Follow Us
Be a Fan
| Birthdate: | |
| Birthplace: | Greensburg, Westmoreland, PA, USA |
| Death: | Died in Covington, KY, USA |
| Occupation: | Wealthy Tanner, Tanner - His leather shop, "Grant & Perkins", sold harnesses, saddles, and other leather goods and purchased hides from farmers in the prosperous Galena area., leather and hardware dealer |
| Managed by: | Arik Vladimir Russell |
| Last Updated: | |
http://presidentusgrant.com/?page_id=314
Ulysses Grant’s father
Jesse Grant (1794-1873) was born near Greensbury, Pennsylvania on the Monongahela River. He was named after Jesse Root (1736-1822) Chief Justice of the Superior Court in Connecticut, who was from Coventry, Connecticut, as was his father, Noah. After Jesse’s mother Rachel (Miller) Grant died in 1805, Jesse lived with the family of Judge George Tod. Judge Tod was Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court between 1806 and 1809.
Noah Grant (1748-1819) Jesse Grant’s father, started in the leather trade, and Jesse continued by apprenticing at a tannery owned by his paternal half-brother Peter Grant in Maysville, Kentucky.
Jesse also worked for future-abolitionist John Brown’s father, Owen Brown, in Jesse’s hometown of Deerfield, Ohio. Harold I. Gullan, in his book, Faith of Our Mothers, mentioned that Jesse Grant moved to Ravenna, Ohio “because he hated slavery” [in Kentucky]. At the same time, Owen Brown was also seen in Ravenna, Ohio. Following is a reminiscence written in Ravenna, Ohio, circa 1816.
“[South of Main Street, Ravenna, Ohio] you will see two men lifting something from a rude wagon. One of the men is a farmer and he has just sold a couple of ox hides to the other. The buyer is a sturdy looking young man of about twenty-three years; whose sleeves are rolled up, and who has on a leather apron, for he is a tanner. He will have a son after a while, however, who will carry his name ringing down the ages, for it is Jesse R. Grant, who had just gone into business with John F. Wells, on the now Gretzinger lots…. Jared Mason, who came from Beaver County, Penn., in 1810 started this tannery and did a lucrative business for three years, dying in 1813. In 1815 John F. Wells married the widow, and thus came into possession of the tannery.”
“…there comes Owen Brown the father of John Brown, of Harper’s Ferry renown. Owen Brown is, also, one of the County Commissioners, and there is going to be a meeting here to-day. Here he comes on his old bay horse along the road from Franklin…”
– History of Portage County, Ohio, 1885.
Jesse Grant, 23, co-owned a tannery in Ravenna and shipped the leather to what would become his future home at Point Pleasant, Ohio.*
In 1820 Jesse moved to Point Pleasant and set up the same business at a tannery, next to his cabin. The above picture of the Point Pleasant tannery was taken years about 70 years after Grant family left Point Pleasant. Since then, the stone foundation became a foundation for the Point Pleasant church.
In 1821 Jesse married Hannah Simpson, and in 1822, their first child, Ulysses was born.
Their cabin was near the banks of the Ohio River and the mouth of Big Indian Creek.
By October 1823 Jesse had saved $1100.00 to start his own tannery, and the Grant family moved to Georgetown, Ohio for that purpose. Georgetown, about 22 miles east from Point Pleasant, was 8 miles from the Ohio river, near White Oak Creek.
In Georgetown Jesse’s industry, wealth and family increased. He worked as a tanner, butcher, hauler, builder (he built the town jail), and he owned a carriage-service and two small farms.
† tmsociety.org
††Grant, By William S. McFeely, 2002
☼ Richardson, Albert G. Personal History of U. S. Grant American Publishing Co. 1868, pg.69
☼☼ The Biographical Encyclopedia of Ohio of the Nineteenth-Century Cincinnati: Galaxy Publishing Co., 1876.
…………………………
Peter Grant of Maysville, Kentucky
Jesses Grant’s half-brother, Ulysses Grant’s uncle
Peter Grant (1781-1829) and his older brother, Solomon (c. 1779-1798+) were born to Noah and Anna (Buell) Grant in Coventry, Connecticut. Noah fought in the Revolutionary War, and returned to find that his wife died c. 1787-1789. Solomon remained in Coventry with his grandfather Buell. Solomon was well-educated there, and at 20 year of age went to the island of Demerara as overseer on a sugar plantation. Solomon wasn’t heard from again, and presumed to have died by 1798.
Peter traveled with his father, Noah, to Greensburg, Pennsylvania, and his father remarried there in 1792. There were four more children added to the family, including Jesse Grant (Ulysses’s father) in 1794. After nine years near Greensburg, the family moved West via the Monongahela and Ohio Rivers to towns in Ohio (see Google map).
In 1806, after his step-mother Rachel (Kelly) Grant died, the family dispersed, and Peter Grant settled in Maysville, Kentucky, marrying Permelia Bane in 1807. Peter was industrious, owning Armstrong, Grant & Co. salt manufacturer, a tannery, and a mine. Peter and Permelia had nine or ten children. The first child was born in 1808 and the last in 1829, the year of Peter Grant’s drowning.
Peter’s father, Noah Grant, and the two youngest children lived with Peter in Maysville from 1811 to his death in 1819. His half-brother, Jesse Grant (Ulysses’s father) apprenticed in Peter’s tannery from 1812 to circa 1814.
Peter was good friends with antislavery leader, John Rankin, as described by Rankin’s son: ” [John Rankin] had…several warm antislavery friends in Maysville, among them were…Mr. Grant, an uncle of Gen. U. S. Grant.” †
Peter died on 10 Jan (1825?) 1829 by drowning where the Ohio River meets its tributary, the Kanawha River at Point Pleasant, West Virginia. He may have been visiting his sister Rachel, who married William Tompkins, and lived in Charleston, West Virginia on the Kanawha River. Ulysses was only seven when his uncle Peter Grant died.
Ulysses’s cousins later favored the Confederates, and lost much of their property in the Civil War.
Peter Grant went early to Maysville, Kentucky, where he was very prosperous, married, had a family of nine children, and was drowned at the mouth of the Kanawha River, Virginia, in 1825, being at the time one of the wealthy men of the West.
–Memoirs, by Ulysses S. Grant, 1885
| 1794 |
January 23, 1794
|
Greensburg, Westmoreland, PA, USA
|
|
| 1821 |
June 25, 1821
Age 27
|
Point Pleasant, Clermont, Ohio
|
|
| 1822 |
April 27, 1822
Age 28
|
Point Pleasant, OH, USA
|
|
| 1825 |
September 23, 1825
Age 31
|
Georgetown, Brown, Ohio, United States
|
|
| 1828 |
December 11, 1828
Age 34
|
Georgetown, Brown, Ohio, United States
|
|
| 1832 |
February 20, 1832
Age 38
|
Georgetown, Brown, Ohio, United States
|
|
| 1835 |
May 15, 1835
Age 41
|
Georgetown, Brown, Ohio, United States
|
|
| 1839 |
July 29, 1839
Age 45
|
Either in Georgetown, Brown Co., OH, or Bethel, Clermont Co., OH
|
|
| 1873 |
June 29, 1873
Age 79
|
Covington, KY, USA
|
|
| ???? |
|