USA > Indiana > Biographical and historical cyclopedia of Indiana and Armstrong counties, Pennsylvania > Part 41
USA > Pennsylvania > Armstrong County > Biographical and historical cyclopedia of Indiana and Armstrong counties, Pennsylvania > Part 41
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"Several persons were ordered during the action to tell the Indians to surrender themselves prison- ers. On being thus told, one of them replied : ' I ama man and I will not be a prisoner.' Being told, . in his own language, that he would be burned, he said : ' I don't care, for I will kill four or five before I die.' Had not Col. Armstrong and his men desisted from exposing themselves, the Indians, who had a number of loaded guus, would have killed many more of them. As the fire approached and the smoke thickened, one of the Indians evinced his manhood by singing. A squaw being heard to cry was severely re- buked by the Indians. But after awhile, the fire having become too hot for them, two Indians and a squaw sprang out of the house and started for the cornfield, but were immediately shot by some of their foemen. It was thought that Capt. Jacobs tumbled out of the garret or cock- loft window when the houses were surrounded. The English prisoners who were recaptured offered to be qualified that the powder-born and pouch taken from him were the very ones which
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ARMSTRONG COUNTY.
Capt. Jacobs had obtained from a French officer in exchange for Lieut. Armstrong's boots, which he had brought from Fort Greenville, where the lieutenaut was killed. Those prisoners said they were perfectly assured of Capt. Jacobs' scalp, because no other Indians there wore their hair in the same manner, and that they knew liis squaw's scalp by a particular bob, and the sealp of a young Indian, called the king's son.
" The report of the explosion of the magazine under Capt. Jacobs' house, says Patterson's ' His- tory of the Backwoods,' was heard at Fort Du Quesne, whereupon some French and Indians, fearing an attack had been made on the town (Kittanning), instantly started up the river, but did not reach the place until the day after the explosion and battle, wheu the troops had been withdrawn. They found among the ruins the bodies of Capt. Jacobs, his squaw and his son.
" Capt. Hugh Mercer, who was wounded in the arm early in the action, had been, before the attack on Capt. Jacobs' house, taken to the top of the hill above the town, where several of the officers and a number of the men had gathered. From that position they discovered some Indians crossing the river and takiug to the hill, with the intention, as they thought, to surround Col. Armstrong and his force, and cut them off from their retreat. The colonel received several very pressing requests to leave the house and retreat to the hill, lest all should be cut off, which he . would not consent to do until all the houses were fired. Although the spreading out of that part of the force on the hill appeared to be necessary, it nevertheless prevented an examina- tion of the cornfield and river side. Thus some sealps, and probably some squaws, children and English prisoners were left behind, that might have otherwise been secured.
" Nearly thirty houses were fired, and while they were burning, the ears of Col. Armstrong and his men were regaled by the sueeessive dis- charges of loaded guns, and still more so by the explosion of sundry bags and large kegs of
powder stored away in every house. The Eng- lish prisouers, after their recapture, said that the Indians often told them that they had ammu- nitiou enough to war ten years with the English. The leg and thigh of an Indian and a child three years old were thrown, when the powder exploded, with the roof of Capt. Jacobs' house, so higli that they appeared as nothing aud fell into an adjacent cornfield. A large quantity of goods which the Indians had received from the French ten days before was burned.
" Col. Armstrong then went to the hill to have his wound tied up and the blood stopped. Then the English prisoners, who had come to his men in the morning, informed him that on that very day two batteaux of Frenchmen, with Delaware and French Indians, were to join Capt. Jacobs at Kittanning, and to set out early the next morning to take Fort Shirley, and that twenty-four warriors who had lately arrived were sent before 'them the previous evening, whether to prepare meat, spy the fort, or make an attack on the frontier settlements, these pris- oners did not know.
"Col. Armstrong and others were convinced, on reflection, that those twenty-four warriors were all at the fire the night before, and began to fear the fate of Lieut. Hogg and his party. They, therefore, deemed it imprudent to wait to cut down the corn, as they had designed. So they immediately collected their wounded and forced their way back as well as they could, by using a few Indian horses. It was difficult to keep the men together on the march, because of their fears of being waylaid and surrounded, which were increased by a few Indians firing, for awhile after the mareh began, on eachı wing, and then runniug off, whereby oue man was shot through the legs. For several miles the mareh did uot exceed two miles au hour."
Blanket Hill .- "On the return of Col. Arm- strong and his foree to the place where the Indian fire had been discovered the night be- fore, they met a sergeant of Capt. Mercer's
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GEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL SKETCH OF
company and two or three others of his men who had deserted that morning immediately after the action at Kittanniug, who, in running away, had met Lieut. Hogg, lying by the road- side, wouuded in two parts of his body, who then told them of the fatal mistake which had been made by the pilot in assuring them that there were only three Indiaus at the fireplace the previous niglit, and that when he aud his men attacked the Indians that morning, accord- ing to orders, he found their number consider- ably superior to his own. He also said that he believed he had killed or mortally wouuded three of the Indians at the first fire ; that the rest fled, and he was obliged to conceal himself in a thicket, where he might have lain safely if 'that cowardly sergeant and his co-deserters,' as Col. Armstrong stigmatizes them in his re- port, had uot removed him. When they had marched a short distance, four Indians appeared and those deserters fled. Lieut. Hogg, not- witlistauding his wounds, with the true heroism of a brave soldier, was still urging and com- manding those about him to stand and fight, but they all refused. The Indians then pur- sued, killed one man and inflicted a third wound upou the gallant lieutenant-in his belly, from which he died in a few hours, hav- ing ridden on horseback seven miles from the place of action. That sergeant also represeuted to Col. Armstrong that there was a much larger number of Indians there thau had appeared to them to be; that they fought five rounds; that he had seen Lieut. Hogg and several others killed and scalped; that he had discovered a number of Indians throwing themselves before Col. Armstrong and his force, which, with other such stuff, caused confusion in the colonel's ranks, so that the officers had difficulty in keep- ing the men together, and could not prevail on them to collect the horses and baggage which the Indians had left, except a few of the horses, which some of the bravest of the men were persuaded to secure.
" From the mistake of the pilot iu underrat- ing the number of Indians at the fire the night before, and the cowardice of that sergeant and the other deserters, Col. Armstrong and his command met with a considerable loss of their horses and baggage, which had been left, as before stated, with Lieut. Hogg and his detach- ment when the maiu force had made their detour to Kittanning.
" Many blankets were afterward found on the ground where Lieut. Hogg and his small force were defeated by the superior number- about double-of their Indian foes. Hence that battle-field has ever siuce borne the name of 'Blanket Hill.' It is on the farm of Philip Duumire, in Kittanning township, to the right, going east, of the turnpike road from Kittall- ning to Elderton and Indiana, about four lıun- dred and seventy-five rods, a little east of south from the present site of the Blanket Hill post- office, and two hundred and seventy-five rods west of the Plum creek township line.
" Various other relics of that fight have been fouud from time to time, among which a straight sword with the initials 'J. H.' on it, which is owued by James Stewart, of Kittan- ning borough, was on exhibition with other relics at the Centennial exposition, Philadelphia.
"It was impossible for Col. Armstrong to ascertain the exact number of the enemy killed in the action at Kittauning, siuce some were burned in the conflagratiou of the houses and- others fell in different parts of the cornfield ; but he thought there could not be less, on a moderate estimate, thau thirty or forty either killed or mortally wouuded, as much blood was found in various parts of the cornfield, as In- dians were seen crawling from several parts thereof into the woods, whom the soldiers, in their pursuit of others, passed by, expecting afterward to find and scalp them, and as several others were killed and wounded while crossing the river.
" When the victors commeuced their return
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ARMSTRONG COUNTY.
march they had about a dozen scalps and eleven English prisoners. Part of the scalps were lost on the road, and some of them and four of the prisoners were in the custody of Capt. Mercer, who had separated from the main body, so that on the arrival of the main body at Fort Littleton, Sabbath night, September 14, 1756, Col. Armstrong could report to Governor Denny only seven of the re-captured prisoners and a part of the scalps."
Brady's Fight .- In 1780, Capt. Samuel Brady, with five men and his pet Indian, inter- cepted, at the mouth of the Big Mahoning creek, a war party of Indians who were returning from a murdering and plundering expedition in the Sewickley Creek region of Westmore- land county. He surprised the Indians in their camp at break of day and killed five of them besides securing all of their plunder and a val- uable horse which they had stolen.
Early Settlers .- The early settlers were chiefly of Scotch-Irish and German descent. The former came from Westmoreland county and the Cumberland Valley, while the latter were mainly from Lehigh and Northampton counties. One of the pioneer settlers was Capt. Andrew Sharp, who died from wounds received in a fight with Indians, which will be de- scribed in the history of Plum Creek township. In the histories of the townships will be given the few names of all the pioneers which we have been enabled to secure, although it is fair to presume that a respectable number of tliose residents given in the assessment lists of 1807 were pioneer settlers.
" Armstrong county was formed out of parts of Allegheny, Westmoreland and Lycoming counties by act of March 12, 1800. All that portion west of the Allegheny river was taken from Allegheny county ; all that portion on the east side of that river, between the Kiskimi- netas river and the then northern boundary of Westmoreland county, viz., a line due west from the purchase line at the head of the Susque-
hanna, striking the Allegheny river a short distance below the mouth of Cowanshannock creek, was taken from Westmoreland county, east of the Allegheny river and Clarion river was taken from Lycoming county which had been formed out of Northumberland county by act of April 13, 1795.
"The original boundaries of Armstrong county were: 'Beginning on the Allegheny river, at the mouth of Buffalo creek, the corner of Butler county,'" which was also erected by act of March 12, 1800; "' thence northerly along the line of said county of Butler to where the northeast corner of the said county of Butler shall strike the Allegheny river; thence from the said corner, on a line at a right angle from the first line of the county of Butler, until the said line shall strike the Allegheny river; thence by the margin of said river to the mouth of Toby's creek'-Clarion river-' thence cross- ing the river and up said creek to the line dividing Wood's and Hamilton's districts : thence southerly along said line to the present line of Westmoreland county ; thence down the (Kiskiminetas) river to the mouth thereof on the Allegheny river; thence across thic said river to the westwardly margin thereof; thence down the said river to the mouth of Buffalo creek, the place of beginning.'
"By act of March 11, 1839, that part east of the Allegheny river and between Red Bank creek and the Clarion river was detached from Armstrong and annexed to Clarion county. Thus it appears that the territory of Armstrong county has been successively included in tlie counties of Chester, Lancaster, Cumberland and Bedford, wholly, and in Northumberland, West- moreland, Allegheny, and Lycoming, partly."
While the above is correct in regard to the legislative acts creating the different counties named, yet the Legislature prohibited settle- ments in that part of the county south of a straight line from Kittanning to the Indiana county line (Purchase Line) and east of the
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GEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL SKETCH OF
Allegheny river, until the purchase of 1768, and the remainder of the county until the suc- ceeding purchase from the Indians, of 1784.
We endeavored to compile a list of senators and assemblymen from Armstrong county, from 1860 to 1890, from " Smull's Legislative Hand- Book." We found several errors in names and dates, and were compelled to drop the list for want of time to correct it.
We give the county roster as found in Smith's history of the county.
CIVIL ROSTER FROM 1805 TO 1880.
State Senators .- Robert Orr Jr., 1822-25 ; Eben Smith Kelley, 1825-29 (died in the dis- charge of his duties at Harrisburg, Saturday, March 28, 1829); Philip Meehling, 1830-34 ; William F. Johnston, 1847, until he was inaug- urated Governor in January, 1849; Jonathan E. Meredith, 1859-62.
Members of Assembly .- James Sloan, 1808-9; Samuel Houston, 1817-18-19 ; Robert Orr Jr., 1818-19-20-21; James Douglass, 1834-5-6 ; William F. Johnston, 1836-7-8 and 1841 ; John S. Rhey, 1850-1-2; J. Alexander Ful- ton, 1853; Darwin Phelps, 1856; John K. Calhoun, 1857-8; Philip K. Bowman, 1872-3; And. W. Bell, Wni. G. Heiner, 1877-80; W.F. Rumberger, Lee Thompson and Frank Martin, 1880; Thompson and A. D. Glenn, 1882.
President Judges .- John Young, Westmore- land county ; Thomas White, Indiana county ; Jeremiah M. Burrell, Westmoreland county ; John C. Knox, Tioga county ; Joseph Buffing- ton, Armstrong county ; James A. Logan, West- moreland county ; John V. Painter, Armstrong county ; Jackson Boggs and James B. Neale.
Associate Judges-Robert Orr, Sr., James Barr, George Ross, Joseph Rankin, Robert Orr, Jr., Charles G. Snowden, John Calhoun, An- drew Arnold, Hugh Bingham, Robert Wood- ward, Michael Cochran, George F. Keener, John Woods, Josiah E. Stephenson, H. A. S. D. Dudley, John F. Nulton, Robert M. Beatty, James M. Stephenson.
Sheriff's .- John Orr, Jonathan King, James McCormick, Joseph Brown, Philip Mechling, Robert Robinson, Thomas McConnell, Jacob Mechling, James Douglass, Chambers Orr, Samuel Hutchinson, Job Truby, George Smith, John Mechling, William G. Watson, Joseph Clark, Hamilton Kelly, George B. Sloan, Jon- athan Myers, Robert M. Kirkadden, George W. Cook (appointed vice Kirkadden, deceased), David J. Reed, Alexander J. Montgomery, John B. Boyd, George A. Williams, James G. Henry, James H. Chambers.
District Attorneys .- John W .- Rohrer, Frank- lin Mechling, William Blakely, Henry F. Phelps, 'John V. Painter, John O. Barrett, Jef- ferson Reynolds, Joseph R. Henderson, M. F. Leason, R. S. Martin.
Deputy Attorneys-General .- Deputy attor- neys-general were appointed by the attorney- general until by act of May 3, 1850, the name was changed to district attorney, one of whom was thereafter to be elected by the voters of each county. Thomas Blair, William F. John- ston, Michael Gallagher, J. B. Musser, John B. Alexander, John Reed, George W. Smith, John S. Rhey, Thomas T. Torrey, Daniel Stanard, Hugh H. Brady, Ephraim Carpenter, J. G. Barclay, John W. Rohrer, James Stewart.
Prothonotaries and Clerks .- Paul Morrow, James Sloan, George Hiccox, Eben S. Kelley, James E. Brown, Frederick Rohrer, Simon Torney, W. W. Gibson, James Douglass, Jon- athan E. Meredith, Samuel Owens, Simon Truby, Jr., James S. Quigley, John G. Parr, James G. Henry, A. H. Stitt.
Registers and Recorders .- Paul Morrow, James Sloan, George Hiccox, Eben S. Kelley, David Johnston, Philip Mechling, Frederick Rolirer, John Croll, John Mecliling, John R. Johnston, Joseph Bullman, William Miller, David C. Boggs, Philip K. Bowman, William R. Millron, James H. Chambers and H. J. Hayes.
County Treasurers .- Appointed annually by the county commissioners, as provided by acts of
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ARMSTRONG COUNTY.
April 11, 1799, and April 15, 1834; Adam Elliott, Robert Brown, Samuel Matthews, Guy Hiccox, Thomas Hamilton, James Pinks, Alex- ander Colwell, David Johnston, Jonathan H. Sloan, Samuel McKee, Andrew Arnold, James Douglass, Samuel Hutchinson, John F. Nulton. Some of them were reappointed once or twice.
County Commissioners .- Appointed : James Sloan, James Matthews and Alexander Walker. Elected : Jonathan King, Adam Ewing, James Jackson, Thomas Johnston, John Henry, George Long, Alexander McCain, John David- son, David Johnston, Philip Clover, Isaac Wagle, David Reynolds, Joseph Rankin, Joseph Waugh, Daniel Reichert, Philip Tem- pleton Sr., Joseph Shields, Hugh Reed, James Barr, George Williams, John Patton, Samuel Matthews, James Green, Job Johnston, Jacob Allshouse, James Reichert, Alexander A. Lowry, Jolın R. Johnston, Willianı Curll, Jacob Beck, George W. Brodhead, Lindley Patterson, James Stitt, Joseph Bullman, Wil- liam Coulter, Amos Mercer, Philip Hutchinson, John Boyd, Robert McIntosh, Arthur Fleming, Andrew Roulston, John Shoop, William McIn- tosh, Archibald Glenn, Wilson Todd, Thomas H. Caldwell, James Douglass, David Beatty, George B. Sloan, William W. Hastings, John M. Patton, William H. Jack, James Blair, Thomas Templeton, James Barr, Daniel Slagle, George H. Smith, Augustus T. Pontius, Peter Heilman, William P. Lowry, Thomas Mont- gomery, Thomas Herron, William Buffington, Brice Henderson and Owen Handcock, Lewis Corbett, John Murphy, James White, John Alward, T. V. McKee.
County Surveyors .- James Stewart, Robert S. Slaymaker, John Steele, Robert H. Wilson.
Assessment Lists of 1807 .- The following lists of taxables were returned in the above- named year for the townships of Kittanning, Toby, Sugar Creck, Red Bank, Allegheny, and the borough of Kittanning :
The following is a list of the taxables of
Kittanning township in 1807: Peter Altman, Frederick Altman, John Allison, James Bark- ley, - Bleakley, Hugh Brown (store-keeper), John Beer (s), George Beer (gunsmith), Samuel Beer (saw and grist-mill), George Beek, John Bachman, William Brinigh, William Boyd, Jacob Baumgarner, Jonathan Bouser (s), James Cogley, Joseph Claypole, James Claypole (s), Conrad Cook, George Cook, Jeremiah Cook, Joseph Clark, James Carson (s) (saw and grist- mill), James Clark, William Clark, Andrew Craft, John Caldwell, John Coon, James Cun- ningham, John Cohun, James Cohun, Samuel Cohun, Henry Davis, William Doty, James Douglas, Patrick Dougherty, John Davis, An- drew Dormoyer, Robert Duncan, Peter Eg- inger, John Ekey, Robert Ekey (s), James El- gin, Ephraim Evans, McKniglit Elliott, Dan- iel Fichard, Abraham Fiskus, Thomas Fitz- hard, John Golde, Daniel Golde, James Gaff, Samuel George, James Guthrie, Sr., John Gross, George Hoover, Chris. Hoover, James Henry, Michael Hardman, Peter Hyleman, John Hyle- man, Jacob House, Samuel Hill (s), James Hall, George Helfried (saw-mill), William Hookcs, Robert Jordan, John Irvin, Peter Kealer, Jon- athan Killgore, Ezekiel Killgore, George King, John Kirk, John T. King, Daniel Kimmel, · William Kirkpatrick (distillery), James Kirk- patrick, Sr., James Kirkpatrick, Jr., James Kean (s), Adam Lowry, Benjamin Lowry (s), Jacob Lafferty, Abraham Lee (s), Daniel Long, John Mufley, Alex. McGache, Thomas Mc- Gache, Hugh Martin, James Miller, George Miller, Joseph McKraken, John McKraken, John McMillen, Sr., John McMillen, Jr., Smith McMillen (tailor), Arch. McIntosh, Jon- atlıan Mason, John Munroe, William McAdoo (s), Thomas McMillen, James Moore (s) (school- master), Thomas Miller (s), Jacob McFuse, William Marchel, Joseph Marchel, Jolin Nol- der, Jolın Nolder, Jr., Henry Ncas, Henry Neas, Jr., Jolin Neas, Peter Neas, Peter Neal- ich, John S. Oliver, Chris. Oury (distillery),
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GEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL SKETCH OF
Adam Oury, Robert Patrick, John Patrick, Lewis Pears, William Pears, Abe. Parkison, Henry Ruffner, John Roley, Jacob Robey, David Robson, Peter Rubert (weaver), Peter Rubert, Jr., John Rubert, Patrick Rabb, Philip Rearight, John Ruff, Chris. Rupp, Francis Rupp, George Rupart, Fred. Rupart, Peter Richard, George P. Shaffer, William Sheenes (s), William Simrel, Richard Smith, Sr., George Smith (distillery), John Steel, Samuel Sloan, - Smith, George Smith, Jr., Robert Sloan, Philip Shaffer, George Shoemaker, George Shall, Jr., Thomas Swan (s), James Simpson, David Shields, Conrad Shrackencost, George Smith, John Smith, James Sloan, James Shall, Jacob Shrackencost, Henry Shracken- cost, John Shrackencost, George Shrackencost, Jolın Thomas, Peter Thomas (grist and saw- mill), John Templeton, John Thomas (mulatto), David Todd, Peter Terney, Parker Truett, Anderson Truett, John Willis, Abraham Wood- ward, Jacob Weamer, Peter Weamer, Adam Waltenbach, Thomas Wilson, - Wolf (wid- ow), Thomas Williams, Jacob Wolf, George Wolf, (s) Adam Wilhelm, Jacob Willyard, Philip Wheitzel, Isaac Wagley (grist-mill), Robert Walker (s), James Walker (s), Abe Walker, Robert Work, David White, John Wilson, Rolin Weldon, John Wagle (s), George Wil- liams, Robert White, Daniel Younts, Jonathan Younts, Fred. Yackey.
Tax list of the Town of Kittanning for 1807. -Robt. Beatty (surveyor), James Brown (s), (joiner), Mathias Bouser (mason), Eli Bradford (joiner), Francis Bell (hatter), Thomas Beatty (s), John Bellark (mason), Alex. Blear, John Caldwell (tailor), Robt. Cooper (joiner), Pat- rick Daugherty, James Gibson, James Guthrie (joiner), S. M. Harrison (atty. at law), James Henry, James Hanegan (hatter), William Han- egan (tailor), Daniel Lemon (s), Joseph Miller (store-keeper), Barnard Mahon (shoemaker), Alex. Moore, James Metheny (wheelwright), . Samuel Miller (shoemaker), Samuel Massey
(atty. at law), Michael Machlen, Paul Monroe, Jacob Nealish (saddler), James Pike (joiner), Abe Parkeson (mason), David Ronalds (store- keeper), William Ronalds (tanner), James Sloan, Walter Sloan (s), John Shafer (joiner), Dewalt Shafer (carpenter), Erastus Sands (joiner), Mi- chael Starr, John Thomas (shoemaker).
List of taxables in Toby township in 1807 .- Thomas Guthrie & Co., William Love, Thomas Miller and John Mortimer (grist and saw-mill owners), Philip Clover (blacksmith), Francis Hillard and James McElhany (wheelwrights), John Simpkins (wagon-maker), John Guthrie (carpenter), John Wilson (tanner), William Kelly (schoolmaster), Absalom Travis (cooper), Philip Bigley (shoemaker), Hugh Reed (mill- wright), Daniel Boyles (tailor), Tate Allison, James Colhoon, William Cochran, John Coy, John Love, William Miller, Nicholas Polyard, James Smith and Robert Wilson (weavers).
The following persons were land-owners, and principally farmers : Robert Alison, William Adams, Williams Adams, Jonathan Adams, William Ashton, Samuel Ashton, Robert Beatty, George Beck, Joseph Boney, John Boney, Joseph Barns, George Baird, Thomas Brown, Alex. Brown, James Brown, Jacob Bunker, William Bunker, Henry Benn, Wil- liam Barr, Thomas Barr, John Brandon, James Brandon, John Brown, Jacob Bnmgardner, William Booth, John Black (s), Peter Ben- ninger, John Bowls, John Bole, John Boney, Abe Corsal, Paul Corsal, Philip Corsal (tan- ner), John Corbitt, Alex. Cannon, William Clark, James Cannon, John Cochran, John Crawford, Thomas Connor, Robert Culbertson, Samuel Crow, Hugh Cullan, James Cathcart, Robert Cathcart, Joseph Craig, Andrew Camp- bell, Samuel Colhoon, John Colhoon, John Clugh, James Callen, Peter Coy, Benj. Coy, James Carson, Fleming Davidson, Peter Dun- cle, Isaac David, John Donnel, Lewis Dover- spike (s), George Delp (s), George Delp, Sr., John Doverspike, George Doverspike, John
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311
ARMSTRONG COUNTY.
Duntap, Fleming Davis, Joseph Erwin, Philip Essex, Wright Elliott, John Emmitt, George Emmitt, John Eaton, Samuel Early, Joseph Everet, Peter Fidler, Thomas Freeman, Jacob Flyfoot, Isaac Fetzer, Henry Fulton (s), Wil- liam Frazier (s), James Fulton, Cochran Ful- ton (s), Levi Gipson, John Gipson, William Guthrie, Sr., William Guthrie, Alex. Guthrie, Henry Gist, Joseph Greenawalt, William Grim, John Gross, William Henry, John Henry, Pe- ter Hilliard, George Hall, John Hepler, Ed- ward Hegin, David Hegin, David Hull, George Hilliard, Job Johnston, Hugh Kerr, Moses Kirkpatrick, William Kirkpatrick, James Kirk- patrick, Francis Kirkpatrick, James Knox, Jolın Loge, James Laughlin, John Lauglilin, Daniel Long, Abe Lee, Peter Lobaugh, Abe Lobaugh, Peter Lotshaw, Sr., Peter Lotshaw, John Long, William Lattimer, Frederick Miles (s), William Meals, Jacob Meals, Jacob Mon- ney, Robert Myler, Thomas Meredith, William Moorhead, Paul McLean, Jacob McFadden (s), Joseph McQuown, Samuel Myers, Alex. Mc- Kean, John McGee, John Martin, Robert Mc- Call, Arch. McNeel, James McGuire, William McKinley, Ezekiel Matthews, Thomas McGa- hey, Alex. McGahey, William Marchel, William Maffet, John Mufflee, Alex. Moore (weaver), William Matthew (s), Rev. Robert McGery, Arch. Mckinney, Jesse McConnell (s), Joseph Marshall, Arch. Monney, John Miller, Charles McCoy, Thomas Mckibbons, Jolın Mckib- bons (s), John McKibbons, Valentine Moir, Henry Nulfs, John Nulfs, Henry Nees, John Nees, Peter Nees, Richard Nesbitt, Samuel C. Orr, Samuel Orr, William Orr, Adam Aurey, William Oliver, Chris. Over, William Pollock, Thomas Pollock, James Potter, James Parker, Joseph Pearce, Sr., Joseph Pearce, Thomas Patrick, Robert Prather (s), James Parker, Peter Price, Robert Patrick, Phillips, John Patrick, Edward Pearce, George Peecli, Francis Rupe, Chris. Richart, Joseph Reed, John Roll, John Ross, Joseph Rankin, David
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