CRAGUN FAMILY
Jean C. Tombaugh
TOMBAUGH HOUSE
700 Pontiac Street
Rochester, Indiana 46975
1990
This book cannot be reproduced without the express permission of Jean C. Tombaugh, her heirs or assigns.
Made in the United States of America.
CRAGAN CRAGGEN CRAGIN CRAGON CRAGUN CRAIGEN
(An Introduction to the Family of Cragun)
Tradition in the family of Jean (Cragun) Tombaugh, tells that our ancestor was originally of Scotland and the name was McCRAGUN. Also, that Caleb Cragun moved from England to Ireland where he married and had children, one of whom was a son PATRICK, who came to America about the time of the Revolutionary War.[1], [2]. So, right or wrong, we will begin with the Craguns of Scotland.
"CRAIGEN - Local. In 1272 the church of Cragyn (now Craigie) in Kyle was confirmed to the Monks of Paisley by THOMAS de CRAGYN son and heir of JOHN HOSE, who had assumed his surname from his lands (RMP., p.232). He may be the THOMAS de CREGEYN del counte de ARC who rendered homage in 1296 (Bain 11, p.206). ADE CRAGYNE who held a tenement of Irvine 1477 (Irvine, 1, p.149) most probably derived his name from the same source. A family of this name in New Pitsligo village were remarkable for their longevity. (AEI., p.47) CHRISTAIN CRAIGANE was liferenter of Readfurd, 1630 (LIM., p.110) PATRICK CRAIGEN in Burnebray of Gorthie, 1670 (Dunblane) and ROBERT CRAIGIN in the Parish of Sumbennan, 1716 (SCM., IV, p.171). WM CRAIGEN was a member of the Huntley Volunteers, 1798 (Well p.19) (a history of the volunteer movement in Strathbogie from 1798-1808) and JOHN W. CRAIGEN from King Edward served in the first Great War (Turriff) of Craigie.[3]
___________________
LETTER. Written by Charles Hartwell Cragun, A.M.M.D., 16 Feb 1862, at Georgetown, D.C. Copy made by Ella M. Cragun wife of Edmund Cragun, in 1935, and made available to Jean Cragun Tombaugh (Rochester, Ind.) by Eva Cragun Heiner of Salt Lake City, in August 1964.[4]
"Tradition in all branches of this family points to Scotland as the original home of its head. In my father's family it was handed down by him that three brothers had originally come to this country, one of them settled in Maine, one went to the south and the third settled at Acton, Mass. I have always had a curiosity to learn our early and true history and on a visit north in 1857, I visited my cousin FRANCIS KIMBALL CRAGIN, who resides in Woburn, Mass., and there saw the result of his investigation, which was a very complete genealogy of his branch of the family from its founder, the original and only JOHN CRAGIN, who had settled and died in that town just about two centuries ago. Availing myself of his labors, I proceeded to enlarge upon the facts thus gathered, and, by writing to every possible source of information, I have been enabled to form with a few exceptions, a complete genealogy of every descendant of this original John Cragin.
"These results show that the family originated in the south of Scotland where JOHN was born about 1634. When about 16 he was pressed into the services of Charles who was terribly defeated by Cromwell in the battle of Dunbar, 5 Sept 1650, where he (John) was captured, and exported in the year 1652 as a prisoner of war with 270 other prisoners in the ship "John & Sarah," Capt. John Green, Master (see Vol.1, No.4, for Oct.1847, of the New England Historical & Gen. Register, for the list of the passengers, where his name appears as "JOHN CRAGON"), arrived at Charleston, Mass., (their?) labor was sold to defray expenses, they working three days for their masters to pay for their houses and land and money expended for them, and the other three days for themselves. Tradition says that JOHN was attacked with 'smallpox' on board ship, and would have been thrown overboard but for the earnest interference of an English woman named SARAH DAWES, who thus saved his life, and to whom he was afterwards married.
"There are a few CRAGINS in the city of New York, who are not his descendants, but have come recently from the north of Ireland and they write me that their ancestors came originally into Ireland from the south of Scotland. They are Protestants.
"Furthermore, there is an old Virginia family now in Hampshire Co., but originally from Hardy Co., who spell their name CRAIGEN, and whose ancestors originated in Scotland, but left there about a century later than John. Very probably all these sprang from the same neighborhood in Scotland.
"The following letter from the present head of this Virginia family will be read with interest. It is very curious that he speaks of his grandfather fighting loyally for Charles, being captured and sent to this country about the same time that JOHN CRAGIN settled in Acton. The writer's son is a young physician in Washington and has decided Cragin features. In this letter, MR. JACOB J. CRAIGEN speaks of ROBERT CRAIGEN, his grandfather, who had but two children, ROBERT and JOHN. John Craigen his father, was for some years High Sheriff of Hardy Co., and had but two sons, JACOB L. and GEORGE SEE (Craigen). The latter had no sons, left on a tour to Ohio and other western states about 1825, and never returned, being probably dead. Mr. Jacob J. Craigen has two sons, Dr. WM. J. of Washington City, and JOHN, a younger brother at home. Besides these two sons he has, I think, six daughters.
'Green Spring Run, Hampshire Co., Va.
'Dr. C. H. Cragin:
'Dear Sir: I received yours of the 7th inst., and am compelled to say my knowledge of my father's connections is very small. My grandfather died before I was born, and my father before I was old enough to take any interest in the matter. My mother said my grandfather was taken in some battle fighting (I judge for Charles Edward of Scotland, styled by English History as the Pretender) and sent to America. He first settled in Maryland, somewhere on or near the Patuxent, afterwards moved to Winchester, in Virginia. His name was ROBERT, he left several brothers in Scotland, and I think he was not aware of any of them ever coming to this country. My mother also said he had a large number of letters he had received from his friends, which he and also my father kept carefully locked in a chest. But sometime after my father's death, when she went to show them to me, they were gone, and I believe they were never heard of after. ROBERT CRAIGEN had but two children, ROBERT, his eldest who died without issue, and JOHN who was my father. You will see he came to this country near a century after Cromwell's time.'
"With these exceptions all of the Cragins in this country are descendants of the John Cragin who settled in Woburn, Mass. about 200 years ago, and there lived and died.
"Generally at the North the name is pronounced with the 'a' as in Crag and the 'g' hard as in the same word as if written Crag-in. The Virginia family spell and pronounce the name softer as in Craigen. By the advice of an old Scotch Schoolmaster in Mendon, Mass., the Branch of the family in that neighborhood were induced to spell the name CRAGGIN, as is still incorrectly done by some there. For myself I prefer the softer pronounciation.
"JOHN (Cragin) had but one son to bear his name and that son died at the age of 26 leaving his family to the guardianship of a Mr. BARKER. His son, JOHN, the grandson of the first JOHN, married JUDITH dau. of his guardian, and settled on a farm about a quarter of a mile south of the middle of Acton. There he had a large family of sons and daughters; when about 1766, they mostly removed to Temple, N.H., where they were among its first settlers, and from which place as a center most of the younger branches have emmigrated. This third John had an only brother who went south from Acton and settled in Mendon, Mass., and became the center of another branch of the family, who still reside mostly in that neighborhood. Before the removal to Temple, N.H. one son of the third John, named JOSEPH, had married and removed with two of his sisters (also married), to Maine, on the Kennibeck river. Here we have probably the foundation of the tradition above alluded to of three brothers, one settling in Maine, one going South, and one settling in Acton, Mass.
"In a very interesting letter from Miss HATTIE B. DINGLEY, the grand-daughter of ABIGAIL NEWELL, who is still living, and is herself the grand-daughter of JOSEPH CRAGIN, I received the following incidental information. Grandmother Newell related an incident connected with the origin of the name Cragin, which I will write you, although you may be aware of it. DOROTHY (Joseph's sister) gave it to her years ago:
'After a thirty years war in Scotland the Irish took posession permitting any of the Scotch to remain that would join their party, and many, rather than desert their cattle and lands, remained and intermarried with the Irish nobility. The greater part fled to the mountains, and lived there until they were a powerful army, and then came down and retook their lands. The name was then a combination of Irish and Scotch, being McCRAGIN.'
"This completes all that I have been able to learn of the Mendon branch of the Cragin family and the entire genealogy of JOHN CRAGIN of Woburn, Mass. I am very grateful to all those of my numerous kinsmen and kinswomen who have so promptly and kindly aided me in my work of love, for such it has been to me, and beg them to accept my very cordial thanks, and also that they will continue their kindness by sending me notice of my mistakes found in the preceding pages, and all future dates and names of births, marriages, and deaths that may occur in their several families. If the family continues to be as expansive, and, I may truly add, 'as faithful' for the coming two centuries, as it has proved itself since 1652, about which date John first arrived in Charleston, Mass., our genealogist A.D. 2052 will find here the roots and main branches of the goodly tree truly presented from which he can trace out its growth to some thousands of Cragin twigs and leaves and blossoms also, that with God's help may bless and make beautiful our country."
_____________
JOHN CRAGIN (Craggen), from Scotland.
b. 1634, Scotland.
d. 27 Oct 1708, Woburn, Mass.
bur. prob. Woburn, Mass. (Woburn Record of Deaths 1640-1873)
From south of Scotland in the "John & Mary" 1652, to Charlestown, Mass., as a prisoner of Cromwell, and sold as a slave to Thomas Kimble.
m. (as "John CRAGGEN") to SARAH DAWES, 4 Nov 1661, at Woburn, Middlesex Co.,
Mass. While enroute to America, he was about to be thrown overboard because he had smallpox. Because of the earnest interference of Sarah Dawes, an English woman, his life was saved. He later married her.
b. (unkn)
d. 23 Dec 1725 ("Sarah Craggen, wid. of John Craggen, Sen.")[5]
children:
1. Abigail Cragin, b. 4 Aug 1662, Woburn, Middlesex Co., Mass.
d. (unkn)
m. John KNIGHT, 2 March 1681, at Woburn, Mass.
b.
son of:
2. Sarah Cragin, b. 10 Aug 1664, Woburn, Middlesex Co., Mass.
d. (unkn)
m.
3. Elizabeth Cragin, b. 3 Aug 1666, Woburn, Middlesex Co., Mass.
d. (unkn)
m. John SHEPHERD, 19 March 1689/90, Concord, Mass.
b.
son of:
4. Mercy Cragin, b. 25 March 1669, Woburn, Middlesex Co., Mass.
d. (unkn)
m. Thomas SKELTON, 29 Dec 1701, at Woburn, Mass.
b.
son of:
5. Anna Cragin, b. 6 Aug 1673, Woburn, Middlesex Co., Mass.
d. (unkn)
m.
6. John Cragin, b. 19 Sept 1677, Woburn, Middlesex Co., Mass.
d. 26 Jan 1704, Woburn, Mass.
bur. (unkn)
m. Deborah SKELTON, probably at Woburn, Mass., 1700
b. (unkn)
dau. of:
ch.: (Gdn was William Barker)
(A) John Cragin, b. 25 March 1701, Woburn, Middlesex Co., Mass.
d. 1794, Temple, N.H.
m. Judith BARKER, 1727
b. 1701
d. 1762
dau. of William & Dorothy (Hayward) Barker
Settled on a farm about a quarter of a mile south of the middle of the town of Acton, where a large family of sons and daughters were born. Then, about 1766/69, they mostly removed to Temple, N.H., where they were among its first settlers, and from which place most of the younger branches emigrated. Before the move to Temple, N.H., JOSEPH CRAGIN, son of John and Judith (Barker) Cragin, had married and removed with two of his sisters (also married) to Maine on the Kennibeck river.
ch.:
(a) John Cragin, b. 8 Jan 1728/29, Acton, Mass.[1]
d. 16 May 1797, at Temple, N.H.
m.(1), Sarah BARRETT, 1755
b. 1730 - d. 1771
dau. of:
m.(2), unkn
Dea. John selectman; signer of the Assoc. test in Temple, N.H.; served as private in N.H. troops in American Rev.; town treas., 1778-92, 1797; del. to N.H. convention, to ratify the U. S. Constitution, 1778; he was already 48 years old when the war began in 1775.
children:
(1) Judith Cragin, b. 1767
d. 1859
m. David SEARLE, 1787
b. 1766 - d. 1854
son of:
(desc.: Mrs. Harriett Leone Clark Holmes[2]
(2) John Cragin, b. 1769
d. 1853
Sgt Militia 1795, Lt. 1802, Capt 1803.
m. Ruth HEALD, 1788
b. 1772 - d.1833
dau. of: Maj. Ephraim HEALD (1734-1815, Temple N.H.; Amer. Rev.; m. 1757 Sarah CONANT [1738-1825, John (6) m. Sarah, dau. of Jacob FARRAR; Lot Conant (7), John Conant (8), Lot Conant (9), Roger Conant (10) ].);
gr-dau. of Ephraim HEALD (b. 1711 Townsend, Mass.; m. 1732/33 Eleanor ROBBINS);
gr-grandau. of Lt. John HEALD (1666-1721, comd. the Concord Co. which marched to Boston to capture Gov. Andross, 1689; m. 1690, Mary CHANDLER [1671-1757, Roger Chandler (8), m. Mary SIMONDS].);
gr-gr-grandau. of John HEALD (d. 1687; m. Sarah DANE [or DEAN] 1642-1689; Thomas Dane (or Dean) (9);
gr-gr-gr-grandau. of John HEALD[3]
children:
(i) Abner B. Cragin, b. 1806
d. 1860
Architect and builder, purchased section of land in Panola Co., Miss.
m. Martha SHEPHERD, 1829
b. 1805 - d. 1871
dau. of: Wm SHEPHERD (4), Quaker of Va., m. Rebecca SWANN.
ch.:
(1) Eudora Cragin, b. 1847
d. 1880
res., Bynum Creek, Panola Co., Miss.
m. Dr. Arthur Augustus WILLIAMSON,
(1838 - 1892, son of Arthur Starr Williamson [1797-1870, planter, York Co., S.C., Panola Co., Miss. and Memphis Tenn.] m.(1), ca. 1824 Caroline McNEIL who d. 1844;
gr-son of Samuel Williamson (1759-1815) York Co., So.Car.; m. 1783-85 Anne STARR (1759-1806);
gr-grson of James Williamson (1713-1806), from Ulster Ire. ca. 1720, to York & Chester Cos., Pa.; to Chester & York Cos., SC; elder Bull Run (later Purity) ch., on Bull Run Creek;
Grad. Jefferson Medical College, Phila.; plantation owner, nr Sardis, Miss.; Phys., Panola Co., Miss. and Fort Smith, Ark; Capt. 12th Miss. Regt., CSA;
He m.(2), 1881, Martha BROWN
(b) Judeth Cragin, b. 17 Dec 1730 (Concord, Mass. Birth Records)
(c) Mary Cragin, b. 21 Jan 1732/33 (Concord, Mass. Birth Records)
(d) Joseph Cragin, b. 28 June 1735 (Concord, Mass. Birth Records)
d. (unkn)
m. (unkn)
Joseph Cragin, a son of John & Judith (Barker) Cragin married some time prior to ca. 1766-69 (when the family moved to Temple, N.H.) and he, his wife & two sisters (who were also married) moved to Maine, settling on the Kennibeck river.
(e) Dorothy Cragin, b.
d. (unkn)
m.
Charles Hartwell Cragin, A.M. M.D., of Georgetown, D.C., writes a letter 16 Feb 1862, in which he mentions a letter from Miss Hattie B. DINGLEY granddau. of Abigail NEWELL "who is still living, and is herself the granddau. of JOSEPH CRAGIN." She also mentions "DOROTHY (Joseph's sister)" giving her information.
(B) ANNA CRAGIN (twin of John), b. 25 March 1701, Woburn, Mass.
(no further inf.)
(C) BENJAMIN CRAGIN, b. 27 Nov 1702, Woburn, Middlesex Co., Mass.
son of John and Deborah (Skelton) Cragin.
d. (unkn)
John Cragin (1701-1794) is said to have had an only brother, who went south from Acton and settled in Mendon, Mass., and became the center of another branch of the family, who still reside mostly in that neighborhood.[4]
7. RACHEL CRAGIN, b. 14 March 1680 (twin)
d. 18 March 1680
8. LEAH CRAGIN, b. 14 March 1680 (twin)
d. 18 March 1680
_____________________
SOME STRAY CRAGUNS
SAMUEL CRAGIN, born 1739, Uxbridge, Mass.
(Parents unkn)
died, 1825 at Uxbridge, Mass.
m. MERCY CHAPIN
Served as Lieut Colonel in Nathan Tyler's Regt of Worcester Co., Militia.
(DAR LINEAGE, vol.45, p.174: Helen Capron Adams Hanson, Nat.#44441)
ch.:
(a) BETSEY CRAGIN,
m. Benj. ADAMS,
b. 1764
son of Josiah Adams (m. 1750, Sarah Reed b.1729)
ch.:
(1) John Adams, 1798 - 1878
m. FANNY CRAGIN, his cousin.
b. (unkn)
dau. of BENJ. CRAGIN (s/o AMOS CRAGIN 1741-1777, and Ruth STAPLES), & Azubah HILL (d/o Moses Hill, & wife Sinah Robinson 1759-1851)
ch.:
(i) George Adams, b. 1819
m. Angeline DAY
ch.:
* Helen Capron Adams Hanson.
AMOS CRAGIN, born 1741 at Mendon, Mass.
(parents unkn)
died - 1777 at Ticonderoga, N.Y.
m. RUTH STAPLES
Amos Cragin, private, at Ticonderoga where he died.
(DAR LINEAGE, Vol.45, p.174. Helen Capron Adams Hanson, Nat.#44441)
ch.:
(a) Benjamin Cragin, b. (unkn)
d. (unkn)
m. Azubah HILL
b.
dau. of Moses Hill (m. Sinah Robinson, b. 1759, d. 1851)
______________
FIRST CENSUS OF THE UNITED STATES 1790, Heads of Families, p.55
New Hampshire, Hillsborough County.
CRAGGIN, John 16 & over (b.1774 & bef.), with 2 fem. (including hd of fam.);2 w/m 16 & over;
1 w/m under 16 (1774-90).
CRAGGIN, Benja 16 & over (b.1774 & bef.), with 2 fem. (including hd of fam.); 1 w/m 16 & over; 2 w/m
under 16 (1774-90).
CRAGGIN, Francis 16 & over (b.1774 & bef.), with 3 fem. (includ. hd of fam.); 2 w/m 16 & over;
4 w/m under 16 (1774-90)
______________
BENJAMIN CRAGIN, b. 1740 at Concord, Mass.
d. 1816 at Mason, N.H.
bur. (unkn)
m. MERCY ROBBINS, 1766
b.
dau. of:
Benjamin Cragin responded to the Lexington Alarm from Temple, N.H., and served as lieutenant in Capt. Parker's Co. at the Battle of Bennington.
(DAR LINEAGE BK, Vol.145, p.71, Mrs. Nellie Cragin Walker, Nat.#144214.)
(DAR LINEAGE BK, Vol.154, p.69, Mamie Knickerbocker, Nat.#153239.)
ch.:
(a) Simeon Cragin, b. 1787
d. 1861
bur.
m. Betsy DAKIN, 1811
b. 1793
dau. of:
ch.:
(1) Frank Benjamin Cragin, b. 1827
d. 1864
__________
PROPRIETORS' RECORDS OF MENDON, MASS., 1667-1816 (Middlesex Co.)
(p.538 mentions "Benjaman Cragin")
HISTORY OF LYNDEBOROUGH, N.H., Hillsboro Co., 1735-1905
".... This mill was at a later day given up as a cloth mill, and was changed to a grist mill and a door knob factory. Mr. JOHN NEWELL, born in Brookline 30 Aug 1824, bought it, probably about 1845. He took it down and built, a few rods south of the old foundation, the mill which is now owned by Mr. Colburn. Mr. Newell carried on a cabinet shop there for several years. MR. DANIEL CRAGIN, now of Wilton, served about three years there as Mr. Newell's apprentice, after which he bought the shop, about the year 1857, and Mr. Newell removed to Hancock. Mr. Cragin engaged in the business but a little more than a year, and then sold out and removed to Wilton."
______________
FRANCIS CRAGIN, b. (unkn)
d. (unkn)
m. SYBIL PIPER
b.
dau. of
Called "Sergt Francis Cragin", and gr-gr-gr-Grandfa. of Mrs. Grace Greenhalgh Eversman. (DAR Lineage Vol.59, p.185, Nat.#13641 & 20918)
Francis "Craggin" was a householder of Hillsborough Co., N.H., in 1790. He was 16 years or older (b. on or before 1774), with a wife & 2 other females, 2 males 16 or older, and 4 males under 16 yrs (b.1774-90)
Two other householders in the same area, who might be relatives, were a JOHN CRAGGIN, and BENJA CRAGGIN. These two were in the same age grouping as Francis Cragin (Craggin).
children:
(a) Esther Cragin, b. (unkn)
d.
m. Artemas WHEELER
b. 1774
son of Lieut. Abijah Wheeler (m. 1st, 1772, Mary HAYWARD)
ch.:
(1) Mary Hanna Wheeler
m. Benjamin F. PARTRIDGE
ch.:
(i) Amos S. Partridge
m. Eliza PEGG
ch.:
* Harriet Partridge
m. Wm L. GREENHALGH
ch.: Mrs. Grace Greenhalgh Eversman.
Note: Amos Partridge (1758-1844) was placed on a pension roll 1832, for svc. as private in the Mass. and N.H. troops.
He was born in Menden, Mass., and died in Ogdensburg, N.Y. (Probably this Amos was the father of Amos S. Partridge?)
____________
SILAS CRAGIN, b. 1775
d. 1849, age 74 years.
bur. (unkn)
m. ANNA PERLEY
b. 1776, d. 1838, age 62
dau. of:
He was of New Ipswich, of Scotch ancestry, and by trade a saddler.[5]
children:
(a) Lorenzo S. Cragin
m.
(b) Anna Cragin
m.
(c) Sophronia Cragin
m.
(d) Elvira Cragin
m.
(e) Elizabeth Cragin, b. (unkn)
d. 1850
m.
(f) Rebecca Cragin
_____________________
CRAIGEN FAMILY, from Scotland to Virginia.
This is an old Virginia family, now in Hampshire Co. (formed originally from Hardy Co.), who spell their name "CRAIGEN." Their ancestors came originally from Scotland, but left there about a century later than JOHN CRAGIN (1st), or ca. 1750. The present head of the family (1862) is JACOB J. CRAIGEN, who gives the following information on his family: (see letter from Green Spring Run, Hampshire Co., Va.)
ROBERT CRAIGEN, (grandfa. of Jacob J. Craigen)
Fought for Charles (prob. Edward of Scotland), was captured and sent to this country about the same time that JOHN CRAGIN settled in Acton. He came from Scotland in the Johnson, from Liverpool, England, to Port Oxford, Md., arriving 17 July 1747.
He first settled in Maryland, somewhere on or near the Patuxent, and then he moved on to Winchester, in Virginia. He left several brothers in Scotland, and had a large number of letters he had received from his friends, which he kept carefully locked in a chest. He had two children.
Robert Craigen is included in the 1790 census, Frederick Co., Va., with four whites.
children:
(a) Robert Craigen, eldest child.
d. without issue.
(b) John Craigen, b. 14 Sept 1769
d. 5 Jan 1827
bur.
He was High Sheriff of Hardy Co., Va. (Hampshire Co., W.Va.) for some years.
married - (unkn)
ch.:
(1) Jacob J. Craigen, b. (unkn)
d. (unkn)
Jacob Craigen, of Hardy Co., Va., and Eliza S. PARSONS, of this city, were married in Hampshire Co., Va., 3 April 1833, by the Rev. Mr. Martin.[6]
ch.:
(i) William J. Craigen, Dr.,
of Washington, D.C.
(ii) John Craigen "the younger",
at home.
(iii) dau.
(iv) dau.
(v) dau.
(vi) dau.
(vii) dau.
(viii) dau.
(2) George See Craigen, b. (unkn)
d. (unkn)
He left on a tour to Ohio ca. 1825, and never returned.
Census records for Ohio (1820 thru 1850) reveal the name (or variations of the name) of CRAGUN. Although there were others, the following are perhaps the ones of most interest to this family:
(1820) CRAIGHOEN, Andrew Butler Co., Ric. tp
CREAIN, Jeremiah " , Ham. tp
CREGIN, Eleanor Miami Co., SC. tp
(1830) CRAUGHAN, Isaac Franklin Co., Mad. tp
" Abraham " "
(1840) CARAGIN, Susannah Adams Co., Fra. tp
CIRGAN, J. Athens Co., Lee tp
CARIGAN, James Brown Co., Hun. tp
" John " "
CREAGEN, Joseph Brown Co., Ste. tp
CRACKEN, John Carroll Co., Per. tp
CROCKEN, William Clark Co., Per. tp
CACKEN, Eliza Delaware Co., Con. tp
CRAGLAN, Jas. Fairfield Co., Ber. tp
CREGLAN, Solomon " Per. tp
CRAIGLONE, David " Hoc. tp.
CROCHAN, I. Franklin Co., Mad. tp.
CROCHAN, E. Greene Co., Xen. tp
" N. " "
" Thos. " Sug. tp.
CACKINS, Vincent Guernsey Co., Spe. tp.
CAUSAN, John " "
CARRIGAN, Stephen Hamilton Co., Cincin.
CROGHAN, Benj. " "
CAUGER, Patrick " Fla. tp.
CARRAGEN, Thos. Henry Co., Nap. tp.
CROGON, ----? " "
CROUGHEN, Jas. Jefferson Co., Sal. tp.
CAGENS (?), Samuel Knox Co., Che. tp.
CAGGINS, Jonathan " But. tp.
" Jos. " "
CRAGGEN, ----? Lorain Co., Pen. tp.
CRAGIN, ----? " Lag. tp.
CARAGAN, Johnston Muskingum Co., Ada. tp
(1850) CRAGEN, Charlotte Cuyahoga Co., Cleve. Ward 1
" Lewis " Cleve. Ward 1
CRAGON, Bridget " Cleve. Ward 2
CRAGAN, Aurora Erie Co., Portland
" James " "
Guernsey Co., Cumberland, Spencer twp, 29 July 1850 (262:262)
CRAGUN, Joshua 30 "tinner" b. Ohio
Augusta 32 (f) b. ---
Mary E. 3 b. ---
Tucker, Wm 38 b. Ind.
CRAGAN, Patrick Hamilton Co., Cin. Ward 1
CRAIGLON, Solomon Hocking Co., Perry tp
CRAGIN, Priscilla Lorain Co., Carlisle
CROGAN, Larry" "
CRAGHLAN, Catherine " Elyria
CRAGGIN, Benjm N. Lorain Co., Grafton
" Charles C. " "
CRAGIN, Benjn " Lagrange
CRAGEN, Ellen Montgomery Co., Dayton, Ward 4
____________
ONEIDA COMMUNITY, Land Records Wouldn't Help Here!, by Eleanor Myers.
(National Genealogical Society, V.54 (1966), pp.193-210)
"In 1847 the Town of Lenox, Madison County, New York, became the home of a group of adherents to the religious creed of Perfectionism. Today all home-makers know the end result of this religious experiment as the Oneida Community Ltd., makers of fine silverware and silver tableware. John Humphrey Noyes, the acknowledged leader of this group, was born in West Brattleboro, Vermont, in 1811, the eldest son of John and Polly Noyes. ...
"There upon 386 acres this group became self-supporting in a communal type of living ... prospered from the beginning in their business operations. Preservation of fruits and vegetables for sale to the outside world, tree nurseries, trapmaking, printing, silk manufacture and machine shops were someof the activities engaged in. ..."
(1855 Census, 2 July, Town of Lenox, Co. of Madison, New York)
CRAGIN, George, ae 46, b. Mass., wid., Publisher, res. here 6 yrs.
CRAGIN, George E., ae 15, b. N.Y., farmer, res. here 6 yrs.
CRAGIN, John H., ae 10, b. Vt., res. here 6 yrs.
(1865 Census, 1 June, (same)
CRAGIN, Charles A., ae 23, b. Vt., unmd, trap Maker.
CRAGIN, John H., ae 20, b. Vt., unmd, bag maker.
(1875 Census, 18 June, (same)
CRAGIN, George E., ae 35, b. N.Y.City, unmd., Physician.
CRAGIN, Chas. (A.), ae 33, b. Vermont, unmd., Mech Engineer
CRAGIN, Viola, ae 11/12, b. Madison,
CRAGIN, John H., ae 30, b. Vermont, unmd., Book Keeper
CALEB CRAGUN FAMILY, England, Ireland, America.
CALEB CRAGUN (first gen.)
b.ca. 1700, Huntingdon, Huntingdonshire, England
d. (unkn)
He resided near the home of Oliver Cromwell. Caleb Cragun moved to Ireland where he married an "Irish lady". They had a son PATRICK CRAGUN.
PATRICK CRAGUN (second gen.)
b.ca. 1743/45, in Northern Ireland.
d. (date unkn), in Va. Tradition tells that some years later his remains were brought to Indiana, and reburied near Whitestown in Boone Co., in a field of a farm near ENOCH CRAGUN, Sr.'s old farm.
JOHNATHAN O. Q. CRAGUN wrote (date unkn) "Our great grandfather PATRICK CRAGUN is buried near Whitestown, Ind. I saw where he was buried some five years ago while I was in Indiana."
Some descendants of Enoch Cragun (son of ELISHA CRAGUN, 1786) stated that they had visited a cemetery at Whitestown, Indiana, and had seen the graves of Patrick Cragun & his son, Elisha Cragun. They said that the cemetery had no name and is in the church yard there.[1]
A trip was made to Whitestown, Ind., in Aug. 1964, by JEAN CRAGUN TOMBAUGH of Rochester, Ind., and a search of four graveyards was made. There were many Cragun graves, but none for our Patrick Cragun. Many were found that were impossible to read, and many that were broken off and the inscription missing. Only one cemetery had no name, and appeared to be very old indeed. It was just off the road enclosed with wire fence. I believe the twp is Eagle twp, and the cemetery is located about two miles south of Whitestown, on the left (east) side after crossing a small bridge. There was no church, although there might have been one originally.
married 1st - ROSE MARY ABBEY (born ca. 1852)
(research by Homer McCarty)
married 2nd - HANNAH ---- and/or ELSEY --
The home of Patrick Cragun was on Indian Creek, about 10 miles below Bristol, Va-Tenn, and near Bluff City, Tenn. He received a grant of 170 acres from the state of Tennessee on 10 Nov. 1784. He sold 164 acres lying on Indian Creek, Tenn., to CHARLES BARNETTE, 19 Feb. 1812. This Indenture shows his name as "PATRICK CREGGAN". As "PATRICK CREGAN" he helped in building a road in 1795, in old Sullivan County, Tenn. Sullivan county was created out of the northern part of Washington county, by the N.Car. legislature in October 1779. Most of the original records of Sullivan county were destroyed 22 Sept 1863 when a shell from a Federal Battery hit the Sullivan Courthouse at Blountsville, setting it afire and destroying County Court Minutes and Marriages from 1780, and also records of Wills.
The children of Patrick Cragun appear in Franklin County in 1814, where ELISHA CRAGUN entered land. It is not known for certain when Patrick Cragun, their father, came to Indiana. Patrick Cragun had ten (maybe 11) children all certain except the last one. ISAAC CRAIGAN (1785 Vir); ELISHA CRAGUN (1786); JOHN CRAGON (1787); TYRESHA CRAGUN (1789); LYDIA CRAGAN (1791); HANNAH CRAGUN (1795); CALEB CRAGAN (1796 TN); JOSHUA CRAGUN (1796 TN); ELIZABETH CRAGUN (b. 1 May 1799); SYREN CRAGUN (13 Aug 1801); and possibly another son LUCIUS CRAGUN (res. in New York).
Of these children, Isaac Craigan & his descs settled in Cass Co., Ind. Elisha Cragun and family went west with the Mormons to Utah. John Cragon family were found to have settled in Tenn., and Caleb Cragun was in Franklin Co., Ind. in 1819, where he entered land. Joshua Cragun and his twin, Caleb Cragun, were tax payers of Brookville twp, Franklin Co., Ind., in 1828. Joshua Cragun later removed to Cass Co., Ind., and was in Howard Co., Ind. by 1860. Elizabeth Cragun and her brother Syren Cragun went west to Utah, 21 Jan 1846.
Children:
1. ISAAC CRAIGAN, b. ca. 1785, Virginia; d. ca. 1857 Cass Co., Ind.
m. ESTHER L. CORNWELL, 1817
2. ELISHA CRAGAN, b. 22 Feb 1786, Virginia/Tenn.; d. 1847, Iowa
m. MARY OSBORNE, 1811
3. JOHN CRAGAN, b. ca. 1787, Tenn.; d. ----
m. ELIZABETH (....)
4. TYRESHA CRAGUN, b. ca. 1789, Tenn.; d. ----
m. ----
5. LYDIA CRAGAN, b. ca. 1791, Tenn.; d. ----
m. JAMES HICKS, 1819, Franklin Co., Ind.
6. HANNAH CRAGUN, b. ca. 1795, Tenn.; d. ----
m. (----) MELTON
7. CALEB CRAGAN (twin), b. 1796, Tenn.; d. ca. 1838, Franklin Co., Ind.
m. SARAH JAMES, 1820, Franklin Co., Ind.
8. JOSHUA CRAIGEN (twin), b. 1796, Tenn.; d. 1874, Howard Co., Ind.
m. SALLY RADER, 1822, Franklin Co., Ind.
9. ELIZABETH CRAGUN, b. 1 May 1799, Tenn.; d. ----
(unmd)
10. SYREN CRAGUN, b. 13 Aug 1801, Tenn.; d. ----
m. ----
11. LUCIUS CRAGUN, b. 1803, Tenn.; d.----
m. ----
12. WILLIAM F. CRAGIN,[2] b. 1819, Va/Tenn.; d. ----
m. ELIZA CASTEEL, 1843.
(Res. of Hancock Co., Ind. 1850 and 1860)
PATRICK CRAGUN'S MIGRATION TO AMERICA
Versions of Patrick Cragun's migration to America vary. The first one, by Homer McCarty, was forwarded by letter 25 July 1962, by LUCY C. FOULGER (Mrs. WALTON E. FOULGER), to JEAN (CRAGUN) TOMBAUGH of Rochester, Ind.:
"In Ireland Patrick Cragun's parents bound him out to a saddler for a number of years to learn the trade. Hearing much of that wonderful America to which so many people were going, Pat became obsessed with the desire to go there too. Without saying anything to his parents or his boss, he left the work bench and made his way to the sea. Fortunately a ship ready to sail for America lay anchored in the harbor.
"It seems in those days it was the custom of sea captains to pick up run-away boys and hold them on their ships for service for a number of years. Pat had heard of the practice and was too wise to be caught in such a trap. He made himself acquainted with the ship's master, obtained favors from him, and was able to make the voyage still a free boy (he thought). He was about 12 years of age at the time.
"However, once he had the boy on board, the Captain had views of his own regarding Pat. When the ship reached America, the Captain would not allow the boy to leave the ship. The night before the ship was to leave on its return trip to Ireland, Pat jumped overboard. It was a desperate attempt but it was also his only chance. Pat was a good swimmer for a boy, and reached the shore safely. There he hid himself in some long ricks of lumber, and remained in his hiding place nearly three days.
"The Captain searched his ship, then searched the shore for Pat. He made inquiries of the men at the lumber ricks, but no one had seen anything of a run-a-way boy. At length, concluding the boy had drowned trying to reach the shore, the captain hoisted anchor and sailed away. When the ship was fading out of sight, Pat came out of his hiding place more dead than alive, but still a free boy. And now he was in a free country.
"Patrick grew to manhood in South-west Virginia. Family tradition has this to say of him: That in early manhood he went to Massachusetts and became one of the 'Indians' who threw the English tea into Boston harbor. A genealogical history of S.W. Virginia states that one Patrick Cragun had been arrested the fourth time by the King's officers for his revolutionary tendencies. Patrick Cragun and wife, HANNAH, raised a family of eight children. Nothing much is known of them except as to ELIJAH CRAGUN and LYDIA CRAGUN."
A second version, as told by J.O.Q. CRAGUN, and retold by EVA CRAGUN HEINER, was sent by LUCY C. FOULGER (MRS. WALTON E. FOULGER) to JEAN CRAGUN TOMBAUGH 25 July, 1962:
"Late one November evening in 1931 an elderly gentleman and his son knocked at my door, and introduced themselves as distant relatives from Minneapolis, Minn. The elder man was JONATHAN O. Q. CRAGUN, a professor of Phrenology, and his son LELAND CRAGUN. They were on their way to California to spend the winter. They were anxious to meet their relatives along the way, and to get any genealogy that we had of the Craguns. I too was anxious to get some genealogy and soon discovered that this dear old gentleman at the age of 78 years had a very keen mind.
"They were our guests for several days and related many interesting things to us. J.O.Q CRAGUN was well informed on Mormonism. He said that his father had been a devout Latter Day Saint, having died at Nauvoo on the treck to Utah. His mother never joined the Church but went north after his father's death. This accounts for the indifference of most of that family.
"It is from this distant relative that I am able to give the following account of our g.g.grandfather, PATRICK CRAGUN."
"CALEB CRAGUN is the first ancestor that we have any knowledge of and he was born in Huntingdon, Huntingdonshire, England, near the home of OLIVER CROMWELL, about 1700. He moved to Ireland, marrying an Irish lady. Their son Patrick, born 1745 or 1746 had a most interesting life and was closely connected with our American government in its making. I should like to give you a brief sketch of his life as it was told to me by J.O.Q.C.
"Patrick Cragun had a great desire to come to America, so he, with 40 other Irishmen obtained a sailing vessel and provisions sufficient and more than enough to last the journey through. They sailed along and all went well until in mid-ocean a current, together with the trade-winds, sent their ship sailing to the calms around Cuba. The pecularity of these calms is that not a breeze stirs for weeks at a time.
"Here their ship floated and they waited. They were careful of their provisions but no breeze came to carry them on and they were not prepared for any such happenings. Gradually the food supply was gone, and they resorted to eating candles, boiled ropes and anything at all. Some of the men became prostrated. Others, with their tongues hanging out of their mouths, were savage. One day when hope was about despaired of, someone saw a steamship in the distance and made some feeble attempts to attract their attention. This proved successful. It was an English ship and friendly too. The crew came aboard the ill-fated vessel, bound the men with strong cord and carried them onto their own ship, keeping them bound and nursing them, gradually increasing their diet until they became well. Great wisdom was shown in keeping them bound in their savage starved-state until they were well.
"This English ship brought them on to America about the time that Mother England was demanding a tax on everything. Patrick Cragun became a citizen of the United States by choice, and naturally he became concerned with the way England was treating the Colonies. Many meetings were held in Old Faneuil Hall in Boston to discuss the tax problems and he attended those meetings.
"In March 1770, after the king's troops had been in the town for nearly a year, there occurred a scrimage in which seven soldiers fired into a crowd of townspeople, killing five and wounding several others.
"Many interesting incidents occurred. England insisted upon Americans paying taxes, but the Americans resisted. Finally, ships laden with tea were sent from England in the autumn of 1775, to Boston, New York, Philadelphia and Charlestown, and consignees were appointed to receive the tea. This was purely a political trick of King George III, and a way of saying 'what are you going to do about it?'. In the other cities they were forced to accept it, but not in Boston where they were under Samuel Adams who knew that he was backed by public opinion of the whole continent, and they did not accept it. Patrick Cragun was in the midst of this excitement and together with a small party of men, some of the best towns-folk, disguised as Indians, ripped open the tea chests and spilled their contents into the ocean. It was a formal defiance to the King and was so accepted.
"Patrick had four sons, JOSHUA who was killed in the Mexican war under General Scott at Vera Cruez[3]; CALEB, lived in North Indiana and of whom we have no record; ELISHA the third son and our great-grandfather, joined the L.D.S. church and began to treck west, but he died and was buried in Nauvoo with two of his children who died at that time; the fourth son LUCIUS, lived in New York and had two sons both eminent physicians.
"Our great-grandfather, Elisha Cragun who died at the beginning of the treck west, had a family of whom we know little. Two of his sons JAMES CRAGUN, the eldest, who married one of the Lane girls, joined the church and came west with his younger brother SIMEON CRAGUN, suffering the many tribulations but always happy to be one of the Pioneers. James fought in the Civil war under General Lott Smith and was called to Pioneer St.George country in the fall of 1863, but later moved his family to Cache Valley where he lived and became an active church and civic worker up there. The youngest son, Simeon Cragun, was born on the banks of the Platte River. The covered wagon company waited over one day, then the mother cared for her infant son from then on."
A third version was prepared by Merlin J. Stone, 20 April 1912, Ogden, Utah, which gives the following information:
"PATRICK CRAGUN, the earliest of the name that we trace to, was born about 1726[4] in Ireland and came to America when 18 years of age. He married a Holland lady (some say she was French) and lived north and made brick before the war. He enlisted in the Revolutionary war at age of 50, and served through the whole war. He helped to throw the 'tea' overboard in the Boston Harbor. He was a weaver and after the war settled near Nashville, Tenn. Children of Patrick Cragun were Caleb Cragun and Joshua Cragun (twins), Isaac Cragun, Elisha Cragun, John Cragun who went to North Carolina, and Hannah Cragun."
ISAAC CRAIGAN (1) (third gen.)
son of Patrick Cragun and Rose Mary [Abbey] Cragun
born ca. 1785, Vir./Tenn.
died: prior to 11 May 1857, Cass Co., Ind.[5]
buried: Olive Branch, southwest corner of Methodist Episcopal church,
Mill Creek, Murphy's farm family burial ground.[6]
married: ESTHER L. CORNWELL, 7 May 1817, Russell Co., Va.[7]
born ca. 1780, in N.Car. or Vir.; her parents are unkn.[8]
died: after 1860 Census (date & place unkn); bur. unkn
Isaac drafted in Russell Co., Va., 7-25-1814, svc in War of 1812.
Research by Col. (Ret.) Henry D. CRAGON of Birmingham, Alabama, disclosed that an ELISHA CRAGEN was in nearby Russell County, Va., in 1810; an ISAAC CRAGAN was there also in 1814, 1817 & 1820; and a JOSHUA CRAGUN, residence unknown in May 1817, who visited his brother Isaac a few hours after Isaac's marriage in Russell County, Va. Col. (Ret.) Henry D. Cragon is a descendant of JOHN CRAGON, brother of Isaac, Elisha & Joshua.
Children:
(?) (William F. Cragun, b.1819 Va/TN; or could be son of Patrick, Sr.?)
(A) Susannah Jane Craigan, b. 1825; m. Jonathan SHIDLER, 1847.
(B) Patrick S. Cragan, b. 1827 Ind.; m.1st, Lydia V. LAMBORN, 1857; m.2nd,
Lucy C. FELLERS, 1883.
(C) Caleb J. Cragan, b. 1829 Ind.; m. Margaret HUMES, 1871
(D) Mary Cragan, b. 11 June 1831 Ind.; m. Joseph W. HILL, 8 May 1849[9]
(E) Martha Craigan, b.1835 Ind.; m. James MONTGOMERY, Jr., 1857
(F) Esther L. Craigan, b. 1837 Ind.; m. James G. KENDRICK, 1860
(A) SUSANNAH JANE CRAIGAN, b. 1825
d.
bur.
m. JONATHAN SHIDELER, 2 Feb 1847, Cass Co., Ind.[10]
b. (ca. 1823)?
d.
bur.
son of: George and Elizabeth (NEFF) Shideler, of Clinton tp, Cass Co.Ind.
Jonathan Shideler had a sister, Elizabeth N., who married Zachariah Cragun, son of Joshua and grandson of Patrick Cragun, Sr.
Indenture dated 3 March 1865, conveys real estate in Cass Co., Ind., from JOSEPH HILL and MARY HILL his wife, of Cass Co., Ind., to JONATHAN SHIDLER of same[11].
Children:
(a) Urias Shidler, b. 1847
(b) Thomas Shidler, b. 1849
(B) PATRICK S. CRAGAN, b. 13 Feb 1827/29, Ind.
d. (date unkn)
bur.: Olive Branch cem. southwest corner, Methodist Episcopal church on Mill Creek. Murphy's family burial ground[12]
Res. of Patrick S. Cragan, & wife Lydia, in 1860 was Harrison twp, Cass Co., Ind. This family included children: Cyrus Cragan ae 2, and Anna E. ae 1. Also with them was ESTHER CRAGAN, age 80 b. NCar, who was the widowed mother of Patrick S. Cragan.
Patrick S. Craigan of Cass Co., Ind., sold to Elijah W. Cornwell of Hamilton Co., Ohio, 80 acres in Cass Co., 26 Sept 1852; recorded 20 June 1853, at Logansport, Ind. Then on 3 Oct 1863, Alvin M. Higgins of Cass Co., Ind., conveys 60 a. of real estate in Pulaski Co., Ind. to Patrick S. Cragan.
On 23 Aug 1862, Patrick S. Cragan and his brother Caleb (both of Cass Co. Ind.) bought land in Cass Co., from JAMES MONTGOMERY, JR. and his wife MARTHEO (of Fulton co., Ind.) recorded 21 Sept 1863. Martheo was a sister of Patrick S. & Caleb Cragan.
Also, on 3 Oct 1863, Patrick S., his brother Caleb J. & Caleb's wife Lydia V. Cragan (of Cass Co., Ind.) sell land in Cass Co., to Barnard J. Burch (of Cass Co.); recorded 3 Oct 1863.[13]
He was of Cass Co., Ind. on 6 Oct 1863, when he bought real estate in Pulaski Co., Ind., at Francesville, from Alvin M. Higgins of Cass Co., Ind. The real estate was in Pulaski Co.
married: (first) LYDIA V. LAMBORN, 15 April 1857, Wm K. Hoback, min.[14]
b. 1 Jan 1830 in Ohio (Census gives her age in 1860 as 22 yrs)
d. (unkn)
bur.
dau. of:
married: (2nd) LUCY FELLERS, 29 Nov. 1883[15]
b.
d.
dau. of:
Children:
(a) CYRUS CRAGAN, b. 1858 Ind.
(b) ANNA E. CRAGAN, b. 1859 Ind.
(c) PHINETTA "Nettie" ADEL CRAGAN, b. 12 Jan 1862 Pul. Co., Ind.
d. 1926
bur. Leiters Ford IOOF cem., Aubbee twp, Fulton Co., Ind.
m. WILLIAM ROBINSON, 2 May 1880, Pul. Co., Ind.[16]
b. 1849 in Vir.; s/o Job & Catherine (----) Robinson.
d. 1929, bur. Leiters Ford IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind.
res. Delong, Aubbee twp, Fulton Co., Ind.; Civil War svc Co.A 155th Regt, organized in Indpls 18 April 1865.
Children:[17]
1. Lee B. Robinson, b. 7 Nov 1881; d. 9 Dec 1965
bur. Leiters Ford, Aubbee twp, Fulton Co., Ind.
m. Mable DECK, 7 Nov 1906, Fulton Co., Ind.[18]
(b. 19 Feb 1888; d. 4 Oct 1973, bur. beside her husband)
2. Loyd V. Robinson, b. 1883, Winamac, Pulaski Co., Ind.
d. 1950, bur. Leiters Ford IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind.
m. Grace SHADLE "of Delong", 22 March 1903[19], at Delong, Ind.;
(1884-1957) dau. of Charles Wesley and Nellie (Newcomer) Shadle
children:
(i) Mildred G. Robinson, b. 30 Aug 1903 (Fult. Co., IN B.R.)
(ii) Cecil V. Robinson, b. 15 Nov 1908 (Fult. Co., IN B.R.)
(iii) Pauline L. Robinson, b. 8 Nov 1915 (Fult. Co., IN B.R.)
m. Lesley F. JAMES (1912-1966, Leiters Ford IOOF cem., Aubbee twp, Fulton Co., Ind.)
3. Letcher A. Robinson, b. 2 Dec 1885, nr Star City, Pul. Co.,Ind.[20].
d. Wed., 22 March 1967, ae 81, at Parkview hospital, Plymouth,Ind res. of Delong, Ind.; bur. to be Leiters Ford cem., Fulton Co., Ind., a son of William and Finetta (Cragan) Robinson.
His obituary gives survivors: two daus, Mrs. Everett MURHLING of Kewanna, Ind., and Mrs. Madonna KELLY of Bradenton, Flo.; two sons, L. O. Robinson of Indianapolis, and Bill Robinson of South Bend, Ind.; a bro., Don Robinson of Peru, Ind.; four sisters, Mrs. George MAMLEY of Huntington, Ind., Mrs. Ray WOLFRAM of South Bend, Ind., Mrs. Mary COPLEN of Bloomington, Ind., and Mrs. Seth CARPENTER of Peru, Ind.; also 13 grandchildren.[21]
married: Nora DECK, 19 Oct 1904, at Maxinkuckee, Ind.[22] dau. of John and Carrie (Taylor) Deck
of DeLong.
Children:
(i) Olive C. Robinson, b. 4 Sept 1905, Fulton Co., Ind.[23]
d. 1926; bur. Leiters Ford IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind.
(ii) Geraldine Robinson, b. 20 Sept 1909, Fulton Co., Ind.[24]
m. Everette V. MURHLING, 8 June 1929, Fulton Co., Ind.[25]
(iii) Letcher O. Robinson, b. 30 April 1913, Fulton Co., Ind.[26]
(iv) Avanelle Robinson, b. 7 Dec 1917, Fulton Co., Ind.[27]
m. Forest A. BROCKWAY, 25 Oct 1947, Fulton Co., Ind[28]
4. William Robinson, b. 1888
5. Jennie Robinson, b. 1890
m. George MAMLEY
res. in Huntington, Ind.
6. Don R. Robinson, b. 1892 - d. 1977
bur. Leiters Ford IOOF cem., Aubbee twp, Fulton co., Ind.
m. Effie May SHEELEY, 25 Jan 1913, Fulton Co., Ind.[1]
b.1894, d. 1971, bur. beside her husband
7. Evelyn Robinson, b. 27 Dec 1895 Fulton Co., Ind.[2]
m. Ray ("Rea") W. WOLFRAM, 17 May 1922, Fulton Co., Ind.[3]
8. Mildred May Robinson, b. 8 Nov 1899, Fulton co., Ind.
teacher of DeLong, Ind.
m. Elijah Gordon COPELAND, 19 June 1924, by James Milton Williams, Min. of M.E. Church,
Fulton Co., Ind.[4]
b. 18 Feb 1895 Clay Co., Ind., son of Joseph (b.TN) and Jane A. (Gordon) Copeland
(b. Penn.).
Teacher, and res. of Jasonville, Ind.
9. Leta June Robinson, b. 6 June 1903, Fulton Co., Ind.[5]
m. Seth CARPENTER,
res. at 12 Flora Dr., Peru, Ind. 46970.
(C) CALEB J. CRAGAN, b. 1829 in Indiana
d. 16 Oct 1907 ae 73 years, in Logansport, Cass Co., Ind.[6]
bur. (unkn)
Caleb J. Cragan, his brother Patrick S. & wife Lidy V. Cragan, all of Cass Co., Ind., convey land in Cass Co., 3 Oct 1863. On the same day they purchased land in Pulaski Co., Ind., from Alvin M. Higgins. The land in Cass Co., appears to have been the same land conveyed to Caleb J. and his brother Patrick S. Cragan, by their sister & brother-in-law Martheo and James MONTGOMERY, Jr. of Fulton Co., Ind., 23 Aug 1862.
married: MARGRET HUMES, 14/17 Sept 1871, Fulton Co., Ind.[7]
(N.f.r.)
(D) MARY CRAGON, b. 11 June 1831 in Ind.
d. 24 Jan 1875, and buried in Moon cem., Aubbee twp, Fulton Co., Ind.
She was a dau. of Isaac & Esther (----) Craigan of Cass Co., Ind.
married: JOSEPH W. HILL 8 May 1849 in Cass Co., Ind. (a blacksmith)
b. 18 June 1825 in Ohio, a son of Joseph & Elizabeth "Esther" (Jenkins) Hill, Cass Co., Ind.
pioneers.
d. 30 Jan 1891, bur. in Moon cem., Aubbee twp, Fulton Co., Ind.
Joseph W. Hill m.2nd, Elizabeth LONGAEN, 8 Sept 1875, Fulton Co.,Ind.[8]
Soon after the marriage of Joseph W. and Mary (Cragon) Hill, they removed to Fulton county. Two years later they returned to Cass County where they resided until 1863, at which time they returned to Fulton Co., and remained in that place for thirteen years. Their last move was to Starke County, Ind., where he died several years later.[9]
Joseph (W.) Hill ae 36 (Ohio) and his wife Mary ae 29 (Ind), were householders of Cass Co., Ind., Harrison twp, in the 1860 census. Their five children (ages 10 to 2 yrs & all b. in Ind.) were with them: Patrick, John, Marshall, Isaac and Edwin?
Children:
(a) PATRICK URIAS HILL, b. 6 March 1850, Clay twp, Cass Co., Ind.
d. 5 March 1913, Long Beach, Calif.
bur.
m. Abigail Elizabeth HUDKINS, 21 March 1875, Fulton Co., Ind.[10]
b. 30 May 1854; d. 7 Oct 1927, Long Beach, Calif.
dau. of Archibald E. Hudkins, Sr. (d. 16 Aug 1886, ae 69y-9m-(10?)d) and wife, Sarah (----) Hudkins (d. 16 Jan 1885, ae 63y-7m-24d); both bur. in Shaffer cem., Union twp, Fulton Co., Ind.
children:
1. Anna M. Hill, b. 1876 in Ind. "dau. of P.U. & A. Hill"
d. (10?) June 1877, age 1yr----
bur. in Shaffer cem., Union twp, Fulton Co., Ind.
2. Mary E. Hill, b. 1 Jan 1878 in Ind. "dau. of P.U. & A. Hill"
d. 12 Sept 1878, age 8m-11d
bur. in Shaffer cem., Union twp, Fulton Co., Ind.
3. Sadie Hill, b. Aug 1879, Kewanna, Fulton Co., Ind. "dau. of P.U. and A. Hill"; d. 15 Jan 1881,
age 1y-5m-11d
bur. in Shaffer cem., Union twp, Fulton Co., Ind.
4. Eva E. Hill, b. 30 Aug 1882, Kewanna, Fulton Co., Ind.
d. 1901
m. Charles LEWIS, 6 Dec 1899, Fulton Co., Ind.[11]
5. Ray Adam Hill, b. 27 July 1885, Kewanna, Fulton Co., Ind.
d. May -- 1948
m. Celia E. HALLEY, 8 Oct 1910, Fulton Co., Ind.
children:
(i) Virgil Ray Hill, b. 4 Sept 1911, Oakville, Wash.
m (1st), 1933 Frances RANGE
m.(2nd), 12 Aug 1937, Eva Mae MADEN
(ii) Millie Adeline Hill, b. 2 June 1913
m. H. GLOVER, 1929
(iii) Milton Fred Hill, b. 25 Aug 1915, Lebam, Wash.
m. Louise RANGE, 1933
(iv) Lowell Bruce Hill, b. 12 July 1923, Labam, Wash.
m. Mae FOSS, 1942
(v) Kenneth Ishmal Hill, b. Jan. -- 1926, Labam, Wash.
m. Dot PEPPER, 1945
6. Guy Hill, b. 22 July 1887, Kewanna, Fulton Co., Ind.
d. 9 Jan 1959
m. Mary Lou VAUGHAN, 1 May 1911, Glendora, Calif.
7. Ira E. Hill, b. 10 April 1889, Kewanna, Fulton Co., Ind.
8. Otto Hill, b. 24 Dec 1890, Kewanna, Fulton Co., Ind.
9. Ervin Jay Hill, b. 22 Sept 1892, Kewanna, Fulton Co., Ind.
10. Ernest Elmer Hill, b.---
11. Amy Artella Hill, b.---
(b) JOHN J. HILL, b.ca. 1852 in Indiana (ae 8 yrs in 1860 census)
d. (unkn)
bur.
His residence in 1880 was in Union twp, and he was a "mason". Some records of 1896 indicate that he was living in Rochester city, at Plum and Monroe streets, with three children entered in school.
m. Eleanor ("Ellen; Elnora") McKEE, 21 May 1876 Fulton Co., Ind.[12]
b. 1856 in Ind. (parents also b. Ind.)
d. 4 Sept 1913, ae 57 yrs, Fulton Co., Ind.
bur. Rochester IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind., beside two of her children.
(2nd m.?) Louise A. BABCOCK, 14 April 1915, Fulton Co., Ind.[13]
Children:
1. Floyd O. Hill, b. 1877 Fulton Co., Ind. (Also called "Loyd A.")
d.
m. May HUBBARD, 30 Jan 1890, by J. L. Bryan, Rochester, Ind.[14]
b.ca. 1874/75, dau. of John & Melissa (Reding) Hubbard.
2. Edward Hill, b. May -- 1880 in Indiana
3. Bertha M. Hill, b. 20 Oct 1883, "dau. of John J. & E.",
d. 2 Jan 1900, age 16 yrs, at Rochester, Ind.
bur. in Rochester IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind., beside her mother.
4. Hugh Evert Hill, b. 9 March 1890, "son of John J. & E.",
d. 15 Oct 1902, age 12 yrs, at Rochester, Ind.
bur. in Rochester IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind., beside his mother.
(c) MARSHALL M. HILL, b. 1854 in Indiana
d. 1931
bur. in Rochester IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind.
He was a res. of Rochester city in 1880, a cooper ae 25, with his wife Sarah (ae 22), and two sons, Melvin & Edward. These two children were in school in Rochester in 1896, but not found in latter years.
m. Sarah E. CARTER, 3 Oct 1875, Fulton co., Ind.[15]
b. 1855 Ind., dau. of Milton & Hannah M. S. Carter of Union twp.
d. 1937, bur. in Rochester IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind.
Children:
1. Melvin L. Hill, b. 1876, Ind.
d. 1962, bur. in Rochester IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind.
m. Ludy (----).
(b. 1880, d. 1961)
2. Edward M. Hill, b. 1878, Ind.
d. 1955, bur. in Rochester IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind.
m. Ella May PRIEST, 25 Dec 1899, Fulton Co., Ind.[16]
b. 1877 Ind., dau. of Zachariah Tailor Priest & wife Laura, of Rochester twp, 1870 & 1880.
d. 1959, bur. beside her husband.
children:
(i) Mildred Louise Hill, b. 28 May 1902, Fulton Co., Ind. (Births)
(ii) Loreen Hill, b. 4 July 1905, Fulton Co., Ind. (Births)
(d) ISAAC C. HILL, b. 29 Feb 1856, Union twp, Cass Co., Ind.
d. 5 Sept 1910, ae 54 years, at the home of his son, Walter, in South Bend, Ind. (see obit.)
bur. Leiters Ford IOOF cem., Aubbee twp, Fulton Co., Ind.
He was a farmer and carpenter, and operated a saw-mill at Leiters Ford.Isaac (C.) Hill ae 24, and wife Rebecca ae 20 are included in the census records of Aubbee twp in 1880. There were no children listed. School Enumeration lists, cemetery records, and the two documents on the following pages, give names of their children.
m. Rebecca A. LUNSFORD, 7 Feb 1878 Fulton Co., Ind.[17]
b. 28 Jan 1860 in Ind.; dau. of Hiram Lunsford and his first wife, Rebecca (Moore) Lunsford, natives of Ohio, who settled in Pulaski Co., Ind., 3-1/2 m. south-east of Monterey.[18]
d. 1 July 1904, Fulton Co., Ind.; bur. beside her husband.
Children:
1. (infant) -------- (dec'd)
2. Walter Hill, b. 1882, Union twp, Fulton Co., Ind.
(ae 14 yrs, school enumeration list of 1896)
Res. of South Bend, Ind., 1910.
3. Harvey Hill, b.29 Nov 1882
d. 30 Aug 1883, age 9mo & 1da; "son of I.C. & R.A."
bur. in Leiters Ford IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind.
4. Roy Hill, b. 27 July 1884, "son of I.C. & R.A."
d. 29 March 1889, age 4y-8m-2d;
bur. Leiters Ford IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind.
5. Elmer Hill, b. June -- 1887/86
Res. of State of Washington, 1910.
6. Bessie G. Hill, b. 1 Dec 1885
d. 24 Dec 1893, age 8mos & 23da; "dau. of I.C. & R.A."
bur. Leiters Ford IOOF cem., Fulton Co., Ind.
7. (white fem.) --------- b. 25 Oct 1895; "ch. of Isaac Hill & Rebecca Lunsford Hill", Fulton Co., Ind. Birth Records.
This might be the Ruby, ae 7, who was signed into school in 1903 by Isaac Hill. N.f.r.
The Evening Sentinel, Rochester, Ind., Wed., 7 Sept 1910.
OBITUARY. "ISAAC HILL, a resident of the Leiters vicinity, died Monday afternoon, 5 Sept at the home of his son, WALTER, at South Bend. Some time since Mr. Hill suffered a stroke of paralysis from which he never recovered and following came the second stroke on Monday, which caused his death. The deceased was born 29 Feb 1856, being 54 years old at the time of his death. He grew to manhood in the near vicinity of Leiters, and was at the time of his death vice-president of the Leiters bank. He was also ex-trustee of Aubbeenaubbee twp, and was well and popularly known throughout the county.
"He leaves two sons, WALTER of South Bend, and ELMER who resides in the state of Washington. Besides the two sons, there are four brothers and three sisters, MARSH and JOHN HILL of this city, being the brothers of the deceased.
"Since the death of his wife, which occurred some eight years ago, he resided with Mr. & Mrs. Al Yelton at Leiters, and was actively engaged in various business pursuits at the time of his death.
"The funeral will be held Friday afternoon at the Methodist church in Leiters. The exact hour for the service has not been set because it is not known when the son from Washington will arrive."
Elia W. Peattie, History of United States, Indiana and Fulton County, 1896, p.85.
"ISAAC C. HILL was born in Union township, Cass Co., Ind., 29 Feb 1856. His parents were JOSEPH and MARY (CRAGON) HILL. His father was a native of Cass county, Ind., and a son of JOSEPH and ELIZABETH HILL, who were pioneer settlers of Cass county. Soon after the marriage of Joseph Hill and Mary Cragon, they came to Fulton County. Two years later they returned to Cass County, where they resided until 1863, in which year they returned to Fulton county, and here lived for thirteen years and then moved to Starke county, where he died several years later. His wife preceded him in death.
"They had twelve children, viz: PATRICK, JOHN, MARSHALL, ISAAC C., EDWARD, CALEB, JOSEPHINE, LUCINDA, ETTA, MILO, MOLLIE and MINNIE.
"Isaac C. Hill began the battle of life for himself at the age of seventeen years. He learned the carpenter's trade, and has followed this, together with farming, all his life. He was married in 1878 to REBECCA, daughter of HIRAM LUMSFORD, Esq., of Pulaski County. For five years after Mr. Hill's marriage he resided in Union township, this county, but since then he has resided in Aubbeenaubbee township. He has operated with success a saw-mill at Leiters Ford; owns a good farm and is in prosperous circumstances.
"Unto him and his wife there have been born the following offspring:
Infant, dec'd; WALTER; HARVEY, dec'd; ROY; ELMER; BESSIE, dec'd.
"Mr. Hill is a firm democrat in politics, and in 1890 was elected trustee of his township. As trustee he served five years with satisfaction to the people. Both he and his wife are members of the Baptist church, and they number among the leading families of their community."
(e) EDWARD HILL, b. 1858 in Indiana
d. 1940/43
(f) CALEB J. HILL, b. 1863, Cass Co., Ind.
d. 15 Jan 1910, age 42 years, at Ora, Starke Co., Ind.
Letters of Adm. date 2 Feb 1910; disch'd 14 Oct 1912, Starke Co.[19]
bur. (unkn)
m.(1st), Rena RANK, 1 Oct 1886 Starke Co., Ind.[20]
m.(2nd), Matilda M. REASONER, 17 Nov 1895, by R. W. Barton, Pastor M.E. church, Hamlet; wit. by J.C. and Ellen Reasoner; at home, Knox, Ind.; her age next bthday 22, and his 32; her first m., and his second m.
b.ca. 1874 Benton Co., Ohio; dau. of J. C. Reasoner & wife Ellen (Weed) Reasoner, of Starke Co., Ind.[21]
d.
bur.
(g) JOSEPHINE HILL, b.ca. 1863
d.
m. Sol. ROMICK
(h) LUCINDA HILL, b.ca. 1865
m.
(i) ETTA MARY HILL, b.ca. 1867
d.
m. William "Bill" WILLSON, 29 March 1888 Starke Co., Ind., by C. J. Corbin, minister[22]
(j) MILO HILL, b. March -- 1870; d."young" 1872
bur. Moon cem., Aubbee twp, Fulton Co., Ind.
(k) MOLLIE HILL, b. (unkn)
(l) MINNIE HILL, b. (unkn)
JOSEPH HILL FAMILY (Cass & Fulton Cos., Ind.)
b. 28 Jan 1798, Washington Co., Pa. (his fa. was foreign born)
d. 12 May 1876, Cass Co., Ind.[23]
bur. Fletcher's Lake cem., Wayne twp, Fulton Co., Ind.
Removed to Fulton Co., Ind. in 1852; then to Cass Co., Ind. 1873.
Census 1860 Wayne twp: Joseph Hill, Hester, Martha A., Orlando and
Israel; 1870 (ibid): Joseph Hill, Hester and Israel J.
m. Esther Elizabeth "Hester" JENKINS, prob. in Penn.
b. 9 Aug 1805, Jefferson Co., Ohio
d. 24 Jan 1873, Fulton Co., Ind.
bur. beside her husband in Fletcher's Lake cem.
children:
(A) William J. "Joseph W." Hill, b. 18 June 1825 in Ohio
m. Mary CRAGON, 1849 Cass Co., Ind.
(B) Mary Jane Hill, b. 21 May 1834 Wash. Co., Pa.
m. Benjamin F. YANTIS, 1855 Fulton Co., Ind.
(C) Martha A. Hill, b.ca. 1835, Pa.
(D) Orlando Hill, b.ca. 1840, Pa.; d. 11 Feb 1907, Winamac Ind.
m. Savina (---)
b.ca. 1845 Ind-Pa-Pa
res. of Wayne twp, fulton Co., Ind., 1870 & 1880.
children:
(a) Rosella Hill, b.ca. 1867 Ind-Pa-Pa
(b) David M. Hill, b.ca. 1869 Ind-Pa-Pa
(c) John Hill, b.ca. 1873 Ind-Pa-Pa
JACOB YANTIS, (first gen.) b.ca. 1750; d.a.6-10-1805
Native of Germany, who came to America before the Rev. War, and served as a pvt from Pennsylvania, under General Greene.
married twice: one of his wives was Ruth CRISMAN[24]
ch.:
GEORGE, JOHN, AMOS, AARON, REBECCA, RACHEL, ENOCH and JESSE.
AARON YANTIS, (second gen.)
b. 11 April 1787 in Boyle Co., Ky
d. 19 July 1861 in Bethlehem twp, Cass Co., Ind.
bur. (unkn)
He moved to Logansport, Ind. about 1836, and lived with his children till his death.[25]
married: Martha COCHRAN, 1812 in Spencer Co., Ky
b. 1790 Clark Co., Ky, a dau. of Robert & Jane (Laird) Cochran.
d. 30 March 1835, in Spencer Co., Ky
bur. (unkn)
ch.:
JANE, JAMES, JACOB, JOHN, ROBERT, SAMUEL, WILLIAM L. and BENJAMIN F.
(C) JACOB YANTIS, b. 15 Dec 1817 Spencer Co., Ky; son of Aaron & Martha
d. (unkn)
m. Margaret A. SCOTT, 9 Oct 1845 Spencer Co., Ky
b. 28 Nov 1824 in Shelby Co., Ky
d.
Jacob Yantis moved to Graves Co., Ky, in Dec 1845, then in Nov. 1857 he moved to Harrison twp, Sect 14, Cass Co., Ind. They are known to have had at least five children.
ch.:
(a) Mary M. Yantis
(b) Viola Yantis
(c) Jane E. Yantis
(d) Aaron S. Yantis (dec'd)
(e) Emma F. Yantis
(H) BENJAMIN F. YANTIS, b. 2 Feb 1831, Spencer Co., Ky; son of Aaron & Martha (Cochran) Yantis
d. (unkn)
Benjamin F. moved to Logansport, Cass Co., Ind. about 1836, remaining for two years; then to Clay twp, Cass Co., Ind., until about 1841 when he moved once again to Bethlehem twp, Cass Co., Ind. He remained there until his death.
m. Mary Jane HILL, 13 Sept 1855 Fulton Co., Ind.[26]
b. 21 May 1834, Washington Co., Pa.; dau. of JOSEPH & ESTHER ELIZABETH "Hester" (JENKINS) HILL, natives of Washington Co., Penn. & Jefferson Co., Ohio respectively. They came to Fulton Co., Ind. 1852, where her mother died 1873. The father came to Cass Co., Ind. 1873, and died there.
children:
(a) Harvey C. Yantis, b. 18 Aug 1857
(b) Mary E. Yantis, b. 5 Dec 1858
(c) Esther A. Yantis, b. 11 Oct 1860; d. 9 Sept 1862
(d) Elvira A. Yantis, b. 7 July 1862
m. Sumner E. BUCK (of Bethlehem twp, Cass Co., Ind.)
(e) Ruthanna Yantis, b. 14 May 1864
(f) Joseph A. Yantis, b. 9 June 1866
(g) Lyman Yantis, b. 21 Jan 1872
(h) Etta Yantis, b. 7 Dec 1873; d. 26 March 1880
(E) MARTHA "MARTHEO" CRAIGAN, b.ca. 1835/40 in Ind.
(age 15 years, dau. of Isaac & Esther Craigan of Clay twp, Cass Co., Ind. in census record of 1850.
d. (unkn)
m. JAMES MONTGOMERY, JR., 3 Sept 1857 Cass Co., Ind.[27]
b.ca. 1837 in Ohio
d.
James Montgomery, Jr. (ae 23) and wife Martha (20), were residents of Wayne twp, Fulton Co., Ind., in 1860 census records, with a son Tilman M. Montgomery ae 1 year.
In 1862 (Aug 23) James Montgomery, Jr. and Martheo, his wife, of Fulton Co., Ind. convey to Caleb and Patrick Cragun of Cass Co., Ind., forty acres in Cass Co., Ind. This land was later sold by Caleb and Patrick Cragun to Barnard J. Burch of Cass Co., Ind., on 3 Oct 1863.
Children:
(a) Tilman M. Montgomery, b.ca. 1859 in Ind.
(F) ESTHER L. CRAIGAN, b.ca. 1837 in Ind.
(ae 13 years, dau. of Isaac & Esther Craigan of Clay twp, Cass Co.Ind. in census record of 1850)
d. (unkn)
m. JAMES G. KENDRICK, 21 July 1860 Cass Co., Ind.[28]
GEORGE SHIDELER, family of Cass Co., Ind.
b.ca. 1795 in Washington Co., Pa.; to Cass Co., Ind. ca. 1832
d. 23 Dec 1875 in Cass Co., Ind.
bur. St.Johns (or Old Shideler) cem., Clinton twp, Cass Co., Ind. in south-west 1/4 sec.3
m. Elizabeth NEFF
b.ca. 1793 in Virginia
d.
children: (4 known)
(A) Jonathan Shideler, b.ca. 1823
m. Susannah Jane CRAIGAN, 2 Feb 1847 Cass Co., Ind.
(B) Elizabeth N. Shideler, b.ca. 1830 nr Eaton, Preble Co., Ohio
m. Zachariah CRAGUN (son of Joshua & Sarah), 13 Oct 1850
(C) Abraham Shideler, b.ca. 1835 in Ohio/Ind (census)
m.
(D) Isaac Shideler, b. 22 July 1835, Clinton twp, Cass Co., Ind.
youngest of a fam. of 9 children.
He entered the army in July 1862, enlisting in the 55th Ind. Infty, 100-days' men. After his service ended he returned to Cass Co., Ind. and entered the clothing business at Logansport in partnership with G. R. Thomas. He purchased his partner's interest in 1867, and he continued in this line of work until 1882.[29]
ELISHA CRAGUN (2) (third gen.)
son of Patrick and Rose Mary (Abbey) Cragun
born: 22 Feb 1786, in Russell Co., Va.
died: 1847, Nauvoo, Council Bluffs, Iowa/ Winter Quarters, Neb.
War 1812 service, at New Orleans, under Jackson
Elisha was an early settler of Franklin Co., Ind., purchasing land in Metamora twp as "Elisha Cragan" in 1814; and in Butler twp as "Elisha Cragon" in 1814. Another tract book entry calls him "Elisha Cragun (Sept 5, 1814). Elish Craigen was a taxpayer of Brookville twp in 1817; and Elisha Cragun was a householder in the town of Brookville in 1820 census, of Richland, Rush Co., Ind. in 1830, and of Eagle twp, Boone Co., Ind. in 1840. He sold land to Washington St.Clair 8 Sept 1845 in Boone Co., Ind.[30]
Eva (Cragun) Heiner's fine book on the Cragun family tells that Elisha Cragun and his son, Hiram, cleared away the fine black walnut trees on their heavily timbered farm land, and burned them in piles to get rid of them.
Elisha Cragun and his whole family were converted and baptized to the Latter-day Church of Jesus Christ in 1843, except the eldest daughter who had married and moved away. They were baptized in a stream called "Jackson's Run" which flows through the Pleasant View Church yard. His wife had died in 1844, Elisha sold his land in 1845, and then made his way to Nauvoo where he died. This was where more than 600 members of the church died in the winter of 1846-47.[31]
married: MARY OSBORN, in 1811
b. 17 Dec 1790 in Russell Co., Va.; a dau. of James & Mary (Whitaker) Osborn, slave & land owners of Virginia.
Elisha Cragun was 25 and she was 21 yrs old when they were married.
d. 14 Dec 1844, Pleasant View, Eagle twp, Boone Co., Ind., on their farm.
bur. on the farm, by the side of a dau., Abigail, who died three days later, 17 Dec 1844.
At the time a large walnut tree marked the spot, but now it is impossible to find the place.
JAMES OSBORN
b.abt 1774, Rowan Co., N.Car., son of Caleb & Hannah Osborn
d. 14 Dec 1821, Castle's Woods, Washington Co., Va.
(Will date: 4-29-1816; prob. 5-7-1822, Russell Co., Va. WB 4:34)
m. Mary WHITAKER, (b.ca. 1778)
James Osborn is of record as a soldier at Moore's Fort in 1777[32]
children:
1. Mary Osborn, b. 12-17-1790; m. Elisha CRAGUN
2. Jonathan Osborn, b.
3. Lucreece (Lucrita) Osborn
(stolen by Indians, taken to Canada, then returned after four years)
4. Elizabeth Osborn
5. Lucy Osborn
6. Abigail Osborn
7. Hulda Osborn
(a descendant is Mrs. Rita Sutton of Virginia)
8. Polly Osborn
9. Solomon Osborn
Children:
(A) Rebecca Cragun, b. 25 Sept 1812, Sullivan Co., Tenn.
m. Aaron BEEMAN
(B) James Cragun, b. 26 July 1814, Connorsville, Fayette Co., Ind.
m. Eleanor LANE
(C) Hyrum Cragun, b. 8 Dec 1816, Brookville, Franklin Co., Ind.
m. Reiter DOOLEY
(D) Mary Martha "Molly" Cragun, b. 17 Dec 1819, Brookville, Franklin Co., Ind.
m.(1st), Jacob BEELER
m.(2nd), David McOLNEY, widr.
(E) Enoch Cragun, b. 14 Jan 1821, Brookville, Franklin Co., Ind.
m. Mary "Molly" PETERS
(F) Abigail Cragun, b. 17 Dec 1823, Brookville, Franklin Co., Ind.
d. 17 Dec 1844, Eagle twp, Boone Co., Ind.
(G) Tyresha Cragun, b. 28 April 1825, Brookville, Franklin Co., Ind.
m. George NORVILLE
(H) Simeon Cragun, b. 13 Aug 1827, Richland, Rush Co., Ind.
m. Susan MOWER
(I) Tabitha Cragun, 5 March 1830, Richland, Rush Co., Ind.
m. Edwin Rueben LINDSAY
(J) Sarah Jane Cragun, b. 22 Feb 1833, Richland, Rush Co., Ind.
d. 27 Aug 1948
Sources for reading:
J. H. Beers & Co., Atlas of Franklin Co., Ind., 1882, pp.103, 104
Boone & Clinton Cos., Ind., Ft.Wayne, Ind. Lib., p.273 "Strange N. Cragun"
J. H. Beers & Co., Commem. Biog. Record of Prominent & Representative Men of
Indianapolis & Vicinity, 1908, p.491
Eva Cragun Heiner, 1347 Roosevelt Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah, 84105.
August J. Reifel, History of Franklin Co., Ind., Indianapolis, B. F. Bowen & Co., 1915, p.187, 95
(A) REBECCA CRAGUN, b. 25 Sept 1812, Sullivan Co., Tenn.
(dau. of Elisha & Mary [Osborn] Cragun)
d. 1856, in Ind.
Eva (Cragun) Heiner's book on the Cragun & Ellis family (p.38-39) tells that Rebecca (Cragun) Beaman and her husband, Aaron, seem to have been in Iowa with the Mormon group. However, the two sons evidently returned to Indiana. This was indicated in a letter written 4 Jan 1909 from Chicago, Ill., by Dr. Wiley Moroni Cragun, who was studying medicine, and visited Elisha Beaman (son of Rebecca) who was living in the country seven miles from Lebanon, Ind. The letter said: "This man is seventy-two years old and is one of the party who turned back when they reached Council Bluffs, Iowa."
m. 29 Dec 1832, AARON BEAMAN
b.
Aaron Beeman was living with his bro-i-law, Enoch Cragun, in 1860 census.
Two children born: (a) Elisha Cragun Beaman, and (b) Jasper Beeman.
Children:
(a) ELISHA CRAGUN BEAMAN, b. 1838 in Rush Co., Ind.
d.
m. Catherine LUCAS, 22 March 1866
b.
ch.:
1. Favella Beaman, b. 1867 Boone Co., Ind.
m. James H. MILLER, 21 Aug 1887
2. Dennis Beeman, b. 1869; d.y.
3. Larkin Beeman, b. 1872
4. Thyra Beeman, b. 1873
m. Cornelius R. YATES, 18 Aug 1889
5. Myra Beeman, b. 1874
m. George RICHARDSON, 25 June 1900
6. Minnie Beeman, b. 1876
7. Berthie Beeman, b. 1879
m. Walter N. PERRINE, 3 Sept 1899
(b) JASPER BEEMAN, b. 1841 Boone Co., Ind.
d.
m.(1), Susan HAND, 11 April 1861
b. (unkn); d. 19 Aug 1897
m.(2nd), Amanda MANTOOTH, 29 Nov 1904 (no children)
ch.:
1. Writter R. Beeman, b. 1861
m. John O. DODSON, 25 March 1883
2. Emma J. Beeman, b. 1863 Boone Co., Ind.
m. Jacob D. QUICK, 8 Nov 1888
3. Frances Beeman, b. 1864 Boone Co., Ind.
4. Perry Beeman, b. 1867 Boone Co., Ind.
5. Annie Beeman, b. 1869
d. (unkn)
m. Grandville A. MAYFIELD, 21 Nov 1889 Boone Co., Ind.[33]
b. 1865
d. 1915; bur. Mts Run Reg. Bapt. Church, Whitestown, Boone Co., Ind.
son of: Greenberry Mayfield (b. 1828 Ky) & Elenor (Mahawn) Mayfield, who moved to Boone Co., Ind., from Whitley Co., Ky, sometime between 1860 and 1880. Greenberry Mayfield was a son of Isaac Mayfield Sr. (1804 KY - betw 1870 & 1880) and Margaret "Peggy" (Snyder) Mayfield, of Whitley Co., KY. Isaac & Margaret "Peggy" (Snyder) Mayfield also had a son, Peter Mayfield, who was the grandfather of Iva (Mayfield) Cragun (Mrs. John Beach Cragun, Chicago, Ill.)[34]
ch.
(i) Thomas J. Mayfield, b. 1894
d. 1919 (Served on U.S. Malory)
bur., Mts Run cem., Whitestown, Boone Co., Ind.
6. George Beeman, b. 1870 Boone Co., Ind.
7. Allie Beeman, b. 1872 Boone Co., Ind.
m. Samuel P. FREEMAN, 17 June 1894
8. Anniah Beeman, b. 1874
9. John W. Beeman, b. 1877
m. Anna CAMPBELL, 10 Feb 1904
(B) JAMES CRAGUN, b. 26 July 1814, Connorsville, Fayette Co., Ind.
(son of Elisha & Mary (Osborn) Cragun)
d. 7 Feb 1887, St.George, Washington Co., Utah
both he and his wife are buried at St.George, Wash.Co.,Utah
He and his wife & children moved to Utah in 1849 in the Ezra T. Benson Co., known as the 5th company. That year James was called to go to Utah county to help fight the Indians who attacked the people sent to settle the Provo area. James was gone three months, and during that time his wife and five children were living in South Salt Lake (Mill Creek Ward) and endured many hardships.
m. 30 March 1836, Boone Co., Ind., ELEANOR LANE
b. 11 Nov 1817, Brandenburg, Meade Co., Ky,
dau. of Samuel Lane and Margaret (McCarty) Lane, of Kentucky.
d. 24 Dec 1901, St.George, Washington Co., Utah
Martha Cragun Cox, dau. of James & Eleanor (Lane) Cragun, tells the following: "I do not know just when the Elisha Cragun family moved from Virginia to Indiana, but it must have been earlier than the coming of the Lanes, Yates and Lincoln families, for my father was born in Indiana while my mother, Eleanor Lane's family was still in Kentucky. Her grandfather, Lambert Lane, was born in England and emigrated to America with his parents when he was about 12 years old." Eleanor Lane Cragun remembers living on the banks of the Susquehanna River opposite the home of Abraham Lincoln's parents.[35]
children:
(a) Lydia Margaret Cragun, b. 26 Jan 1838 Eagle Village, Boone Co., Ind.
m. James Hardwick McCARTY (her 2d csn)
(b) James Hyrum Cragun, b. 31 July 1840 Eagle Village, Boone Co., Ind.
never married; d. 14 Feb 1919 St.George, Washington Co., Utah
(c) Thomas Calvin Cragun, b. 28 Dec 1843 Northfield, Boone Co., Ind.
m. Amelia CHAMBERS
(d) Mary Ellen Cragun, b. 24 Feb 1845
m. Lars JENSEN ("Danish")
(e) Melvina Cragun, b. 30 March 1847; d. June 1847, ae 3 months
(f) Elisha Cragun, b. 3 Aug 1849 crossing the plains
m. Margaret LAWSON
(g) Martha James Cragun, b. 3 March 1852 Mill Creek, Salt Lake Co., Utah
m. Isaiah COX
(h) Sarah Jane Cragun, b. 27 April 1854
m.(1st), Samuel Henry Worthen
m.(2nd), Oliver C. Garthwaite
(i) Tyresha Cragun, b. 27 March 1857, Mill Creek, Salt Lake Co., Utah
m. Joseph KIRKHAM
(a) LYDIA MARGARET CRAGUN, b. 26 Jan 1838 Eagle Village, Boone Co., Ind.
d
m. James Hardwick McCARTY, 5 Oct 1855 (her 2nd csn)
b. 9 May 1836 Meade Co., Ky; son of James & Rebecca (Murdock) McCarty
He became a school teacher in Kentucky and later in Missouri. He decided to join a group of gold seekers leaving for California. He caught mountain fever on the journey and because of weakened condition he stopped in Salt Lake, and here he found his cousins, the Craguns.
Lydia Margaret, as a girl of 11 years, came across the plains in a covered wagon with her parents, in Ezra T. Benson's company. They left in July 1849 and arrived in Utah in October the same year. They settled on a farm in Mill Creek in southeastern Salt Lake Valley.
After her marriage to James H. McCarty, they settled on a farm in Mill Creek, where three whildren were born, then they moved south to Mountainville or Alpine where Uncle David McOlney resided. James Hardwick McCarty went with Lydia's father and brothers to guard Johnston's army and keep them from entering Salt Lake City.
ch.:
1. James Cragun McCarty, b. 1 July 1856 Mill Creek, Utah
d. 12 June 1913, of acute Brights disease
He was of slight build, mild disposition, honest and made friends wherever he went. The schooling he had, he received from his father. He homesteaded 160 acres, and it was many years before the land was well under cultivation. He sold the homestead and moved to Monroe to help his mother on the old McCarty land.
m. Susan May SYMONS
b. (unkn), d. Feb 1919 of influenza
She was a quiet woman, never talking much about herself. Her family had come from Annabella to live in Monroe some time before her marriage to Jim.
ch.:
(i) Margaret Louise McCarty, b. 17 Feb 1906
m. Bernard GURR
ch.:
James McCarty Gurr
(ii) Susan McCarty, b. (unkn); d.i.
(iii) Ella McCarty, b. 21 Apr 1912
(unmd 1940)
2. William Murdock McCarty, b. 15 May 1859, Millcreek, Utah
d. 19 Dec 1918
He was of stocky build both as a boy and young man; a wrestler, foot-racer, boxer and very combative. He became interested in law in early life. Judge Wheedon from Beaver, Utah, lived at the McCarty home for some time and had his law office there. Under him, Bill studied his first law. After schooling, he returned home to open his law office in one of his mother's rooms. Became Deputy U.S. Dist. Atty at Beaver; County Atty at Monroe; and Judge of the sixth Judicial District with headquarters at Richfield. After several years he was elected to the Supreme Court.
m. June 1893, Lovina Lauretta MURRAY
b. (unkn); d. 1953
dau. of Frank Charles & Lovina Heaton Murray.
Lovina was raised in Marysvale on a ranch about a mile north of town and was quite a horsewoman
in her ranch days.
ch.:
(i) Murray William McCarty, b. 24 June 1894
m. Ida Elizabeth FARIELLO
ch.
(1) Peggy Jean McCarty
(2) Patricia Rose McCarty
(ii) Ray Sargent McCarty, b. 12 Sept 1897
d. 13 Dec 1963
m. Mildred ENGLES
ch.:
(1) William Courtney McCarty, b. 13 Jan 1930
m. Julie Ann POLLOCK
ch.
+ Richard Pollock McCarty, b. 2 July 1955
+ Cullen McCarty, b. 29 June 1957
(2) Patricia Ann McCarty, b. 8 Feb 1934
m. David NOALL
(3) Mary Jacqueline McCarty, b. 2 Oct 1936
m. Bert GILBERT
(iii) Margaret Lovina McCarty, b. 12 Aug 1902
m. Donald Martin MAJOR
(iv) Frank Edward McCarty, b. 29 Jan 1907
m. Olga Elizabeth .....
3. Samuel Houston McCarty, b. 15 Aug 1861, Millcreek, Utah
d. (date unkn), in Boise, Idaho
bur. Boise, Idaho
m. Louise DUDLER
While Louise and the children were in Salt Lake visiting, Homer McCarty, Samuel's brother, received a telegram from Boise stating that Sam had suddenly died. It was 500 miles to Boise with only a horse and buggy for traveling, so Homer wired back to bury Sam in Boise. A week later when Louise returned to Boise she could find none of Sam's possessions. Of the details of his death she could learn nothing - only that he had died from a gunshot wound. Louise returned to Salt Lake City and was very successful in the cafe business.
Sam was a slender boy and stood as straight as a ship's mast. He had blue eyes and blond hair. When he was about 16 years old he went north to Salt Lake County, and there found work chopping timbers for the mines in Little Cottonwood Canyon. The axe slipped and almost cut his foot in half. He was brought to Salt Lake City where he lived at Dr. Seymour B. Young's home until he was able to work again.
After he married, he had no regular training for work, but he took up law. He and his wife moved to Rocky Bar, Idaho. Law was not a flourishing business, and Sam could hardly make a living. Two children were born to them, then a fire destroyed their home and all their belongings. They had to start again.
ch.:
(i) Ella McCarty, b. (unkn)
(ii) Homer Bar McCarty, b. (unkn)
m. Hazel HUNT, ca. 1916
ch.
(1) Homer E. McCarty, b. 3 Dec 1917
d. 1968
m. Norma Janet SEVERSON, 8 oCT 1939
ch."
+ Donald Homer McCarty, b. 7 Aug 1940
+ Janet Arlene McCarty, b. 30 Sept 1942
+ Joy McCarty, b. 25 March 1945
+ Valerie McCarty, b. 17 May 1946
+ Roger Dale McCarty, b. 7 Aug 1949
+ Carol Lynn McCarty, b. 6 June 1953
+ Byron Homer McCarty, b. 7 Aug 1958
(2) Ray McCarty, b. 1919; d. 1967
(unmd)
(3) Jack McCarty, b. 14 March 1921
m. Dessie ROSKELLEY, 24 July 1937
(4) Barbara Jean McCarty, b. 17 Jan 1923
m. Glen WILSON, 23 Oct 1946
(5) Donald James "Busby" McCarty, b. 1925
4. Margaret Eleanor McCarty, b. 10 July 1863
d. 5 Oct 1874
bur. St.George, Wash. Co., Utah
When eleven years old, a mysterious illness affected her, first in one foot then moving upward along her leg. The nearest doctor was in St.George, 75 miles southward. Homer said: "Father took Ella, Mother, Martha and I to St.George. We went with an ox-drawn wagon, a rough conveyance for a desperately sick girl, but all we had." Nothing was able to be done and after a few weeks in St.George, Ella passed away.
5. Emily Tyresha McCarty, b. 21 Oct 1865, St.George, Wash. Co., Utah
d. 27 Jan 1918, Salt Lake City, Utah, of cancer.
m. 17 Oct 1894, Joseph D. BERTELSEN
b. (unkn) ; (living 1940)
blacksmith and mechanic
She was a teacher, then elected County Superintendent of schools, a position she held for several terms. She was postmistress for two or more terms in Marysvale, then she and her husband purchased the Grand Hotel and operated it for several years. She had a very large library and was a great reader.
ch.:
(i) Horace Bertelson, b. 21 Nov 1895
m. Sylvia BLACK
(ii) Joseph Lane Bertelson, b. 2 Aug 1897
m. Etta Maria LONG
6. Homer McCarty, b. 10 Jan 1868, Santa Clara, Washington Co., Utah
d. 12 Sept 1952, Salt Lake City, Utah
He attended the elementary schools taught by his father. He learned much about gardening, ranching, herding sheep, etc. from his older brothers. The family lived in Utah's Dixie nearly seven years, suffering extreme poverty most of the time. From there they moved to Iron County, then to Summit County, and managed a hotel in Monroe for many years. Everyone drove oxen and Homer said he never saw a buggy until he was 16 or 17 years old.
He attended Park College in Missouri, then taught school, worked as a surveyor, and helped develop mines.
m. Mary Wilhelmina HESSE, 24 June 1891.
She was of Monroe, Sevier County, Utah. Seven children were born.
ch.:
(i) Laurell McCarty, b. 21 Feb 1892
m. John R. GARDNER, 24 June 1915
(ii) Uarda McCarty, b. 28 Feb 1895
m. A. S. WINTON, 28 Aug 1926 (no issue)
(iii) Homer Ward McCarty, b. 3 Feb 1900
m. Ardis YOUNG, 30 June 1920
ch.:
(1) Kent Young McCarty, b. 1923
m. Virginia D. SHENKEL, 1945
(2) Coralie Ardis McCarty, b. 1926
m. John Marlon BOYERS, 1949
(3) Nancy Gerda Ann McCarty, b. 1931
m. Carlton Thomas SUMSION, 1951
(iv) Henry Dean McCarty, b. 10 Nov 1904
d. 11 July 1928
(v) Wilhelmina Hesse McCarty, b. 10 Dec 1907
(living 1968) unmd.
(vi) Beulah McCarty, b. 22 Feb 1909
d. 1 Nov 1961
m. Clarence P. CURTIS, 10 July 1934
(vii) Shirley McCarty, b. 15 April 1911
m. Hugh MOUNT, 31 May 1936 (no issue)
7. Martha Evaline McCarty, b. 12 March 1870
(still living in 1940, Portland, Oregon)
She taught school. She and her husband purchased the old McCarty farm where they lived for several years, then moved to Richfield. After selling that farm they moved to Salt Lake City, where he went into the insurance business. In the early twenties Martha & Robert moved to Portland, Oregon, where he died.
m. Robert A. FARLEY
b. (unkn) d. Dec -- 1938, Portland, Oregon
ch.:
(i) Gertha Farley, b. (date unkn) in Pioche, Nevada
m.-------- (a druggist)
ch.: (two)
8. Horace Lincoln McCarty, b. 13 Jan 1873
d. 10 May 1893, and bur. in Monroe.
He was four yrs old when the family moved to Monroe, and was stricken with a heart condition early in his teens. In spite of it, he was a great help on the farm.
He attended the Brigham Young Academy at Provo, and in the spring of 1893 he became so ill he was forced to leave school and stay in bed. His brother Homer came to care for him, but soon sent for their mother and it was decided to take him home to Monroe. He died on the way.
9. Norman Franklin McCarty, b. 6 April 1876
He seemed dedicated to music from early childhood. After much study in Salt Lake City, he went to Ann Arbor, Michigan to more schooling, and then became professor of music in Park College, Missouri. He returned to Utah to teach at the Branch Agricultural College at Cedar City, then to Idaho State normal College at Albion, Idaho. He is now (1940) in Prineville, Oregon.
(unmarried)
10. Ruth McCarty, b. 18 March 1878
d. 20 March 1878
11. Edgar Cook McCarty, b. 17 May 1879
d. 23 May 1945, Salt Lake City, Utah
bur. in Mt. Olivet Cemetery
He was never very robust and was slow in learning to talk. He had blue eyes and reddish hair. When the call for volunteers was made for the Spanish-American War, Edgar enlisted joining Torrey's Rough Riders. The war ended before his company embarked for overseas duty.
m. Aileen ERICKSON, 14 June 1911
She taught school in the Presbyterian school at Monroe. After their marriage, he quit the creamery business, and obtained employment with Nelson-Ricks Creamery Co. in Salt Lake City.
ch.:
(i) James Cragun McCarty, b. 25 Nov 1912
m. Anna Loree NORRIS, 1936
ch.:
(1) Brian Curtis McCarty, b. 25 June 1937
m. Rose Ann STAPLEY, 3 Sept 1964
(2) William Edgar McCarty, b. 8 Apr 1940
m. Beth Joan HARRISON, 26 Jan 1962
(3) Eric Lane McCarty, b. 26 May 1948
m. Barbara Sharon WALLACE, 3 March 1967
(ii) Ruth Marion McCarty, b. 16 Sept 1914
m. Charles CARRIER
(l) Beatrice McCarty, b. 15 Dec 1884
The last child of James Hardwick & Lydia Margaret (Cragun) McCarty.
d. 27 April 1885
(b) JAMES HYRUM CRAGUN, b. 31 July 1840, Eagle Village, Boone Co., Ind.
d. 14 Feb 1919, St.George, Washington Co., Utah
(never married)
James Hyrum crossed the plains, helped his father farm in Mill Creek, and helped build up Washington County. He farmed at Pine Valley, and lived his later life in St.George and died there.
(c) THOMAS CALVIN CRAGUN, b. 28 Dec 1843, Northfield, Boone Co., Ind.
d. 23 May 1909, Smithfield, Utah
m. Amelia CHAMBERS, 2 Aug 1861, Salt Lake City, Utah
b. 10 Jan 1846 in Bristol, Gloucester, England; dau. of William and Clarissa Bench Chambers. The Chambers family emigrated to Utah, crossing the plains in Capt. Doly's Company, arriving in Salt Lake City in Sept 1853, and moved to Mill Creek in 1856.
Amelia died 5 June 1916, Smithfield, Utah.
Thomas Calvin Cragun came to Salt Lake City with the family on 25 Oct 1849. He played the clarinet and piccolo, and was a member of the Salt Lake City Martial Band. He taught the fife and drum, and was the "kindest, most gentle and loving husband and father."After their marriage, Thomas Calvin & Amelia moved to "Dixie" and helped settle the country. They stayed