Shelton Genealogy, Shelton Family History - English?
Please note: Most of this information has been obtained through other researchers and their web sites, sources are listed if known.
Generation One
William SHELTON was born circa 1742, and died about 1794.
Where? maybe Virginia or North Carolina, does anyone know? He married
Hannah YATES b:1740, daughter of John Yates and Elizabeth unknown,
different information on Ancestry.
Ancestry.com has John Yates as Hannah's father and mother as Jone Jobe. Elizabeth Gaines' parents were Francis Gaines and Dortha. I have not had time to verify or dispute this information. From my cousin Tina: Elizabeth Unknown's mother is
not Gaines, or Kilgore. Elizabeth Kilgore married the John Yates who died in Caswell county, North Carolina. Elizabeth (Unknown) Yates, w/o John Yates of Dan River, lost her husband, John, about 1778 in Pittsylvania county, VA. She, herself, passed away in Pittsylvania county, VA in the late 1700's as well. Both left wills and there is no Stephen Yates mentioned in either will, so that is also something that needs to be verified. Elizabeth Kilgore Yates' data is in Caswell county will records and can be found at Ancestry. The children's names are totally different, and the wills of both John Yates (1778- Pittsylvania co., VA) and his wife Elizabeth (our true lines) are in the Pittsylvania county records and copies of a transcription can be found on my site here:
I have seen far too much MIS-information posted on our lines and I'm afraid that if you see anything out there connecting our William with Crispin and Letitia Shelton, that's all my fault and I can't seem to make this mistake go away. <grin> Too much proof exists to prove that they are
not father and son, so if anybody tries to convince you that they are related, don't buy it. Take a look here: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~thall/dna.html and check out the pink group. A cousin, who happens to descend from William Jr., tested his DNA for us and if you compare out test results with that of Ralph Shelton who died 1733 in Middlesex co., VA, you will see that we do not match with that line. That Ralph is the father of the said Crispin, and further evidence that he did not father our William.
Sincerely, Tina Hall
William Shelton and Hannah Yates married abt 1760 in Virginia. Also: "The William who is married to Hannah Yates is not the son of Crispin Shelton. This William was still alive when Crispin died. There was no William or his heirs listed in the will or subsequent lawsuit for the estate of Crispin. If this William was his son, there would have been mention of him or his heirs as all of his children (all 9) were still living. William, Hannah's husband, died sometime in 1793 or 1794 as Hannah was named his administratrix in the February court term of 1794."
(Pitts. Court Orders 7:313) If anyone out there has information on this family, I would love to talk to you.
- 1763 - William bought 80 acres of land in Halifax County,
Virginia by the Dan River for ten shillings.
- 1767 - William is in the 1767 tithables list by John Wilson.
- 1773 - William bought 198 acres of land in Pittsylvania County, Virginia on
the north branch of the Dan River for 20 shillings.
- 1778 - William was named executor of John Yates estate (Hannah's father).
- 1784 - William bought 250 acres of land on the north side of the Dan River in
Pittsylvania County, Virginia for one pound and five shillings sterling.
William died in testate. His children are mentioned in a land transaction
record where each sold their share of the estate to Josiah, the youngest son
of William.
Eight of William's nine known children are listed in a
land document showing where they all sold their inherited land to their
brother, Josiah, in 1803. The only child not listed in this document is
their sister, Agnes. Agnes named her firstborn son "William Shelton Arnett".
Names of children given in two deeds. On 6 Dec 1802 (recorded 20 Jun 1803),
Pitt. Deeds 13:320: William SHELTON Jr., George SHELTON, Susanna HAMMONDS,
Ephraim RUSSELL and wife Elizabeth & Henry HOILER and wife Anna, all of
Pittsylvania, sold to Josiah SHELTON of the same county their claim or
interest in land on the north side of Dan River "whereupon Hannah SHELTON
now lives it being all our part or parts of land which may or shall fall to
us from the estate of William SHELTON, Dec'd." George ADAMS, William ROSS,
Jeffry GIBSON were witnesses.
On 13 Aug 1803 (recorded 16 Jan 1804: Pitts. Deeds 13:538) John SHELTON and
Elijah SHELTON sold to Josiah SHELTON their interest in the same land with
similar wording in the deed. John and Elijah were "of the City of
Rockingham, NC." (recorded 21 Jun 1813), Deed Book 18 page 271, 12 Dec 1812,
Joseph and Agnes ARNETT grant to Josiah SHELTON. (Line of SH-52)
TIMELINE OF WILLIAM (OF DAN RIVER) SHELTON
--1742 abt Feb, bn.
--1762 abt, son William Jr. bn Pitts.
--1763 bought land, Halifax, VA.
--1764 abt. son John bn Rockingham, NC. --1766 abt. dau Agnes bn.
--1767 abt. dau Anna bn. Wm appears on John Wilson's list of tithables
(Clements's History of Pittsylvania County, Virginia, page 277).
--1769 abt. dau Susannah bn.
--1770 abt. son Elijah bn.
--1773 On 1 Mar was granted 198 acres "on the North Branches of Dan River".
--1774 abt. dau Elizabeth bn.
--1777 abt. son Josiah bn. Wm signed Oatth of Allegiance in Pittsylvania
County, VA.
--1782 Tax list of Pittsylvania Co., VA; "on first enumeration with 10
whites".
--1789 Tax list of Pittsylvania Co., VA; Inventory recorded with county
clerk's office.
--1794 Died. Left no will.
Aug. 13, 1803 - John and Elijah sold their inherited land to Josiah. Recorded
in the Pittsylvania Deed Book, Vol. 13, page 538.
William Shelton and Hannah Yates had the following children:
i |
William SHELTON, Jr. b: 1762 in Pittsylvania County, Virginia - our line, more below.
Lived in Pendleton Co., SC in 1790. Sons served in War of 1812. Sons
lived near Dahlgren, IL 1840. |
ii |
John SHELTON b: 1764 in Pittsylvania County, Virginia.
John married Sarah Gorman. She went to KY with her son John
C. after her husband, John, died. |
iii |
Agnes SHELTON b: 1766 in Pittsylvania County, Virginia.
Married Joseph B. Arnett, moved to Henderson Co., KY. |
iv |
Anna SHELTON b: 1767.
Married Henry Hoiler. |
v |
Susannah SHELTON b: 1769 in Pittsylvania County, Virginia.
Married A. Hammonds. |
vi |
Elijah Franklin SHELTON b: 1770 in Pittsylvania County, Virginia.
Married Violet Yates. I wonder how she connects to Hannah Yates? |
vii |
George W. SHELTON b: Abt 1773 in Pittsylvania County, Virginia.
Married to unknown. |
viii |
Elizabeth SHELTON b: Abt 1774 in Pittsylvania County, Virginia. |
ix |
Josiah SHELTON b: 1777 in Pittsylvania County, Virginia.
died bet. 1860-64 KY. Buried in Webster Co., KY in
Shelton Cemetery west of Sebree, KY. Md 3 Sep 1803 Pittsylvania, VA.
(1820 Christian Co., KY Census; age 40-50 in 1830 Union Co., KY Census.
Lived "near what used to be Russell's store on Highland Creek"; age
50-60 in 1840 Henderson Co., KY Census; age 70 in 1850 Henderson Co., KY
Census; age 77 in 1860 Webster Co., KY Census) m. 3 Sep 1803
Pittsylvania Co., VA. Md Nancy ROSS on 3 Sep 1803. Lived next door to
Wm. Jr. 1820, Christian Co., KY. 1830 Union Co., KY.; 1840 Henderson,
KY; 1850 Henderson, KY, 1860 Webster Co., KY. All of these counties are
east across the Ohio River from and close to Shawneetown, IL. Had lots
of land and slaves. +Nancy ROSS b. 1791 VA, d. aft. 1870. Do
William ROSS. (1820 Christian Co., KY Census; age 40-50 in 1830 Union
Co., KY Census; age 50-60 in 1840 Henderson Co., KY Census; age 60 in
1850 Henderson Co., KY Census; age 69 in 1860 Webster Co., KY Census;
age 82 in 1870 Webster Co., KY Census w/dau. Lucy Yates) |
Generation Two
William SHELTON, JR., was born circa 1762 in Pittsylvania County, Virginia and died 16 May 1864 in Hamilton County, Illinois. He married Rebecca HOGG, daughter of Gideon Hogg and Judith Pittman. Married: 1783 in CASWELL COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA. IN 1803, MOVED TO CHRISTIAN COUNTY, KENTUCKY WHERE HE SET UP A TREADMILL ON ROCK LICK CREEK (NOW KNOWN AS DRIPPING SPRINGS CREEK); A FEW MILES WEST OF CROFTON, next to his brother-in-law, John Gibson who married Judah Hogg.. HE LATER MOVED TO HAMILTON COUNTY, ILLINOIS. SOLD HIS PROPERTY IN KENTUCKY IN 1854. According to these dates, William lived until he was 102, and sold his property in KY and moved to IL when he was 92, all possible, but it makes me second guess the birth/death dates.William is enumerated in the 1810 Christian County, Kentucky Federal Census, p. 55, 11301-21011-00.
William is enumerated in the 1820 Christian County, Kentucky Federal Census, p. 036; as follows. Note our John Gibson, his sons Meredith and Pittman are next door in addition to our Thomas Lindley as well as the Longs who were married to Nancy "Louissign Ratliff", sister to our John A. B. Ratliff.
Shelton William | 1-1-0-0-0-1 |
0-1-0-1-1-0 | Gibson, John | 0-0-0-0-0-1 |
0-0-2-0-1-0 | Gibson, Pitman | 0-0-0-1-0-0 |
0-0-1-0-0-0 | Gibson, M. (Meredith?) | 0-0-0-0-1-0 |
2-0-0-1-0-0 | Lindley, Thomas | 2-2-0-0-1-0 |
3-1-0-1-0-0 | Long, William | 2-1-0-2-0-1 |
2-1-0-0-1-0 | Long, Aquilla | 0-0-0-1-0-0 |
3-0-1-0-0-0 | | Thompson, Lawson | 3-0-0-0-1-0 |
2-0-0-1-0-0 |
and in the
1840 Christian County, KY Census:
Males |
0-5 |
5-10 |
10-15 |
15-20 |
20-30 |
30-40 |
40-50 |
50-60 |
70-80 |
Fem |
0-5 |
5-10 |
10-15 |
15-20 |
20-30 |
30-40 |
40-50 |
50-60 |
60-70 |
70-80 | Lynn, William |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 | Long Aquilla |
0 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
2 |
2 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Shelton, William |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
1 | Croft, Rowland |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Cotton, William |
1 |
2 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 | Lindley, Thomas |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 | Ford, Elijah |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Madox, Joseph |
3 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 | Monk, Elizabeth |
|
|
|
|
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In the census above, William Lynn, born circa 1790, brother to our Betsey Shelton William Shelton is living one door down from the Lynn's and it's William Shelton's daughter, Betsy (Elizabeth) Shelton who marries Jonathan Lynn, son of John C. Lynn and Jean Penny. William Shelton, Jr. and Rebecca Hogg's children were:
i |
Abraham SHELTON,
born 1786, married a Peggy Gibson,
I wonder if she is connected to our Gibson line somehow, I'm betting so, but I don't have a Peggy or Margaret as a daughter of our John Gibson and Judah Hogg.
I
am also descended from William Shelton Jr. and Rebecca Hogg. My line
comes from their son Abraham.
My Answer Arrived via a
Cousin: You had some question about his wife and
her connection with the Gibsons. Her name was Sarah Margaret "Peggy"
Gibson. Her father was Joel Gibson (Your John's brother).
They were married on February 24, 1808 in Pittsylvania County. They
ended up migrating to Kentucky with the rest of the family, but then
moved on to Jefferson County, IL. Some other family members were located
in nearby Hamilton County. Abraham was born in the year 1786 and died
in 1872. -- Michelle Westlund
Abraham is buried in Jefferson County, IL at Shelton cemetery I think. It is
just a little cemetery that is very badly neglected and overgrown. It was on
someone's farm and they could not have cared less about it. When my great-great
aunt was alive and living down there, she tried to take care of it, but no
one has for a long time now. Unfortunately, Abraham's grave may not be
marked. Someone has walked the cemetery and recorded all names and
headstones online. However, since it is in such bad shape, I'm hoping that
they might have missed something. The reason I think this is because
Abraham's son John W. is buried there. He died before Abraham did. If John's
headstone is there, where is Abraham I wonder? I'd love to get down there.
It's only about 3 hours away. It is possible that he's buried somewhere
else. None of his wives are buried there either. He was married three times.
I will keep looking. If I find anything definitive, I'll let you know.
Here's a link to pictures, etc. of the cemetery.
http://www.rootsweb.com/~iljeffe2/sheltcemmoores.htm
Michelle |
ii |
William SHELTON
b: abt 1787, married Elizabeth Fuller. I saw somewhere
on the Internet that he died in the War of 1812. |
iii |
Elijah
Franklin SHELTON b: 1792, Elijah married Elizabeth Lynn, sister to
Jonathan Lynn who married Betsy Shelton below. |
iv |
Joseph SHELTON b: 1795, married Nancy Fagin Chafin, I am assuming she was a Chafin widow when she married Joseph. |
v |
Robert SHELTON - From John W. Lynn's Bio - "His three great-uncles, Meredith Gibson, Robert and Elijah Shelton, fought under Gen. Jackson at New Orleans, and the two last named also fought under Gen. Harrison in the Indian wars, and were in the Battle of Tippecanoe." There is information on the Battle of New Orleans here. |
vi |
Reuben SHELTON, Reuben married Mary Gibson, daughter of John Gibson and Judah Hogg. |
vii |
Susannah SHELTON, married Joseph Maddox. He is listed above in the 1840 census as a neighbor of William Shelton and the rest. |
viii |
Elizabeth "Betsy" SHELTON, our line. Betsy married Jonathan Lynn.
Betsy states in a newspaper article in 1892 (Hardin County, IL) that she was born in Caswell
County, North Carolina in 1800. |
ix |
UNKNOWN SHELTON b: 1780 |
Elijah, William, Abraham, Joseph and Robert Shelton above were all
the he War of 1812; They served under Captain James Robison's Company,
Kentucky Detached Militia.
The Battle of New
Orleans, by Zachary F. Smith, Louisville, Kentucky, John P. Morton &
Company, Printers to The Filson Club, 1904.
Page 184.. Captain James Robison's Company:
Privates Shelton, Elizah (I believe this is Elijah above)
Shelton, William
Shelton, Abraham,
Shelton, Joseph
Shelton, Robert
|
|
Shelton Cemetery is about 2 miles
north of the Dahlgren Township building on the property of
Lavern Peters. It is in a wooded area (pictured grove of trees)
in the center of a bean field.. not very many stones still
standing here... (AKA Auxier Cemetery, for the Auxier Creek runs
right near this). Large stone is of my 5th great grandfather
Joseph Shelton. They also have an infant baby here but its grave
is unmarked. There is a LARGE pile of stones in the center of
the cemetery.. Most of these have the last name of GARRISON on
them. |
Joseph Shelton
Joseph Shelton, an early settler near
Dahlgren, was born in 1793, some say in the eastern part of the
United States, though most of the descendents feel that he was
born in Kentucky.
Joseph Shelton was a private in the War
of 1812. He fought in the Battle of New Orleans in 1815, and
the Shelton heirs have an old watch he found on the battlefield
at New Orleans. He served, probably as a captain, in the Indian
Wars in Illinois in 1816 or 1817. The Shelton heirs have his
old rifle and powder horn that he carried in the Indian War.
When this period of service was ended, he was discharged near
where Chicago now stands. His horse was lame, so he turned it
loose and walked to Southern Illinois. The captains in the
Indian War furnished their own horses, and the pay was $8.00 per
month.
Joseph Shelton was married somewhere in the
East in about the year 1817, and about 1820 he and his wife
settled a mile north and a mile west of what is now Dahlgren.
Their first baby was born and died at the
home northeast of Dahlgren. When Mr. Shelton was gone into the
woods to make a coffin in which to bury the baby, a panther came
to the door of their cabin. Mrs. Shelton drove the hungry
animal away with a stick with fire on one end of it that she had
grabbed from the fireplace.
One summer a long, hard rain had put out
the fire which they always tried to keep near their cabin in
order to have fire with which to cook. Mrs. Shelton rode a
horse twelve or fifteen miles east to the nearest neighbor to
get some fire in an iron pot. She covered the glowing coals
with ashes so it would not out during the long journey back
home.
The children of Joseph and Mrs. Shelton
included: Sopha, who married Nathan Garrison, the grandmother of
David M. and Roman Garrison; Pernecie, who married a man named
Rawls; Nan, who married a Mr. Richardson; Julie Ann, who married
a Mr. Atchinson; Sylvester, who was the grandfather of Lawrence
and Frank Shelton who live near Dahlgren; and a son whose
name is unknown who was the grandfather of Carl, Bernie and
Earl Shelton. * (See below)
Joseph Shelton again served his country as
a major in the Black Hawk War in 1832.
He was a very dignified man, and relied
greatly on ceremony. It is often told that when he was coming
home if his wife did not come out and meet him and say, “alight,
Mr. Shelton, and come in,” he would ride right on by!
David M. Garrison, one of the grandsons of
Joseph Shelton, has an old kettle about four and a half feet in
diameter which has been in the family a long time. This kettle
was originally used near Shawneetown, Illinois, to “boil down”
salt water for salt in the early 1800s.
Joseph Shelton is buried on the old Shelton
homestead northeast of Dahlgren. His heirs held a Shelton
Reunion every year from 1915 to 1925.
*Update:
Joe D. Garrison
"a son whose name is unknown was the grandfather of....", should
read: Albert Shelton, was the grandfather of Carl, Bernie and
Earl Shelton. Wilson Albert was the son of Josiah Shelton who
was a brother to Joseph C. Shelton.
Joseph C. Shelton was born March 1, 1793 in
Pittsylvania Co., VA. As a small child his family moved to
Kentucky where he grew up and married Nancy Fagin Chaffin
January 15, 1850 in Christian Co., KY. This may be why some
thought he was born in Kentucky. Linnie Pernecie Shelton
married James Rawls; Nan (Nancy) Shelton also married Aaron
Flatt; Julia Ann Shelton married James Arnold Atchison; Rebecca
Shelton married James Garrison; Leonard Chaffin married Mary
Blake, and Sylvester married a Melissa.
|
The Battle of Tippecanoe
Battle Ground, Indiana
Located seven miles north of Lafayette, just off the St. Rd. 43 exit of I-65.
It seems hard to believe that a wooded area seven miles north of Lafayette, Indiana, played such a major role in American history. Yet it was on this spot the American Indian lost his grip on the fertile Midwestern lands he had roamed for thousands of years. It was also on this spot some years later that a gathering took place that helped launch the modern political campaign. That wooded area is the Tippecanoe Battlefield, a National Historic Landmark that attracts tens of thousands of visitors to northern Tippecanoe County annually.
Native American Settlement
Early man and many Indian tribes roamed this part of the Wabash Valley before the thriving trading post of Keth-tip-pe-can-nunk was established in the eighteenth century. Known to many as "Tippecanoe", the village thrived until 1791, when it was razed in an attempt to scatter the Indians and open the land to the new white settlers.
Seventeen years later a new Indian village was established on or near the old Keth-tip-pe-can-nunk site at the Wabash/Tippecanoe River junction. Known as "Prophet's Town", this village was destined to become the capitol of a great Indian confederacy -- their equivalent to Washington, D.C.
The town was founded in May, 1808, when two Shawnee brothers, Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa (the Prophet), left their native Ohio after being permitted to settle on these Potawatomi and Kickapoo-held lands.
The Protagonists
Tecumseh and the Prophet planned to unite many tribes into an organized defense against the growing number of western settlers. Through this union they could defend the lands they had lived on for thousands of years.
In addition to being a seat of diplomacy, Prophet's Town became a training center for the warriors, with a rigorous spiritual and athletic regimen. As many as one thousand warriors were based in the capitol at its peak.
The white settlers of the Indiana territory were disturbed by the increasing activities and power of Tecumseh's followers. In the late summer of 1811, the governor of the territory, Gen. William Henry Harrison, organized a small army of 1,000 men, hoping to destroy the town while Tecumseh was on a southern recruitment drive. The regiment arrived on Nov. 6, 1811, and upon meeting with representatives of the Prophet, it was mutually agreed that there would be no hostilities until a meeting could be held on the following day. Harrison's scouts then guided the troops to a suitable campsite on a wooded hill about a mile west of Prophet's Town.
The Battle
Upon arriving at the site, Harrison warned his men of the possible treachery of the Prophet. The troops were placed in a quadrangular formation; each man was to sleep fully clothed. Fires were lit to combat the cold, rainy night, and a large detail was assigned to sentinel the outposts.
Although Tecumseh had warned his brother not to attack the white men until the confederation was strong and completely unified, the incensed Prophet lashed his men with fiery oratory. Claiming the white man's bullets could not harm them, the Prophet led his men near the army campsite. From a high rock ledge west of the camp, he gave an order to attack just before daybreak on the following day.
The sentinels were ready, and the first gunshot was fired when the yells of the warriors were heard. Many of the men awoke to find the Indians upon them. Although only a handful of the soldiers had had previous battle experience, the army bloodily fought off the reckless, determined Indian attack. Two hours later, thirty-seven soldiers were dead, twenty-five others were to die of injuries, and over 126 were wounded. The Indian casualties were unknown, but their spirit was crushed. Angered by his deceit, the weary warriors stripped the Prophet of his power and threatened to kill him.
Harrison, expecting Tecumseh to return with a large band of Indians, fortified his camp soon after the battle. No man was permitted to sleep the following night.
Taking care of their dead and wounded, the demoralized Indians left Prophet's Town, abandoning most of their food and belongings. When Harrison's men arrived at the village on November 8, they found only an aged squaw, whom they left with a wounded chief found not far from the battlefield. After burning the town, the army began their painful return to Vincennes.
The Aftermath
Tecumseh returned three months later to find his dream in ashes. Believing the reconstruction of the confederation to be too risky and the chance of Indian survival under the United States government to be dim, he gathered his remaining followers and allied himself with the British forces. Tecumseh played a key role in the War of 1812, being active in the fall of Detroit, but he was killed at the Battle of the Thames on October 5, 1813, at the age of forty-five.
Scorned by the Indians and renounced by Tecumseh, the Prophet took refuge along nearby Wildcat Creek. Although remaining in disgrace, the Prophet retained a small band of followers, who roamed with him through the Northwest and Canada during the War of 1812. He died in Wyandotte County, Kansas, in November, 1834.
Gen. Harrison remained governor of Indiana Territory until September, 1812, when he was assigned command of the Northwestern frontier in the War of 1812. He was in command at the capture of Detroit and the Battle of the Thames, where Tecumseh was killed. At the close of the war, Harrison returned to public life at his old home in North Bend, Ohio. He served in the Ohio state senate, the U.S. House of Representatives, and the U.S. Senate.
The Rally
Harrison was an unsuccessful Whig candidate for President in 1836, and four years later his followers were still determined to land him in the White House. After he clinched the nomination a second time, the Whigs prepared a massive rally at the Tippecanoe Battlefield on May 29, 1840. Over 30,000 people followed the poor roads and trails or the winding rivers to sing the praises of "Old Tipp"! Roast beef and pork were everywhere, the stew and bread were free, and the hard cider flowed. Catchy campaign songs capitalized on that great political slogan, "Tippecanoe and Tyler, Too!". Bands, floats. stump speeches, and majestic tales of the battle added special color to the event. The Tippecanoe rally and similar events were successful, and Harrison landed the coveted office. He died just a month after assuming the Presidency, but the hoopla at the battlefield and other places lives on as the modern, festive political campaign.
The Methodists
By the 1850s, the battlefield was already attracting visitors and picnickers. A refreshing artesian spring was discovered, and the Louisville, New Albany, & Salem Railroad laid its tracks along the eastern edge of the battlefield. A large wooden frame refreshment stand was erected on land adjacent to the battlefield to serve the growing number of visitors.
The stand and surrounding acreage became the property of the Northwest Indiana Conference of the Methodist Church in 1857. The building served as a school -- the Battle Ground Collegiate Institute -- until 1862, when it was replaced by a larger structure.
In 1873 the battle site was enclosed by an iron fence, which survives. Two years later the land just north of the fence was developed as a Methodist campground. The boarding house was remodeled into a hotel, and a 2500-seat tabernacle was erected. The Battle Ground campground became extremely popular, and as many as 10,000 persons attended special programs.
By the early 1920s the campground had become basically a retreat area for youth.
The camp was active through the early sixties and new buildings were erected to replace the old. A sesquicentennial celebration in 1961 attracted 10,000 people to Battle Ground, but interest in maintaining the old camp and the battlefield dwindled after the event. Although great plans were made for the area, the camp eventually shut down and the grounds were neglected.
The Monument
The battlefield was in disarray for many years after the conflict, although there was sporadic attention given to the site. Nearly two decades following the battle, serious motions were begun to preserve and mark the battlefield. In 1834 the Indiana General Assembly authorized the acceptance of the sixteen-acre campsite from its owner, battle veteran John Tipton. The tract was formally presented on the twenty-fifth anniversary of the conflict in 1836. The return of Gen. Harrison to the site in 1835 inspired toasts to the raising of a monument commemorating the battle. It would be seventy-three years before this was accomplished.
Increasing activity at the site, by attendees at the Methodist Campground in the late 1800s, brought new urgency into erecting a suitable memorial to the battle. An association organized in 1892 worked the state and national representatives into funding a monument. It wasn't until 1908 that the 85-foot marble obelisk was finally erected, at a cost of $24,500. |
A Walk Through Marine by Ronald Loos
Date: approximately 1803 until about 1820
The story of early settlers can best be told by repeating some of the
contents of a hand written letter by John L. Ferguson Esq. of Marine. The
letter was dated approx. 1 year prior to his death in 1876. John L.
Ferguson was the son of Isaac Ferguson the first settler in Marine
Township.
© 1875 John L. Ferguson
I was born about 4 miles northwest of Edwardsville in Madison County on
the 20th day of November 1807 in a blockhouse near Indian Creek, about 1 ½
miles from Jones’ Fort. The following spring the Indians became so
troublesome that my father, Major Isaac Ferguson and my grandfather John
Ferguson (then living together in the blockhouse) were compelled to move
into Jones’ Fort for safety. My father came to Illinois in the Spring of
1804, with his wife, having been married in January of that year. He then
stopped at Downing’s Station some mile south of the present site of Troy,
where he remained about 1 ½ years. There were a great many blockhouses
built on Ridge Prairie about that time at different places. In the spring
of 1805, my father moved into a blockhouse, about 1 ½ miles north of Troy,
on the place now owned and occupied by Jubilee Posey.
At that place my father’s first child Melinda (now
Melinda Kile, living near St. Jacobs) was born May 18th, 1803. He remained
at that place with a man named Isham Revis in the same house until the
winter of 1806 when my father’s family moved to the place where I was
born. In the summer of 1808 my father left Jones’ Fort and assisted in
building Hill’s Fort in what is now Bond County. Hill’s Fort was situated
on the east side of Shoal Creek about 5 miles south of Greenville, the
present county seat of Bond County. While there he raised a company of
Rangers partly composed of Kaskaskia Indians. He remained in active
service during the remainder of the war. We were attacked occasionally by
the Indians up to 1813. In 1809 my father assisted, in fact, he had the
entire supervision of building Shelton’s Fort. During the next
summer he built Brazil Station, at a place then and yet known as Terrapin
Ridge, being then and now the extreme southern part of Madison County.
There were no troops regularly stationed at Brazil’s
Station, it being only 5 miles from Shelton’s Fort where
they could get assistance at any time if required. It was almost
impossible for Indian’s to get to that station without being discovered by
the soldiers from the forts more on the frontier. At that time there were
no forts or lines of defense north of Jones’ Fort on Indian Creek and
Hill’s Fort on Shoal Creek. As there were soldiers passing or always on
the line between those forts everything south of the line was
comparatively safe, except in the summer time when the Indians in small
thieving bands would penetrate or go into the country considerably further
south until Shelton’s Fort was built.
My father always had his wife and two children with him
as he considered them being more safe with him than when left in a fort
garrisoned by a few men and many women and children. Though when in forts
women could do as good fighting as the men and it was not an uncommon
things in those days for a single lone woman with perhaps five or six
children in blockhouses on the farms to successfully defend herself
against five or ten Indians particularly if the attack was made in daytime
which was generally the case as women and children were never left home
alone at night if it could be avoided.
All women on the frontier at that time learned to shoot.
My mother was a good shot with a rifle and could shoot a deer or an Indian
as well as my father. Her services were several times called into
requisition on certain occasions during the war as were like services by
many other ladies of those times. Previous to the building of Shelton’s
Fort, there was a small settlement there, made in 1808. The first settlers
were William Shelton, Augustus Shelton, Josiah
Shelton, Thomas Shelton, Samuel Lindley, John Lindley,
John Higgins, David Smeltzer, John Howard, Abram Howard, William Howard
and Joseph Howard who all lived in blockhouses near each other and
cultivated the land in common for the benefit of their families until
Shelton’s Fort was built. After that time their families with many
others lived in that fort until the close of the war.
In the year 1810 my father located his family permanently in Shelton’s
Fort until 1813, though he did active ranger service outside the forts. In
1810 there was a regular line of forts commencing in Kaskaskia Fort
Chartres, in Marion County, Whiteside Station in St. Clair County,
Downing’s Station to the southern part of Madison County and Jones’ Fort
in the northern part of Madison County. In the southeast part of Madison
County on Silver Creek were Shelton’s Fort and Brazil Station and
on Shoal Creek in Bond County was Hill’s Fort. It was the business of
those rangers to be always on the march and occasionally visit all those
forts and see that everything was right. Most of the time they were kept
on the frontier watching for Indian signs and whenever they discovered any
signs of Indians they followed up. If they could overtake them, the
rangers invariably chastised them and sometimes wholly exterminated small
bands.
The general orders for the rangers were from Gen’l Harrison of Vincennes,
Indiana to whom all military messages and dispatches from this region of
country had to be sent.
Carrying these dispatches was a duty that invariably fell to the lot of my
father and with three of four [?] picked me it was a hazardous undertaking
as the whole country between Mississippi and Wabash Rivers was always
overrun by roving bands of Indians. About the close of our Indian war,
Gen’l Harrison was Territorial Governor of Indiana. About that time there
was an eccentric genius in the service with my father called Mike Dood.
Many old settlers know the man and have probably heard the joke. He said
he had never seen a Governor and as Maj. Isaac Ferguson had to see Gen’l
Harrison on military business in a short time. Mike Dood insisted on being
selected as one of his bodyguards. His wishes were gratified and the party
of three men arrived safely in Vincennes. They immediately reported to
Gen’l Harrison’s headquarters and after being introduced to the General,
Mike walked around him several times, examined him from head to foot and
said, “My Major, this is nothing but a man!”
From the time of my first recollection and particularly while living in
Shelton’s Fort, there was more unity of feeling amongst the people up
to 1814, than has ever existed since this country, their habits, manners,
dress and customs, being the same and their social intercourse as that of
one family. There were no distinctions between rich and poor, they were
all alike. They all labored or cultivated the land in common, for the
benefit of all and the only advantage one had over the other was that
those who had the greatest number of children received the greatest
reward. The only crops cultivated at Shelton’s Fort during the war
were corn, potatoes (then called taters), cabbage and cotton, all the
above crops grew fine, with little cultivation. The women picked, spun and
wove the cotton for their own and their children’s clothes, and during the
war none of them in the region of country ever wore anything except
articles raised and manufactured at home.
The men invariably dressed in buckskins, except shirts,
which were made of cotton and of home manufacture. All the men, women and
children wore moccasins in those times and if they had been worn by all
classes, rich and poor, up to the present day, you would have seen a much
less number of lame and crippled men and women, than are now seen on the
streets every day, troubled or lamed with corns or bunions or both. You
may say to yourself without fear of contradiction, that such gentleman and
ladies were not raised in Indian wartimes and have never worn moccasins.
Moccasins never produce such results and I do honestly recommend their use
to all those who are thus unfortunately afflicted. As an infallible remedy
for all such unfortunate deformities, I am aware that these remarks may be
unpopular, yet I consider them true and can site many loving examples of
old men and women, who have lived and dressed all their days in the old
primitive style, yet perfect models of humanity compared with the present
band box style of raising men and women.
I know from experience and general observation that boys of sixty years
ago at the age of fourteen and fifteen years could endure and accomplish
more than most young ones of the present can accomplish at the age of
twenty one years owing I presume to their constant outdoor exercise and
the plain substantial food on which they lived in the early settlement of
the county.
In those days almost any boy of 10 years old, if he found a rabbit on the
prairie, could run it down and catch it. At the present day, it would take
a half dozen boys and that many dogs and the result could be uncertain. In
fact, I believe that dogs, owing to high feeding and extra care taken of
them at present, are degenerating in physical ability as much as men and
boys and owing to the same cause.
From the year 1810 to the close of the war, all the corn
meal used in Shelton’s Fort was ground on a hand mill ox powered in
wooden vessels. The people lived entirely on corn bread, hominy, venison,
turkeys, beef and occasionally pork. Hogs being at that time scarce and as
game of almost every kind was plenty and all sorts of vegetables grew
abundantly when planted the people at the forts always had plenty of
something to eat, and if they did get a little short in the provision
line, five or six soldiers could go out and get a half dozen or more deer
before breakfast. Beef was plenty as cattle were seldom stolen by Indians.
Though Indians could not get them without shooting them, and for an Indian
to fire his gun in day time anywhere near the fort was almost the same
thing as sounding his own death knoll, so soon and certain was his fate.
The people of the fort lived in perfect harmony with each other and when
one had plenty, all had plenty. In many instances you could see two or
more families in one house with several children in each family and all
eat at one common table (that is) for each member of the several families
to take whatever they had to eat in their hands and use it to the best
advantage under the circumstances. They were perfectly happy, from the
fact that they knew no other mode of living, and probably at that time not
many of them looked forward to anything higher than the privileges they
then enjoyed. At that time we had no markets and had nothing to sell. We
never bought anything from the fact that we never wanted anything, except
what we could make.
The people were then generally happy and honest. I never heard of a theft
or murder being committed by white men until I was twelve or thirteen
years old and never hard of such things during war. Men were strictly
honest and many of them religious. Were but few men that could make a
false statement about anything, and if they did, that one offense
generally cured them.
A man’s word was then as good as his note, and his house was all he had to
care for. He was therefore very careful not to tarnish it by any
ungentlemanly act.
There were a number of good religious women in Shelton’s Fort
amongst whom was my mother. Although the opportunities for religious
services in the fort were limited, yet there were many shining lights in
the Methodist and Baptist churches who then worshipped together and why
they will not do so now is a mystery. I cannot understand unless we come
to the conclusion that they had better Christians in times of war, than
they have at the present day.
In time of war you seldom ever heard a man swear an oath. There are not
civil officers in our fort, yet as soon as the war ended, the Territorial
Legislature in session in Kaskaskia passed a law (and enforced it
strictly) fining a man or woman fifty cents for every oath sworn in
public, and at the time there were no exceptions or executions or fines.
That law was enforced until 1818 when Illinois Territory became a state.
We had a law at the same time which was continued in force for several
years after we became a state, making it a penalty from $3.00 to $10.00
for any person caught at work on Sabbath, and so far as morality is
concerned we are certainly on the retrograde.
Men now do with impunity, things that would have
appeared horrible fifty years ago. Such things would have consigned the
perpetrator to endless infamy. The world now is becoming so corrupt and
selfish and the great mass ignoring or disregarding the common interest of
the country and his fellowmen that we are on dangerous ground.
The first religious service, or first sermon, preached in Shelton’s Fort,
was preached by Samuel Lindley, a Baptist minister, then a resident of the
fort. The first marriage solemnized was between Joseph Ferguson and
Virginia Smeltzer in 1811. The first death in Shelton’s Fort was Augustus
Shelton who died in the year 1814. The first child born was Thomas Shelton
(son of William Shelton) inn the year 1810. After that time they were so
numerous as to escape my memory. We resided in the fort until the year
1813. We moved into a blockhouse near the fort in the spring of 1813 and
that summer my father, Maj. Isaac Ferguson, built the first house ever
built in Marine prairie on land in Section 33. After building it he did
not dare to live in it for fear of the Indians who yet made raids on the
frontier settlements. At this period we had very little protection. The
greatest protection we had on the frontier settlement, of which Marine was
one, was from the Kaskaskia Indians and a few soldiers.
After my father built, five other persons built houses in the fall of
1813, and they did not dare to live in them until the spring or early
winter of 1814, when there was a permanent settlement made, consisting of
about one dozen families as follows: Isaac Ferguson, John Warrick, John
Woods, George Newcomb, John Ferguson, William Ferguson, Joseph Ferguson,
Alston and Joshua Dean, Abraham Howard, Absalom Ferguson, Aquilla Delahide.
All of these men made permanent settlements at the close of 1813 and the
early part of 1814. In 1815, there were added Christopher Payne, Thomas
Breeze, Richard Windsor, John Campbell and John Giger.
In 1816 came John Scott, John Laird, James Sims, Henry Peck, Andrew
Matthews, Jr., James Matthews, Lefford French, James French, Abram Carlock
and John Miller. In 1817 came John Dugger, Philip Searcey, John Cleveland
and Albert H. Judd.
On the 19th day of September 1817, a company left their pleasant homes in
New York City, and turned their course westward, to seek homes in the
vicinity of Edwardsville, Illinois, where some of the party, the Masons,
had been the previous year, and brought back favorable reports of the new
country. Rowland P. Allen, his wife and son, George T., a negro boy, Henry
and a negro girl, Jane, servants given to Mrs. Allen by her father in New
York. Paris Mason, wife, a sister of Mrs. Allen, one child and two negro
servants, James Mason and family, Hall Mason and family, Elijah Ellison,
wife and Townsend, John and Jacob, his sons; Richard Ellison, Theophilus
W. Smith, an able lawyer, and afterward a judge, with his family; William
Townsend, Daniel Tallman and several young men composed this party of
pioneers. They came in wagons to Pittsburg, Pennsylvannia and there
purchased a large flat boat, in which they pursued their journey as far as
Shawneetown, where they disembarked, continuing their travels by wagon to
Edwardsville, where they arrived on the afternoon of December 23, 1817,
and found a comfortable log house provided for their reception, where they
spent the winter. In the spring of 1818, Rowland P. Allen and Elijah
Ellison moved into Marine, and on section 28 built their cabins, entered
the land together, enclosed the same and farmed in common for many years.
Also coming with Allen and Ellison were John Barnaby, Jacob Johnson, the
Balsters, Jacob Varner, Adam Kile, Sr., Adam Kile, Jr., John Kile and
Jacob Kile. At this time the place was called Ferguson Settlement in Point
Prairie.
In 1818 Capt. Curtis Blakeman and Capt George C. Allen arrived in Ferguson
Settlement with seventy-two persons in one train on the 19th of July in
that year, all of who settled here.
Capt. Blakeman brought with him a four-horse wagon driven by Henry B.
Thorp, and a one horse rockaway driven by James Sackett. Elijah Blakeman,
a brother of the captain, came with him in a two horse wagon, bringing a
wife and five children. He improved a farm in section 32.
Capt. George C. Allen brought two teams, one driven by himself and the
other by William Coon. William May, a carpenter by trade, resided here
about the same time, but soon returned to his former home in the east. A
few years later, William Goodsell and his family came from the east, but
dying about three years subsequent to his arrival, his family returned to
their former home.
During the fall of 1819 and spring of 1820, Capt. Justus DeSeelhorst,
Capt. Lewis DeSeelhorst, Capt. James Breath, Capt. Presswick, Capt. David
Mead, William C. Wiggins, John Shinn, Samuel Lawrence, David Anderson,
Jacob Schneider, David Gooch, Ambrose Houser, Mathias Long, John Ambuehl,
William Giger, Reuben Reynolds, Benjamin May, John Harrington, Whitmil
Harrington, Frank Frisse, M. Botchford, Solomon Curtis, Wheeler Curtis
settled in this settlement and after time changes were so frequent that it
would be a difficult job for any person to keep account of the changes
that did occur. From the year 1820, the place was always called Marine
Settlement, taking its name from the character of former occupations of
the men who made extensive and valuable improvements in 1819 and 1820,
many of whom had been sea captains and a majority of the others had been
sailors, most of whom made good, honest industrious farmers.
Some of these pioneer families reached the Marine Settlement by two
different routes, for some traveled through Virginia, then by way of the
Shenandoah Valley to Tennessee, through the Cumberland Gap to Kentucky
ferried by flatboats across the Ohio River to Shawneetown in southern
Illinois. There they continued their overland journey in their conveyances
such as covered wagons, two wheeled carts, horseback and rockaways to the
prairie regions. The other route was to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvannia, where
flatboats were secured and used to float down the Ohio River to
Shawneetown traveling the overland trail by wagon to St. Louis then on to
the prairie. This beautiful rolling land with bits of wooded area, the
rich soil, the creeks with smaller streams containing a water supply was
an inviting place for these pioneer home seekers.
Capt. Blakeman was born October 24, 1777 in Sheffield, England. When he
arrived in Marine Township, he was a man of 40 years of age, who had
received much wealth with his endeavors as a ship owner and a sea captain.
Curtis Blakeman purchased one thousand one hundred and 20 acres in
Township 4, North Range6. From what was researched for that time, land was
sold for $1.25 per acre.
Land grants prior to the sale of land by the Federal Government were
first, ancient land grants, or allotments, derived from former governments
(French or British) or from the Indians, under act of Congress of June 20,
1788. There were no grants of this class within the present territory of
Madison County.
Second, Donations to heads of families. Under the law of the 20th of June
1788, a donation of four hundred acres of land not given to each of the
families living at either of the villages of Kaskaskia, Prairie de Rocher,
Cahokia, Fort Chartres, or St. Phillips. The Commissioners construed this
to provide for all those who had become heads of families from the peace
of 1783 to the passage of the law in 1788.
Third, Improvement Rights. Under the law of the third of March 1791, when
lands had been actually improved and cultivated, under a supposed grant by
a commander or court, it was directed that the claim should be confirmed,
not exceeding four hundred acres to any one person.
Forth, Militia Rights. Under the act of March 1, 1791, a grant of land,
not exceeding one hundred acres was made to each person who had obtained
no other donation of land from the United States, and who on the first day
of August, 1790, was enrolled in the militia and had done militia duty. To
our knowledge, through research, none of the above land grants existed in
Marine Township. Research has shown that many more of the early settlers
purchased land to large quantities from the Federal Government in 1816, in
Marine Township.
In this settlement we had no markets, or took nothing to market until
about the year 1815. We then commenced hauling the products of our farms
to St. Louis. We hauled with ox teams and the roads were so bad that we
generally took from four to five days to make a trip. In going to market,
it never cost the people anything but passage, as they invariably took
their provisions with them, and slep tin in their wagons, or carts, or on
blankets on the ground. At that time, carts were generally used, as almost
any man could take an axe, a handsaw, a drawing knife and chisel and make
a cart in 3 or 4 days, as they were not to particular about having things
polished as they are present.
About the year 1815, the first wheat was raised in Marine Prairie. It was
then threshed on the ground with horses, on a place scraped off smooth for
the purpose. It was then cleaned by standing in the wind and slowly
pouring from some small vessel, and when there was no natural wind, two
men could make a strong breeze with a sheet, or sufficiently strong to
clean wheat or oats. After it was ready and hauled to St. Louis, wheat was
wroth thirty seven and a half to fifty cents a bushel . Oats ten to
fifteen cents per bushel and corn ten to twenty cents in the St. Louis
market though I have many times seen corn sold in the country to newcomers
for six to eight cents per bushel.
From the first settlement of the county until about the year 1820 the
farmers labored under many disadvantages owing entirely to the inferior
quality and make of the implements they were compelled to work with. Plows
were made of wood, except the bar shear and two small rods which were made
of iron. With these plows the land was generally broken up, but not turned
upside down as it should be to cover the seeds and grass. About 1825 they
made an improved plow, then known as the Carey plow, with half the mould
–board made of iron. It was a decided improvement over the old plow. Until
about the year 1818, all wheat and oats were cut previous to that time
with sickles. I recollect, that during that year, Elijah Ellison
introduced the first grain cradle lever saw, and it was then ascertained
to be a much better plan of saving grain, that in 1819 and 1820 they
became of general use amongst the farmers in this part of the county. The
old plan of threshing wheat and oats continued until about the year 1837
when two different kinds of threshing machines were introduced and since
that time the inventive mind of the Yankee has made many improvements on
all those machines and invented and brought out many other implements of
husbandry that probably had never been thought of at that time.
The corn crops in the early settlement of this county averaged much
heavier than now (1875) but wheat crops are at least one third heavier
than then, and the oats crop are heavier owing I presume to the better
culture generally, by deep plowing and thoroughly pulverizing the land
before sowing wheat or oats and by sowing better varieties.
Ever since I was a small child, I was told that the first town of Marine
was south of the Marine Cemetery. Through research I have found that what
they were referring to was really Marine Settlement that was not the same
as the future village Of Marine. In fact, the original settlement of 1813
of the Ferguson, Kile, and Allen families was called Ferguson Settlement,
this being some years prior to the arrival of the seagoing men of 1820.
Definition of settlement according to Webster’s dictionary is: a group of
settlers, colonists, etc: the place, tract of country, where they settle:
their dwellings, etc collectively.
As these settlers arrived in the new land they live in tents and in wagons
until such time as their cabins were built. The cabins were built of logs,
normally one room and occasionally two and some lofts. They either had a
log or sod roof. And all had a stone or rock fireplace that served a dual
purpose for cooking and heating. The undertaking of building a home in the
early days was a project that involved several months of work.
Within the Ferguson Settlement the first marriage was that of Lefferd
French and Sarah Matthews in 1815. Elijah Ferguson, brother of Major Isaac
Ferguson, was the first death in the year 1815. The first child born was
Elizabeth A. Ferguson, the daughter of Major Isaac Ferguson, on March 14.
1814. Also married in the year of 1815 was John Barnaby and Mary Johnson
Major Ferguson, and the other settlers, coming as they did from the
heavily timbered countries of Kentucky and Tennessee, all made clearings
in the edges of the forest and there built and lived.
Rowland P. Allen was one of the first to build in the prairie and was
laughed at for his willingness to haul building material, fencing and
firewood so far, a distance of half a mile. But in a few years the older
pioneers realized the advantages of a residence on the prairie and came
out in to the sunshine.
Food for the early settlers was entirely off the land. The menu for the
pioneers would be wild game, birds, fruit and berries. Their livestock was
fed on the prairie grass and the off falls of the berries and nut trees.
The livestock did very well on these foods. Two of the things that were
rarely heard of by the early settlers was coffee and tea. On the other
hand, honey of wild bees was in abundance and sugar was made in February
from the maple trees. There were elk when the settlers came. Elk were
killed around the Alton area with horns that were four feet long. There
were no buffaloes, but the settlers found many horns that were perfectly
sound. Deer were in abundance and panthers were plentiful. Wildcats would
come and catch chickens in open daylight. One kind of wildcat was called
the catamount and it was the most troublesome. Foxes were also very
troublesome, they were gray as were the prairie wolves. The settlers would
go after wolves on the prairie and run them down on horseback.
You would find otters on the creeks along with beavers. The beavers would
cut down cottonwood trees that were six inches in diameter. Parrots could
be found in hollow trees near the creeks. The parrots fed on cockleburs
and used to crack small hickory nuts with their bills. They also had
eagles and ravens. Robins and pheasants would come around the settlement.
Waterfowl was very plentiful and you could see as many as ten thousand a
day flying north in the spring of the year. Isaac Ferguson turned in 6
wolf scalps to a licensed county furrier in 1816 for which he received
$.75 each.
These pioneers were forced to be self sufficient: create implements,
manufacture clothes and household items, provide for basic medical needs,
provide for the winter season and maintain family safety and unity. One
small innovation was the flour mill. A large stump was rounded out with an
ax and corn was mashed to flour with a pestle. This served as a mill
(mortar).
One might note that many early settlers did not stay. It was a complete
change of lifestyle for many of these people. It was very difficult to
cope with the pioneer life and especially with the renegade Indians. Thus,
many of the settlers returned to what they considered to be a more
civilized lifestyle.
Those who remained at the settlement were found on tracts of land of ten,
twenty, thirty, forty, fifty, sixty, eighty, one hundred, and plus acres
per settler. Also in the settlement were those that did not own a piece of
land, but who lived on the land and worked the land for a prominent
landowner.
Seeing some early photos of Marin and Marine Township and listening to a
number of the older folk’s stories as I was growing up, there were always
strong emphasis on stories that there were never any colored (black)
people living around here. Research has shown that were was a colored
settlement on land in Range 7, Section 8 and 15, beginning in 1818. The
settlement amounted to about 300 people in the mid 1800s with their own
school and two churches. These people, none of which were slaves, crossed
the Silver Creek which was the only thing between their lands and the
Marine township. They did indeed work with the settlers of Marine and did
appear on many photos.
Note:
The Major Isaac Ferguson, his father, that he talks about went on to move
to Texas and believe it or not at 70 was one of the first volunteers for
the Mexican American War, they made him a captain and he died in Mexico
City January 1, 1848. |
Some Shelton Notes I'm pursuing
that have promise; as I have some connections to the Dabney line as well.
Source: LOUISA COUNTY,
VIRGINIA, 1743-1814
WHERE HAVE ALL THE CHILDREN GONE?
Abstracted & Compile by Rosalie Edith Davis
Manchester, Missouri. 1989
Book Page 70
O. B. 1774-1782
p. 125. June 12, 1775. Church Wardens of Trinity Parish bound out Zedakiah
Harris Orphan of John Harris to Thomas Shelton for three years.
I wish I knew the answer to your question about this particular orphan.
Since he was bound out, I am assuming the family had little material means.
There is supposedly an association of Harrises and Sheltons in and around
Albemarle Co., VA, but I have NOT verified this. I also have not checked as
to whether any records of Trinity Parish still exist. Here is a tidbit, but
it should be verified against original records (or good transcripts or
abstracts thereof.)
Here are my notes on a William Shelton of colonial Virginia.
Submitted by E. W. Wallace
LUCY HARRIS, daughter of Robert Harris and his wife Mourning [Glen?] is
reported to have married William Shelton. Refer to Malcolm Hart Harris, A
HISTORY OF LOUISA COUNTY, VIRGINIA, "Appendix," p. 355. Refer to biography
of William Shelton.
WILLIAM SHELTON. William Shelton, who was said to be married to a daughter
of Robert Harris--Lucy Harris--was probably a resident in King William Co.,
VA before he removed to Louisa or Albemarle Co., VA. Or, more probably,
there were several William Sheltons. Shelton was one of two executors of his
mother-in-law Mourning Glenn Harris (qv), will proved in Albemarle March
Court 1776. The Shelton's may have held land in both Louisa and Albemarle
Cos. Also in Lunenburg Co., as indicated in a deed cited below.
1762 - An earlier deed found in Lunenburg Co. indicates that in 1762 William
Shelton was of Albemarle Co.
Lunenburg Co. DB 7, Jan 13, 1762 from William Shelton of Albemarle County,
to Tyree Glen of L[Lunenburg], for 100 pds., a certain tract of land in L on
the east or lower side of Reedy Cr containing 274 acres, being the lower
part of the land Joseph Minor purchased of Mackie, and by Minor sold to
Joseph
Gentry, and by Gentry sold to the said William Shelton, all via L deeds. The
land is bounded as per the deed of Joseph Gentry to the said William
Shelton.
Signed - Wm. Shelton. Wit - Nathll Williams, William Smithson, Jeremiah
Glen.
Recorded Feb 2, 1762.
(TLC Genealogy, LUNENBURG COUNTY, VIRGINIA DEED BOOKS 7 & 8 (1761-1764)
[Miami Beach: TLC Genealogy, 1990], p. 21)
1768 - William Shelton in mid-1768 purchased some land in Albemarle Co. from
William Dabney and his wife Jane. Albemarle Co. DB 3-37-38: 2 June 1768
between William Dabney & Jane his wife of Albemarle to Wm. Shelton of same..
sum of 200 pds. current money of Virginia.. parcel of land lying on Mechams
River, Albemarle Co...corner to Wm. Wallace...Mechams River to the first
station. /s/ Wm. Dabney
signed, seald & delivered in the presence of Thomas Grubbs, Elizabeth Jones,
Christopher Harris, Robert Harris, Tyre Harris.
(Adapted from Ruth & Sam Sparacio, ALBEMARLE COUNTY DEED BOOK 5 1764-1772,
PART I [McLean, VA: The Antient Press, 19??], p. 21)
According to the index of Rosalie Edith Davis, FREDERICKSVILLE PARISH VESTRY
BOOK, 1742-1787, Vol. 1, there were a number of Shelton males in that
parish: David, Henry, Joseph, Thomas, William.
1771 - At a vestry held for Fredericksville Parish ye 14th November 1771:
(p. 97) Ordered tht James Kerr, Joel Terrell, Wm. Lewis, David Allen, John
Barnett, Charles Goodman, Fra. Grymes, Samuel Rea & William Shelton do
procession all the lands between Mechams River down to Carrs ford. the Three
notched Road, down to Lewis's & the Fredericksburg Road. (Davis, p. 101)
Shelton was a neighbor of some other members of the Dabney family as
evidenced by the following Louisa Co. deed:
1777 - Louisa Co. DB E-216-217 8 Dec 1777 Isaac Dabney & Anne his wife of
King William Co. to Cornelius Dabney of Louisa Co.; 85 pds.; 100 A on the
south side of the Southanna River joining lands of Wm. Shelton & land
conveyed by me to my Brother Cornelius Dabney. Wit: none 8 Dec 1777 ack. by
Isaac Dabney. 13 April 1778 Commission for the Examination of Ann the wife
of sd. Dabney
(Rosalie Edith Davis, LOUISA COUNTY VIRGINIA DEED BOOKS E & F, 1774-1790
[Manchester, MO: Privately published 1983], p. 24-25)
1783 - At a vestry held for Fredericksville Parish the 13th day of November
1783 at Charlottesville ....
(p. 119) Ordered that James Keer [is this Kerr?], George Divers, John Marks,
William Shelton, Charles Goodman, Claudious Bustard do possession all the
lands from Mechams River down to Carrs ford, the three Notched Road, down to
Lewises old place. (Davis, p. 124)
1785 - Wm. Sheltons line in Louisa Co. is mentioned:
Louisa Co. DB F-35-36 is a deed dated 7 April 1785 Thomas Johnson &
Catherine his wife of Louisa Co. to Wm. Lovell of same.... 90 A. on waters
of Owens Cr... Wm. Sheltons line... John Symes line... Johnsons line (Davis,
p. 50)
1786 - Louisa Co. DB F-192-193 16 Oct 1786 Thomas Johnston of Louisa Co. to
John Richardson of Hanover Co.; 100 pds. 216 A. in Louisa Co. near Owens Cr.
adj. lands of Collo. John Syme & known by the name of Bobits old Tract...
corner of Late Capt. Joseph Sheltons line... Symes line... Lovels parcel of
land bought of sd. Bobbits tract... William Shelton's line. /s/ Thos.
Johnson Catharine Johnson
Wit: Jesse Lacy, Stephen Farrar, Elisabeth (X) Johnson (Davis, p. 66)
1787 A William Shelton and a William Shelton, Sr. appear on the 1787
personal property list of Albemarle Co., VA.
Shelton, William - self - 1 white poll - 5 blacks above 16; 7 blacks under
16; 9 horses; 25 cattle
Shelton, William, Sr. - self - 1-0-0-2-5
Shelton, Henry - self - 0-7-8-7-47
(Adapted from Netti Schreiner-Yantis and Florine Speakman Love, THE 1787
CENSUS OF VIRGINIA [Springfield, VA: Genealogical Books in Print]
1788 - Louisa Co. DB F-299-301 5 April 1788 Cornelius Dabney to William
Shelton, both of Louisa Co., St. Martain's Par.; 63 pds-8s-9d; by late
survey 36 1/2 A. bounded by lines of sd. parties, beginning at the old
Mountain Road on the line of sd. Shelton... sd. Road, down same.
/s/ Corl. Dabney
Wit: James Shelton, Jesse Shelton, William Shelton Junr., Philemon Frayser
14 April 1788 ack by Corl. Dabney (Davis, p. 78)
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