Elias Powell, Jr.

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Elias Powell, Jr.

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Bromfield Parish, Culpepper, Virginia, United States
Death: May 05, 1832 (77)
Morgan, Burke, North Carolina, United States
Place of Burial: Lenoir, Caldwell County, NC, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of John Powell, of Burke County and Mary Powell
Husband of Anna Barbara Powell
Father of George Powell; Catherine Tilley and Elijah Powell
Brother of Ann Clay; Joseph Alfred Powell; Eliza Powell; John Powell; James R Powell, sr. and 7 others
Half brother of Elizabeth Blair; Mary Elizabeth Powell; Ambrose Powell; Robert William Powell, Jr and James R Powell, sr.

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Elias Powell, Jr.

Find a Grave Memorial Elias Powell

  • Elias Powell BIRTH 25 Sep 1754 Orange County, North Carolina, USA
  • DEATH 5 May 1832 (aged 77) *Lenoir, Caldwell County, North Carolina, USA
  • BURIAL Lower Creek Baptist Church Cemetery Lenoir, Caldwell County, North Carolina, USA
  • MEMORIAL ID 57059403 · .

http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/h/e/n/Elaine-Hensley/WEB...

RESEARCH NOTES by CECIL MELTON JR.

John Powell had at least 2 children out of wedlock. First was Elias born in 1669. This Elias had a son named Elias @1698, this Elias had a son named Elias. @1640, who could have served in the Revolutionary War. There are so many errors in this part of the Powell tree. Think only way of making positive sources are to use all the DNA connections.

The Powell Family, By Allan L. Poe

The most that can be said, with any certainty, about the origins of the Powells of Caldwell county, NC. is that they are of Welsh descent. (The name is a contraction of the Welsh “ap Howell—son of Howell) and that their first American ancestor migrated from Wales to the colony of Virginia in the 17th century.



“Most of the accounts represent that the British Colonel Ferguson was killed outright. He is said to have received six or eight bullet holes in his body—one penetrating his thigh, another re-shattering his right arm just above the elbow; and yet he continued to raise his sword in his left hand, till a rifle ball piercing his head, put an end to further fighting or consciousness. In falling from his horse, or while being conveyed to the rear, a silver whistle dropped from his vest pocket, which was picked up by one of his soldiers, Elias Powell.

Elias preserved it for many years; and Powell, and three others, as John Spelts relates, were seen, at the close of the surrender, bearing off, in a blanket, their fallen chief to a spring near the mountain brow, on the southern side of the elevation; and there gently bolstered him up with rocks and blankets.

Powell was one of the young men induced to enlist under Ferguson’s banner, and became much attached to his commander. He was taken prisoner to Hillsboro, where he was paroled, and returned to his widowed mother, who lived as what is known as Powellton, two miles east of Lenoir, Caldwell County, on the western frontier of North Carolina. There he lived until his death, May 5th, 1832. The silver whistle then went to one of his decedents, who removed West, and having since died, the relic has been lost sight of.

John Spelts related, that Ferguson has a yet larger silver whistle, a foot in length which fell into the hands of Colonel Shelby.

Elias was born in Culpepper, Virginia on September 26, 1754. He left Virginia and came to North Carolina with two of his brothers, William and Robert, who went on the Kentucky. Elias settled in Orange County, NC. In the summer of 1776, Elias, as on ensign, participated in the expedition to suppress Cherokee Indian uprisings on the frontier. With him was a 17 year old drummer boy, Jacob Albright, whose sister, Barbara Albright, became Elias’ wife, November 25, 1777.

About 1780, Elias and his family were among a number of settlers who moved into the frontier country in Caldwell County (then Burke). Elias built his log cabin on the site where years later stood the residence of the late “Red Pink” Puett in the Powelltown area, near Lower Creek Baptist Church.

During the battle of Kings Mountain, Elias served as General Patrick Ferguson’s aide-de-camp, supported the brave leader when he fell, and assisted in burying him. Elias kept a small silver whistle which Ferguson has blown as his raced hither and yon signaling to his men during the battle. For years the whistle was a treasured relic of the family. The member who inherited the memento took it West and all trace of it were lost.

Elias was taken prisoner after the battle. It is said he and others were brought footsore, weary, and almost famished through the area on their way to prison in Hillsboro. After his release, he returned home to become one of the most highly regarded citizens of the area. Elias and Barbara had seven children: Catherine, who married Stephen Tilley; Elizabeth, who married Isaac Harshaw; the Rev. Philip Powell, who married Elizabeth Herman; Benjamin, who married Nancy Harris; Elijah; George, and a child whose name is not known.
Submitted By: reverhar99

Family Members Spouse Anna Barbara Albright Powell 1754–1802 (m. 1777)

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/57059403/elias-powell

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Elias Powell, Jr.'s Timeline

1754
September 26, 1754
Bromfield Parish, Culpepper, Virginia, United States
1767
1767
1789
February 26, 1789
Lenoir County, North Carolina, United States
1795
February 20, 1795
Macon, Warren County, North Carolina, United States
1832
May 5, 1832
Age 77
Morgan, Burke, North Carolina, United States
????
Lower Creek Baptist Church Cemetery, Lenoir, Caldwell County, NC, United States