NOTE: Since this article was written it
has
been established that Winney Clayton Kilgore was NOT
married to Charles
Kilgore, but was the wife of his brother, Robert
Kilgore, killed by the
Indians in 1782.
Rev. Robert Kilgore,
affectionately
known as Robin, married Mrs. Jane Porter Green in
1785. She was the
daughter
of Patrick Porter who lived on Fall Creek (near
present Dungannon) and
built a fort and a grist mill there. She was the widow
of James Green
who
was killed by Indians December 31, 1782. (1)
A traditional story
has
come down to us concerning this Indian killing, but
now we know it is
partially
untrue. Here is the story as related in the History of
Scott County:
"In
March 1783 Charles Kilgore, James Green, and a man by
the name of
McKinney
left Fort Blackmore and went to the Pound River (in
present Wise
County)
to hunt, and while there they were surprised by
Indians, and Charles
Kilgore,
and James Green were killed. McKinney made his escape
and returned to
the
fort. A search party led by McKinney found the bodies
of Kilgore and
Green,
and buried them in the hollow of a large chestnut tree
on the north
bank
of the Pound River, a short distance above the mouth
of Indian Creek."
(2)
Further proof of
James
Green's death at the time cited above is an entry in
the court records
of Washington County, Virginia, July 15, 1783: "On
motion of Patrick
Porter
(James' father-in-law) administration is granted him
on the estate of
James
Green deceased who made oath thereto and entered into
and acknowledged
his bond with Samuel Ritchie and John Martin his
securities in the sum
of one hundred pounds for the faithful administration
of the said
decedent's
estate." (3)
But nowhere in these
records
do we have notice of Charles Kilgore's having been
killed by Indians.
To
the contrary we have explicit proof that he lived long
after James
Green's
massacre by the Indians. His Revolutionary War pension
statement is
proof
of this.
"January 30, 1929
Mr. Hugh M. Addington
Nickelsville, Virginia
Sir
I advise you the
Revolutionary War
record
of this bureau shows that Charles Kilgore served in
Captain James
Dysart's
Company in Colonel William Campbell's Virginia
Regiment during the
Revolution.
He was pensioned from April 28, 1809 on
account
of disability incurred in service.
In May 1820 he was living in Green
County,
Tennessee.
Respectfully,
Winfield Scott, Commissioner." (4)
The fact that
Charles Kilgore's
name was not on the 1783 Washington County taxable
list but his wife's
name Winnie was (error: Winnie was married to Robert
Kilgore, brother
of
Charles), can easily lead one to believe that Charles
was actually
killed
by Indians immediately prior to this date: however,
one must take into
consideration that Charles could have been away from
home and the
matter
of making a tax report fell to his wife. Jane Porter
Green's name also
appears on this list but this is understandable since
we know her
husband
James had been killed by Indians.
By why was not
Charles
at his home on Fall Creek (near present Dungannon) to
take care of the
tax report of that year?
A good guess is that
he
was in Green County, North Carolina (now Tennessee)
for his pension
statement
in the archives at Washington, D. C. shows, according
to a copy in the
hands of this writer, that it was written near
Greenville, Tennessee to
suffice for a previous statement which had been
destroyed by a War
Department
fire in 1814. According to the records he was still
receiving a pension
in 1820. The book "King's Mountain Men" by White, page
197 states:
"Charles
Kilgore was a private under Campbell, and was wounded.
In the pension
list
of Green County, Tennessee, in 1820, he is named as an
invalid with an
allowance of $48 per year."
Since the 1820
pension
payment was the last one made it seems safe to assume
that Charles died
about that time. Some genealogists place his death in
the year 1823
because
in the archives of the Green County Court is a will
made in the year
1822
by one Charles Kilgore. This will (examined by this
writer) leaves
legacies
to sons John M. and James M. which led Hugh M.
Addington, author of
"Charles
Kilgore of King's Mountain" to conclude that Charles
had married in
Tennessee
after his first wife's death (Winnie Clayton). (Error:
Winnie Clayton
was
the wife of Robert Kilgore).
But an examination
of
the book "Virginia Soldiers of the Revolution", by
Burgess shows
clearly
that the will was made by a different Charles Kilgore.
Even his name
had
a middle initial J. Therefore, this eliminates
Washington County
Charles'
second family.
But what happened to
his
real family? We know that Charles, Jr. the eldest son,
moved from the
Fall
Creek area of Russell County, (formerly Washington
County, later Scott
County), to Green County, Tennessee in 1787. It is
logical to conclude
that the father Charles, Sr., went with him or even
preceded him since
he didn't make a tax report in 1783, but left it to
Winnie, his wife.
Neither
he nor Winnie is on the Virginia 1784 tax report.
So, what happened to
Winnie
and the 400 acre farm Charles owned on Fall Creek?
Hugh M. Addington in
his book, "Charles Kilgore of King's Mountain" says
Winnie died in
1784.
He does not document the statement. Where did she die?
In the bounds of
present Scott County (Virginia) or Green County,
Tennessee? From
Charles,
Jr.'s pension statement we learn that Charles, Jr.
moved from Green
County
into South Carolina, thence back to Virginia.
According to his pension
statement he was born in Orange County, North
Carolina, which means, of
course, that most of Charles, Sr.'s children were born
in Orange
County,
North Carolina. Charles, Sr. took up 400 acres of land
on Fall Creek in
1773.
It seems that all of
Charles,
Sr.'s children, except Charles, Jr., remained in the
bounds of present
Scott County, since they are known to have married and
reared families
here.
Robert Kilgore
married
Jane Porter Green in 1785 (5) and began to look for a
place to call
home
for her and her son James Green, Jr., born February
12, 1783. (6)
As a girl Jane
had
lived in her father's forthouse called Porter's Fort,
situated about a
mile up from the mouth of Fall Creek, on the western
side.
Therefore it is
likely
that Jane, having lived during her girlhood in the
Porter forthouse and
since her husband James Green had been killed by
Indians, insisted that
her new home be a forthouse.
And that is
what
Robert Kilgore did, build a forthouse. He built it
near Copper Creek
one
and a half miles southwest of a cluster of houses
which later, with
coming
of James Nickels from Tazewell County, became known as
Nickelsville. (7)
This house was built
in
the year 1786 (8) of hewn logs and the cracks between
them chinked with
limestone. In case of Indian attack the inmates could
go upstairs, and
let down a trap door over the stairway. Three port
holes, one in the
west
end and one in each side, made it possible to shoot
out at Indians
should
any ever appear.
It is said that the
house
was never attacked, however a band of Shawnees camped
for a short while
on the cliff tops to the south.
Over the years the
house
deteriorated. So long as a roof was kept on it the
interior remained in
fairly good condition, but of recent years the roof
was neglected and
the
whole structure rapidly went to ruin. The big chimney
began to slump
and
shatter.
Then fortunately the
Scott
County government secured funds to restore it to its
original condition.
Now we come to Rev.
Robert
Kilgore, the builder of the forthouse. There is a
mystery about his
ancestry,
which came to light only recently.
In his book,
"Charles
Kilgore of King's Mountain", Hugh M. Addington placed
Robert in
Charles,
Sr.'s list of children as number two. But Robert, Jr.,
who lived in the
forthouse with his father, went to Gate City upon his
father's death
and
in the courthouse entered in the death register the
following:
"Rev. Robert
Kilgore,
age 88, died May 29, 1854. Residence: Copper Creek,
Place of Birth:
unknown;
Parents: Robert and Milly Kilgore. Reported by his son
Robert Kilgore,
Jr."
This leads us
to
believe that Rev. Robert was not the son of Charles,
Sr., as has been
assumed,
but instead the son of Robert, who was a brother of
Charles.
This we know about
the
elder Robert; he acquired 41 acres of land near Clinch
River in 1772
and
settled on it. (9) It was probably in the Fall Creek
area where a year
later his brother Charles settled.
It seems quite
logical
for us to believe that Robert, Jr., or may we say
Robert III who made
the
death entry would surely have known his grandfather's
and grandmother's
names. Had they been Charles and Winnie he would have
said so.
The last time we
find
Robert the settler's name in print is on the Virginia
tax report 1782.
But after that he vanishes.
Could it be possible
that
he went with his brother Charles into North Carolina
(now Tennessee)?
Rev. Robert Kilgore
of
the forthouse was known far beyond his residence as a
minister in the
Regular
Baptist church. He began his ministry at the Regular
Primitive Baptist
Church on Copper Creek two miles east of Nickelsville
where he was one
of the original members. (10) At that time the
meetings were held in
dwelling
houses and sometimes in the Good Intent schoolhouse.
It was here that
Rev.
Robin was ordained to preach April 16, 1808. (11)
Later he often held
services
at the forthouse. It was here between the dates of
1815 and 1853 that
he
performed wedding ceremonies for 285 couples. (12)
And here at
his
beloved forthouse he died May 29, 1854. His wife Jane
Porter Green had
preceded him in death by 12 years. (14) They were
buried in the
Nickelsville
Cemetery. An emblem on Rev. Robin's stone shows he was
a mason. In all
probability he first joined the masons at a lodge held
in the loft of
the
old grist mill on Fall Creek, for as a young man he
lived in that
vicinity.
FOOTNOTES:
(1) In the Russell County, Virginia
courthouse,
order book No. 3, page 266. Entered 1803. Ordered to
be certified to
the
registrar of the land office that it is proved by this
court that James
Green who is the son and heir at law of James Green
who was killed by
the
savages December 31, 1782 and that said James Green
the younger was
born
February 12, 1783.
(2) Addington, R. M., History of Scott
County,
Virginia, p. 303.
(3) Summers, Lew, Annals of Southwest
Virginia,
p. 1155.
(4) Charles Kilgore pension statement,
number
S699
(5) Addington, H. M., Charles Kilgore
of
King's Mountain, p. 141.
(6) Russell County, Virginia, Order
Book
No. 3, p. 266.
(7) Addington, H. M. op. Cit., p. 41
(8)
ibid, p. 141
(9) Summers, Louis, op. Cit., p.
1225
(10) Copy of original Copper Creek
Primitive
Baptist minute book, p. 1, Date 1807.
(11) Ibid, p. 2
(12) Addington, H. M., op. Cit., p.
142
(13) Robert Kilgore, Jr.'s statement in
death
register at Gate City.
(14) Addington, H. M., op. Cit., p. 18
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