History: Family: Part V - Swope's 1905 McKINNEY-BRADY-QUIGLEY families, PA Contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by David Loy. info@protoSight.com USGENWEB ARCHIVES NOTICE: Printing this file within by non-commercial individuals and libraries is encouraged, as long as all notices and submitter information is included. Any other use, including copying files to other sites requires permission from the submitters PRIOR to uploading to any other sites. We encourage links to the state and county table of contents. http://www.usgwarchives.net/ html table of contents may be found at http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/1pa/mbqfams.htm _______________________________________________________________________________ HISTORY OF THE FAMILIES OF MCKINNEY-BRADY-QUIGLEY CONTENTS. Page file name CHAPTER I. OUR ANCESTORS. 5 mck01.txt CHAPTER II. THE CLAN MACKENZIE. 14 mck01.txt CHAPTER III. JOSEPH MACKENZIE. 20 mck01.txt CHAPTER IV. THOMAS McKINNEY AND HIS DESCENDANTS. 24 mck01.txt CHAPTER V. ANDREW M'KINNEY. 72 mck02.txt CHAPTER VI. DAVID McKINNEY AND HIS DESCENDANTS. 75 mck02.txt CHAPTER VII. AGNES McKINNEY AND HER DESCENDANTS. 85 mck02.txt CHAPTER VIII. QUIGLEY-BRADY. 140 mck03.txt CHAPTER IX. THE BRADY FAMILY. 142 mck03.txt CHAPTER X. MARY QUIGLEY BRADY AND HER DESCENDANTS. 144 mck03.txt CHAPTER XI. ROBERT QUIGLEY AND HIS DESCENDANTS. 228 mck04.txt ADDENDA. ORATION AT MUNCY, PENNSYLVANIA, OCTOBER 15, 1879. BY HON. JOHN BLAIR LINN. I mck05.txt INDEX OF HEADS OF FAMILIES TO THE FOURTH GENERATION. (1) mck05.txt _______________________________________________________________________________ ORATION AT MUNCY, PENNSYLVANIA, OCTOBER 15, 1879. BY HON. JOHN BLAIR LINN. People of the West Branch Valley: The mournful death of Captain John Brady, which has flung its dark shadow down through the corridors of a century and brought us together today, occurred on the 11th of April, 1779. I will relate it in the language of his daughter, Mrs. Mary Gray (late widow of Captain William Gray, of Sunbury,) who was fifteen years of age at the time of her father's death, and who had, even to the last day of her life (December 13, 1850) a vivid recollection of the stirring scenes of border life. She said: "My father was riding along the public road beyond Muncy creek, and about three miles from Fort Brady, and near Wolf run, accompanied by Peter Smith on foot, when the Indians fired and Captain Brady fell without uttering a word, being shot in the back between his shoulders with two balls. Smith escaped by jumping upon my father's frightened horse. The Indians in their haste did not scalp him, nor plunder him of his gold watch, some money, and his commission which he carried in a green bag suspended from his neck. His body was soon after brought to the Fort and interred in the Muncy burying ground, some four miles from the Fort over Muncy creek." John Brady, son of Captain Samuel and grandson of Captain John Brady, said as noted down by Lyman C. Draper, Esq., (in 1845) he was shot through the heart, only two rifles discharged, and the signs showed only two Indians present. His watch, &c., were not taken. Mrs. Gray's statement gave my informant (Lyman C. Draper, Esq.) the impression that Captain Brady was not killed out of revenge, but simply that a couple of Indians who shot were in II too big a hurry to rob his body, perhaps afraid that other whites were following near at hand. The history of cotemporary events, however, coupled with the undisputed incidents of his death-two Indians and two shots fired into him-in my judgment point to a design in his death, and enroll him with Warren, Montgomery, Mercer and other martyrs to the principles of free government for which they laid down their lives upon the field of battle. The invasion of Wyoming Valley, which had taken place in July, 1778, caused the depopulation of the West Branch Valley, known as the "Great Runaway," and as early as the fall of that year a decisive stroke at the Six Nations in their own homes had been determined upon, but postponed on account of the lateness of the season. All winter it was discussed by the camp fires at Morristown, and with the opening spring of 1779 General Washington wrote from his headquarters at Middle Brook, February 27, 1779, to President Reed, of Pennsylvania, for actual surveys of the waters of the Susquehanna to assist him in forming a plan of operations. His preparations to visit the heart of Indian dominion with stern vengeance could not be concealed, and the news was carried by swift runners to the council fires of the Iroquois. To divert such a stroke from their homes, what would those wily warriors do but detach scouting parties to beat up the settlements and ward off the blow by the desolation of the West Branch Valley on the extreme right boundary of their nation. Their ablest leaders and those well acquainted with the valley would be selected for this purpose. Among these was John Montour, and what greater blow could he deal to the American cause than to assassinate the prudent, the resolute and fearless leader, who stood with drawn sword upon the frontier of Pennsylvania to hurl back the savage foe. The circumstances of Capt. Brady's death, however, are not what this vast assemblage has met to commemorate. Many unknown mounds in this valley wrapt the silent clay of other of its defenders who fell by the rifle of the concealed savage. Nor is it to mark to the latest posterity the scene of this bloody tragedy, this granite cenotaph is made to arise. "Cold as the sod on which it rests, still as the silent heavens above it," it is to be forever eloquent of our III undying remembrance of the man and the soldier, and of our regard for him and others who died to save our National Independence: "For God's inalienable rights to man, Our hero fought and bled- So glorious were those rights secured, We thus revere the dead." Let us turn then to the record of the man, the soldier and the officer. Captain John Brady was born in what is now the State of Delaware, in 1733. His father, Hugh Brady, was an emigrant from the North of Ireland; of the Godly Scotch-Irish ancestry who read their bibles by the light of the camp fires of Oliver Cromwell's army, who were the first to cross the Boyne and engage the hosts of churchly despotism; and who at the siege of Londonderry slowly starved to death for the rights of conscience. Captain Brady was as well educated as the circumstances of his father would allow, and taught an elementary school and singing school over in New Jersey prior to the removal of his father and family to the banks of the Conodogwinet, not far from Shippensburg, in Cumberland county, about the year 1750. In the quiet the Province had before the coming storm of the French and Indian war, he followed the usual avocations of frontier life; the primeval forest yearly bowing to the settler's axe. His personal appearance has come down to us by tradition; he was six feet high, well formed, had coal black hair, hazel eye and of rather dark complexion. About the year 1755 he married Mary Quigley, who was also of Scotch-Irish extraction, and in the year 1756 his eldest son, the celebrated Captain Samuel Brady, was born in the midst of the tempestuous waves of trouble that rolled in upon the settlements in the wake of Braddock's defeat. Armstrong's expedition against Kittanning was then organized and marched from Fort Shirley on the 30th of August three hundred strong, Brady going along as a private. General James Potter, his subsequent associate in the settlement of this valley, was a Lieutenant in the command and was wounded at Kittanning. Kittanning was destroyed on the 8th of September, and the settlers returned in triumph. IV But this severe retaliation did not deter the savages; as late as the 8th of November, 1756, they entered Cumberland Valley, killed a number of inhabitants and carried away captives. Forbes' expedition against Fort Duquesne followed in 1768. His troops were composed in part of the regular forces of the Province, but Brady does not seem to have been along, not at least as an officer, as there is a very circumstantial account extant of every officer who accompanied the expedition.-Pennsylyania Archives, 2d series, vol. 2, pages 560, &c. On Forbes' approach the French burned Fort Duquesne and retired, thus terminating the struggle between the French and the English for the Ohio Valley (Nov. 25, 1758). General Stannix built Fort Pitt upon the ruins of Fort Duquesne, in 1759, and on the 13th of September, upon the plains of Abraham, rendered immortal by the death of General Wolfe, Montcalm, with the "Lilies of France," went down before the Cross of St. George; virtually ending French dominion in North America. This was followed by the peace of Paris, February 10, 1763. But the end was not yet to blazing homes and border conflicts on the frontiers. Pontiac has secretly organized his noted conspiracy of the Indian tribes extending from the Lakes to the Lower Mississippi, and now called upon them, in fiery eloquence, to save their face from slavery and ruin, and to drive the English into the Atlantic. About the 27th of April, 1763, he assembled a Council on the banks of the Excorces, a small stream not far from Detroit, and having aroused the chiefs in a speech of unparalleled fury to terrible earnestness, he let the tribes loose in vengeful wrath upon the frontiers. While Nature was robing the forests of the West in the green mantle of May, they stole silently through them, seized most of the forts unawares and massacred the garrisons. They even surrounded Fort Pitt, and for five days threatened its capture, their scouting parties from the North penetrating nearly to Reading. Then John Brady sprang from the ranks apparently to the office of Captain. He was commissioned, July 19, 1763, Captain of the Second Battalion of the Pennsylvania Regiment "commanded by Governor John Penn," Turbutt Francis and Asher Clayton, Lieutenant Colonels commandants. Then V came Bouquet's expedition for the relief of Fort Pitt, the battle of Bushy Run beyond Fort Ligonier (August 5, 1763), a hard fought battle of two days in which Bouquet's troops suffered severely, but he at last defeated the Indians by a bold stratagem-a victory which saved Fort Pitt, relieved the Western frontiers, and the Provincials returned to battle with inroads from the North. Thus closed the year 1763. With the return of spring 1764, their incursions were renewed, and in the Pennsylvania Gazette of April 5, 1764, there is an account of "the Indian depredations in the Carlisle region on the 20th, 21st and 22d of March; killing people, burning houses and making captives," adding "Captains Piper and Brady, with their companions, did all that lay in their power to protect the inhabitants. No man can go asleep within ten or fifteen miles of the border without being in danger of having his house burned and himself or family scalped or led into captivity before the next morning. The people along the North Mountain are moving farther in, especially about Shippensburg, which is crowded with families of that neighborhood." Bouquet's second expedition followed, in which he was accompanied by the First and Second Battalions of the Pennsylvania Regiment. At Fort Loudon (about twelve miles west of Chambersburg) he was met by a runner from Col. Bradstreet, who had penetrated with a force to Presque Isle, (City of Erie now) who advised Col. Bouquet that he had granted a peace to all the Indians between Lake Erie and the Ohio. Bouquet was at the head of the Provincial soldiery, of Pennsylvania, and he and they were determined upon a conquered peace. He, therefore, forwarded the dispatch to Gov. Penn, with the remark, "that such a peace with no satisfaction insisted upon, would fix an indelible stain upon the Nation. I, therefore, take no notice of that pretended peace, and proceed forthwith upon the expedition, fully determined to treat as enemies any Delawares and Shawanese I shall find on my way." He accordingly penetrated the country of the Delawares to the Forks of the Muskinghum, (where Coshocton, Ohio, now stands) and upon the banks of that river dictated his own terms of VI peace; among these were the absolute return of about three hundred captives. Some of my hearers, the decendants of the Cummins, the Gambles, the Irvines, the McComicks, the Montgomerys, the Pipers, the Robbs, and others, who with me trace their lineage to the dwellers under the shadow of the North Mountain, will recall the traditions of Bouquet's return with the captives, which were mingled with our grandmothers' fireside tales, and haunt the memory of our infant years, like the dying cadence of some far distant music, or the words of a well nigh forgotten song. It was on a wintry day (December 31, 1764) when Colonel Bouquet, having advertised for those who had lost children to come to Carlisle and reclaim them, brought out the band of little captives for recognition. Many had been captured when very young and had grown up to boyhood and girlhood in the wigwam of the Indian, having learned the language of the savage and forgotten their own. One woman was unable to point out her daughter, and the captives could only talk in an unknown tongue. She told her sad lot to the Colonel, and mentioned that she used, many years before, to sing to her daughter a hymn of which the child was very fond. The Colonel told her to sing it, and she began: "Alone, yet not alone am I, Though in this solitude so drear, I feel my Saviour always nigh, He comes my dreary hours to cheer." She had not finished the first verse before her long lost daughter rushed into her arms. I come now to the connection of Bouquet's expedition with the history of the settlement of the West Branch Valley. On the 30th of November, 1764, the First Battalion of the Pennsylvania Regiment left Fort Pitt for home, and the Second followed the next day. When they reached Bedford the officers made an agreement with each other in writing, to apply to the Proprietaries for a tract of land sufficiently extensive and conveniently situated, whereon to erect a compact and defensible town, and accommodate them with reasonable and commodious plantations, the same to be, divided according to their several ranks, etc. John Brady VII was one of the officers who signed this agreement. In their application to the Proprietories, dated April 30, 1765, they proposed to embody themselves into a compact settlement, at some distance from the inhabited part of the Province, where, by industry, they might procure a comfortable subsistence for themselves, and by their arms, union and increase become a powerful barrier to the Province. They suggested the confluence of the two branches of the Susquehanna at Shamokin, as affording a situation convenient for their purpose, and asked the Proprietaries to make a purchase from the Indians to accommodate their application. Meanwhile, urged by the restless, mysterious impulse that moulds the destiny of the pioneers of civilization, Captain Brady had removed from the Conodogwinet fifty miles further northwest, to Standing Stone (now Huntingdon). Here, in 1768, his children, General Hugh Brady and twin sister Jennie were born, and Captain Brady followed the occupation of surveyor. On the 5th of November, 1768, Thomas and Richard Penn purchased from the Six Nations at Fort Stanwix (now Rome, N. Y.), with other territory, all that portion of the West Branch Valley extending from the mouth of Mahanoy creek to the mouth of Pine creek, and on the 3d of February, 1769, the officers of the First and Second Battalions met at the Governors and obtained an order allowing them to take up twenty-four thousand acres. The surveys of 8,000 of it, in what is now Union county, were made by Samuel Maclay on the 1st, 2d, and 3d of March, 1769, Captain Brady, with others of the officers, being along. The surveys of the second 8,000 acres, at the mouth of Chillisquaque creek, were made at the same time, and the officers returned to Fort Augusta (now Sunbury), held a meeting and determined that the remaining 8,000 acres should be surveyed on Bald Eagle creek, and Captains Hunter, Brady and Piper were selected to oversee it. The latter surveys were made by Charles Lukens in April, 1769, Captain Brady accompanying him, and embrace the land from the city of Lock Haven up Bald Eagle creek to where Hoard now stands, in Centre county. During the summer of 1769 Captain Brady removed his family to the West Branch and cleared a place on the eastern side of the river, directly opposite Derr's Mill, now the VIII site of Lewisburg. On the 21st of March, 1772, Northumberland county was created, and on the fourth Tuesday of May Captain John Brady was foreman of the first Grand Jury that ever sat in Northumberland county. But the air seemed to be full of trouble in those early days. The Connecticut people, who had settled at Wyoming, claimed under their charter the territory of the Province of Pennsylvania, as far south as the 41st deg. of latitude, which would run a mile or so south of Lewisburg, and were determined to enforce it by adverse occupation. Between the 3d and 7th of July, 1772, a large party of them reached the river at Hulings, where Milton now stands, when Colonel Plunket summoned the Pennamites to arms and forcibly drove them off. This contest continued for some time after the trumpet of the Revolution summoned the combatants to fight a common foe. In December, 1775, Brady accompanied Colonel Plunket's force to Wyoming Valley as captain of a company, in which last encounter of the Pennamite war Jesse Lukens, son of the Surveyor General of the Province, lost his life. Meanwhile the storm of war with the mother country broke upon the shores of New England, and when the news of the Battle of Bunker Hill reached this valley, its heroic settlers promptly accepted the arbitrament of the sword, and Captain John Lowdon's company, one hundred strong, marched for Boston, Captain Samuel Brady, then a young man of twenty years, went along as a private, entering the trenches at Cambridge, with Lowdon, on the 31st of August, 1775. Two Battalions of Associators were organized on the West Branch, one commanded by Colonel Hunter, the other by Colonel William Plunket; in the latter Battalion Captain John Brady was commissioned First Major (March 13, 1776). On the 4th of July, 1776, he attended the Convention of Associators, at Lancaster, as one of the representatives of Plunket's Battalion, where Daniel Roberdean and James Ewing were elected Brigadier Generals of the Associators of the Province. And now comes in order of time, August, 1776, the incident at Derr's trading house, when returning in haste from Sunbury (laid out in June, 1772, just below the site of Fort Augusta) he entered a canoe and shoved swiftly over to Derr's, to find the Indians in high IX carnival over a barrel of rum, with which Derr was standing treat. In the midst of their drunken orgies he kicked over a barrel. To this interference some attribute Captain Brady's sad fate, as the Indian appointed to be sober that day said, in effect, "He would rue the spilling of that rum someday." Soon after this occurrence Capt. Brady moved to Muncy, having erecting in the spring of 1776 the semi-fortified residence which afterwards went by the name of Fort Brady. The day of associators was soon over with nine months and one year's service. It became imperative to raise regular regiments, enlisted for the war, if the independence of the States was to be maintained. Accordingly Col. William Cook's Regiment, the Twelfth, was directed to be raised in the counties of Northampton and Northumberland. Among the last acts of the Convention which formed the first Constitution of this Commonwealth, September 28,1776, was the election of the field officers of this Regiment. Col. William Cook, whose grandson, Jacob Cook, is with us today, Lieutenant Colonel Neigal Gray, then of Northampton county, but who after the war owned and died upon the place now known as Kelly's Mills, in Union county, and Major James Crawford, who died in Wayne township, Lycoming county, of which he was a Justice of the Peace in 1814, were elected. John Brady was commissioned one of its Captains, October 14, 1776, and on the 18th of December, in mid-winter, it left Sunbury in boats for the battlefields of New Jersey. The regiment went immediately into active service. Being composed of good riflemen it was assigned to the same duties our "Bucktails" were in the late war, on picket, on the skirmish line, to commence the fighting, and to go through it. At Boundbrook, at Bonumtown, at Piscataway, it left its dead, and the green mounds that decked the purple heaths of New Jersey left their sorrow in many a home in the West Branch Valley. When General Washington crossed the Delaware into Pennsylvania to await the development of General Howe's plans, he detached Captain Hawkins Boone, of the Twelfth to Morgan's Rifle Command, to assist in the capture of Burgoyne, and two at least (that I know of) of his wounded soldiers returned to this valley to tell that Timothy Murphy, X a West Branch rifleman had shot Gen. Fraser at Saratoga and how they, with Major James Parr, of Northumberland, and Lieutenant Colonel Richard Butler, of Westmoreland, stormed Breymand's camp, led by the lion-hearted Arnold. Within a few short months (July 26, 1779) after Capt. Brady's death, Capt. Boone bravely died in defence of this valley at Fort Freeland. In due time Howe made his appearance at the Head of the Elk, and General Washington moved his army to the banks of the Brandywine to confront him. The Twelfth, with the Third, the Ninth and the Sixth, was in Conway's Brigade, General Sterling's Division, in the right wing commanded by General Sullivan on the eventful 11th of September (battle of Brandywine). General Wayne, with the two other brigades of Pennsylvania, was left at Chadd's Ford to oppose Knyphausen while Sullivan's right wing was hurried on to Bermingham Meeting House to attack the English left under Cornwallis. When the Twelfth Pennsylvania arrived on double quick upon the ground, "the cannon balls were ploughing up the ground, the trees cracking over their heads, the branches riven by the artillery, and the leaves were falling as in Autumn by the grape shot." Capt. Brady had two sons in the fight; Samuel, the eldest, was First Lieutenant (commissioned July 17, 1776,) in Capt. John Doyle's company, then attached to the First Pennsylvania, Col. James Chambers, and was with General Wayne at Chadd's Ford. John, (subsequently, Sheriff of Northumberland county) then a youth of fifteen years, who had gone to the army to ride the horses home, was with his father with a big rifle by his side. They had scarcely time to obey the stentorian order of Col. Cook, "fall into line!" when the British made their appearance. The Twelfth fired sure, and fast and many an officer leaped forward in death after the sharp crack of its rifles. As the fight grew furious and the charge of gleaming bayonets came on, other troops that had not time to form reeled before "the burnished rows of steel." But the Twelfth stood firm, and Lieutenant William Boyd (of Northumberland) fell dead by his Captain. Little John was wounded and Captain Brady fell with a wound through XI his mouth. The day ended with disaster to our arms, and the Twelfth sullenly quit the field nearly cut to pieces. The wound only loosened some of the Captain's teeth, but being disabled by a severe attack of pleurisy, caused by his exposures, which he never got entirely well of, he was sent home. On the invasion of Wyoming Valley, in 1778, he retired with his family to Sunbury, and it was there, on the 8th of August, 1778, his son James was sent to his parents, cruelly wounded and scalped by the Indians, to die. The circumstances of his death are very minutely detailed in a letter from Col. Hartley, to be found in the Pennsylvania Archives, vol. 6, O. S. page 689; also in Meginness' history, page 222 &c. I will only add Gen. Hugh Brady's recollections of his brother. "James Brady was a remarkable man. His person was fine, he lacked but a quarter of an inch of six feet, and his mind was as well finished as his person. I have ever placed him by the side of Jonathan, son of Saul, for beauty of person and nobleness of soul, and like him he fell by the hands of the Philistines. He was wounded and scalped on Saturday and carried on a bier to Sunbury, where he died on the Thursday following, after reviving sufficiently to relate everything that happened." On the 1st of September, 1778, Captain Brady returned to the army. Meanwhile, under an arrangement of the army, which took place about the 1st of July, the field officers had been mustered out and the companies and their officers distributed into the Third and Sixth Pennsylvania Regiments. Captain Brady was therefore sent home, by General Washington's order, with Captain Boone, Lieutenants Samuel and John Dougherty, to assist Col. Hartley in protecting the frontiers. He joined Col. Hartley at Muncy on the 18th of September, and accompanied him on the expedition to Tioga. Col. Hartley, in a letter to Congress (dated October 8th, 1778, Penna. Archives, vol. 7, page 5) describes the hardships of this march. "We waded or swam Lycoming creek upwards of twenty times, met great rains and prodigious swamps, mountain defiles and rocks impeded our course, and we had to open and clear the way as we passed. We carried two boxes of spare ammunition and twelve days provision. I cannot help observing the difficulties in crossing the Alps or passing up the Kennebec XII could not have been greater than our men experienced for the time." On their return, after they left Wyalusing, the enemy made a heavy attack upon his rear and the rear guard gave way. "At the critical moment Captains Boons and Brady, and Lieutenant King, with a few brave fellows, landed from the canoes and renewed the action. We advanced on the enemy on all sides, and the Indians, after a brave resistance, conceiving themselves surrounded, fled with the utmost haste, leaving ten dead." During the whole of the fall of 1778 the savages ravaged the settlements, and Captain Brady was kept busy. He was one of those whom Colonel Hunter wrote on the 13th of December, who told him, "They would rather die fighting than leave their homes again." With the opening spring of 1779 these inroads were renewed, and in such force that William Maclay wrote, "He believed the whole force of the Six Nations was being poured down upon the West Branch Valley." Amid these scenes of terror and confusion Captain Brady stood manfully at his post, and died by it, at a time when his services could ill be spared. On the fatal 11th of April, 1779, in the golden light of morning, its sunlight reflected by the myriad rain drops lying on the bushes and the trees, with the songs of birds among the branches, in all the hope and glory of coming spring, going forth to the duties of the hour, the sharp summons came, and in the twinkling of an eye Captain John Brady stood before his God. "The car of victory, the plume, the wreath, Defend not from the bolt of fate the brave;" But- "Glory lights the soldier's tomb, And beauty weeps the brave." The days of Heathenism are long since past, and we no longer lay our dead beneath the cypress shade, to sleep the sleep that knows no morning. The eye of faith reveals to us a more glorious destiny, and the firm belief of a reunion in the Heavenly home sweeps the shadows from our hearts and fills our souls with hopes that will be realized beyond XIII the tomb. "Spring shall yet visit these mouldering graves." Know we not "The time draws on When not a single spot of burial earth, Whether on land or in the spacious sea, But must give up its long committed dust, Inviolate." Yes, when the Arch Angel's trump shall sound, Biddle will come, and Conner will come, from their seaweed shrouds and their coral coffins, far down in the deep green waters of the Atlantic, and Captain John Brady will leap exultant from his silent grave, with the immortal light of God upon his countenance. To the valley his loss was well nigh irreparable. Death came to its defender, and "Hell followed" hard after. In May Buffalo Valley was overrun, and the people left; on the 8th of July Smith's Mills, at the mouth of White Deer creek, were burned, and on the 17th Muncy Valley was swept with the desom of destruction, Starrett's Mills and all the principal houses in Muncy township burned with Forts Muncy, Brady and Freeland, and Sunbury became the frontier. But why picture the sadness and sorrow which, on this happy day, cannot be realized? Time has long since assuaged it all. The broken hearted widow has long since clasped hands with her brave husband in a better world, where there are no "garments rolled in blood," and their children and their grand children and their great grand children have joined them beyond the flood. After the death of her husband Mrs. Brady removed with her family to her father's place, in Cumberland county, where she arrived in May, 1779. She remained until October of that year, and then removed to Buffalo Valley, to what is now known as the Frederick place, three miles west of Lewisburg, where she died on the 20th of October, 1783, at the early age of forty-eight years. Over her remains in the beautiful cemetery at Lewisburg, in the same grave with those of the youthful hero of Brandywine (John Brady, who died on the 10th of December, 1809, at the same age-forty-eight), is a marble slab with the appropriate inscription, "All tears are wiped from her eyes." XIV To Captain Brady's descendants, time fails me in paying a proper tribute. When border tales have lost their charm for the evening hour; when oblivion blots from the historic page the glorious record of Pennsylvania in the Revolution of 1776; then, and then only, will Captain Samuel Brady, of the Rangers, be forgotten. In private life, in public office, at the Bar, in the Senate of Pennsylvania, in the House of Representatives of the United States, in the ranks of battle, Captain John Brady's Sons and grandsons and great grandsons have flung far forward into the future the light of their family fame. Of General Hugh Brady, of whom General Winfield Scott said, "God never made a better man nor a better soldier," I must speak: No character in all history, since the days of General Wayne- (and I am proud to see honoring the occasion with his presence, a worthy descendant of the heroic General-Captain William Wayne, of Paoli, and on the part of the people of this Valley, I am sure, I can extend him a most cordial welcome)-has impressed me like him-a kind, true-hearted man; an accomplished gentleman; an educated, lion-hearted officer. At Chippewa, where, as his nephew, Samuel Brady (second son of Sheriff John Brady, who was an Ensign in the Twenty-second Infantry, Colonel Brady's regiment), wrote: "There was blood, carnage and destruction of men, and out of the whole regiment of men, only Major Arrowsmith, Ensign Brady and thirty privates could march into camp;" Colonel Brady was severely wounded within fifteen minutes after the action commenced, and had to be lifted upon his horse, yet he commanded until the dreadful drama had nearly closed. But the crowning glory of his career was that he was a Christian Soldier. Shortly before his death at Detroit, in April 1851, he was thrown from a carriage and severely injured; and when the physician told him that he could not recover, with that calm self-possession, so indicative of true courage, he said: "Let the drums beat; my knapsack is slung." As the General sank under his injuries he became partially unconscious, and his mind wandered back to the scenes of his early life. He was again an officer in high command, marshaling his army on the battle-field; then a subaltern, obeying the orders of his XV superiors; again a school boy, conning over his lesson; and finally, a child at his mother's knee; until, as the night of death closed around him forever, he murmured- Now I lay me down to sleep; I pray the Lord my soul to keep. Many of my hearers will recollect Capt. John Brady's grandson, William Perry Brady, so long Sergeant-at-Arms of the Pennsylvania Senate. He was with a Centre county company at Lake Erie, when Commodore Perry, not having a sufficient number of marines to man his vessels, called for volunteers. William P. Brady was the first man to step out, and helped gain the brilliant victory which bent a thrill of joy throughout our country and placed an immortal chaplet upon the brow of Perry. And where were the great-grand children of Captain John Brady when the Secessionists undertook to overturn this government, ordained of God and sealed with the blood of their ancestors? I recall one, Captain Evan Rice Evans Brady, who, upon the soil of his native State, within sight of the ancestral home of the Brady's on South Mountain, fell in the storm of battle. Four generation of the Brady's fought for this country, yet he was the first to fall in action: "God-fearing, God-obeying; his fair brow Lies low among his country's martyrs now; Weep ye who can, I mourn not such a man." He fell fighting the battle of freedom, fell in the great struggle for the preservation of the Union, purchased by the blood of a noble ancestry. "He fell in a war for law, for order, for the obligation of solemn contracts, for the sanctity of oaths, for religion, for morality, for social quiet, for all that secures the transmission of healthy political institutions from age to age, for all that is venerable in history, for all that is lovely, pure, peaceable and of good report, among men for all that truly made the United States a power ordained of God;" and he and those who fell at Gettysburg, at Malvern, at Shiloh, at Petersburg, or starved to death in XVI Libby and at Andersonville, were as truly martyrs as the early Christians, or the Huguenots, who "Kissed the flames that drank their blood, And chased their souls to Heaven." From far and near, all over this grand valley, the most beautiful to us the sun in his course through the Heaven looks down upon, we have come to dedicate this monument to the memory of its pioneer and defender-Captain John Brady. At thy feet, then, oh! Mountains of Muncy! thy solemn Red Men fled before the mystic sound of coming civilization; before the tramp and tread of States; we dedicate this granite land-mark to Brady, the pioneer the Corypheus here of title by improvement and pre-emption; a system which began by the rock at Plymoute, and will continue until the last echo of the woodman's axe dies away amid the surges of the Pacific. In thy bosom, oh! Valley of the West Branch! we dedicate this memorial to the eagle-eyed sentinel, who one hundred years ago peered through the dusky twilight for thy foes. Here, on these heights, in this holy bivouac of the dead, let it forever stand sentry of his compatriot slain of Antietam, of Fredericksburg, of the Wilderness, of Atlanta, of the mourned battle-fields of the war for the Union, whose last "All's well!" is still echoing gloriously through the Republic. By thy bright waters, oh! Noble Susquehanna! which mirror in thy winding course so many, many scenes of domestic peace and comfort; so many scenes of Eden-like beauty, rescued from primeval wildness, only listening, in thy quiet course to the sea, "To the laughter from the village and the town, and the church bells ever jangling as the weary day goes down;" surrounded by these venerable fathers who have lingered in life's journey to see this happy day; surrounded by the youth and beauty of this grand old home of brave sons and patriotic daughters, under the auspices of the Grand Army of the Republic-the "Cincinnati" of the war for the Union-in solemn joy we dedicate this monument to our benefactor. And as we gaze upon it, let us resolve, that as this Government came down to us from the Past, it shall go from us into the Future-a blessing to our posterity, and the hope of the world's freedom. (1) INDEX OF HEADS OF FAMILIES TO THE FOURTH GENERATION. NAME. PAGE. Adams, Henry 256 Adams Sarah Jane Gilbert 255 Ahl, Dr. David 41 " Mary Ellen Gilmore 41 " Mary Louise 42 " James Gilmore 42 " Eleanor Gilmore 42 " John Gilmore 42 " Jane Belle 42 " David Wilson 42 " Arminell C. Reilly 42 Angell, James 23 " Lydia Robinson 123 Annis, John F. 120 " Cordelia Robinson Doty 120 Ashbrook, Letcher Lee 210 " Sue Britton Brady 210 Backus, Andrew 94 " Col. Electus 180,191 " Sarah Wallis Brady 180 " Mary Laithy Brady 180,190 Bannister, Clayton Jay 137 " Frances Jewett 137 Barclay, Joseph B 219 " Jane Elizabeth Cooper 219 Barney, William 220 " Helen Barclay 220 " Asa Newell 100 " Abigal Hall 100 (2) NAME. PAGE. Barr, Alvah 90,114 " Hefty Robinson 90,114 " Milton Ford 116 " Catharine Johnson 116 " William Milton 117 " Robinson Lincoln 117 " Oliver Edwin 117 " Edwin Thomas 118 " Robinson Alex 118 Becker, Waldo 65 " Mary Kellogg Bollinger 65 Bell, David 236 " Mary Quigley 236 " William Arthur 239 " Jane Ewalt Irwin 239 Berry, Capt. Robert M 224 " Mary Augusta Brady 224 Bingham, Jane 23,24 Blaine, Polly 86,88 " Alex. T 86,91 " Rosanna McCord 86,91 " Ephraim W. M 92,131 " Alex. W 92,133 " Joseph F 92 " Margaret McCord 92,124 " Nancy B 92,128 " Mary 92,131 " William A 92,132 " James 92,132 " Alex. W 133 " Emma Eliza 132 " Isabel A 133 Block, Louis 64 " Cora Josephine Bollinger 64 Bollinger, Albert Lester 63 " Emily Diana Wills 63 " James 63 " Mary Elizabeth Gilman 63 Boyd, John Yeomans 46 " Eleanor Gilmore Herr 46 " James 47 (3) NAME. PAGE. Boyd, Andrew Jackson Herr 47 " Eleanor Gilmore 47 " Louisa Yeomans 47 Brown, John Miller 279 " Harriet Ann Sharp 279 " John C 280 " Eleanor Quigley 280 " John Quigley 283 Bradbeer, Sarah Isabelle Croul 223 Brady, Captain John 144 " Mary Quigley 144 " Captain Samuel 155,156 " Drusilla Van Swearingen 155,156 " James 155,168 " William 155 " John 155,170 " Jane McCall 155,170 " Mary 155,172 " William Penn 155,174 " Jane Cooke 155,174 " General Hugh 155,175 " Sarah Wallis 155,175 " Jane 155,180 " Robert Quigley 155,180 " Mary Cooke 155,180 " Agnes 155 " Hannah 155 " Joseph 155 " Liberty 155,181 " Van Swearingen 167,181 " Elizabeth Ivess 167,181 " John 167,182 " Nancy Ridgely 167,182 " James 172 " John 172 " Samuel 172,184 " William Perry 172,185 " Rachel Mussina 172,185 " Jasper Ewing 172,186 " Margaret Maria Morton 172,186 " Hannah 172,187 (4) NAME. PAGE. Brady, James McCall 172 " Jane 175 " Nancy 175 " Colonel Hugh 175,188 " Sarah Smith Evans 175,188 " Mary 175,188 " James 175,189 " Samuel Preston 180,189 " Elizabelle Hall 180 " Jane 180 " Cassandra 180 " John 181 " Samuel 181 " Matilda Parker 181 " Hugh 181 " Sarah Ann 181 " John 182 " William Ivess 182,192 " Dr. Robert 182 " Helen Hampton 182 " John 182 " William Perry 183,194 " Samuel 203 " Lyons Mussina 205 " James Dunlop 207 " Joseph Pritts 208 " Jasper Ewing 209 " Rev. Cyrus Townsend 209 " George Keyports 210 " William Perry 212 " Capt. Evan Rice Evans 218 " George Nexsen 223 " Preston 224 " Samuel 225 " Wallis 225 " William Henry 226 " Henrietta Margaret Murray 210 " Dr. Mifflin Broadhead 211 " Lucy Denise Tracy 212 " Augusta McClelland 223 (5) NAME. PAGE. Brady, Robert McClelland 224 " Emily Medbery 224 " Margaret H. Radcliff 224 " Jennie DeForest Howard 225 " Anna Herbel Gamble 225 " Samuel Howard 225 " Hugh 225 " Alice L. Darnell 226 " John 193 " Joseph Vance 195 " John Speer 195 Bridgens, Jane McCall Brady 206 Bruner, Rev. Martin 174 " Mary Gray 174 Burnett, Margaret Faber Brady 213 " Dr. Swan Moses 213 Campbell, John 23 " Thomas P 117 Canfield, Mary Noble Croul 223 Case, Mary Rose Blaine 132 Chalfant, John Weakley 34 " Ellen Quigley McCrea 34 " Mary Liberty 35 " Isabella 35 " Henry 35 " Eleanor McCrea 35 " Annie 35 Clark, Sarah Helen Brown 283 Craig, Elizabeth Brady 218 Crawford, William 92,128 " Nancy Blaine 92,128 " Jennings Price 123 " Anna Sarah Williams 123 " Alex Blaine 129 " Thomas Childs 129 " William Allison 130 " Benj. Franklin 130 Croul, Sarah Wallis 222 Cochran, Dr. Alex 112 " Dr. Wm. Robinson 112 (6) NAME. PAGE. Cooper, James Erwin 188 " Mary Brady 188 " Thomas Jefferson 221 Coons, Kate L Stoughton 216 Coyle, John 109 " Samuel McCord 109 " William Scott 109 " David Linn 110 Cudworth, Frank Barrows 44 " Mary Elizabeth Gilmore 44 DeClark, Frank A 62 " Emma Belle Wills 62 Delin, Charles King 256 " Ellen 256 Dewart, William 181 " Liberty Brady. 155,181 Dibblee, Ethel Rodgers 272 Dickson, Isabel A 92,133 Diven, Mary Elizabeth 107 " James 89,107 " Isabella McCord 89,107 " William Bleakley 108 Doty, Nancy Robinson 90,118 Duxbury, Jane Brady 208 Ege, Michael Peter 69 " George Arthur 70 Elliott, Elizabeth Bell Brown 282 Engle, Mary Ann Linn 103 Ernst. Mollie Brady cooper 221 Ewalt, Harris 238 " Jane Quigley 238 " Anna Harris 239 Finckel, Charlotte Brady. 211 " Franke Hermann 211 Fleming, Eliza McCormick Robinson 113 Floyd, Clara Fannie Whiting 116 Forrest, Kate Lyndall 217 Fross, Emma Elaine 132 Frey, George Henry 260 " Jane Quigley Ward 260 " Isaac Ward 261 (7) NAME. PAGE. Frey, George Harrison 261 " Frederick Hamilton 261 " Robert Rodgers 262 Furey, Clara Geddes 217 Geddes, Thomas 92 " Lacy McCord 92 Gilbert, Daniel 255 " Eleanor Quigley 255 Gillespie, Rev. John 242 " Anna Mason Quigley 242 " Rev. George Elliott 243 " Thomas Hartford 243 Gilmore, James 39 " Eleanor McKinney 39 " Mary Ellen 41 " David McKinney 43 " Sara Grizelda Kyle 43 " Sarah Eleanor 44 " James Kyle 44 " Eleanore Lynn Orris 44 " Thomas McKinney 44 " Richard Rodgers 44 " Mary Elizabeth 44 " Alice Belle 44 " Nancy Jane 45 " Lydia Bell 47 Gordon, George Whitfield 115 " Julia Aurelia Hubbard 115 Graham, John Gleason 67 " Lydia Wills 67 Gray, Captain William 172 " Mary Brady 155,172 " Robert 155,181 " Hannah Brady 155,181 " Willis E 127 " Anna Josephine Mills 127 Greene, David 272 " Emma Rodgers 272 Greer, Michael 33 " Liberty McKinney 33 (8) NAME. PAGE. Grier, Gen. David Perkins 82 " Anna McKinney 82 " Smith McKinney 83 " John Perkins 83 " William Reynolds 83 " Margaret 84 " Robert Cooper 84 " David Perkins 84 " Annie McKinney 84 Guyn, Edward Charles 70 " Isabelle Wallace Smith 70 Hall, Augustus Ephraim 102 " Nancy Blaine McCord 101 " William Augustus 102 " Burga Frey Simmons 102 Hampson, George 101 " Anne McCord 101 " Hays, John Sharp 57 " Edwin Ruthven 38 " Maria Louisa McKinney 38 " Thomas MtKinney 39 " Margaretta Sharp 39 " Rachel Glenn 39 " Robert McKinney 39 " Jane Eleanor McFarlane 57 " Belle McKinney 58 " Lucy Sharp 58 " Jane McFarlane 58 Hayes, Dr. William Graham 105 " Ann Eliza Linn 105 Hemphill, Robert Clark 282 " Margaret Jane Brown 282 " Elizabeth Clark 283 " Cynthia Jane 286 Herr, Andrew Jackson 45 " Nancy Jane Gilmore 45 " Daniel Coyle 46 " Eleanor Gilmore 46 Herring, James McNeal 276 " Alice Rodgers Quigley 276 (9) NAME. PAGE. Hilton, William 115 " Mary Anne Barr 115 Hills, Edgar L 120 " Sarah Louisa Doty 120 Hodgson, Eugene M 82 " Adelaide Abbott McKinney 82 Holyoke, William 116 " Frances Ella Murphy 116 Hoitham, Dr. James H 102 " Nancy Blaine Hall 102 Hubbard, James H 115 " Julia S. Barr 115 Husted, Margaret Reynolds McKinney 81 Irwin, George W 239 " Anna Harris Ewalt 239 " Charles Harris 239 " George McCully 240 " Boyle 240 " Richard Ewalt 240 " James 240 " Harris Ewalt 241 " Addison Mowry 241 Jeffers, Rev. Wm. Hamilton 121 " Annie Robinson Tuttle 121 Jessop, William 42 " Mary Louise Ahi 42 Jewett, Frances 137 " George Thomas 137 " Susan Mary McKibben 137 Johnson, Cassius Uriah 126 " Florence Margaret Mills 126 Jordan, Simon Cameron 78 " Annie Lyde McKinney 78 Junkin, Joseph DeForest 111 " Mary McCord 111 Kellogg, William Pitt 66 " Mary Ellen Wills 66 Keyes, Frank E 272 " Jane Rodgers 272 Kreps, William Cassidy 78 " Elizabeth Craig McKinney 78 (10) NAME. PAGE. Kilgore, Jesse 272 " Mary Quigley 272 " William Mathers 274 Korrady, John 133 " Margaret M. Blaine 133 Leet, Amanda 87,98 " Charles 94 " Elizabeth Moorhead 94 Lichtenwalter, Mary R?thinson 120 Lilley, Eliza Sullivant Rodgers 272 Linn, Andrew 89,102 " Mary Ann McCord 89,102 " John 103 " Alexander McClure 103 " Mary Ann 103 " Samuel McCord 104 " William Blaine 105 " Andrew Gettys 105 " James Graham 105 " William Turbett 105 " John Alex 105 " Ann Eliza 106 Long, Philip 77 " Hadessah Jane McKinney 77 " Charles Orr 77 " David Shoemaker 77 " Abraham Smith 77 " Jennie 77 " Philip Nelson 77 Loy, Captain Andrew 106 " Ann Eliza Linn 106 " Andrew Linn 106 " William Gettys 106 " James Ramsey 107 " Edwin Russell 107 Loomis, Dyer 9,124 " Eliza McCord Robinson 9,124 Lyndall, Stephen Flanigan 217 " Catharine Ann Stoughton 217 " Joseph Brady 217 " Kate 217 (11) NAME. PAGE. Lyndall, Clara Geddes 217 " Henry Ward Beecher 218 Mabry, Seth 244 " Eliza Quigley 244 Macon, John 23 MacKenzie, Joseph 20 Maynard, Robert Doty 119 " Elisha Burr 119 McClelland, John Holmes 275 " Margaret Eleanor Quigley 275 " William Charles 275 " Liberty McCrea Quigley 275 McCrea, William 33 " William Bryson 35 Means, William S 285 " Jane McFarland Quigley 285 Mellier, Walter Gallatin 244 " Ella Mabry 244 Molenaer, Susan Howard Frey 262 Menkens, Alexander 67 " Lavinia Wills 67 Miller, Admiral J. N 67 " Helen Wills 67 Milliken, John 87,98 " Nancy McCord 87,98 " John Thomas 98 " Andrew Joseph 98 Mills, James 92,125 " Margaret McCord Blaine 92,124 " Royal Alexander 125 " James Marcellus 125 " John Marcellus 126 " Royal James 126 " Frank Charles 126 " Dr. John Marcellus 127 " Paul Blaine 128 " Nelson Ritner 130 " Josephine Crawford 130 Moore, Cyrus W 68 " Kate A. McKinney 68 (12) NAME. PAGE. Moorhead, Joseph McCord 94 " Thomas 94 " William McCord 95 " James Adair 95 " James Miller 93 " Eliza McCord 93 " Joseph Young 131 " Mary Blaine 131 " Jane Young 96 " Edward T 96 McFarlane, Robert 31 " Robert Williamson 54 McKee, Rev. William Alex 50 " Mary Jane Stewart 50 " Edward McKinney Stewart 51 " Dinah Eleanor 51 " Robert Montgomery 51 " William Rippey Stewart 51 " Maj. George Wilson 35 " Mary Liberty Chalfant 35 " Georgiana 35 McKibben, Nancy McCord 92 McKinney, Thomas 23,24 " Andrew 23,72 " David 23,75 " Samuel 23 " Joseph 23 " Mary 23 " Agnes 23,85 " William 23 " David 26,75 " Jean 26,58 " Maj. Joseph 26,67 " Andrew 26 " Grizelda 26 " Thomas 26 " Mary 30 " Jane 31 " Liberty 33 " Thomas Andrew 35 " Jane Rachel Glenn 35 (13) NAME. PAGE. McKinney, Maria Louisa. 38 " David Andrew 39 " Eleanor 39 " Dinah 47 " Lydia Bell 54 " Dinah 67 " Dr. Thomas 68 " Robert 68 " Kate A 68 " Jane Louisa 69 " Jennet Smith 75 " Abraham Smith 81 " Abraham Smith 79 " Ann 76 " Hadessah Jane 77 " Margaret Reyndds 76 " Anna 82 " Samuel D 77 " David Arthur 78 " David 80 " John Reynolds 84 " Erastus 77 McCord, Agnes McKinney 85 " William 85 " Joseph 86,87 " Polly Blaine 86,88 " Mary 86,89 " Rosanna 86,91 " Andrew 86,92 " Rosanna Bell 86,92 " James 86,92 " Susan Davidson 86,92 " Jane Sturgis 86,93 " Eliza 87,93 " William 87,96 " James R 87,97 " John 87,97 " Joseph 87,98 " William Harkness 88,100 " David 88,101 " Ephraim Blaine 89 (14) NAME. PAGE. McCord, John Davidson 92,110,134 " Margaret McCandlish 134 " Rosanna Blaine 92,110 " James Sturgis 93,138 " William 96 " Thomas Moorhead 96 " William Alex 96 " Nancy 98 " Anne 101 " Mary 101 " Nancy Blaine 101 " Mary Ann 102 " Isabella 109 " Elizabeth Thompson 107 " William McCandlish 135 " Susan Davidson 135 " Jane Margaret 135 " Mary Ellen 135 " James Edwin 135 " Alice Bridgeworth 136 " Charles Clifford 111 " Ella 111 " Mary Robinson 111 " James Sturgis 93,138 " Annie 138 " Walter Lowrie 138 " Arthur Parke 138 " Joseph Alexander 138 " James Sturgis 139 " Andrew 137 " Anna Mary Tuttle 137 McCormick, Nancy M. Piatt 203 " Elizabeth Piatt 215 " Robert H 203 " William S 215 McCune, William E 284 " Margaret Ellen 284 Morrison, Robert George 45 " Alice Belle Gilmore 45 " Elizabeth 45 (15) NAME. PAGE. Morrow, John Benton 136 " Alice Bridgeworth McCord 136 Munroe, George Walter 51 " Dinah Eleanor McKee 51 Murphy, Wright 115 " Robinson Barr 115 Norcross, William R 220 " Mary Emma Barclay 220 Orr, William 285 " Agnes Quigley 285 Park, George Henry 61 " Mary Lovena Wills 61 Parker, John C 62 " Amanda Jane Wills 62 Patton, William A 108 " Katharine Jane Linn 108 Piatt, William 172,183 " Mary Brady 172,183 " William 172,187 " Hannah Brady 172,183 " H. C 172 " Charlotte Brady 172 " John Brady 184,199 " William McKinney 184,200 " James B 187 " Hermon Cline 187,213 " Abner 187,214 " McCall 214 " Robert McClintock 201 " Frank Hammond 201 " James Wilson 202 " Joseph Wood 202 Power, Prof. Joseph Culbertson 197 " Mary Ann Brady 197 Prothero, Mary Ward 270 Quigley, Robert 228 " Mary Jacob 228 " James 233 " Joseph 236 " John 237 " Robert 241 (16) NAME. PAGE. Quigley, Joseph 244 " Thomas 245 " Edward Payson 249 " Edward Payson 251 " George Washington 253 " James Harris 254 " Robert Quigley 274 " James Brown 275 " John Quigley 276 " James Sharp 283 " Joseph Sharp 284 " David Grier 286 " Thomas McKinney 287 " Robert Clark 287 " Anna Mason 242 " Lucien Graham 253 Randolph, Mary Ellen Sharp 279 Robinson, Mary A 39 " William Andrew 90,110 " Nancy Cochran 90,110 " Hetty 90,114 " Nancy 90,118 " George Washington 91,120 " John 91 " Mary Ann 91,121 " Joseph McKinney 91,122 " Alexander Hamilton 91,123 " Eliza McCord 91,124 " Samuel McCord 91,124 " Thomas 86,89 " Rosanna Blaine 110 " Alex. Cochran 111 " John F 112 " Nancy Martin 112 " David 112 " Rev. Thomas Hastings 112 " William Andrew 113 " Thomas Hastings 114 " Eliza McCormick 113 " Edward Orth 113 " Mary Buehler 114 (17) NAME. PAGE. Robinson, William Andrew 114 " Samuel Martin 114 Rodgers, James 234 " Jennet Quigley 234 " Richard 235,256 " Mary 235,258 " Rachel 235 " Dr. Robert 235,262 " William 235,267 " Eleanor 235 " Jane Linn 235 " Rev. James Linn 235,268 " Andrew Denny 236,270 " Dr. John Harrison 265 " Richard Henry 265 " Isaac Ward 266 " Frances 266 " Jane Ellen 266 " James Godman 266 " Sarah Elizabeth 266 " Robert Cochran 269 " James Denny 270 " William 270 " Wm. Starling Sullivant 271 " James Linn 271 " Andrew Denny 272 " James Denny 258 " George Greene 258 Rose, Drusilla Brady 183,198 " Joseph Ulysses 183,198 Roys, Emma Rodgers 272 Rutter, James S 53 " Liberty Stewart 53 Seely, Lieut. Robert 174 " Mary Gray 174 Selkregg, George 98,99 " Rebecca Elizabeth 98,99 " Hannah Elizabeth 99 " Harley Dwight 127 " Mary Moorhead 727 " William 128 (18) NAME. PAGE. Selkregg, Margaret Blaine Mills 128 Scouller, Agnes Eleanor Brown 281 Sharp, Robert 273 " Mary Eleanor Kilgore 273 " James Sterrett 277 " Margaret Jane Quigley 277 " William Craig 278 " Martha Agnes 278 Shapley, Rufus E 138 " Annie McCord 138 Sherwin, George F 95 " Jane Moorhead 95 Smedley, James 101 " Mary McCord 101 Smith, Jennet 75 " William Robertson 69 " Mary Blackford Ege 69 " George Putnam 174 " Marie Totten 174 Sterrett, Martha Ellen Brown 281 Stewart, Dr. William Rippey 48 " Dinah McKinney 47 " Mary Jane 50 " Alex. Quay 51 " Eleanor Isabel Virginia 51 " Catharine Rippey Raum 51 " Gen. William Warren 51 " Liberty McCrea 53 " David McKinney 54 " Dinah Julia 54 " Robert Montgomery 54 " Sarah Hannah 54 " Phoebe Rachel 54 " Mary 83 Stoughton, Rowland 172,188 " Jane Brady 172,188 " Jasper Brady 215 " Sarah Jane Broadhurst 216 " Oscar 216 " Jasper Brady 216 (19) NAME. PAGE. Swope, Gilbert Ernest 58 " Belle McKinney Hays 58 Tandy, Mary Moore Brady 195 Thompson, Ella Ophelia Williams 122 " Matthew A 279 " Margaret Quigley Sharp 279 Thurber, Elizabeth Brady Croul 223 Todd, Margaret Grier 84 Tuttle, Benj. Royce 121,137 " Mary Ann Robinson 91,121 " Edwin Rush 121 " Mary Sherwood 121 " Mary Ann McCord 121,137 " Anna Mary 137 Walker, Judson 130 " Kate Mason Crawford 130 Walkup, Rev. Alfred Christopher 117 " Margaret Lavenia Barr 117 Wallace, Dr. William H 108 " Anna Mary Linn 108 Ward, James N 226 " Mary Electus Backus 226 " Isaac 258 " Mary Rodgers 258 Whiting, Martha Charlotte Murphy 116 Williams, Alex. Fraser 122 " Frances Robinson 122 Wills, John 59 " Jean McKinney 59 " Samuel 60 " David 60 " Benjamin Franklin 61 " James Albert 61 " Thomas 61 " Jane 63 " Dr. David 63 " William 63 " James 63 " Andrew 65 " John 67 (20) NAME. PAGE. Wilson, William Nevius 47 " Lydia Bell Gilmore 47 " Ira Jacob 105 " James Ramsey 107 End Part V END of Book