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Dagley�G1E7Y pF r a a �y COURT "OU31762 _? THE HISTORICAL SaCIieTY ®r BERKS COUNTY 940 CENTRE AVENUE READING, PENNSYLVANIA '19601 Telephone 375-4375 December 12, 1985 Dear Mr. Dagley: Thank you for your check of $20.00. As promised we covered our church records of Exeter and Amity Townships f or the name DAGLEY, We f ound the name appeared only in St, Gabriel's Clurch and en- close xerox copies of same. Sincerely yours, i - 20 i AD:bs s. Almee iievin6 Sanders enc. 1 Consultant, Archives and Research Y 10 1 1 .l� Cl Qti . /%gin» ZI this record is f�cincr i:z t1�^ tibrary-ar�E�uw�s U� �rlw t-I'rst:lrical SEA.IG' �I O EiQr►t�a �vuG11i%- I � Signe Im- Davie County Public Library I Mocksville, NC i Ce{Y11 I /p r�r •-\ �G�}>_A�1 V��lta�v �lUl�1 o/rCi',1(dJQ%,/ , �2, U ��1 d Ci ✓ /�(i , /� , i U LIAn,QQhbganj- A, Soo. r "�+o �Gd 1r10� eL>�1�40, t�',.n , 14a �6 . r '-AC'-L )lQl) '(f1fL1v . l�J l�i� % � ��J h r �3j moi. (01.rAQn ! ek dL �j i �,Q rl�rvl�� /�ff�G�"h J/iQlz6z�. � p.,, . meq,. 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Howett Boone Hunting Creek f Boone Faxm Road Route 1, Box 365A Mockay.itte, NC 27028 Deax Mx. Boone, Thank you very much Jor your packet of Febnuany 5th. You and have done ouch a good Job tracing February 12, 1986 tetter and .injormat.ion other Boone dea eendentA youx anceatora . 0J Apec.iat .intexeat waA the 1787 cenaub xetuxn Jox Pearson' A Company, Rowan County, N. C.. And you ane abaotutety tight, .it iA 1787 beJoxe we bee the name Vagtey .in Rowan County. It 4*.A JuAt poaa.ibte that James Vagtey did not come to North Caxotina untit th.iA time A.ince he Aexved .in the Revotut.ionaxy Wan Jxom Pennaytvan.ia. Jonathan Vagtey who t.ived .in uppers Rowan County, Sat.iAbuxy V.iatx.iet, .in 1790 may have been .in V.irg.in.ia during the wan. But ThomaA Vagtey waA dei.in.itety .in Noxth Carot.ina du -ting the wan and waa a patx.iot and waa Aaid to be a baggage master jot Genexat Geoxge Waah.ington. The Nonth Caxotina Axeh.ivea have eop.ieA o J vouehexA whexe Thomas waa paid jot Joxag a dux.ing the wax. Bt.iaA Vagtey, Jathex of the three, James, ThomaA, 8 Jonathan, and atao moat t.ikety, the 6athex o6 Etizabeth who waz Aaid to have maxx.ied Jonathan Boone;' w.itneAAed a Witt .in BexkA County, Amity Town4h.ip, .in 1769, but when the w.itt waa pxooved a Jew months tater, a note at the bottom said EtiaA Dagtey, Achootmaatex, had 6 ince removed to North Caxotina. 06 eouxa a it .iA poaa.ibte that Ft.iaa ont y had .intent.ionA o J going to North Carot.ina and may have ventured no Jaxthex than V.ixg.in.ia. From youx experience .in tracing your BooneA 6xom Pennaytvan.ia .into North Caxotina, can you tett me the moat tikety ptaeea to took Jox the DagteyA Jrom the period 1770 to 1787? MxA. GtadyA W.ittiama, a deaeendent of Joseph Boone and 3 Satty Dagtey, o6 Caxm.i, Itt.inoiA, haA spent yeaxA xeAeaxeh.ing hen , t.ineag e, and I w.itt take the t.ibext y o J photo copying some of the .inioxmat.ion Ahe haA Gent me. You may have atxeady a1 coxxeaponded with hen. Atao, I w.itt enctoae home o6 the eaxty q pant o6 the book on ThomaA Vagtey that waa wx.itten by Mux.iet Queatett Oatex o6 Zaneay.*tte, Ohio. It ahoutd be noted that Mna. Oatex Atatea that Thomas Dagtey waa born .in Ixetand, and we have church xeeoxdA Jxom St. Gabr.iet'A Fp.iaeopat Church r. o6 Amity Township, Bexka County, Penna ytvan.ia Febxuax y 25, �- 1754, the Aon of Ft.iaA 6 Cathex.ine Dagtey. U �'^ ^c -t sntY Public Library block;sville, NC L I hope you j ind th.ia unaotic.ited bit o6 .injonmation o6 home .inteneat and I thank you again bon you& anawen to my .inqu.iny. I woutd appnec.iate any add.itionat .injonmation that may come to mind on that you may come to have. My jam.ity and I were .in eaatenn Tenneaa ee and .in Ab hv.itte, NC, .in 1984. I w.iAh now we had viA iced Rowan County. Hope to heap move Jnom you noon. cc - Gtadyb Witt iamb K.indeat negand.a , Lanny Dag t e y public Library NG Volume 26o Number. ***BOONE PIONEER ECHOES*** April 1984, Page 112 THIS MAP WILL APPEAR -IN THE UPPER LEFT HAND CORNER OF THE 3 feet by 2 feet PLAQUE AT JOPPA C IXTERY LOCATED IN MOCKSVILLE, DAVIE COUNTY, NORTH.CAROLINA TO BE UNVEILED 22 OCTOBER 1984 woe JOHN BOONE I I ` at Hunting Creek (nephew of Squire) 'DANIEL 3 REBECCA BRVAM B :CABIN at SUGAR(TREE) CRE GEORGE BOONE at Bear Creek JOPPA CEMETE SQUIRE BOONE SQUIRE BOOrE and ander SR,:IRE BOONE (Jr) DANIEL oOONE Elisha R: Dutchmans Creeks at Beer Creek Nq avile Ccunly Pu'aii;; i.iui a y x Macksviiie, NC 71, JOHN WILCOCKSON and wife SAR{1Fi BOONE I!)LCOCKSON at 82ar Creek S0�.� Ty Y Alk IN JONATHAN BOONE and father-in-law JAMES CARTER at Bear Creek �GfjeRainboWPaturaiTgribge of stab The discovery of the Rainbow Nat- sits to unlawful excavation of prehis- . ural Bridge of Utah by William Boone toric ruins reserved by the Smithson - Douglass, U. S. Examiner o1 Surveys, ian Institution. Trader Wetherill and General Land Office, October, 1908, his excavators Joined Surveyor Douglass was the result of his assignment to on the trip who was the first to reach photograph and survey the White Can- the bridge, after the guides, on Aug. 11, yon, Natural Bridges and obtain their 1909. The accompanying illustration Fiute Indian names 11 possible. He shows the bridge as photographed by found old Mike, who said they were Surveyor Douglass at that date. Un - "the s, aea under the horse's belly be- derneath the bridge he discovered a tween his fore and hind legs." Would prehistoric shrine. By lowering them - he go with the Surveyor to the bridges? selves over a 50 -ft. ledge, he and his Mike answered emphatically "Nol" three assistants were the only ones to but his toy would ga. When the bridges reach the top of the bridle. The Utah were reached. Mike's boy, who later- party left next morning without mak- took t'10 name of "Jim," told Surveyor Ing measurements of any kind. Mr. Douglass of a greater midge, arching Douglass remained to make a careful . a twig to show how it looked. He told survey and measurements. The bridge where It Was, and how to reach IL Tries � - is -a bugsandstone arch 30 feet wide discoV&Y' was reported to the Genera}' "4' 30,= feet thin at. J6 center . Yt Land Office, and instructions for its bridges a stream of water ffowm3 into - survey were issued. Missing Jim, Sur- the Colorado River. Its span is 275 - veyor Douglass proceeded to the home feet wide, and its arch over 300 feet of Indian Trader Wetherill, who denied high. Unknown to the Indians it had that any such a bridge existed. As no no name other than a hole in the local Indians knew of it, and the snow ground. "Barahona" is the Piute for had come the survey of the bridge was a rainbow. President Taft gave Mr. ' postponed until next year. 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Co v -r WA o u N `7'Y C o U• -0 oNTY - Ads f f,- ILS. �� t aa 4A CA&_M-1 VV ff i T E C D L) IVTY CO (.f Al 7-Y ()NC7 li�IoR y :jN' 0 )A NA �- uN I o jvjTo w14 Y j. 1\l f a /V Lb�a`� • T JONATHAN BOOItiE Al -,.D T::CMAS Dr GLEY AI1; D THEIR FAMILIES The place to start t_^__s story is with the beginning of the family in England, and for this I shall copy from Hazel Attebury Spraker' s big volume, THE BOONE FAMILY. I George Loone, born in England II George Boone, born near Exeter in Devonshire, England. He was a blacksmith, married.Sarah U ppey. III George Boone, born 1666 at Stoak, England, in Devonshire, died 27 July (old time) or Aug. 7, 1744 in Exeter Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania. Married Mary Maugridge, daughter of John and Mary Milton Maugridge. Belonged to Society of Friends. On 17 Aug. 1717 with six children the Boones set sail for America. Three older child- ren, George,_Squire, and Sarah had been sent to America in 1713 or before as record shows the marriage of George, Jr. in 1713. George Boone was a weaver. The Boones were a people more rough-hewn tharx.fashionable, more pract- ical than artistic, more constructive than idealistic; retaining the strong, forceful characteristics of its early ancestry, yet progressing with the times in matters of development and education. Not the sword and -gilded snuff-box, but rather the musket and woods- man's axe were the symbols of this rugged family of pioneers. Not the perfume of courtly ball rooms and assemblies, but rather the breath of the forest and tang of the log fire were the atmosphere in which it labored and rejoiced. ..hen George III died it was recorded in the ! anily Bible that "~'When GrandfCather died he left 8 children, 52 grandchildren, and 10 great grand- children living,. -in all 70, being as many persons as the House of j acob which came into Egypt". Squire Boone, son of George III, married Sarah Morgan "�3d day of ye 7th month of the year of our .Lord 1720". Squire Boone i -;as a strong, ti:irS man of rather small stature, with ruddy complection, red hair and gray eyes. Sarah had 'slack hair and eyes, with "the sudden 1 elch snap in them". Children of Squire and Sarah, the first tr=ee or four bore in rew �� 1tG�ri township, ucks .oun•ty, , Pa., the reit it -E.:eter to ;ns i;. , - arks County, 'Pa. r X10 ;. T 1. Sarah Boone b, 7 Jure 1724 Old Style or 18 June New Style. 2. Israel Boone b. 9 May or 20 May 1726. Married outside Quarters Dec. 31, 1747.It is said he went to Forth Carolina and died there early; but other evidence indicates he went to Fayette County, Ky. In Deed Book D. page 143 of Fayette Co. Circuit Court there is a record of Israel's deed to his brother Daniel, of property, land etc. of con- siderable value. 3. Samuel Boone b. 20 May 1728 4. Jonathan Boone b. 6 Dec. 1730 5. Elizabeth Boone b. 5 Feb. 1732 6. Daniel Boone b. 22 Oct. 1734 7. Teary Boone b. 3 Nov. 1736 8. George Boone b. 2 Jan. 1739 9. Edward Boone b. 19 Nov. 1740 10. Squire Boone b. 5 Oct. 1744 11. Hannah Boone b. Aug. 1746 Squire Boone's headstone reads, "Squire Boone departed this life they sixty-ninth year of his age in thay year of our Lord 1765, Geneary Tha 2." Sarah, "Sa-- -Boone desotned this life 1777, aged 77 years." In 1750 Squire Boone sold part of his land in.Penna. to his brother Joseph , and past to William Maugridge, and left for North Carolina. In 1759 an Indian outbreak in E. C. caused Squire and Sarah to move to Virginia, and Maryland. It was from there Sarah and son, Souire,Jr. made a trip back to Penna. on horseback. Souire and Sarah died in North Carclira, they left --any descendants scattered in almost every state. This is copied from a s -.all booklet loaLed to me by Mrs. Aller Joseph, of Jasper, Indiana. Since Jonathan Boone is our subject it is tide to collect all we have found about him. ~ He must have gone to 1 . C. with his parents, he would have been about ttenty at that time. In Mrs Spraker's book she states there was a dearth. of infcrmaticn about Jonathan. Let me quote directly from her book, " Except for his birth aS recorded among the chil.ren of Squire Boone, practically all that is known about Jonathan is found in the following excerpt from Draper Manuscript, which is a statement of Encch M. Boone, a re_rhey of ba.ni el Boo.:e, Lr_de in August 1 5i , 'Jonathan Boone -- care early to ::entucky -- r_e: ^ers him at Squire Boon's teticn as early as 17 3, and te::=.cd :;quire Boone' s ..f ter a few years _etti ed or, Green River, and Davie CO'�:nty Publ;L �..�brar y ���csvitte, NC N «r- .0 - after living thEre several years then. settled at the �;ig Falls of the Wabash (Haar ?:t. Carmel, 'Wabash County) on the Illinois side not more than 15 miles, if that above the mouth of the Vj'abash where he built a 1 mill. There he died about 1808, don't know wherehis wife died, nor how old he was. Left several daughters, got mostly married on Green River, and left three sons, John, Joseph, and Daniel, who settled in the lower country'. CHILDREN: - 1. John Boone -- settled somewhere in Kentucky. 2. Joseph Boone died subsequent to 1827. He settled Elesheco (now called Poland or Columbia) above the Big Cypress Bend in Mississippi State, and died there leaving a family. 3. Daniel Boone, settled at St. Antoine, Texas, and was killed there by the Indians. rootnote -,In a letter written to rrs. J. F. Cahill, of San Antonio, Texas, by John B. Manly, clerk of the Superior Court of South Carolina, 15 Dec. 1916, he says that there are two instruments from James Carter to Jonathan 3oone conveying specific property, and another one to Mary Boone, wife of Jonathan Boone, fro:: James Carter, her father, conveying to her all personal property in Bristol Hall which was then in the Garish of St. Lukes, Rowan County, N. C. From an old V. C. book coves also this statement, which locates one James Carter in the vicinity of the Boones -- "James Carter and Hugh Foster owned land upon which Salisbury, N. C. was built about 1754. This is the only thing to indicate that the Jonathan. Boone whose wife :;as Mary Carter, belonged to this family. There were other Jonathan Boones in N.C. in that period. There is also a tradition that Jonathan 3oone married an Elizabeth Da€ley, but no documentary proof of it has been found. It might have been a second marriage." -• E :d of quote. From the Boone Scout, of April 1967: Photostats of several transactions by Janes Carter of Rowan County, K. C. have been received for the Center from -firs. Carl E. killers of New Jersey. Of special inter- est is one in which he records his gift of "Bristol -_all" to I'my loving deugr ter !•Lary Boone, the wife of Jonathan Econe of the same county and parish." In another document, he acknowledges receipt of "Proclamation .•:oneyll in the sure of "forlty pounds paid by V'onajL..-.an Boone." We greatly ap _:reciate this _ii t fro.-: i•:rs. .:iiie_ s for . uch .:ata -.eke the Center of .7reat value to the re -searcher. nubV'C Ubfary - - DBVi2 C� itio' NC ,�_ mor , i'rom The I�oone 6cout, of July 19064: V'e are able to offer for T sale two �-Qhotostats of records in the Court Hou =e in Salisbury, 1. C. (1) the bill of James Carter, establishing the fact that his daughter, Mary, was the wife of Jonathan Boone, ( brother of Daniel) and naming two of their children; (2) deeds of property in Salisbury from James Carter to Jonathan Boone, his wife, Mary, and their children. Any des- cendant of Jonathan and nary may now settle a disrnted question permantly. From Boone Pioneer Echoes: Rowan County, "orth'Carolina Minute Document, 1753-67, page 37: "A deed of gift from JAMES Cr_RTER to ABACALE BOONE, daughter of Jonathan Boo=:e, and granddaughter of said JAj•,:ES CA'TER." This brief, but very important record, proves another daughter for Jonathan Boone and Nary (Carter) Boone. Jonathan was the son of Souire Boone, Sr. and brother to Daniel Boone, the pioneer. This added informatiol to the meager knowledge of Jonathan's family, was contributed by Delores DeWitt, From The Boone Scout, of Jan. 1964; Through Dr. Theodore V.I. Houk of Seattle, we are able to present from the Rowan County, N.C. records the. following list of Marriage Bonds A --L, positive microfilm HS 258, in- dexed by surname of both bride and groom. As most of the Boones named are descendants of John (Benjamin 4, George 3) it is honed these data may be of General interest. Boon Catherine nark 'i.hitaker 1 March 1780 Since two others in the list are questioned as being from John Boone, we question this one, as Catherine Boone is said, in other docu- ments, to be the daugrter of Jonathan and MGry Boone. Or is it possible that the record of the marriar.e of Katie =•oore and Mark ti':hittier is a different couple and this latter is the Jonathan coone daughter? Boone Marria€e Index, published in Toone Pioneer Echoes, July 1972. paF-e 21) lists Dinah Boone and Zachariah Allen. From The Boone Scout, Jan.1970, "Zachariah Allen, b 1754 m Dinah Boone, daughter of Jonathan (brother of Daniel) in 1779, Warren County, Ky. Dinah was born in 1759. Zachariar.,.was a brother of an Allen who was an early settler of Pike County, jllinois." Joseph Boone and Sally Dar -ley r 179E in Ky. . Boone _ donee: s Echoer Oct. 1972. rom Caroli r_a Cradle b;; o°pert !'.. =•:amsey ; Squire uoone' s sort, onathar_ (e.cco: dir_g to Ston: t) borr_ i:. ucks Cou: ty) married ' amen T�T �c7) The Noone firm (Year Carter's daugr_ter, �.'ary, (:-cov,a.. ee .s - _ - } •,. .T., .•�M� �`�.�1ti . .•._ : S _ JM•she �vrter dace • L1 a J4 ftf pubs. ,_bra l �� 10'. ffiet NIC V in Southampton township. . t • •• Occupations of Settlers on the Northwest Carolina Frontier, 1747-1762. Squire Boone (senior) Weaver Jonathan Boone Spinner James Carter Millwright, surveyor From Boone Pioneer Echoes, -Oct. 1971: TA XABLES OF ROWAN COUNTY, 1':ORTH CAROLINA. Taken from an old record book containing many and various records of Rowan County, N. C. 1761 Jonathan Boon,: 1768 Daniel Boon Taxables taken by Thos. Donnell - 1768 Edward Bun John Bun Jonathan Bun & negro Jonathan Bun, J r . "October 17, 1768 I have received ?50 scalps," Jonathan Hunt. 1778 REED'S DISTRICT John Boon 1778 WILLSON'S DISTRICT Jonathan Boon l - 1778. JOHNSTON'S DISTRICT Jonathan Boone 1782 CAPT . REED'S DISTRICT John Boon 1690 10 1782 CAPT . jt: ILS0K 1 S DISTRICT Jonathan Boone 1782 CAPT. JOHNSTON'S DISTRICT Jonathan Boone 1784 TODD'S DISTRICT DaV a COL 1\i Public; I .fbrarY j onathan Boone .`is ,, NC TAXABLES DATE UNU CWN ny Gideon Wrioht, Eso. Dan iel Boon Jonathan noon "These names seem to indicE: Le this co. -:_n -any was somewhere in forks of t� e xadkin.". (i:ote �.r�tte:: in boLk.) T z .ALES DATL U. -I K: is .,a:.ie� moor • n^ V onG. haii��-- `''::E "ova sc- e^ exacat a^ earYc J-7- th old record bed b From The Boone scout, April 1968:* An ad for BOONE-CARTER.: Need date m Jonathan Boone (bro Daniel) & Mary Carter & names chr; also date their dau Dinah m Zachariah Allen & names chr, s Levis n Deborah Moore 24 Dec. 1818. Jonathan Boone and Thomas Dagley lived neighbors in Rowan County,N. C. Jonathan was married to Thomas' sister, Elizabeth, and Jonathan's son, Joseph was married to Sarah (Sally) Dagley, the -daughter of Thomas. We do not know when or where Mary Carter Boone died. She was the mother of all the Jonathan Boone children. If Elizabeth had children there is no record of them. Thomas Dagley was a native of Ireland. His mother was a native of Scotland. Of Scotch -Irish descent, the Dagleys, like all their race, have energy, strong common sense and practical worth. Thomas Dagley was baggage - master for Gen. Washington in the Revolutionary War. During the march of the British there were guards placed over his wife's house to protect it -from the ravages of the troops. He moved to New Haven in 1812 with his wife and five children ........ New Haven was then called Boone' s Fort. The above paragraph from history of White County, Illinois, 1883. From the History of the Thomas Dagley Family, by Murial questell Osler: "ti"ith the help of Daughters of the American Revolution, Thomas Dagley's name was added to the list of soldiers of the Revolutionary leas in Washington, D.C., in the summer of 1964. He was a patriot from Rowan County, N. C., and furnished supplies....... . Mrs. Osler gives records of deeds for land in Rowan County, sold by Thomas Dagley. one in 1772, and one in 1795. It was about that time that the Dagleys moved to Kentucky. There are records of land deals by Jonathan 'Boone, Joseph and Sally Boone in 1779. This was in Barren Cou. ty, Ky. The Second Census of Kentucky, 1800 Taxpayers Census by G. Glenn Clift lists Jonathan Boone and Thomas Dagley in Barren County. Also listed are Joseph Boone and Zachariah Allen, in Barren County. Mrs. Osler says that Thomas paid taxes on 200 acres each year until 1,13, ►►,hen he raid on only 100 acres, then in 1812} no Dagley listed, which ties in with the in_ormation that has been ha::ded do:.n from generation to generation that amuel Dagley we. -.t back to Kentucky and wrou-ht his father and sister: to Boone' s Fort in i Iiiir.oi::. In 1E14 Tho:.as and SamuelbaE-ley bot -.-&-ht land in .bite County, Ill. On :,are c„ of Gallatin County History, it states: �:hile G�ite a nu-mDer of settlEra ca=ne early i?:to the col.-.ntj the land offi-e was not Or :::E:: -.L S!"iawnizetown untt.il 1 14, and -her, G .�� :d ert:'ies -4 erE- / y Z i t j o: tel, h a Lr . j' e a. . rp!�:: • Y � t In the Histo_ -y of White County, 18P3, on pa: e 227, under FIRST LAND EFTRIES, it states: In the following list we give all the land entries from the first to the close of the year 1817. Joseph Boon, S E v of 17, 7 South, i 10 East. Aug. 24, 1814. From Gallatin County History: New Haven is situated in the northeast corner of the county, on the Little 'Habash River. It claims to be the third oldest town in Illinois, and assuming that the town was started when Jonathan Boone (not Joseph Doone as is published in the history of White County) first settled there, the claim is doubtless correct. Jonathan Boone was a brother of Daniel Boone, the famous'first settler of Kentucky. Jonathan Boone made an entry of land under date of August 24, 1814, as follows: Southeast quarter of Section 17, Township 7 South, Range 10 East of the third principal meridiaa A stockade was erected on the bank of the little Wabash, enclosing consider- able land, and the enclosure, with its protections, was called Boone's Fort. He also built a mill not now in existence, but always referred to as Boone's Mill. The steam mill now in New Haven, :mentioned hereafter, stands within the limits of the ancient stockade. An interesting landmark stands close to :r.G south end of this steam mill, in the shape of a stout and an umbrageous catalpa tree, the result of the growth of a riding whip, carelessly stuck in the ground by one of Jonathan Boone's daughters, upon her return from a pleasure ride on horseback. Jonathan Boone came to this country in 1812, for in that year Samuel Dagley, Sr., moved to Yew Haven with his family of f fteen?crildren, being attracted there by family relationship, one of his sisters being the wife of Jonathan Boone. fir. Boone remained in Hew Haven but a few years, possibly because he could not tolerate the refinements of advancing civilation, and so moved again into the wilderness -- this time into the wilds of Arkansas, where he died at an a:dvarced age. End of quote. in a bio€raphical sketch of Samuel Dagley, Or., on pace 830 of ;:bite County History it states that he was born on Peter's Creek, Barren County,K y., Oct. 2, 1797, and was the son of Thomas Dagley, a native of Ireland........ He moved to New Haven in 1E12 witl� his family of five children ---Sara (Mrs. Joseph Boone) , Rebecca (1•:rs. a illiam l'Vithrow) , Hannah (Mrs. Huth Withrow, and afterward krs. Robin 'Harris) , Ruth (Mrs. Carter Smith) , and Samuel. Eew haven i'ia.s trey: called H.00ne' s Fort, from j ose: h Boone, the first :settler. Mr. Boo: -%e L':a:. a brother of the famous Daniel Boone. As one of Thomas vagley' s da rhter s was married to oseph,raniel as nece=-sarily brour-ht to the Fettle- a2'. many it.tcresting .,tori p_ are tol of fi':: by hi_ relatives here. NV, �./ �:i.. :.•... i :l M7 Samuel Dagley slept with him the night he was twenty-one.yamuel was m:.r�► March 2. 181.7, in New Haven to Jane Webb, a daughter of Asa and Nary (Bloc$) Webb, who was -born Jan. 14, 1796. To them were born ten children---- these are named, but our interest does not carry into that veneration. Before we get too far, we should go back and correct mistakes, so we will take up the story that Enoch Boone told the person who interviewed him for Dr. Lyman C: Draper. Enoch said -that his Uncle Jonathan had operated his father, Squire Boone's mill in Kentucky before he went to Illinois. Then he tells that Jonathan settled at the Big Falls of the Wabash, near Mt. Carmel in Wabash County, not more than 15 miles, if that, from the mouth of the Wabash where he built a mill. The mouth of the Little V abash is about 50 miles from Mt. Carmel. Enoch probably didn't know there were two rivers, the Big Wabash and the Little Wabash, and he may have.confiised the names of the towns, Mt. Carmel and Carmi. The mouth of the Little Wabash is about 15 miles from the spot Jonathan chose to build a fort and a mill. The Little Wabash originates near Mattoon, Illinois and flows south to where it enters the Big Wabash about 15 miles from Boone's Fort. Carmi is situated another 15 miles upstream from the site of the old fort*- About 20 miles "as the crow flies"from the mouth of the Little Wabash, The Big Wabash flows intothe Ohio. Besides this proof , there is abundant evidence that the Boones, Jonathan and his son, Joseph , came to this spot on the bank of the Little Wabash. It has been argued that Jonathan was too old to build a mill in 1811-12. Since he was born in 1730, he would have been about 81 or 92, and as all the Boones were hardy, outdoor people, he was probably quite vigorous at that a€e. My guess would be that he planned and supervised the building of the mill, as he was a miller, according to Enoch's statement. In no place can we find that Joseph operated the mill, but there is proof in 81:1ite County records that he operated a ferry. v immie Chastain, a young man who s-. ant most of his life in a wheel- chair, and his tutor, Mrs. Knight 0. Holland, Loth of whom lived in New Haven coauthored a history of- the tov:n`. Here is a Quote: ":New Haven proudly claims to be the third olde-t town in Illinois, and assuming that the town was start- ed when Joe Boone settled here this claim is correct. "Joe" Boone, as he is still affectionately called by the peorle here, was a brother fif the famous Daniel Boone, the first settler of 'r�entucky." E.:d of quote. Callin€ Jens than "Joe". and his son ceing Joseph ray account for sc.---e of the confl_sion oi, names, and cause score fey. ~..0:111= to argue that ' of 11-1 V C.:a�1.IO.i. _CO%E ::�`r „r ..G^.E Z.00 inc_Z _ • _.1:m ieI S 1"o;o� ci CG_'_ .�.es he stork' Davie Cour:b y Public Library Morks`•tii'le, NC t9e riding whip stuck in the ground by one of the Boone daughters, to its conclusion. "For more than a hundred years one of the landmarks of New Haven was a large and beautiful catalpa tree which stood on the bank of the river near the south end of Boone's mill. This tree is said to have grown from a riding whip carelessly stuck into the ground by one of Boone's daughters on her return from a horseback ride. Many of the people who live in New Haven now, in 1943, can remember when this tree was struck by lightning and pract- ically destroyed. Seeing an opporunity to preserve the wood in the form of keepsakes for posterity, Seymore Hughes made and sold walking canes from the wreck of this old tree. It is said he made quite a lot of money and many of the canes are in homes herb." A Dagley descendant, Gerald C. Smith and I have corresponded for several years, he lives in Homelake, Colorado now, but when he was a boy his home was in Illinois. His father, the Rev. Samuel S. Smith was the min- ister of Big Prairie Methodist Church, which is one half mile from my home. When the Rev. Smith was transferred to Equality, the family.and furniture went by rail, and I Kant to use Gerald's own words to tell you how the three oldest boys went, and some of their adventures. "An overland caravan living off the country consisted of older brother Joyce, younger brother Harold and me with cows, chickens, horses and dogs arrived at our new home just as the last piece of furniture moved into the parsonage. Our overnight stay in historic old 1 ew Haven at Aunt Mollie Mitchell's had been as gay as usual and she hovered over us as we filled up on fried chicken and hone-made ice cream. At daybreak on our second day we had an escort to the Jonathan Boone cabin which we knew well, but our great great uncle, Henry Da€ley, was certain he had never shov:n us where he hid from Indians, with a Boone cousin when he was six years old. That would have been in 1839. His Aunt Sara was married to Joseph Boone, the o� son o: Jonathan, who was an older f Daniel." End of quote. Gerald carries the story a little farther in this letter: "I was nine years old at the time and my greatest thrill was hearing, from Uncle Henry Dacley, tales of Indians that were around when he was a boy. He was fairly old, but as I recall quite vigorous.is most exciting story, for me, was about the time a lady ancestor cane close to shooting Gariel Boone who had core unannounced, ..--for a visit to the cabin of his brother, Jonathan and had stopped just as usual, for a drink at a sprint. The lady was Eliza— 1i beth, v.ife of Jonathan, who was abscent, who on walki € to the doorway had spotted a figure at the seri n€ ar.d taouh t it v,zs a: Indian, as only a 'read Could be seer, w _ich F eei: ed to have a feather at tac%:ed to it. She euic=:iy DavieC '�3�� s� i s�t;Iolic Lauf iAi y Ulecicsville, NC '= •. Y reached for the ever-nresert rifle and had the marauder just about in her sights when up raised Daniel Boone and shouted a hearty greeting. 1 - Uncle henry was the son of Samuel Dagley, whose sister Elizabeth was wife of Jonathan Boone.-They had come with the Dagleys from Barren County, Kentucky. In 1811 Jonathan was age 81, and he resumed his trade as a miller after the stockade was builton the banks .of the ..'abash River and the structure 1 was named Boone' s Fort." Gerald is sure that the Boones- and' Dagleys did not travel overland, but used the river for transportation. He says that flatboats had to travel down the Ohio River in groups in the center of the river during the War of 1812 period as the British had supplied the Indians with muskets. Parts for the mill woLld be difficult to transport by wagon or cart. One of the buhr stones from the Boone mill is in five pieces, each weighing about 100 lbs. They fit together so perfectly one is reminded of the fitting of the stones in the,Great Pyramid. There had to be another mill stone, the location of which is unknown, also heavy weights for the mill wheel. I know where two of these weights are, and the five piece buhr is in my front yard, cemented to a base so that it forms a seat. This buhr it flint, which was im- ported from France, and is grCwed for corn meal. " River travel was much easier than going through the trackless forest. Rivers were much wider and deeper then than'r_ow. My Pomeroy ancestors cane from Shawneetown­up the Ohio, into the Big Wabash, then into the Little J Wabash, past Boone's Fort, and about ten miles fatther, all this in flatboats in 1814. They bought land, which is still owned by their descendants. 1'+e will follow the Boones later on, as they continue to travel the rivers and make their homes along the barks. Back to Gerald as he tells: I'My father died in 1931, and following his burial in Big Prairie Cemetery, Cousin Kate took us (Gerald and wife, Floye) to New Haven to see our various relatives and we spent an hour at the old Jonathan Boone cabin. I went down to the old spring and Floye stood in the door-way in the same spot that my Aunt Elizabeth had stood some century and a ouarter earlier." :r- Sara Dagley Boone's young brother, Samuel, was born in Barren County, Ky. in 1797. There is a family tradition that on Samuel's twenty- first birthday he slept with Daniel Boone, who was visiting at Boone' s Fort, that woLld be i : 1818. That may be the time j onat'ran and family derarted for the "wilds of Arkansas", and Daniel tr•avellirg with them to show than the way. Fiore we leave all mention 04 ::ortr'Caro=ina and Kentucky, let s use is 2te� from tI�E �OO?'iC' +COut O; CCt. 1yC7. ".',-e? te- V�aS sent by ?'.: ,.. p�� � L r I} &- Library , lh)Ci SVI;ie, Drduet W. Vidrine, Ville Platte, La.: MEERC R COU -..TY, CtARTEF: SESSION BOOK (Called Deed Book 4, No. 2) page 462, dated 21 September 1795 - Jonathan Boon of Mercer County, State of Kentucky, appoints "my well beloved son Joseph Boone of the County and Commonwealth aforesaid (mercer County, Kentucky) **mytrue and lawful attorney for me*** in the County of Roan in the state of North Carol- ina or elsewhere *** to make deed to Richmond Pierson for 144 acres of land*** No witnesses attested. s/ Jonathan Boone Acknowledged.by the Sept. Court of Quarter. Sessions 1795 in Mercer County. No wife signed and no release of dower was made. Along with the Boones and Dagleys when they came to Illinois were tIwo young men named Young and John Funkhouser. According to J. Andrew Smith, a great grandson of Young and Nary (Cross) Funkhousmz*, the Funkhouser boys continued up the Little Wabash to Carmi where they built one of the first log houses on Main Street. John remained in ar_d around Carmi, while Young obtained a tract of land about three miles south of Liberty. Liberty or Burnt Prairie as it is now called is about twenty miles north of Carmi, but still in White County. h otice that the Funkhousers were travelling by boat. The reason for my research of the Boone families is that there is a slight possibility that one of Jonathan's undiscovered daughters could be my great -great reat grandmother, Shaba Boone Johnston. Mary Cross F'unkhouser, mentioned above was a granddaughter of Shaba Boone Johnston. My Shaba Boone doesn't* fit into any Boone family I can find, and I've had some excellent searchers helping me. I;ow that is told we'll get back to the Boones at Boone' s Fort and go on with our corrections. How is one to correct a thing that is definitely wrong, but the right solution evades us? Mrs. Chalon Land, a local historian, now deceased, and I worked on this and she pronounced it a "tangled skein". There are just too many Samuel Dagleys, every family had one, as Mrs. J. H. Buchanaaid about the Eoones, every family had a Daniel. There is no Samuel Da.gley that we know of who came to ?oone's Fort in 1812 with his family of 15 children, as stated the Gallatin County History. Thomas Dawley came about 1812, with his 5 children, four married daughters, and young Samuel, born in 1797, would have been 15 years of ave then. He was marries: in 1E17 and had a fanily of 11 child- ren. . is son, Samuel Jr. ..has. born Sept. 25, 18-25. He married Lucinda Hanna, a first couSi n to my crar_dfa ther, ar . they grey; up on adjoining farms, So I know he is not the Samuel that to krkanras, as will be told later. Samuel 8.:.d Lucin-da ere u�a.rrie� =.ec. 31, lE46. :•:rs. G�l�r a;'s he dies s.o-:. 1 69. • ;.ow that ,%e h -z': e our Boone_ a T' l- °s i.. "oone' s Fort, we will •�. '' .�,r`�; i.. .�}i�L. ;Uta+y file NC aiL�Y i L'� check up on their doings. Jonathan and Elizabeth were probably the first to move on. Mrs. Osler tells that her great great grandfather, James Hanmore and his brother, Thomas, operated the grist mall. Joseph Boone operated a 1 ferry, applying for a license August 12, 1816. His charges for ferriage were: Ilan and horse 18 3/4 ¢, single horse 12-j¢, hogs and sheep 3¢, Wagon & team 50¢, two wheel carriage 2609 meat cattle over,one year old 1210, and footman 6V¢. In his.book, "Gallatin County, Illinois Cemgteries", Mr. Glen Miner, includes a most interesting history. Here is a quotation: "The Shawnee- town to Vincennes mail route had been started in 1806, going by what a few years later became Boone' s Hull or Boone' s Fort, but permanently named New Haven by one of its first merchants, one of whose acdount books, from 1816 to 1821 is still in existence.- We had heard of this ledger and read a news story about it, so my friend, Harriet B. Vaught and I borrowed it from the owners, ter. and Mrs. Andrew Bosaw. Mrs. Bosaw was Mary Elizabeth Dagley, called May by family and ,friends. N.ay had been so generous in loaning this book, and the pages being loose, some of them were lost, and we could find:.no mention of Joseph Boone, although others had found his name. Looking through this ledger was a delight, the many names of pioneer families and the articles they bought and the prices they paid! A book could be written about it. I was delighted to find the z1arre of my maternal great great grandfather, George R. Logan. Under date of 1E19 he bought window glass, nails, and needles. Probably he had just arrived from Cumberland County, Ky., and was building a cabin. This ledger was kept by Robinson & Porth, and on the last pare this: This day dissolved partnership with D. Forth, and all charges here after charged will be under the amme of tim. P. P.obinson. New haven May 11th 1821. Mr. Roswell H. Grant, a Yankee from New Haven, Conn., arrived at Boone' s Fort about 1818. He helped to survey the town, lay out the lots and streets, and it was he who changed the name to New Haven for his native town. It was in 1818 that Joseph and Sally Boone were selling their land, there are deeds recorded in both White,a d Gallatin Counties. One deed showed the price $8600, and another $2000. There were other sales, so we know they left with enough money to start, or buy a town, as Enoch Boone said they did, but no one in later days had any idea where this town was. The first deaths at Bo::ne' s Port WEre said to be two children of % ose.h Boone. T- a bicrraprical sketch of the Smith fa :ily 0- hi*e Co. .:i:.tory) it states: ::eery S. Smith's first r:if a Aas T av isia -oone, d&:.i: -:-tEr of oseph i;�i%.s►�Ee, NC 1� Boone. In my'search for the cildren of Joseph and Sally, I asked a good many people what they knee: about it, and a Dagley sent me to her cousin, Fern Dagley i Edwards, who was said to have a letter written by Joseph to his family back home , while he was on a trip to Kentucky. This letter was hand cancelled for 250. It could have contained the names of some of his children. Mrs. Edwards did not have that letter, but she showed*te other letters and papers. She. handed me.a letter to read, and the heading was Illechical, Arkansas, Mayl2, 1828. It was from Samuel Jr. to his father in the New Haven area. He told a sad story of how the riverbank where several cabins had been built, was .caving in so fast that some of the cabins had already fallen into the river, which was, of course, the Mississippi. He said he was moving his cabin-far- ther back as he did not want to lose it. He must have been discouraged and homesick as he wrote of longing to see his folks, and if not in this world, in the world to come. Now the name Illechical hit me like a flash--- that place Enoch Boone said Joseph Rent when he left Illinois-- Elesheco. I believe Samuel Dagley,Jr. knew how to spell it right, but Enoch never saw it in print and said it the way it sounded, and the person taking notes for Dr. Lyman Draper didn't know the correct spelling either. I could hardly wait to pyrite to Gerald about it. Before we go on with that story let's mention as many of Joseph's children as possible. Mrs. Edwards told me there was a Nancy Boone, who was either-a sister or daughter of Joseph, and she was said to have married one of the Samuel Dagleys. In White County marriages is this April 22, 1823 James A tterberry and Jane Boone. In Gallatin County marriages is this: Feb. 1, 1814 John Bone and Patsey Overstreet, both of union County, Ky. Remember Enoch saying that John stayed in Kentucky? And remember how clerks spelled names, Bone might be Boone. As to the exact time Joseph and Sally left here we do not know, but the last entry in White County records is a deed given by the Boones to Williail McHenry, dated Jan. 3, 1820. When Gera3:d Smith read ray letter and the connection I made between Elesheco and Illechical, he i,.-rote to the State Historical Society in Arkansas, and Glory .Be: :-pit the ;pack-pot: Hare carve a bundle of nhotoco--ies of instru- ments that proved t" oseph a- d Sally, and their son, Jonathan Boone had done . to Cricot County, Ark. i et your b:.ok of macs and find it1n the southeast cor- ner o-'* the stave, ::ltt: `.1E as its ea_T.e Y':_ ti'v^L'n dary. met j'^vi.r aye iGllow the : ivcr :SQL ins t%.'is,;%-. s a= d 'Lrns -:.d areas t at have , a:.d 111 do • ,valor.- t.o f_� V _. G: 44 'wv Irl_ z r+: Tvj1 rC `-here1 r a loop lorcal that forms a ho -man's land, such as v:e have seen in our own corner of the world where the Ohio and the Wabash do the same thing, but not on such a grand scale as the Father of k'aters. Is it any wonder that Enoch said Elesheco was in l ':ississippi state, on the Big Cypress Bend? Illechscal may be in the middle of the river by now, or possibly is a Fart of Mississippi state. The first of the instruments from Chicot County was the following: County of. Chicot, Territory of J'rkansas Book A-12 This indenture made this twentieth day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and twenty five. Between Sally Boon widow of the late Joseph Boon, of the first part and Jonathan Boone of the second part, both of the County of Chicot, and Territory of Arkansas. Witnesseth I that the said party of the first part for and in consideration of the sum of one hundred and twenty dollars to hur in hand paid by the party of the second part the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged. Hath bargained and sold ---- unto the said party of the second part and to his heirs ----all that undivided half of land ---- which was bargained and conveyed to the party of the first part by J ohnC. Jones by a certain instrument of writing dated June 21. 1821 and recorded in the Clerk's office ---- It being rresisely the same lands, tenaments and premeses as were bequeathed to the said Jones in the last will and testament of the said late Joseph Boone --- In witne.se whereof I the said party of -the first part hath here- unto ereunto set hur hand and seal the day and year first above mentioned. Sarah Boon Personally appeared before me, Richard Latting, Calk & E. of R. -- in and for the County of Chicot and Territory of Arkansas, Sarah Boon and acknow- ledged the foregoing conveyance or instrument of writing to be hur voluntary act and deed for the purpose therein contained. In testimony whereof I have here unto set my hand and seal this 1st day of April A. D. 1826 Richard Latting Clk. etc This proves that Joseph Boone died before June 20, 1825, and €ives us cause to wonder who John 'G. Jones was. Could he be married to one of the Boone daughters? Surely so or Joseph wDuld.. not have named him in his will. Te will see more of this name. The second instrument: Know all mere by these _resents that I Jc'r_r. C. Jones of Chicot 'County ir. of = rkans_ s for and in consideration of the sum of t'rrE;e hundre d .collar- Cash to one in hand n2i. the recti+:t ::t1�reOf is hereby led --ed or also for a certain notie oI ai." :.c mea i Ew Haven,T11. ::..:­ary 2, 1L�c6 :a�sble at r:-- ---'.,Sdays � or � our �._ nF� i� by -J ora t ^a NG W . Boone of the said County of Chicot -- against said Jones and for other good considerations have bargained sold and delivered to the said Jonathan W. Boon all and singular the articles of merchandise & countryproduce, Book Accounts, notes of hand, etc. etc. set forth -and mentioned in the following schedule viz. 2 peaces of domestic plaid 55 yds.@220, 1 pack pins 1.500, 2 peases of brown shirting 60 yds. @ 160, 45 yds calico @210, 2 doz horn combs 1.50@, 5 musquetoe bars @ 1.50¢, 17 unbleached shirts@ $8 dz, 20 bleached do 8.50 dz, 20 fine cotton do 7.50, 12check do 9.50, 15 pairs pantaloon, 4 gingham do, 3 gingham coats @ $2, 2 round jackets 1.50, 5 vests 1.50, 4 pr satinette pantiloons $5.50, etc. Also all my interest in the undivided half Or a certain Flat Boat & its cargo viz.'Seven thousand .pounds pork 270, 100 pairs venison hams 2.500, 5*barrels corn meal 1.50, 300 lbs. lard 6�0, Half of empty flat boat 615., 1 beadsted $14, l.table $7, 1 feather bed $13, 3 chairs $3, also 2 cows and calfs $10 each pair. Also the following Book Accounts and notes of hand, Benjamin Pattens note dated April 1, 1826 at 10 days for ninty dollars; Francis Roy - craft $74.50; Jno. Plaulding 65; Samuel Hankins duebill $7; A Smalley' s account $4.75; James Estell note 33.70; Joseph Carner oblegation for rent, etc. To have and to hold the said produce tc, etc. and the proceeds i thereof to the said Jonathan W. Boone his heirs and assignes - and for the consideration above stated, by the said Jones to hereby forever quit claim & discharge the said Boone from all demands whatsoever that the said Jones hath against him up to the date of these presents. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this 11 day of April in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and twenty six. John C. Jones There follows another long list of merchandise, some of the items very interesting, but tris is not the place to list all of it. it was witnessed by W. B. Patten a. -.d James Estill. Then the same instrument signed by Richar;: Latting, as found 'in the irstru&-"ent signed by Sarah Boone. Dated 21, April A.D. 1826. r Now comes another in trumient, numbered A-110, wherein John C. Jones transfers to Jonathan W. Boone for and in consideration of two hundred dollars, a11 ri`._s jointly tto their ointl owned merchaIdise. The said �� onathan �� . _" � Leone cath avrEed 2rd oblirat-61 ed himself by a inztrumeri- of writ -in` bea:lnr X'qual date herewith to :gay to the fcllow-*ng raced creditors of the said ;,ones two years frcc the _ate hereo_ the several sums o� Loney annexed to �f 0heir namL*s ----- Eight names of persons 'or firms, all of Cincinnati follow and the sums owed to them add up to $42?1.01. Jones transfers all the goods, household stuff, merchandise, furniture and implements and all other goods, J chattles, claims, interests and demands whatsoever mentioned and expressed in the schedule hereunto annexed. John C. Jones Witnessed by James Blaine and J osepul�an - 8th day of June 1830 At: one time I had another instryxment that snowed that Jonathan V. Boone was sheriff of Chicot, County, Ark. Territory at the time of his death which occured between June 8, 1830 and Jan. 4, 1831, and his mother Sally or .Sarah Boone had to settle his estate. Instrument A-158 tells about that. Know all men by these presents that I Sarah Boone of tie County of Chicot and Territory of Arkansas, mother of and legal and sole represent- ative of Jonathan W, .Boone, deceased, have on this fourth day of January, one thousand eight hundred and thirty one, in consideration of the sum of one thousand dollars to me in hand paid by John C. Jones of said county, etc. ----the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged granted bargained sold released transferred and forever quit claimed unto John C."Jones, all the estate real and personal claims and demands of or belonging to the said Jonathan cif. Boone deceased, including his interest in the late firm of Boone and Jones by instru- ment bearing date of June 8, 1830, and which is on record in �h e clerk's office, etc. James Estill is mentioned as administrator. Sarah Boone signs and it is witnessed by I% B. Patton. This brings us to Daniel, the son of Jonathan Boone. In a letter from Mrs. J. H. Buchanan, late historian_ of the Boone Family Association of Washington, she sent this thumb-nail sketch, all of which is authenticated. "We have a stat of the will of James Carter, father of Mary, wife of Jonathan Boone, in which James names her as such and bequeathes her 'Bristol Hall' among other properties. So we know Jonathan was married and to whom, but we have no date of marriage or of Daniel's birth except he gives his age when married in Louisiana. In February 1800, he is in New Orleans, requesting permission to go to A ttakapas, Li. He is there by March and in July marries Marie Rose Benoit in St. Martinsville, (Attakapas). Rose Marie (sic) must have died as in November 1801, as a uidov.er, he marries Anne nouduaux in Opelousas, La. In 1800, as a witness in a civil suit, he €ave his age as 27 and his religion as A nglean. (tet he married tz o Catholic girls:). In June 1L04 his son, Daniel, born in lE03, is ba:tised in the Catholic religion i r. �t . ,'•'ar Lir_s�►ilwe . E �;�- I-;$u14C Ubrary -- DaV1a s i�ie, NC ��_ bock f. a � t I -n June 1806, Daniel, his family and posseEsions are at Bexar, Texas, requesting land on which to settle. (He had become quite hostile to i the L. S. because of land troubles, for he was as careless about filing, etc, as his noted uncle, Daniel: So he went to Texas, then a Republic.) In March 1809, he presented a bill for blacksmith work, then in San Antonio.. In June 182-7, Anne Boudreaux is named widow of Daniel Boone so he must have been killed by Indians about that date. This is a brief summary of many documents. In one it says he is the son of Jonathan Boone. This will give you an idea that he lived a stormy life, and died a tragic death. He was first married 12, Aug.: 1800 and gave his a€e as 26, he also gave his mother's name as Mary Carter". Mrs. Drouet W. Vidrine of Ville Place, La., is a descendant of Daniel Boone, and much of the above information is her work. Now for Jonathan's son, John Boone, about which nothing of positive proof has ever been found. In correspondence with Mr. Arthur J Boone, of Cambridge Springs, Pa., he sends his line of descent from John Boone. He --says. that Mrs. J. H. Buchanan said this John was probably the son of Jonathan. Two pages in Boone Pioneer Echoes, Jan. 1969 are given to this family. We will copy part of it. John Boone, born within.eigst miles of York, York County, Penngyl- varia, about 1755; and died July 17, 1835. he married Elizabeth Alford, 1787 in Augusta County, Virginia and she died Feb. 15, 1841. (Arthur Boone corrects Augusta County to Rockingham, the date to 1785). Their children: John Boone abed 57 in 1847 Nancy �oone 'Burdett 37 in 1847 Henry Boone b. March 10, 1802 in Monroe C�6Ja7anor Frances Boone Myers 37 in 1847 Sally Boone Humphreys JA. Boone served in the American Revolutionary .' ar. He Anlisted in York County, Pa. in 1?77 and served three years ---- His Pension Claim R1017. Application executed Aug. 20, 1833, at which time he was ?7 and resident of Konroe County, West Virginia.: Mr. Raymond Boone adds this to the above: The puzzle about Jo n Boone is that he stated in his :;ensior. application that he vias a nephew of Daniel Boone of 'Kentucky". The name of J ohr_' s father is not known. In the faMnilies of Daniel's brothers is found no J onn Boone that could be John Boone of Fayette Co., Y;-*. Va. tihen. John served in the Revolution in 1777, from York Co., Pa., the family of Scuire Boone had lone Leen in :;orth Carolina. Is th z One of the fil"st inQ-4." aces Of �Orre one- Vl� j..;il.z �i1P.S�11U t0 J2Tlie1 = oene, when it is not a f a%:ily de:.Cended f rcm .: Eco = e _ oone III Of Devonshire, . 1 Davie COUrl " Pubi c Liu�ary t . Mocksviize, NC England and Pennsylvania? or was John Boone really kin to Daniel and that con- nection is not now known? James Douglas Boone did indicate that John Boone was a son of a brother of Daniel Boone. The above material was graciously provided by Anna F. Wood of Graydon, W.' Va. from papers by James Douglas Boone, of Fayetteville W. Va. Jan. 1926-0 Gerald Smith adds -that the John Boone born in York County, Pa., could be the son of Samuel -Boone who became an ironmaster in Reading, Pa. after his family left for North Carolina. Reference found in a book about the Boones written by W. H. Bogart in 1854. Mr. Arthur J. Boone, of Cambridge Springs, Pa., is descended from the above John Boone and Elizabeth Alford Boone married 1785, through their son -John, who married fancy Carr (Kerr) 1809. Their son William .mar: Elizabeth .Fii7k--in-1841, and their son Andrew H. mar. Isabel Ferguson, they were the grandparents of Arthur J., their son Orlando J. mar. Marie C. Peterson, and they were Arthur's parents. Mrs. A.J. Boone has prepared a small book on this family. If interested, the address it 127 Canfield, Cambridge Springs, Pa. 16403, Not only in the above case, but in all that has been included in this collection of items about tha Boones, if any reader has other knowledge, or can make any correction, we would be most happy to have this done. The add- ress will be given at thi conciusicn. Two pages, '264 and 265, from William and Mary Quarterly, submitted by Mrs. H. Virginia Cahill, no date shown, are about a Skaggs, and a Smith family. It states that Miss Rhoda Boone Smith, born Jan. 3, 1793, lived and died in Warren County, Ky., She married Abraham 14oredock Skaggs, Oct. 15, 1E15. The Smith Parents of this Rhoda are unknown by their first names, although the names of their seven children are given and all daughters have,Loone as a middle name. Therf'it states, "It is understood that ----Smith's wife was either a daughter or granddaughter of Jonathan ?oone (born 1730) brother of the famous Daniel Boone. Her father was commonly called Esq. John Boone in Ky. or by the old relatives" .- From The Boone Scout of Jan. 1966 comes this: A recent clipping from the 7.'ashington Post, tells of the first lecture of the seasonof the Library- of Congress Gertrude Clark V,hit-kall Poetry and Literature Fund. Diss Katheri:.e Anne Porter, ack.r.owledged as Ameri:an master of the short story form, but prob- eb•ly be t k:_own by :der :first full lenc-th -novel, "The Shiti of � ools", pubiished _n 1962, v;as the gue-t s_,e&ker. ::iss Pcrter, who v.ds speak'; nE. -trite is forma_ly ::_e_.t__..ec t-- -L2-,Or ;.'r.e was 6: _ t -`t anuru ter o• Daniel oche. "It was ,j a �; ti's •.1.. K :11ulo,.c. i a � not Daniel, it was his little brother Jonathan" she confided. "But we liked nim". What a refreshing attitude and direct explanation: No wonder the large audience waa charmed with her. We are indebted to Mr. J. B. Childs of Wash- ington D. C. for this bit of Boone information. More information, with reference sources may be found in Boone Pioneer Echoes, July 1973, on Daniel, son of Jonathan, called ANCLO- AMERICAiiO. Another daughter of Joseph and Sally may be Esther Boone who married Richard Sessions and moved to Z°ilkinson County, Miss. Also a Mrs. Thurman Boone of Columbia, Miss. says Joseph Boone was given land grant in `fast Feleciana Parish, La. This parish and Wilkinson County, Miss. are divided .by the State line, and both lie along the river. Yhere ever one finds these Boones, they are near a river, which we are certain they used for transportation and an aid to their livlihood. +;'ho knows, Joseph could have died in Mississippi as Enoch said. He could have been looking after his land or visiting his dau- ghter, or both. Or there is a possibility hat this Joseph is not the one we are interested in, the husband OltSally Dagley. Mr. Arthur Boone sent the following,,.from the Boone Family Associa- tion of Missouri: Jonathan Boone had tw*o daughters, Abagail; and Dinah, who married Zachariah Allen, their children: Jonathan, Lewis, Polly Thornton, Sally Garrison. I have been a member of this association since 1964, and I i haven't found this in any of the Boone Pioneer Echoes. On July 11, 1971 A. BOOItiE MILL MEMORIAL PLAQUE was dedicated in the village of New haver.. It was erected by Gallatin County Historical Society and the Illinois State Historical Society. This is the story the plaque tells: JONATHAN BOOhT, AN OLDER BROTHER OF THE FAMOUS PATHFINDER DA&hIEL BCOi:E, BUILT A MILL ON THIS SITE ABOUT 1800. HE WAS BORN IN PEENSYLVANIA IN 1730 AICD DIED ABOUT 1808. HI Gh , JOSEPH COI:TI UED TO OPERATE THE MILL. Ili 1813) OSr.PH WAS NAMED TO MARK OUT A ROAD FROM BURNT PRAIRIE TO SHAWNEET0Wly BY WAY OF HIS MILL. ON AUGUST 24, 1814, HE PURCIRASED THE MILL- SITE FROM THE iEDERAL Lk1\L OFFICE AT SHAWNEETOWE. THE MILL WAS USED AS A LANDMARK BY THE STATE LEGISLATi;nL II: DESCRIBING THE BOUE'DARY LINE SEPARATIl"G V'HITE FROM UkLLATIN COUNTY. JOSEPH SOLD THE LAE -D Ir; 1818. HE DIED IN MI ;SISSIPPI IN 1827. X.rs. George Edwards and Mrs. Roel M=arlin unveiled the marker, oth are _.00ne - Dagley descendants. At the dedic_•tio , the urincipal speaker was =.ussell Birk, State Historical Markers Cra►irm.an. *.-*e took each sentence on the ��lacue and exp lained how he mained that mi=ca cf '�cn— ledge, and that rothin f:•a-s on it C �t did t :: � - = � % G _o a�".. 'J���_ti%t .:rcOf�. .. e 3t"Gt d that 01,Onath.a:: PA r_ `built the mill about 1800, he may have been, and probably was a little later, but since no proof existed, a few years either way made little difference. The remaining sentences There from the statements of Enoch Boone, found in the Draper Manuscripts. We know that some of Enoch's statements are incorrect, in fact Mr. Birk said some of it was hearsay. Now we know that Joseph's death did occur at about the time Enoch stated, !'subsequent to 1827". Mr. Birk also related that when Ithite and Gallatin Counties were divided back in the. early 1EOOs, the Boone rill was used in tie legal description as the dividingline between the two counties. The finding of this description according to Biek, verifies the fact that the mill actually F' existed. The History of White County, on page 297: The south line of the county was once described in law as "beginning in the eye of the millstone in Boone' s mill" at New Haver' From the History of Gallatin Cou. ty: ''Although White County was organized in 1815, the boundary lire between it and Gallatin County was not settled for many years. At the Decembe-r term (1830) off'the county commiss- ioners court of Gallatin County, the surveyors of Gallatin, I:hite and Hamilton Counties were required to meet on the 16th of August 1831, to run and establish a line between said counties. They met according to this requirement, but .ti could not determine the piece of ground u=pon which 3oone's mill had stood, as the mill had been removed. ---- The survey was completed August 23, 1831. The present day boundary was not settled permanently until February 28, 1854." Iiow we see the wisdom of the Boones entering the same piece of land at both land offices, the one at Carni, and the one at Shawnee town. (Tars.) Gladys P. %'illiams .t. 1 Box 234 Carmi, Ill. 62E21 Qdic .�.r ,�a!'lij fub U 3 NC 1 Qr - 0 4 Now for arpother chapter in the story: Enoch Boone said Jonathan had several daughters that married and lived } along Green River in Kentucky. We know of one, Dinah, who married Zachariah Allen. The dates seemed right that my great -great -great grandmother, Bathsheba Boone Johnston could be one of Jonathan's daughters, but no proof could be f ound . Lathan andShaby Johnston's daughter, Hettie, was the wife of Zachariah Cross, and their daughter, Mary1married Young Funkhouser. Young and John Funkhouser came to Illinois with the Boone-Dagley party, but instead of stay - at Boone's Fort, they proceeded up the Little Wabash in their boat. John stayed at the tiny village`of Carmi, and Young went about twenty miles farther to the Burnt Prarie area. We know that Zachariah and Hettie Cross came to White County about 1830. He was a Revolutionary soldier, and is buried in Burnt Prairie Cemetery. They were parents of ten children, after Mr. Cross's death , Hettie and a daughter named Bathsheba went back to her native Logan County, Ky. home to live. Many Cross descendants live here, six are members of Wabash Chapter ,Daughters of American Revolution. Hettie Johnston. Cross's brother, John Johnston, had three daughters living in White County, Mary, wife of Dr. Henry Stewart; Elizabeth, wife of James Stewart, later of Geor§tPatrick; and Nancy, wife of'James Patrick, the latter being my great grandparents. John Johnston was in V:hite County in 18-34, and rave a deposition as to the marriage date of his sister and Zachariah Cross, when Mr. Cross applied for his evolutionary +car pension. There is no evidence that John Johnston ever lived in :shite County. His home was in Johnson County (Vienna) at the time of his wife's death, Between 1843 a:_d 48. But he was a r_entucr.ian, his parents mored from'iorth Carolina to Logan County, icy. about 1779. His father died in 1809, and John and hil mother, "Shaby" were administratossh f his estate. In 1818 John married Nancy manna, of Logan County. He was then a Meth- odist preacher, a circuit rider, and an associate of Peter Cartwri:ht. Referers r to him as a minister are found in Christian and Trigg Counties in Kentucky, also Lotan County. nithoL:rn I did not have proof o. descent from a 3oore, I was allot -ed to • becowe a member of the Loore Family 1tiesearch Association_ of '•:issouri, and the cone r a=ily iassociation of -as'irgtor.. =:oth organization ,- orked with me and for ce b;.,,t my --at^sh-eba 7 -;cone could : of be sou. d. W • Mr. Charles B. Boone of Chicago loaned rye his huge volume, The Boone Family by Hazel Attebury Spraker and I had plenty of time to study and copy from it. I joined several other organizations and placed ads in genealogical publications, corresponded with numerous persons, but no one could find my Bathsheba. Then I joined the Genealogy Club of America, and received their publication, The Genealogy Digest. fir. Kerry Ross Boren was on the Editorial Staff, and wrote some interesting articles, also had ads for his Borens in western Kentucky and southern Illinois. I asked him if he would look for my Boones and Johnstone in the sage area he v.as searching for his Borens. He agreed and started sending material, he asked me to help him by sending Boren information, which I was able to do. Eventually cane the letter that sent my spirits soaring Kerry Ross Boren had found that his Borens and Dinah Boone Allen and her family had come to Illinois with the Boone-Dagley party, but they had settled on the Indiana side of the Big Wabash. It is reported that the Lincoln family wain in this party, but went farther north into Indiana. None of these families stayed long in- Ill. & Ind. I imagine the Wabash flooded them out. Next we find these families and Jonathan and Elizabeth Boone appearing in Pike County, Ill. Dinah Boone Allen left a record stating that she was the daughter of Mary Calloway and Jonathan Boone, she was born in 1759, a sister (unnamed) Dorn in 1761 married David Smith and lived in :';arren County, Ky., Bathsheba born 1765 married Aathan Johnston. Then she names John, Daniel and Joseph. Dinah said their mother was Nary Calloway of Virginia, who married Jonathan Boone in Kentucky. Vieknow that when Daniel married a Catholic girl in Louisiana, he had to give a bit of information about himself, and he stated that his mother was Mary Carter. Daniel was born in 1774, and his mother could have been a second wife of Johathan. Besides Pike County history, which. some say is very inaccurat evidence that istrueis found in vrarren County, Ky. Marriages; in Skaggs Family History in l,;illiam & Mary Quarterly'Vol. 21, page 67. At last we have found where Jonathan Boone vert when he left his Fort and gill in Illinois, -and the date of his death should be 1818 instead of 1808. My next problem is to prove that Jonathan Boone is my gr -gr -gr -gr -grand- father. If that is so his brother, Daniel Soone is my gr -gr -g -r -great uncle. nd so my problem is solved, or is it? Da ° e 'SIG S ,vV:tv`�, �'� li g*l !, ilzilw zv, -- i Davie ccui'r -i""t., u'oilc Lib rarY by . MURIAL QUESTELL OSLER mocksviliet KC ZANESVILLE, OHIO 1971 h. .This book was compiled, to the best of my know- ledge. by Murial Questell Osler. My many thanks to the Dagley family for infor- mation on the family - Also to Mary Smith of Texas who supplied the information on the Dagley family before 1790. PUbiic Library Mocksuille, NC d Thomas Dagley our Immigrant Ancestor and forfather of eight generations his son Samuel Dagley his son Jonathan Boone Dagley his son Charles Bailey Dagley his son William Bailey Dagley his son Joe Bailey Dagley his son Michael Kieth Dagley his son Charles £Fieth Dagley Library €-U svi le, NG . na - � 5 1 , f 4 a i C, Ka qg. 4z .: 9ys+- s THOMAS DAGLEY b L j/�� fy f jOti ' Thomas Dagley was born a out 1755 and died after the 1820 Federal Census. He'is buried in Union Ridge Cemetery in White County, Illinois. According to the White County history, published in 1883 by Interstate Publishing Company of Chicago, Illinois, "Thomas Dagley was a native of Ireland. His wife was a native of Scotland. Of Scotch -Irish descent, the Dagleys, like all their race, have energy, strong common sense and practical worth. Thomas Dagley was baggage -master for General Washington in the Revolutionary War. During the march of the British there were guards placed over his wife's house to protect it from the ravages of the troops. He moved to New Haven i in 1812 with his family of five children. They were Sarah (Mrs. Joseph Boone), Rebecca (Mrs. William Withrow), Hannah' (Mrs. Hugh Withrow and afterward Mrs. Robin Harris), Ruth (Mrs. Carter Smith) and Samuel. With the help of Daughters of American Revolution, Thomas Dagloy's name was added to the list of soldiers of the Revolutionary War in Washington, j D.C., in the summer of 1964, He was 3 a patriot from Rowan County, North Carolina; and furnished supplies. Copies of his pay -vouchers are on file at the Daughter of American Revolution in Washington, copied from State Department of Archives and History of North Carolina titled "Revolutionary Army Accounts". Volume XI, page 28; Folio two. The United States of America reimbursed the State of Carolina for 323 pounds, 1 Ctlilie Count, F u'ok Library Niocksville, NC eix shillings paid to Thomas Dagley ,for forage on May 3, 1779, 1%9�— A deed was made on April 27, 1772 between Thomas Dagley and Gasper Rowland of Rowan County, North Carolina, "that piece of parcel of land on the east side of Bare Creek, being part of the land granted to the said Thomas Dagley by the State afore"..,112 acres !by estimation... signed Thomas (X) Dagley, witnessed by Thomas Prather ;and Daniel Hendrick. In 1795, August 25, a deed of Thomas Dagley to Jacob Keller, estimated 80 acres of land granted by State to Dagley. It was on the east side of Bare Creek, by John Willcoxen's corner ;and Daniel Lewis's corner. It was witnessed by William Willcoxen and William Butlar. Following Dagley into Kentucky, Peter Creek was in Green County before Barren County was formed. In the Surveyors Book of Barren County, - Commissioners Certificate number 1640. Jonathan Boone, Commissioners Certificate number 1643, 200 acres to Thomas Dagley' by virtue. Commissioners Certificate number 1644 Joseph and Sally Boone, dated August 29, 1799. In the Barren County Circuit Court records, it turned out Joseph Boone had no clear title to 200 acres and Rebecca Dagley made a deposition in Circuit Court, Case fifty-seven, on August 24, 1813, that she witnessed the signing of the dead by Joseph Boone in April or May of 1811. This was probably where Joseph Boons was selling out and moving on into Illinois. Rebecca Dagley's name was also 2 Davie County Public Library Mocksvilie, NC listed in the American Genealogical Index in Washington in the first census taken in'1790. She was of the Slocum family. Other Dagleys listed were: James Dagley and John Dagley who lived in Pennsylvania. Their estimated dates of birth (175?). John Dagley lived in Virginia, estimated birth (174?). James Dagley and Jonathan Dagley, estimated birth (175?), lived in North Carolina. In January 1797, Thomas Dagley gave a deposition on behalf of Squire Boone in Shelby County, recorded in Dead Book B 1, page 321. Quote, "We, John Warford and Daniel Kitcham, in obedience to a warrant from the Court Of Shelby County, have on the sixteenth day, of this instant caused Thomas Dagley to come before us, about forty- two years of age and being duly sworn, deposeth and saith that in June 1796, he came in company with Squire Boone to where Sims Boling now lives and Mr. Boone said that was Gesses ;reek. We put the first letters of our names on trees. Mr. Boone on a Buckeye and himself on a Blue Ash. Boone also Put the first letters of his name on A stone near to a Lick. We camped at the Lick and next morning went westwa- about three hundred yards and made an Improvement by deadening two or three Sugar trees and peeled a Walnut which is all the Improvement made in this, County with a view of claiming land for it, and then called the place Pleasant Farm and saith not". Thomas (X) Daglay In the tax list in Frankford, Davie County Public Library Kentucky, page six, 1799+ Thoria 2 Dagloy, MOck$vilie, NC 200 acres Peter Creak, Barren County. In 1800, Thomas Dagley and John Dagley Ijr each paid taxes on 200 acres. In 1801 listed Thomas Dagley but no John Dagley. Each year Thomas Dagley paid taxes on 200 acres until 1812. In 1813 he only paid on 100 acres. In 1814 no Dagley listed, which ties in with the informa- tion that has been handed down from generation to generation that Samuel Dagley went back to Kentucky and brought his father and sisters to Boone's Fort in Illinois. In 1814 Thomas and Samuel Dagley bought land in White County, Illinois. TOMBSTONE OF THOMAS DAGLEY 4 Davie Couniy PLI '; �7urary voc,av0e, NC ,. ____1�- .-.._. -- . ___.. SARk DAGaY Sara (Sally) Dagley, daughter of Thomas Dagley was married to Joseph Boone, broth�r`of Daniel Boone, so we have been told from generation to generation. We don't know where Sara was born. In Deed Book C, page 163, Barren County, Kentucky, May 3, 1811. Joseph Boone and wife Sally of Barren County to Joseph Lanning, 100 pounds lawful money, 200 acres. Commissioner Certificate number 1644, survey of which was dated August 29, 1799. Line of Ruben Foxes... John Right's line... Jonathan Boone's corner, "with appurtenances". Signed Joseph and Sally Boone. Witnessed by Jeremiah Bridges, George Shiplet and James Morri- son. Recorded October 12, 1811. Joseph Boone probably left Ken- tucky in 1811, and moving westward, settled on the banks of the river later called the Little Wabash. There are conflicting stories. Some say they settled in 1811 and some in 1812. He brought with him his young brother-in- law, Samuel Dagley. Here was built a wooden stockade beside the log cabins. There was the Cries Mill and a pioneer trading post. .The Fort was called Boone's Fort. The trading post was Operated by Roswell S. Grant, a Connecticut Yankee, who came to the settlement. He changed the name of Boone's Fort to New Haven in honor Of a city in his native state. Accord - int to White County history, page 938, Roswell Grant, a son of A. S. Grant, the gehius of invention and master of circumstances, surveyed 56avie C00W public Library Mocksville, NO p�,vie Cc.:n"! pUrltic Ijbrar/ ��ockwdte� tic and platted the original plat. The Gries Mill was controled. and operated by our great -great-grand- father, James Hanmore, and his brother, Thomas. After Thomas' death in 1862, James operated the mill alone until he sold out to the Stock Company. James was born at Rosecommonce, Ireland. about 1816. In White County.Court Records, Book A, pa§e 18, under date August 129 1816, On the motion of Joseph Boone, by his attorney, praying the establishment of a ferry across the. Little Wabash River at the place_ where he now lives and proving to the aatisfaction of the court that he had complied with the requisition.of:the law and they believe such a ferry will be of Public Utility, where upon it is considered by the court that said Boone be permitted to erect and keep R ferry at above recited place and to observe the following rate of ferriage: Mas end horse, 18 3/4¢, singl4 horse, 12�, "ho$gs" and sheep, 3¢, wagon and team 50¢, two wheel carriage, 26, meat cattle over one year old, 12 ¢ and footman, 6j�". In Recorders Office Book A, pale "Joseph and Sally Boone for ,000.00.to Robison and North, under date of April 6, 1818, parcel of land lying on Little Wabash S.E. I of Section 179 T. 7, 3 & R 10, 160 acres lying in the district of Shawneetown.�' I don't have the dates when Joseph Boone bought land in White County or how long he lived there. In Book A, page 21, October 13, 1818, Joseph Boone of Wb-ite County and wife Sarah doeded land to Samuel Dagloy for $2.000.00 in Section 12, Townr_h_p South and Rango 9, Er_st of 2nd incipal.meridan. The old Joe Boone ' se, as it was referred to in later ars, was moved off of this farm Jonathan B. Dagley, Sr. to the rty acres north of where he built big house. It is owned by Mrs. 11ey Dagley and has been added to remodeled. One end of the front on is part of the original Joe e house. The original logs can seen in the attic and are still Perfect condition. By Joseph and Sarah Boone selling l it land in 1818, they were probably paring to leave Illinois. In Gallatin County records: oseph Boone to Mary Hatchel, October • 1818. Joseph Boone to John Newel, tober 26, 1818." Not much on Joseph Boone family. e first deaths recorded were two 11 children of Joseph Boone. In its County history on page 856, eery S. Smith's wife was Lavisia Go daughter of Joseph Boone." Boones probably moved on to loot County and territory of "Arcansa3". least Henry S. Smith was living re on March 26, 1831 when Samuel leY gave him a mortgage for •000.00 on.the Southwest j of section Henry S. Smith's second wife Cynthia (Mitchell) Linicomb. In bhita County history, page 856, pry and Cynthia Smith were parents four children: John H., Marietta s. V. 0. Salsbury),'Elbort and calf. Mrs. Marietta Salsbury had bo a lover of flowers. After her Dav*_IL ary Mocicsville, NC Bath, my parents, Alex and Lillian Daglev) Queatell, bought the forty Cres in'1916. Enory spring our Pont_yard was.. beautiful. It was ull of daffodils -,-narcissus and Onquils of all kind, snow drops and Bautiful blue bells. The farm is cw owned by Joe Dagley. library U� i i I 56 Pepleter of the Kentucky (Cert icsd for 400 fees Sx pd D. D.) John Alvy this day claimed a pre- emption to 400 Acrd of land at the State price lying on the head of e branch running South into pond Creek about 3 Miles from the Flat lick and abon: 12 Miles from this place by actual settlement made in the Month of May 1779 satisfactory proof being made to the Court they are of Opinion that the said Alvy has a right to a PreemP- tion of 400 Acres of Land including the said settlement & that a Cert issue (Cert issd for 1400 fees W D. D. to Colo. Clark) Squire Boone for and ' behalf of Benj. Vaucleve this day aimed a set- tlement & preemption a tract of Land )Sing Clear Cr known by the name of be pai Stone a branch of Brayhei res a branch of Salt River by the sal ancleve's Improving the same e. Crop of Corn in the year 76 tiefaclury proof being in to the Ck they ore of Opinion t the said Van eve has a right to a ttlement of 400 A of Land includ- ing the said Improvement & the pre- emption of 1000 Acres of Land adjoin- ing and that s Certificate issue accord- ingly. / (Cert issd for 1400 fees &c pd D. D. to Colo. Clark) Squire Boone for and in behalf of om&—ThLD`Z this day claimed a set- tiement & preemption to a tract of Land lying on the head of fists on No E Fork of Bresbei s's Creek a branch of Salt River to include a ®all Deer lids by improving the same & raising a Crop of Corn in the year 1776 satisfactory proof being made to the Court they are of Opinion that the said Dagerly has a right to a settlement of 400 Acres of Land to include the said Improvement & the preemption of 1000 Acres Adj'g & that a Cert'e issue accordingly. +(Cert issd for 1400 fees &c pd D. D. to Colo Clark). Squire Boone for & in behalf of James Lee this day claimed a settlement & preemption to a tract of Land lying on Bresheirs's Creek a branch of Salt Raver about 2 Miles above the painted Stone by improving the same & raising a Crop of Corn in the year 1776 & re- siding 12 Months in the Country before the year 1776 satisfactory proof being made to the Count they are of Opinion that the said Lee has a right to a settle- ment of 400 Acres of Land to include the said Improvement & the preemp- tion of 1000 Acres adj'g & that a Cert'e issue accordingly. (Cert issd for 1400 fees pd D. D. to M. Brashears) Marsham Brasbeir for and in behalf of Rich'd Brashears this day claimed a settlement and preemption to a tract of Land lying on Fox Run a breach of Brashears Creek a branch of Salt River about 3 Miles West of the pointed Stone by the said Brashears reining a crop of Com in the year 1775 & 1776 satisfactory proof being made they are of Opinion that the s'd Breasbears has a right to a settlement of 400 Acres to include the above location and the pre- emption of 1000 Acres adjoining and that a Certificate issue aecordingly. Davie County Public Library mocksvilie, NC -4 i -a+er J ~ '1;,.'r;�:4rsc,+.mfvwJ::itGa:,:Sn'•Y.Ihii ZEN UCXY T 19 4 OURT 011 try/ with SUPREME COURT, DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY Deed BookS A - B1 - B2 (1783•- 1792) By MICHAEL LaCOOK, C.G n IPe)Sf.t�r 9E(1��aq S BETTIE A. COOK, C.G. S - EP 0 5 5 lyd� Dallas, T vn33 COOK PUBL.ICA i ONSS 3318 WIMSERG AVENUE EVANSVILLE. INDIANA 47712 1 9 8 5 Davie County Public Library Mocksville, NC Page 549 beginnieg corner to WILLIAM CRAIG's settlement, thence northwest, containing 55 acres and bounded by John Patterson (which was pe nted to Hugh Shiell). Witnessed by JAMES BROWN, THOMAS SPEED anal THOMAS LOWRIE. Recorded June 26, 1789. p.691 Indenture, May 18, 1789, SAMUEL McGEHEE, ALBERTUS BRITE and WILLIAM STAFFORD, of Fayette County, to JAMES CURD, for 100 Pounds, 350 acres in Jefferson County of Guesses Fork of Brashears Creek, including a large spring,_ beginning northwest corner to THOMAS DAGARLEY, thence north. Witnessed. by WILLIAM BRADSHAW, BENJAMIADSHAW, PRICE CURD,and JOHN CURD. Recorded September 12, 1789. p.71•, CHRISTOPHER GREENUP, of` Danville, District of Kentucky, appoints his friend CHARLES BINNS, Esq., the Younger, of Loudoun County, Virginia, as his true and lawful attorney in fact, to convey to JOSIAH NOFFETT of Loudoun County, a tract in that county of 38 acres, as per bond of October 4, 1787. September 12, 1789. Recorded September 12, 1789. p.72, Indenture, June 9, 17890 JOHN PRESTON, FRANCIS PRESTON, JOHN BRECKINRIDGE, and JOHN BROWN, executors of Col. WILLIAM PRESTON, dec'd., to JAMES HARROD and ANN HARROD of Mercer County. By virtue of the last will of William Preston, the executors were directed to convey to James & Ann Harrod 700 acres in now Nelson County on the Ohio, at the first large creek below the Hurricane andabout 50 miles below the Falls of the Ohio, it being an U; -vided moiety of 11400 acres patented to William. Preston on June 1, 1785 as assignee of the said James and Ann Harrod. This makes the conveyance. Witnessed by CALEB WALLACE, GEORGE MADISON, P. TARDIVEAU, JAMES HOPKINS, ALEXANDER BRECKINRIDGE, JAMES SPEED and THOMAS SPEED. Recorded September 24, 1789. p.73, Indenture, June 90, 1789, JOHN PRESTON, FRANCIS PRESTON, JOHN BROWN and JOHN BRECKINRIDGE, executors of Col. WILLIAM PRESTON, dec'd., to JAMES SPEED of Mercer County. In consideration of a release given by John Breckinridge to James Speed, of all his right and claim to 700 acres on the Ohio willed to John Breckinridge by Col. William Preston, there is conveyed to Speed the said 700 acre tract, being one moiety of 10400 acres on the Ohio about 50 miles below the Falls, patented to William Preston as assignee of JAMES HARROD and ANN HARROD on June 1, 1785. Witnessed by CALEB WALLACE, GEORGE MADISON, P. TARDIVEAU, JAMES HOPKINS, ALEXANDER BRECKINRIDGE and THOMAS SPEED. Recorded September 24, 1789. p.75, Indenture, September 18, 1789, MARTIN DANIEL, attorney in fact for ROBERT DANIEL of Jefferson County, to THOMAS BARBEE of Mercer County, for 32 Pounds, lot No.39 of 4 acres in the town of Danville in Mercer County, bounded by JAMES BROWN. Witnessed by CHRISTOPHER GREENUP, PIERCY POPE, THOMAS SPEED and WILLIS HORD. Davie Cnt!nfir P+ibiif, Librgy a W�F.• ` •Ilia' >-.;. _. _.- ._��. -_ -�V. 7"A t ...:.. 1 - ri. Page 6 Columbia, to JAMES DARDIS, SAMUEL SMITH, JAMES A. BUCHANAN and JAMES CALHOUN (the first named of Tennessee, the others of Baltimore, Maryland), for $2,50,0, as tenants in common, the tract of land herein described, to -wit, the whole tract containing 50,000 acres lying on Saxton's Creek, waters of the Kentucky River, in Madison County, Kentucky, patented��to BENJAMIN WYNKOOP on May 18, 1786. Said part conveyed beginning at the end of the second line of the original tract and running thence with the third line thereof, northwest, containing by estimation __5,.000 acres.' Witnessedr by ROBERT BRENT and CHARLES GLOVER. Recorded une 14, 1803, Washington, District of Columbia, and November 28, 1803 by the Kentucky Court of Appeals. p. 5 7 ,. Indenture,, November 2 5 , 1803, SAMUEL McGEHEE, to. JOHN TROXCEL, for 100 Pounds, all his right, title and claim to a tract -of land beginning at northwest corner of THOMAS DAGLEY's settlement in Shelby (formerly Jefferson) Coun' y cky Kentu thence- north. Acknowledged and recorded in Fayette County, Kentucky on November 26, 1803, and by the Kentucky Court of Appeals on November 29, 1803. [See next deed also.] p.59, Indenture, October 4, 1803, JOHN CURD, to SAMUEL McGEHEE, for 100 Pounds, relinquishes and returns back to McGehee a certain tract of land that he bought of McGehee containing 350 acres in Shelby ( formerly Jefferson) County, Kentucky, for which McGehee is to have no claim against Curd if any part should be' lost by prior claims. [Same tract as mentioned in preceding Indenture.] Acknowledged and- recorded in Jessamine County, Kentucky on October 4, 1803, and recorded by the Kentucky Court of Appeals on November 29, 1803. p. 61 , Indenture, July 28, 1803, GSE ROGERS C_LI�,RK of Jefferson County, Kentucky, to WILLIAM CLARK of the same county, for S2,100 in sundry services by William Clark, two tracts of land containing 73,.94Z„ acres in Livingston County, Kentucky on the Ohio River below the Tennessee River, bounded by land of GEORGE SMITH. Witnessed by ROBERT K. MOORE, CHARLES ANDERSON, ISSAG ROBERTSON, WORDEN POPE, COLBY TAYLOR, ANTHONY REYNOLDS, W. AKIN, GEORGE POPE, GEORGE WILSON and EDWARD DENNY. Recorded by the Kentucky Court.. of Appeals on November 28, 1 803. p..64, HUMPHREY MARSHALL declares that he, having seen a deed of conveyance from G. R. CLARK to WILLIAM CLARK ( see preceding deed] conveying 73,962 acres of land in Livingston County, does protest against the said deed as being illegal and fraudulent because the said G.R.Clark stands bound to him by contract entered into long prior to the date of the said deed, to convey to him the said two tracts of land. And because there is now and has long been a. suit depending in Chancery in the Federal Court for the District of. Kentucky, by ROBERT MORRIS as Ma),shall's assignee, against the said G. R. Clark to compe.1I execution, 'of the contract .�Signed Dave CnJn''y Pub;i;: Literary Mocksviile, NC _ . e M yvo k 0 CI � a --c o Z ` O �r � Q o � Q ell Z h V� x 0 -1 0 � a --c o Z � Q o ell Z os n V� x 0 -1 a 5 s 1420 Filbert --Street Salisbury,.'N.C. 28144 1983 April.-,, 16 Dear Mr. Dagley, Your recent. letter. -.to the Clerk of Court, Rowan County, N.C. has been handed to me for. reply. I. answer all the-. letters coming into the Clerks office -that. pertain.. to the. old records and make J the necessary search: -for," the various requests. -You had requested [ ir$�formation on. the Dagley family and so far . my -search hasn't.revealed very much. We have''.a very good gene- alogical room;-in't4b Rowan Public Library that contains much printed & typed material on those persons who settled in this county. There is one collection knowri_as the.McCubbins Collection which contains abstracts. of * deeds .& wills; . some court minutes, some marriages, some deaths & etc. These notes once belonged to the late Mrs. Mamie McCubbins who did. genealogical work -here for over_ fifty years. Her notes are filed in 20 file drawers and arranged. in alphabetical order by surname and I- searched for a file on DAGLEY but.. was referred.. to - two. other files. -. Willcockson & Hunt where I, found- abstracts of "deeds for Thomas & Jonathan Dagley: But' in none ' of'` the. deeds . was Willcockson & Hunt mentioned. The deeds I found' are as follows:- -�' Abraham Willson'to Jonathan Dagley-- 200 acres Dutchmans Creek on Sept. 16; 1791• . Thomas Dagley to Jacob Keller - 80 acres on Bear Creek on Aug. 26, 1795. State Grant to Thomas Dagley - 192 acres on Bear Creek in 17910 Thomas Dagley to Casper Rowland,- 112 acres on Bear Creek_. in, .April`. 1792. Also one list of Taxables in 1796 in Capt. Hunts Company naming JOHENETHEN DAGLEY - 250. acres, j.I: assume:�that to mean the number of acres he had that were taxable ro n I checked our wills but - so far have not found anyfor anyone with o the surname Dagley. Also no birth records. N.C. did not begin re- , cording births until. 1913. We do have numerous books in the gene- ' • -� alogical room oneRowan- County cemeteries andvarious other counties c in N. C . �. I have a feeling that possibly your Dagley' s may have settled in cr' Davie County, .N.Ce; for that is where Dutchmans Creek is. Actually, all that portion of Davie County was once Rowan County. It was cut from Rowan in.1836 which may be a, little late for your Dagley's. Or its possible they moved out of the State of N.C. Anyway, the above deeds are all I find. If you would like copies of these deeds the charge is $2.00 each. And if you order them and you pay.by check or money order, please make payable to me. I might mention too that all our records, with the exception of the wills & deeds, were moved to -the N.C. State Archives, Raleigh, N.C. years ago. So, all we have to work with is the McCubbins Collection;*u O Q . dC ! CD . i � 1. C"�• C) Cr x.� Mrs. Philip Peacock W it ' •r 1420 ;Filbert Street Salisbury, N.C.-28144 r. F May 23, 1983 ?- Dear` Mr. Dagley, -Enclosed are the-four deeds you requested and do hope they. will be of much help to you: - In- my . last letter, April 16th, I mentioned that your Dagleys may have been livingin Davie County, N.C. and I found a map in the genealogi cal T rom drawn by Mr. Fred Hu hes in 1977. Its a -very � - large map but _• managed to copy a portion of-it iwhich lists Jonathan Dagley in section A2 and Thomas Dagley in section C2. I underlined both names with a red pen. This tap I believe shows & gives not only where each person lived but the date they bought the land. Incidentally, this map can be purchased from - "The Customs House" � P.O. Box 549, Jamestown, N.C. 27282 for $4.00 each. I imagine you make your check or money order payable to The Customs House. Now, about the the "list of taxables" that I mentioned in my last letter, that was all I saw and was in the files I searched for your Dagleys and only states -" Taxables in 1796 in Captain Hunts Company; Johenethen Dagley 250 acres." I also checked about ten volumes of cemetery records listing various -' � • - cemeteries• in Rowan and surrounding counties but found no Dagleys. I also checked Rowan County, N.C. marriages but none listed. As you will" note in these deeds three of them list the land on Bear/ Bare Creek and that is now in Davie County, N.C. So, this is all I have been able to find on your Dagley's. If I should run across anything else, I will send it to you. Sincerely, Mrs. Philip Peacock s VO o t) iT ....s i N . a �; ,1 VW IS /791- ��� 1e C2e eA —k) ,,, PuYic Library p � (VA) i 12. Mary, born November 10, 1795, married John House. - 13. Smith, born February 3.1797. 14. Bethenia, born April 20.1803, married Atkins J. McLemore. ' MEMBERS: May'McLemore Matthews, No. 417066. DADS, FRANCIS, born 1750-1760 in Orange County,, Virginia where he died on May 28, 1791. Married Sarah Taliaferro on March 13,1782. SERVICE:- Cornet, 3rd Continental Dragoons, 1778, Orange County, Virginia. CHILDREN: 1. Lawrence Taliaferro, born 1785, married Anne Mayo. 2. Francis, married Hariette Shepherd. 3. Mary Jackson, born December 15.1789, married Edwin Conway. 4. Horatio, killed in the War of 1812: 5. Ann Hay, married Reid 6. Charles William. - 7. Gibbon Stuart.' . MEMBER& Anna Welsh Thornton Tunks. No. 550008. D_aFFRON. RODY, born 1757 in :Maryland; died October 17, 1834 in Wayne County, Kentucky. Married (2)'lillie Gibbs in Spartanburg District, South Carolina on July 16, 1797. She was probably born in South Carolina about 1777 and died in Barren County, Kentucky on April 25,1853. SERVICE: Private, Randolph and Mecklenburg Counties, North Carolina. CHILDREN: 1. John. 2. Phillip. - 3. El Hanon, born 1811, married (2) Nancy Vaught. M&MBERS: 'Mary Pearl Daffron Bristol, No. 488314. D AGGETT. JOIVq, born 1754; died 1837. Married Sarah Hawkins who was born in Girard, Pennsylvania. SERVICE:: Private, Sergeant, Connecticut. Saw service in New York: Governor's Island, Harlem Plains, White Plains and Bemis Heights. . CHILDREN: 1. Pamelia, born June 6,1774. r 2. Sebra, born November 25,1775. 3. Ethan Allen, born May 13,1783. 4. Dan Delance, born 1780. 5. Charles. 6. Eleazer, born 178, married Elizabeth Crank. 7. Roderick. 8. Baley. MEMBERS: 011ie May Lake, No. 150436. DAGGETT, NAPTHALI, born September 18, 1727 in Attleborough, Massachusetts; died in New Haven, Connecticut on November 25, 1780. iVfarried Sarah Smith in December, 1753 at Smithtown, Long Island, New York. She was born September 16, 1728 and died in New Haven, Connecticut on March 25, 1772. SERVICE: Volunteer., defended the town of New Haven, Connecticut. CHILDREN: I., Henry, born October 14,1754, died in infancy. 2. Sarah, born April 17, 1756. 3. Henry, born February 27,1758. P 1briC Library 4. Ebenezer, born December 20,1760. 5. John, born Marclt1,17601?) .y liCiCKSVIlIe, NG 6. Ezra, born April 18,1765. 7, 'Lary, born April 16,1767. 8. Elizabeth, born April 19,1769. MEMBERS: Laura Daggett Darrough,_`'o. 372986. Helen Darrough Gay. No. 371120. ' 3 DAGLEY, T1101L1S, born in Ireland about 1755: died after 1812 in White County. Illinois. SERVICE: Patriot, Rowan County, North Carolina. CHILDREN: 1. Samuel, born October 2.1797, married Jane Webb. 2. Sarah, married Joseph Boone. 3. Rebecca, married William Withrow. l -t .._ -556- . G,�- -� 4. Hannah, married (1) Hugh Withrow, (2) Robin Harris. . S. Ruth, born about 1800, married Carter Smith. MEMBERS: Jane Aldridge Parrish, No. 502668. DAILEY, JESSE, born December 9. 1760 in Fairfield County, Virginia; died November, 1845 in Leesburg, Virginia. Married Mary Turner in 1791. She was born 17755 and died 1853. SERVICE: Private, Virginia. CHILDREN: 1. Sarah Turner, born 1797, married John Surghnon (2nd). MEMBERS: Mary McFarland Peyton, No. 46932. Varina Saunders Tanner, No. 183408. DAILEY, PHILIP, born 1762; died at Charleston. Indiana in 1830. Married Nellie in Bullitt County, Kentucky.. SERVICE: Private, PrinceGeorgeCounty. Maryland. - CHILDREN: 1. Nellie, married Hezekiah Applegate. 2. Elizabeth, married Daniel Fields. 3. Pollie. married Edmond Huckelberry. 4. Jacob ( War of 1812)• married Isabelle Barker. 5. Philip, married Delia Athen. 6. David Wise, born August 16,1798, married Mary A. Shirley. - 7. Elie, married Mary Null. - 8. Charlotte, born April 10, 1808, married James Boyer. 9. Charles, died in infancy. 10. Kittie, married (1) James Malott, (2) Samuel Carr. „ MEMBERS: Marie Maxfield, No. 320788. Marie Streeter Maxfield, No. 111597. DIAIN, JOHN, born April 27,1751 in Wyndham, Connecticut; died August 7. 1787 at Lisbon, Maine. ( SERVICE: Sergeant, 7th Massachusetts Continental Army. CHILDREN: None listed. See National number 1279555, Edna Plummer Line. MEMBERS: Roxanne Plummer Thams, No. 571030. DAKLY, AMOS, born January 29, 1731 in Sudbury. Massachusetts; died in Mason, New Hampshire on April 28, . 1:59. Married Sarah Thankful Minot at Concord, Massachusetts on June 12, 1755. She was born in Concord on March 4.1737 and died in Mason, New Hampshire on June 28,1811. SERVICE: Representative member of Committee of Inspection and Delegate to Provincial Congress, Mason. New Hampshire. CHILDREN: 1. Sarah, born June 9,1756. 2. Molly, born April 29.1758, married Zebedee Kendall. 3. Amos, born May 13,1760, married nary Kingsley. 4. Hannah, born January 20,1762, married Andrew Eliot. -- 5. Timothy, born March 27,1764, married (1) Elizabeth Dutton, (2) Mary Bowers. (3) Polly Brown. PI, "c Lbrary 6. Lydia. born April 11, 1766. 7. Dorcas, born June 6, 1768. died 1769. i°aC 8. Samuel, born November 17.1770, married Earrer. 9. Jonas, born March 17, 1773. 10. Eunice, born March 16,1775, married Abner Chickering. 11. Rebecca, born April 15,1777. 12. Lucy, born llav 20.1779. .`•1 EMBERS: Ruth :Inn Davis JlcCrary. No. 496337. Ruth Laura Dakin Davis. No. 49, 858. DAL AND. BF.NJa.IILV, born September 21.1729•in Salem, Massachusetts: died at Salem on October 15,1810. SERVICE: Salem, Massachusetts. CHILDREN: None listed. Short form. )•IE�IBERS: Patricia Dowd Overall, No. 549879. 1 DALF. ADAM. born in Worcester County, Maryland on July 14,1768; died in Madison County, Alabama in October, 1851. Married Mary Hall. . -557- rf. l:�-G-- /are Da vj,,? �,�rirs=� Vii. ► ►O ' `{f'os vii, ' . a Deed book 12, page 661, Rowan County, NC State o S Nonth Caxotina No'. 2001 To att to whom these pees encs shaft come Know ye that use jox 6 .in cons.idenat.ion o j the sum o6 Fi6ty Sh.c.tt ings jot every hundred acnes hexeby granted paid .into ouA TneasuAy by Thomas Dagtey have -given 6 gxanted 9 by then e pnes encs do and grant unto the said Thomas Dagtey a tract o f nand containing 192 acnes tying 5 being in the County of Rowan on the watexs of Bean CAeek beginning at a tatt white oafs on the Fast o j the cxeek John w.itcoxson's connen 9 Aunn.ing thence noATT-6.ijty s.ix degrees Fast thence South to a stake on the .6a.id tine thence No,%th Twenty seven chains to a black ash Dan.iet Lew.iss coAneA thence west seventy jive Z inks to a stake said Lew.iss thence Noxth joxt y eight chains to a red oak said Lew.iaa connen to Gas pex Lab.ins tine thence thence west jijty degrees to a white oafs said Lew.iss connen the South to a Dogwood on Jacob KetZeA'a tine thence Fast twen_y cWaTn� a to a post oak. said KetteA's coAneA thence South to the beginning as by the plat hexeunto doth appeax with att woods, waters, mines, m.inenat4, 9 appuxtenences to the said .hand betong.ing 9 appexta.in.ing to MoRTY to the aa.id Thomas Dagtey by h.is heik4 9 A.6.6 ign.6 6oneveA . y.ietd.ing 9 paying to us .such sums os money on otheAw.i,6 a Genexat Ass embZy may 6xom time to time aZway.6 s� the .6aid Thomaa Dagtey shaft cause this gxant to teg.i.6teted .in the Reg.isten's Ojj ice o6 out said County o6 Rowan within Twelve months 64om the date hexeo 6 othexw.ise the same shaZt be void 6 o6 no e6jeet .in testimony whexeo 6 we have caused these oun Letters to Great Seat to be o f 6.ieed AtexandeA Mant.in, Fs qx N. C. at Fayettev.itle the 16 Day o6 Novem en .in that yeax o6 oux T ndependen.ce 9 in the yeah o6 o uA Lond 1790. By W excettency Com G. Atex (Seat) Mant.in No. 2001 Thomas Dagtey--192 acnes Rowen County xecokded .in the Regi.6teA1s Ojjice 3 D Davie r%03: ,r y Public Library _ . WIOCksville, NC a - V � . DEED BOOK 16, p 91, Rowan Co, NC This INDENTURE being made this Twenty Seventh Day of Apt.it Anno Domini Seventeen Hundted and Ninety Two between Thomas Dagtey o6 Rowan County and State of Nohth Cahotina o4 the one pant and Gabpex Rowtand ob the county and state abotesa.id of the,othet part, w.it.ingketh state this Thomas Dagtey box and .in eons.idetat.ion ob the bum ob Thixty Pounds now paid money ob the state aboxesa.id to him .the said Thomas Dagtey .in hand paid at ox begone the Enseek.ing and Detivety o6 these presents by the said Gaspet Rowtand the teeeipt wheteog he the said Thomas Dagtey doth and now pledge h.imsetj gutty`Sat.is6.Led, contented, and paid and o4 evexy pant and pahce2 theheog agteh gutty acqu.ist Encumbehences and D.ibehatges him the said Gaspex Rowtand his heits and assigns gotever and that he the said Thomas Dagtey Doth by these ptesents give grant Satga.Ln Tett r and eong.Lhm and hath gutty .ctmed and clearly given gxantee�axga.cn and con 4 unto him the said Gaspet Rowtand h.c'b 7ie.ixb and assigns 4oxevex att that piece and patcet og tand at a White Oak neat the head og a branch on Jacob Kettet's otd tine and tunn.ing atong the otd .Gine Noxth F.igty Two chains to a post oak one o�,the ot.ig.Lnat eohnexs thence West th.ixty chains to a Dogwood on the ot.Eg.inat kine thence Noxth three chains to a White Oak Gaspeh Lab.in cotnex thence atong his tine East 6.tgty chains to a hed oak Dan.iet Lew.ibeb coxnet on Gasper Lab.inb tine thence atong said. Lewises tine South goxty one chains to a bmatt h.iekoty on said kine thence by a stta.ight -Gine to the beginning.' By Estimation One Hundhed and Twetve Aetes o6 kand be the same mote ox tebb together wx.itten att and s.ingutat the .impxovements, appuhtenees and advantages to - the same cotony being ox .in any way appexta.in.ign to have and to hotd the said baxga.ined Land and goxe that the onty pnopex use and og him the said Gaspeh Row his heihb and aasigncs gotevet and to no other use .intent ox puxpose whatevex and that he the said Gaspeh Rowtand his heixb and assigns goxevet shatt and may have hood occupy possess and enjoy the agoxeba.id Land and ptem.ises 6tee and eteat glom any .bast Ttoubte or motestat.ion glom by ox him and at the me og Enbeek.ing and Det.ivehy og these phesents the said Land and pxem.ibes .is stet and cteax 6tom att manner og .incumbetences whatsoever and that said Thomas Dagtey doth by these pxesntbb wattant and depend the aggotesa.id land and ptem.ises unto the said Gasper Rowtand gor him and as.ignb.,-g-hom at4 inannet o6 petsons whatsoevex cta.im.ing any tight -ox titre or Intetebt thexeto aceotd.ing to .its and binds and the true .intent and meaning eg these presents n Witness wheteog the said Thomas Dagtey hath hereunto bat his hand and o6g.iees his Seat this Day and Veat g-ihbt above. wt.itten. Signed, Seated and Det.ivexed Thomas X Dagtey in Ptesenee og Jno Pxathex (mark) Dan.iet Hendt.icks State•og North Catot.ina Feb 7, 1792 A. D. Osbuhn; cc S eat 1� Deed book 14, page 291, Rowan County, NC This INDENTURE made this 26th day ob August AD 1795 between Thomas Dagtey ob Rowan County 6 State o� North Caro.L.ina of the one pant and Jacob KetZer ob the County 6 State aboxebaohd&oJnthe oche pant, witnesseth that and wt6e.aJ ThmasDa9t-ey bob the sate eons.idexat.ion ob the sum ob Fi6ty p bu ajoresa.id to him the said Thomas Dagtey ion hand paid at ox bebore the enseaZing and Detivexy ob these pxesents by the said Jacob Ket-eer the whexeo6 he the said Thomas Dagtey doth Aeknowtedge-6and h.imb�F7u.C.Cy sat•i.ab•i.ed',' contented, and paid and o6 every p aiLt parcet. thereof doth jutZy acquit exonerate and discharge him the said Jacob Ketter his he.Lrs and assigns borever and that he the said Thomas Dagtey doth by these presents give namegain tetZ Ln� and eon�ixm and hath breety and given ed arga.okd and eonberxed unto m the said Jacob Ketter hi �etirb and-assignes joxever ak.0 that piece ox parcet of Land tying and being .in Rowan County and Statet o6 �andxesaid on the East bide o{� Bane Cxeeh by i�heEStateast �aboxesaid beg•i.nn.ing granted the said Thomas DagZey y Sor the said piece ox paxcet o6 tand at a white oak on the East side ob the creek John w.itcoxen coxnen 6 running thence noxth 4.i4ty six degrees East twenty Jou& chains to a stake on the said tine thence North twenty seven chains to a btack oak Dan.iet Lew.isb coxnex thence west Seventy 4ivedevenseho to a stake said Lew.is4 corner thence rxeeb with twenty two chains hickory thence south 6.iity Jive de9 to a white oak on Jacob KezZex's otd .Gine Chance by a stxa.ight .Gine to the beginning containing by estimation Eighty acxes be .the same moxe ox te64. Together with att and s.ingutax .in .i_mpxovement4 appuxt.i.nanees and advantages to the same entonging ox .in any wise appexta.in.ing to have and to hold the said him, thegained Land and unto the ont y proper use and oJ said Jaeo Ke ter his hears and ass.ignes 6 to no other use intent ox puxposes whatevex 6 that he the said Jacob KeUeand& eandrehis hthes 6 abs.igne4 bhaZZ 6 may have ho.2d occupy pab a6oresa.id .band and pxem.ises bxee 6 cteax Brom any t.itte suit troub.2e ox motestat.ion Jxom by ox under him and at the time o$ enseatC.ing &_deZi.vexy 04 these presents the said Zand and - prem.ises .i4 gree 6 cteax bxom att manner ob .incumbrances whatever and that the said Thomas Dag.Cey doth by these presents warrant and debend the agoresa.id Land 6 pxem.ise4 unto the said Jacob Ketten. his hex.is .a:rrd asb.ign% bxom atZ manner ob pexson whatever eQaiming any r%ght ox tit ox .intexest 6 manner of these presents In witness whereo4 the said Thomas Dagkey hath hereunto bat his hand and o6Jice.6h.is_ beak the day and year 6irst above written Thomas X Dagkey Seat Signed, Seated, 6 DeZivexed (ma)Lk) .in presence ob w.i.Ekt.am w.ikcoten w.it2.iam Butted. rw1ri P��?�fic Library y�j 1 Deed book. 12, page 135, Rowan County, NC This lndentune made this 16th day o6 September .in the yeah of our Lo&d 1791 between Abnaham Witton and Jane his wile of the County o 6 Wood6ond State o J Vi,%ginia o J the one pant and Jonathan Dagtey o J the State o f No&th Catot ina County o f Rowan o f the oche& paxt witnesseth that Jon and .in conside&at ion . o -s the sum o6 Sixty Jive pounds good and taw6ut money of the state of No&th Ca&ot ina to him the -said Abnaham Witson .inhand paid by the said Jonathan Dagtey the' teceipt wheteo J the said Abnaham U itz on 6 Jane h.is wise do heBeeby acknowledge have gtanted ba&gained and sotd as by these pees encs do gtant ba&ga.in sett 9 Mahe oven .in unto the said Jonathan Dagtey a ce&ta.in piece on pa&cel' o and situated tying and being within said Counthwest R waneon the wate&s of Dutchman C&eek beginning as being a Spanish Oak Thence South 47 chains to Geo&geoChooXs hence corner stake thence East 42 chains and 55 Links to p s North 47 chains to a smatt post oak and then west to the be.g.inn.ing containing by computation Two Hundred Acnes be the same mote on .bens being paxt of a tact of 640 acnes_ oxig.inatty granted to said Abnaham Witson by a g&ant J&om the state of NoBeth Canohena bedan.ing date the 10th day o s d cto be& 1782 to have.. and to hold 200 acnes o J .band with att its appurtenances unto him the said Jonathan Dagtey his heirs and assigns Joteve& .and the said Abnaham (V.itsow 6 Jane his w.iJe son themsteves 9 the.i& he.ins Execu ons E Adm.in.istnatons do covenant 9 ag&ee to and with the said Jonathan Dagtey that he the said Jonathan Dagtey h.is -he.i&s and assigns shaft 6 may Joteve& he&eaJte& peaceably qu.ietty' 'have hold use occupy posses and enjoy the said bang a.in ed .hand 9 pno m•is.ing to g eth et with att pita nights Pt-iv.itedges 9 .impnovemencs without any .hawJu., debt hind&once on motestation o6 att pens ons whats o even and 6&ee 6 ctean 6&om att .incumbrances whats o even and the said Abni aham W .bs on 9 Jane h.ia w.i6e do obt idge themselves 9 thein he.i&s to wa&&ant. 9 de6end the said .hand 9 p&em is es above granted to himthe said Jonathan Dagtey his hems 6 assigns Joneve& against any tawJut cta.im on deed and of any pennon whatever. In Witness whe&eo6 the said Abnaham a.itson 9 Jane his w.iJe hereunto set their hands and and Seat the day -.6 yea& Jinst above wn.i..tten, Signed, Seated 9 Acknowtedged Abnaham Witson Sea. .in the p&es ence o6 -Joseph Howett Jane Witson Sea. Stephen Howett State o6 Noxth CaiLat ina, August Session, 1792 Rowan County This deed was duty p&oved .in a cou&t by Stephen Howett, reco&ded, and o&de&ed to be Reg.iste&ed* NOTE: The deed ente&ed just above this one concenend John Duke. . P CR •nt" rpt j�i{r Library _ - ;�f� : t�C Deed book' , page 433, Rowan County, NC Seal State os North Catol.ina No. 2512 To all to whom this shall concern; Gteetings. Know ye that bot S .in eons.idera .con ob .the sum ob Thirty Sh.i.ZZings Sot every hundred aches hereby granted paid .into out Treasury Jonathan Dagley have given & granted 6 by these presents do give and grant unto the said Jonathan Dagley a tsaet of land containing S.ibty acted lying E being .in out County ob Rowanon the Waters ob Dutchman's Cteek E beginning at a Spanish Oak his cornet and tun thence West eleven chains to a stake of -John Johnston's Zine .then South Jolty one chains along his line to a white oak and Johnston's cornet.thenee East eleven chains to a post oak George Chooses cornet thence Notth to the beginning. Entered this 11th Day oaf May,, 1744, as by the plat hereunto doth appeal wit all ways, woods, waters, mines, minenaZ-46, beneb.its, hereunto thereunto belongingg of any wise apperta.in.ing to havi�t e -said Jonathan Dagley h.is heirs and assigns Sotevet y.ieZd.ing and pays unto us such sums ob money yearly as out General Assembly Jrom time to time may d.iseet always that the same grantee shall cause this Grant to 'e'reg,istered .in the Reg.istet's Obj.ice .in the said county of Rowan within the time by law otherwise the same void Davie GourAY public Library Mocksville, NC Deed book. page 411, Rowan Co, NC Tkis .indentu&e made the twentieth day of Octobe& .in. the yea& oS ou& Lo&d 1802 . . . . Be6tive& 200 ac&ed on Dutchman'A C&eek . . . . . . Jonathan Oagtey Seat Rowan County Novembe& Sez4 ion 1802 NOTE: Tkia deed wz a ext&emety d.ib j icutt to head but we can ad ce&ta.in the 6ottow.ing : Jonathan Dagtey dotd out .in Rowan Co .in 1802 (p&obabty bejo&e moving to Tenneaa eel Jonathan Dagtey 4 igned h.iz own name. _ Davie Coy ntj Public Library Mocksville, NC