittinger and Mary Ann Hendricks, April 21, 1842, by Rev. William G. Lauck. Nathaniel Pittinger and Mariah S. Atkinson, Oct. 28. 1841, by W. M. McCartney. John Pittis and Asseneth Cottrell, June 3, 1847, by Rev. Samuel W. Day. John C. Plowman and Mary E. Crawford, Dec. 31, 1850, by Israel Archbold. James Pogue and Sarah Barkcroft. Jan. 1, 1846, by Rev. George Lucy. Cyrus Poland and Susanna Petty, Feb. 11, 1841, by Michael Crawl, J. P. Elias Polen and Mary Hurless, March 22, 1849, by James Hoover, J. P. Mordicai Poland and Elizabeth Bell, March 16, 1843, by John L. Layport, J. P. Nathaniel Polan and Mary Swan, Sept. 25, 1843, by Rev. William Knox. Peter Polen and Ann Maria Graham. Jan. 9, 1849, by Rev. Charles Carter. William Polen and Elizabeth Crumrine, Feb. 27, 1845, by Robert Henderson, J. P. David Pool and Martha Gorley. March 19, 1845, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Hugh Porter and Sarah Irwin, June 23, 1842, by Joseph W. Spencer. J. P. Johnston Porter and Rachel Anderson, Oct. 18, 1843, by Wesley Smith. William Porter and Elizabeth Jones, Aug. 12, 1841, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. James Ponlson and Asneth Spray, March 29, 1849, by E. P. Jacobs. John Poulson and Mahala Spray, March 25, 1845. by Robert P. Simpson. J. P. WMlliam Poulson and Deborah Ross, Nov. 24. 1842. by Thomas Phillips. J. P. Norvil Powell and Margaret Jane Crossan. April 20, 1850. by A. D. Clark. Junias Preston and Elizabeth A. Barcroft. Dec. 12, 1845, by Rev. A. N. Hamlin. Bazaleel Price and Catharine Johnson, Sept. 17. 1844. by J. W. McAbee. Ira Price and Belinda Dunlap, May 5. 1842. by R. Brown. Ira Price and Rachel Arbaugh, April 26, 1849, by Rev. D. Sparks. James Price and Nancy W^illiamson, April 4, 1844, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Stewart Price and Maranda Rowley. Dec. 14, 1843, by R. Brown. Ellis Pugh and Cassandra Sulfridge, March 31, 1846, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. 610 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Eneas Pugh and Margaret Jane Russell, Oct. 24, 1841, by John Selby, J. P. Enoch Pugh and Mary Ann Foot, Aug. 5, 1847, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Enos Pugh and Hannah Nichols, Nov. 17, 1846, by Elijah Carson, J. P. Fleming Pumphrey and Mary J. Murry, July 1, 1845, by R. K. Price, J. P. Harrison R. Pumphrey and Susanna Pumphrey, Nov. 5, 1844, by Rev. Samuel Langdon. Amos Quillan and Mary Johnston, Dec. 17, 1844, by Rev. George Lucy. David Quillan and Jane Wilkins, March 13, 1844, by Rev. Jacob Bull. Elihu Quillan and Eleanor Ann Phillips, Jan. 7, 1841, by Rev. Benjamin P. Ferguson. Stinson Quillan and Urcellia Milhom, March 8, 1842, by Martz Hoggs, V. D. M. Thomas J. Quillan and Rachel Dennis, Nov. 25, 1847, by R. K. Price, J. P. William Quillan and Abby Bell, Aug. 15, 1850, by David Hanlin, J. P. Thomas Quinn and Mariah Watters, April 30, 1846, by Rev. Samuel W. Day. Anderson Ralston and Catharine Jane Michael, Oct. 26, 1848, by Rev. J. Burns. David H. Ralston and Rebecca McCammis, Feb. 11, 1841, by John R. Dunlap. Ephraim Ralston and Magdalena Hildenbrand, Dec. 16, 1841, by Rev. John P. Dundass. Lewis W. Ralston and Nancy Sears, Dec. 30, 1847, by Rev. Ellas Gatchel. Hugh Ramsey and Elizabeth Lyons, Jan. 26, 1841, by John Rea, V. D. M. John Ramsey and Nancy Maffit, May 31, 1844, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John Ramsey and Sarah Jane Hines, March 16, 1847, by G. A. Lowman. Samuel T. Ramsey and Mary Barger, Feb. 16, 1843, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Thomas Ramsey and Louisa Carson, Sept. 8, 1850, by Rev. W. B. Hunt. William Ramsey and Mary Hines, Feb. 23, 1841, by James Kerr, V. D. M. William Ramsey and Tabitha Wilson, Oct. 27, 1841, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. Thomas Ramsour and Susanna Miller, May 14, 1846, Rev. Amos Bartholomew. Henry J. Randall and Ann Huntsman, Feb. 4, 1849, by Jonas Hollaway, J. P. Jonathan Randal and Mary Sinclear, Jan. 31, 1846, by Samuel W. Day. Joshua Randall and Mary Holloway, Feb. 20, 1845, by William Tipton. James P. Rankin and Margaret Brown, April 14, 1842, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Samuel O. Ray and Mary A. Norfolke, Aug. 26, 1847, by Rev. John Rea. Joseph Rea and Matilda Russell, March 30, 1848, by Rev. Elias Gatchell. Ambrose Read and Mary Ann Lewis, May 10, 1848, by Rev. Henry Heberling. William Readman and Mary Ann Anderson, Feb. 11, 1841, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. James Reames and Susanna Clark, July 22, 1841, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. John P. Redding and Belinda Strode, May 29, 1842, by George Clancey, V. D. M. Benjamin Reed and Sarah Smith, Aug. 26, 1842, by Cyrus McNeely. Benjamin Reed and Catharine Shauss, Nov. 15, 1848, by Thomas Finnicum. Brice Reed and Eady Bishop, June 6, 1844, by Henry H. Beckett, J. P. David Reed and Lydia Ann Kirkpatrick, Dec. 1, 1846, by Rev. D. S. Welling. Davis Reed and Susannah Simmons, April 19, 1843, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. John Reed and Mariah Hill)ert, Jan. 8, 1843. by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Mitchell Reed and Sarah Foster, April 9, 1846, by John Rea. V. D. M. Andrew Renaker and Catharine Grim, Aug. 19, 1849, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Edward Reniker and Elizabeth Nup, Jan. 21, 1841, by Thomas Finicum, J. P. Jacob Renaker and Susanna Sheldtz, Nov. 16. 1849, by R. Brown. John Reynard and Julia Pitts, Sept. 9, 1841, by R. Brown. Alexander Reynolds and Catharine McKee, Feb. 18, 1845, by Rev. E. Hays. Thomas Rice and Margaret Barcroft, Dec. 25, 1845, by Rev. A. N. Hamlin. William Richardson and Caroline Fisher, April 18, 1843, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Daniel W. Richison and Keziah Barkhurst. April 5, 1843, by George Clancey, V. D. M. Nathan Rickets and Jane Corban. Feb. 15. 1849, by Rev. James C. Merryman. Jonathan Ridgeway and Elizabeth Hines, May 9, 1844, by Rev. James W. Walker. Abraham Riggle and Rachel Branchfield. May 30, 1844, by Isaac Talbot, J. P. William Rigel and Rachel Ann Willison, Feb. 10, 1846, by William Arnold, J. P. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES Cll Henry Ripley and Elizabeth E. Rogers, Feb. 18, 1847, by Rev. B. Ragan. James Roach and Hannah Morris, June 29, 18i8, by Rev. James Merryman. William Roach and Jane Jones, March 30, 1844, by Jonas Halloway, J. P. John Robb and Elizabeth Miller, March 15, 1842, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. George Roberts and Nancy Benedick, Aug. 22, 1841, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Hazel Roberts and Sarah H. Spring, March 12, 1846, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. Charles W. Robinson and Jane Connaugh, Oct. 13, 1842, by W. D. McCartney, V. D. M. Madison Robinson and Sarah A. Cooper, Oct. 31, 1844, by Asa Holmes, J. P. Edmund Robison and Sophia Hilbert, Oct. 30, 1841, by John Gruber. James D. Robison and Sarah Ann Longshore, Feb. 1, 1848, by John Graham, J. P. John M. Robison and Juliet Bostwick, Aug. 15, 1850, by Rev. J. MofiBtt. William Roby and Pricilla Blair, Oct. 15, 1846, by Rev. A. N. Hamlin. John Rogers and Catherine Houston, May 21, 1850, by William Kemsburg. Joseph Rodgers and Susan Frater, Nov. 21, 1844, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Rowland Rogers and Mary Jane McKinney, Feb. 27, 1848, by John Blair, J. P. Thomas Rogers and Isabella Adams, Dec. 3, 1846, by John Blair, J. P. Thomas Rogers and Lucinda Quillan, Aug. 11, 1850, by William Remsburgh. Wesley Rogers and Albina Johnson, March 23, 1846, by Rev. J. J. Covert. Gardner Rose and Elizabeth Adams, Nov. 10, 1848, by Rev. Pardon Cook, Henry Rose and Ruth Rose, Sept. 28, 1850, by Marshall McCall, J. P. John Stanley Rose and Betsey Johnson Ford, June 8, 1843, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Thompson Rose and Rebecca Scott, Jan. 1, 1849, by Jonas Hollaway, J. P. William Rose and Lucinda Rose, June 1, 1848, by Marshall McCall, J. P. John Ross and Margaret Weaver, Jan. 22, 1848, by Rev. Job Lister. John Rowland and Rosannah Corban, Oct. 28, 1850, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. Philip Rowland and Piety Ann Ford, Aug. 29, 1847, by Rev. Job Lister. Thomas C. Rowles and Caroline Welch, Nov. 4, 1845, by James Kerr, V. D. M. James Rozengrant and Lenora Conner, July 23, 1848, by Rev. Samuel Skinner. Benjamin Ruby and Margaret Nash, Nov. 16, 1848, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. Robert M. Ruby and Debora Hammond, Nov. 7, 1849, by Rev. J. Lister. Samuel Runyon and Sarah J. Moore, June 5, 1845, by Rev. William Argo. William Runnion and Margaret Elliott, May 2, 1842, by James Kerr, V. D. M. William A. Runyon and Sarah Foreman, Oct. 27, 1842, by Wesley Smith. John Russell and Mary Fell, Oct. 14, 1847, by T. F. Lukens, J. P. William Russell and Maria Wallar, March 10, 1848, by William Arnold, J. P. Benjamin Rutledge and Susan Lewis, Oct. 30, 1845, by Rev. E. Hays. Thomas Rutledge and Eleanor Birney, June 19, 1845, by Rev. E. Hays. Lewis Ryan and Malinda Wheeler, March 16, 1847, by Rev. D. S. Welling. Calvin Sadler and Rachel Bishop, Nov. 3, 1844, by Thomas Finnicum, J. P. Lewis Salmons and Jane Pittinger, Feb. 21, 1843, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. John G. Sampson and Elizabeth Birney, Feb. 14. 1850. by Rev. A. Magee. Edmund T. Sands and Mary A. McFadden, Oct. 10, 1844, by H. Parks, V. D. M. David Sayres and Margaret Morton, March 22, 1845, by R. R. Price, J. P. William Sayres and Hannah Winders, Dec. 14, 1841, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. John F. Scarborough and Jane Fowler, April 16, 1848, by G. A. Lowman. Daniel Schiltz and Maria Heath, Sept. 21, 1849, by Aaron Conaway, J. P. Adolphus J. Schreiber and Mary Ann Moore, March 19, 1850, by Hugh Parks, V. D. M. Schulein Schwabacher and Nancy Kraus, May 23, 1847, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. James F. Scott and Eunice Jolly, June 7, 1848, by Rev. Jeremiah Phillips. John Scott and Jane Evans, June 22, 1841, by Rev. Moses Allen. Samuel Scott and Dinah Young, Jan. 5, 1843. by John Knox. J. P. William Scott and Margaret West, Nov. 19, 1844, by James Kerr, V. D. M. William H. Scott and Jane Whitaker. Sept. 13, 1842, by J. Montgomery. John Selfridge and Christina Selfridge, Nov. 4, 1850, by Rev. S. P. Woolf. Charles Sergent and Tabitha Strode, Aug. 17, 1843, by Rev. John Hantewa. Andrew Sewell and Priscilla Creggo, Dec. 12, 1844, by John Graham, J. P. 612 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY John H. Shaffer and Ida Handly, March 4, 1841, by Cyrus McNeely. Isaac Shane and Hannah Baird, April 7, 1849, by Rev. C. C. Riggs. James Shanks to Elizabeth McBarren, Feb. 16, 1843, by Rev. Robert Cook. William Sharow and Marche Cants, Sept. 5, 1850, by Rev. A. Magee. William Sharp and Sarah H. Roberts, Nov. 3, 1848, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Samuel Shause and Nancy Dudgeon, June 24, 1841, by Rev. Elias Gotshall. Henry Shawner and Lydia Shearer, May 21, 1841, by Rev. Benjamin Pope. Joseph Shields and Martha Stiers, Aug. 30, 1849, by Joshua Adams, J. P. David Shilts and Mary Snider, Dec. 27, 1841, by Robert P. Simpson, J. P. Henry Shildts and Mary Hauze, June 17, 1841, by David Bower, J. P. Isaac Shildts and Susan Cessill, June 9, 1844, by Hamilton McFadden, J. P. John Shilling and Susanna Maynard, Sept. 1, 1844, by Rev. A. Bartholomew. William Shilling and Elizabeth Kimmel, March 12, 1846, by Thomas Finnicum, J. P. Samuel Shipman and Margaret Lawson, Nov. 16, 1843, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. John Shipton and Dorcas Herron, Nov. 16, 1841, by M. F. Burkhead, J. P. John Shirey and Eliza Queen, Oct. 18, 1841, by W. D. McCartney. David L. Shisler and Elizabeth Crawford, April 19, 1849, by R. Brown. Isaac Shissler and Emily Patton, Feb. 1, 1847, by Daniel A. Scott, J. P. Jacob Shritt and Jane Gamble, April 6, 1843, by Rev. G. M. Hair. Jacob Shoemaker and Mary Ann McKee, Dec. 15, 1842, by John R. Dundass. James M. Shugart and Priscilla Wright, Oct. 10, 1850, by Lewis H. Davidson. Hiram Shultz and Maria Sproals, Jan. 17, 1850, by Rev. A. N. Bartholomew. Jacob Sidle and Mary Pickering, Aug. 15, 1843, by Alexander Barger, J. P. Philip Sigars and Melinda Knapp, June 24, 1842, by Rev. William G. Lauck. Findley T. Simonton and Sarah A. Smith, Oct. 28, 1845, by Rev. A. Wheeler. John T. Simpson and Nancy H. Livingston, April 4, 1845, by R. Brown. Thomas E. Simpson and Jane Patterson, Dec. 10, 1850, by Rev. John M. Bray. Isaac Sinclear and Sarah Ann Tipton, March 27, 1849, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Abraham Singhaus and Rachel Heald, May 27, 1845, by Rev. George Lucy. Charles Skinner and Julia A. Toombs, Dec. 29, 1845, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. Abraham Skipper and Lydia Pittinger, July 19, 1849, by Rev. Lemuel B. Perkins. Robert Sleeth and Sophia Bowman, April 16, 1844, by William Arnold, J. P. Bazalee Slemmons and Margaret Adams, May 6, 1841, by W. D. McCartney, V. D. M. James Slemmons and Margaret J. Lemmon, June 18, 1846, by B. Mitchell, V. D. M. Matthew G. Slemmons and Ann Welch, Jan. 26, 1841, by W. D. McCartney, V. D. M. Obadiah Slemmons and Eleanor M. Boyles, April 2, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John Sloan and Eliza Wherry, June 3, 1847, by Rev. Z. Ragan. Philip Smick and Sarah Swan, Feb. 6, 1849, by Rev. D. Sparks. John Smiley and Judy Ann Cox, May 1, 1849, by B. Herron. Eli Smith ana Sarah Molesworth, Sept. 19, 1844, by Rev. William Tipton. George Smith and Sarah Jane Case, June 28, 1847, by Rev. Alexander Wilson. George Smith and Sarah Hendershot, April 16, 1843, by Rev. Jacob Brill. Jacob Smith and Susanna Granfell, Jan. 12. 1843. by Rev. Dyas Neel. James P. Smith and Ann Cramblet, Oct. 16, 1847, by G. A. Lowman. James W. Smith and Sarah Jane Bosley, Dec. 31. 1849, by William Reed, J. P. Jesse P. Smith and Margaret Brown, March 1, 1849, by R. K. Price, J. P. John Smith and Mary Ann Anderson, Jan. 25, 1843, by Thomas McClintick, J. P. John F. Smith and Margaret Donnard, Nov. 3. 1846, by Rev. John Marshall. John P. Smith and Hannah Welch, Feb. 13, 1845, by Rev. Samuel Langdon. Nathan P. Smith and Keziah Wheeler, Oct. 10. 1844, by Rev. Samuel Langdon. William Smith and Matilda Ingle. Oct. 5, 1842. by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William Smith and Eliza Wright, Nov. 16, 1844, by Rev. John M. Trego. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES 613 William Smith and Mary Jane Ellis, March 25, 1847, by Jonas Holloway, J. P. "William Smith and Eliza Lewis, March 7, 1848, by William Arnold, J. P. William Smith and Jane Brokaw, Nov. 14, 1849, by McKnight Williamson. William L. Smith and Rebecca Fullerton, July 27, 1842, by George Atkinson. J. P. William Snee and Emma Wells, July 25, 1841, by M. B. Lukins, J. P. Jacob Snider and Elizabeth Bradford, June 24, 1847, by Rev. D. S. Welling. John Snider and Emetine Middleton, Sept. 28, 1841, by David Bower, J. P, John Snider and Barbara McDivitt, June 6, 1844, by Rev. Israel Archbold. Samuel Snider and Hannah Hall, Nov. 1, 1849, by Rev. John Burns. Joseph K. Soneaker and Margaret A. Covington, Aug. 18, 1846, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. John Sparrow and Sarah Jane Adams, Aug. 29, 1849, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Daniel Spencer and Martha J. Pritchard, Oct. 22, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Samuel C. Spencer and Isabella Wood, Oct. 7, 1847, by Rukney Lewis, V. D. M. George W. Spiker and Sina Smith, Nov. 9, 1848, by Rev. Pardon Cook. Lorenzo D. Spiker and Rebecca Jane Dicks, Sept. 5, 1850, by Rev. Abraham Lemaster. William Spiker and Elizabeth Finnical, April 9, 1844, by Rev. Henry Bradshaw. Hugh Sproul and Jane Shaw, Aug. 18, 1847, by H. Parks, V. D. M. James Sproul and Elizabeth Compher, Nov. 15, 1847, by Thomas Merrill. John Sproul and Elizabeth McLandsborough, Aug. 23, 1849, by Rev. Lemuel B. Perkins. Thomas Sprawl and Elizabeth McDivitt, Aug. 17, 1848, by Rev. Israel Archbold. Jacob Spring and Mary Jane Brokaw, Oct. 27, 1842, by Rev. Elias Gatchal. William Spurrier and Mary L. Dungan, March 22, 1849, by Joshua Adams, J. P, James M. Stanley and Susanna Scott, June 24, 1848, by John Hitchcock. J. P. Solomon Staples and Elizabeth Clark, March 8, 1842, by Rev. Adam Hetzler. Adam States and Mary Ann Sawvill, Feb. 2, 1843, by Benjamin Pope. Henry A. Stealey and Elizabeth Matthews, March 12, 1843, by James T. Larkin, J. P. Solomon Steffy and Eliza Simonton. May 9, 1844, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John Steirs and Emily Belknap, Sept. 7, 1847, by Rev. James Henderson. Thomas Stephens and Catherine Ann Fitzgerald, April 13, 1847, by William Arnold, J. P. Thomas Stephens and Eleanor Griffith, Aug. 20, 1849, by James Taggart, J. P. John H. Stephenson and Gertrude Duffield, May 6, 1845, by James Cameron. James Sterling and Elizabeth Jones, April 2, 1844, by Rev. Dyas Neal. Robert B. Stevens and Margaret Murdock, Jan. 18, 1849, by J. Adams, J. P. Andrew Stewart and Henrietta Slemmons, Jan. 4, 1848, by James Kerr, V. D. M. James Stewart and Margaret McGonagale, Feb. 11, 1841, by George Clancy, V. D. M. James Stewart and Elizabeth Palmer, Sept. 2, 1841, by M. B. Lukins. J. P. Joel Stewart and Rebecca Bell, Jan. 5, 1848, by James Hoover, J. P. Alexander Stinard and Sarah Ann Bolin. Oct. 31, 1841, by M. Crowl, J. P. Washington Stinard and Jane Teel. Sept. 11, 1845, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. William Stinger and Barbary Ann Winings, April 20. 1843, by John Knox. John Stoneman and Jane Marshal, July 28. 1846, by Rev. Samuel W. Day. William Stoops and Susan Daugan, Dec. 10, 1845. by William Arnold, J. P. Benjamin R. Stout and Jane Hilton, March 7, 1843, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John Stout and Elizabeth Ann Hobb. Dec. 28, 1848, by John W. Baker, J. P. Robert Strachan and Rachel Ruby, Sept. 8, 1845, by William Wickoff. J. P. Ephraim Straughsbaugh and Jane Barger, Aug. 22, 1844, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Joseph Strausbaugh and Rebecca Dewalt, Feb. 26, 1845, by John Wilkin, J. P. Michael Straughsbaugh and Christina Straughsbaugh, April 8, 1847, by John Wilkin, J. P. Michael Strawsbaugh and Mary Moorhead, Dec. 9. 1847, by Jamps Kerr. V. D. M. Peter Strausbaugh and Elizabeth Dewalt, April 15, 1845, by Rev. Amos Bar- tholomew. 614 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY James Strong and Margaret McKee, Feb. 24, 1843, by Wesley Smith. James Stuart and IMartlia MoCullough. Oct. i), 1S50, by Thomas Merrill. Elias Sudduth and Malinda Jones, April 15, 1S47, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. John Sudim to Deborah Hale, Aug. 1, 1S43, by E. H. Custer, J. P. AVilliam R. Sumption and Rachel Howard, Dec. 5, 1843, by T. L. Larkin, J. P. Evan Swain and Mary Ellen Sears, Jan. V2, 1S43, by George Clancy. William Swallow and Emily Eneas, Aug. 2Li, 1841, by Charles Thorn. Benjamin Swaney and Jane Christian, July 3, 1845, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Jacob Swinehart and Juliann Cook, March 5, 1844, by Aaron Couaway, J. P. George Taggart and Mariah Welch. Dec. 13, 1842. by John Rea, V. D. M. James S. Taggart and Adaliue Hilligas, March 20, 1845, by Cyrus McNeely. Samuel Taggart and Jemima H. Kyle, April 24, 1849, by Alexander Wilson. Henry Tailor and ]\lary Brown, Jan. 2, 1845, by James Simpson, J. P. Samuel Tannehill and Nancy Oglevee. May 25, 1842, by Rev. George M. Hair. John Tanner and Elizabeth Adams. May 9, 1844, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. Joseph A. Tarbert and Margaret Wilson, Feb. 2ti, 184l>, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. King Taylor and Sarah Jane Hagan, Nov. 30, 1849, by William Buchanan, J. P. Elias Tedrick and Sarah Ford. July 1, 1847. by R. K. Price. J. P. Goliah Tedrow and Christina Miller, April 1, 1841, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. David Tenuant and Mary Watson, Nov. l>. 1845. by John Graham. J. P. Edwin Thomas and Sarah Ann Turney, March 14, 1843. by C. H. Custer. J. P. Frederick A. Thomman and Harriet Ditmars, May 18, 1850, by Rev. Johu Moffitt. Christopher Thompson and Eliza Utterback. March 21, 1847, by N. Linder. Ezra Thompson and Prudence Matson, March 21, 1850, by Rev. Charles A. Holmes. John Thompson and Elizabeth Ruby, April 5, 1842. by Samuel Skinner. J. P. John Thompson and Maria B. Gruber, March 9, 1848. by Rev. D. S. W\dling. Joseph Thompson and Mary Conaway, April 5, 1849, by Rev. James C. Merry- man. Perry Thompson and Mary Jane Miser, April 27, 1S4S, by Rev. D. S. Welling. Robert Thompson and Rachel Ann Cox, April 28, 1850. by R. Brown. Robert B. Thompson and Harriett Bell, March 31, 1842, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Thomas C. Thompson and Mary Coulter. Dec. 24, 1842. by John Rea. V. D. M. Samuel Thrawis and Sarah Huff, Feb. 11. 1845. by Rev. Jacob Brill. Joseph Tigley and Sarah Guthrie. June 19. 1845. by Rev. iMoses Allen. Eli Timmons and Sarah Dickerson. Sept. 25. 1850, by Rev. John Moffitt. Albert Tipton and Nockey West, Dec. 30, 1845. by Thomas Phillips, J. P. Benjamin Tipton and Eleanor Herron. Sept. 7. 1845. by S. W. Day. John Tipton and Jane West. Sept. 12. 1844. by William Arnold. J. P. Samuel Tipton and Sarah Richey. Aug. 24. 1848. by James Kerr. V. D. M. George W. Todd and Eliza Crawford. March 25, 1845. by T. T. Larkin. J. P. Joseph S. Toland and j£.ie Slemmons. April 2, 1S4G, by Joseph ]\Iasters, J. P. Michael H. Toland and Julian Doudle. Oct. 31. 1844, by T. T. Larkin. J. P. Thoma;; Tomlinson and Julia Phillips. Aug. 28, 1844, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Josepli Toner and Rebecca Geary. Feb. 15. 1848. by Samuel Ramsey. J. P. Jacob J. Tope and ISIary Jane Brown, Aug. 3. 1843. by Rev. Israel Archbold. Joseph Townsand and Albina Strode. Feb. 24, 1842, by George Clancy. V. D. M. Valentine Trushel and Sarah Smith, Feb. 26, 1846, by Joseph Masters, J. P. David Turner and Mary Bell Divine. Sept. 11. 1844, by Rev. Robert Cook. James Turner and ]\Iary Gladmon. April 26. 1847. by Rev. Job Leister. James P. Turner and Harriett W. Ankrum. Aug. 20. 1846. by Rev. John Hattery. George Tyler and Nancy Davidson. March 25. 1849. by Rev. William Smith. Mathias Ulman and Rebecca Kline. Sept. 9. 1S4S. by William Wilson, J. P. Barrett Utterback and Nancy Blackwell. May 24. 1848. by John Hitchcock. J. P. Elias F. Utterback and Hester A. Sharloat, Sept. 27, 1849, bv John Hitchcock, J. P. Henry C. Utterback and Ruth Simpson, Sept. 13, 1843. by M. F. Burkhead. J. P. John Utterback and Mary Jenkins, Oct. 15, 1845, by M. F. Burkhead. J. P. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES 615 William (Jtterback and Olive Smitli, Sept. 20, 184:{, by Rev. M. F. Uiirkhead. Edward Vanhoni and JOliza (.Jinxnt, S(;i>l. 11, i81'J, Ijy Rev. Charl<;H A. Il(jlrne8. Edward W. Vanhoiii aud Margaret A. Winner, May 'J, 184G, \)y TownKend T. Larken, J. P. Joseph Vanwel and Martha Peterson, May 4, ]848, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Thomas Vasbinder and Rebecca Craig, June 11, 1840, by Rev. Ebenezer Hays. James Vincent and Elizabeth Merrell, June 14, 184'J, by Richard Brown. Joseph A. Vincent and Levina J. McNulty, Oct. 21, 184G, by James Kerr, J. P. Archibald Virtue and Anne Simpson, Aug. G, 1841, by Jarnes McClintock, J. P. Luke Voorhies and Margaret Lalterty, May 1, 1844, by Rev. Thomas Hanna. Nelson Voshel and Amy Class, March 1, IbV.i, by David Bower, J. P. James Waddington and Lydia Bolen, Feb. 2fj, 1840, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Alexander Waddle and Eliza Swezy, Dec. 23, 1840, by Cyrus McNeely. Joshua Wagers and Isabella Edney, Nov. 14, 1840, by Rev. Alexander Wilson, Ephraim Walker and Mary Layport, Oct. i), 1850, by Rev. John Burns. John Walker and Fanny Hoffman, Dec. 27, 1842, by James Kerr. V. D. M. Isaac Walkers and Winnifred Barrett, May 4, 184.'i, by John Huntsman. Jesse Wallace and Susanna Kimmell, July 18, 1848, by Rev. A. N. EJarthoIoraew. John W. Wallace and Mary Guttney, April 1, 1845, by R. Brown. Joseph Wallace and Mary Love, May 15, 1845, by Rev. William Taggart. Nathaniel A. Wallace and July A. Fulton, March 12, 184G, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Samuel Wallace and Nancy Donaghy, Dec. 27, 1845, by William B. Hunt. William Wallace and Margaret Settle, Aug. 14, 1845, by Thomas Phillips, J. P. William Wallace and Mary Ann Titus, Jan. 16, 1847, by Samuel Ramsey, J. P. William L. Wallar and Jane Ross, April 2, 184C, by James Kerr, V. D. M. William Waller and Penina Rozencrantz, Aug. 10, 1849, by Rev. John Burns. Robert Wane and Mary Ann Speer, March 20, 1849, by Lemuel B. Perkins. James Warden and Elizabeth Frost, Sept. 27, 1849, by McKnight Williamson, Daniel Warner and Mary L. Bowers, Jan. 17, 1848, by Rev. Andrew Kllngle, Josiah Warner and Phebe Rickey, Dec. 12, 1842, by William Arnold, J. P. Rezin Watkins and Hannah Johnson, Aug. 2, 1849, by Rev. William Knox. James Watson and Mary McClish, July 28, 1841, by M. F. Burkhead, J. P. John W. Watson and Rebecca Dunlap, March 10, 1848, by T. R. Crawford. Joshua P. Watson and Louisa M. Remby, March 4, 1845, by Rev. E. Hays. Lewis Watson and Julia Ann Carver, March 16, 1848, by T, T. Larkin, J. P. Smith R. Watson and Susan J. McDowell, Dec, 9, 1847, by T, R, Crawford, V. D. M. Uriah Watson and Mary Miller, Nov. 26, 1846, by Robert Wade, J. P. Joseph Walters and Nancy Peddycoart, Jan. 4, 1842, by Thomas McClintock. Martin Walters and Susannah Hess, Dec. 24, 1846, by Daniel A. Scott, J. P. William H. Watters and Suf-an C. Merryman. Dec. 17, 1847, by .John Blair, J, P, James W. Waugh and Ann D. Lewis, .Ian. 1, 1850, by Cyrus McNeely. Jacob Weaver and Elizabeth Hooper, Oct. 29, 1850, by Rev. Samuel W. Day, Jeremiah Weaver and Isabella Hitchcock, March 10, 1842, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Robert Webb and Martha Worley, March 11, 1841, by William Arnold, J. P. Samuel Webb and Mary Goodwin, May 23, 1847, by William Arnold, J. P. John Webster and Anna Patton, June 12, 1845, by .John Knox. J. P. Andrew Weir and Isabella Crossan, April .30. 1850, by A. D. Clark. Thomas Weir and Mary Dugan, April 9. 1849. by .lames Kerr, V. D. M, Daniel Welch and Mary Dunning, April 10, 1848. by John Rea. V. D. M, John P. Welch and Sarah Rowley, June 29, 1847. by Richard Brown. Samuel Welch and Elizabeth Keepers. Oct. 30, 1849, by James Kerr, V. D. M, David Welling and Sarah Dickerson, Feb. 10. 1842. by .lames Kerr, V. D. M. David Welling and Mary A. Black. Aug. 19. 1845. by Hugh Parks. V. D. M. Alexander S. West and Nancy J. Marshall, Aug. 23, 1845, by Rev, Alexander Wilson, Augustus B. West and Mary Lewis. April 22. 1841, by William Arnold, J. P. Jonathan West and Jane Ferrell, Dec. 12. 1844. by Rev. E. Hays. 40 616 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF HARRISON COUNTY Morris West and Michal Ann Spencer, Oct. 4, 1846, by Thomas McClintock, J. P. Samuel West and Mary Ann Goddard, Dec. 15, 1842, by William Arnold, J. P. Thomas West and Sally Underbill, Dec. 31, 1846, by Thomas McClintock, J. P. William West and Sophia Keeser, Jan. 10, 1844, by John L. Layport, J. P. John Whaling and Chastina Dunlap, Aug. 31, 1848, by Richard Brown. Josiah Wharton and Eliza Jane Norris, Nov. 9, 1847, by James Hoover, J. P. Silas Wharton and Lorauda Sergent, Nov. 3, 1842, by George Atkinson, J. P. Harrison Wheeler and Mary Watson, Oct. 16, 1848, by James Hoover, J. P. Joshua Wheeler and Sarah Long, Dec. 30, 1847, by James Hoover, J. P. Nicholas Wheeler and Margaret De Long, Sept. 28, 1841, by David Bower, J. P. Joseph Wheldon and Sarah Jane Henderson, April 8, 1841, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. David White and Nancy Wright, Dec. 30, 1847, by M. Crowl, J. P. Jackson R. White and Rebecca Delong, Jan. 12, 1846, by John L. Layport, J. P. Thomas Whitmore and Lucinda Wallace, June 28, 1849, by H. H. Beckett, J. P. Benoni Whitten and Mariah Dunham, March 28, 1844, by Isaac Talbott, J. P. Joseph Wileman and Mary Martin, July 25, 1850, by William Buchanan. Henry Williams and Elizabeth Whittington, Dec. 16, 1841, by John Knox, J. P. Joseph Williams and Mary Jane Queen, July 6, 1841, by Rev. E. Smith. Joseph Williams and Elizabeth Speer, June 4, 1850, by Rev. John Burns. Thomas Williams and Rachel Brokaw, March 27, 1844, by Wesley Smith. W. H. Williams and Hannah Boyd, Feb. 11, 1847, by John' Graham, J. P. Amos H. Willis and Jane W. Quillan, Aug. 6, 1850, by John Knox, J. P. George Wilson and Susan Harvey, Oct. 10, 1850, by Samuel Skinner, J. P. John Wilson and Sophia Cuzick, Oct. 24, 1846, by James Kerr, V. D. M. John Wilson and Mary Ann Dinger, Jan. 17, 1849, by Rev. D. S. Welling. John Wilson and Phebe Grable, Nov. 12, 1850, by Rev. John Knox. Samuel Wilson and Roxanna Wilson, Jan. 30, 1845, by John Blair, J. P. Samuel H. Wilson and Sarah Guthrie. Dec. 23, 1846. William Wilson and Martha McGill, Jan. 28, 1841, by M. P. Burkhead, J. P. William Wilson and Rhoda Pickering, Jan. 31, 1846, by Matthew H. Phillips, J. P. William W. Wilson and Mary Parrish, Jan. 13, 1848, by Joseph Cloaky. V. D. M. William Wilson and Ruth Ferguson, April 11, 1850, by James Kerr, V. D. M. Jesse Winrod and Lavina Medley, April 19, 1849, by James J. Mcllgar. John Winrod and Nancy Mealy, May 3, 1846, by Rev. J. J. Covert. Abraham Winters and Eliza A. Divine. March 26, 1846, by .Tames Kerr, V. D. M. Robert Winters and Sarah Berry, Sept. 16, 1841, by Rev. Elias Gatchel. James Wittington and Sarah Hill, March 3, 1842, by John Knox, J. P. Hanson Wood and Mary E. Derry, Nov. 3, 1845, by R. K. Price, J. P. Morris Wood and Bersheba Suddith, April 27, 1843, by Rev. Robert Cady. William Wood and Amanda Busby, March 25, 1847, by Rev. D. S. Welling. Lewis Woodman and Sarah Michner. July 9, 1843, by Asa Holmes, J. P. Peter Woods and Elizabeth Brady. July 4, 1849, by William Arnold, J. P. Isaac Woodward and Emily Townsend. Nov. 16, 1848, by John Adams, J. P. Anderson D. Work and Mary Jane Howell, March 1, 1847, by Rev. Charles Thorn. George L. Work and Sarah Ellen Crouch, Sept. 15, 1841, by .John Rea. V. D. M. Samuel E. F. Work and Ruth Green, May 17, 1843, by Rev. William Knox. Daniel Worley and Mary Webb, June 29. 1848, by Rev. James Merryman. Wesley Worley and Elizabeth Worley. Dec. 7. 1843. by William Arnold, J. P. Daniel Wright and Mary A. Snider, July 1, 1847, by David Bower, J. P. George Wright and Mariah C. Lucas, Feb. 17, 1848. by Samuel Skinner, J. P. James D. Wright and Margaret Ann Evans. March 7. 1847. by N. Linder. John M. Wright and Susanna Brown. Nov. 23, 1843, by Rev. Jacob Lemmon. Samuel Wrisrht and Margaret Maynard. Oct. 8, 1850, by Rev. John Burns. William Wright and Mary Cook. Sept. 11. 1844, by Reynolds K. Price. J. P. Abraham Wyant and Roxrany Dunlap, Dec. 6, 1843. by David Bower. J. P. David Wiant and Catharine Grundy, May 2, 1844, by Rev. C. Carter. George Wyant and Margaret Shober, Jan. 13, 1848, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. ADDITIONAL HARRISON COUNTY MARRIAGES 617 Henry Wyant and Lydia Shober, Oct. 20, 1846, by Andrew Lynch, J. P. Solomon Wyandt and Margaret Wyandt, Aug. 20, 1850, by William Arnold, J. P. Colmer B. Yarnell and Elizabeth Worley, Jan. 21, 1842, by Rev. William F. Lauck. John Yarnel and Actia Rogers, April 26, 1849, by Rev. Pardon Cook. William Yarnel and Mary Kelly, Sept. 11, 1850, by William Browning. John A. Yencel and Mary Ann Faulkner, Feb. 6, 1850, by Lemuel B. Perkins. Jared Young and Mary Jane Tipton, Jan. 11, 1844, by Isaac Talbott, J. P. INDEX. INDEX. As the family names in Parts II. and III. are arranged in alphabetical order, it has not been deemed necessary to repeat them in this index. For the same reason the alphabetical lists of names given on pages 82-89, 102-lOG, 11()-127, and 181-182 in Part I., will not be repeated. Abdill, 80. Abdill, 82. Abolitionism, 137, 138, 149. Ackelson, Andrew, 131. Adair, 10. Adams, 30. Adams, 79. Adams, 80. Adams, 181. Adams, 188. Adams, 189. Adams, 190. Adams, S., 179. Adams, William C, 113. Agnew, 7. Agnew, 10. Aiken, 7. Albertson, 31. Albertson, 187. Alexander, 7. Alexander, 107. Alexander,' 148. Allen, 30. Allen. Moses, 132, 156. Allison, 7. Allison, Thomas, 147. Almond, 31. Ames, 107. American People, 1. Amspoker, 48. Anderson, 7. Anderson, 189. Anderson, 190. Anderson, John, 133. Anderson, Joseph, 93, 95, 96, 128, 156. Andrews, 30. Angles, 5. 130, Anglo-Saxons, 2. Anthony, 31. Antrim, 32. Arbaugh, Thomas, 112. Archibald, 186. Armor, 137. Armstrong, 132. Armstrong, John, 134, 135. Armstrong, W. W., 3. Arnold, 6. Arnold, 32. Arnold, 44. Arnold, 78. Arnold, 80. Arnold, 81. Arnold, 82. Arnold, 112. Arnold, 165. Arnold, 168. Asbury, Bishop, 176. Ash, 77. Ash, 81. Associate Presbyterian Church, of Ca- diz, 145-155. Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, of Cadiz, 140-145. Atkinson, 48. Atkinson, 187-8. Atkinson, 190. Athey. Walter. 180. Auckerman, 181. Bailey, 30. Bailey, 31. Bailey, 32. Bailey, 48. Baker, 31, Baker, 81. For additional names, see alphabetical lists on papes 82-80, 102-106. 116-127, 181-182, 202-454, 457- 584, and 587-617. 623 INDEX Baker, 109. Baker, 178. Baker, 179. Baker, 181. Ball, 30. Ballard, 30. Ballard, 31. Bamb, 31. Barclay, 7. Barcroft, Ralph, 111. Bar gar, 181. Barger, ItiO. Barger, Alexander, 112. Barnhlll, 184. Barrett, 44. Barrett, 109. Barrett, 168. Barrett, 182. Barrett, William, 112. Bartley, Mordecai, 3. Bartley, Thomas W., 3. Bates, 30. Baugham, 32. Baxter, 79. Baxter, 168. Baxter, 169. Baxter, 171. Bayless, Zephaniah, 111. Beall, 7. Beall, 173. Beall, James P., 112. Beard, 32. Beatty, 78. Beatty, 181. Beatty, 189. Beatty, John, 3. Beauchamp, 31. Beebe, 109. Beebe, Stewart, 108. Beebe, Walter B., 107, 110, 111, 113. Beech Spring Burials, 314-319. Beach Spring Congregation, Extent of 97. Beech Spring Presbyterian Church, 92-100. Beek, 31. Belden, George W., 109. Bell, Samuel, 113. Berry, 32. Bethel Burials, 375-376. Bethel M. E. Church, 178-182. Betts, 31. Bevin, 30. Biggar, 8. Biggs, Zachariah, 141. Biggs and Beatty, 75. 157, 168. Billingsley, James J., 113. Binford, 30. Binford, 31. Bingham, 136. Bingham, 141. Bingham, John A., 3, 113. Bingham, Thomas, 109. Birdsall, 30. Birney, 178, 179. Birney, 181. Birnie, 8. Birney, J. Fletcher, 178. Bishop, 32. Black, 44. Black, Andrew, 136. Blackburn, 30. Blackburn, 32. Blair, 7. Blair, 14. Blizzard, 31. Bloxom, 30. Boggs, 7. Boggs, 107. Boggs, William, 110. Bogue, 31. Bond, 30. Bond, 31. Bostwick, Samuel W., 110, 111, 113. Boswell, James, 112. Bowerstown Burials, 379-380. Boyce, William, 112. Boyles, 7. Boyles, 10. Boyles, 106. Boyd, 7. Boyd, 10. Boyd, 12. Boyd, 78. Boyd, 81. Boyd, 109. Boyd, James, 112. Boyd, Samuel, 109. Bracken, 137. Braden, 44. Braden, 147. Braden, 181. Bradfield, 20. Bradford, 32. Brady, E. W., 180. Brannon, 106. Branson, 30. Branson, 32. Branson, Lindley M., 113. Bray, J. M., 180. Brereton's Travels, 14. Brice, John, 93. Brice, John, 96. Brice, John, 130. Brindley, 179. Brindley, 181. For additional names, see alphabetical lists on pages 82-89, 102-106, 116-127, 181-182, 202-454, 457- 584, and 587-617. INDEX 623 Brock, 32. Brockunier, S. R., 176, 180, 181. Brokaw, 130. Brokaw, 134. Brokaw, 167. Brokaw, 169. Brokaw, 171. Brokaw, 173. Brooks, 31. Broomhall, 30. Brown, 6. Brown, 30. Brown, 31. Brown, 44. Brown, 81. Brown, 179. Brown, 181. Brown, 189. Brown, W. L., 3. Browne, 78. Browning, Wesley, 165. Browning, W., 180. Brownson, Alfred, 163. Bruce, 135. Bruce, 137. Bruce, Robert, 5. Buchanan, 8. Buchanan, 30. Buchanan, 48. Buchanan, 186. Buchanan, 187-188. Buchanan, 189. Buchanan. George, 140, 141. Bullock, 82. Bundy, 31. . Bundy, 32. Bunker, 31. Burgess, 30. Burials, 312-400. Burnet, Jacob. 3. Burnett, William, 135. Burnett, William, 143. Busby, 181. Buskirk, 161. Butler, 30. Butler, 31. Cadiz in 1847, 79. Cadiz Burials, 319-339. Cadiz, Early Churches of, 139. Cadiz laid out, 75, 77. Cadwalader. 30. Cady, William, 112. .Cain, 48. Calderwood, 10. Caldwell, 7. Caldwell, 134. Caldwell, J. A., 130. Caldwell, John, 112. Caldwell, John P., 132. Caldwell, W. B., 3. Calhoun, 8. Cameron, James, 187, 188. Campbell, 130. Campbell, 154. Campbell, 155. Campbell, 181. Campbell, Alexander, 133. Campbell, David, 110. Campbell, James E., 3. Campbell, Richard, 135. Canby, 30. Cannon, 7. Carle, 30. Carle, 32. Carnahan, 7. Carnahan, 44. Carnahan, 79. Carnahan, 140. Carnahan, 144. Carnahan, 151, Carnahan, 154. Carothers, 8. Carpenter, 48. Carrick, 7. Carrick, John, 113. Carson, 7. Carver, Elijah, 113. Carver, James C, 111, 112. Cary, 31. Cassil, 48. Cassville Burials, 380-381. Castleman, 48. Cavin, 190. Celt and Teuton, 6. Chambers, 48. Chambers, Joseph H., 189. Chaney, 178. Chapel, 31. Chapman, 79. Chapman, 165. Chase, Salmon P., 3, Chew, 31. Chichester, Arthur, 10. Church, Thomas, 162. Clark, 7. Clark, 31. Clark, 44. Clark, 48. Clark, 94. Clark, 109. Clark, 137. Clark. 149. Clark. 185, 188. Clark, Alexander D., 136. Clark, A. D., 172. For additional names, see alphabetical lists on pages 82-89, 102-106, ll(j-127, 181-182, 202-454, 457- 584, and 587-617. 624 INDEX Clark, Ephraim, 110. Clark, Ingram, 110. Clark, John, 3. Clark, John, 93. Clark, John B., 155. Clark, J. L., ISO. Clark, Matthew, 148. Clark, Thomas B., 132, 170. Cleaver, 32. Clendennin, 7. Clendennin, Nathaniel E., Ill, Close, H. M., 180. Cobean, James, 112. Cochran, 7. Cochran, 44. Cochran, 79. Cochran, Robert, 59. Cockerill, John A., 3. Coffee, 30. Coffin, 31. Cole, 189. Collier, 31. Collins, 7. Colviu, Samuel, 112. Como, 30. Compher, 173. Conaway, 107. Conaway, 179. Connard (Kennard), 30. Conrad, 48. Conwell, 109. Cook, 32. Cook, 133. Cook, Pardon. 179, 180. Coon, Jacob, 132. Coon, Jacob, 135. Cope, 30. Cope, Oliver G., 110. Copeland, 31. Corinth Burials, 371. Coulter, 7. Coulter, R. M., 45. Cowan, 136. Cowan. Benjamin, 109. Cowles, Salmon, 132, 134. Cox, 30. Cox, 31. Cox, W.. 181. Crabapple Burials, 339-349. Crabapple Presbyterian Church, 132. Craig, 8. Craig, 30. Craig, 44. Craig, 79. Craig, 137. Craig, 139. Craig, 140. Craig, 145. Craig, 154. Craig, 157. Craig, John, 112. Craig, Walter, 113. Cramblett, Jacob, 113. Ci'ampton, 30. Crawford, 7. Crawford, 132. Crawford, 171. Crawford, Thomas, 166. Crawford, Thomas R., 95, 172. Creek, 30. Crew, 30. Crew, 31. Crew, George A., 111. Crook, George, 180. Croskey, 109. Croskey, Jackson, 113. Culbertson, 7. Cunningham, 7. Cunningham, 10. Cunningham, 13. Cunningham, 155. Cunningham, 166, 167. Cunningham, David, 110, 111, 113. Cunningham, Thomas, 144. Curl, 31. Currey, 190. Custer, 48. Custer, George A., 113. Danes, 5. Davidson, 8. Davidson, 151. 'Davidson, W. A., 181. Davis, 31. Davis, 32. Davis, 48. *' Davis, 164. Dawson, 48. Day, 187. Day, 188. Day, 189. Day, James, 110. 180. Day, Thomas, 112. Decker, 48. Deersville Burials, 381-385. DeLong, 48. 128- DeLong, Jesse, 45. Dennis, 179. Dennis, 181. Devinney. W., 180. Devore. 181. Dew, 32. Dewey, 6. Dewey, Chauncey, 110, 113. Dewey, Orville, 6. /] For additional names, see alphabetical lists on pages 82-89, 102-106, 116-127, 181-182, 202-154, 584, and 587-617. •157- INDEX 625 Dickerson, 44. Dickersou, 78. Dickerson, 107. Dickerson, Itil. Dickerson, 177. Dickersou, 178. Dickerson, 182. Dickerson, Baruch, 112. Dickerson Burials, 368-370. Dickersou Church, 175-178. Dickersou M. E. Church, 175-178. Dickson, 8. Dickson, Robert, 159. Dillhoru, 32. Dillon, 30. Diumore, James, 94. DK'in, 80. ^Ikin, 82. ■ /Wilkinson, 30. ^ Williams, 31. Williams, 32. Williams, 49. Williams, John S., 66. Wills of Harrison County, 451-454. Wilson, 7. Wilson, 30. Wilson, 44. Wilson, 78. Wilson, 81. Wilson, 151. Wilson, 168. Wilson, Alexander, 143-144. Wilson, Job, 180. Wilson, S. J., 160. Wishart, William, 138. Wolf, S. P., 180. Wood, 6. Wood, 30. Wood, 32. Wood, Reuben, 3. Woodborne, Edwin S., 112. Woodborne, George, 112. - Woods, 31. Worley, 175. Worley, John B., 111. Worstell, Henry P., 113. Wrenn, 31. Wright, 30. Wright, 32. Wright, John C, 3. Wylie, 134. Wylie, William, 131. Yarnell, 32. Yost, John, 113. . Young, 78. Young, 80. Young, 81. Young, 181. Young, Isaac, 163. Young, Jacob, 162, 179. Young, Thomas L., 3. For additioi\al names, see alphabclieal lists on pages 82-89, 102-106, 116-127, 181-182, 202-454, 457- 584,»and 587-617. a Lt \J^ I- xO=U % •3 '/ S^ "^. ' ,-. .-. s ^ .-(> - t ^>, " .'J N s. 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