Print Bookmark

Loughry William

Male


Generations:      Standard    |    Compact    |    Vertical    |    Text    |    Register    |    Tables    |    PDF

Less detail
Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Loughry William was born in Near Londonderry, Northern Ireland.

    Notes:

    First generation: Jeremiah LOCKERY, the father of the family in America, was born in Ireland and came to America in 1740. Tradition says he came to America with five sons; no mention is made of his wife or daughters, his wife's name is thought to be Mary.

    Information on Jeremiah Lockery can be obtained from the following:

    Jeremiah Lockery-America-1740
    Source Code 9255.7

    Ulster Genealogical and Historic Guild- "Interest List"
    In Ulster Gen. and Hist. Guild # 9 (1986) pp. 1-42.

    Request from:

    The Secretary, Ulster Genealogical and Historic Guild
    68 Balmoral Avenue
    Belfast, BT. 9-6NY
    North Ireland

    Attn: Source Page # 20

    Another source:LOUGHERY, LOUGHRY, LOUGHREY. From Inchicronin Parish, (Crusheen and Ballinruan), Co. Clare.

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Loghry Archibald Andrew  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1733 in Near Londonderry, Northern Ireland.

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 3. Loughry Jeremiah Jr.  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1731 in Ireland; died on 21 Jan 1824 in Salem Township, Westmoreland Cty, Pennslyvania, Usa; was buried in 1824 in Congruity Church, Salem Township, Westmoreland Cty, Pennslyvania.

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 4. Loughry Mary  Descendancy chart to this point

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 5. Loughry Rebecca  Descendancy chart to this point

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 6. Loghry William B.  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1733 in Ireland; died on 18 Sep 1837 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; was buried on 20 Sep 1837 in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY.

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 7. Loghry James  Descendancy chart to this point

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 8. Loughry Margaret  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Ireland.

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 9. Loughry John  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1737 in York County, Pennslyvania.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Loghry Archibald Andrew Descendancy chart to this point (1.William1) was born in 1733 in Near Londonderry, Northern Ireland.

    Notes:

    Lochrey's Creek is about the 1st below the Great Miami,in Dearborn Co,sw Ind.

    Capt Archibald Lochrey's company drafted ,or enlisted,in what is now Westmoreland Co,Pa to join Col George Rogers Clark in a proposed expedition into Indian country. Clark,and men,got a head-start downriver on them. Lochrey's company had still not caught up with Clark,and were camped in very,very s e Indiana when ambushed.

    They had congreagated at Markle's mill,near Robbtown-West Newton,Pa -an area of many sw Ohioi people. I was expecting to see more names that I recognized when I requested Lochrey's roster. DePeyster commanded the British at Detroit.

    KILLED
    1. Col. Lochrey 2. Capt. Campbell 3. Ens. Ralph 4. Ens. Maxwell 5. Ens. Cahell 6. Sergt. Galaher 7. Sergt. Evens 8. Sergt. Burris 9. Sergt. Forsyth 10. Sergt. Black 11. Sergt. Allison 12. Corp. Paton 13. John Gibson 14. John Young 15. Robt. Dongan 16. John Straiton 17. John Burns 18. William Hudson 19. John Pheasant 20. Zenis Hardon 21. John Milligan 22. John Corn 23. Mathew Lamb[p. 50] 24. Joseph Baily 25. John Smith 26. Wm. Cain 27. Adam Erwin 28. Peter McLin 29. Archibald Askin 30. David Ellinger 31. George Butcher 32. Peter Berkman 33. Josia Brooks 34. John Row 35. Jonas Peter 36. J. McRight 37. John McKimby

    A true copy:

    A. De Peyster- British officer at Detroit.
    Following spent 22 months in captivity.

    CAPTURED 1. Major Craigcraft 2. Capt. Stokly 3. Cap. Orr (Robert Orr, Wash. Twp.) 4. Cap. Shannon (Donegal Twp.) 5. Lt. Robinson 6. Lt. Anderson 7. Lt. Craig 8. Lt. Scott 9. Lt. Baker 10. Ens. Hunter 11. Ens. Guthrie. 12. Qr. Mr. Wallace (William Wallace) 13. Sergt. Trimble 14. Sergt. McCloud 15. Patrick Johnson 16. Richard Fleming 17. Robert Watson 18. Abn Anderson 19. Mcl Hare 20. Wm. Mars 21. John Sence 22. Mcl Miller 23. Patrick Murphy 24. Jas. Cain (should be Kean) 25. Jas. McPherson 26. Wm. Martial 27. Peter Conoly 28. John Farrell 29. Denis McCarthy 30. Solomon Atkill 31. John Lavear 32. Mathias Fisher 33. George Dice 34. John Porter 35. John Smith 36. Adam Owing 37. Saml Le Fever 38. John Hunter 39. Joseph Erwin 40. Manassa Coyl 41. Hugh Steer 42. John Ca 43. Valantine Lawrence 44. Jacob Lawrence 45. Christian Fast 46. Charles McLin 47. William Noach 48. Henry France 49. Abm Highly 50. George Mason 51. Wm. Witherenton 52. Eairy Cuighly 53. Thos. James 54. Thos. Atkinson 55. John Stackhouse 56. Wm. Clark 57. Elishia Risley 58. James Dunseith 59. Danl. Cain 60. Wm. Think 61. Robert Wilson 62. Isaac Lewis 63. Alex Burns 64. Hugh More.

    Above area now well into sw PA,was likely Youghahana Co,Va when these men left home. And PA when they returned.

    Notes for MATTHEW LAMB: Matthew was killed in one of the last battles of the Revolutionary War, at Lauchery Creek (as it is called today, in Dearborn Co. IN (the southeastern-most county that is next to the Ohio border), . His two children, John 2 years old, and Rachel, 1 yr. old baby, never knew him except by description by their mother, Jane Coe Lamb, whose marriage to Mathew Lamb was just some 3 years before his death, and by description by others after they grew up. The story, related in the book 'History of Dearborn and Ohio Counties, Indiana' and other sources, is as follows: A Col. Archibald Lochry, who was the county Lieutenant of Westmoreland County, PA., was requested by Col. George Rogers Clark to raise a military force and join him in a contemplated military movement against the Indian tribes of the Northwest. Capt. Orr, by his own exertions raised a company of volunteer riflemen. Capts. Stokeley and Shannon commanded each a company of rangers (to which Matthew Lamb had joined), and Capt. Campbell a company of horse. The party, initially, amounted to 82 men. Col. Lochry was the only field officer in command. It was Col. Clark's original intention to rendezvous with this additional force at the mouth of the Big Miami River, and to proceed up that river with the joint forces but he had changed his plan and had ordered Col. Lochry to follow him further down the Ohio River to the Falls. On July 24th, the 83 man force initially gathered at Colonel Carnahan's Blockhouse 11 miles west of Hannastown, PA. On Aug. 3rd they set out for Fort Henry (now Wheeling WV) by way of Pittsburgh. Along the way, others joined them until the force numbered 107. On arriving at Fort Henry it was found that Col. Clark had gone on 12 miles down the river, leaving for them some provisions and a traveling boat, with directions to follow him. After preparing some temporary boats for the transportation of the men and horses, which occupied 10 days, they proceeded to join Clark 12 miles down the river as ordered by Col. Clark. On arriving there they found that Clark had, again, changed his mind and had, the day before, gone on down the river but leaving a Major Creacroft with some men and a boat ( with no provisions or ammunition, both of which they had had, by then, an inadequate supply). Col. Clark had promised to wait for them at the mouth of the Kanawha River. At arriving at the mouth of the Kanawha, Col. Clark had been forced to break his promise to meet them there, in order to prevent desertion among his own men, and had, again, proceeded down the river without Col. Lochry's force of 107 men. He had left only a letter fixed to a pole directing them to follow him to the mouth of the Great Miami River where they would finally join forces. Col. Lochry's force was, by then, low on provisions which were nearly exhausted. The river was low, they didn't know the passable channels and therefor it was impossible to catch up. Because of this, the colonel then dispatched Capt. Shannon and 4 men in a small boat, with a letter-- ahead-- to Col. Clark, detailing, in the letter, the bad situation of his forces and requesting that supplies and ammunition be sent back to them. Capt. Shannon's company was put under the command of Lieut. Isaac Anderson. (Mathew Lamb was a member of Capt. Shannon's company but was not one of the four men sent ahead with him). Capt. Shannon and the 4 men, along with the letter, were captured by the Indians soon after their departure. About the same time, Col. Lochry arrested a party of 19 deserters from Col. Clark's force but had released them--upon which the deserters had joined the Indians. Meanwhile, the Indians had been following Col. Clark's force down the river but had not attacked because they feared his cannon. The Indians were now thereby informed of the entire expedition and all details leading up to the time, by the deserters, including the fact that Cols. Clark and Lochry's forces were traveling separately (they had assumed that the two forces were traveling together), and of the weak condition of Col. Lochry's party. The Indians then placed the deserters in a conspicuous place on the north shore of the river, about 3 miles below the mouth of what is now called Lochry's Creek, and promised them to spare their lives on condition that they would shout to their companions in Col. Lochry's force and induce them to surrender. Col. Lochry and his men, made slow progress down the river, despairing of ever catching up with Col. Clark's force. On August 24, about 10:00 in the morning, they landed at the mouth of a creek, on the north shore of the Ohio, about 10 miles below the mouth of the Great Miami River. Here, they prepared to cook breakfast (one of the party had killed a buffalo the day before) and brought the horses ashore and turned them loose to graze. With the exception of a few men to guard the horses, all the men were sitting around campfires eating breakfast when they were surprise-attacked by rifle fire from among trees on the bluff above. Col. Lochry's men sprang to the boats to escape but the water was low, the boats unwieldy and another party of Indians attacked from canoes on the river. Col. Lochry was compelled to surrender. The Indians thereupon immediately fell upon and massacred Col. Lochry more than 40 other prisoners but were constrained by their chief, who arrived soon after. This chief was the famous 'Joseph Brant', who, afterward, apologized for the post-surrender massacre but was unable--he said--to entirely control his Indians. Matthew Lamb was among the more than forty massacred. Among the survivors of the massacre was Lieut. Isaac Anderson who had kept a daily journal of the expedition from the time of its departure from Col. Carnahan's Blockhouse. The next day the Indians set out to return to the Delaware Indian towns, from which they had come, with the survivors of the massacre. On the way they were met by a party of British and Indians commanded by the British Col. Caldwell and accompanied by the two Girtys and British Capt. McKee, who said that they were on their way to attack Col. Clark at the Falls of the Ohio. Chief Brant remained with the British force for two days before returning to the Delaware towns with most of his Indians. The few Indians remaining took charge of the prisoners and spoils. The prisoners remained in captivity until the next year, 1782, which brought the Revolutionary War to a close at which time they were released to return home to Pennsylvania. More than one half of the number who left Pennsylvania under Col. Lochry never returned. The fate of Col. Lochry and his men was not known by their families until several months later. In a letter dated Dec 29, 1781,from General William Irvine at Fort Pitt, dated Dec.29, 1781, to General George Washington telling of the disaster he adds "These misfortunes throw the people of this country into despair, particularly Westmoreland Co., Lochry's party being all the best men of their frontier". Another result was that Col. Clark was forced to abandon his expedition. From 'The History of Dearborn and Ohio Counties', Chapter 1, photostatic copies of which were made by Glenn Lamb Staley and found among his family history papers by Glenn L. Staley Jr. in 1975. A monument to this 'Massacre was erected near the battle site by the Lawrenceburg, IN, Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution ("D.A.R') in 1924. On it is a list of 100 men who were massacred. In the list of enlisted men on it is Matthew Lamb. His descendant, Glenn Lamb Staley Sr., found out about this monument in April,1952 while staying at a hotel in nearby Lawrenceburg IN. He went out to the monument, took photographs and returned to Lawrenceburg for more information He was helped, in that regard, by members of the D.A.R. there and by others, one of whom had a copy of the book 'History of Dearborn and Ohio Counties' from which he made photostatic copies of Chapter1 (which also quotes Lieut. Anderson's diary journal, which lists only 40 some men massacred, but Matthew Lamb's name is in both lists so there is no doubt that he was among those massacred.) Other townspeople, with whom he spoke, had other books telling the story from which he also made copies and it is from among these that I relate the story. Note: A record note by a DAR Reference Consultant, Mrs. Lou Spencer (Genealogical Service Report #685 dated Oct. 12, 1938) was in error that Matthew Lamb died May 13, 1782, though this may have been the date that the news of his death reached his wife, Jane, or the date when his Will was probated. Miles E. Staley

    [221] LETTERS FROM OFFICERS OF THE CONTINENTAL ARMY, FROM 1776 TO 1799.
    FORT PITT, 6 July 1776.
    AT a meeting held this Day at this place, present: Kiashuta, a Mingoe chief, just returned from the treaty at Niagira; Captain Pipe, a Delaware chief; The Shade, a Shawnese chief, with several others, Shawnese and Delawares; likewise Major Trent, Major Ward, Captain Nevill, his officers and a number of the Inhabitants, after being seated, Kiashuta made the following Speech:
    "Brothers: Three Months ago I left this Place to attend a Treaty at Niagira, to be held between the Commanding Officer of that Place and the six nation, Shawnese, Delawares, etc.; But I was stopped near a month at Connywagoe. As the Commanding officer had sent word to the Indians not to assemble until He should hear from Detroit. while I was at Connywagoe, 8oo Indians of the six nations hearing my Intentions of going to the Treaty, came to meet me and go with me. just as we arrived at a small Village beyond Connywagoe, they received a message from the Commanding Officer, acquainting them that the Treaty was over, but they, notwithstanding, persisted in going. "I received a message at the same Time inviting me to come, and assuring me that the Council Fire was not yet entirely extinguished. upon my arrival with the rest of the Indians, I informed the Commanding Officer that I had come a great Distance to hear what He had to say, and desired that he would inform me; but he told me [222] that he was not yet prepared to speak with me, which ended our Conference."
    Kiashuta then produced (his Belt, and is ordered by the Six nations to send it through the Indian Country) a Belt of Wampum, which was to be sent from the six nations to the Shawnese, Delawares, Wyandotts and Western Indians, acquainting them that they were determined to take no Part in the present War between Great Britain and America, and desiring them to do the same. He then addressed himself to the Virginians and Pennsylvanians in the following manner:
    "Brothers: We will not suffer either the English or Americans to march an army thro' our Country. Should Either attempt it, We shall forewarn them three times from Proceeding, but should they then persist, they must abide by the Consequence. I am appointed by the Six Nations to the Care of this Country, that is, to the Care of the Indians on the West side of the river Ohio, and I desire you will not think of an Expedition against Detroit, for I repeat it to you again, we will not suffer an army to march through our Country." A String.
    Kiashuta again rose and spoke as follows:
    "Brothers: Should any Mischief chance to be committed by any of our People, you must not blame the Nations nor think it was done by the approbation of the Chiefs; for the six Nations have strictly forbid any of their young men or Tributaries to molest any People on these Waters, but if they are determined to go to War, let them go to Canada and fight there." A String.
    Kiashuta then addressed Himself to Captain Pipe (a Delaware chief), desiring him to inform his nation of what he had heard, and to request them to be strong and join with the other nations in keeping Peace in his country. A String.
    He also recommended it to the Shade, a Shawnese Chief, to do the same.
    [223] He then desired that the foregoing speeches might be distributed through the Country, to quiet the minds of the people, and convince them that the six nations and their adherents did not desire to live at Variance with them; To which Captain Nevill returned the following answer:
    "Brother Kiashuta: I am much oblig'd to you for your good speech on the present occasion. you may depend We shall not attempt to march an army through your Country without first acquainting you with it, unless we hear of a British Army coming this Course. In such Case, we must make all possible speed to meet, and endeavor to stop them."
    To which Kiashuta replied that there was not the least Danger of that, as they should make it their Business to prevent Either an English or American army from passing through their Country.
    Captain CARSON. First Lieutenant FINDLY. Second Lieutenant ALEXANDER SIMERAL.
    Indian Conference at Fort Pitt, July 6, 1776.
    * * * * * *
    FORT PITT, 4th June, 1777.
    Sir:—I am favored with your letter of this date Informing me that you can't relieve the post at Kittanning except I can Supply you with Arms and Ammunition. Arms I have not until the Wagons arrive, consequently the 50 men who Escort the Wagons may march from here as early as any other Body of men I could arm. Ammunition I suppose to be already at that Post, you complain of the expence attending calling the Militia out. You must keep an account of what necessarily arises on that service and draw for it agreeable to the Act of Assembly.
    I am, Sir, with Esteem, Your obedient Humble Servant, EDWARD HAND.
    [COL. A. LOCHRY.]
    [224] FORT PITT, 6th July, 1777.
    Sir:—I received your letter by Captn. Martin, and am glad that by your late instructions you have it in your Power to punish the refractory Members you mention. Captn. Martin's small Party & two others, 15 Privates in the whole, are all I have yet heard of, pray, inform me if any more have joined him; it is very awkward & irregular to see men droping in by twos and threes without Officers and the least Order.
    Captn. Martin is Stationed at the Kiskimmenitas. You will see by the Militia Act the proportion of Officers to a Certain number of men, which can't be exceeded.
    I am, Sir, Your Obedient, Humble Servant, EDW. HAND.
    [COL. A. LOCHRY.]
    * * * * * *
    FORT PITT, 29th July, 1777.
    Dr Sir:—Your favor of yesterday I received & have furnished thirty Guns and accoutrements to Captns. McKee & Leech agreeable to your desire. I expect you will Please to direct them to be careful of them, that I may receive them fit for service. Captn. McKee received ten yesterday and one some time ago. Captain Leech rec'd nineteen to-day. I intend requesting the Principal Militia Officers of Westmoreland County to meet me at Hannas Town as soon as the Hurry of Harvest is over; I wish to confer with them on public business. I will give you further notice & fix a day. If you will take the Trouble to examine the Articles of War you will see that the men who deserted from Captain Martin's detachment are Guilty of Breach of the 4th & 14th Articles of the 13th Section of the Articles of War, and, as they were then in Actual Service, you will find by the 1st Article of the 17th Section that they are as liable to be punished as regular [225] Soldiers. I enclose a copy of the Articles of War lest you may not have one by you
    and am, Dr Sir, Sincerely yours, EDW. HAND.
    [COL. A. LOCHRY.]
    * * * * * *
    FORT PITT, 6th August, 1777.
    Sir:—I last evening received your favor of the 2d Instant, and am convinced that what you have done is occasioned by your Zeal for the Common Cause; but you may remember that a Magazine was ordered to your Quarter by myself, &, as I did not know the most proper place, I consulted the General I met at Ligonier the 18th Ultimo. By their Common Voice, Col. Mountis was fixed on, & Col. Morgan has only acted by my express Command. I have the Pleasure to acquaint you that, as far as can be ascertained, the Suspicions of that Gentn's Infidelity are quite groundless; would to God those formed of every other Person were so! I find Col. Lochry is gone to Phila.; I therefore request you will please immediately to forward the wagons laden with Salt to Col. Mountis, and Redstone agreeable to prior order; those wagons carrying other stores I beg you will send here. It will be necessary to send an Escort with the Wagons, which must continue at Col. Mountis' as a Guard for the Magazine, & be relieved by you, agreeable to thy directions, to Colonel Lochry, which I find you are acquainted with. I beg to know in what Forwardness the Militia from your County, destined for the Expedition, are in,
    and am, Sir, Very respectfully Yrs., EDW. HAND.
    [JAMES PARRY, Lieut. of Westmoreland.]
    * * * * * *
    [226] FORT PITT, August 8, 1777.
    General Hand wishes to meet the Militia officers, & other principal Inhabitants of the Counties of Bedford and West-moreland, at Ligonier, on Monday, the 18th instant, to con-suit on the best Measures to be taken on the present alarming Occasion.
    By order of the Genl., J. EWING, M. B.
    [To COLONEL ARCHIBALD LOCHRY, Westmoreland County.]
    * * * * * *
    FORT PITT, August 22, 1777.
    Sir:—As the Commissary has been directed to Erect a Magazine of Provisions at Colonel Mounces' , near Stewart's crossing, and one at Redstone old Fort, he will send from Ligonier, by the way of the Nine Mile Run, a Number of Wagons, Laden with Stores, to the above-mentioned places. I therefore Request that you will please to furnish a Party of Militia to Escort the Wagons & serve as Guides, & to remove any obstructions the Wagons may meet on the road, the same party, or another, Consisting of a carefull Subaltern officer, a sergeant & ten Privates, must remain at Colonel Mounces' as a Guard to the Magazine; they are to be kept up until further Orders, and may be delivered as often as you think necessary.
    I am, Sir, Your obedient, Humble Servant, EDW. HAND.
    [COL. A. LOCHRY.]
    * * * * * *
    FORT PITT, 13 October, 1777.
    Sir:—I hope in a few days to move the Provisions & other stores destined for the Indian Expedition from here to Wheeling, & I will, at the same time, march all the troops here assembled to that place. I beg you may be as expeditious as [227] possible in furnishing your proportion and ordering them to march immediately for this garrison. Send an Officer and fifteen or twenty of your Militia to meet and Escort David Tate's Brigade of Horses laden with flour, they will also take under their protection any other Continental Pack-Horses they meet.
    I am Sir, Your Obed, H'ble Servant, EDW. HAND.
    * * * * * *
    FORT PITT, 18 October, 1777.
    Dear Sir:—The protection of your County has, since I have had the Honor to Command, been an object equally attended to with that of any other Frontier County. I have repeatedly requested from you a number of men for that purpose, but (from what cause I can't determine) I never yet could obtain them agreeable to my wish. If you will now send me your proportion, I think that will be sufficient, added to the numbers already arrived and daily expected from different Quarters, to protect the Frontiers. Congress ordered a Post in your County (The Kittanning); I could not support that and have ordered another to be Erected at the expence of the Continent. This I think Sufficient, & will Support, if you lend me your aid; at the same time, beg leave to assure you that I don't mean to interfere with your Command of Westmoreland County, or your Plan in Erecting as many Forts and magazines as you please at the expence of the State of Pennsylvania, and puting the whole County in its Pay. Presuming you have proper authority for so doing, and every State will, no doubt, have a particular regard to the Situation of Different Counties, the People you mention are surely Defending their own Property, and, if the Spirit of Discord would permit them, have it in their Power, by Uniting to march in Bodies, to collect the Grain of every man in the Frontier parts [228] of the County. I again request you may not delay the proportion from your County for the Expedition; the Season advances apace. I shall to-morrow proceed to Wheeling with what Troops I have, yours will receive every necessary I can Afford them when they arrive here, & when they join me shall be put on the same footing with the Militia of any other County. In the meantime, Subscribe myself,
    Dr Sir, very Sincerely yrs, EDW. HAND.
    [COLONEL A. LOCHRY.]
    * * * * * *
    FORT PITT, 5 Nov., 1777.
    Dear Sir:—I was duly fav'd with yours of the 2d by Colonel Barr, who, instead of 53, has no more than 31 Rank and file.
    To my very great mortification I find I can't collect a sufficient number of men to enter the Indian country this season, therefore, as the Frontier of Westmoreland County lies much exposed to the Ravages of the Savages, I beg that you may immediately draw out 150 men, with officers in proportion, to cover that part of the Country and Assist the Inhabitants in securing their Crops and other property, the whole to be under the direction of a Field Officer, who must report to me from time to time what number of men and officers are on duty & where they are. Col. Barr's party are now armed & will remain here subject to your Orders. I wish to render this Body of men as useful as possible to the public, shall for that reason leave the destination of them to yourself. Except 30 to be kept with Captain Moorhead, you are to continue the 150 men & no more on continental pay untill Further orders or until the necessity for it ceases. You must apply to Col. Geo. Morgan or his agent here for In- [229] structions how to Victual them, a sufficient number of cattle are already purchased for that purpose.
    I am, Sir, your Obedt, Humle Servant, EDW. HAND.
    [COLONEL A. LOCHRY.]
    * * * * * *
    [Collection of W. M. D.]
    Sir:—I wrote to the honorable the Continental Congress on the 15th Ultimo, which I hope they have received. I would at that time have wrote to you, but was not certain of your being in Congress; but as Mr. John Anderson informs me he left you in Congress, I take the liberty of communicating to you some matters that have occurred to me since my letter to Congress upon hearing the speeches of the Delawares, and request the favour of you to lay them before Congress, and that Part with respect to the Delawares I have communicated to Col. Morgan. I believe we shall have an Indian war and a general one. If the Delawares were ever so well inclined they will be awed into it by the other nations. I would be for supporting them if possible in order to lessen the strength of our enemy. They should be invited into our Country. Their wives, Children and Old people would be then secure, and we then should reap great Advantage from the service of their young Men and Warriors. And if any other Tribe or Nation would follow their Example they should be encouraged. If we have a general Indian war, it is my humble Opinion four expeditions will be necessary: One to the Southward, one to the Northward, one down the Ohio to establish a Strength on the Ohio, so as to cut off any communication with the Western and Southern Nations, and one other expedition to De Troit or to some part of the Country to the Westward, to cut off the communication between the Northern and Western Nations. Each of those expeditions [230] should be carried into execution under the command of an experienced officer. And it is my humble opinion not less than 3,000 men should be employed in each of those expeditions, and they should be well equipped; that those who went down the Ohio and those to Detroit should have some field pieces, and those troops should not return but establish posts and reduce the Indians and convince them of an error that they have been led into by the governments formerly, that they may at any time make war with us and have peace granted them on their own terms. I would recommend that large numbers of hostages should be taken from every tribe or nation that we may reduce, and take none but their chiefs or ruling men as hostages, that the tribe or nation should support those hostages, and that they should not be exchanged till we had good proof of their tribe or nation becoming agreeable people. That all the lands of the unoffending tribes or nations should be preserved to them, and a generous trade well regulated. And that all the lands of the offending Tribes or Nations should be forfeited, and that they should be restricted to hunt or live on such parts of it as should be directed by the commanding Officer or Governor who might be appointed to rule them. We undoubtedly should have a greater number of the Indians in our interest. If we had a sufficient quantity of goods for that purpose, our enemy have great advantage of us for they out treaty us, and the highest bidder will have the greatest Number of the Indians. This I know from my acquaintance with them for upwards of twenty years.
    To the Delawares we made promises of protection, and they now put our friendship to the test, and if we do not fulfil our promises they will undoubtedly be obliged to look for protection elsewhere, and we must suffer in their opinion and also in the opinion of all the other nations. If I should [231] receive Intelligence, or if anything should occur to me that may serve the general cause, I shall write to you.
    I am, sir, with great respect, Your most obedient humble servant, EDW. HAND.
    [COLONEL JAMES WILSON, Esq., A Member of the Honorable Continental Congress.]
    * * * * * *
    FORT PITT, March 22, 1778.
    Sir:—I am instructed by the hon'ble, the Commissioners appointed by Congress, to fix on a plan for the defence of these frontiers, to desire that you may continue 150 Privates of the Militia of your County, properly officered, on constant duty on its frontiers. Thirty of them to be added to Captain Moorhead's company, stationed at Fort Hand, and the remaining 120 placed at such stations as you find best calculated for the defence of the County. Instead of Militia call'd out in the ordinary way, the Commissioners are desirous of engaging a like number of volunteers for a longer time than the Militia generally serves. I perfectly agree with them in sentiment and wish you to fall on that Plan, provided no delay arises for its execution.
    I am, sir, your obed't h'ble serv't,


  2. 3.  Loughry Jeremiah Jr. Descendancy chart to this point (1.William1) was born in 1731 in Ireland; died on 21 Jan 1824 in Salem Township, Westmoreland Cty, Pennslyvania, Usa; was buried in 1824 in Congruity Church, Salem Township, Westmoreland Cty, Pennslyvania.

  3. 4.  Loughry Mary Descendancy chart to this point (1.William1)

  4. 5.  Loughry Rebecca Descendancy chart to this point (1.William1)

  5. 6.  Loghry William B. Descendancy chart to this point (1.William1) was born in 1733 in Ireland; died on 18 Sep 1837 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; was buried on 20 Sep 1837 in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY.

    Notes:

    Little is know of William B. Loghry. It is tradition that he came from Ireland. He resided for sometime in eastern Pennsylvania probably in the Northumberland County and also in Luzerne County about ten miles from Wilkes-Barre. One of the same and undoubtedly the above, was a Pennsylvania soldier during the Revolutionary War.

    The 1790 Census shows one William Lockry residing then in Luzerne County whose family consisted of one male child under 10 years of age and a wife and one daughter. This coincides with the tradition of the family as told by Mrs. Hannah Jones of Steuben County, NY. Mrs. Jones said that when William came to the area, he went back into the woods ten miles from any house and cleared a place and built a log house to which he took his family, which then consisted of a daughter and two sons, who were then two years of age. When absent from home shortly after they had settled there, one of the sons sickened and died. As the weather was warm, decomposition soon set in and as the father did not return and there was no help at hand, Mrs. Loghry alone dug the grave and buried her child. This had to be a heart-breaking job.

    In the tax list of Tioga Point, now Athens,Pa, for the year 1796, there was a William Loughry assessed for $1034 and Michael Loughry for twelve dollars but both names are missing from the census roll of 1800 when it was possible they had both removed to Steuben County, New York.


    It is unknown where he married his wife, Nancy Santee whose family also came from Pennsylvania.

    Both he and his wife, Nancy are buried at Brown's Crossing, Cameron, Steuben County, NY.

    William married Purdy Nancy before 1770. Nancy (daughter of Purdy) was born in 1748 in Clones, County Monaghan, Ireland; died on 01 Sep 1828 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; was buried on 03 Sep 1828 in Brown's Crossing, Steuben, Steuben County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 10. Loghry Michael  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1753 in PA; died on 04 Mar 1827 in Bath, Steuben Co., NY.
    2. 11. Loghry James  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1762; died on 03 Aug 1838 in Howard, Steuben Co., NY.
    3. 12. Loghry Mary  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1773 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY.
    4. 13. Loghry Joseph Leander  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1777 in Near Wilkes Barre, Luzerne County, PA; died on 01 Feb 1831 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Feb 1831 in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY(Lower Swale).
    5. 14. Loghry Andrew  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1781.

  6. 7.  Loghry James Descendancy chart to this point (1.William1)

  7. 8.  Loughry Margaret Descendancy chart to this point (1.William1) was born in Ireland.

  8. 9.  Loughry John Descendancy chart to this point (1.William1) was born in 1737 in York County, Pennslyvania.


Generation: 3

  1. 10.  Loghry Michael Descendancy chart to this point (6.William2, 1.William1) was born about 1753 in PA; died on 04 Mar 1827 in Bath, Steuben Co., NY.

    Notes:

    Michael Loghry, spelled Loghrey on his Revolutionary Enlistment papers, signed up on August 16, 1780 under the Company commander, Capt. John McClelan in the 1st Pennsylvania Regiment. He was a private. On October 15, 1780, he was appointed.
    P. A. (6) Vol. 2, p.835, 836, 837.

    On 13 August, 1781, he was paid $38.00 for duty from August 1, 1780 to January 1, 1781. Certificate # 73882, Letter H, Receipt book A, Final settlements (Pierce's Certificate) p. 59, Records of the Comptroller General, at D. P. R. The Basic Record Proves Active Duty Before 16 November 1783.

    He received another payment for active duty on 13 Dec. 1782 for the period from 1 Jan. 1781 to 1 January 1782. Certificate # 74020, Letter B, Receipt Book A, Pierce's Certificate, p. 63, Records of the Comptroller General, at D. P. R.

    On August 13, 1783, he was paid $80. to Jan 1, 1783, Certificate # 74197, Letter B, Receipt Book A, p. 69.

    He came to Cameron, Steuben county, NY before 1824 and was one of the only residents west of Cameron Corners in 1824 with John Hallett, Isaac Santee, Joseph Butler and Captain Luther White.

    He died on his way to Bath, Steuben county, to pick up his annual Revolutionaly War pension of $96 dollars per annum, which he had drawn for sometime.
    In the "History of Steuben County, NY by W. W. Clayton, p. 202
    John Hallett, who kept tavern near the bridge, half a
    mile west of Cameron, Isaac Santee, Joseph Butler, and
    Michael Loughry, were the only residents in the town, west
    of Cameron Corners, when Capt. Luther White settled
    where he now lives, near the Santee place, in 1824.

    Michael married McGage Nancy on 15 Mar 1778 in In a log house owned by Polly Moore's parents, built on the Plains of the Juanita River in the state of PA and was witnessed by Polly Moore of PA as well.. Nancy was born about 1756 in PA; died on 17 Jun 1846 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; was buried on 18 Jun 1846 in Brown's Crossing, Cameron, Steuben County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 15. Loghry William Anson  Descendancy chart to this point was born about Jan 1784 in PA; died in 1843 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    2. 16. Loghry "Squire "Joseph  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1786 in PA.

  2. 11.  Loghry James Descendancy chart to this point (6.William2, 1.William1) was born in 1762; died on 03 Aug 1838 in Howard, Steuben Co., NY.

    Notes:

    The name of this twin could possibly James William Loghry. He died in 1779.

    Family/Spouse: Foster Electa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 17. Loghry James Foster  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Steuben Co., NY; died in NE.

  3. 12.  Loghry Mary Descendancy chart to this point (6.William2, 1.William1) was born about 1773 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY.

    Notes:

    Died:
    Autumn of 1846

    Mary married Moore John about 1793 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY. John was born in 1762 in Ireland; died on 28 Feb 1836 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 18. Moore Joseph  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    2. 19. Moore Mattie  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    3. 20. Moore John  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    4. 21. Moore Sarah  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    5. 22. Moore Elizabeth  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    6. 23. Moore Jane  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    7. 24. Moore James  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    8. 25. Moore Lucy  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    9. 26. Moore Nancy  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1794 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 15 Jul 1840 in Steuben, Steuben County, NY; was buried on 17 Jul 1840 in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY.
    10. 27. Moore Susan  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1796 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY.
    11. 28. Moore Mary  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 04 Jul 1800 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 09 Sep 1877.
    12. 29. Moore Lettice  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 04 Dec 1801 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; died on 14 Jul 1834 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Canisteo County, NY.
    13. 30. Moore William  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 07 Jan 1803 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 27 Sep 1834 in Steuben, Steuben County, NY; was buried on 29 Sep 1834 in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY.

  4. 13.  Loghry Joseph Leander Descendancy chart to this point (6.William2, 1.William1) was born in 1777 in Near Wilkes Barre, Luzerne County, PA; died on 01 Feb 1831 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Feb 1831 in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY(Lower Swale).

    Notes:

    Joseph Leander Loghry, generally called "Land Joe", was one of the first settlers of the Brown's Crossing area of the Canisteo Valley. Joseph Loughry, who very early ran a saw-mill on the Canisteo river.

    He was a mill owner/operator on the Canisteo River at Brown's Crossing. The mill was below (south) and to the left of the area where the new steel bridge stands today.

    He bought, probably of Elisha Brown, the original "proprietor" four hundred acres of land for six shillings per acre. This land lay upon both sides of the Canisteo River and later was included in the farms of George Dawson, Isaac Roosa, Jefferson Hadley and Ira Lane.

    At this point he built and operated the saw mill which probably stood on the South bank of the river about 50 rods above the river bridge where there appears to be the outlines of a race.

    History says in reference to this family, "Among the early settlers west of Cameron were Andrew and Joseph Loughry, who early ran a sawmill on the river".

    Joseph, in his youth was an athlete holding records in his native village near Wilkesbarre, PA. He was born about 1777, and married in Pennsylvania, Mary Santee who was born about 1785, daughter of Valentine Santee of Huntington, Pa. (The above is history written by Stacy Jackson of Steuben County in 1923.)

    Brown's Crossing Cemetery is just to the right (north) of the bridge and above the site of the old mill. It is the place where the Brown, Loghry, Santee and Moore families buried their dead. All were related to each other.
    Joseph, who died at the age of 54 years, and his wife, Mary, who was 45 at the time of her death, are both buried at Brown's Crossing Cemetery. CANISTEO BROWN'S CROSSING CEMETERY - On County Route 119 Eastbound at Brown's Crossing near the Canisteo/Cameron Town line.


    When seen in 1995, the cemetery only had one stone left after the river flooded and washed out gravestones and bodies from their resting places. This one gravestone is that of Isaac Santee.

    At one time the river was much larger than today. It was used to transport the settlers coming up the river on flatbed boats and barges moving their cattle, household goods and families from Pennslyvania.

    There also was a Michael Loghry, who was one of the five residents in Cameron township, west of Cameron Corners in 1824. It was supposed that he was the father of "Squire Joe" but it is possible that they were brothers.

    Michael settled in Cameron at a somewhat later date than did Willaim or "Squire Joe" and that he was from Tyrone, Pa. He married but his wife is not known. He probably died sometime before 1835. Mrs. Loghry married a second time to Mr. VanAuker, generally known in later years as grandfather "Nauker".
    Mrs. Hannah Jones of Cameron in 1923 said Mrs. Van Auker died at the home of her son, "Squire Joe Loghry" of Cameron.

    It is believed that Michael's children were; "Squire Joe", Andrew, William Anson, and Nancy (Snediker).

    There was also a James Loghry who resided in Cameron in 1823. There is no record of him other than he was Town Accountant that year.



    WILL OF JOSEPH LEANDER LOGHRY
    I, Joseph Loghry of the town of Canisteo in the County of Steuben and State of New York being of sound mind and memory do make and ordain this my last will and testament in manner and form following:

    To my daughter Nancy Santee, I bequeath the equal and undivided west half of lot No. 115 in the NE quarter of Township no. 4 in 5th Range said lot containing ninety six and one half acres; the east half of said lot No. 115.

    I give and bequeath to the heirs of my son William Loghry, the said William to have the use and benefit of said property during his natural life.
    To my son Isaac Loghry, I give an bequeath fifty acres of land in the northwest corner of lot No. 104 in Township No. 4 in fifth Range (lately owned?) by John Loghry containing about one hundred and eleven acres.
    To my son George Loghry, I bequeath five dollars the residue of my real estate consisting of the homestead on which I now reside together with two-thirds of the saw-mill and all the personal property of whatever name or nature to remain for the support of myself and my aged father during our natural lives and at my death to become the property of my two little daughters Mary Loghry and Lettice Loghry containing about two hundred and eighty acres of land after paying all legal demands which may remain against me and I hereby revoke all other and former wills by me at any heretofore made.

    In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal the fifteenth day of April in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty. (In the margin on the first page, it is written: To my son Charles, I give the ______ the residence of said lot No. 104.) Joseph Loghry
    _________________

    There is also a Joseph Loghry buried at the Lower Swale Cemetery, also known as the Peter Drake Burying Ground in Cameron, Steuben County, NY.

    Family/Spouse: Santee Mary. Mary (daughter of Santee Valentine and Craig Mary) was born in 1785 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 15 Mar 1830 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; was buried on 17 Mar 1830 in Brown's Crossing, Cameron, Steuben County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 31. Loghry William  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Sep 1801 in Luzerne County, PA; died on 06 Mar 1873.
    2. 32. Loghry John Joseph  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Mar 1803 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died in 1860 in Kankakee, Kankakee County, IL.
    3. 33. Loghry James H.  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Mar 1805 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 08 Apr 1867 in Washington; was buried in Buck Settlement Cemetery, Bath, Steuben County, NY.
    4. 34. Loghry Nancy  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1807 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 21 Oct 1836 in Amherst, Loraine County, OH; was buried in Amerherst Cemetery 9 (Pioneer) Amherst, Loraine County, OH.
    5. 35. Loghry Isaac  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 25 Nov 1809 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 27 Sep 1879 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Oak Hill/ Bird District Cemetery, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY.
    6. 36. Loghry Charles L.  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 30 Oct 1811 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 13 Aug 1882 in Bath Township, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Unionville Cemetery, Bath Township, Steuben Co. NY.
    7. 37. Loghry George William  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 13 Mar 1813 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; died on 29 Aug 1886 in Hepburn, Page County, IA; was buried on 31 Aug 1886 in Hepburn, Page County, IA.
    8. 38. Loghry Mary  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 Oct 1815 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; died on 29 Sep 1881 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    9. 39. Loghry Lettice Lorena  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1820 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 21 Dec 1893 in St. Anne, Kankakee Co., IL; was buried in Old Brown-Hanen Cemetery four miles east of Witchert in Pembroke Township on the old Brown farm.IL.

  5. 14.  Loghry Andrew Descendancy chart to this point (6.William2, 1.William1) was born about 1781.

    Notes:

    It is uncertain if Andrew was indeed a son to William and Nancy Loghry.
    He is mentioned as an early settler with Joseph who came "west" from PA.
    He could easily have been a cousin or uncle.



Generation: 4

  1. 15.  Loghry William Anson Descendancy chart to this point (10.Michael3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born about Jan 1784 in PA; died in 1843 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.

    Family/Spouse: Tice Katherine. Katherine was born in 1809; died on 31 Mar 1888 in Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Lower Swale Cemetery, Cameron, Steuben County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 16.  Loghry "Squire "Joseph Descendancy chart to this point (10.Michael3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born about 1786 in PA.

  3. 17.  Loghry James Foster Descendancy chart to this point (11.James3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born in Steuben Co., NY; died in NE.

  4. 18.  Moore Joseph Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.

  5. 19.  Moore Mattie Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.

  6. 20.  Moore John Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.

  7. 21.  Moore Sarah Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.

  8. 22.  Moore Elizabeth Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.

  9. 23.  Moore Jane Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.

  10. 24.  Moore James Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.

    Notes:

    Never married.


  11. 25.  Moore Lucy Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.

  12. 26.  Moore Nancy Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born about 1794 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 15 Jul 1840 in Steuben, Steuben County, NY; was buried on 17 Jul 1840 in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY.

    Notes:

    Nancy, first wife of Isaac Santee was named for her maternal grandmother, Nancy Purdy Loghry. It is unknown where she was born and where they were married. She was 46 years old at the time of her death.

    Nancy married Santee Isaac in 1810. Isaac (son of Santee Valentine and Funston Margaret) was born in 1780 in Mount Bethel, Northampton County, PA; died on 18 Oct 1864 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; was buried on 20 Oct 1864 in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 40. Santee Mary  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 25 Jun 1812 in PA; died on 27 Apr 1855; was buried in West Cameron Cemetery, Cameron, Steuben County, NY.
    2. 41. Santee Lettice  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 21 Jul 1814 in PA; died on 04 Mar 1879 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    3. 42. Santee John  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 06 Feb 1817 in PA; died on 08 Oct 1890.
    4. 43. Santee Joseph  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 21 Apr 1819 in PA; died on 13 Feb 1901.
    5. 44. Santee William  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 12 Jun 1822 in Cameron, Canesteo County, NY.
    6. 45. Santee James M.  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 13 Nov 1825 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 05 Mar 1897.
    7. 46. Santee Jesse  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 08 Sep 1828 in Cameron, Canesteo County, NY; died on 21 Jun 1910.
    8. 47. Santee Parmelia  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 07 Jul 1831 in Cameron, Canesteo County, NY; died on 17 Sep 1902 in Eaton County, MI.

  13. 27.  Moore Susan Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born about 1796 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY.

    Family/Spouse: Stephens Nathan. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  14. 28.  Moore Mary Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born on 04 Jul 1800 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 09 Sep 1877.

    Notes:

    Wife of William Sr. ?

    Family/Spouse: Stephens. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  15. 29.  Moore Lettice Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born on 04 Dec 1801 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; died on 14 Jul 1834 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Canisteo County, NY.

    Notes:

    On her gravestone, readable in 1984, she was 32 years, seven months and 10days old at the time of her death on 14 July 1834.

    Family/Spouse: Thomas Nehemiah. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  16. 30.  Moore William Descendancy chart to this point (12.Mary3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born on 07 Jan 1803 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 27 Sep 1834 in Steuben, Steuben County, NY; was buried on 29 Sep 1834 in Brown's Crossing, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY.

    Notes:

    William was named after his maternal grandfather, William Loghry. He was 31 years, 9 mos. and 20 days old when he died.

    William came to Cameron in 1827 and making a settlement where Charles Johnson later lived. He and his brother, Joseph built a saw mill there.

    Family/Spouse: Kerr Dorcas Carr. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 48. Moore Jane  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Cecil County, MD; died in Union Twp, Luzerne County, PA.

  17. 31.  Loghry William Descendancy chart to this point (13.Joseph3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born on 20 Sep 1801 in Luzerne County, PA; died on 06 Mar 1873.

    William married Tuttle Nancy about 1829 in Howard, Steuben Co., NY. Nancy died in Howard Township, Steuben County, NY; was buried in Tollsville Cemetery, Steuben County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 49. Loghry John  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 50. Loghry William  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 51. Loghry Jane Caroline  Descendancy chart to this point
    4. 52. Loghry Sabrina  Descendancy chart to this point
    5. 53. Loghry Ebenezer  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 08 Jan 1841 in NY; died on 08 Jul 1883.

    William married Miller Lydia about 1842 in Steuben, New York, Usa. Lydia was born on 20 Apr 1823; died on 17 Jan 1902 in Arkport. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 54. Loghry Charlotte  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 55. Loghry George  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 56. Loghry Daniel  Descendancy chart to this point
    4. 57. Loghry Harlow Smith  Descendancy chart to this point
    5. 58. Loghry Clark  Descendancy chart to this point
    6. 59. Loghry Joseph B.  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1843 in New York, Usa.
    7. 60. Loghry David  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1845 in New York, Usa.
    8. 61. Loghry Mary  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1847 in New York.
    9. 62. Loghry Robert  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1848 in New York, Usa.

  18. 32.  Loghry John Joseph Descendancy chart to this point (13.Joseph3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born on 20 Mar 1803 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died in 1860 in Kankakee, Kankakee County, IL.

    Notes:

    John moved to Oberlin, Lorraine County, Ohio in 1835. In 1844, he was in Russia, Lorraine County, Ohio. He was in Burr Oak, St. Joseph County, Michigan in 1845. (Source for Russia, Lorraine Co.OH is from a probate record filed 1 Apr. 1844 of the Joseph Leander Loghry estate.)

    He married Electa Foster between 1823 and 1825 in Steuben County, NY. It is thought he died in Kankakee, Kankakee County, IL in 1860.

    John married Foster ElectaSteuben, New York, Usa. Electa was born on 13 Jul 1805 in New York; died in Mar 1852. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 63. Loghry Henry  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 64. Loghry Joseph  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 18 Dec 1825 in Steuben Co., NY.
    3. 65. Loghry James Foster  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 01 Feb 1827 in Howard City, Steuben County, NY; died on 10 Sep 1906 in Geneva, Fillmore County, NE; was buried in Geneva Public Cemetery, Geneva, NE.
    4. 66. Loghry Adeline  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 27 May 1832 in Steuben Co., NY.
    5. 67. Loghry Charles  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 15 Apr 1835 in Oberlin, Lorraine County, Ohio; died after 1917 in Prob. Steuben County, In.
    6. 68. Loghry Andrew J.  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 09 Dec 1839 in Oberlin, Lorraine County, Ohio; died before 1906.
    7. 69. Loghry Alvin A.  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 01 Sep 1842 in Oberlin, Lorraine County, Ohio; died on 11 Nov 1924 in Geneva, Nebraska; was buried in Geneva Public Cemetery, Geneva, Nebraska.
    8. 70. Loghry Amos  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Sep 1846 in Branch County, MI; died on 20 Feb 1932 in Lafayette, Tippacanoe County, IN; was buried in Fowler, Benton County, IN.
    9. 71. Loghry Sarah Priscilla  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 18 Apr 1848 in Burr Oak, St. Joseph County, Michigan; died on 11 Feb 1917 in Bagley, Iowa.

  19. 33.  Loghry James H. Descendancy chart to this point (13.Joseph3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born on 20 Mar 1805 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 08 Apr 1867 in Washington; was buried in Buck Settlement Cemetery, Bath, Steuben County, NY.

    Notes:

    At the time of his death, four minor children remained at home; Helen M., George, Jane and John all at Bath, Steuben County, NY besides his wife, Margaret. (Steuben Co. NY Court Docket # 6717/ Will- Vol. 19-p 79.) He died in the Civil War in Washington according to "the History of Steuben County, NH" by Professor W. W. Clayton. p. 206.

    Family/Spouse: Emerson Margaret. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 72. Loghry Jr. James H.  Descendancy chart to this point died before 1891.
    2. 73. Loghry Jane  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 74. Loghry John  Descendancy chart to this point
    4. 75. Loghry George  Descendancy chart to this point
    5. 76. Loghry Fanny  Descendancy chart to this point
    6. 77. Loghry Helen M.  Descendancy chart to this point
    7. 78. Loghry Charles  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 08 Dec 1846 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.

    James married Leach Nancy about 1826 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 79. Loghry Harvey William  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 80. Loghry Aurena  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 81. Loghry Sarah Ann  Descendancy chart to this point
    4. 82. Loghry Rheuhama  Descendancy chart to this point
    5. 83. Loghry Isaac  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1827.

  20. 34.  Loghry Nancy Descendancy chart to this point (13.Joseph3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born about 1807 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 21 Oct 1836 in Amherst, Loraine County, OH; was buried in Amerherst Cemetery 9 (Pioneer) Amherst, Loraine County, OH.

    Notes:

    Nancy married her cousin, George Santee. They moved to New Oberlin, Lorraine County, Ohio where they resided. Her children Joseph, James, Mary and Susan were named in the will of her father, Joseph Leander Loghry as heirs. She was deceased by the time of probate so her legacy went to her children. Probate filed 1 Apr. 1844.

    Nancy married Santee George in 1826. George (son of Santee James and McNeal Rachel) was born on 09 Aug 1798; died on 03 Aug 1861. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 84. Santee Mary  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 85. Santee James  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 86. Santee Susannah  Descendancy chart to this point
    4. 87. Santee Joseph Loghry  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 08 Oct 1827 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 31 Mar 1908 in Cedar Falls City, Black Hawk County, IA; was buried in Fairview Cemetery, Cedar Falls, Black Hawk County, IA.

  21. 35.  Loghry Isaac Descendancy chart to this point (13.Joseph3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born on 25 Nov 1809 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 27 Sep 1879 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Oak Hill/ Bird District Cemetery, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY.

    Isaac married Snyder Christine Lucretia about 1831 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY. Christine was born on 06 Nov 1814; died in Nov 1888 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Oak Hill/ Bird District Cemetery, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 88. Loghry Sarah  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1820 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    2. 89. Loghry Wilson  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1832 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died in 1908 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Lower Swale Cemetery, Cameron, Steuben County, NY.
    3. 90. Loghry James S.  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1833 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 05 Apr 1865 in Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Oak Hill/ Bird District Cemetery, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY.
    4. 91. Loghry Rachel  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1837 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    5. 92. Loghry Clarissa  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1841 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    6. 93. Loghry Lacretia  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1842 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    7. 94. Loghry Abraham  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1845 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 29 Nov 1918 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Oak Hill/ Bird District Cemetery, Canisteo, Steuben County, NY.

  22. 36.  Loghry Charles L. Descendancy chart to this point (13.Joseph3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born on 30 Oct 1811 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 13 Aug 1882 in Bath Township, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Unionville Cemetery, Bath Township, Steuben Co. NY.

    Notes:

    Charles Loghry served in the Civil War from 1863 to 1865 as a private from Bath, Steuben County, NY.



    After Charles and Juliette Brown married in a double wedding with his sister and her brother, Mary Loghry and Robert Emmett Brown, they settled near the Oregon School house on the road to Brown's Crossing where John Hedges had formerly resided.

    Charles, a big man in stature and weighed over 250 pounds, was a farmer all his life. He died at home in Cameron of heart trouble and is buried at Coss' Corners burying ground, Bath Township. He was 70 years of age.

    In a letter written by Charles's granddaughter, Mary Loghry, 21 May, 1943,
    she says,"My grandfather, Charles Loghry, was a strong Christian; God-fearing and tried to live right by the letter of the Bible. I never saw him. He always spelled his name, L-o-g-h-r-y." It is said to have been formerly pronounced Lawrey.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Letters written by Charles Loghry to his son, William Henry Harrison Loghry

    Alens Station, N. Y. August 30, 68

    Well henry it has bin some time sinse I have rote to you.
    We had A leter from you A short time a goe and was glad to hear that you and your family was well and was doing well.
    We are as usual working and tuging through this world and triing to git something to live on when we Cant work any more. We have had it very dry this sumer. Spring crops is very poor this year hear and as been as I can hear. Corn aint more than half a crop.
    When you git this you must tell us how times is with you. We had A good crop of hay and winter wheat but Barley and oats was lite this year potatoes is A lite crop I have a good croop of buckwheat.
    I am going to rite to franklin Loghry*. I begin to think that he has forgotten us it has ben A long time sinse he has rote to us. tell him to rite and let us noe what he is doing.
    We have had the hotest weather that was ever none in this country. it was so hot it was all most imposibel to work.
    I have sowed one peis of wheat and am redy to sow five acors more this week. I have had the falow ready two weeks.
    We are well to day and nobody but us two hear. Ada* is to sunday school while I am riting.
    You must come and make us a visit as soon as you can. You must rite as soon as you git this and let us noe how you git along.
    You must doe what you can for Seymour and Blain the Democrats will carie this state by A big majority as was ever nown.
    Give my respects to unkel Dar* and Lety* and all their fokes.
    Good by for this time
    to Henry Loghry and wife (signed

    Charles Loghry


    *1. Franklin Loghry is his son.
    2. Ada was a girl they had taken in to raise.
    3. Unkel Dar is Erasmus Darwin Brown, brother of Juliette Brown Loghry, and brother-in-law to Charles.
    4. Lety is Lettice Loghry Brown, a sister; one of the three Loghry Children to marry three Brown children.
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Cameron, N.Y. Dec 26, 1869

    Well Henry it is some time sinse I have rote to you. I thout this morning I woud rite to you and let you noe that we are in the land of the living and as well as usual. I have in qite lame this fall and winter I have got A bad nee that is very lame and pains me very bad so that I cant sleep good nites. it was taken lame last summer and is giting worse. I have got most discourage of its ever giting any beter I haint ploud any this fall help is hard to git and wages is high hear.
    Comon labor is one dollar A day and bord and wheat is worth $1.00 for that is good
    You rote that you wanted me to send you some money that is out of the question this winter for money is hard to git and very scarce there is nothing that will fetch money hear.
    we have had some cold wether and good slaying But this warm today and raining there aint mutch going on this winter hear Sam Brown* has got home from the Asilum and seams to bee all rite he Chops wood evry day Brown's foxes* is well and doing well they are in the hoop pole business this winter
    Henry you must keep good Courage your young yet and you mustent git the horers for that dont doe any good if I was of your age and had my health I could live any where I think that I can doe as much as I ever could But when I goe to work I soon git tierd and soon think difernt I have worked this fall that when I got in the house and sot down I had all that I could doe to git up I have the rheumatism most all the time
    My nee pains me so that I can hardley rite while I am now riting
    We got a leter from your wife on Chrismuss for A Chrismuss present and was glad to hear that you was well and all the friends
    I wish that you was hear today to hellp us eat some Big Aples we have the Bigest Aples that you ever seen David Williamson was hear last sunday and he meshered one that was 14 inches round we have got 20 bushels of grafted aples in the seler
    Good By for this time rite soon as you git this
    We like to hear from you often as we can
    Direct to Alens Station
    (signed)
    C. Loghry
    * 1. folks
    2. Sam Brown is Samuel Right Brown, Jr.; a brother of Charles's first wife, Juliette.
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Cameron, March 15, 1880

    Well Henry Loghry it has bin A long time since we have heard from you you dont rite very often and today I thaut that I woud rite you a few lines to let you noe that we are in the land of the living but not very smart this winter I have bin qite poorley this winter and lame not abel to doe my chores nor to cut my wood I am giting old and will soon be out of this world and it wont mater how qick if I am prepard for that day that day will surly come prepared or not Ada and her man is with us this winter and will stay with us this year or that is the talk now if nothing hapens. We have had A very warm winter and noe snow it has bin rather unheathy this winter. A grate many old fokes has dropt off this winter some without one moments warning there are several that has dropt dead seting their chair and it stands us in hand to be ready to meet to meet it if we never meet on this earth less try to meet in heaven your unkel Em Brown* is very poorley this winter he lais A bed the most of the time he haint bin from home in nine years he is nothing but skin and bones.
    the rest of the family is well but hard up this winter they had their barn burnd and all their hay and grain and it is touf for them this winter I hurd form you unkel Henry Brown* the other day he is bad off he dont noe hardly any thing and the man told me that they had lost ther property he thout it was all used up they sold out but dident saave mutch
    that is bad to loes his senses and property to
    times is beter this spring that it has bin for sevel years past money is plenty and proptery is chang hands and things looks beter now than they have for some time
    Wheat is 140 rie 90 corn 65 oats 50 potatoes 40 Apels from 50 to 65
    hay is from $10 to $12 tone
    give my best Respects to all the frends and tell them that I would (like) to see them very much I would like to see you and your wife today and have you hear
    tell Juliaette* to rite to us I will rite to her before long now Henry rite soon as you git this and till us how you are giting A long

    from your father
    (signed)
    Charles Loghry

    * 1. unkel Henry Brown is William Henry Harrison Brown, brother to Juliette, Charles's first wife.
    2. Juliaette is Charles'granddaughter by William Henry Harrison Loghry and Elizabeth Williams.

    After Charles and Juliette Brown married in a double wedding with his sister and her brother, Mary Loghry and Robert Emmett Brown, they settled near the Oregon School house on the road to Brown's Crossing where John Hedges had formerly resided.

    Charles, a big man in stature and weighed over 250 pounds, was a farmer all his life. He died at home in Cameron of heart trouble and is buried at Coss' Corners burying ground, Bath Township. He was 70 years of age.

    In a letter written by Charles's granddaughter, Mary Loghry, 21 May, 1943,
    she says,"My grandfather, Charles Loghry, was a strong Christian; God-fearing and tried to live right by the letter of the Bible. I never saw him. He always spelled his name, L-o-g-h-r-y." It is said to have been formerly pronounced Lawrey.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Letters written by Charles Loghry to his son, William Henry Harrison Loghry

    Alens Station, N. Y. August 30, 68

    Well henry it has bin some time sinse I have rote to you.
    We had A leter from you A short time a goe and was glad to hear that you and your family was well and was doing well.
    We are as usual working and tuging through this world and triing to git something to live on when we Cant work any more. We have had it very dry this sumer. Spring crops is very poor this year hear and as been as I can hear. Corn aint more than half a crop.
    When you git this you must tell us how times is with you. We had A good crop of hay and winter wheat but Barley and oats was lite this year potatoes is A lite crop I have a good croop of buckwheat.
    I am going to rite to franklin Loghry*. I begin to think that he has forgotten us it has ben A long time sinse he has rote to us. tell him to rite and let us noe what he is doing.
    We have had the hotest weather that was ever none in this country. it was so hot it was all most imposibel to work.
    I have sowed one peis of wheat and am redy to sow five acors more this week. I have had the falow ready two weeks.
    We are well to day and nobody but us two hear. Ada* is to sunday school while I am riting.
    You must come and make us a visit as soon as you can. You must rite as soon as you git this and let us noe how you git along.
    You must doe what you can for Seymour and Blain the Democrats will carie this state by A big majority as was ever nown.
    Give my respects to unkel Dar* and Lety* and all their fokes.
    Good by for this time
    to Henry Loghry and wife (signed

    Charles Loghry


    *1. Franklin Loghry is his son.
    2. Ada was a girl they had taken in to raise.
    3. Unkel Dar is Erasmus Darwin Brown, brother of Juliette Brown Loghry, and brother-in-law to Charles.
    4. Lety is Lettice Loghry Brown, a sister; one of the three Loghry Children to marry three Brown children.
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Cameron, N.Y. Dec 26, 1869

    Well Henry it is some time sinse I have rote to you. I thout this morning I woud rite to you and let you noe that we are in the land of the living and as well as usual. I have in qite lame this fall and winter I have got A bad nee that is very lame and pains me very bad so that I cant sleep good nites. it was taken lame last summer and is giting worse. I have got most discourage of its ever giting any beter I haint ploud any this fall help is hard to git and wages is high hear.
    Comon labor is one dollar A day and bord and wheat is worth $1.00 for that is good
    You rote that you wanted me to send you some money that is out of the question this winter for money is hard to git and very scarce there is nothing that will fetch money hear.
    we have had some cold wether and good slaying But this warm today and raining there aint mutch going on this winter hear Sam Brown* has got home from the Asilum and seams to bee all rite he Chops wood evry day Brown's foxes* is well and doing well they are in the hoop pole business this winter
    Henry you must keep good Courage your young yet and you mustent git the horers for that dont doe any good if I was of your age and had my health I could live any where I think that I can doe as much as I ever could But when I goe to work I soon git tierd and soon think difernt I have worked this fall that when I got in the house and sot down I had all that I could doe to git up I have the rheumatism most all the time
    My nee pains me so that I can hardley rite while I am now riting
    We got a leter from your wife on Chrismuss for A Chrismuss present and was glad to hear that you was well and all the friends
    I wish that you was hear today to hellp us eat some Big Aples we have the Bigest Aples that you ever seen David Williamson was hear last sunday and he meshered one that was 14 inches round we have got 20 bushels of grafted aples in the seler
    Good By for this time rite soon as you git this
    We like to hear from you often as we can
    Direct to Alens Station
    (signed)
    C. Loghry
    * 1. folks
    2. Sam Brown is Samuel Right Brown, Jr.; a brother of Charles's first wife, Juliette.
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Cameron, March 15, 1880

    Well Henry Loghry it has bin A long time since we have heard from you you dont rite very often and today I thaut that I woud rite you a few lines to let you noe that we are in the land of the living but not very smart this winter I have bin qite poorley this winter and lame not abel to doe my chores nor to cut my wood I am giting old and will soon be out of this world and it wont mater how qick if I am prepard for that day that day will surly come prepared or not Ada and her man is with us this winter and will stay with us this year or that is the talk now if nothing hapens. We have had A very warm winter and noe snow it has bin rather unheathy this winter. A grate many old fokes has dropt off this winter some without one moments warning there are several that has dropt dead seting their chair and it stands us in hand to be ready to meet to meet it if we never meet on this earth less try to meet in heaven your unkel Em Brown* is very poorley this winter he lais A bed the most of the time he haint bin from home in nine years he is nothing but skin and bones.
    the rest of the family is well but hard up this winter they had their barn burnd and all their hay and grain and it is touf for them this winter I hurd form you unkel Henry Brown* the other day he is bad off he dont noe hardly any thing and the man told me that they had lost ther property he thout it was all used up they sold out but dident saave mutch
    that is bad to loes his senses and property to
    times is beter this spring that it has bin for sevel years past money is plenty and proptery is chang hands and things looks beter now than they have for some time
    Wheat is 140 rie 90 corn 65 oats 50 potatoes 40 Apels from 50 to 65
    hay is from $10 to $12 tone
    give my best Respects to all the frends and tell them that I would (like) to see them very much I would like to see you and your wife today and have you hear
    tell Juliaette* to rite to us I will rite to her before long now Henry rite soon as you git this and till us how you are giting A long

    from your father
    (signed)
    Charles Loghry

    * 1. unkel Henry Brown is William Henry Harrison Brown, brother to Juliette, Charles's first wife.
    2. Juliaette is Charles'granddaughter by William Henry Harrison Loghry and Elizabeth Williams.

    Family/Spouse: Chisholm Phebe Ann. Phebe was born on 16 Dec 1821 in New York; died on 01 Nov 1897 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 95. Loghry William Henry Harrison  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 05 Sep 1832 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 26 Dec 1911 in Momence, Kankakee County, IL; was buried on 28 Dec 1911 in Aroma Park Cemetery, Waldron, Kankakee County, IL.
    2. 96. Loghry J. Franklin  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 15 Sep 1835 in OH; died in 1889.

    Charles married Brown Juliette Eunice on 14 Aug 1831 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY. Juliette (daughter of Brown Samuel Right (Wright) and Annable Eunice Mary) was born about 1812 in Saratoga, Saratoga County or Albany, Albany Co., NY; died before 25 May 1840 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Brown's Crossing, Steuben, Steuben County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 95. Loghry William Henry Harrison  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 05 Sep 1832 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 26 Dec 1911 in Momence, Kankakee County, IL; was buried on 28 Dec 1911 in Aroma Park Cemetery, Waldron, Kankakee County, IL.
    2. 96. Loghry J. Franklin  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 15 Sep 1835 in OH; died in 1889.

  23. 37.  Loghry George William Descendancy chart to this point (13.Joseph3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born on 13 Mar 1813 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; died on 29 Aug 1886 in Hepburn, Page County, IA; was buried on 31 Aug 1886 in Hepburn, Page County, IA.

    Notes:

    George W. Loghry married first Jane Axtell. They had five children. He then remarried,to Esther Schock Peterson.

    Young Lettice (Letty) Loughry, George's younger sister, after her mother's death, she went to live with Ester's parents, according to guardianship papers filed in Bath, Steuben County.

    In a letter from Virginia Dickey, county clerk from Bath, Steuben County, NY, she writes that George died on Oct. 23, 1836.

    In April of 1844, George was living in Rob Roy, Fountain County, Indiana near his sister and brother-in-law, Lettice and Erasmus Darwin Brown. The Browns later moved to St. Anne, Kankakee County, IL. This is according to a probate filed on 1 April 1,1844 by Robert E. Brown for the estate of Joseph Leander Loghry.

    Family/Spouse: Schock Esther. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 97. Loghry Christian William  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 23 Mar 1851 in Beaver Township, Jasper, Indiana.
    2. 98. Loghry Jacob  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1853 in IN.
    3. 99. Loghry Joseph  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1856 in IL.
    4. 100. Loghry Daniel  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Oct 1859 in Adams, Mahaska County, IA.

    George married Axtell Nancy Jane on 12 Nov 1833 in Oberlin, Lorain County, OH. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 101. Loghry Joseph  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 102. Loghry Letty L.  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1844 in IN.
    3. 103. Loghry Pricilla  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1847 in IN.

  24. 38.  Loghry Mary Descendancy chart to this point (13.Joseph3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born on 17 Oct 1815 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; died on 29 Sep 1881 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.

    Notes:

    In a letter from the County Clerk's Office, Bath, NY; Virginia Dickey writes that Mary was born in 1807. After she married Robert E. Brown, they afterward resided in the vicinity of Brown's Crossing. Brown operated the sawmill, that of her father's at Brown's Crossing for many years and also resided up on the Robert Waters farm at the gulf. (This must be near the old school house up on Oregon Road.)

    In a letter from the County Clerk's Office, Bath, NY; Virginia Dickey writes that Mary was born in 1807. After she married Robert E. Brown, they afterward resided in the vicinity of Brown's Crossing. Brown operated the sawmill, that of her father's at Brown's Crossing for many years and also resided up on the Robert Waters farm at the gulf. (This must be near the old school house up on Oregon Road.)

    Mary married Brown Robert Emmett on 14 Aug 1831 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY. Robert (son of Brown Samuel Right (Wright) and Annable Eunice Mary) was born in 1809 in Milton, Saratoga County, NY; died on 05 Sep 1882 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 104. Brown Samuel  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1832 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY.
    2. 105. Brown Eunice  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Oct 1836 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; died on 14 Mar 1853 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; was buried on 16 Mar 1853 in Brown's Crossing, Cameron, Steuben County, NY.
    3. 106. Brown Juliette  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Dec 1838 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY; died after 1910 in Horsehead, Chemung County, NY.
    4. 107. Brown Margaret  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1840 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY.
    5. 108. Brown Martin B.  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Feb 1845 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY.
    6. 109. Brown Robert Emmett  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Jun 1847 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY.
    7. 110. Brown Mary Jane  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Jun 1849 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY.
    8. 111. Brown Anne  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1850 in Canisteo, Steuben Co., NY.

  25. 39.  Loghry Lettice Lorena Descendancy chart to this point (13.Joseph3, 6.William2, 1.William1) was born about 1820 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY; died on 21 Dec 1893 in St. Anne, Kankakee Co., IL; was buried in Old Brown-Hanen Cemetery four miles east of Witchert in Pembroke Township on the old Brown farm.IL.

    Notes:

    Letty was only 11 yrs old when her father, Joseph Loghry died in 1831. Her mother having died the year before.

    A guardian was appointed for her and she was sent to live with Christian Schock and his wife, Catherine and their family. Christian and Catherine were parents of Esther, who was married to George Loghry (Letty's brother) at the time of Joseph's death. Why she was sent to live with them and not her brother is anyone's guess.

    In a letter from Virginia Dickey, County Clerk at Bath, Steuben County, NY, she writes that Lettice was born in 1808. However, there was a guardianship appointed for her after her father's death and at the time she was thirteen, two years after his death. Also, according the 1850 census of St. Anne,Iroquois County,Illinois, it lists Letty as being 30 yrs. old and her husband, Erasmus as 42 yrs. old. This would make her birth date 1820.

    Erasmus Darwin Brown, Letty's husband, went to live briefly in Ohio, where Letty was living with the Schock family, in-laws of her brother, George. He and Letty were married about 1834. It isn't certain if they were married in NY or Ohio but their first two daughters were born in New York state.

    He and Letty moved their small family to Rob Roy, Fountain county, Indiana around 1838 where his third child, Mary, was born. His son, Allen, born in Shawnee, Fountain County, in 1844 was his last child born in Indiana.

    'Dar' and his familiy finally moved to the state of Illinois and settled in the wilderness area known as St. Anne sometime between 1844 and 1846 where his son, Samuel was born.

    An article written in the old book of the county history, 'Kankakee County History' is the following:

    "Few of the early settlers or families of Kankakee County are better represented in its second generation both among its relief and active citizens, then that established here by Erasmus Brown and Letty Loughry Brown, the former born in New York in 1808. This worthy couple to whom in early life came the desire to travel West and ally their fortunes with its undeveloped strength, left their native New York state and settled in the Wilderness of what then was St. Anne but now is Pembroke township, Kankakee County. Loneliness and deprivation were their portion for they had little of this world's goods and there were few neighbors to whom they could turn for counsel or sympathy. Nevertheless, they had grit and determination and their farm yielded of its fertility in response to their untiring labor.

    With the passing of years their family increased until seven children played around their hearthstone. Of these, Jane was the oldest." We know that eventually there were ten children born to this couple.

    Lettice married Brown Erasmus Darwin about 1834 in Oscaloosa, Mahaska County, OH. Erasmus (son of Brown Samuel Right (Wright) and Annable Eunice Mary) was born on 07 Jul 1808 in Milton, Albany County, (Saratoga) NY; died on 26 Oct 1887 in St. Anne, Kankakee Co., IL; was buried in Old Brown-Hanen Cemetery four miles east of Witchert in Pembroke Township on the old Brown farm.IL. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 112. Brown Elizabeth M.  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 01 Apr 1835 in Steuben, Steuben County, NY; died on 02 Oct 1905 in St. Anne, Kankakee Co., IL; was buried in Tegge Cemetery, Kankakee County, IL.
    2. 113. Brown Jane E.  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1836 in Cameron, Steuben Co., NY.
    3. 114. Brown Mary Ann  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1838 in Shawnee, Fountain Co., IN.
    4. 115. Brown Emily  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1840 in Shawnee, Fountain Co., IN.
    5. 116. Brown Allen  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Sep 1844 in Shawnee, Fountain Co., IN; died before 1850.
    6. 117. Brown Melinda Ellen  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Sep 1844 in Shawnee, Fountain County or Benton Co., IN; died on 16 Feb 1922 in St. Anne, Kankakee Co., IL; was buried in St. Anne Cemetery, St. Anne, Kankakee County, IL.
    7. 118. Brown Samuel Henry  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 24 Nov 1847 in St. Anne, Kankakee Co., IL; died in 1909 in St. Anne, Kankakee Co., IL; was buried in St. Anne Protestant Cemetery, St. Anne, Kankakee County, IL.
    8. 119. Brown Eunice  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Feb 1850 in St. Anne, Kankakee Co., IL.
    9. 120. Brown Rosella  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 02 Dec 1853 in St. Anne, Kankakee Co., IL; died on 10 Oct 1933 in Momence, Kankakee County, IL; was buried on 13 Oct 1933 in Momence Protestant Cemetery, Momence, Kankakee County, IL.