Samuel Ritchie of
Scott County,
Virginia
By Emory L. Hamilton
The family
of Alexander
Ritchie, Sr., moved from Prince Edward County,
Virginia, out of
Cassel's
Woods, on the Virginia frontier, sometime shortly
after 1770, when the
area was still Botetourt County. By 1772, they had
moved down on Clinch
River and settled on the southside thereof at a place
which later
became the William Gray farm, near the
present
Gray's Island of Clinch River. Here they built a log
home known as
Ritchie's
Fort. The home was likely only a strongly built log
house with
portholes
for defense, commonly called a "Fort House." I can
find no evidence
that
it was ever a stockaded fort, although it may
have been.
All this family, except Samuel, later
left
Scott County, and it is very probable that some of
the family,
especially
some of the sisters, remained in Prince Edward
County and did not move
with the family to the frontier.
Samuel served 17 days and 99 days under
Captain
Russell in 1774 in the militia on the frontier. His
brother, Alexander
Ritchie, Jr., who later settled in Hawkins County,
Tennessee, did
extensive
service as an Indian Scout on the frontier.
Alexander enlisted at
Blackmore's
Fort in 1776 when he was only twelve years old, and
served
intermittently
on tours of duty until after the Revolutionary War.
Samuel Ritchie married, probably around
1790-91,
Ann, the daughter of Patrick and Susanna Walker
Porter of Porter's
Fort,
who lived about three miles from Ritchie's Fort.
This marriage ended up
on "the rocks," for on October 10, 1782, Samuel
appeared in the Russell
County court and asked for an annulment
of his marriage on two counts of
infidelity.
No record has ever been found that the court ever
acted upon the
request.
However, notwithstanding the fact that he divorced
in 1797, Samuel took
the "common law." His wife, Frances Kindrick, was
the daughter of
Patrick
Kindrick. He had no children by his legal wife,
Ann Porter, but had one son and five
daughters
by Frances Kindrick.
Despite the fact that Samuel was living
in
adultry, it did not seem to affect his career
greatly. He seems to have
been highly respected in the Scott County of his
day; and from the
appraisal
of his estate, one could say that he was a "good
liver" in worldly
means.
He was one of the Commissioners to select a site for
the
county seat when Scott County was
formed
in 1814. He was a Magistrate and presided over the
first court held and
signed the records as Chairman of the Board of
Magistrates. Prior to
1870,
county courts were constituted by the Board of
Magistrates after the
manner
of the Old English Quarter Sessions, a magistrate
being elected by the Board for each
court
session who was called a Presiding Justice, who
signed the court
records
in the same capacity as does a Judge today. At the
time of his death he
was Overseer of the Poor for the North District, and
his name appears
on
many legal papers in Scott County.
In order to prevent his wife, Ann
Porter
Ritchie who was still living in the neighborhood,
from getting any of
his
property, he gave to his son, Samuel, Jr., a tract
of land and a Negro
slave named Jacob. The son, Samuel, was "harrassed
and embarrassed" by
the Sheriff, so that the elder Samuel, during the
absence
in West Tennessee of his son, Samuel,
Jr.,
went to the Court of Scott County, and he, the elder
Samuel, being the
Senior Justice of the court, found that the Clerk,
John Henry, being
young
and inexperienced, had entered, but not registered
the deed. Old Samuel
got back the deed, lined through the entry in the
deed book,
but did not obliterate it. He then
destroyed
the deed and had, through his influence as senior
Justice, the court
annul
the deed.
Samuel, Jr. was much disturbed by this
and
vowed he would never relinquish the property. The
old man tried to
convince
him that if he tried to hold on to it, he would only
be harrassed by
the
Sheriff and promised he could have it by a later
will. The reason for
the
harrassment by the Sheriff was that Samuel,
Jr., owed five hundred dollars to James
Albert,
and Albert had assigned the debt to William H.
Kendall (Samuel's
brother-in-law),
and Kendall was trying to collect the debt.
Once the elder Samuel was very sick and
thought
he was going to die, he made the above deed in
haste; but when he got
better,
he got the deed back and made a regular will. The
children of Samuel
must
have been a greedy lot, for the first will did not
suit all of the
children.
In fact, he said his children would not let
him die in peace because of making
wills.
Finally, on the afternoon of December 16, 1818 (the
same day Samuel
died),
a will was made to suit young Samuel. About six
months later, Samuel,
Jr.,
died in West Tennessee, unmarried and without heirs.
His mother,
Frances
Kindrick, had gotten hold of his land and sold
it to her son-in-law, John Kindrick.
The
other son-in-law, William H. Kendall, who had gotten
from James Albert
the five hundred dollar debt against young Samuel
Ritchie, was trying
to
collect and brought suit charging some "hocus pocus"
was going on.
On June 10, 1819, Ann Porter Ritchie,
listed
as the "widow of Samuel Ritchie, deceased," made a
deed to the children
of Samuel Ritchie that he had by Frances Kindrick of
her dower in his
estate.
In 1818, the year of his death, Samuel
Ritchie,
Sr., was taxed for three tracts of land, all on
Clinch River, of 190,
120
and 32 acres. In his will, (Book 1, page 117) he
directs his executors
to sell the 120 and 32 acre tracts, his personal
property, and five
Negro
slaves to pay his personal debts, etc. He further
disposes of his
property
as follows:
"To the heirs
of
my brother, John Ritchie, deceased, $4
To the heirs
of
my brother, Alexander Ritchie, deceased, $4
To the heirs
of
my brother, James Ritchie, deceased $4
To the heirs
of
William Crockett and my sister Agness, both deceased
$4 (This couple
were
married in Prince Edward County, VA in 1760)
To the heirs
of
John Simpson and my sister, Catherine, his wife,
both deceased $4.
To the heirs
of
Thomas Rice and my sister, Mary, his wife, both
deceased $4
To my sister,
Susanna
Ritchie and her heirs, $4
To my friend,
Frances
Kindrick, the tract of land whereon I now live of
290 acres; also $200;
also 1/6 of my estate.
To my
daughter,
Jane Lowe, after deducting $200, 1/6 of my estate,
To each of his
daughters,
Susanna, Mary (Polly), Frances Adeline, and Rachel
Ritchie, he leaves
1/6
of his estate. Witness to the will were William
Wallace, James Albert
and
J. L. Culbertson. The appraisement of the estate was
dated January 23,
1819, and included five slaves, law books, Bible,
dictionary, and other
items to the value of $2,825.75.
The children
of
Samuel Ritchie and Frances Kindrick were:
1.
Samuel
Ritchie, Jr., died unmarried
2.
Jane
Ritchie married Isaac Lowe
3.
Susanna
Ritchie, married William H. Kendall
4.
Mary
(Polly) Ritchie m. John Kindrick
5.
Frances
Adeline Ritchie m. John R. Porter
6.
Rachel
Ritchie m. Henry Salling
There is also an interesting story of
Samuel's
son-in-law, Isaac Lowe, was not Isaac Lowe at all,
but really John L.
Elliott,
born in Kentucky, September 30, 1794, and said to
have been the son of
by descendants James and Hanna Scott Elliott. When a
young boy, he ran
away from his home in Bath County, Kentucky, and
went to that part of
Russell
County which later became Scott County, and changed
his name to Isaac
Lowe,
so as to avoid being found. We find him, along with
Samuel Ritchie,
Jr.,
James Cocke, and John Dunkin, on a "good behavior"
bond in Russell
County,
Virginia, February 24, 1795. Isaac and Jane lived in
Scott County,
Virginia
until 1823, when they moved to Morgan County,
Kentucky.
He also appears on personal property
tax
lists through 1822. They lived on a tract of 240
acres of land they had
bought on July 29, 1816, from John and Mary Alley.
The latter having
moved
sometime earlier to Franklin County, Indiana.
By the 1820 census of Scott County,
Isaac
and Jane were the parents of four sons, all under
the age of 10 years.
One of these sons was Ephraim Blane Elliott, born
about 1829-30.
Another
was Judge John M. Elliott, probably the same for
whom Elliott County,
Kentucky,
was named.
While living in Russell County (now
Scott),
Isaac Lowe, on the 13th of September, 1814, along
with many others,
entered
the War of 1812, at Dickensonville, Virginia. They
marched away to
Norfolk,
Virginia, where they arrived one month later. They
left under the
command
of First Lieutenant Andrew Caldwell, Third
Lieutenant Hiram Kilgore and
Ensigns John Bickley and William D. Haft. At
Norfolk, they became a
part
of the Fourth Virginia Regiment of Militia, under
General Taylor and
Lieutenant
Colonel Koontz, and Isaac Lowe was appointed Fourth
Corporal.
At Norfolk many of the men were put to
work
building barracks, among whom was Isaac Lowe. A log
fell on his leg,
breaking
it some two or three inches above the ankle and he
was subsequently
discharged
on March 12, 1814.
After his return to Kentucky and the
resumption
of his true name, John L. Elliott, he started to
accumulate property.
In
1825, he was appointed Deputy Surveyor of Morgan
County. In 1829, he
was
taxed for three tracts of land of 200, 400 and 1,430
acres. Each years
afterwards his acreages increased. He appears on the
1830 census of
Morgan
County and on the 1840 and 1850 census of Carter
County. He died in
October,
1855.
Amended
Pension
Statement of Alexander Ritchie, Jr.
R-8784
State of Tennessee
Claiborne
County
First
Judicial Circuit 1886, April the 26th
Present the
Honorable
Samuel Powell, Judge. Then personally appeared before
the said court
Alexander
Ritchie, Jr., and made this amendment to his
declaration originally
filed
at Washington for the purpose of drawing a pension
according to the
benefits
offered by the Act of Congress passed the 7th of June
1832.
Deposeth and
sayeth
that he entered the army of the United States under
the following
officers
and served as herein stated.
That he resided in the county of
Fincastle,
now Russell, in the state of Virginia, and in the
month of April, 1776,
he entered the service of the United States under the
command of
Captain
martin from Henry County in the state of Virginia.
Captain Martin was
sent
out to defend the Western Frontiers and he enlisted
under him in the
said
month of April for the term of six months in the cause
of his country.
He states that the term of service was not an
enrollment, but that he
enlisted
and was excepted to (sic) by the commanding officer.
The services that
this applicant performed was in about every two weeks,
ranging the
mountains
in pursuit of the Indians and the reasons that this
applicant was
excepted
(sic) of at such a tender age was that the frontiers
were in danger and
that the men were scarce and he therefore offered
himself to the
service
of his country and that by the consent of his father
and after his term
of service expired this applicant was discharged.
And this applicant begs leave further
to
state that in the month of April in the year of 1777
that he still
resided
in the county of Fincastle in the state of Virginia
and that he again
voluntarily
enlisted under Captain Gipson (sic) in the cause of
his country for the
term of six months to guard Blackmore's Fort in what
is now Scott
County
in said State and he served out the whole term for
which he was
enlisted
and the order of the Captain under whose command he
was to range the
mountains
in pursuit of the Indians every two weeks which this
applicant
performed
in good faith to his country; after his term of
service expired, he
received
his discharge which is lost or mislaid so that he
cannot produce the
same.
This applicant further states that sometime in the
month of April,
1778,
that he then resided in the county of Fincastle, in
the state of
Virginia,
and that he again voluntarily enlisted himself in
the cause of his
country
under the command of the above named Captain Gipson
and they who was
forted
at that place. (I mean Blackmore's Station or Fort).
This applicant
most
positively states that he did perform the duties
assigned him as a
soldier
and that he spied through the whole country for many
miles around the
fort
until his term of service expired and applicant
states that he then
received
his discharge. He states that during the last
aforementioned campaign
or
tour of duty that they had one engagement with the
Indians. This
applicant
states that he moved with his father from the Fort
in the fall of 1778
to his father's plantation where he continued to
live until the 12th of
March the next ensuing and early in the morning of
the 12th the news
reached
this applicant that the Indians had broke out and
had killed six
persons
belonging to the family of a man by the name of
Phillips. He then moved
to Duncan's Fort where he remained until the month
of April in said
year
of 1779, when this applicant again enlisted in the
cause of his country
under Captain John Snoddy for the term of six months
and said applicant
states most positively that he did serve in the army
of the United
States
for the term of six months; and after his term of
service had expired,
he received his discharge, which said discharge is
lost or mislaid so
that
he cannot produce the same. He states that during
the last above
mentioned
tour of duty that they had no general engagement
with the Indians. He
sates
that all of the services that he rendered the
country as above
described
was as a private, and the said applicant begs leave
further to state
that
in the month of April in 1780 that he again enlisted
in the service of
his country under the aforesaid Captain Snoddy for
the term of six
months
for the purpose of guarding Dunkin's Fort in the
same country as
aforementioned;
and this applicant ranged the mountains in pursuit
of the Indians
according
to the orders of the Captain under whom he entered
and said applicant
states
most positively that he had many hard and dangerous
trips after the
enemy
during the said tour of duty but that they had no
general engagement
with
the enemy. He states that his servitude in the
campaign was entirely
devoted
to the defense of the west and states that he did
actually serve out
that
in actual serve the aforementioned term of six
months in the cause of
his
country. The applicant states that he was a private
when he rendered
the
service as described in the year of 1780, after his
term of service had
expired he received his discharge from Captain
Snoddy which said
discharge
was lost or mislaid so that he cannot now produce
the same.
And this applicant
begs
further leave to represent to the department that
sometime in the month
of January, 1786, that this applicant then received
an appointment as
one
of the Indian spies from Colonel Henry smith of
Russell County,
Virginia,
and he spied through the Kentucky and Cumberland
Mountains and also in
the Sandy Mountains, which is situated in the State
of Kentucky. This
applicant
states most positively that he did serve for the
term of nine months as
one of the Indian spys; and said applicant states
that John Alley, who
was likewise a spy, spied with him. He states that
he and Alley left
Dunkins
Fort on every Monday morning, packed their
provisions on their backs,
and
ranged through all the above named mountains once in
every week; that
is
to say, that left the Fort on Monday and returned to
it again of the
Sunday
thence next ensuing, and this they continued to do
for the term of nine
months, commencing on the first day of February,
1786, and then his
term
of service for which he was appointed expired. This
applicant states
most
positively that he did serve as an Indian spy on the
frontiers of
Virginia
for the aforesaid term of nine months.
Signed:
Alexander
Ritchie, Junior
Be it remembered
that a
Circuit Court of Law continued and held for the county
aforesaid in the
State aforesaid at the Courthouse in Tazewell, by and
before the
Honorable
Samuel Powell, Judge, thereof assigned and
commissioned to hold said
court,
the same being a court of Record, and having the power
of fine and
imprisonment
upon the 26th day of April, 1836, came into the said
court Alexander
Ritchie,
Junior, who hath subscribed the foregoing declaration
and being sworn
upon
the Holy Evangelist of Almighty God, saith that the
matter an
____________
(illegible) therein set forth therein are true.
In testimony
whereof
I, Lewis A. Garrett, Clerk of said court have herewith
set my hand and
seal of office, at office in Tazewell the 26th day of
April 1836.
Lewis A.
Garrett,
Clerk
State of Tennessee
Grainger County
This 22nd day
of
March, 1841, Alexander Ritchie, a resident of
Claiborne County and
State
aforesaid, personally appeared before me, Jessee F.
Beeler, a Justice
of
the Peace for this county, and made oath in due form
of law that the
facts
contained in the following amended declaration for a
pension are true,
viz: states that he entered the service under Col.
Christian in the
year
1776, under Captain Joseph Martin, formerly from
Henry County, State of
Virginia. He was entered in Washington County this
tour of six months
service,
was under the authority of the State of Virginia and
the State of North
Carolina, and served his time out; and another fact,
there was an
agreement
between Col. Christian and the Cherokees that a
treaty of peace should
be made the spring following: but the leading chief,
Dragging Canoe,
under
the influence of Cameron, the British agent, kept up
their warfare in
small
parties and was constantly killing, more or less the
white people,
which
rendered it necessary to keep up the line of forts
all along the
frontiers
and spys when we were embodied and regular spys were
appointed. Myself
and Elisha Wallen was two that reconnoitered from
Blackmore's Fort,
Castlewoods,
and on to the Clinch and Holston River. In 1778, the
whole frontier was
harrassed by Dragging Canoe and his party, and they
were again called
out
in the spring of the year for a six-month and served
in and took the
appointment
of Spy again until the breaking up of winter of
1779. He was then
enrolled
under Col. Evan Shelby of twelve-months men;
Dragging Canoe, having
increased
his strength to 12 or 1,300 men, was doing mischief
all along the line
from Georgia to the State of Pennsylvania. This tour
of service (he had
forgotten if it were more than six months, as they
were retained in
actual
service only six months), but they now took the
place of spys again
after
Dragging Canoe and his party were driven to the
mouth of Big Creek -
where
Rogersville now stands. Col. John Montgomery had the
command in this
affair.
About 40 Indians were killed, having on the approach
of their force
retreated.
This twelve-month tour was under the authority of
the state of Virginia
and North Carolina and he expected there was an act
passed by
Legislature
for that purpose. He knew they were ordered by the
Governor through
General
Campbell who issued all the orders by the Governor
to the frontier line
under field officers and to the brigade. A thousand
men were called out
this last tour, which was one of the great
hardships; and in the latter
part of the summer, a treaty was concluded. In
August, and even after
that
until the latter part of the year. 1781, they were
continued in service
either as spies, militia or volunteers. Col. Shelby,
Col. Christian and
Col. Avery of North Carolina was some of the
commanders that treated
for
peace with the Indians. There are many particulars
that from age and
forgetfulness
had escaped his memory, but these facts taken in
connection with his
former
declaration filed with the suspended cases and the
undisputed testimony
of William Condray and Elisha Wallen, his
contemporaries through the
service,
and this explanation to the facts of the service
commanders and orders
to Shelby and Christian and the treaties of peace.
All of these things
must be known to the department, must place his case
beyond any doubts
and must now feel satisfied with the additional
testimony sent on with
this amended declaration. There must be a favorable
decision now after
the facts laid before the board, the hardships he
suffered, the
starvation
through wet and cold, and all the privation that
human flesh is able to
bear - shall he be denied the scanty pittance that
Congress had made
provisions
for him to receive for his five years suffering? He
thinks not. He
would
only request that his case have a dispatchable
examination. He might
refer
to many other circumstances of his service during
this five years and
many
hardships after the year 1781, in excursions after
the Cherokees under
Col. Sevier and until 1787 or 1788, and his
contemporaries William
Condray,
Elisha Wallen, William Steward, and others that
waded through blood for
many years for the protection and settlements of the
frontier.
In conclusion he now states that this
amended
declaration taken in connection with his former
declaration and this
deposition
now sent on, will, he is in hopes, make every part
of his case plain
from
the great length of time since these events
transpired and his great
age.
There are many little circumstances and perhaps some
important ones
that
has escaped his memory which in some points might
seem clothed in some
mystery, but feels that on careful examination will
be found that most
matured facts are all stated and by reference to the
first declaration,
comparing dates will be found generally correct. He
has no memorandum
or
records in his possession and has stated all from
memory and frail as
before
stated. Dr. Alfred Noel is his agent to transact
this business and
corresponds
for him and will attend to getting his certificate
if allowed and prays
to be placed on the Revolutionary pension roll
according to his service.
Sworn and
subscribed
this day and year first above written.
Alexander
Ritchie
Jessee F. Beeler
Justice of the Peace for Grainger County
And I Jessee
F.
Beeler, one of the Justice of the Peace for the said
County, do certify
that the foregoing amended declaration was sworn and
subscribed to in
my
presence in due form of law and that the facts
stated upon his
knowledge
he knows to be true and these found in this
information of others he
believes
to
be true.
Jessee F.
Beeler
J. P. for
Grainger
County
Historical Sketches of Southwest
Virginia,
published by The Historical Society of Southwest
Virginia, Publication
12 - 1978, page 21 to 27
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