Richards Family
RICHARDS is a common Celtic Welsh, or Cornish
surname based on the English version of the parent's name ending in -S. In 1881
people with this surname were mainly located in Wales, Cornwall and adjacent
South-West counties of England. By 1998 many Welsh and Cornish people had
migrated to cities in England particularly those adjacent to these areas.
Originally, it was an English surname brought to England in the great wave of
migration following the Norman Conquest of 1066.
Recorded in over one hundred spelling forms
ranging from the German Reichardt, Richardi, and Richar, the English Richard,
the French Ricard, the Flemish, and diminutives or patronymics such as
Riccardi, Liccardi, Richards, Richardson, Richardeau, Rickertssen and many
others, this ancient surname is of pre 7th century Germanic origins. Deriving
from the twin elements of 'ric' and 'hard', and translating as "powerful
ruler", the name spread throughout Europe in the early medieval period. It
was no doubt considerably helped in its popularity by its meaning, but the
greatest impetus to its success came in the 12th century with the legendary
exploits of King Richard 1st of England, (and much of France). He was the most
prominent leader of the famous Crusades to free the Holy Land, and he became
known throughout Christendom as 'Coeur de Leon'. Despite his 'title', Richard,
Coeur de Leon, was unsuccessful in his attempts to suppress the Muslims, but by
his efforts he achieved more than the other leaders, who in the manner of humans
far and wide, were not pleased. Early examples of the surname recording taken
from authentic European rolls and registers of the period include Nicol Richart
of Basle, Switzerland, in the year 1260, Richardus Richardi of Pfullingen,
Germany in 1273, and Thomas Richard, in the Oxfordshire 'Hundred Rolls' of
England in 1276. Other recordings from these ancient times include Thomas
Richardes of Worcester, England in 1327, and Olbrecht Reichart of Dresden,
Germany, in 1396. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have
continued to "develop", often leading to astonishing variants of the
original spelling.
The surname Richards was first found in
Yorkshire where they held a family seat at Hatfield being ancient Lords of the
manor of Ricard or Rycard. Over on the Isle of Wight in Yaverland, a small
branch of the family was found at one time. "An ancient mansion of the
Russells here, subsequently of the Richards family, and now a farmhouse, is a
good specimen of the Elizabethan style."
The motto was originally a war cry or slogan.
Mottoes first began to be shown with arms in the 14th and 15th centuries but
were not in general use until the 17th century. Thus, the oldest coats of arms
generally do not include a motto. Mottoes seldom form part of the grant of
arms: Under most heraldic authorities, a motto is an optional component of the
coat of arms and can be added to or changed at will; many families have chosen
not to display a motto.
Motto: Honore et amore
Motto Translation: With honour and love.
Surnames of Richards: Henderson, Coleman, Cogburn, Sparks, Doler,
Webb, Caldwell, Smith, Redus, McGahey, Thomas, Keasler, McGahey, Barefield,
Dowdle, Bales, Kessler, Taggert, Hedrick, Campbell, Robertson, Boles, Watkins,
Sherron, Roberts, Armstrong, Murray, Lawder, Muir, Rose, Stewart, Boyd,
Brisbane, Fairlie, Colville, Wallace, Graham, Eglinton, Lindsay, Crawford,
Cathcart, de Lucerne, Waleys, De Grainsby, Ramsey, Beaty, Boyd, Bellenden,
Lauder, Caylor, Orman, Mahaffey, Curdup, Taylor, Thomas, Doler, Alcock,
Sherron, Cundiff, Clarke, Browne, Guyton, Underwood, McCurdy, Whitaker,
Stormant, Martin, Parker, Schoonhoven, Erskine
7th Great Grandfather John Richards
was born in 1690 in Westbury on Trym, Gloucestershire, England. He married Mary
Aldington on 18 December 1718 at St Nicholas, Bristol, Gloucester, England and
had 1 child
1-6th Great Grandfather William
Richards was Baptism on 18 October 1713 in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England.
He died in 1751 in Bristol, England. He married Mary Elizabeth Gossate 28 July
1737 in Bristol, England. They had 3 children. 2 sons that I have not been able
to fine yet.
1-
2-
3-5th Great Grandfather William
Cornelius Richards was born in Ireland in 1735. He died in 1846 after going
back to England. He died in Croydon, Surrey, England. (William Richards is
famous for the Oconee Station in South Carolina in which is a Historic Site and
on the National Register of Historic Places. Read more in Richards Stories) He
married Elizabeth Cowlard 1821-1880 and they had 2 children.
I-Sarah Richards 1841-1841
2-4th Great Grandfather Thomas
Richards was born in England in 1755. He died in 1841 in Pickens County, South
Carolina. He married Betsy Jackson from South Carolina, British Colonial,
America. She was born in 1759 and died in 1850 in South Carolina. They had 5 children.
1-Eleanor Richards born in England in 1787 and
died in Anderson County, South Carolina in 1863. She married Robert
Breckenridge 1779-1870 and they had 9 children.
I-Thomas R Breckenridge 1810-1864
II-Agnes Elizabeth Breckenridge 1816-1888
III-Elizabeth Breckenridge 1818-
IV-Robert W Breckenridge Jr 1818-1891
V-James D Breckenridge 1819-
VI-Jeremiah P Breckenridge 1825-1872
VII-Sarah Breckenridge 1826-1903
VIII-David S Breckenridge 1832-
IX-Robert W Breckenridge 1838-
2-Margaret Polly Richards was born in 1800 in
South Carolina. She died in 1869 in South Carolina. She married James Todd Jr
1799-1877 and they had 4 children
I-John Todd Sr 1825-1916
II-Elizabeth Todd 1826-
III-Jane Elizabeth Todd 1828-1873
IV-William R Todd 1830-1862
3-Jane Richards born in 1802 in South Carolina
and died in Falls County, Texas in 1881. She married into one of the most
famous royal family from the 1200’s. (Erskine) Hugh Erskine 1792- and they had
7 children
I-Elizabeth Erskine Steele 1821-1870
II-William Richardson Erskine 1823-1892
III-Mary Emeline Erskine McAllister 1824-1894
IV-Margaret Jane Erskine Sowders 1829-1900
V-Martha Agnes Erskine Hodges 1832-1900
VI-Amanda Erskine Bell 1839-1889
VII-John Wilford Erskine 1840-1913
4-Peggy Richards born in 1808-
born in York County, South Carolina in 1789.
He died in Reform, Alabama in 1850. He married Catherine Smith from Union
County, South Carolina. She died in Pickens County, Alabama in 1865. They had 7
children.
1-Thomas A Richards born in South Carolina in
1818 and died in Pickens County, Alabama in 1853. Thomas married Mary B McGahey
in 1849. She was born in Pickens County, Alabama in 1833. She died in 1911 in
Reform, Alabama. They had 1 child together
I-Catherine Rebecca Richards born 1849 in
Pickens County, Alabama. She died in 1939 in Golden, Texas. She married Mathew
Thomas born 1833 in Pickens County, Alabama and died in 1875 in Golden, Texas.
They had 2 children
I-Jesse A Thomas born 1869 and died in 1915
and was from Pickens County, Alabama. Jesse married Mollie Caylor born 1877 and
died in 1916. They had 2 children
I-James Hubert Thomas born 1896 and died in
1955 born and died in Texas. He married Pansy Thomas born in 1904 from Texas.
They had 1 child.
I-James H Thomas Jr 1926-1972 from Mineola,
Wood, Texas. Married Nell Rose Woodard from Texas.
II-William Sterrett Thomas born in 1906 in
Texas and died in Taylor County, Texas in 1979. He married Opel W West was born
1908 in Texas and died in Texas in 1992.
II-Rufus K Thomas born in 1872 and died in
1955 born and raised in Texas.
3-Elvina Olivia Richards born in 1830 in
Pickens County, Alabama and died in 1860 in Pickens County, Alabama. She was
married to 2nd Great Grandfather Abner D Henderson born in 1822 from Reform,
Alabama and he died in 1897 in Reform, Alabama. They had 9 children.
I-Sarah Catherine Henderson born in 1849 in
Pickens County, Alabama and died in 1937 in Cass County, Texas. She married
John Robert Lineberger on May 9, 1872 in Cass, Texas born in 1847 from Gaston,
North Carolina. He died in Gilmer,
Texas in 1900. They had 9 children.
II-Mary Elizabeth Henderson born in 1851 in
Pickens County, Alabama and died in Millport, Alabama in 1910. She married
Jacob N Mouchette. They have 8 children.
III-Enoch Daniel Henderson born in 1856 in
Pickens County, Alabama. Died in 1925 in Pickens County, Alabama. He married
Ida Clovinger who was born in 1869 in Cass, Texas. She died in 1932. They had
16 children.
IV-Henry Goodlow Henderson born in 1867 in
Pickens County, Alabama and died in Tuscaloosa, Alabama in 1940. He married Ada
B Huff in 1889. They had 6 children.
V-Anne Henderson born in 1868 in Alabama.
VI-Nancy Isabell Henderson was born in 1870 in
Pickens County, Alabama. She died in Columbus, Mississippi in 1954. She married
Marion Buchanan “Buck” Logan 25 Jan 1888. He was born in 1856 in Alabama and
died in 1938 in Columbus, Mississippi. They had 7 children.
SEE MORE INFO ON HENDERSON IN HENDERSON FAMILY
VII-William Sterling Henderson was born in
Providence, Alabama in 1875. He died in Millport, Alabama in 1968. He married
Fannie Robertson 18 October 1896. He married Hazzie Hodge. They had 5 children.
VIII-Andrew Clark Henderson was born in 1878
in Millport, Alabama. He died in 1963 in Hutchinson, Kansas.
IX-Great Grandfather Rufus Abner Henderson was
born in 1882 in Pickens County, Alabama. He died in 1969 in Pickens County,
Alabama. He married Great Grandmother Hattie Mae Brown 26 December 1907. She
was born in 1892 in Pickens County, Alabama. She died in Reform, Alabama in
1964. They had 5 children.
4-Daniel Marion Richards born in 1831 in
Pickens County, Alabama. He died in 1915 in Columbus, Mississippi. He married
Sarah Elizabeth Richardson born in Carrollton, Alabama in 1848 and she died in
1938 in Columbus, Mississippi. They had 6 children.
I-William W Richards born in 1874 in
Mississippi and died in Lowndes County, Mississippi. He married Annie Colmes
Cotton. She was born in 1882 in Mississippi. She died in 1962 in Columbus,
Mississippi. They had 6 children.
William Ward Richards 1874-1933
Daniel Dupree Richards 1875-1946 married Agnes
B Bishop 186-1915 and they had 2 children Daniel D Richards Jr 1908-1963 and
William Watson Richards 1913-2000
Dr Charles Clifton Richards 1877-1938 married
Eula Randle 1886- they had 2 children. Carl Richards 1918- and Earline Richards
Thomas Tillman Richards 1880-1907
John Jay Richards 1883-1955 married Pal W
Burris 1880-1953
Edward Earl Richards 1889-1965 married Ruth
Howell 1892-1968
5-John R Richards born in 1833 in Pickens
County, Alabama. He died in 1863 in the Civil War.
6-William Powell Richards born in 1844 in
Pickens County, Alabama.
7-Mary J Richards born in 1847 in Pickens
County, Alabama
.
2-2nd Great Grandfather Elnathan David
Richards born in South Carolina in 1823. He died in 1894 in Reform, Alabama. He
married Sarah Frances Cogburn born in 1840 in South Carolina. She died in
Reform, Alabama in 1915. They had 6 children.
I-Mary E Richards born in Pickens County,
Alabama in 1862. She died in Liberty, Pickens County, Alabama in 1924. She
married Andrew Sole Taggert on 1 November 1903, born in 1846 from Fayette
County, Alabama and died in Lamar County, Alabama in 1919. They had 7 children.
I-Minnie Taggert 1868-1926 Lamar County,
Alabama. Married 1-William Henry Hackleman and 2-James Martin Sims 1862-1942
and they had 2 children.
II-J L Taggert 1869-1872 Liberty, Pickens
County, Alabama
III-William A Taggert 1874-1914 Liberty,
Pickens County, Alabama.
IV-Webster Taggert 1883-1886 Liberty, Pickens
County, Alabama
V-Lillian Duncan
VI-Louis F Duncan
VII-J L Taggert
II-Nancy J Richards born in 1864 in Pickens
County, Alabama and died in 1945 in Reform, Alabama. She married Josiah D
Keasler on 4 November 1894. He was born in 1871 in Pickens County, Alabama and
died at Coalfire, Alabama in 1934. They had 1 child.
I-Charlie W Keasler 1897-1983 Pickens County,
Alabama. Married Lydia Hogue 1907-1986. They had 8 children.
I-Allines Keasler
II-Bettie Keasler 1929-
III-Gwynn Keasler
IV-Dan Keasler
V-Dorrath Keasler
VI-Joe Keasler
VII-Charles H Keasler 1927-2011
VIII-Donald C Keasler 1929-1998
III-Artemisia N Richards 1877-1948 from
Tuscaloosa, AL. Married Robert Alvin Dowdle 1875-1944 and had 6 children.
I-Andrew Bremen Dowdle 1902-1979 from
Ethelsville, AL. Married Cliffie Bell Dowdle
II-Comer Richards Dowdle 1906-1953 from Cuba,
AL. Married Gayle Booth 1919-1992
III-Robert E Dowdle 1908-1977 from Tuscaloosa,
AL. Married Ruth Nelson 1909-2008
IV-Ina R Dowdle 1911-1977 from Aliceville, AL
V-John Tilmon Dowdle 1913-1991
VI-Helen Claire Dowdle 1921-2017 from
Columbus, MS.
IV--Rufus Elnathan Richards born in 1879 in
Pickens County, Alabama. Died in Reform, Alabama in 1967. He married Lucy
Ottleyu McGahey born in 1885 in Pickens County, Alabama and died in 1963 in
Millport, Alabama. They had 6 children.
I-Henry W Richards 1905-1973 married Nancy
``Alabama” Huff 1903-1976 had 2 children. I-Net Arlene Richards 1933 and II-Ruthlene
Richards 1933. Were Twins
II-Newman T Richards 1907-1938 married Ida
Richards who died in 1964. They had 3 children.
I-Franklin Richards, II-Joan Nanna Richards,
III-John Richards
III-Nannie Mae Richards 1911-1996 married
Elton Ray Keasler 1911-1998
IV-Sallie M Richards 1914-1998 married Carlos
C Hedrick 1910-1996
V-John Rufus Richards 1918-1987 married Mary E
Pate 1924-2016 they had 1 child.
I-John D Richards 21 May 1944-30 May 1944
VI-Olene Richards 1922-
V--Sarah C Richards born in 1868 in Pickens
County, Alabama. She died in 1925 in Pickens County, Alabama. She married
Sterling B Bales born in 1864 and died in 1931. They had 1 child.
I-Sterling Bales 1898-1992 he married Eddie
Lou Thomas 1901- they had 3 children
I-Joseph Bales 1936-1979
II-Sterling Bales III 1937-2007
III-Theora Teresa Bales 1939-
6-Great Grandfather Daniel Tillman Richards
born in 1874 in Pickens County, Alabama. He died in Reform, Alabama in 1953. He
married Elizabeth Rebecca Sparks born in 1871 in Pickens County, Alabama and died in Reform, Alabama in 1952.
They had 8 children.
I-Lila Mae Richards born in 1897 in Pickens
County, Alabama and died in 1942 in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.
II-Allie C Richards born in 1899 in Pickens
County, Alabama. She died in 1972 in Reform, Alabama. She married William Claud
McGahey on 30 November 1933. Born in Pickens County, Alabama in 1897. He died
in Reform, Alabama in 1964.
III-James Elnathan Richards born in 1902 in
Pickens County, Alabama. Died in 1972 in Winfield, Alabama. He married Flora
Redus born in 1904 and died in 1979. She was from and lived in Pickens County,
Alabama.
IV-Daniel Clinton Richards born in Pickens
County, Alabama in 1905. He died in Millport, Alabama in 1986. He married
Mattie J Coleman born in 1901 and died in 1973. She was from Pickens County,
Alabama. They had 4 children.
I-Elizabeth Coleman Richards 1928-2013 married
Coleman Campbell Jr.
II-Leighton Edsel Richards 1931-
III-Yvonne Richards 1935-
IV-Dan Richards 1937-
V-Kathleen Richards born in Pickens County,
Alabama in 1913. She died in 1990 in Flomaton, Alabama. She married Grady H
Boles 22 July 1930, he was born in 1910 from Pickens County, Alabama. He died
in Gordo, Alabama in 1996. They had 1 child
I-Charles G Boles 1934-2018
VI-Susie C Richards 1914 from Pickens County,
Alabama
VII-Carl Givens Richards born in 1915 from
Pickens County, Alabama and died in 2002 in Huntsville, Alabama. He married
Evelyn Watkins born in 1912 from Millport, Alabama.
She
died in 1999 in Huntsville, Alabama. They had 3 children
I-Bettie Richards born in 1938. Died in
Pickens County, Alabama.
II-Billie R Richards born in 1939. Died in
2011 in Pickens County, Alabama.
III-Larry Richards born in 1947
VIII-Grandfather Roy Lee Richards born in 1909
in Reform, Alabama and died in Tuscaloosa, Alabama in 1966. Lived in Moundville,
Alabama. He married Audie Lee Henderson from Reform, Alabama. Born in 1913. She
died in Moundville, Alabama in 1994. They 1 child
I-Mother Edith Lavelle Richards 1934-2010
.
3rd Great Grandmother’s Family Side
Catherine Smith 1787 from Union South
Carolina. Died in 1865 in Pickens County, Alabama.
4th Great Grandfather was Captain Abraham
Smith born 1748 from Augusta, Virginia. He died in South Carolina in 1808. He
married 4th Great Grandmother Mary Katherine Guyton born 1755 from Union County,
South Carolina. She died in 1831 in Pickens County, Alabama.
5th Great Grandfather Captain Henry Smith was
born in Ulster, Ireland in 1727. He died in 1792 in York, South Carolina. He
married 5th Great Grandmother Catherine Amelia Hampton from Augusta, Virginia
and was born in 1730. She died in 1808 in York, South Carolina.
6th Great Grandfather Colonel John Smith from
Ulster, Ireland born in 1691. He died in 1783 in Smithland, Virginia. He
married 6th Great Grandmother Margaret Shoonhoven from Ireland and was born in
1700. She died in 1785 in Virginia.
7th Great Grandfather Daniel Smith Sr from
Marlborough, England and born in 1650. He died in 1692 in Rehoboth,
Massachusetts. He married 7th Great Grandmother Rebecca Prime born in 1656 from
Connecticut. She died in 1703.
GRANDPARENTS
**Matthew Sparks 1847-1931 2nd GGF Pickens
County, Alabama
Susan R Doler 1844-1927
**Sterrett J Sparks 1800-1863 3rd GGF South
Carolina
Elizabeth Webb 1800-1880
**Jesse Sparks 1775-1824 4th GGF South
Carolina
Isabella S Armstrong 1779-1809
**Thomas Sparks 1722-1784 5th GGF South
Carolina
Rachel Thomas 1730-
**John Sparks 1679-1737 6th GGF Virginia
Mary Sparks
**Patrick Doler 1814-1860 3rd GGF Ireland
Nancy S Sherron 1813-1893
**Curtis Roberts 1755-1819 5th GGF North
Carolina
Cynthia Roberts 1755-1819
**Captain Abraham Smith 1748-1808 4th GGF
Virginia
Mary K Guyton 1755-1831
**Captain Henry Smith 1727-1792 5th GGF
Ireland
Catherine A Hampton 1730-1808
**Colonel John Smith 1691-1783 6th GGF Ireland
Margaret Shoonhoven 1700-1785
**Daniel Smith Sr 1650-1692 7th GGF England
Rebecca Prime 1656-1703
**Hendrick Claessen Van Schoonhoven 1652-1715
7th GGF New York
Cornelia Rache Swartwout 1667-1714
**Claas Hendricks Van Schoonhoven 1628-1715
8th GGF Netherlands
Cornelia Frederickse 1637-1664
**Hendrick Van Schoonhoven 1600-1677 9th GGF
Netherlands
Altgen Adriens 1603-
**Wernhart Von Schaunberg 1575-162110th GGF
Netherlands
**Samuel Guyton Jr 1669-1752 7th GGF England
Margaret Underwood 1670-1731
**Randel Browne 1626-1659 9th GGF England
Elizabeth Browne 1620-
**Joseph Guyton 1732-1818 5th GGF Maryland
Hannah Whitaker 1729-1812
**John Whitaker Sr 1660-1713 7th GGF England
Mary Kendall
**Aaron Whitaker 1640-1713 8th GGF England
**Captain Jabez Whitaker 1595-1649 9th GGF
England
Lady Mary Bourchier 1598-1666
**William Whitaker 1548-1595 10th GGF England
Joan T Fenner 1552-1599
**Thomas Whitaker of Holme 1504-1598 11th GGF
England
Lady Elizabeth Nowell 1525-1606
STORIES BEHIND THE
RICHARDS FAMILY
The Richards came from England to South
Carolina. They settled in York County, South Carolina in and around 1789. I
can’t find the date when they first arrived in Pickens County, Alabama but I
have Land Patents Papers from August 05, 1835 that my Grandmother had that I
have now where Elnathan Richards and Daniel Richards bought 365 acres, 10
Acres, 15 Acres, 10 Acres, 100 Acres. 10 Acres, 10 Acres. There is a lot of
land dealing going on with the Richards, McGahey, Keasler, Dowdle, Taggert and
Sparks in Pickens County. All of the above were all married together. There is
land dealing going on up to the year 1929. I have all the paperwork from my
grandmother on these land deals.
The first settlers in Pickens County had come
from South Carolina, came thru Tennessee, then down the Tennessee River thru
North Alabama,
Some came over the Military Roads cut by the
United States troops during the Indian Wars.
These settlers came down from Ditto T’s
Landing in North Alabama, to Mud Town (now
Birmingham), thru Jones Valley into Tuscaloosa
County, part of which was made into
Pickens County, then across Sipsey swamp to a
bluff half a mile north of the Tombigbee
By 1823 the population of Pickens County was
said to have around 5000 people. The
wealthier ones settled on the broad terraces
along the creeks and rivers, The Tombigbee
River had long been an important highway
Steamboats soon made their trips on the
Tombigbee, later some of these boats were
destroyed by explosions or collisions.
Bad roads limited the contacts of many of the
settlers, but soon the roads were widened
from trails to roads to serve vehicles, which
soon brought mail services, carried by a four-
horse post=coach three times a week from
Tuscaloosa to Pickenville in 1837.
The Richards lived in Vail Community,
Providence Community, Liberty Community, Beard Precinct, Richardson Community
and the Antioch Community in Pickens County.
I’ve been over to the area and always enjoy
going back. Not much has changed over the years with Pickens County. When I
went to look up records in Carrollton, Alabama, you know the first thing you
have to do is look for the MAN’s FACE in the window. I guess if you’ve been to
that area you have been told of the man in the window.
The first courthouse in Carrollton was burned by troops under Union
general John T. Croxton on April 5, 1865. The second courthouse was also
destroyed by fire on November 16, 1876. Arson was suspected, and in January
1878 Henry Wells, a freed slave who lived near Carrollton, was arrested on
circumstantial evidence and locked in the garret of the new courthouse, erected
in 1877. According to legend, Wells was peering down from the north garret
window awaiting trial as a mob gathered to hang him. A bolt of lightning struck
nearby and copied Wells' anguished face into the window glass. A vague image
resembling a face may still be seen in the lower right-hand pane of that window.
Granddaddy Roy Lee Richards left the Vail
Community in the 30’s and moved to Moundville, Alabama. Roy Lee and Audie lived
in Havana Junction at first in the Chaney Home. Then built a house in Griffin
Circle. The Richards Family remained up to 1994 in Moundville, Alabama. Grandchildren still live in the area. He also
married Henderson. Audie Lee Henderson. It would show why he went to Auburn
University to get a degree in Agriculture and was a teacher at Hale County High
School teaching Ag. He loved fishing at Ford’s Lake in Moundville, Alabama. He
lost his billfold one time while bream fishing. He got his Ag class at school
to go with him to drag a net on the lake where he was fishing to try and
recover it. He also loved bird hunting for Quail. He had two great bird hunting
dogs. I just wished he had been around a lot longer for me to learn things from
him.
There is not much history on the Richards,
just what’s in the census records.
William Richards was a Doctor. His wife
Catherine Smith has a ton of history on them. William also was a farmer. All
the Richards from the year 1830 to 1940’s were farmers. After that from census
records all their children and their children lived in the Pickens County area.
Most Reform, Millport and Columbus, Mississippi. The Richards didn’t have large
families like other families in the 1800’s. They were all small families. Some
didn’t have children at all and there were quite a few in the Richards Family.
There is just not much to even write on the
Richards Family. Now the Richards men married women with some backgrounds.
There are a few that have a lot of history in their family. I would have never
guessed that there were 4 Brigadier Generals in the Richards Families. Yes
cousins but still kin.
The Henderson-Richards family produced a great
family in the 1800’s. Elvira Olivia Richards married Abner Daniel Henderson.
They were our Great Uncle and Aunt. They had 9 children. Their children had
large families.
Rufus and Hattie Mae had 4 children
William and Fannie had 6 children
Nancy and Marion had 7 children
Enoch and Ida had 16 children
Mary and Jacob had 8 children
Sarah and John had 6 children
(More Info in Henderson Chapter)
The Richards married into the McGahey Family.
Allie Catherine Richards married William McGahey.
Thomas Richards married Mary McGahey.
Rufus Richards married Lucy McGahey
These 3 McGahey’s go back to what we knew as
the family of Uncle Sam McGahey.
The Richards married into the Keasler Family
which the Keasler’s are a very very large family. They believe in having big
families. The Keasler’s have their own website and books. The Keasler’s in
Gordo, Alabama helped me out with Bible records from Pickens County.
The Richards married into the Sparks Family
which is another very large family. They have web sites and books on the Sparks
Family.
William Cornelius Richards and son Thomas
Richards
OCONEE STATION
In the late 18th and early 19th century, a
small plot of land along South Carolina’s western frontier served as a military
compound against attack from the Cherokees and later a trading post.
Today, that plot of land is Oconee Station
State Historic Site.
The park just off S.C. 11 (Cherokee Foothills
National Scenic Highway) contains two structures: Oconee Station, a stone
blockhouse used as an outpost by the U.S. military from about 1792 to 1799, and
the William Richards House, named for the Irish immigrant who built it as a
trading post in 1805.
Oconee Station Falls
In 1792, what later became Oconee County’s
first European settlers-built Oconee Station, a small wood and stone
“blockhouse” about a mile from the falls. The military fort and accompanying
1805 residence were intended to protect settlers from the Cherokees and
vice-versa. Today, they are on the National Register of Historic Places and
tours are available from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, or by appointment.
When established in 1792, Oconee Station was
in Pendleton County within the overarching Washington District, which was
abolished in 1798. In 1798, the very short-lived overarching Pendleton District
was created, and Oconee Station was now in this district. In 1800, the
overarching Pendleton District was abolished. A new Pendleton District (county)
was established in 1800, and later split into Pickens District (county) and
Anderson District (county). From 1826 to 1868, Oconee Station was in Pickens
District (county).
The oldest building in Oconee County stands at
Oconee Station in a remote section above the county seat of Walhalla. From the
early colonial history of South Carolina, we learn that the outlying frontiers
suffered from the depredations of the Indians from the years 1756-1760 and
besought the government to come to their aid. Yielding to their entreaties,
England, in the year 1760, sent Colonel Archibald Montgomerie with 1,200 men
who landed at Charles Town where he was joined by a Scots regiment, and at the
Congeries his forces were still further augmented. With this force he marched
into the heart of Cherokee territory carrying fire and sword, burning villages,
killing eighty braves and taking forty prisoners, mostly women and children.
He established three outposts but only this
one remains. The story handed down by the early settlers is that the rough
stone house was the guard house of Colonel Montgomerie's military post and that
soldiers were kept there until after the American Revolution.
Located on a hill overlooking the mountains is
a building of rough plaster with thick walls, the windows are high, narrow and
deep-set. It consists of two rooms, roughly plastered with a large chimney in
the center furnishing two huge fireplaces. From one of the rooms a narrow
stairway leads into a basement which is filled with an assortment of household
utensils of a half century ago. On the walls hang bunches of life everlasting,
boneset, mulling, and jimsons, the latter to inhale for the asthma, festoons of
onions and peppers, twists of golden-brown home-grown tobacco, dried apples on
canes and a medley of peanuts, pumpkins, and potatoes. It is so peaceful now
where once was heard the tramp of soldiers' feet, the savage yells of the
Indians in war-paint and feathers, the cries of the panther and the howl of the
wolf.
By the guard house stands a substantial two
storied brick house and into the wall of this dwelling is inserted a marble
slab bearing this inscription: William Richards-1805.
The early settlers tell that when the troops
were removed after the American Revolution that the three Richard brothers
remained, living for a while in a house at the foot of the hill, later building
the present house which bears the name of William Richards.
The house was surrounded by an old English garden.
Boxwood, euonymus, and English ivy form an old-world setting for the daffodils,
roses, lilacs, and clumps of lavender and rosemary. No doubt the garden was
lovingly tended by the English girl who came over to join her brothers, and the
fragrance of her garden was like a breath of home in her wilderness dwelling.
Her grave lies at the foot of the hill and on
her tomb, we read the following: "Margaret Richards who crossed the ocean
for love of her brothers."
During the years that followed, the three
brothers died and are buried in the same spot in unmarked graves. We are told
that when the last brother died that a relative from England took over the
property.
The property was later owned by James Doyle,
Sheriff of Pickens District. His sons fought in the Confederate army and after
peace was declared, all save one went to Texas, where they made honorable names
for themselves, but never failed to love their native state. The McWhorter
boys, John, Lee, Will, and Doyle, once called this home and later became
merchants and heads of railways in other states. Here the genial Henry F.
Alexander and his bride, Rebecca Doyle, set up housekeeping and their first
child was born.
After their removal, it seems that this
property fell into the hands of Mr. Green who came with his large family from
the mountains of North Carolina.
Three of these kindly daughters still live
here, Misses Parnecy, Tekorah, and Victoria Green. For half a century they have
tended their fields and made the cloth for their clothing. They will gladly
show you their treasured quilts, representing years of patient toil, calling
them lovingly by name, a young man's fancy, rosebud and magnolia.
Oconee station & the William Richards
House
This site was a frontier outpost and a meeting
place between European American and Cherokees of this region during the late
1700s. The first building here, known as Oconee Station, was built as a
garrisoned fort for armed troops and included a military blockhouse. Its
initial purpose was to protect white settlers in the area from Indian attack.
Soon Oconee Station became used as a trading post. Trader William Richards came
to live on the property in 1795 and, in 1805, built a brick residence next to
the station building.
Military Outposts and Trade
The sturdy stone structure at Oconee station
housed as many as 30 soldiers at a time over a period of about eight years. We
can only guess at the number of deerskins that passed through its doors during
and since that time. Deerskin was in high demand in Europe, and Southwestern
Indians responded by hunting millions of deer annually for trade. In exchange,
they received weapons, cotton and linen fabrics, rum, ornaments, metal tools.
2. Oconee Station Marker - Military Outposts
and Trade
and other items. European guns made it easier
for Indians to hunt deer, but weapons were also valuable to them in defense
against their enemies. Though trade was beneficial to both sides, it was
disruptive of traditional Native American life, particularly as hunters. The
Indians bartered other goods such as baskets, ginseng, and snakeroot, but
deerskins remained their main trade good until Indian removal from the
Southeast.
Material Cultures
In exchange for their valuable deerskin, many
Southeastern Indians received clothing made of European cotton and other
fabrics, wearing a mixture of European and traditional Indian apparel. The
attire of the white Americans living on the frontier also showed a blending.
The fringed deerskin jacket associated with the frontiersman is European in
construction but Native American in its materials and decoration. The sharing
of material cultures between European-Americans and Native Americans revealed
the amount of contact between these two groups and symbolized the complexity of
their relationships, which ranged from inflamed animosity to friendly
cooperation.
Defending the South Carolina Frontier
As Europeans and European-American settlement
expanded across South Carolina, the "frontier" moved west. Beginning
in 1792, Oconee Station and six similar military outposts served as the
westernmost defensive
3. Oconee Station Marker - A Sharing of
Material Cultures
points for new settlers. Scouts based in these
stations roamed the frontier areas and served as an early warning network of
imminent Indian attacks, giving the alarm to local white settlers. This site
was the only station on the South Carolina frontier that remained in operation
after 1796. Its use by the military ended after 1799, when the threat of a
major Indian attack became highly unlikely. Oconee Station, with its history as
a military fort and trading post, reveals the complex and changing
relationships between Southeastern Indians and white settlers, as the whites
gained land and as the Indian Territory was pushed westward.
IN THE LATE 1700S, THE upstate of South
Carolina was the western frontier for European settlers in America. To protect
against raids from the native Cherokees, early colonists in what is now Oconee
County erected military outposts, called blockhouses, that were garrisoned by
local militiamen.
One of the few remaining blockhouses, Oconee
Station, now stands in a small clearing at the Oconee Station State Historic
Site in Walhalla. Right next to it is another historic building, a brick home
and trading post built by an Irish American merchant named William Richards.
About 20 to 30 soldiers were stationed at the
military blockhouse from around 1792 up until the troops were removed in 1799.
By 1795, the station was used as a trading site, where colonists exchanged guns,
livestock, and other wares for animal skin and furs from the Cherokee. In 1805,
Richards built his two-story handmade brick home, which doubled as a trading
post until 1809. An inventory from that year showed a stockpile of over 30,000
animal skins, 82 pounds of ginseng, and other goods of the era.
The historic site is located on 210 scenic
acres along Oconee Creek. The grounds boast nature trails, a waterfall, and
wildlife. The real gems, though, are the Oconee Station blockhouse and the
Richards House, sitting side by side. Together they offer an interesting
glimpse at the colonial history of the state, showing two sides of the
relationship between the settlers and Native Americans.
The Cherokee were among the original
inhabitants of the region, at one point controlling approximately 40,000 square
miles of the Appalachian Mountains in parts of present-day Georgia, eastern
Tennessee, and western parts of North and South Carolina.
Smith Family
11th Great Grandfather John Smith 1580-1631 of
England. One of the founders of The Colony of Jamestown. Founder of the First
Permanent English Settlement in American. Everyone knows Disney World’s
“Pocahontas” John Smith etc: well this is John Smith.
Captain John Smith" redirects here. For
other Captains named John Smith, see John Smith.
John Smith (baptized. 6 January 1580 – 21 June
1631) was an English soldier, explorer, colonial governor, Admiral of New
England, and author. He played an important role in the establishment of the
colony at Jamestown, Virginia, the first permanent English settlement in
America in the early 17th century. He was a leader of the Virginia Colony
between September 1608 and August 1609, and he led an exploration along the
rivers of Virginia and the Chesapeake Bay, during which he became the first
English explorer to map the Chesapeake Bay area. Later, he explored and mapped
the coast of New England. He was knighted for his services to Sigismund
Báthory, Prince of Transylvania, and his friend Mózes Székely.
Captain John Smith (1624)
Born
Lincolnshire, England
Baptized
6 January 1580
Died
21 June 1631 (aged 51)
London, England
Resting place
St Sepulchre-without-Newgate, London
Known for
Helping to establish and govern the Jamestown
colony
Jamestown was established in 1607, and Smith
trained the first settlers to farm and work, thus saving the colony from early
devastation. He publicly stated, "He that will not work, shall not
eat", alluding to 2 Thessalonians 3:10. Harsh weather, lack of food and
water, the surrounding swampy wilderness, and attacks from Native Americans
almost destroyed the colony. With Smith's leadership, however, Jamestown
survived and eventually flourished. Smith was forced to return to England after
being injured by an accidental explosion of gunpowder in a canoe.
Smith's books and maps were important in
encouraging and supporting English colonization of the New World. He named the
region of New England and noted: "Here every man may be master and owner of
his owne labour and land. ... If he has nothing but his hands, he may ... by
industries quickly grow rich." Smith died in London in 1631.
Window in St Helena's Church, Willoughby,
displaying Smith's coat of arms
Smith's exact birth date is unclear. He was
baptized on 6 January 1580 at Willoughby, near Alford, Lincolnshire where his
parents rented a farm from Lord Willoughby. He claimed descent from the ancient
Smith family of Cuerdley, Lancashire, and was educated at King Edward VI
Grammar School, Louth from 1592 to 1595.
Smith set off to sea at age 16 after his
father died. He served as a mercenary in the army of Henry IV of France against
the Spaniards, fighting for Dutch independence from King Philip II of Spain. He
then went to the Mediterranean where he engaged in trade and piracy, and later
fought against the Ottoman Turks in the Long Turkish War. He was promoted to a
cavalry captain while fighting for the Austrian Habsburgs in Hungary in the
campaign of Michael the Brave in 1600 and 1601. After the death of Michael, the
Brave, he fought for Radu Șerban in Wallachia against Ottoman vassal Ieremia
Movilă.
Smith reputedly killed and beheaded three
Ottoman challengers in single-combat duels, for which he was knighted by the
Prince of Transylvania and given a horse and a coat of arms showing three
Turks' heads. However, in 1602, he was wounded in a skirmish with the Crimean
Tatars, captured, and sold as a slave. He claimed that his master was a Turkish
nobleman who sent him as a gift to his Greek mistress in Constantinople,
Charatza Tragabigzanda, who fell in love with Smith. He then was taken to the
Crimea, where he escaped from Ottoman lands into Muscovy, then on to the
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth before traveling through Europe and North
Africa, returning to England in 1604.
Coat of Arms of John Smith
In 1606, Smith became involved with the
Virginia Company of London's plan to colonize Virginia for profit, and King
James had already granted a charter. The expedition set sail in the Discovery,
the Susan Constant, and the Godspeed on 20 December 1606. His page was a
12-year-old boy named Samuel Collier.
During the voyage, Smith was charged with
mutiny, and Captain Christopher Newport (in charge of the three ships) had
planned to execute him. These events happened approximately when the expedition
stopped in the Canary Islands for resupply of water and provisions. Smith was
under arrest for most of the trip. However, they landed at Cape Henry on 26
April 1607 and unsealed orders from the Virginia Company designating Smith as
one of the leaders of the new colony, thus sparing him from the gallows.
By the summer of 1607, the colonists were
still living in temporary housing. The search for a suitable site ended on 14
May 1607 when Captain Edward Maria Wingfield, president of the council, chose
the Jamestown site as the location for the colony. After the four-month ocean
trip, their food stores were sufficient only for each to have a cup or two of
grain-meal per day, and someone died almost every day due to swampy conditions
and widespread disease. By September, more than 60 had died of the 104 who left
England.
In early January 1608, nearly 100 new settlers
arrived with Captain Newport on the First Supply, but the village was set on
fire through carelessness. That winter, the James River froze over, and the
settlers were forced to live in the burned ruins. During this time, they wasted
much of the three months that Newport and his crew were in port loading their
ships with iron pyrite (fool's gold). Food supplies ran low, although the
Indians brought some food, and Smith wrote that "more than half of us
died". Smith spent the following summer exploring Chesapeake Bay waterways
and producing a map that was of great value to Virginia explorers for more than
a century.
In October 1608, Newport brought a second
shipment of supplies along with 70 new settlers, including the first women.
Some German, Polish, and Slovak craftsmen also arrived, but they brought no
food supplies. Newport brought a list of counterfeit Virginia Company orders
which angered Smith greatly. One of the orders was to crown Indian leader
Powhatan emperor and give him a fancy bedstead. The Company wanted Smith to pay
for Newport's voyage with pitch, tar, sawed boards, soap ashes, and glass.
After that, Smith tried to obtain food from
the local Indians, but it required threats of military force for them to
comply. Smith discovered that there were those among both the settlers and the
Indians who were planning to take his life, and he was warned about the plan by
Pocahontas. He called a meeting and threatened those who were not working
"that he that will not work shall not eat." After that, the situation
improved, and the settlers worked with more industry.
Native Americans led by Opechancanough
captured Smith in December 1607 while he was seeking food along the
Chickahominy River, and they took him to meet Opechancanough's brother at
Werowocomoco, the main village of the Powhatan Confederacy. The village was on
the north shore of the York River about 15 miles north of Jamestown and 25
miles downstream from where the river forms from the Pamunkey River and the
Mattaponi River at West Point, Virginia. Smith was removed to the hunters'
camp, where Opechancanough and his men feasted him and otherwise treated him
like an honored guest. Protocol demanded that Opechancanough inform Chief
Powhatan of Smith's capture, but the paramount chief also was on a hunt and
therefore unreachable. Absent interpreters or any other means of effectively interviewing
the Englishman, Opechancanough summoned his seven highest-ranking kwiocosuk, or
shamans, and convened an elaborate, three-day divining ritual to determine
whether Smith's intentions were friendly. Finding it a good time to leave camp,
Opechancanough took Smith and went in search of his brother at one point
visiting the Rappahannock tribe who had been attacked by a European ship
captain a few years earlier.
In 1860, Boston businessman and historian
Charles Deane were the first scholar to question specific details of Smith's
writings. Smith's version of events is the only source and skepticism has
increasingly been expressed about its veracity. One reason for such doubt is
that, despite having published two earlier books about Virginia, Smith's earliest
surviving account of his rescue by Pocahontas dates from 1616, nearly 10 years
later, in a letter entreating Queen Anne to treat Pocahontas with dignity. The
time gap in publishing his story raises the possibility that Smith may have
exaggerated or invented the event to enhance Pocahontas' image. However, Professor
Leo Lemay of the University of Delaware points out that Smith's earlier writing
was primarily geographical and ethnographic in nature and did not dwell on his
personal experiences; hence, there was no reason for him to write down the
story until this point.
Henry Brooks Adams attempted to debunk Smith's
claims of heroism. He said that Smith's recounting of the story of Pocahontas
had been progressively embellished, made up of "falsehoods of an
effrontery seldom equaled in modern times". There is consensus among
historians that Smith tended to exaggerate, but his account is consistent with
the basic facts of his life. Some have suggested that Smith believed that he
had been rescued, when he had in fact been involved in a ritual intended to
symbolize his death and rebirth as a member of the tribe. David A. Price notes
in Love and Hate in Jamestown that this is purely speculation, since little is
known of Powhatan rituals and there is no evidence for any similar rituals
among other Native American tribes. Smith told a similar story in True Travels
(1630) of having been rescued by the intervention of a young girl after being
captured in 1602 by Turks in Hungary. Karen Kupperman suggests that he "presented
those remembered events from decades earlier" when telling the story of
Pocahontas. Whatever really happened, the encounter initiated a friendly
relationship between the Native Americans and colonists near Jamestown. As the
colonists expanded farther, some of the tribes felt that their lands were
threatened, and conflicts arose again.
In 1608, Pocahontas is said to have saved
Smith a second time. Chief Powhatan invited Smith and some other colonists to
Werowocomoco on friendly terms, but Pocahontas came to the hut where they were
staying and warned them that Powhatan was planning to kill them. They stayed on
their guard and the attack never came. Also, in 1608, Polish craftsmen were
brought to the colony to help it develop. Smith wrote that two Poles rescued
him when he was attacked by an Algonquian tribesman.
In the summer of 1608, Smith left Jamestown to
explore the Chesapeake Bay region and search for badly needed food, covering an
estimated 3,000 miles. These explorations are commemorated in the Captain John
Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail, established in 2006. In his absence,
Smith left his friend Matthew Scrivener as governor in his place, a young
gentleman adventurer from Sibton Suffolk who was related by marriage to the
Winfield family, but he was not capable of leading the people. Smith was
elected president of the local council in September 1608.
Some of the settlers eventually wanted Smith
to abandon Jamestown, but he refused. Some deserted to the Indian villages, but
Powhatan's people also followed Smith's law of "he who works not, eats
not". This lasted "till they were near starved indeed", in
Smith's words, and they returned home.
In the spring of 1609, Jamestown was beginning
to prosper, with many dwellings built, acres of land cleared, and much other
work done. Then in April, they experienced an infestation of rats, along with
dampness which destroyed all their stored corn. They needed food badly and
Smith sent a large group of settlers to fish and others to gather shellfish downriver.
They came back without food and were willing enough to take the meager rations
offered them. This angered Smith and he ordered them to trade their guns and
tools for fruit from the Indians and ordered everyone to work or be banished
from the fort.
The weeks-long emergency was relieved by the
arrival of an unexpected ship captained by Samuel Argall. He had items of food
and wine which Smith bought on credit. Argall also brought news that the
Virginia Company of London was being reorganized and was sending more supplies
and settlers to Jamestown, along with Lord De la Warr to become the new
governor.
John Smith taking the King of Pamunkey
prisoner (1624 history)
In a May 1609 voyage to Virginia, Virginia
Company treasurer Sir Thomas Smith arranged for about 500 colonists to come
along, including women and children. A fleet of nine ships set sail. One sank
in a storm soon after leaving the harbor, and the Sea Venture wrecked on the
Bermuda Islands with flotilla admiral Sir George Somers aboard. They finally
made their way to Jamestown in May 1610 after building the Deliverance and
Patience to take most of the passengers and crew of the Sea Venture off
Bermuda, with the new governor Thomas Gates on board.
In August 1609, Smith was quite surprised to
see more than 300 new settlers arrive, which did not go well for him. London
was sending new settlers with no real planning or logistical support. Then in
May 1610, Somers and Gates finally arrived with 150 people from the Sea
Venture. Gates soon found that there was not enough food to support all in the
colony and decided to abandon Jamestown. As their boats were leaving the
Jamestown area, they met a ship carrying the new governor Lord De la Warr, who
ordered them back to Jamestown. Somers returned to Bermuda with the Patience to
gather more food for Jamestown but died there. The Patience then sailed for
England instead of Virginia, captained by his nephew.
Smith was severely injured by a gunpowder
explosion in his canoe, and he sailed to England for treatment in mid-October
1609. He never returned to Virginia. Colonists continued to die from various
illnesses and disease, with an estimated 150 surviving that winter out of 500
residents. The Virginia Company, however, continued to finance and transport
settlers to sustain Jamestown. For the next five years, Governors Gates and Sir
Thomas Dale continued to keep strict discipline, with Sir Thomas Smith in
London attempting to find skilled craftsmen and other settlers to send.
John Smith Biography
John Smith was a British soldier who was a
founder of the American colony of Jamestown in the early 1600s.
Who Was John Smith?
English soldier John Smith eventually made his
way to America to help govern the British colony of Jamestown. After allegedly
being saved from death by Pocahontas, he established trading agreements with
native tribes. With his governing tactics called into question, he returned to
England in 1609 and became a staunch advocate of colonization via his published
works.
Early Life
John Smith is believed to have been born in
1579 or 1580 in Lincolnshire, England. After a merchant’s apprenticeship, Smith
decided on a life of combat and served with the English Army abroad. Working as
a soldier for hire (and professing to be highly successful in his military
ventures), Smith eventually embarked on a campaign against the Turks in
Hungary. There he was captured and enslaved. He was sent to what is now
Istanbul and served a kindhearted mistress who, not wanting Smith to be her
enslaved person, sent him to her brother’s home, where he was forced to do farm
work. After receiving harsh treatment from his master, Smith killed him and
escaped, eventually returning to England in the early 1600s.
Jamestown Settlement
Smith then came to meet with Capt. Bartholomew
Gosnold, who was involved with organizing a colony sponsored by the Virginia
Company of London that would be sent to America. Smith was made part of a
multi-person council that would govern the group, whose purpose was to generate
profit in the form of mineral wealth and goods.
The voyagers set sail at the end of 1606. But
during the trip, Smith was allegedly accused of mutiny and almost hanged.
Managing to stay alive yet placed into custody, he arrived with the group at
the Chesapeake Bay in April 1607.
The settlement was named Jamestown and would
eventually be known as the first permanent British North American colony. Yet
initially the population dwindled as colonists succumbed to starvation and
disease. And the settlers were not alone, as they were attempting to claim a
region that was home to multiple Native American communities, later understood
to be part of the Powhatan Confederacy.
Released from custody weeks after arrival,
Smith helped overturn the leadership of colony president Edward Winfield.
Working with new president John Ratcliffe, Smith was tasked with overseeing the
barter of food from the surrounding native tribes. He had also started to
explore the region, which would later be detailed in publications.
In an expedition along the Chickahominy River,
Smith was captured by a native band and taken to Algonquin chief Wahunsonacock,
whom the English referred to as Powhatan. It is said that Powhatan's
12-year-old daughter, Pocahontas, rushed to save Smith from being killed as he
was held down. After this, Powhatan allegedly regarded Smith as a figurative
"son," granting him territory while having expectations of allegiance
and mutual protection.
(However, there are historians who question
whether this event actually happened, as the relationship between Smith and
Pocahontas has been largely romanticized by popular culture. It is also
theorized that Smith might have been taking part in a ritualized acceptance
ceremony as opposed to an actual execution. Powhatan possibly saw Smith as a
resource in trade relations with the Europeans and the acquisition of arms, and
hence wanted him alive.)
Upon returning to Jamestown, Smith was
imprisoned for losing men on the failed Chickahominy expedition and on
suspicion that he would try to usurp control of the colony with his new allies.
He was soon freed and relations between Native Americans and the settlement
went smoothly for a time. Pocahontas often visited the colony, arriving with
her people as they brought goods.
In 1608, Smith dispatched a letter to England
about what had been occurring, and it was published as the short length A True
Relation... of Virginia, hence being seen as the first book to come from
American soil. In September of the same year, he was elected president of the governing
council, going on to contend with a difficult winter. Smith demanded a staunch
work ethic from settlers with the hope of increasing survival and utilized
harsh measures to keep them in line.
Also, due to a debilitating drought, Native
American food supplies were scarce, and the Powhatan community refused to
supply limited rations without the requested recompense; Smith responded by
waging attacks on natives—ordering the burning of villages in some cases—and
stealing food. Native people were also imprisoned, beaten and forced into
labor.
Return to England
In 1609, after the Virginia Company had
drafted a new charter for Jamestown, Smith was badly burned from a gunpowder
explosion following more conflict with fellow colonists. He returned to England
both to recover and face allegations of misconduct, thereby relinquishing
leadership of the settlement. There are no records of a subsequent hearing or
trial.
Back in Britain, Smith produced a published
report on Virginia that included detailed descriptions of its tribal
communities, flora, fauna and overall topography. In 1614, he visited the coast
of Maine and Massachusetts and came up with the name "New England" to
describe the region, as well as designating certain bodies of water.
Smith met Pocahontas again after she traveled
to England in 1616 with her husband John Rolfe and son Thomas. Believing that
Smith was dead, she was astonished that he’d never informed her that he was
alive or intervened as matters worsened between the colonists and the
Powhatans.
3rd Great Grandmother Catherine Smith
1787-1865 was from Union County, South Carolina. She married 3rd Great
Grandfather Dr William Richards 1789-1850.
Her family had a lot of Military History.
Catherine’s father was Captain Abraham Smith 4th Great Grandfather 1748-1808.
He married Mary Katherine Guyton 1755-1831. They had 25 children.
I-Alice Smith 1778-1787
II-John Smith 1773-
III-Polly Smith 1775-
IV-Henry Smith 1778-1830
V-Daniel Smith 1779-1831
VI-Joseph Smith 1781-1781
VII-Samuel Smith 1781-1781
VIII-Sally Smith 1783-
IX-Mary Smith 1784-1784
X-Moses Smith 1785-
XI-Mary Smith 1786-1865
XII-Catherine Smith 1787-1865
XIII-Kattegat Smith 1787-
XIV-Sarah Smith 1787-1840
XV-Moses Smith 1796-
XVI-Catherine Smith 1799-
XVII-Abram Smith (Died Infant)
XVIII-Catherine Smith (Died Infant)
XIX-Hannah Smith (Died Infant)
XX-John Smith (Died Infant)
XXI-Joseph L Smith (Died Infant)
XXII-Joseph Smith (Died Infant)
XXIII-Mary Polly Smith (Died Infant)
XXIV-Mary Polly Smith (Died Infant)
XXV-Moses Smith (Died Infant)
Abraham Smith's will
proven 14 Jun 1806
Union County, South Carolina, Will Book A
pages 97-101
Will of Abraham Smith of Union District? to my
son John Smith, 200 acres joining Clantons part of the land where he now
liveth; to my daughter Polley Humphries, 100 acres, being the place whereon she
now liveth, also negro Rachel; to my daughter Hannah Alexander, negro wench
Windy, to my grandchild Polley Alexander, a negro girl Sarah, and to my
grandchild Abraham Alexander, my young mare; to my son Henry Smith , the old
survey where he now liveth in York District at the ford, about 100 acres also
the land adjoining to him formerly granted to Bridges, including the place
granted to his Grand Father whereon Joseph Lusk lived, also negro fellow Harry,
now in his possession; to my son Joseph Smith, remainder of that tract of land
upon Thickets Creek formerly called Stockpiles land adjacent below his brother
John, and negro fellow Tom; to my son Daniel Smith, part of land whereon or adjoining
to that I now live, upon Youngs old line, where Murphy's School house stood,
Kelleys old field, adj. morgans, also negro fellow Nedd; to my daughter Salley
Smith, negro wench Jude and child called Nancy with negro girl Patt, and bed
& furniture; to my wife Molley Smith, all the remainder of my land whereon
I now live to be enjoyed as her natural rite during her life or widowhood, also
negro wenches Hannah & Renne and Kate, and three negroes London, Pompey
& Mark, to raise and educating my two youngest child; to my son Moses
Smith, the remainder of the land where I now live at his mother’s death or
marriage, and negro boys Jacob & Charles; to my daughter Kattey Smith, my
five little negroes Dave, Arnold, Sam, Faun & Chloe; my wife Molley Smith
and my son Joseph Smith, 31 May 1806.
Abraham Smith (X), Witness: Nicholas Corry,
Henry Good, Spencer Morgan. Proved by Nicholas Corry Esqr., 14 Jun 18
5th
Great Grandfather Captain Henry Smith born 1727 from Ulster, Ireland. He died
in York, South Carolina in 1792. He married Catherine Amelia Hampton born in
1730 from Virginia and died in 1808 in York, South Carolina. They had 18
children.
I-John Smith 1747-1806
II-4th Great Grandfather Abraham Smith
1748-1808
III-Sarah Smith 1749-
IV-William Smith 1750-1781
V-Gideon Smith 1752-1783
VI-Elizabeth Smith 1754-1845
VII-Daniel Smith Jr 1756-1779
VIII-Henry Smith Jr 1756-1840
IX-David Smith 1761-1806
X-Jonathan Smith 1762-1829
XI-William Smith 1764-
XII-Sarah Smith 1766-1831
XIII-Britain Smith 1775-1862
XIV-Cynthia Smith (Died Infant)
XV-James Smith (Died Infant)
XVI-Nathaniel Smith (Die Infant)
XVII-Nelly Smith (Died Infant)
XVIII-Rachel Smith (Died Infant)
6th Great Grandfather Colonel John Smith born
in Monaghan, Ireland in 1691. He died in Smithland, Virginia in 1783. He
married 6th Great Grandmother Margaret Shoonhoven born in 1700 in Ireland and
died in 1785 in Virginia. They had 7 children.
I-Lilly Smith 1709-1780
II-Colonel Daniel Smith 1724-1781
III-Captain Henry Smith 1727-1792
IV-Joseph Smith 1734-1766
V-Margaret Louisa Smith 1737-1812
VI-Jonathan Smith 1744-1848
VII-Captain James Smith 1746-
7th Great Grandfather Daniel Smith Sr was born
in Marlborough, England in 1650. He died in 1692 in Rehoboth, Massachusetts. He
married 7th Great Grandmother Rebecca Prime born in 1656 and died in 1703. They
had 5 children.
I-Thomas Smith 1681-
II-Colonel John Smith 1691-1783
III-Mary Smith 1695-1765
IV-John Smith 1698-1776
V-Elizabeth Smith 1702-1702
Daniel P Smith born in 1779 and died in 1850.
He was from Virginia.
Daniel Smith, "a learned, pure judge and
good man," was born at or near Harrisonburg, in 1779, son of John and
Margaret Davis Smith, grandson of Justice Daniel Smith (pp. 54, 68); he married
Frances Strutter Duff, June 10, 1809; children, Margaret, Elizabeth, Lucius,
Frances, Marie, John, Daniel; he died Nov. 8, 1850. In 1805 he was a member of
the Virginia House of Delegates; from 1804 to 1811 he was commonwealth's
attorney for Rockingham; on April 10, 1811, he was appointed a judge of the
General Court, and from the same date till his death (1850) he was judge of the
circuit superior court for Rockingham County. He succeeded Judge Hugh Holmes
and was succeeded by Judge Green B. Samuels. His portrait now adorns the
Rockingham County court room. Judge John Paul said of him:
No judge, perhaps, whoever presided on the
Circuit Court bench in Virginia exerted a better or more lasting influence on
the people within his jurisdiction. He was not only a great man intellectually,
but he was great in the moral attributes necessary to the perfection of
judicial character.
James McConnell Smith (1787-1856)
James McConnell Smith was born 14 June 1787.
The site of his birth was a log cabin near the confluence of the Swannanoa and
French Broad Rivers, very near what was to become the City of Asheville in
Buncombe County, North Carolina. His father is Colonel Daniel Smith
(1757-1824), his mother Mary McConnell Davidson (1760-1842).
Tradition has it that James McConnell Smith
was the first child born west of the Blue Ridge Mountains. While this cannot be
confirmed, he probably was among the first.
In 1814, he married Mary (Polly) Patton
(1794-1853) of Swannanoa, and they had eleven children. Seven daughters and two
sons lived to maturity. One of those sons is of particular interest to those
studying Caswell County, North Carolina:
This is Jesse Siler Smith (1821-1870) who
married Margaret Isabella (Maggie) Graves (1831-1911) of Yanceyville, North
Carolina. They were married 15 Mar 1853 in Yanceyville, probably in the home of
her father. This home would have been the Dongola mansion as her father was
Jeremiah Graves, Sr. (1786-1868). Many with the name Smith and Lindsey now in
Caswell County and surrounding areas are descendants of this union.
James McConnell Smith built and operated the
Buck Hotel. This was a working-man's hotel that catered to drovers and provided
for livestock to be corralled in the back. Smith owned a store across the
street from the Buck Hotel, maintained a tannery and several farms, built and
for several years managed Smith's Bridge, the first bridge in what is now
Buncombe County across the French Broad River, afterwards selling the bridge to
Buncombe County. Smith's Bridge, initially a toll ferry, was a toll bridge and
may have been the beginning of his fortune.
James McConnell Smith was heavily invested in
the stock of the Buncombe Turnpike Company, and he owned a gold mine. He was a
large landowner in Asheville and other parts of Buncombe County and in nearby
Georgia (owning at one time some 30,000 acres in Buncombe County). He was a
judge, served as the first Chairman of Asheville's Board of Commissioners in
1849 (a chief executive position that became mayor), and his picture hangs in
the hallway outside the Asheville City Council Chambers.
By the time of his death on May 18, 1856,
Smith was one of the city's wealthiest and most prominent citizens. It is said
that he needed armed guards to accompany him to Charleston so he could do his
banking. James McConnell Smith is remembered as a man of untiring industry,
economy, and perseverance.
Around 1840, James McConnell Smith built
Victoria, today known as the Smith-McDowell house located at 283 Victoria Road
in Asheville, North Carolina, for his young son John Patton Smith who never
married and died in 1857. The house stands on property that was one of the land
grants opening Western North Carolina to permanent settlement after the Revolutionary
War. The plans for the house were brought from England. The brick walls are 18
inches thick, and some of the bricks were made in England, brought over as
ballast on ships coming to Charleston, South Carolina. The bricks were then
transported to Asheville by oxen teams.
In all probability the house was built by
slaves owned by James McConnell Smith. It is an outstanding house and is opened
as a museum today. This house and all of the adjoining land was willed to his
son John Patton Smith and his heirs, however, John Patton Smith died nineteen
months later without heirs. In 1858 the house was purchased at auction by a
daughter of James McConnell Smith, Sarah Lucinda Smith (1826-1905), and her
husband, William Wallace McDowell. They and their family lived in the house
until 1881. Economic difficulties arising after the Civil War forced them to
sell the house at that time.
Value of Real Estate Owned in 1850: $30,000.
Source: 1850 US Census.
James McConnell Smith is buried with his
parents and alongside his wife, Mary (Polly) Patton (1794-1853), in the Newton
Academy Cemetery in Asheville, North Carolina.
Smith McDowell House Museum
The 4-story mansion was built on a plantation
south of Asheville approximately twenty years before the Civil War. Constructed
on a hill’s summit, ringed by picturesque mountains, the manse was constructed
by slave labor. During a time when most people lived in log cabins, the
imposing structure was composed of rare brick. Slave labor was probably used to
construct the impressive home. Today known as The Smith-McDowell House, it is
the oldest surviving house in Asheville and the oldest brick house in Buncombe
County, North Carolina.
The mansion sits upon a plot of land acquired
by Colonel Daniel Smith (1757-1824) via a land grant for Revolutionary War
soldiers. Among the earliest settlers to the region, the Colonel’s son, James,
is said to have been the first white child born west of the mountains in North
Carolina. It was this son, James McConnell Smith (1787-1856) who would wed Mary
“Polly” Patton (1794-1853) and build the impressive brick home. In 1833, J.M.
Smith built and operated a state-licensed toll bridge over the French Broad
River on the Buncombe Turnpike. The bridge was part of the Drovers Road,
linking Greenville, TN and western North Carolina farmers to markets in South
Carolina and Georgia. His monopoly on the bridge gave Smith great wealth and he
became one of North Carolina’s most influential and leading businessmen,
becoming a judge and a mayor and owning a store, tavern, two plantations, a
tannery, gold mine and the Buck Hotel. At one time, Smith owned more than
30,000 acres across Buncombe County.
When Smith died in 1856, his son, John Patton
Smith (1823-1857), inherited the Smith-McDowell House. Upon John’s death a
short year later, James's business partner and son-in-law, William Wallace
McDowell (1823-1893), and Sarah Lucinda Smith McDowell (1826-1905) purchased
the house and 350 acres for $10,000. On the eve of the Civil War, McDowell
organized the Buncombe Riflemen, the first group of Confederate volunteers from
Western North Carolina. W.W. McDowell achieved the rank of Major. During the course
of the War, the house was visited by Union troops.
In 1951, the Catholic Diocese purchased the
house for a boy's school dormitory. The then-dilapidated house and grounds were
purchased by Asheville-Buncombe Technical Community College in 1974. That same
year, the Western North Carolina Historical Association rescued the house from
demolition by negotiating a lease to restore the house as a heritage center.
Due to fund-raising efforts and extensive restorations, the Museum opened in
1981. Today, the restored Smith-McDowell House is a nonprofit museum and is
included in the National Register of Historic Places. It is the finest
surviving example of brick antebellum architecture in Western North Carolina
The 3 generations of Smith’s there were 36 out
of the Family that fought in the Revolutionary War. 13 of them were at the rank of Colonel. 7
Lieutenant and 12 were Captain.
9th Great Grandfather was Hendricks Van
Schoonhoven born in 1600 in the Netherlands. He died in New York in 1677. He
came over from the Netherlands in 1654 to New York.
Another Family in Richards were the Bowen’s.
They had a few famous Military people in their family.
The BOWEN Family I went back to the year of
0913. The family went back to King Of Deheubarth Howell ap Owain born in 0913
and died in 0983 and was from Wales. He was our 25th Great Grandfather of the
Husband of 6th Great Aunt. He had 2 wives of the name “Consort of Owain an
Hywel dds” born in 0915 in Wales. His second wife was Angharad Verch Llewelyn
born in 0917 and died in 1002. She was from Wales.
Deheubarth was a 10th-century king in Wales of
the High Middle Ages. A member of the House of Dinefwr, his patrimony was the
kingdom of Deheubarth comprising the southern realms of Dyfed, Ceredigion, and
Brycheiniog. Upon the death of his father King Owain around AD 988, he also
inherited the kingdoms of Gwynedd and Powys, which he had conquered for his
father. He was counted among the Kings of the Britons by the Chronicle of the
Princes.
Maredudd was the younger son of King Owain of
Deheubarth and the grandson of King Hywel the Good. Owain had inherited the
kingdom through the early death of his brothers and Maredudd, too, came to the
throne through the death of his elder brother Einion around 984. Around 986,
Maredudd captured Gwynedd from its king Cadwallon ab Ieuaf. He may have
controlled all Wales apart from Gwent and Morgannwg.
Maredudd is recorded as raiding Mercian
settlements on the borders of Radnor and as paying a ransom of a silver penny a
head to rescue some of his subjects who had been taken captive in Danish raids.
Viking raids were a constant problem during Maredudd's reign. In 987, Godfrey
Haroldson raided Anglesey, supposedly killing one thousand and carrying away
another two thousand as captives; Maredudd was said to have then paid a huge
ransom for the freedom of the hostages.
Following Maredudd's death around AD 999, the
throne of Gwynedd was recovered for the line of Idwal Foel by Cynan ap Hywel.
The throne of Deheubarth went to a man named Rhain who was accepted as
Maredudd's son by its people but who—after the kingdom's conquest by Llywelyn
ap Seisyll—was recorded by most Welsh histories as an Irish pretender and
usurper. The kingdom was later restored to Maredudd's family, but through
Hywel, the grandson of his brother Einion.
Then we drop Down to the year 1081. King
Gruffydd ap Rhys was born in 1081 and died in 1137 and was from Wales. He
married Gwenllian Ferch Gruffydd born in 1100 and died in 1136 and was from
Wales.
Then we are at the year 1167 where Prince Rhys
Wyndod Ap Rhys Fychan born in 1167 and died in 1270 from Wales. He married
Gwerfyl Verch Maelgwn born in 1191 from Wales.
Now to the year 1415 where Einion Ap Deikws
Ddu was born in Wales in the year 1415 and died in France in 1514. He married
Morfudd Verch Mathew born in 1419 in Wales and died in France in 1514.
In the 1500’s Lewis ap Gruffydd was born in
1525 in Wales. He died in Wales in 1600. He married Ethli Verch Edward ap
Levantine born in 1520 and died in 1610 and was from Wales.
Robert Ap Lewis born in 1555 and died in 1645
and was from Wales. He married Gwrvyl Verch Llewelyn born in 1550 and died in
1610 in Wales. They had 21 children.
Then after Robert Ap Lewis came for the first
time of the name BOWEN.
Lord Evan Ap Lewis Of Rhiwlas Bowen born in
1584 in Wales and died in 1668 in Wales. He married Jane Verch Cadwalader born
in 1585 and died in 1668 in Wales.
Then down to the real world with real names of
Moses Bowen born in 1674 and died in 1761. He came from Wales to Montgomery
County, Pennsylvania and then on to Augusta County, Virginia. Moses Bowen and
his wife Rebecca Reece were among the early Quaker Settlers in Pennsylvania.
They emigrated with a large company from Wales about the year 1698 having
purchased ten thousand acres of land in Guinness Township, Chester County,
Pennsylvania.
Moses Bowen fought in the Revolutionary War.
Moses Bowen son John Bowen Sr 1696-1761 which
was a Father-n-law to our 6th Great Aunt Lillian Stella Mcllhaney born in 1709
and died in 1780. He also fought in the Revolutionary War in Pennsylvania. They
produce 15 children of which 8 fought in the Revolutionary War.
Lieutenant Rees T Bowen was killed at the
Battle of Kings Mountain at Cleveland, North Carolina on 7 October 1780
From the "Bowen family history" the
following account of the Battle of Kings Mountain and the over mountain Men
October 7th, 1780 is taken.
" Colonel Campbell commanded the
Washington County Military Force, and William Bowen, a company that belonged to
Campbell's Command... In this company Reece Bowen was a First Lieutenant, his
son John a Private......
When
the order came for Bowen's company to join the
regiment it found its Captain, William Bowen, sick of a fever, and this
situation devolved the command of the company upon Lieutenant Reece Bowen, who
led it into the battle of King's
Mountain, and there, together with several of his men, was killed and buried on
the field. His remains were never
removed, for the reason that when opportunity was offered for their removal the
spot in which he was buried could not be identified. Campbell's Regiment lost in this battle 35
killed and wounded; among the killed,
other than Lieutenant Reece Bowen, were Captain William Edmondson, Robert
Edmondson, Andrew Edmondson, and Henry Henninger, and among the wounded,
Charles Kilgore and John Peery, the two latter and Henninger from the Upper
Clinch Waters."
" William Bowen when hearing his brother
was downed, went crazy, running to find his brother hoping that it was not too
late. As he ran to where his brother had fallen, a sentry yelled, demanding the
password of the day. William, so distraught, couldn't make sense of what the
man was yelling and forgot the password. When they were about to shoot it out,
an officer, recognizing William grabbed him, bringing him back to his senses.
They hugged, grateful for not having to shoot each other, but distraught about
finding his brother. When Rees was found, it was too late, he had died, the
only son of 13 children to be lost in an actual battle, fought in the Rev. War.
Years before, while on patrol, his baby brother Moses Bowen, died of a simple
flesh wound, received in the field. It seems while washing the wound, it was
done with river water that had not been boiled and he developed a fever, from
which he died in 1776." [ref 2]
Note: An account by David E. Johnson states
that Moses Bowen died of smallpox.
Over mountain victory national historic trail.
The Battle of Kings Mountain
The battle of Kings Mountain, fought October
7th, 1780, proved to be the turning point in the British Southern campaign.
The
American Continental army suffered successive defeats at Charleston, Wax haws,
and Camden, South Carolina, in the summer of 1780. By the fall, only the
voluntary militia units remained in the field to oppose the armies of
Cornwallis.
To recruit and equip militia loyal to the
British cause, Cornwallis sent Major Patrick Ferguson into the western
Carolinas. He was to raise a loyal militia army and suppress the remaining
Patriot militia. Intending to cow the Patriots, in September he sent a
proclamation to the mountain settlements, telling them to lay down their arms,
or he would march his army west, and "lay waste the countryside with fire
and sword."
The result was the march of the famous Over
mountain men from the Sycamore Shoals of the Watauga River across the mountains
in search of Ferguson. Overcoming hunger, weather, wrangling, and intrigue, the
Patriots attacked and destroyed Ferguson's Loyalists at Kings Mountain.
The Patriot army, nominally under the command
of William Campbell from Virginia, contained strong leaders who managed to
combine their efforts. John Sevier would go on to serve as Tennessee's first
governor. Isaac Shelby would be Kentucky's first governor. Benjamin Cleveland
would serve as a civic leader and judge in North Carolina, South Carolina, and
Georgia. Joseph Winston, Joseph McDowell, Andrew Hampton, William Chronicle,
and Joseph Hambright all led troops from North Carolina. William Hill, Edward
Lacey, and James Williams led contingents from South Carolina. William Candler
led a small group from Georgia.
Charles McDowell from North Carolina helped
organize the army. But he stepped aside before the battle to preserve a united
Patriot army.
Henry Bowen was a Sergeant in the VA
Continental Line from 1777 until he mustered out in February of 1780.
He was under the command of General George
Washington at Valley Forge.
It is said that he joined the VA militia after
his Continental Line duty and fought at the Battle of King's Mountain alongside
his brothers to include Rees/Reese Bowen, Lieutenant, who was killed during the
battle.
Henry married Ann Cunningham about 1770. Their
daughter, my 4th great-grandmother Margaret married John McElhaney, Sr.
possibly in Tennessee. A son John, Jr., my 3rd great-grandfather, was born in
Tennessee in 1797 and served in the War of 1812 with the First Regiment of TN
Volunteer Mounted Gunmen commanded by Major William Russell. After mustering
out in the spring of 1815, John, Jr. eventually moved on to Mississippi and
married Elizabeth Womack daughter of War of 1812 Lieutenant David Womack II of
Louisiana. John and Elizabeth McLehaney are both buried at Simpson Co., MS on
land owned by John. If there were ever headstones, they now do not exist.
Captain Robert Pickens Bowen served in the
Continental Army as a member of Capt. William Bentley's Company, 3rd & 4th
Virginia Regiment, commanded by Col. John Neville. He served as a private from
1777 to 1779.
He had four brothers who fought in the
Virginia militia and Lieutenant Rees Bowen was killed at the Battle of Kings
Mountain while serving with his brothers Captain John Bowen, Captain William
Bowen and Private Charles Bowen.
Smyth County (VA) placed on the Courthouse
lawn a monument honoring their Revolutionary War soldiers and patriots. This
monument contains the names of 60 soldiers and patriots who were authenticated
by the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution in
Washington, D.C.
These western mountain patriot soldiers
marched in September 1775 to Williamsburg to aid Patrick Henry in forcing
Governor Dunmore to return the great store of gunpowder he had removed from the
powder magazine in fear of the colonists. They fought the Battle of Guilford
Courthouse and the savage Battle of King's Mountain, which Thomas Jefferson said,
"turned the tide of war in favor of the United States and led Cornwallis
to remove to Yorktown and surrender." Many died or were terribly wounded.
After the Revolutionary War, Captain Robert
Bowen and Colonel John Gillespie, his brother-in-law, migrated with their
families to George's Creek, Pendleton District, South Carolina which is now in
Pickens County, S.C. In about 1805, Robert Bowen and his wife Mary moved to
Hickman County, Tennessee.
Charles Bowen 1747-1834 On October 7, 1780 the
foundation that would forever change the world was established. Fewer than one
thousand American Heroes, through skill, luck, and the leadership of cunning
strategists, defeated Patrick Ferguson, a brilliant star of the British
military might. Charles Bowen was one of those Heroes.
His participation in the Battle of King's
Mountain was documented in the "The Patriots at Kings Mountain" by
Bobby Gilmer Moss which, along with "King's Mountain And Its Heroes:
History Of The Battle Of King's Mountain, October 7th, 1780, And The Events
Which Led To It" by Lyman Copeland Draper, Anthony Allaire, and Isaac
Shelby, has long been recognized as the definitive listing of the participants.
Charles Bowen was the son of John Bowen and
Lillian Lily McIlhaney, DAR Ancestor Number
A012714. Mrs. Bowen was awarded her own acknowledgement by the DAR, because she
loaned money to the cause. Captain Bowen married Nancy Gillespie and they had a
son, Charles, who married Susan Shell. There may have been other children:
Charles is documented by the DAR.
State of Tennessee, Knox County: Personally
appeared before me the undersigned, a justice of peace for the County of Knox
in the State of Tennessee, Charles Bowen, who being duly sworn deposited and
saith that, by reason of old age, and the consequent loss of memory, he cannot
swear positively as to the precise length of his service but according to the
best of his recollection he served not less than the periods mentioned below
and in the following grades: for three months as a private soldier drafted:
that he then volunteered for six months as a private soldier; he afterwards
volunteered for three months and served as a private soldier; he again volunteered
for six months and served as a private soldier; and again for the period of
three months he volunteered and served as a
private soldier; and was again in the service as a volunteer for three months
as a private soldier; and was in the Battle of Kings Mountain as stated in his
declaration; he served some other short tours as a volunteer after the Tories
but the periods he does not precisely recollect, so as to give any definite
time to them. He further after obtaining his commission as Captain was out in service,
he feels assured as a Captain for more than two years adding the different
periods together. S/ Charles Bowen, X his mark Sworn to and subscribed before
me the 12 November 1832. S/ Zach Boothe, J. P.
Application for a Transfer State of Indiana, County
of Putnam On this third day of February 1834 before me the subscriber, a
Justice of the peace for the said County of Putnam, personally appeared,
Charles Bowen, who on his oath declares that he is the same person who formerly
belonged to the company commanded by Captain William Edmiston in the Regiment
commanded by Colonel Campbell in the service of the United States; that his
name was placed on the pension roll of the East Tennessee Agency in the State
of Tennessee from whence he has lately removed; that he now resides in the
State of Indiana where he intends to remain and wishes his pension to be there
payable in the future. The following are his reasons for removing from
Tennessee to Indiana, to wit, for the purpose of living in Indiana with his son
who had previously emigrated to the State of Indiana. S/ Charles Bowen
Boan (Bowen), Capt. William was born in
Virginia in 1742 and by age 35 had "accumulated quite a handsome
estate." He fought in the Colonial Army of Virginia against the French and
Indians, in the Battle of Point Pleasant on 10 October 1774, at Fort Randolph
in 1775 and had been with Russell's Rangers when they helped relieve the
besieged fort at Watauga. During the Revolutionary War he served in the cavalry
protecting the frontiers in Virginia and Tennessee from the British, Indians,
and Tories, At the end of the war he, with 15 other soldiers of the Continental
army, traveled "all through Kentucky and the Cumberland country"
prospecting for the best places to locate their land warrants. Captain Bowen
claimed land in what is now Smith County, Tennessee "but the larger
portion in Sumner County, about twelve miles from Nashville," where his
family joined him in 1784. For two years they lived in a double log house and
then built the first brick house west of the mountains. In good condition, it
stands today in the Moss-Wright Park at Goodlettsville.28 His name appears on
the 1787 military payroll.29 One "negro boy who is the possession of
William Bowen" was sold to Andrew Jackson by George Augustus Sugg,30 and
"William Bowen of Davidson County Metro sold unto Andrew Jackson a negro
girl named Peg.
Captain William Bowen 1742-1804 married Mary
Henley Russell from Virginia born in 1760 and died in 1827 in Gallatin,
Tennessee. They had 15 children.
Mary Henley Russell’s father was Brigadier
General William Washington Russell II. He was born in 1735 in Virginia and died
in 1793 in Shenandoah, Virginia. He married Elizabeth Henry Campbell and then
2nd he married Tabitha Coates Adams. Between them two they had 34 children. He
fought in the Revolutionary War for Virginia. He is also buried at Arlington National
Cemetery.
In
1773, Daniel Boone made arrangements with Captain William Russell of Castle's
Wood in southwest Virginia to lead a group of settlers across the mountains
into the rich lands of the Kentucky wilderness.
Boone's party, consisting of his family and closest friends, left their
homes in the Yadkin Valley of North Carolina traveling to a predetermined point
somewhere near Wallen's Ridge, in present day Lee County, Virginia. Other parties were also preparing for the
journey and all were to assemble there as one main body.
From
somewhere near present-day Abingdon, Virginia, Daniel Boone sent his eldest
son, James, in his seventeenth year, and others on to Castle's Wood where they
were to inform Captain Russell that Boone's party was en route. While in Castle's Wood, James' party was to
collect food, seed corn, and supplies for the journey. About nine other young men joined James on
the trip through Rye Cove and Kane's Gap towards the main rendezvous point.
This
party consisted of James Boone, John and Richard Mendenhall, Henry Russell
(William Russell's son), Isaac Crabtree, Samuel Drake (son of John Drake) and
two slaves named Charles and Adam. Some
reports indicate that two other, unidentified men may also have been included
in the James Boone party.
These
young men camped for the night near Wallen's Creek, Virginia. As morning broke on 10 October, they were
attacked by Delaware, Shawnee and Cherokee Indians. Only Isaac Crabtree and Adam escaped. By early December, the attack was reported in
newspapers as far away as Baltimore and Philadelphia.
Col. Henry Bowen represented Tazewell County
in the House of Delegates 1802-1806 and was an officer in the war with
Mexico." Jamie Ault Grady, Bowens of Virginia and Tennessee, Descendants of
John Bowen and Lily McIlhaney.
William, b. 1742; was a Capt. in the VA
militia and was to have led the Campbell rifleman on that fateful trip to Kings
Mountain in S.C., in Aug of 1780. But due to illness, he was delayed and his
older brother, famed Indian fighter, Lt. Rees Bowen took over for him.
Historically, the Battle of King's Mountain, Oct. 7th, 1780 was the decisive
battle that finally turned the tide for the fledgling nation. The description
can be found in "King's Mountain, and it's Heroes" by Draper.
These wonderful mountain men of VA., fresh
from their battles with Indians, dressed in buckskin, hair long, feather's on
the ends of their rifles, came whooping and hollering with a combination of
Indian War whoops and Highland battle cries that scared the daylights out of
the British troops, waiting on King's mountain. They were routed so badly that
they never did recoup.
Unfortunately, Lt. Rees Bowen was killed,
William when hearing his brother was downed, went crazy, running to find his
brother hoping that it was not too late. As he ran to where his brother had
fallen, a sentry demanded the password of the day. William, so distraught,
couldn't make sense of what the man was yelling and forgot the password. When
they were about to shoot it out, an officer, recognizing William grabbed him,
bringing him back to his senses. They hugged, grateful for not having to shoot
each other, but distraught about his brother. When Rees was found, it was too
late, he had died, the only son of 13 children to be lost in a battle fought in
the Rev. War. Years before, while on patrol, his brother Moses Bowen, died of a
simple flesh wound received in the field. It seems while washing wounds, it was
done with river water that had not been boiled and he developed a fever from
which he died in 1776.
Of a family of 13 children, 8 boys and 5
girls, all had made it to adulthood, only 2 were lost in wars fought settling
the colonies. All eight sons served in the Militia, all were considered
Revolutionary War heroes and are on the list as Patriot's for membership to the
DAR and SAR. McIllhaney Bowen. During the War years, Lillian gave money,
supplies and opened her home to the wounded. Lillian died just 2 months before
her beloved son Rees, in 1780, in Washington CO., VA. Her son had been one of
the first settlers in S.W.VA., and a founding father of Tazewell CO., VA.
Rees's homestead, "Fort Maiden Spring's", which became "Maiden
Spring's Farm" is still in existence and has had a "Rees Bowen"
in residence for over 250 years. The homestead is located in the Upper Clinch
Valley, Tazewell CO., VA. He left 8 small children upon his death. It's said
that one of the reasons that William moved on was the crushing loss of his
brother Rees. They were a remarkable close family and remain so to this day.
Rees BOWEN was the second white man who
brought his family to make permanent residence in the Clinch Valley. Therefore,
it is met that he and his family should be the second considered in the
sketches I am writing of the pioneer families. The Tazewell BOWENs are of
Celtic blood. Their immediate ancestor was Moses BOWEN, a Welshman, who married
Rebecca Rees. They came from Wales to America a good many years before the
Revolution, and settled in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Their son John was a
Quaker, and he married Lily McIlhaney. He and his wife moved from Pennsylvania
to Augusta County, Virginia, soon after the first settlements were made in the
Shenandoah Valley, perhaps as early as the year 1732, and located in that part
of Augusta now embraced in the county of Rockbridge. They had twelve children
and Rees was one of their five sons. He married Louisa Smith; whose parents
then lived in that section of Augusta now known as Rockingham County. It is
said that, after his marriage, he took up his abode on the Roanoke River close
to where the city of Roanoke is now situated. In some way Rees BOWEN learned of
the fertile lands and abundance of game that could be found in the Upper Clinch
Valley; and he concluded to abandon his home on the Roanoke River and settle in
this region, where he could locate and occupy, without cost, a large family in
the vicinity of the great spring, to which he gave a peculiar name, he had not
then selected the boundary of land upon which he would settle. After they went into
camp, on the evening of the day he reached the place that has since been the
home of the BOWENs, he went out to find and kill a deer to get a supply of
fresh meat. While thus engaged he discovered the spring. Bickleythus tells of
the discovery of the immense fountain and what followed: When Mr. BOWEN first
saw the spring, he discovered a fine young female deer, feeding on the moss
within the orifice from which gushes the spring. He shot it, and when he went
to get his deer, saw a pair of elk horns standing on their points, and leaning
against the rocks. Mr. BOWEN was a very large and tall man, yet he had no
difficulty in walking upright under the horns. He chose this place for his, and
the spring and river have since been known as Maiden Spring and Fork. The first
four years after he and his family located at Maiden Spring were free from any
hostile demonstrations by the Indians against the Clinch settlements. He was
possessed of great physical strength and was very industrious, and in the four
years he erected a large and strong log house, extended his clearings into the
forests, and added considerably to the number of horses and cattle he brought
with him from his home in Roanoke. Then came trouble with the Ohio Indians, in
1773, when the whole frontier of Virginia was threatened by the red man; and
Rees BOWEN built a heavy stockade around his dwelling, converting it into an
excellent neighborhood fort. In the meantime, his four brothers, John, Arthur,
William, and Moses moved out from Augusta to find homes in the country west of
New River. John settled at some point in the Holston Valley; Arthur located in
the present Smyth County, four miles west of Marion; and William and Moses took
up their abode in the Clinch Valley, but in what immediate locality is now
unknown. When Dunmore's War came on the three brothers, Rees, William, and
Moses went with Captain William Russell's company on the Lewis expedition to
the mouth of the Kanawha River; and were prominent figures in the eventful
battle of Point Pleasant. Moses BOWEN was then only twenty years old; and on
the return march from the Kanawha, he was stricken with smallpox, from which
frightful malady he died in the wilderness.
Rees (all documents of the time spelled it
that way), was the son of John BOWEN and Lily Mcilhaney who spent most of their
lives in Augusta Co, VA. Rees' grandparents were Moses BOWEN and Rebecca REES
(originally spelled Rhys) who came from Wales to Gwynedd township, Chester Co,
PA (near Philadelphia) in 1698 and purchased 10,000 acres. Rees BOWEN (I've
never seen the name Hugh) was born in 1737 in Augusta Co, VA and died at the
Battle of Kings Mountain in North Carolina, in 1780. About eight years prior to
his death, Rees and Levisa, as she was commonly called, purchased a large tract
of land in what is today Tazewell Co, VA and many of their descendants have
remained there. That same land and the original house they built, with many
additions through the years, is today owned by Rees BOWEN VII. Levisa Smith
BOWEN lived to a very old age, reared her children as a widow, and was known
for her courage, leadership, and strong business abilities. Margaret's family
came to this country during the 1600's and that her lineage qualifies for
membership in the Colonial Dames.
Lt. Rees Bowen, born 1737 in Rockingham
County, Virginia, died October 7, 1780, in the Battle of King's Mountain. He
was married in 1756 to Margaret Louisa Smith (1740-1834), daughter of Capt.
John Smith.
Lt. Rees Bowen was one of the first settlers
in Tazewell County, located at Maiden Spring about 1772. He and Louisa had 8
children.
Died at the Battle of King's Mountain in 1780
during the Revolutionary War.
A Patriot of the American Revolution for
VIRGINIA with the rank of LIEUTENANT. DAR Ancestor #: A012723
In 1772 Rees built a blockhouse on his place
"Maiden Spring" for a refuge. This blockhouse was also known as
Bowen's Fort. He was in the Battle of Point Pleasant and went on to the relief
of the Kentucky stations in 1778. Rees was known for his Herculean strength and
great activity. Once a man named Fork, from Pennsylvania, who had a reputation
of being a tremendous physical fighter came to Maiden Spring just to whip him.
They fought for almost a day and Fork was defeated and died in about 20 days.
Revolutionary War Service
Rees was a Lieutenant under his brother Capt.
William Bowen. Because his brother was ill, Rees took command under Major
William Edmondson and Col. William Campbell and was killed at the Battle of
Kings Mountain. According to The Kings Mountain Men by K.K. White, Rees had
five brothers at the Battle of Kings Mountain. These being Capt. William Bowen,
Capt. Arthur Bowen, Robert and Henry who were both officers and Charles, rank
unknown. Rees' son John was at the battle also.
Death at the Battle of Kings Mountain
Near the end of the battle on Oct 7, 1780
Lieutenant Rees Bowen, who commanded one of the companies of the Virginia
regiment was observed while marching forward to attack the enemy, to make a
hazardous and unnecessary exposure of his person. Some friend kindly
remonstrated him with - "Why Bowen, do you not take a tree--why rashly
present yourself to the deliberate aim of the Provincial and Tory rifleman,
concealed behind every rock and bush before you? -- death will inevitably
follow if you persist." "Take to a tree, he indigently replied--no!
--never shall it be said, that I sought safety by hiding my person, or dodging
from a Briton or Tory who opposed me in the field." Well, had it been for
him and his country, had he been more prudent, and, as his superiors had
advised, taken shelter whenever it could be found, for he had scarcely
concluded his brave utterance, when a rifle ball, shot by a Tory hiding behind
a baggage wagon, struck him in the breast. He fell and expired. A “Tory” was an
American colonist that remained loyal to England during the Revolutionary War.
The first three generations of the Bowen
Family of Augusta Co., Virginia by John Blakemore 1963
BOWEN, LIEUTENANT REES son of John Bowen and
Lilly McIlhaney Bowen. Born about 1742. Married Levisa (Louisa) Smith. Issue:
John, Rees Jr., Nancy, Margaret (Peggy), Rebecca, Lilly, Louisa, and Henry. He
was a large tall man, On 15 Nov 1762 Lillie Bowen (Bowan), deeded to Reece
(Rees) Bowen (Bowen) 230 acres on Glade Creek of Roanoke River, Augusta Co, Va.
DB 11-42.
On 20 Sep 1763 in the settlement of Lilly
Bowen, administrator of the estate of Moses Bowen, he was listed as having been
paid. WB 3-278 In 1766 he was paid by William Herbert for the estate of Robert
Andrews. WB 4-70 On 10 Sep 1770, in Botetourt Co, Va. he served as a juryman in
the case of William Hind v. Nicholas Lawrence. SA94 On 14 Nov 1770 he was a
juryman in the case of William Hind v. William Fleming. SA100 On 16 Nov 1770 he
was a juryman in the case of Robert Alexander v. William McCraddock. SA102 On
13 Mar 1771 he was a juryman in the case of John Kelly v. Arthur Campbell.
SA108 On 14 Mar 1771 he was a juryman in the case of William Anderson v. John
Daily. SA125 On 16 May 1771 he was a juryman in the case of Solomon Elliott v.
Will Thornton. SA 125 On 8 Oct 1771 he was a juryman in the case of Robert
Galloway v. John English. SA134 On 10 Oct 1771 he was a juryman in the case of
James Matthews v. Walter Stewart SA 136 On 13 Nov 1771 a suit by Israel
Christian v. He was tried by jury with a verdict for the defendant. He was a
juryman in the case of Jonathan Smith v. William Hutchinson. SA 142, 144 On 15
Nov 1771 he was a juryman in the case of Anthony Bledsoe v. Charles Leonard.
SA147 On 11 Feb 1772 he was a witness to the will of Joseph Phipps.WB A-18?
SA585 It is stated by Bickley, Tazewell County, that he settled at Maiden
Spring in 1772, but it is a family tradition that he had located there several
years earlier. Draper in Kings Mountain and its Heroes wrote "Rees Bowen
was born in Maryland about 1742, emigrated to Rockbridge County, Va. and in
1769 to the waters of the Clinch". His jury service would indicate that he
did not go to the waters of the Clinch to settle until 1772. He built a fort at
Maiden Spring. (Pendleton 242, 376). No attack by Indians was made on the fort
at Maiden Spring, although on one occasion in his absence a small band of
Shawnee threatened to make an assault, but were prevented from doing so by a
clever ruse practiced by Mrs. Bowen, who was as fearless and resourceful as her
husband. On 13 May 1774 he and his wife,
Lavinia, executed a deed to Thomas Blanton for 238 acres on Glade Creek, branch
of Roanoke, Botetourt County, Va. (SA 551). In August 1774 he was a scout at
the Upper Station (Tazewell County, Va.) (Pendleton 288) SA1425 from 16 Aug to
2 1774 he was a soldier at his fort at Maiden Spring. (Pendleton 286) He was
released to go with Capt. William Russel to Point Pleasant (Pendleton 287). On
10 Oct 1774 he was at the Battle of Point Pleasant (Pendleton 314). On 7 Feb
1775 he was appointed by the Fincastle County Court, Va. as an appraiser of the
estate of Joseph Cravens SA637. On 26 Feb 1777 he was recommended by the
Washington County Court, Va. to be appointed Ensign of the Militia, with his
first name being spelled "Rice '' OB 1-17 SA 958. On 30 Sep 1777 he, David
Ward, and William Bowen were appointed appraisers of the estate of John Henry
SA 971. On 17 Mar 1778 he, James Hill, and Andrew Lammy (Lamie) were appointed
to view the way for a road from the CourtHouse to the Rich Lands, by Maiden
Spring, and to the gap at Laurel Fork of the North Fork of the Holston River OB
1-12. On 18 Mar 1778 James Fowler was appointed overseer of the road from
Hill's hill in the Rich Lands of Clinch, to the fork of the path between Rice
(Rees) Bowen's (Bowen's) and Thomas Brumlie's to the foot of Clinch Mountain on
the south side OB 1-24 SA 980. William Bowen to be overseer for the last part
of the above road. On 19 Aug 1778 he was again recommended to be appointed
Ensign of the Militia OB 1-40 SA 1001. On 4 Sep 1780 he was named in the will
of Lilly Bowen as her child and legatee. WB 1-73 SA1345. The gallant Lieutenant
Rees Bowen, with his Company (the Company of his brother William) of sterling
patriots marched with Campbell to the Battle of Kings Mountain Pendleton 247.
He was killed in that battle 7 Oct 1780 SA 1382 1583 Pendleton 247, 383, 384.
Excerpts from Bowens of Virginia and Tennessee
Vol I Rees Bowen first settled at Big Lick, now Roanoke, Va. He was the second
white man who brought his family to make permanent residence in the Clinch
Valley. The first settler was John Craven. He learned of the fertile lands and
abundance of game to be found in the upper Clinch Valley, so he decided to
abandon his home on the Roanoke River and settle in the area of nearly level
land containing about 15 square miles, fertile, well timbered and watered. He could
locate and occupy, without cost, a large boundary of this unoccupied land. On
the evening of the first day in camp after they reached the place that has
since been the home of the Bowens, Rees Bowen went out to find and kill a deer
to get a supply of fresh meat. It was on this occasion he discovered the
spring. He also saw a fine young deer feeding on the moss within the orifice
from which gushes the spring. He shot it and when he went to get the deer, saw
a pair of elk horns standing on their points and leaning against the rocks. Mr.
Bowen was a very large man and tall yet had no difficulty in walking upright
under the horns. He chose this place for his home and the spring and river have
since been known as Maiden Spring and Fork. (Bickley's History of Tazewell
County, Va. 1856) The pioneer Rees Bowen was a man of large physique, a trait
still evident in his scions. "Louisa (Levisa) Smith, his wife, was a
small, neat, and trim woman, weighing only about one hundred pounds. It is told
as a fact that she could step into her husband's hand and that he could stand
and extend his arm, holding her at right angle to his body" (Johnson's New
River Settlements Pages 383) " A great deal of Tazewell lands remain in
the hands of families who pioneered in founding such estates, but none have
perpetuated title in the same name for five generations as have the owners of
Rees Bowen's Maiden Spring farm. Excerpts from Bowens of Virginia and Tennessee
Vol 2 "Rebecca [Ed. sister of Rees Bowen] named one of her sons Jonathan who
used to beg her to tell them about Uncle Reece and how he killed a boar.
"I had two brothers traveling with Daniel Boone at one time or another.
Reece and William, but it was your uncle Reece who killed the boar. He crushed
it against his chest."
Lt. Rees Bowen and wife, Levisa Smith, were
said to be the second white family on the frontier in SW Virginia in 1772.
Their old home place still stands today in Tazewell Co, VA. He was the oldest
son of John Bowen and Lily McIlhaney. Rees was killed in the Battle of King's
Mountain.
Notes for Rees Bowen: Source: Pendleton's
History of Tazewell County, Virginia. Rees married Louisa Smith; whose parents
then lived in that section of Augusta now known as Rockingham County. It is
said that, after his marriage, he took up his abode on the Roanoke River close
to where the city of Roanoke is now situated. In some way Rees Bowen learned of
the fertile lands and abundance of game that could be found in the Upper Clinch
Valley; and he concluded to abandon his home on the Roanoke River and settle in
this region, where he could locate and occupy, without cost, a large boundary
of fine unoccupied land. It is known from tradition that when he arrived with
his family in the vicinity of the great spring, to which he gave a peculiar
name, he had not then selected the boundary of land upon which he would settle.
After they went into camp, on the evening of the day he reached the place that
has since been the home of the Bowens, he went out to find and kill a deer to
get a supply of fresh meat. While thus engaged he discovered the spring.
Bickley thus tells of the discovery of the immense fountain and what followed:
"When Mr. Bowen first saw the spring, he discovered a fine young female
deer, feeding on the moss within the orifice from which gushes the spring. He
shot it, and when he went to get his deer, saw a pair of elk horns standing on
their points, and leaning against the rocks. Mr. Bowen was a very large and
tall man, yet he had no difficulty in walking upright under the horns. He chose
this place for his, and the spring and river have since been known as Maiden
Spring and Fork." The first four years after he and his family located at
Maiden Spring were free from any hostile demonstrations by the Indians against
the Clinch settlements. he was possessed of great physical strength and was
very industrious, and in the four years he erected a large and strong log
house, extended his clearings into the forests and added considerably to the
number of horses and cattle he brought with him from his home on the Roanoke.
Then came trouble with the Ohio Indians, in 1773, when the whole frontier of
Virginia was threatened by the red men; and Rees Bowen built a heavy stockade
around his dwelling, converting it into an excellent neighborhood fort. In the
meantime, his four brothers, John, Arthur, William and Moses had moved out from
Augusta to find homes in the country west of New River. When Dunmore's War came
on the three brothers, Rees, William and Moses, went with Captain William
Russell's company on the Lewis expedition to the mouth of the Kanawha River;
and were prominent figures in the eventful battle at Point Pleasant. Moses
Bowen was then only twenty years old; and on the return march from the Kanawha
he was stricken with smallpox, from which frightful malady he died in the
wilderness. After his return from Point Pleasant, for two years Rees Bowen,
like all the pioneer settlers, was actively engaged in clearing up fields from
the forest and increasing the comforts of his new home. While thus occupied the
war between the colonies and Great Britain began; and the British Government
turned the Western Indians loose on the Virginia frontiers. This caused the
organization of a company of militia, expert Indian fighters, in the Clinch
Valley. The two Bowen brothers were members of the company, William being
captain, and Rees, Lieutenant. This company, composed of pioneers, did
effective service for the protection of the settlers in the Clinch and the
Holston valleys. When Colonels Shelby and Sevier, in the fall of 1780, appealed
to Colonel William Campbell to join them in the expedition to King's Mountain,
with a volunteer force from Washington County, Virginia, the company from
Clinch Valley volunteered to go. Owing to illness from a serious attack of
fever, Captain William Bowen was unable to lead his men on the expedition, and
the command of the company devolved upon Lieutenant Rees Bowen. He marched with
his company and joined Campbell at Wolf Hill (now Abington), and thence on to
the Carolinas, and gave his life for American freedom, while leading his men in
the memorable battle at King's Mountain.
WILLIAM CAMPBELL AND THE BATTLE OF KINGS
MOUNTAIN It is beyond the scope of this narrative to discuss the Battle of
Kings Mountain in any great detail. The noted military historian, Henry
Lumpkin, gives a very good and objective account of the battle in his book From
Savannah to Yorktown, at pages 91-104. The official report of the engagement,
signed by Colonels Campbell, Shelby and Cleveland, was published in the
Virginia Gazette on 18 November 1780 and was included in Lyman C. Draper's book
Kings Mountain and Its Heroes, at pages 522-524. Prior to issuance of this
official report, a shorter account had already been made in a letter written by
the American commander, Colonel William Campbell, a few days after the battle.
A transcript of Colonel Campbell's letter is as follows:
"October 25th, 1780
"Dear Sir, "Ferguson and his party
are no more in circumstances to require the citizens of America. We came up
with him in Craven County, South Carolina posted on a height called Kings
Mountain, about 12 miles north of the Cherokee ford of broad River, about two
o'clock in the evening of the seventh instant, we had marched the whole night
before. Col. Shelby's regiment and mine began the attack & sustained the
whole fire of the enemy for about ten minutes while the other troops were
forming around the height, upon which the enemy was posted. The firing then
became general, & as heavy as you can conceive for the number of men. The
advantageous situation of the enemy, being on the top of a steep ridge, obliged
us to expose ourselves exceedingly, and the dislodging of them was equal to
driving men from strong breastworks; though in the end we gained the point of the
ridge where my regiment fought, and drove them along the summit of it nearly to
the other end, where Col. Cleveland and his country men were. Then they were
driven into a huddle, and the greatest confusion; the flag for a surrender was
immediately hoisted, and as soon as our troops could be notified of it, the
firing ceased, and the survivors surrendered. The estimated prisoners at
discretion. The victory was complete to a wish. My regiment has suffered more
than any other in the action. I must proceed with the prisoners until I can in
some way dispose of them, probably I may go on to Richmond in Virginia.
"I am etc.
"/S/ Wm Campbell, Col. Cdr."
________________________________________A
History of The Middle New River Settlements and Contiguous Territory. By David
E. Johnston (1906)
The Bowens, of Tazewell. This family is of
Welch extraction, and the immediate ancestors of those that came hither were,
long prior to the American Revolution, located and settled about Fredericktown,
in western Maryland. Restive in disposition and fond of adventure, like all of
their blood, they sought, fairly early after the first white settlements were
made in the Valley of Virginia, to look for homes in that direction. How early,
or the exact date, that Reece Bowen, the progenitor of the Tazewell family of
that name, came in to the Virginia Valley from his western Maryland home,
cannot be named with certainty; doubtless he came as early as 1765, for it is
known that for a few years prior to 1772, when he located at Maiden Spring, he
was living on the Roanoke River, close by where the city of Roanoke is now
situated, then in Augusta County, he married Miss Louisa Smith, who proved to
him not only a loving and faithful wife, but a great help meet in his border
life. She was evidently a woman of more than ordinary intelligence and
cultivation for one of her days and opportunity. She was a small, neat and trim
woman, weighing only about one hundred pounds, while her husband was a giant in
size and strength. It is told as a fact that she could step into her husband's
hand and that he could stand and extend his arm, holding her at the right angle
to his body. Prize fighting was quite common in the early days of the
settlements, by which men tested their manhood and prowess. The man who could
demolish all who chose to undertake him was the champion, and wore the belt
until some man flogged him, and then he had to surrender it. At some period
after Reece Bowen had settled on the Roanoke, and after the first child came
into the home, Mrs. Bowen desiring to pay a visit to her people in the Valley,
she and her babe and husband set out on horse-back along the narrow bridle way
that then led through the valley, and on the way they met a man clad in the
usual garb of the day--that is , buck-skin trousers, moccasins, and hunting
shirt, or wampums. The stranger inquired of Mr. Bowen his name, which he gave
him; proposed a fight for the belt. Bowen tried to beg off, stating that he was
taking his wife and child, the latter then in his arms, to her people. The man
would take no excuse; finally, Mrs. Bowen said to her husband; "Reece,
give me the child and get down and slap that man's jaws." Mr. Bowen
alighted from his horse, took the man by the lapel of his hunting shirt, gave
him a few quick, heavy jerks, when the man called out to let him go, he had
enough. It is also related of Mr. Bowen, that in a later prize fight, at Maiden
Spring, with a celebrated prize fighter who had, with his seconds, come from
South Carolina to fight Bowen, and when he reached Bowen's home and made known
to him his business, he, Mr. Bowen, did what he could in an honorable way to
excuse himself from engaging in a fight; but the man was persistent and Bowen
concluded to accommodate him and sent for his seconds--a Mr. Smith and a Mr.
Clendenin. The fight took place and the gentleman from South Carolina came off
second best. Just when Reece Bowen first saw the territory of what Tazewell
County is now cannot be definitely stated. Whether he was one of the large
hunting party organized of men from the Virginia Valley, North Carolina and New
River, which rendezvoused at Ingles' Ferry in June, 1769, and hunted on the
waters of the Holstein, Powell's River, Clinch, and in Kentucky, is not known;
his name does not appear among the number, but the writer, "Haywood's
Civil and Political History of Tennessee," does not profess to give all
the names of the party. Nevertheless, it is highly probable that Bowen was
alone, or he may have gone out with the party the next year, or he may have met
with the Witten's, and others, on their way out in 1771, and joined them. He
seems not to have made his settlement at Maiden Spring until the year of 1772.
He went with Captain William Russell's company to the battle of Point Pleasant,
in 1774, leaving home in August of that year, and leaving Daniel Boone in
command of that part of the frontier. As already stated in this volume, Boone
had been forced to give up his journey to Kentucky in September, 1773, on
account of the breaking out of the Indian War, and had spent the winter of
1773-4 in the neighborhood of Captain William Russell, near Castlewoods.
Captain Russell's company belonged to Colonel William Christian's Fincastle
Regiment, the greater part of which did not participate in the battle of Point Pleasant,
being in the rear in charge of the pack horses carrying provisions for the
army; but Shelby's and Russell's companies went forward with the main body and
took an active part in the conflict. Moses Bowen, a relative of Reece, was with
Russell's company, but died on the journey, from smallpox. From 1774 to 1781,
when Reece Bowen marched away to the battle of King's Mountain, the border on
and along the Clinch was harassed by bands of marauding Indians, and in many of
the skirmishes and troubles Reece Bowen took a hand. During the period from the
date of Bowen's settlement at Maiden Spring until his death, to procure salt,
iron, and other necessary materials he had to travel across the mountains to
Salisbury, North Carolina, carrying them on a packhorse, and would be absent
for weeks, leaving his wife and children alone. His trips, however, were always
made in winter, when there was no danger from the Indians. He left rifle guns
and bear dogs at home, and with these his wife felt safe from danger, for she
was a good shot with a rifle, often exceeding the men in ordinary rifle
practice. Mr. Bowen had selected a lovely country for his home, and around and
adjacent thereto, prior to the fall of 1780, had surveyed and secured several
thousand acres of that valuable land, of which his descendants today hold about
twelve square miles. When it was known that Lord Cornwallis' Army was marching
northward through the Carolinas, and that Colonel Ferguson, who commanded the
left wing of his Army, had sent a threat to the "Over Mountain Men"
that if they did not cross the mountains and take the oath of allegiance to the
King, that he would cross over and destroy with fire and sword, Evan Shelby,
John Sevier, and William Campbell determined to checkmate Colonel Ferguson by
crossing the mountains and destroying him and his army. Colonel Campbell
commanded the Washington County Military Force, and William Bowen a company
that belonged to Campbell's Command, though a part of his company lived on the
Montgomery County side of the line. In this company Reece Bowen was a First
Lieutenant, his son John a Private, and James Moore a Junior Lieutenant. When
the order came for Bowen's company to join the regiment it found its Captain,
William Bowen, sick of a fever, and this situation devolved the command of the
company upon Lieutenant Reece Bowen, who led it into the battle of King's
Mountain, and there, together with several of his men, was killed and buried on
the field. His remains were never removed, for the reason that when opportunity
was offered for their removal the spot in which he was buried could not be
identified. Campbell's Regiment lost in this battle 35 killed and wounded;
among the killed, other than Lieutenant Reece Bowen, were Captain William
Edmondson, Robert Edmondson, Andrew Edmondson, and Henry Henninger, and among
the wounded, Charles Kilgore and John Peery, the two latter and Henninger from
the Upper Clinch Waters. Reece Bowen has in Tazewell County many highly
respected, prominent and influential descendants, among them Mr. Reece Bowen,
Colonel Thomas P. Bowen and Captain Henry Bowen, all brave and distinguished
Confederate Soldiers; the latter, Captain Henry, being frequently honored by
his people as a member of the Legislature of Virginia, and a Representative in
Congress. The present Mr. Reece Bowen married Miss Mary Crockett, of Wythe;
Colonel Thomas P., Miss Augusta Stuart, of Greenbrier, and Captain Henry, Miss
Louisa Gillespie, of Tazewell.
Children of Rees Bowen and Margaret Louisa
Smith are: John Bowen, d. date unknown. Rees Bowen, d. date unknown. Margaret
Bowen, d. date unknown. Rebecca Bowen, d. date unknown. Lily Bowen, d. date
unknown. Louisa Bowen, d. date unknown. Henry Bowen, d. date unknown. Nancy
Bowen, b. 1778, Augusta, Virginia, d. October 8, 1835, Arkansas Among those of
the Bowens who fought as officers in the War of the Revolution were
Quartermaster-General Ephraim of Rhode Island, Captain Oliver of Georgia,
Captain Prentice of New York, Captain Seth of New Jersey, Captain Thomas
Bartholomew of Pennsylvania, and Lieutenants John and Reece of Virginia.
May/June 2009 issue of the D.A.R. Magazine:
"Fort Maiden Spring Chapter, Tazewell, VA, joined the Clinch Mountain
Militia Chapter, S.A.R. for a memorial dedication for Patriots Rees Bowen and Thomas
Gillespie. The celebration was of great interest to the chapter because its
namesake, Fort Maiden Spring, was the home of Rees Bowen. Bowen settled in the
town in 1769 and led the local militia to the Battle of King's Mountain. There
he died and was buried. After the battle, Thomas Gillespie married Bowen's
daughter, Margaret." "The S.A.R. and government markers were placed
in the cemetery at the Bowen home. The Bowen and Gillespie families were both
well represented at the event. The two families have remained close through the
years, and this event renewed those ties."
Additional Account of King's Mountain Battle:
Rees Bowen Birth: 1750 Virginia, USA Death: Oct. 7, 1780 A Statement of the
proceedings of the Western Army, from the 25th of September 1780, to the
reduction of Major Ferguson, and the army under his command. On receiving
intelligence that Major Ferguson had advanced as high up as Gilbert Town, in
Rutherford county, and threatened to cross the mountains to the Western waters,
Col. William Campbell, with four hundred men from Washington county, of
Virginia; Col. Isaac Shelby with two hundred and forty men from Sullivan
county, North-Carolina, and Lieutenant-Col. John Sevier, with two hundred and
forty men from Washington county, North-Carolina, assembled at Watauga on the
25th of September, where they were joined by Col. Charles McDowell, with one
hundred and sixty men from the counties of Burke and Rutherford, who had fled
before the enemy to the Western waters. We began our march on the 26th, and on
the 30th, we were joined by Col. Cleveland, on the Catawba River, with three
hundred and fifty men from the counties of Wilkes and Surry. No one officer
having properly a right to the command-in-chief, on the 1st of October, we dispatched
an express to Major General Gates, informing him of our situation, and
requested him to send a general officer to take command of the whole. In the
meantime, Col. Campbell was chosen to act as commandant till such a general
officer should arrive. We reached the Cowpens, on the Broad River, in South
Carolina, where we were joined by Col. James Williams, on the evening of the
6th October, who informed us that the enemy lay encamped somewhere near the
Cherokee Ford of Broad River, about thirty miles distant from us. By a council
of the principal officers, it was then thought advisable to pursue the enemy
that night with nine hundred of the best horsemen and leave the weak horses and
footmen to follow as fast as possible. We began our march with nine hundred of
the best men about eight o'clock the same evening, marched all night, and came
up with the enemy about three o'clock P.M. of the 7th, who lay encamped on the
top of King's Mountain, twelve miles north of the Cherokee Ford, in the
confidence they could not be forced from so advantageous a post. Previous to
the attack, in our march the following disposition was made: Col. Shelby's
regiment formed a column in the Centre on the left; Col. Campbell's another on
the right; part of Col. Cleveland's regiment, headed by Major Winston and Col.
Sevier's, formed a large column on the right wing; the other part of Col.
Cleveland's regiment composed the left wing. In this order we advanced and got
within a quarter of a mile of the enemy before we were discovered. Col.
Shelby's and Colonel Campbell's regiments began the attack and kept up a fire
on the enemy while the right and left wings were advancing forward to surround
them. The engagement lasted an hour and five minutes, the greatest part of
which time a heavy and incessant fire was kept up on both sides. Our men in
some parts where the regulars fought, were obliged to give way a small distance
two or three times, but rallied and returned with additional ardor to the
attack, and kept up a fire on the enemy while the right and left wings were
advancing forward to surround them. The engagement lasted an hour and five
minutes, the greatest part of which time a heavy and incessant fire was kept up
on both sides. Our men in some parts where the regulars fought, were obliged to
give way a small distance two or three times but rallied and returned with
additional ardor to the attack. The troops upon the right having gained the
summit of the eminence, obliged the enemy to retreat along the top of the ridge
where Col. Cleveland commanded, and were there stopped by his brave men. A flag
was immediately hoisted by Captain Dupoister, the commanding officer, (Major
Ferguson having been killed a little before,) for a surrender. Our fire
immediately ceased, and the enemy laid down their arms--the greater part of
them loaded--and surrendered themselves to us prisoners at discretion. It
appears from their own provision returns for that day, found in their camp,
that their whole force consisted of eleven hundred and twenty-five men, out of
which they sustained the following loss:--Of the regulars, one Major, one
captain, two lieutenants and fifteen privates killed, thirty-five privates
wounded. Left on the ground, not able to march, two captains, four lieutenants,
three ensigns, one surgeon, five sergeants; three corporals, one drummer and
fifty-nine privates taken prisoners. Loss of the Tories, two colonels, three
captains, and two hundred and one privates killed; one Major and one hundred
and twenty-seven privates wounded and left on the ground not able to march; one
colonel, twelve captains, eleven lieutenants, two ensigns, one quarter-master,
one adjutant, two commissaries, eighteen sergeants and six hundred privates
taken prisoners. Total loss of the enemy, eleven hundred and five men at King's
Mountain. 3
Given under our hands at camp, WILLIAM
CAMPBELL, ISAAC SHELBY, BENJAMIN CLEVELAND
The loss on our side--
Killed—1 colonel, Wounded—1 Major, 1 Major, 3
captains, 1 captain, 3 lieutenants, 2 lieutenants 55 privates 4 ensigns, 19
privates 62 total wounded. 28 total
killed.
Rees Bowen's home place on Maiden Spring
History for Historic Register: Bowen Birth: 1750 (sic) Virginia, USA Death:
Oct. 7, 1780 A Statement of the proceedings of the Western Army, from the 25th
of September, 1780, to the reduction of Major Ferguson, and the army under his
command. On receiving intelligence that Major Ferguson had advanced as high up
as Gilbert Town, in Rutherford county, and threatened to cross the mountains to
the Western waters, Col. William Campbell, with four hundred men from Washington
county, of Virginia; Col. Isaac Shelby with two hundred and forty men from
Sullivan county, North-Carolina, and Lieutenant-Col. John Sevier, with two
hundred and forty men from Washington county, North-Carolina, assembled at
Watauga on the 25th of September, where they were joined by Col. Charles
McDowell, with one hundred and sixty men from the counties of Burke and
Rutherford, who had fled before the enemy to the Western waters. We began our
march on the 26th, and on the 30th, we were joined by Col. Cleveland, on the
Catawba River, with three hundred and fifty men from the counties of Wilkes and
Surry. No one officer having properly a right to the command-in-chief, on the
1st of October, we dispatched an express to Major General Gates, informing him
of our situation, and requested him to send a general officer to take command
of the whole. In the meantime, Col. Campbell was chosen to act as commandant
till such a general officer should arrive. We reached the Cowpens, on the Broad
River, in South Carolina, where we were joined by Col. James Williams, on the
evening of the 6th October, who informed us that the enemy lay encamped
somewhere near the Cherokee Ford of Broad River, about thirty miles distant
from us. By a council of the principal officers, it was then thought advisable
to pursue the enemy that night with nine hundred of the best horsemen and leave
the weak horses and footmen to follow as fast as possible. We began our march
with nine hundred of the best men about eight o'clock the same evening, marched
all night, and came up with the enemy about three o'clock P.M. of the 7th, who
lay encamped on the top of King's Mountain, twelve miles north of the Cherokee
Ford, in the confidence they could not be forced from so advantageous a post.
Previous to the attack, in our march the following disposition was made: Col.
Shelby's regiment formed a column in the Centre on the left; Col. Campbell's
another on the right; part of Col. Cleveland's regiment, headed by Major
Winston and Col. Sevier's, formed a large column on the right wing; the other
part of Col. Cleveland's regiment composed the left wing. In this order we advanced
and got within a quarter of a mile of the enemy before we were discovered. Col.
Shelby's and Colonel Campbell's regiments began the attack and kept up a fire
on the enemy while the right and left wings were advancing forward to surround
them. The engagement lasted an hour and five minutes, the greatest part of
which time a heavy and incessant fire was kept up on both sides. Our men in some
parts where the regulars fought, were obliged to give way a small distance two
or three times, but rallied and returned with additional ardor to the attack,
and kept up a fire on the enemy while the right and left wings were advancing
forward to surround them. The engagement lasted an hour and five minutes, the
greatest part of which time a heavy and incessant fire was kept up on both
sides. Our men in some parts where the regulars fought, were obliged to give
way a small distance two or three times but rallied and returned with
additional ardor to the attack. The troops upon the right having gained the
summit of the eminence, obliged the enemy to retreat along the top of the ridge
where Col. Cleveland commanded, and were there stopped by his brave men. A flag
was immediately hoisted by Captain Dupoister, the commanding officer, (Major
Ferguson having been killed a little before,) for a surrender. Our fire
immediately ceased, and the enemy laid down their arms--the greater part of
them loaded--and surrendered themselves to us prisoners at discretion. It
appears from their own provision returns for that day, found in their camp,
that their whole force consisted of eleven hundred and twenty-five men, out of
which they sustained the following loss:--Of the regulars, one Major, one
captain, two lieutenants and fifteen privates killed, thirty-five privates
wounded. Left on the ground, not able to march, two captains, four lieutenants,
three ensigns, one surgeon, five sergeants; three corporals, one drummer and fifty-nine
privates taken prisoners. Loss of the Tories, two colonels, three captains, and
two hundred and one privates killed; one Major and one hundred and twenty-seven
privates wounded and left on the ground not able to march; one colonel, twelve
captains, eleven lieutenants, two ensigns, one quarter-master, one adjutant,
two commissaries, eighteen sergeants and six hundred privates taken prisoners.
Total loss of the enemy, eleven hundred and five men at King's Mountain. 3
Given under our hands at camp, WILLIAM
CAMPBELL, ISAAC SHELBY, BENJAMIN CLEVELAND
The loss on our side--
Killed—1 colonel, Wounded—1 Major, 1 Major, 3
captains, 1 captain, 3 lieutenants, 2 lieutenants 55 privates 4 ensigns
Reese Tate Bowen 1809-1879 2nd cousin 5x
removed went on to become a Brigadier General in 1856. Also represented
Tazewell County, Virginia House of Delegates in 1863-1864. He was also elected
Conservative Party to represent the 90th District in the 43rd Congress.
Dr Charles Urquhart Gravatt 1849-1922
State Senator in Virginia, US Navy Surgeon,
made Rank of Rear Admiral US Navy.
John J Gravatt 1854-1925 Protestant Episcopal
Church Clerical
William Loyall Gravatt 1858-1942 Bishop at the
West Virginia Episcopal Diocese for 54 years.
Colonel John Amber 1762-1836
During the war John Ambler remained at
"The Cottage," in Hanover County, Virginia. He went to school in the
neighborhood to a man named Bates.
When the Revolutionary War closed, in which he
had acted the part of a boy warrior, young John Ambler found himself of age and
one of the richest men in the State of Virginia. Without ever being in debt to
any amount, he owned the following estates:
1. Jamestown, in County of James City.
2. Maine, in County of James City.
3. Powhatan, in the County of James City.
4. An Estate, in the County of Surry.
5. Westham, in the County of Henrico.
6. Cottages, in the County of Hanover.
7. Mill Farm, in the County of Louisa.
8. Lakeland, in the County of Louisa.
9. Nero's -, in the County of Louisa.
10. Glen-Ambler, in the County of Amherst.
11. Saint Moore, in the County of Amherst.
12. Estate -, in the County of Frederick.
13. 1,015 acres of land, in Piedmont Manor.
14. 10,000 acres, in the Manor of Leeds.
15. Several lots, in the Town of Little York.
16. Several lots, in the Town of Manchester.
17. Several lots, in the Town of Richmond.
18. The Mill tract, in the County of Henrico.
19. Stock in the Bank of Virginia.
20. Stock in the Farmers' Bank of Virginia.
21. Stock in the Farmers' Bank of the United
States.
22. Stock in the Dismal Swamp Canal.
23. Stock in the Richmond Dock.
24. 5,000 acres of land, in Mason County.
Col. John Ambler put his affairs in order,
placed an overseer on each estate and employed a steward to superintend the
whole. Before he was of age, John Ambler was elected to represent James City
County, in the Legislature. He became the commander of a troop of cavalry in
James City, which consisted of eighty men and was at the time the finest in the
State. He took great pride in this company and presented it with an elegant
banner.
When he removed to Richmond to live in 1807,
he was made major in the 19th Regiment of Virginia Militia. And with this rank
surrounded the troops who were sent to Norfolk in what was called the
Chesapeake War, caused by British ships of war firing in the frigate Chesapeake
and forcibly taking out some of her crew.
On his return he was promoted to the rank of
Colonel of 19th Regiment-and in this rank he served through the War of 1812. He
was stationed at Camp Bottoms Bridge about fifteen miles below Richmond on the
road leading to the old City of Williamsburg, Virginia. His headquarters were
at what has since been known as Frazer's Tavern. His usual style of traveling
was in a "Coach and Four," with a gig and outriders. There is a most
accurate portrait of John Ambler, which has the merit of being both a good
likeness and a good painting, and from which is copied the engraving given on
the opposite page. There is also an admirable portrait of the third Mrs.
Ambler. The first of these portraits was painted by Petticolas and the last by
King.
Col. Ambler's friends and associates were:
Judge St. George Tucker, native of Bermuda’s, d. 1827; William Coleman, of
Williamsburg; Wilson Miles Cary; Bishop James Madison; Col. Burwell Bassett;
Dr. Philip Bernard, of Norfolk, Virginia, d. 1830; Wm. Marshall, of Richmond,
husband of Mary Macon; General John Hartwell Cocke, of Surry; Philip Norborne
Nicholas,
Mrs., John Ambler Née Bush, of Winchester,
Va.-Widow Norton (Copied from painting by King) President of Farmers' Bank;
Wilson Cary Nicholas, Governor of Virginia; John Marshall, Chief Justice of
United States; Col. Edward Carrington, of Richmond; Edward Smith, Mrs. Ambler's
brother-in-law; Mrs. Bannister, of Williamsburg, Virginia; Sam G. Adams, of
Richmond; Col. Sam Travis, of Williamsburg.
John Ambler was on the jury which tried the
celebrated Aaron Burr.
In the year 1806, Col. Ambler purchased an
elegant house upon Shockoe Hill in the city of Richmond, to which he removed
his family in the fall of the same year.
His estate, Westham, about eight miles above
Richmond on James River, now became his principal source of pleasure. He was in
the habit of visiting it about twice a week and took great delight in improving
it. Even after he came to Richmond to live, he passed his summers in
Winchester.
In 1818 John Ambler received from James City
County an old christening vase, which had been given to the church of Jamestown
nearly a century before by the wife and son of his ancestor Edward Jaquelin.
At his death, he was surrounded by all his
children excepting Thomas Marshall and Richard Cary. He died with all the
dignity of a philosopher and the calm and tranquil resignation of a devout
Christian. In the War of 1812, he bore amongst the officers and soldiers of the
army the sobriquet of Marshal Ney. And during the last years of his life, he
was so large a land holder, that he was familiarly spoken of by his Richmond
acquaintances as "The Duke."
His widow, the third Mrs. Ambler, survived him
for ten years. She breathed her last on the 15th of June 1846, in the same room
in which he died, surrounded by all the children except Philip Saint George and
Richard Cary. She was buried by the side of her husband; under the marble
pyramid she had assisted his children in rearing to his memory.
John Ambler's tombstone is a high shaft, with
coat-of-arms, and this simple inscription:
John Ambler of Jamestown, Va. Born September
25, 1762. Died April 8, 1836. Erected by his widow and children.
On the right side of shaft is inscription:
Katharine Ambler, Widow of John Ambler Esq.
Born May 9, 1773. Died June 16, 1846.
William Marshall Ambler 1813-1896 Virginia
State Senate, Studied at William & Mary, Studied Law and Practice Law
The Henry Family
John Henry IV born in 1659 in Scotland and
died in Scotland in 1708. He married Giselle Carney of Scotland. She was born
in 1659 and died in 1708. John Henry IV came to American in 1683 and landed in
Maryland from Scotland. In 1701 John and wife Giselle went back to Scotland.
They had 8 children. The one that has to do with the Richards family is:
Alexander Patrick Henry from Foveran,
Scotland. He was born in 1681. He died in Scotland in 1735. He married Jean
Robertson also from Scotland. She was born in 1684 and died in 1735. Their son
Colonel John Henry born in 1704 in Scotland
and died in 1773 in Virginia.
Painting of John Henry
The painting is entitled “Patrick Henry
Arguing the Parson’s Cause Case at Hanover Courthouse.
John Henry came to America in 1730 from
Scotland. He married Sarah Dannebrog Winston from Virginia born in 1710 and
died in 1784.
Sarah Dabney Winston
They had 7 children.
John Syme Henry 1728-1805
Anne Henry Christian 1738-1790
Mary Jane Henry Meredith 1738-1819
Susannah Henry Madison 1742-1831
Elizabeth Henry Russell 1749-1825
Lieutenant William Henry 1734-1784
The famous Governor Patrick Henry of Virginia.
Born in 1736 and died in 1799.
Governor Patrick Henry was well known for the
SPEECH
“GIVE ME LIBERTY OR GIVE ME DEATH”
Patrick Henry married Sarah Shelton first born
in1738 and died in 1775. They had 7 children from the marriage.
He married Dorothea Spotswood Dandridge from
Virginia. She was born in 1757 and died in 1831. They had 10 children from this
marriage.
Dorothea Spotswoods Dandridge 1757-1831 The
First Lady of Virginia. Daughter of Nathaniel West Dandridge. She was Martha
Dandridge Washington's 1st cousin. Wife of George Washington.
Brigadier General William C Campbell
William Campbell (born 1745 and died on August
22, 1781) was a Virginia farmer, pioneer, and soldier. One of the thirteen
signers of the earliest statement of armed resistance to the British Crown in
the Thirteen Colonies, the Fincastle Resolutions, Campbell represented Hanover
County in the Virginia House of Delegates. A militia leader during the American
Revolutionary War, he was known to Loyalists as the "bloody tyrant of
Washington County", but to the Patriots he was known for his leadership at
the Battle of Kings Mountain and the Battle of Guilford Courthouse.
Brigadier General
William Campbell
Personal details
Born
1745
Augusta County, Virginia
Died
22 August 1781 (aged 35–36)
Hanover County, Virginia
Spouse(s)
Elizabeth Henry
Relations
Patrick Henry (brother-in-law)
Military service
Allegiance
United
States
Branch/service
Continental Army
Rank
Brigadier General
He was a militia leader of the American
Revolutionary War, known for harsh treatment of Loyalists. It was alleged he
had executed at least one loyalist, thus leading to their label of him as the
"bloody tyrant of Washington County". He became a colonel in 1780 and
was noted for leading his militia to victory at the Battle of Kings Mountain,
where he charged the enemy while telling his men to "shout like hell and
fight like devils!" Afterward, he worked in conjunction with Continental
Army troops to oppose the British invasion of Virginia, providing support at
the Battle of Guilford Courthouse. The Virginia Assembly commissioned him a
brigadier general in 1781, however, he died soon after.
Campbell was married to Elizabeth Henry,
sister of Virginia Governor, Patrick Henry. They had two children: Sarah
Buchanan Campbell, and Charles Henry Campbell. Following Campbell's 1781 death
of an apparent heart attack, his widow subsequently married General William
Russell.
The tract of land where the Campbells settled was
called "Salt Lick" for the area's numerous salt deposits. The salt
works that were eventually established there became an important source of
revenue for the family, also playing an important role in supplying salt for
the Confederacy during the Civil War. It had been surveyed in 1748, when James
Patton entered the area with an expedition of several men, including one
Charles Campbell. After William Campbell's death, the General Assembly of
Virginia granted 5,000 acres to his young son, Charles Henry Campbell, in
consideration of the distinguished services of his father.
Colonel William Campbell was the
quintessential commander for the tough, independent-minded riflemen who formed
the militia units from Campbell’s home in the mountains of southwest Virginia.
Tall, muscular and dignified (although he had a fiery temperament when
aroused), Campbell resembled a Scottish clan leader straight from a Sir Walter
Scott novel, even carrying his Scottish grandfather’s broadsword, for which he
had “… an arm and a spirit that could wield it with effect.”
Educated at Augusta Academy (a forerunner of
Washington and Lee University) and holder of valuable lands in Southwest
Virginia, Campbell often performed both civic and military duties, including
service as a justice for the local courts and captain of militia in Lord
Dunmore’s War against the Shawnee and Mingo nations in 1774, all in service to
the British Governor of Virginia. Campbell broke openly with British governance
and established his Revolutionary credentials in January 1775 when he was one
of thirteen members of the local Committee of Safety to sign the Fincastle
Resolutions, which included an early expression of support for armed resistance
to the British Crown.
Campbell joined the war effort against the British
in September 1775 when he led a company of volunteers to Williamsburg, then the
capital of Virginia. He received a captain’s commission in Virginia’s
Provisional Forces and was assigned to the First Virginia Provisional Regiment,
commanded by Patrick Henry, with whom he became friends Campbell was transferred from the Virginia
command to the Continental Army five months later, and was commissioned a
captain in the First Virginia Continental Regiment on February 3, 1776. He
remained with his command in the Williamsburg area until the autumn of 1776 and
found enough time away from soldiering to court Patrick Henry’s sister
Elizabeth; they were married on April 2, 1776.
With the dangers of Tory and Indian incursions
on the frontier, Campbell requested that he be released from Continental
service to return to southwest Virginia to help protect that region. His request was granted on October 6, 1776,
after which he and his bride traveled home to their Aspen-Ville estate. In the
ensuing years, William Campbell moved back and forth frequently between civic
and military duties. For example, he was elected to the House of Delegates in
1780, but when the Governor of Virginia directed the commanding officers of
Washington, Montgomery, Botetourt, Rockbridge and Greenbrier Counties to plan
an expedition against “the Enemy Indians on the North West side of the Ohio,”
the group recommended that Campbell be given command of the expedition. The
House of Delegates granted him leave to be absent for the remainder of the
session on Wednesday, June 21, and Governor Thomas Jefferson gave Campbell
orders for this expedition in a letter dated the next day (“…you are hereby
authorized to take command…”). However, the Governor soon countermanded those
orders and directed Campbell to support Colonel William Preston in defending
the lead mines in the region and quashing a Tory insurrection.
The Battle of King’s Mountain
By September 1780 Campbell was leading the men
who marched to western North Carolina to confront Major Patrick Ferguson, a
British Army officer who commanded a rampaging force of Loyalist militia. There
were several units of riflemen that had assembled to confront Ferguson and they
decided to name Campbell the overall commander, supporting all the Colonels of
the various units who would meet in council every day. Therefore, although he
was the least experienced of the senior officer’s present, William Campbell was
considered the commander of the army of riflemen that overwhelmed Ferguson on
October 7, 1780 at the Battle of King’s Mountain. His military reputation
soared with this important victory.
There was a fierce side to William Campbell’s
personality. In the fighting around his home in Virginia, he had hanged,
without trials, British agents who incited tribes to harass the frontier
settlements. After the Battle of King’s Mountain, he authorized the trials that
resulted in the hanging of nine men who had served with Ferguson, and British
commander Lord Charles Cornwallis was thought to have threatened to put
Campbell to death if he was captured, for his “rigor against the Tories.” Not
the least intimidated, Campbell resolved that “… if the fortune of war would
place Cornwallis in his power, he should meet the fate of Ferguson “who had
been killed on the battlefield.
Campbell returned home to southwest Virginia
after the King’s Mountain battle and faced once again the threat of attacks by
bands of Cherokees and ardent Loyalists. Whenever frontiersmen like William
Campbell left home to fight the British, they worried about the danger to the
families they left behind.
The Guilford Courthouse Campaign
In January 1781, after the American victory at
Cowpens, Nathanael Greene was leading his small army north from the Carolinas
toward the safety of Virginia, pursued every step of the way by the aggressive
Lord Charles Cornwallis and his professional British army. Greene wanted
desperately to turn and face Cornwallis in open combat, but he was far too weak
to do so. He reached out in all directions for reinforcements, which included a
series of urgent requests to William Campbell to bring 1,000 mountain riflemen
to his aid.
While Greene was intensely focused on his hope
for a large reinforcement of frontier rifle militia, William Campbell was beset
by problems back home that undermined his recruiting efforts. Greene was
understandably focused solely on the British troops that were pursuing him, but
the frontiersmen had to defend the lead mines, keep one eye on the Cherokees,
another on the local Loyalists, and be ready to defend against their attacks
while considering what resources they could spare to support Greene and his
Continental Army. Because of these conflicting priorities, Campbell was able to
lead only sixty men to reinforce Greene, instead of Greene’s hoped-for 1,000
riflemen. Campbell and his small detachment arrived in Greene’s camp on March
4, 1781 and were involved in the skirmish at Weitzel’s Mill two days later
where they fought with their accustomed skill.
After the affair at Weitzel’s Mill, Campbell
was assigned to a “Corps of Observation” with Light Horse Harry Lee, and they
participated in the Battle of Guilford Courthouse on March 15, 1781, which
Campbell described in a letter written two weeks after the Battle:
we had Intelligence of the Enemy being in
Motion and marching towards us, upon which Colo. Lee with his Legion, and about
30 of my Riflemen under the Command of Captain Fata of the Augusta Militia,
went out to meet them, while the rest of the Riflemen, and Colo Washington’s
Horse, formed at our Encampment to Support them in their Retreat back They met
with the Van of the Enemy about two Miles from where we were formed, and
immediately began to Skirmish with them, and continued retreating and fighting
with them near half an hour, which disconcerted and retarded the Enemy very
Considerably In the meantime the main
Body of our Army was formed about three quarters of a Mile in rear of us, and
upon the Legions reinforcing us, we were ordered back to take our Position in
the Line of Battle.
After these initial skirmishes, Lee and
Campbell fell back to the left flank of the army where they became separated
for a time from the American lines, and eventually rendezvoused with Greene
after his army had retreated from the battlefield. Because he held the field,
Cornwallis claimed that the Battle of Guilford Courthouse was a victory, but it
was a Pyrrhic victory indeed. The British had received a brutal mauling that
had cost Cornwallis one-fourth of his men. This battle was an important factor
in Cornwallis’ decision to move north to Virginia, and eventually to his
surrender at Yorktown.
Greene’s general orders the day after the
battle gave generous praise to William Campbell and others:
The Gallant Behavior of the Corps of
Observation consisting of the Detachments of Cavalry and Infantry commanded by
Lieutenant Colonel (William) Washington & the Legion commanded by
Lieutenant Colonel (Henry Lee in Conjunction with the Rifle men & Light
Infantry commanded by Collo (William) Campbell & (Charles) Lynch.
In addition to this public praise, Greene
wrote personally to Campbell shortly after the battle to extol his contribution
and to give him permission to return home to southwest Virginia:
Sir: Your faithful Services and the Exertions
which you made to second the efforts of the Southern Arms, on the 15th inst.
claims my warmest thanks. It would be ungenerous not to acknowledge my entire
approbation of your conduct, and the spirited and manly behavior of the
Officers and soldiers under you. Sensible of your merit, I feel a pleasure in
doing justice to it.
In this concluding sentence, Greene told the
Colonel:
Most of the riflemen having gone home, and not
having it in my power to make up another Command, you have my permission to
return home to your friends; and should the Emergency of the Southern
Operations require your further Exertions, I will advertise you.
Service in the House of Delegates; Promotion
to Brigadier General
As William Campbell returned home Virginia
was, as always during this War, beset by the needs to defend against British
incursions, stave off Indian and Tory raids on the frontier, protect the lead
mines, and support Nathanael Greene’s re-entry to North and South Carolina. The
British threat was growing since Benedict Arnold had raided Richmond in
January. General Phillips now led a force of about 2,000 men in Portsmouth, and
Lord Cornwallis was moving north into the colony from Wilmington, North
Carolina, where he had gone to regroup after the Battle of Guilford Courthouse.
Questions of military recruiting, organization, and assignment dominated
government deliberations.
Campbell regained his seat in the Virginia
House of Delegates. He returned to the legislature in tumultuous times, when
the members were under constant threat of capture from invading British forces.
Accordingly, Campbell and his fellow delegates had to change the location of
their meetings several times to avoid this danger. On May 10, 1781, the House
of Delegates decided to leave Richmond because “of the approach of a hostile
army” (Cornwallis) and to meet on May 24 in Charlottesville. The House then met
in Charlottesville until June 4, when they decided to move their deliberations
to Staunton, “…there being reason to apprehend an immediate incursion of the
enemy’s cavalry to this place…” (Banastre Tarletan was conducting a raid that
was designed to capture the Legislature and Governor Jefferson.)
On June 12 the House received a letter from the
Marquis de Lafayette requesting support for his efforts to protect Virginia
from the British incursions. Two days later Campbell’s fellow delegates elected
him to be a Brigadier General. The short
time between Lafayette’s request and Campbell’s promotion may suggest that the
subject had been discussed previously, and that the House was only looking for
a proper opportunity to enact the promotion. With British forces roaming
freely, the colony needed its best soldiers in the fight, and Campbell’s reputation,
demeanor and commanding physical presence must surely have made an impression
on his fellow Delegates in this time of danger. The influence of Delegate
Patrick Henry, Campbell’s brother-in-law and friend, was presumably also very
helpful.
On Saturday, June 16, the House granted the
newly minted Brigadier General Campbell permission to be absent for the
remainder of the session. Campbell moved quickly, and Lord Cornwallis reported
only two weeks later that Lafayette had “received considerable reinforcements
of militia and about 800 mountain riflemen under Campbell.”
Campbell’s Service in the Yorktown Campaign;
His Illness and Death
Sadly, William Campbell was not able to serve
for an extended period as a Brigadier General. He commanded the rifle corps in
Lafayette’s army during the early stages of the Yorktown campaign that would
result in the surrender of Lord Cornwallis’s army, but to the great regret of
his comrades Campbell did not live to witness the surrender. He became ill with
chest pains and fever and died near Richmond at the home of his wife’s
half-brother, Colonel William Syme, on August 22, 1781. By the order of
Lafayette, he was buried at that location with full military honors (his body
was later moved to Aspen-ville in southwest Virginia by his son-in-law, where
he was re-interred in a family cemetery under an impressive headstone).
Lafayette wrote that Campbell was “an officer whose service must have endeared
him to every citizen, and particularly to every American soldier.”
William Campbell’s death from illness at age
thirty-six was a loss to the army, to Virginia and to the nation. Had he lived,
he surely would have risen to roles of prominence and civic leadership, as did
his peers who survived the war years. Lafayette said that Campbell’s name
should have “everlasting honor and insure him a high rank among the defenders
of liberty in the American Cause.”
On the other side of the Richards Family we go
to the Muir, Boyd, Campbell and Wallace Families from Scotland. All Famous
Families.
Campbell Family
9th Great Grandfather Colin Blythswood
Campbell born in 1612 in Scotland and died in 1671 in Scotland. He married
Janet of Rowallan Muir. Born in 1613 and died in Scotland in 1671. They had 20
enjoyable children. One which one named
Colin Campbell our 8th Great Grandfather
1636-1671. He married Margaret Lawder 1643-1674.
12th Great Grandfather William B Muir
1490-1590 born and died in Scotland. He married 12th Great Grandmother Sara
Brisbane born in 1499 in Scotland and died in Scotland in 1590.
11th Great Grandfather Robert Muir born in
1540 and died in 1640 and was from Scotland. He married Margaret Boyd born in
1548 and died in Scotland.
Margaret Boyd’s parent were
13th Great Grandfather Thomas Boyd born in
1492 in Scotland and died in Scotland in 1548. He married 13th Great
Grandmother Marion Fairlie born in 1495 in Scotland and died in Scotland in
1550.
14th Great Grandfather was Sir Alexander 3rd
Lord Boyd of Kilmarnock Boyd. Born in 1449 in Scotland and died in Scotland in
1515. Born and raised at Kilmarnock Castle in Scotland.
Alexander Boyd, uncle and heir, and, but for
the attainder of 1649, Lord Boyd (he does not appear to have been recognized as
such), being second son of Robert 1st Lord Boyd. He became head of the family
on the death of his 15-year-old nephew James, 2nd Lord Boyd in 1484. He was
Chamberlain of Kilmarnock before 2 August 1488 and a witness to the sasine of
Queen Margaret to the Lordship of Kilmarnock on 19 April 1504. He was still
living 26 June 1508. He was said to be a favorite of King James IV.
Alexander Boyd married 14th Great Grandmother
Janet, sister of Sir William and daughter of Sir Robert Colville of Ochiltree
on 23 November 1505. They were related within the third and third and fourth
and fourth degrees of consanguinity and had a dispensation for the marriage
already contracted between them and legitimizing the children already born, 23
November 1505. Their children were:
• Robert, his heir and the 4th Lord Boyd
• Thomas (died 1547), ancestor of the Boyds of
Pitcon
• Adam (died after 21 November 1577), ancestor
of the Boyds of Penkill and Trochri
• Three other sons
• Margaret, wife of George Colquhoun, 3rd of
Glens, by whom she had an only daughter and heiress, Margaret, who married her
cousin-german, Robert Boyd, 5th Lord Boyd.
Euphemia, wife of John Logie of Logiealmond in
Perthshire, by whom she had issued a daughter and heiress Margaret, who married
Thomas Hay, and was mother of George Hay, 7th Earl of Erroll (d. 1573)
15th Great Grandfather Sir Robert 1st Laird
Kilmarnock Boyd Lord High Chancellor of Scotland. Born in Scotland in 1425 and
died in 1482 at Alnwick Castle in Northumberland, England.
Robert 1st Lord Boyd was eldest son and heir
of Sir Thomas Boyd, whom he succeeded 9 July 1439. The Scots which tells us
that a certain "Robert Boyd of Duchal," presumably this Robert, son
of Thomas Boyd, Bailie of Duchal, slew Sir James Stewart of Ardgowan at
Drumglass 31 May 1445. Sometime after 1451, King James II created him 1st.
Robert Boyd was knighted, and was created a Peer of Parliament (Lord Boyd) by
James II of Scotland at some date between 1451 and 18 July 1454 (the date he
took his seat in Parliament). In 1460 he was one of the Regents during the
minority of James III. In 1464 he was one of the commissioners at York for a
truce with Edward IV of England.
The date of creation of Boyd's title can be
further narrowed to between 1451 and 15 June 1452. On the latter date, the King
confirmed the charter of Robert Boyd, Lord of Kilmarnock and of Dalry,
conveying one-third of the lands of Lynn in Dalry to Robert Boyd of Lynn. Only
three months earlier, Andrew Lynn in Dalry was described in another charter as
Lord of that Ilk, meaning lord of a property of the same name as his family
name.)
Lord Boyd conspired with his brother, Sir
Alexander Boyd, and obtained possession of the young King's person in 1466 and
was made by Act of Parliament sole Governor of the Realm; and Great Chamberlain
for life, and Lord Justice General in 1467. Early in that year he procured the
marriage of his eldest son, Thomas, (created Earl of Arran for that occasion)
with Mary, elder sister of James III, which aroused the jealousy of the other
nobles and made his eventual downfall inevitable since the King regarded the
marriage as an unforgivable insult.
Lord Boyd obtained the cession of the Orkney
Islands to Scotland, 8 September 1468, from Christian I, King of Norway, for
whose daughter Margaret, he negotiated a marriage with James III. While absent
for that purpose he and his son Thomas (the Earl of Arran) and his brother Sir
Alexander Boyd, were obtained for high treason, whereby his peerage became
forfeited. He was living Easter 1480/1, and died before October 1482, it is
said, at Alnwick in Northumberland where he had fled in 1469. James III's
biographer sums Boyd up as an unscrupulous political gambler and an inveterate
optimist. To forcibly assume guardianship of an underage King was, indeed, a
familiar path to power in medieval Scotland, but it was also a dangerous path.
Boyd underestimated the dangers, overestimated his support, and made the fatal
mistake of marrying his son to the King's sister, an insult the King would not
forgive.
Family
Robert Boyd belonged to an old and
distinguished family, of which one earlier Sir Robert Boyd, had fought with Sir
William Wallace and Robert The Bruce.
He married Lady Marriott Janet “Mariot”
Maxwell of Calderwood, born in 1430 and died in Scotland in 1472.
16th Great Grandfather Knight Thomas
Kilmarnock Boyd 5th Baron of Kilmarnock. born in 1405 in Scotland and died in
1439 in Scotland.
Sir Thomas Boyd; 5th feudal Baron of
Kilmarnock; was born around 1400 lived at Kilmarnock, Ayrshire, Scotland.
Imprisoned and fined by James l. He killed Sir Alan Stewart of Darnley in a
feud 1439 and was killed in revenge by his victim's brother 9 July 1439.
Sir Thomas Boyd IV succeeded to the Kilmarnock
Estates, but was only to hold them for seven years. He seems to have been an
excessively war-like knight.
Sir Thomas fought at the battle of Craignaugh
Hill in 1439. From Dena Castle he picked an argument with the Stewarts of Darnley
and killed Sir Alan Stewart of Darnley in a fight at Polmaise Thorn between
Linlithgow and Falkirk. A follower of Sir Alan's brother, Sir Alexander
Stewart, promptly stabbed him to his death the next day, 9 Jul 1439, at
Craighaught, Renfrewshire. It is recorded that his wife collapsed and died on
seeing his body being carried back into Dean Castle
Sir Thomas married Lady Isabell Lyle, Baroness
Boyd born in 1405 in Scotland and died in 1439 at Craignaught Hill, Scotland.
17th Great Grandfather was Thomas Boyd of
Kilmarnock 1375-1432
Dean Castle, Scotland
18th Great Grandfather Sir Thomas Boyd of
Kilmarnock 1355-1409
Scotland
19th Great Grandfather Thomas Boyd 2nd Baron
Boyd of Kilmarnock 1323-1365
Scotland
20th Great Grandfather Sir Robert Boyd 1st
Baron Boyd of Kilmarnock
Knight 1298-1333
Scotland
21st Great Grandfather Sir Robert Boyd II
1249-1330
Scotland
22nd Great Grandfather Sir Robert Boyd of
Noddsdale
1230-1297
Scotland
23rd Great Grandfather Robert Boidh of Gavin
and Risk 1164-1205
Scotland
9th Great Grandfather John Lauder born in 1595
in Melville Mills, Scotland. He died in 1692 in Edinburgh, Scotland. 1st
Baronet of Newington and Fountainhall was a notable Scottish baillie and
Treasurer of the City of Edinburgh, who was raised to a Nova Scotia baronetcy
in 1688.
Lauder was born at Melville Mill and baptized
17 August 1595 at Lasswade church, the son of Andrew Lauder of Melville Mill,
Lasswade (d. June 1658) and his first wife, Janet (d. April 1617), daughter of
David Ramsay of Polton and Hillhead. His son, Sir John Lauder, Lord
Fountainhall, recorded his ancestry in his Holograph Notes. He gives the 1st
baronet's father as Andrew Lauder, and his father as William Lauder, a
"second brother of [Robert] Lauder of that Ilk", sons of Richard
Lauder, younger, of that Ilk (k. June 1567).
As John Lauder of Newington, he matriculated
Arms with the Lord Lyon King of Arms c. 1672 as descended of a second son of
Lauder of that Ilk.
Lauder, mentioned in his mother’s Testament,
became a highly successful merchant-burgess in Edinburgh, being admitted as a
Burgess on 23 November 1636. He served as Treasurer of the City of Edinburgh in
1652, and as bailie from 1657 to 1661. He purchased (before 1672) the estate of
Newington, Edinburgh, and subsequently (10 June 1681) the lands of Woodhead and
Templehall, which along with others in Edinburghshire and Haddingtonshire, were
erected by Crown charter into the feudal barony of Fountainhall on 13 August
1681. He later purchased the lands of Edington (now Edington) near Chirnside,
Berwickshire, from his third father-in-law, George Ramsay of Edington.
Lauder married three times: (1) 20 November
1639, at Edinburgh, Margaret (1618–1643) daughter of James Speirs by his wife
Catherine née Curie; (2) 17 July 1643 at Edinburgh, Isabel (27 July 1628 – 2
February 1669), daughter of Alexander Ellis of Mortonhall and Stanhope Milnes
by his wife Elisabeth, daughter of Nicol Edward, Dean of Guild in Edinburgh;
(3) 15 February 1670, Margaret, daughter of George Ramsay of Edington (of the
Dalhousie family), by his wife Margaret Seton. After Lauder's death his widow
married William Cunninghame, younger of Brounhill, sometime Provost of Ayr.
On 17 July 1688, he was created a baronet, of
Fountainhall, East Lothian in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia, with special
remainder to the eldest surviving male heir of his third marriage. This patent
was successfully contested and "reduced" (cancelled)
on 19 February 1692 having been replaced on 25
January 1690 with a new Letters Patent altering the succession to include his
eldest surviving son from any marriage.
He died on 2 April 1692, in his 97th year and
was interred in the Lauder vault within Greyfriars Kirk. He had, in all,
twenty-four children by his three wives and was succeeded in the baronetcy by
his eldest surviving son (of his second marriage) Sir John Lauder, 2nd Baronet,
later Lord Fountainhall.
Sir Robert Lauder of The Bass born at Lauder
Tower Forest in 1495. He died in 1561 in East Lothian, Scotland. He was the
13th Great Grandmother’s Husband.
was a Scottish knight, armiger, and Governor
of the Castle at Berwick-upon-Tweed. He was also a member of the old Scottish
Parliament. The Lauders held the feudal barony of The Bass (the caput of which
was its castle), East Lothian, Edrington Castle and lands in the parish of
Mordington, Berwickshire, Tyninghame in Haddingtonshire, and numerous other
estates and properties elsewhere in Scotland.
Lauder was the eldest son and heir of Robert
Lauder of the Bass (d.1495) by his first spouse Jonet, daughter of Sir
Alexander Home
Prior to his father's death, Lauder was
usually designated "of Edrington" in Berwickshire. After his purchase
of the lands of Biell, in East Lothian he was designated 'of Biel'.
In 1462 Berwick-upon-Tweed was recovered by
the Scots and Lauder was put in charge of Berwick Castle, until he was succeeded
in 1474 by David, Earl of Crawford. In 1464 Lauder was paid £20 for repairs to
the castle.
A notarial instrument dated 13 May 1465
narrates:
Robert
Lauder, son and apparent heir of Sir Robert Lauder of Eddington, asserted that
David Lauder of Popil (East Lothian) had given sasine and heritable possession
to his eldest son James Lauder and Jonete his spouse, their heirs etc., of a
certain piece of land at Popil, to the prejudice of the first-mentioned Robert,
who solemnly protested that the said sasine should neither be valid nor
prejudice his right in the land, and for greater security, he, by throwing of
earth and stone outside the house belonging to the piece of land, and by
breaking a plate with his foot, broke and annulled the said sasine and so
possession by James Lauder and his wife. Done at Popil at 7 a.m. on 13th May
1465 before Henry Ogil of Popil, James Ogilvy his eldest son, and others.
"Robert de Laweder de Edryngtoun" is
the first witness to a Retour of Service, dated 7 April 1467, of Margaret
Sinclair as one of the heirs of her grandfather John Sinclair in the lands of
Kimmerghame, Berwickshire. Although he was not yet in formal possession of the
Edrington estate (see next entry below) he appears to be regularly using the
designation, as eldest son, 'of Edrington'.
In a charter of 1471, James III of Scotland
confirmed to Robert Lauder, son and heir apparent of Robert Lauder of Edrington
and the Bass, the lands of Edrington and Coalstell with the fishing of
Edermouth (or mouth of the Whiteadder Water) plus the mill there (at Edrington)
which Robert the father personally resigned to Robert junior and his male heirs
failing which those relations bearing the Lauder arms.
In a further charter signed at Edinburgh on 26
June 1474 and confirmed there on 27 July 1475, James III confirmed a feu
charter of Robert Lauder junior, Lord of Edrington, and superior of West
Nisbet, to David Creichtoun of Cranstoun and his heirs, of the lands of West
Nisbet in the barony of Pencaitland, East Lothian, which John de Colquhoun of
Luss has resigned into the said Robert Lauder junior's hands. Witnesses
included Robert Lauder of Bass, father of said Robert junior, and William
Lauder.
King James III of Scotland again appointed
Robert Lauder of Edrington as custodian and governor of the castle at
Berwick-upon-Tweed for 5 years, with a retainer of 200 merks per annum.
In 1477 Robert was one of those entrusted by
James III to escort the dowry of Princess Cecily of York for her planned
marriage to James, Duke of Rothesay. Cecily was the third daughter of Edward IV
of England and Elizabeth Woodville.
Bain records that on 2 February 1477:
"James King of Scotland signifies to the bearers of the installment of the
Princess Cecilia's dower due at Candlemass, that he has sent Alexander, Lord
Hume, Robert of Lawdir of Edrington son and heir apparent to Robert of Lawdir
of the Bass, and Adam of Blackadder of that Ilk, with the Lord Lyon King of
Arms, to conduct them to Edinburgh."
A charter of 1477 to Alexander Inglis of tenements
of land in Hide Hill etc., in Berwick-upon-Tweed, lists those who own
neighboring properties, which include "Robert Lauder of Bass junior".
A Retour of Special Service was held at
Berwick-upon-Tweed on 20 May 1477 serving Thomas Broun (of lawful age) as son
and heir to John Broun (who has been dead three months), in a caracul of land
with pertinent on the north side of Flemington, (near Eyemouth, Berwickshire),
valued at four marks annually and held in chief of the Laird of Restalrig [near
Edinburgh] and Flemington for service of ward and relief, such services being
given as neighboring tenants in these lands are accustomed to give. Retour
given by Henry Congiltoun, Sheriff deputy of Berwick. Amongst the jury was
Robert Lawder of Edrington, Thomas Edingtoun of that Ilk, Thomas Lumsden of
that Ilk, William Douglas, Archibald Manderston, John Skougall and William
Lauder.
He witnessed a charter at the castle of Dunbar
on 18 December 1475 as "Robert Lauder of Edrington". On 2 April 1486,
a "Robert Lawedar" was one of the witnesses to a document signed on
the High Altar at Holyrood Abbey. As the leading witness was William Hall,
Vicar of Baro, it is probable that Robert is of the Bass family. Another
witness was an Alexander Home.
In 1489 James IV of Scotland granted a charter
to Lauder of the lands of Beil, Johnscleuch in the Lammermuir Hills, and
"le Clientis", with their towers and mills etc., in the Barony of
Dunbar, formerly owned by Hugo de Dunbar & Beil, with the lands and mill of
Mersington, Berwickshire, which Hugo de Dunbar of Bele also resigned. The
charter mentions Robert's wife Isabel Hay.
The Exchequer Rolls record Robert Lauder of
Edrington in possession of the lands of Glensax in Yarrow, Selkirkshire in
1489/1490/1491.
A Petition to Pope Innocent VIII signed in the
presence of Henry Congleton and others in January 1491, craved absolution for
numerous people during the 'recent troubles' in Scotland and the Battle of
Sauchieburn (11 June 1488). Lauder was named as son and heir of the Lord of Bass
and Baron of Stenton. Others include Kentigern Hepburn of Waughtown, Patrick
Skowgale, Alexander Sideserf, William Sinclair, David Renton of Billie &
Lamberton, Alexander Home, Archibald Dunbar, William Manderston, Gavin Home,
and John Sommerville.
On 4 August 1494 in a court held at Stenton,
before John Swinton of that Ilk, depute and lieutenant of John, Lord Glamis,
and Robert Lord l'Isle, King's Justiciars generally constituted from the south
side of the Forth; Robert Lauder of Bass showed a charter or writ of
resignation by the deceased Gilbert Duchry mentioning that Gilbert resigned the
land or tenement of Duchray (in the Lammermuir Hills), in the tenement of
Stentoun, in the hands of Walter, Stewart of Scotland, superior thereof. Robert
Lauder of Beil, son and apparent heir of the said Robert, asserted that a
charter by his father to him of the mains of Stenton and three-quarters of the
town and territory made no reservation of the lands of Duchray. The witnesses
were Robert Laweder, son and apparent heir of Robert Lauder of Beill, James
Cockburn of Clerkington, William Hepburn of Athelstaneford, Alexander Sydserf
of Ilk, James O'gill, David O'gill, and others.
13th Great Grandmother Alison Cranston was
born in 1505 and died in 1567. She was from Scotland. She was born and raised
at Ruthven Castle in Perthshire County, Scotland. Now the Castle is called
Huntingtower Castle.
Jermyn Family-Torksey Castle
Torksey Castle is an Elizabethan manor house
located in the village of Torksey on the east bank of the River Trent in
Lincolnshire, England. It is 12 miles northwest of Lincoln on the A156 road.
Seven miles to the north is Gainsborough Old Hall and 10 miles southeast is
Lincoln Castle. It is a 16th-century Tudor stone-built fortified manor house founded
by the Jermyn family of Suffolk. It is a Grade-I listed building and a
scheduled ancient monument, but the building is on the Heritage at Risk
Register. The site is private, with no public access and is only visible from
the A156 road and a public footpath, on the west bank of the River Trent.
The country house was built by Sir Robert
Jermyn in c. 1560. It may have been built as a waypoint for the Jermyn family's
travels to York or as a gift to one of their sons. In 1645, the property was
slighted during the English Civil War. Having been taken from the Royalist
Jermyn family by Parliamentarians, it was burned by Royalist soldiers based at
Newark. Very little of the structure remained.
Though the Jermyn family retained control of
the estate after the Civil War, the property was not restored, but continued to
deteriorate. The remains of the buildings were scavenged for usable building
supplies by residents of the area. Also, the hall was built quite close to the
flood-prone River Trent, which may have stood the family in good stead as a
source of transportation and commerce (as the Lords of Torksey had been
permitted to levy tolls on the river's travelers), but which also contributed
to the damage of the building through flooding. In 1961, the Trent River Board
buried part of the ruins when raising the riverbank.
The west facade and part of the rear wall
survive. English Heritage undertook stabilization of the building in 1991 but
the building is on the Heritage at Risk Register.
It is not known why Torksey Castle was
popularly termed a castle. The building was never used as a fortress and would
not have been suitable for that purpose. Although the structure is a hall
rather than a castle, it bears similar architectural design features, including
angular projecting towers and crow-stepped gables. According to Heritage
Lincoln, these features may have led to its being termed castle. Alternatively,
it may have been built on the site of an earlier medieval castle
The Frederickse, Van Schoonhoven &
Swartwout Families of the Netherlands.
The origin of the names is explained in two
ways; old historians claimed the “Belle Portus'' (beautiful harbor) and stated
its real name was “Schoonhoven” with an a (Schoonhoven is beautiful and haven
is harbor). Other historians derive the name from “Schoonhoven hoven” with an
o, meaning beautiful farm, after the many rich farms and estates surrounding
the town.
The Coat of Arms varied from each family in
the Schoonhoven village. The Crest of Hendrich Van Schoonhoven emblem wS 4
climbing lions with a snake in their mouths. The first and last lion (stork)
are black and the remaining are red. There are also coins with the same
marketing that are found at Castle of Horst.
The bloodline relationship of Hendrich Van
Schoonhoven and Olivier Van Schoonhoven, new owners of the Castle of Horst, is
not known at this time however Hendrich was from the village of Schoonhoven and
must have known the castle was occupied by Olivier Van Schoonhoven.
11th GGF Aelbrecht Van Schoonhoven 1535-1597
from Schoonhoven, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands
10th GGF Wernhart Van Schoonhoven 1575-1621
from Schoonhoven, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands
9th GGF Hendrich Van Schoonhoven 1600-1677
from Schoonhoven, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands. Died in Albany, New York
8th GGF Claas Hendrickse Van Schoonhoven
1628-1715 from Utrecht, Holland. Died in Fort Orange, New Netherland Colony,
buried in Albany, New York
7th GGF Hendrick Claessen Van Schoonhoven
1652-1715 from Ulster, New York. Died in Ulster, New York.
Hendrick daughter
6th GGM Margaret Schoonhoven 1700-1785 from
Virginia married into the Smith Family. (Richards/Smith)
Dorothea Spotswood Dandridge 1757-1831 from
Hanover, Virginia.
Her mother's father was the Governor of the
Colony of Virginia, Alexander Spottiswood and some say he is descended from
Robert, the Bruce and the Thomas, Henderson’s are also. In addition, Dorothea
Dandridge and President George Washington's wife, Martha Dandridge Washington,
are 1st cousins.
Dorothea Dandridge is famous because she was
the second wife of Patrick Henry, but she was a remarkable woman in her own
right, with an illustrious pedigree. Her parents were Nathaniel West Dandridge
(1729-1786) & Dorothea Spottiswood (1733-1773). Her father's father was a
British Navy-Commander, Captain William Dandridge.
born in Hanover County, Virginia, on September
25, 1757, to Nathaniel West Dandridge and Dorothea Spotswood. Dorothea was the
granddaughter of Alexander Spotswood, who was born in the Tangier Garrison,
Morocco, in 1676. Dorothea married Patrick Henry and became the
"first" First Lady of Virginia. After his term as governor, Patrick
Henry moved his family to Red Hill and renewed his law practice in order to
recoup his personal fortune which had been spent in support of the American
Revolution. Dorothea had eleven children when Henry died in 1799. Henry’s will be
indicated that Dorothea was to receive nothing if she remarried. She struggled
for three years trying to manage the plantations and take care of her underage
children. Finally, she married Judge Edmund Winston, and they moved to his
estate in Lynchburg. When Judge Winston died in 1818, Dorothea moved to her
daughter’s home, “Seven Islands,” in Halifax County. At age 74, Dorothea died
and requested burial next to Patrick at Red Hill.
On October 9, 2002, the Dorothea Henry Chapter
of the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution (NSDAR) dedicated
a DAR Insignia grave marker at her gravesite next to her first husband, Patrick
Henry. A courageous woman, Dorothea witnessed the birth of our nation as an
insider. As our chapter’s namesake, she will continue to live in the hearts and
memories of our DAR members. According to a short history of the chapter
written in 1930, founders chose to name the newly organized chapter, Dorothea
Henry, in “a moment of frenzied gratitude,” to commemorate the women who
maintained homes for their families under the great stress and hardships of the
Revolutionary War.
William Gascoigne
Sir William refuses to sentence Archbishop
Scrope
Sir William Gascoigne (c. 1350 – 17 December
1419) was Chief Justice of England during the reign of King Henry IV.
Life and work
Gascoigne (alternatively spelled Gascoyne) was
a descendant of an ancient Yorkshire family. He was born in Gawthorp to Sir
William Gascoigne and Agnes Franke.
He is said to have studied at the University
of Cambridge, but his name is not found in any university or college records.
According to Arthur Collins, Gascoigne was a law student at the Inner Temple.
It appears from the yearbooks that he practiced as an advocate in the reigns of
Edward III and Richard II. When Henry of Lancaster was banished by Richard II,
Gascoigne was appointed one of his attorneys, and soon after Henry's accession
to the throne was made chief justice of the court of King's Bench. After the
suppression of the rising in the north in 1405, Henry eagerly pressed the chief
justice to pronounce the sentence upon Lord Scrope, the Archbishop of York, and
the Earl Marshal Thomas Mowbray, who had been implicated in the revolt. This he
absolutely refused to do, asserting the right of the prisoners to be tried by
their peers. Although both were later executed, Gascoigne had no part in this.
It has been doubted whether Gascoigne could have displayed such independence of
action without prompt punishment or removal from office.
His reputation is that of a great lawyer who
in times of doubt and danger asserted the principle that the head of state is
subject to law, and that the traditional practice of public officers, or the
expressed voice of the nation in parliament, and not the will of the monarch or
any part of the legislature, must guide the tribunals of the country.
The popular tale of his committing the Prince
of Wales (the future Henry V) to prison must also be regarded as inauthentic,
though it is both picturesque and characteristic. It is said that Gascoigne had
directed the punishment of one of the prince's riotous companions, and the
prince, who was present and enraged at the sentence, struck or grossly insulted
the judge. Gascoigne immediately committed him to prison and gave the prince a
dressing-down that caused him to acknowledge the justice of the sentence. The
King is said to have approved of the act, but it appears that Gascoigne was
removed from his post or resigned soon after the accession of Henry V. He died
in 1419, and was buried in All Saints' Church, the parish church of Harewood in
Yorkshire. (This even attracted gazetteers in the 19th century, suggesting his
tomb amongst places worthy of visit). Some biographies of him have stated that
he died in 1412, but this is disproved by Edward Foss in his Lives of the
Judges. Although it is clear that Gascoigne did not hold office long under
Henry V, it is not impossible that the scene in the fifth act of Shakespeare's
Henry IV, Part 2, (in which Henry V is crowned king, and assures Gascoigne that
he shall continue to hold his post), could have some historical basis, and that
his resignation shortly thereafter was voluntary.
Family
He was born in Gawthorp- in the valley below
Harewood House, in an area later flooded to facilitate the landscape at
Harewood (not in Gawthorpe in the West Riding of Yorkshire) - to Sir William
Gascoigne and Agnes Franke. He married, firstly, in 1369 Elizabeth de Mowbray
(1350–1396), daughter of Alexander de Mowbray, son of Roger de Mowbray, 1st
Baron Mowbray. He married, secondly, Joan de Pickering, widow of Henry de
Greystock.
The issue by his first marriage were:
Sir William Gascoigne II (1370–1422) m. Joan
Wyman.
Elizabeth Gascoigne, m. John Aske
Margaret Gascoigne, m. Robert Hansard
Issue by second marriage:
Sir Christopher Gascoigne (born 1407)
James Gascoigne (born 1404), ancestor of poet
George Gascoigne
Agnes Gascoigne (c. 1401 – after 1466), m.
Robert Constable.
Robert Gascoigne (born c. 1410)
Richard Gascoigne (born c. 1413)
His brother, Nicholas Gascoigne, was ancestor
of the Gascoigne baronets. Another brother, Richard (c. 1365 – 1423), married
Beatrice Ellis, and was possibly the father of Thomas Gascoigne, Chancellor of
Oxford University.