John Buchanan | |
---|---|
Born | County Donegal, Ireland |
Died | 1769 Greenfield (Fincastle, Virginia), Botetourt County, Virginia, Colony of Virginia |
Years active | 1741-1769 |
Known for | Virginia leadership and development |
Title | Augusta County magistrate, Augusta County Sheriff, Justice of the Peace, coroner, surveyor, collector of duty on skins and furs, tax collector and exterminator of wolves |
Spouse | Margaret Patton |
Parent(s) | James Buchanan and Jane Sayers |
Relatives | Children: Mary, James, John, Margaret, Jane, William, Anna |
Military career | |
Allegiance | Colony of Virginia |
Years of service | 1742-1769 |
Rank | Colonel of the Augusta County Militia |
Unit | Virginia militia, Augusta County militia |
Battles/wars | Battle of Galudoghson (1742), Sandy Creek Expedition (1756) |
John Buchanan (died 1769) was a colonial Virginia landowner, magistrate, colonel in the Virginia Militia, deputy surveyor under Thomas Lewis, and Sheriff of Augusta County, Virginia. As a surveyor, Buchanan was able to locate and purchase some of the most desirable plots of land in western Virginia and quickly became wealthy and politically influential. As magistrate, sheriff and a colonel the Augusta County Militia, he was already well-connected when his father-in-law Colonel James Patton was killed in 1755. Buchanan had replaced Patton in several key roles by the time of his own death in 1769.
Buchanan is often referred to in official documents as "John Buchanan, Gent.", while his brother-in-law, Captain John Buchanan, is usually referred to as "John Buchanan, yeoman." Both men owned land on the New River and the Holston River and are frequently confused. [1] Captain Buchanan married Colonel Buchanan's sister Martha. [2] : 294
Little is known for certain of Buchanan's birthplace or his life before 1741. Buchanan may have been born in Ireland [2] : 164 or in Pennsylvania. [3] His date of birth is disputed, with sources variously citing 1699, [4] : 50 1716, [5] and 1728. Several sources say he was the son of James Buchanan and Jane Sayers, and that the family lived for a time in Northumberland County, Pennsylvania. [6] : 268 Lyman Draper states that before coming to America, he "had figured in the wars of Scotland," although no details or source is given, and Draper may have confused John Buchanan with his father James. [7] : 379 Lyman Draper's collected papers of William Preston (1731-1791) contains information suggesting that Buchanan immigrated from Ireland in 1738 with his father James, and James Patton. [8]
Letitia Floyd Lewis, granddaughter of William Preston, wrote a letter to Robert William Hughes, dated 13 June 1879, describing her family history. [9] : 13 [10] : 2320 Although the original letter appears to be lost, a transcription was printed in The Richmond Standard on 18 September 1880. [11] : 9 The letter says that:
On 24 June 1742, Buchanan qualified as a captain in the Augusta County militia. [12] : 43
In December 1742, the militia engaged in combat with a group of twenty-two Onondaga and seven Oneida Indians who had traveled to Virginia from Shamokin in Pennsylvania, under the command of an Iroquois chief named Jonnhaty, to participate in a campaign against the Catawba. An account of the battle, known as the Battle of Galudoghson, was given to Conrad Weiser by Shikellamy's grandson in February, 1743. [13] : 643–646 The grandson claimed that suspicious white settlers, thinking that this war party planned to raid Virginia settlements, attacked them. The settlers later reported that the Indians had killed several hogs and horses belonging to the settlers, and "went to Peoples houses, Scared the women and Children [and] took what they wanted." The militia were called in, and Patton ordered them to escort the war party out of Augusta County. The militia followed the warriors for two days, until one of the Indians made a detour into the forest near Balcony Falls, possibly to relieve himself, and a militiaman fired at him. The Indians then attacked and killed the militia captain, John McDowell. In the battle that followed, three or four of the Indian warriors and eight or ten militiamen were killed. [14] [15] : 250–52 [16] According to Colonel Patton, the Indians fled into the forest and were pursued for "several hundred yards" by Captain Buchanan and eight militiamen. [17]
On 18 November 1752, Buchanan was promoted to colonel of horse and foot. [18]
Following the Draper's Meadow massacre of July 1755, Buchanan sent a company from the Augusta County militia to pursue the Shawnee warriors responsible for the massacre, but they were unable to locate them. On 11 August Governor Robert Dinwiddie wrote to Buchanan: "I am sorry the Men You sent after the Murderers did not come up with them." [19] : 154 In late 1755, he succeeded Colonel Patton as commander-in-Chief of the Augusta County Militia. The next spring he moved to Cherry Tree Bottom Plantation at Looney's Ferry on the James River, where he was visited by Colonel George Washington in October. [1] : 368–371
In February-April 1756, Buchanan led a company of rangers on the Sandy Creek Expedition, intended to assault the Shawnee village known as Lower Shawneetown, from which raids on Virginia settlements had been launched. The expedition was forced to turn back due to harsh weather and lack of supplies. [20]
On 27 July 1756, Buchanan presided over a council of war, held at the Augusta County Courthouse, "to meet and consult on the most proper places to build forts along the fronteers for the protection of the Inhabitants." Present were Colonel David Stewart, Major John Brown, and ten captains, all officers of the Augusta County militia. The council decided on the locations of fifteen forts to be built in a "chain" across the county. The council determined that 680 men would need to be recruited to man these and several other existing forts. [21] Samuel Stalnaker represented the Holston Settlement and recommended that stockade forts be built at Dunkard's Bottom on the New River and Davis' Bottom at the middle fork of the Holston River. [22]
On 23 August 1756, Governor Dinwiddie wrote Peter Hog: “I have recommended Colo. Buchanan to him [Clement Read] for Augusta Coty. I have a bad Opinion of Colo. Stewarts Conduct, & before he receives any Mony, I shall make a Strict Scrutiny into his Demands, & think it must go through Buchanan's Hands." [23]
In 1758, Buchanan supervised the construction of Fort Fauquier, which replaced Robert Looney's Fort, built in 1755 near Looney's Ferry [24] in Botetourt County. [25] [26]
On 17 November 1768 he qualified as Lieutenant of Augusta County. [27] : 222
Buchanan served as an Orange County magistrate for the Augusta district from 3 November 1741 to 10 October 1745, at which time the Virginia Council included him as the third most senior magistrate (subordinate only to James Patton and John Lewis) in the first Augusta County commission of the peace [28] : 191, 214 [15] : 84 In 1742 he was appointed tax collector and exterminator of wolves. [1] On 9 December 1745, Buchanan was appointed justice in the newly formed Augusta County, and on 9 December, 1745 he qualified as a deputy sheriff. On 16 July 1746, he qualified as sheriff. [18] : 13, 20 At that time Buchanan was also a deputy surveyor under Thomas Lewis. [1]
On 18 November 1752, Buchanan qualified as coroner. [18] : 56 In 1759 he was appointed collector of duty on skins and furs, and in 1761 Sheriff of Augusta County. [8]
In 1746, by order of Governor William Gooch, Buchanan and eleven other men were elected to the Augusta County Vestry. [12] : 58–59
The Wood's River Grant for 100,000 acres of land on the Wood's River (later renamed the New River) was issued in the spring of 1745 to Colonel James Patton, with Buchanan being appointed agent and surveyor. [29] Patton immediately formed the Wood's River Company, known later as the New River Company. [30] Among his 20 company members were John Buchanan, George Robinson, James Wood, Adam Harman, Israel Lorton, and Peter Rentfroe. Patton wanted corporate power to negotiate profitable purchases and sales and to participate in treaties with Native Americans, but the company made only a few purchases and dissolved after Patton's death in 1755. [31] : 23–25
On 7 October 1745, Buchanan mentioned in his journal that he transcribed John Peter Salling's journal during a six-day visit with Salling. [15] : 17 [8] As a member of the John Howard expedition, March to July 1742, Salling had reached the New River, [32] and Buchanan was interested in surveying the area as part of the 1745 Wood's River land grant. [33] : 66
He moved to Orange (now Augusta) County, Virginia in 1740. Buchanan became an assistant surveyor for James Patton and worked closely with Patton's nephew William Preston under Thomas Lewis to survey lands for the Woods River Company. As a surveyor, he was able to locate some of the best lands in western Virginia and purchased nearly 5,000 acres for himself. [26] : 280
In early 1748, Buchanan accompanied Dr. Thomas Walker and James Patton on a journey west, as far south as the "Fork Country of the Holston" (present-day Kingsport, Sullivan County, Tennessee), [38] to survey the westernmost lands which were included as part of Patton's 1745 land grant. [39] : 177–78 [40] : 86
In 1781, Buchanan's career as a surveyor became the focus of a major investigation, as a result of a lawsuit filed by William Ingles over his holdings in Burkes Garden. Buchanan had evidently worked as a surveyor without a license, which was obtained by surveyors in Virginia after passing an examination at the College of William and Mary. The issue focused on the legality of the surveys done by Buchanan, which would have been rendered null and void if it was revealed that he was unlicensed. [41] Thomas Lewis wrote to William Preston in a letter dated 7 August 1781:
Comparisons of Buchanan's and Preston's survey measurements with modern-day measurements show that both Preston and Buchanan underreported the acreage that they surveyed for James Patton, in order to reduce the amount of quitrent Patton owed. [44] : 18 [45] : 33 It seems likely that Buchanan and Preston used a fraudulent Gunter's chain that was forty percent longer than the legally standardized chain, in order to complete their surveys. Other landowners, including Dr. Thomas Walker, probably knew that the measurements were inaccurate, and took advantage of the deception to defraud the colonial land office of the amount of payment due for land patents. [42]
In May 1745, John Buchanan and his future father-in-law James Patton conducted a survey for "a Road from the County line of Frederick [County] to the upper Inhabitants of Augusta [County] on Woods River." [33] : 60 They began laying out the road through the Shenandoah Valley from Winchester to Staunton and later down to Roanoke and what would become Blacksburg. Initially known as the "Indian Road" because parts of it followed the Great Indian Warpath, it was incorporated into the "Great Wagon Road" which ran from Knoxville, Tennessee to Philadelphia. [46] This road facilitated travel for settlers heading into what is now West Virginia. [47] [48] : 7
On 17 June 1749, John Buchanan married Margaret Patton, daughter of Colonel James Patton. [2] [12] They built a log cabin on the bank above Reed Creek [49] in Wythe County, near Fort Chiswell. In 1756, they moved to Cherry Tree Bottom plantation at Looney's Ferry on the James River, at the mouth of Purgatory Creek, near where the town of Buchanan now stands. Buchanan had inherited this "small stone house" from his father-in-law James Patton. [50] [51] Buchanan was planning to move to their 1,200 acre Anchor and Hope plantation on Reed Creek [52] when he died in mid-1769. Buchanan had surveyed the plantation in 1748 and patented it in 1753. [53] : 200–202
John and Margaret had seven children: [1]
On 22 January 1767, Buchanan purchased six slaves at a cost of £337.10 total, as a gift for his daughter Mary. [55] : 458
Buchanan died between June and August 1769, in Greenfield (Fincastle, Virginia). His will was dated 25 June and proved 16 August. It mentions his three sons, James, William and John, his daughter Mary Boyd, wife of Andrew Boyd, and three younger daughters who are not named. After Buchanan's death, his wife Margaret married William Anderson in 1796, and they moved to Kentucky.
Historians Mary and Frederick Kegley described Buchanan's death:
The town of Buchanan, Virginia is named after John Buchanan. [51]
A historical marker commemorating Looney's Ferry, Buchanan's Cherry Tree Bottom home and Fort Fauquier, is located on Main Street (US Route 11) in Buchanan, Virginia. [56]
A 1932 historical marker, located on the west side of US 52, just south of I-81, commemorates Buchanan's home at the Anchor and Hope Plantation. [52]
James Patton Preston was a U.S. political figure who served as the 20th Governor of Virginia.
Andrew Lewis was an Irish-born American surveyor, military officer and politician. Born in County Donegal, he moved with his family to the British colony of Virginia at a young age. A colonel in the Virginia militia during the French and Indian War, and brigadier general in the American Revolutionary War, his most famous victory was the Battle of Point Pleasant in Dunmore's War in 1774, although he also drove Lord Dunmore's forces from Norfolk and Gwynn's Island in 1776. He also helped found Liberty Hall in 1776.
The Virginia militia is an armed force composed of all citizens of the Commonwealth of Virginia capable of bearing arms. The Virginia militia was established in 1607 as part of the English militia system. Militia service in Virginia was compulsory for all free males. The main purpose of the Crown's militia was to repel invasions and insurrections and to enforce the laws of the colony.
Mary Draper Ingles, also known in records as Mary Inglis or Mary English, was an American pioneer and early settler of western Virginia. In the summer of 1755, she and her two young sons were among several captives taken by Shawnee after the Draper's Meadow Massacre during the French and Indian War. They were taken to Lower Shawneetown at the Ohio and Scioto rivers. Ingles escaped with another woman after two and a half months and trekked 500 to 600 miles, crossing numerous rivers, creeks, and the Appalachian Mountains to return home.
The Draper's Meadow Massacre was an attack in July 1755, when the Draper's Meadow settlement in southwest Virginia, at the site of present-day Blacksburg, was raided by a group of Shawnee warriors, who killed at least four people including an infant, and captured five more. The Indians brought their hostages to Lower Shawneetown, a Shawnee village in Kentucky. One of the captives, Mary Draper Ingles, later escaped and returned home on foot through the wilderness. Although many of the circumstances of the massacre are uncertain, including the date of the attack, the event remains a dramatic story in the history of Virginia.
James Pittillo was a Scots laborer and Jacobite rebel, who became a major landowner after being deported in 1716 to the Colony of Virginia. After completing service of his indenture, in 1726 Pittillo was granted 242 acres (1.0 km2) on Waqua Creek in Brunswick County, Virginia.
Israel Christian (c.1720—1784) was an 18th-century American pioneer, militia officer, politician and businessman. One of the earliest landowners in Kentucky, he founded the town of Fincastle, Virginia. He was also a representative of Augusta County in the House of Burgesses from 1759 to 1761.
John Peter Salling, born Johan Peter Saling and sometimes referred to as John Peter Salley, Sayling, Sallings, and Sallee, was a German explorer known for being among the first Europeans to visit parts of what is now Virginia, West Virginia and Kentucky. He was imprisoned by the French in New Orleans on charges of spying and escaped together with another prisoner, taking eight months to finally reach his home in Virginia. His detailed journal describing his journeys of exploration was lost twice, and each time Salling was able to reconstruct it from memory. Salling's journal was used as a source in the creation of early maps of Virginia and eastern North America.
Smithfield is a plantation house in Blacksburg, Virginia, built from 1772 to 1774 by Col. William Preston to be his residence and the headquarters of his farm. It was the birthplace of two Virginia Governors: James Patton Preston and John B. Floyd. The house remained a family home until 1959 when the home was donated to the APVA.
Colonel William Preston was an Irish-born American military officer, planter and politician. He played a crucial role in surveying and developing the Southern Colonies, exerted great influence in the colonial affairs of his time, owned numerous slaves on his plantation, and founded a dynasty whose progeny would supply leaders of the South for nearly a century. He served in the House of Burgesses and was a colonel in the Virginia militia during the American Revolutionary War. He was one of the fifteen signatories of the Fincastle Resolutions. Preston was also a founding trustee of Liberty Hall when it was transformed into a college in 1776.
William Beverley (1696–1756) was an 18th-century legislator, civil servant, planter and landowner in the Colony of Virginia. Born in Virginia, Beverley—the son of planter and historian Robert Beverley, Jr. and his wife, Ursula Byrd Beverley (1681–1698)—was the scion of two prominent Virginia families. He was the nephew of Peter Beverley (1668–1728), Speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses, and the grandson of wealthy Virginia planter William Byrd I (1652–1704) of Westover Plantation. Beverley's mother died shortly before her 17th birthday, and he was sent to England.
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Samuel Stalnaker was an explorer, trapper, guide and one of the first settlers on the Virginia frontier. He established a trading post, hotel and tavern in 1752 near what is now Chilhowie, Virginia. He was held captive by Shawnee Indians at Lower Shawneetown in Kentucky for almost a year, before escaping and traveling over 460 miles to Williamsburg, Virginia, to report on French preparations to attack English settlements in Virginia and Pennsylvania. He later served as a guide under George Washington during the French and Indian War.
The Sandy Creek Expedition, also known as the Sandy Expedition or the Big Sandy Expedition, was a 1756 campaign by Virginia Regiment soldiers and Cherokee warriors into modern-day West Virginia against the Shawnee, who were raiding the British colony of Virginia's frontier. The campaign set out in mid-February, 1756, and was immediately slowed by harsh weather and inadequate provisions. With morale failing, the expedition was forced to turn back in mid-March without encountering the enemy.
William Ingles, also spelled Inglis, Ingliss, Engels, or English, was a colonist and soldier in colonial Virginia. He participated in the Sandy Creek Expedition and was a signatory of the Fincastle Resolutions. He was eventually promoted to colonel in the Virginia Regiment. His wife, Mary Draper Ingles, was captured by Shawnee warriors and held captive for months before escaping and walking several hundred miles to her settlement. William's sons, Thomas and George, were also held captive, although William was able to ransom his son Thomas in 1768. William Ingles established Ingles Ferry in southwestern Virginia.
Thomas Ingles was a Virginia pioneer, frontiersman and soldier. He was the son of William Ingles and Mary Draper Ingles. He, his mother and his younger brother were captured by Shawnee Indians and although his mother escaped, Thomas remained with the Shawnee until age 17, when his father paid a ransom and brought him back to Virginia. He later served in the Virginia militia, reaching the rank of colonel by 1780.
James Lynn Patton, was a merchant, pioneer frontiersman, and soldier who settled parts of Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. Between his immigration to Virginia in 1740, and his death there in 1755, he was a prominent figure in the exploration, settlement, governance, and military leadership of the colony. Patton held such Augusta County offices as Justice of the Peace, Colonel of Militia and Chief Commander of the Augusta County Militia, County Lieutenant, President of the Augusta Court, commissioner of the Tinkling Spring congregation, county coroner, county escheator, collector of duties on furs and skins, and County Sheriff. He also was President of the Augusta Parish Vestry and a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses. He was present at three important treaty conferences with Iroquois and Cherokee leaders. Patton was killed by Shawnee warriors in July 1755.
The Battle of Galudoghson took place in December 1742, at a site near present-day Glasgow, Virginia, when the Augusta County militia engaged in combat with Onondaga and Oneida Indians. These warriors had traveled to Virginia from Pennsylvania under the command of an Iroquois chief named Jonnhaty, to participate in a campaign against the Catawba. The battle was the first armed conflict between settlers in Western Virginia and Native Americans. Several distinct accounts of the battle exist, with contradictory details. The Iroquois regarded the battle as an unprovoked act of aggression, while the Virginia colonists claimed that the Iroquois had raided Virginia settlements and killed livestock. The battle was one factor that led colonial authorities to negotiate with Native American leaders for the 1744 Treaty of Lancaster.
John Lewis was a militia officer, magistrate and prominent Virginia landowner. Born in Ireland, he was forced to emigrate after killing his landlord. He settled in Virginia and, together with his nephew James Patton, became wealthy through land grants and sales during expansion of Virginia's westward frontier. His youngest son Andrew Lewis was a well-known general in the French and Indian War and the American Revolutionary War. His second oldest son Thomas Lewis was a politician who served in the Virginia House of Delegates. For many years, Lewis engaged in a heated rivalry with his nephew Patton over land grants, judicial power, and the construction of a parish meeting house. He died at his home in Staunton, Virginia at the age of 84.
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