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Benjamin
Crow was born in the British American Colonies about 1756 or 1757 in the
county of New Castle, Delaware. His parents were Walter and Ann(e) Crow.
He was a middle child in a family of eight children, whose names were
Mary (called Polly), James, John, William, Benjamin, Jacob, Nancy and
Rachel. There is no family bible, diary or journal to tell us of this
family, only documents showing their area of residence. Understanding
the historical setting in which they lived helps us to understand their
lives. From 1760-1764, Benjamin's father, Walter, was the proprietor of an "inn," "tavern," or "public house," located on the Upper King Road which connected Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to Wilmington and New Castle, Delaware1. Whenever a direct and much traveled road was developed within the Colonies, a network of inns, ordinaries and taverns sprang up placed strategically to anticipate travelers' needs. The trip from Philadelphia to New Castle, made either on foot, by horseback or coach, could be dusty and tiresome. The road was a simple dirt track running through the forest, and the trip took from three to eight days depending on the weather and road conditions. Walter Crow's establishment, a forerunner of our modern motel, provided weary travelers with a meal and accommodations for the night. Walter Crow's inn was located thirteen miles south of
New Castle, between Christiana Bridge and Blackburn Bridge. His place
was known by "Crow's Tavern," or "Sign of the Tun"
(the Cask). After he left, it became "Ham's Inn," then
"Carson's," and later "The Buck Tavern." This region
achieved more than local fame as the combined British and Hessian armies
launched their Philadelphia campaign from this area in late August of
1777. In
late 1763 or early1764, Walter moved further West over the Appalachian
Mountains into Augusta County Virginia2.
He purchased land located on the South Branch of Linville Creek near
Harrisonburg, Virginia. This was considered the Western frontier and had
only been opened to settlement for about 20 years. In mid 1750's there
were many Indian raids through these valleys in conjunction with the
French and Indian Wars. Here Benjamin grew to adulthood. One can imagine
him as a young adult wearing buckskins or homespun clothing along with
homemade moccasins or boots clearing trees or planting or harvesting
crops. He would have helped build the log cabin or barns for the
livestock. He learned to hunt and trap animals for food, clothing and
trade. He would have attended socials to mingle with his neighbors. Although the colonists were still loyal to England for the most part, they were beginning to feel some dissatisfaction with the continued increase in taxes and control. The discontent grew with the passage of the Stamp Act by Parliament in 1765. The Virginia House of Burgess replied with a paper called "The Declaration of Rights" which caused the Act to be repealed only to be replaced by new taxes on tea, glass and painters materials in July 1767. To enforce the collection of these duties, two Regiments of British soldiers were sent to Boston. This trouble continued to escalate until April 19, 1775 when the first shots were fired at Concord, Massachusetts. The first written record found of Benjamin Crow is
his military service pay slips for service in the Revolutionary War. He
enlisted on December 26, 1776 in Captain David Stephensen's Company of
the 8th Virginia Regiment of Foot. He served under the
Command by Colonel Abraham Bowman for a period of three years. He
received pay of seven and one-third dollars per month. He was promoted
to Corporal on August 5, 1777, then to Sergeant March 1, 1778. His pay
was increased to eight dollars per month. These dated pay slips show
that he received pay for
November and December 1777, January through June 1778 at Valley Forge,
part of this time he is listed as "sick." There is a gap in
the pay slips from June 1778 to May 1779, when he became a part of
Captain John Steed's Company of the 3rd & 4th
Virginia Regiment of Foot, Commanded by John Nevill and his
pay was increased to ten dollars per month in Virginia Currency. As of
August 1779, he received his pay at Camp Ramapoo, and the very last pay
slip dated December 9, 1779 shows
he was stationed at a Camp near Morriston, (?). His three-year
enlistment ended on December 26, 1779.3 Either
before his discharge from the Virginia Militia or shortly after, he
married Ann Gragg, daughter of Robert Gragg and Lydia Harrison Gragg,
neighbors to his family in Augusta County, Virginia. On
September 19, 1780, Benjamin purchased part of 400 acres in Augusta
County. This transaction is witnessed by Robert Gragg (Gregg)4.
Two years later, on September 28, 1782, Benjamin and his wife, Ann, sold
this property. The witnesses of the sale were Robert Gragg and Samuel
Gragg.5 Just
before the sale of this property, on August 18, 1782, Benjamin made a
claim in Court to be compensated for a rifle that was lost while serving
during the Revolutionary War. "Came
into Court Benjamin Crow and made oath that there was a Rifel gun,
powder horn, shot pouch and knife taken from Him When a continental
soldier in the year 1777 and put into the Magazine for which he received
a certificate which he lodged with Walter Crow who also came into Court
and made oath that he has lost the said certificate and never received
any value for ye same the Court is therefore of the oppinion that ye
said Benjamin Crow be alowed 7 Pounds 10 shilling for said gun, powder
horn, shot pouch and knife and the Same is Ordered to be
certified."6 Shortly
after the sale of his land Benjamin moved his family to the Holston
River Valley in Southwestern Virginia. This area extended into what was
then North Carolina and later to become Greene County, Tennessee. This
valley lay between the Appalachian Mountains on the East and the Clinch
Mountains on the west. In this raw untamed wilderness Benjamin began to
clear land and build cabins. He built with the cabins facing each other
and a stockade fence with a gate at the ends. These gates were to be
closed in case of an Indian attack. This was the home that he prepared
for his family. In spite of the fact that one-time tax records "as insolvent and delinquent, as he had gone to the Holston,"
7moving
his family and working hard to reestablish himself must have paid off. In
the book of North Carolina Land Grants recorded for Greene County,
Tennessee, "For 10 pounds per 100 acres - to Benjamin Crowe 300 acres in
Greene County on south side of Nolichucky River on both sides of Meadow
Creek, to watery fork of Meadow Creek. s/Richard Caswell, Governor at
Kinston, N.C.; 20 September
1787." Then
in Deed Book 3, "Benjamin Crow - 200 acres. Consideration of 10
Pounds (No further
description) s/Alexander
Martin (Governor) at Newbern, N.C. dated 26 December 1792". Deed
Book 3, "3 October 1799; Benjamin Crow, Greene County, Tennessee To
Thomas Pate for $728.00, 440 acres in Greene County (further property
description and location not recorded). Witnesses William Rankin, Sally
Rankin. (Registered 24 Jan 1801). Thomas
Pate then conveyed this property back to Benjamin Crow. Benjamin
Crow then conveyed this 440 acres to John Neash, on 25 November 1801. Benjamin
Crow sold 30 acres in Greene County to Michael Neese for $100.00.
(Registered 5 January 1804) Benjamin
Crow sold 27 acres to Joseph Patterson for $37.00. Witnesses,Thomas
McLaughlin, John Reynolds, Robert Gragg. (Registered 24 December 1803). Benjamin
Crow was very active in public and civic affairs. In the records of the
Greene County Tennessee Court of Common Pleas there are numerous entries
for Benjamin Crow to serve as a jurist, to lay out a road, to act as a
witness or to help settle an estate or other legal problems. Benjamin
was appointed a Colonel in the local Militia to defend against the
Indians. He was on the committee that offered its help to General George
Washington in fighting the French. Then
in early 1802, Benjamin Crow with his extended family left Tennessee for
the Louisiana territory. Louisiana Territory at that time belonged to
Spain who invited settlers to move west of the Mississippi River. The
three oldest children were married, and they along with their spouses
moved with Benjamin and Ann. Since
Benjamin's property was located near or on the banks of the Nolichucky
River, which flowed into the French Broad River, a tributary of the Ohio
River their quickest and easiest means of transporting the large family
group to the wilderness would have been via raft or houseboat. This
would go along with leaving Tennessee in the spring to take advantage of
the higher water flowing down the rivers. What an undertaking to take
all of your household items, animals and family members down a wild and
turbulent river. While
traversing this river, the first grandchild was born. Walter's wife
Margaret gave birth to their first child a daughter, who they named
Elizabeth (Betsy) Waters Crow. Upon arriving in the Louisiana Territory, they
traveled westward until they came to a beautiful valley called Bellevue,
there they chose land, erected homes and established farms. Benjamin
received a Spanish Land Grant of approximately 1055 acres.8
His son, Walter received a Land Grant of at least 385 acres. Prior to 1803 control of the Missouri section of the
Louisiana Territory (or New Spain as it was termed) was passed back and
forth between France and Spain. In 1803, this land was purchased by the
United States from France, known as the "Louisiana Purchase".
In 1805, the area known as Missouri became a part of the Territory of
Louisiana and remained so until 1812 when it was divided off and became
Missouri Territory. In 1813, Washington County was created. August 10,
1821, Missouri became the 24th State of the Union. Their
first census was taken in 1830. Few records remain regarding the time the Crow family emigrated to Missouri. Among those are minutes of the Board of Land Commissioners, which includes a list of the men in the District of Louisiana in December 1805. This roster is the nearest thing to a census and represents the entire population of the area south from St. Charles to New Madrid. Appearing on the roster were the following men named Crow:
At
2:00 AM December 16, 1811, citizens of New Madrid were awakened from
their sleep by a violence of the earth they could not understand. The
log cabins sat at the epicenter of the first of many shocks which were
to last for thirteen months and create unbelievable havoc. Eyewitness
accounts of the scene at New Madrid: "The Earth was observed to roll in waves a few feet high, with
visible depressions in between. By and by these swells burst, throwing
up large volumes of water, sand and coal. When the swells burst,
fissures were left running in a northern and southern directions, and
parallel for miles. Some were five miles long, four and one-half feet
deep and ten feet wide." The
first thing that happened in the destruction of New Madrid was when the
graveyard slid into the Mississippi River. Escarpments in firmer rock
below the soil and sand formed rapids and waterfalls in the Mississippi.
One waterfall eight miles down river could be heard from what was left
of New Madrid. The eastern bank of the Mississippi below New Madrid was
raised several feet while New Madrid and the western bank sank about 25
feet. Two
lakes were formed. Reelfoot Lake, 10-mile long, five miles wide, on the
Kentucky-Tennessee line, still has the dead hardwood tree trunks
standing where they drowned in the 1811 sinking of the land. Lake
Francis is 40 miles long and a half mile wide, and also has thousands of
tree trunks preserved in the water. Few
people were killed as there were so few living in this almost virgin
forest, in this far tip of the Louisiana Purchase. Also, if you wanted
to build a quake-proof house, a notched, horizontal log one room
enclosure would be about as good as you could figure out, if you
suddenly found the earth flouncing up and down beneath you.9 The
next year in 1812, there was a great revival of religious fervor. Maybe
it was because the people were getting more established and settled and
they wanted the steadying influence of religion, or maybe it was in
reaction to the terrible fright from the recent earthquakes. Many
traveling preachers came to the area and held camp meetings and
revivals. A man by the name of William Stevenson, who resided in and
made his living as a farmer in the Bellevue Valley, had been licensed as
a minister in Tennessee. His brother, James whose home was on the
Ouachita River in Clark County, Arkansas came to visit him.. James
lamented the lack of preaching in the wilderness and prevailed upon
William to go to Arkansas with him to see the people and preach. James
was very influential in persuading Benjamin's son John to become a
preacher. Following these religious urgings, John, returned to Kentucky
to attend a seminary. Several members of the family joined with William
Stevenson and the Methodist sect. Shortly after the Crows settled in Bellevue and established their
homes, there seemed to be conflicts over the land claims. The land
records and disputes started in 1806 and continued all the time that
they were living there.10
Benjamin must have deeded 137 acres of his grant to
his son, Robert, as Robert and his wife sold this land on January 17,
1819. Benjamin and his wife sold their land on October 18, 1818. Walter
and his wife sold their land in January 1819. On January 25, 1819,
Benjamin and his sons, Walter and Benjamin, signed as witnesses to a
Court Administration of James McLaughlin's will.11 We do find Benjamin on the 1823 and 1829 tax lists
for Arkansas. Beginning in July of 1824, Benjamin started applying for a
pension from the United States Government based on his Revolutionary War
Service. Several letters and affidavits were
sent to the War Department in Washington, D.C. In October 1829,
his application for a pension was denied because he had no written
evidence or proof of his service.12 These letters provide evidence that at this time, Benjamin was old, ill and very poor living in Antoine, Arkansas. One letter mentions that he is a member of the Methodist Church. The last known record of Benjamin is the 1830 US Census for Arkansas, Antoine Township. The census shows that the household consisted of one male, age 70-80, one female, age 70-80; and one female age 20-30. Although no specific death record has been found, it is believed that both he and Ann died and are buried in Arkansas. On August 17, 1977, approximately 145 years after
Benjamin's death, The Sons of the American Revolution placed a marker at
the intersection of Highway 26 and Christian Camp Ground Road near
Arkadelphia in Clark County Arkansas to commemorate the Revolutionary
War Service of Sgt. Benjamin Crow. The marker was placed at what is
believed to be the site of his grave.13 In
all Benjamin and Ann Gragg Crow had eleven children: 1.
Elizabeth,
born about 1782 in Virginia, married Thomas M. McLaughlin, 8 Dec 1799,
Greene County, Tennessee. 2.
Walter,
born 1782/83 in Virginia, married Margaret Hutchinson, 20 May 1801,
Greene County, Tennessee. 3.
Ann,
born about 1785 in Virginia, married James McLaughlin, 10 Jun 1801,
Greene County, Tennessee. 4.
John,
born 16 Jun 1787, in Greene County, Tennessee, married Esther Alexander,
23 Nov 1813, Bellevue, Washington, Missouri. (He took a middle name of
Finley and added an 'e' to end of his surname. 5.
Mary
called Polly, born about 1789, in Greene County, Tennessee, married
Curtis Morris, 20 Jan 1805, Ste. Genevieve District, Missouri. 6.
Lydia,
born about 1792, in Greene County, Tennessee never married. 7.
Robert,
born 22 Jun 1794, Greene County, Tennessee, married Elizabeth (Betsy)
Brown, 5 September 1817, place unknown. 8.
Benjamin,
born about 1796 in Greene County, Tennessee, married Nancy Daniels about
1816, place unknown. 9.
Nancy,
born about 1798 in Greene County, Tennessee, married Thomas Gragg, about
1822 (?), place unknown. 10.
James
Rankin, born about 1800 in Greene, Tennessee, married Hannah (?), about
1821, place unknown. 11.
Rachel,
born 19 Apr 1802 in Ste. Genevieve District, Missouri, married Samuel
Gibbins about 1820, in Arkansas. Written by Darlene Chaffin Law, 3rd great-grand daughter (8/2001) 1
History of Delaware,
1609-1888, by J. Thomas Scharf, Vol. 1 published by L. J. Richards
& Co, Philadelphia (1888), page 415; The House on the Kerby
Tract, Pgs 30, 50,58 2 Chronicles of The Scotch-Irish Settlement in Virginia Extracted from the Original Court Records of Augusta County 1745-1800, Deed Book 11, page 647, June 20/21, 1764. 3 Photocopies from National Archives, Washington, D.C. 4 Chronicles of the Scotch-Irish Settlement in Virginia, Vol. III by Chalkley, page 563 (Page 325, Augusta Court Records). 5 Photocopy of land transfer from August County Court, dated Nov 19th, 1782. 6 Rockingham County Virginia Minute Book, 1778-1792, Part I, page 174 7 Chronicles of the Scotch-Irish Settlement in Virginia, Vol. II by Chalkley, page 434 8 Early Settlers of Missouri as taken from Land Claims in the Missouri Territory, By Walter Lowrie, Editor, The American State Papers, Vol. 2, pgs 392-393; book 977.8 R2e, located in the Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah; photocopy of actual Spanish Land Grant from Microfilm #0,915,365, Grant #2118; Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah. 9 "Me and a Log Cabin Bedroom", by Sam Woolford (1972) Missouri Newspaper article sent to me with no date or name of paper. 10 First Settlers of Missouri Territory, Vol. I 11 Iron County Courthouse, Ironton, Missouri, Miscellaneous deeds, 1814-1858; Film #0,924,434 Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah 12 Photocopies of handwritten letters and affidavits from National Archives 13 Newspaper article dated August 12, 1971 from Southern Standard Newspaper, Arkadelphia, AR.
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