Capt. William Rankin Bowen

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Capt. William Rankin Bowen

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Botetourt County, Virginia
Death: December 15, 1804 (61-62)
Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, United States
Place of Burial: Sumner County, Tennessee, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of John Bowen, Sr. and Stella Lillinan Bowen
Husband of Mary Henley Bowen
Father of Tabitha Adams Moore; Col. John Henley Bowen, US Congress; Levisa Saunders; Hardin Allen Bowen; Catherine Campbell and 4 others
Brother of Ann Nancy Buchanan; Agnes Buchanan; John Washington Reece Bowen; Lt. Rees Bowen, Sr.; James Bowen and 10 others

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Capt. William Rankin Bowen

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/30630942/william-bowen

Son of John Bowen and Lily MeIlhaney, married Mary Henely Russell in 1777. Veteran of Lord Dunmore's War, French and Indian War and American Revolution. 1st Bowen in Tennessee. Brought his family to what is now Sumner County in 1784. He first built a double log cabin on the bank of Mansker's Creek before erecting a brick home in 1787. The Bowen-Campbell House is the oldest brick home in existance in Middle Tennessee, The Bowen-Campbell House located in Moss-Wright Park, Caldwell Road, Goodlettsville, Sumner, TN.

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A Patriot of the American Revolution for VIRGINIA with the rank of Captain. DAR Ancestor # A012747

14. William BOWEN was born in 1742 in Augusta, Co., Va.. He died on 15 Dec 1804 in Sumner Co., Tn.. He was buried UNKNOWN. Moved from Augusta County,Virginia to the Clinch Valley. When the Dunsmore War came went with his brothers Rees and Moses into Captain William Russell's Company in the fall of 1774 on the Lewis expediation against the Shawnee Chief Cornstalk and others to the mouth of the Kanawha River and were prominent figures in the eventful Battle of Point Pleasant. He became a Captain and in the fall of 1785 moved his family to Sumner Co.,Tn near Nashville, Tn. Capt. Virginia Rangers

He was married to Mary Henley RUSSELL in 1777 in Unknown. Mary Henley RUSSELL was born in 1760 in Unknown. She died in 1815 in Sumner Co. Tenn. William BOWEN and Mary Henley RUSSELL had the following children:

child+68 i. Tabitha BOWEN.

http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entry.php?rec=115

child+69 ii. John Henley BOWEN.

child+70 iii. Lavisa BOWEN.

child+71 iv. Catherine BOWEN.

child+72 v. William BOWEN.

child73 vi. Mary BOWEN (Died Young) was born in 1788 in Sumner Co, Tn.. She died UNKNOWN.

child+74 vii. Samuel Adams BOWEN.

child+75 viii. Celia Wilson BOWEN.


GEDCOM Note

Biography

William was born about 1742. He is the son of John Bowen and Lilly McIlhaney. <ref>Entered by Marie Mills, Oct 26, 2011</ref>

✿ Burial:

Bowen-Campbell House Cemetery Sumner County Tennessee, USA http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Bowen&GSfn=Wi...

Military 10 Oct 1774

Age: 32Battle of Point Pleasant, Commander-in-Chief, Gen. Andrew Lewis, brother of Meriwether Lewis, traveler and surveyor who with Clark explored the Northwestern portion of the country years before. "A Sketch of the Bowen Family", Wm B. Campbell, Jr Veteran of Lord Dunmore's War of 1774, the French and Indian War of 1754 to 1763, and the American Revolutionary War

Sources

<references />✿ Bowen Plantation House - http://www.cityofgoodlettsville.org/115/Bowen-Plantation-House

✿ Bowen-Campbell House http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowen-Campbell_House

The Bowen Family

Written by Jay Guy Cisco

From Historic Sumner County, Tennessee 1909 Moses Bowen and his wife, Rebecca Reece Bowen, emigrated from Wales to the American colonies in 1698 and settled in Chester County, Pennsylvania. John Bowen, their son, married Lily McIlhaney and in 1730 moved to Virginia. They had twelve children, one of whom, Captain John Bowen, was the father of Captain William Bowen, who was the first to emigrate to Tennessee. Captain William Bowen was born in Fincastle County, Virginia, then Augusta County, in 1742. He was a very active, enterprising man, and by the time he was 35 years of age he had accumulated quite a handsome estate for that day by adding to the portion given to him by his mother. He took part in the several campaigns against the French and Indians as a member of the Colonial Army of Virginia before the Revolution of 1776. He was a First Lieutenant in Captain William Russell's company in the campaign against the Shawnee and other Indian tribes in 1774, the confederation being commanded by "Cornstalk" a noted chief of the Shawnees. He was in the hotly contested battle of Point Pleasant on October 10, 1774. He was also with Captain Russell while that officer was in command of Fort Randolph, when that garrison was ordered to be disbanded by Lord Dunmore on July 1775, fearing the fort might be held by rebel authorities. Prior to this date he was with Russell's Rangers when they assisted in relieving the besieged fort at Watauga. Captain Bowen was principally engaged in the partisan warfare on the border of Virginia and Tennessee during the Revolution. He was in the cavalry service, employed in scouting and protecting the frontiers from the inroads of the British, Indians and Tories. At the termination of the long struggle for independence, he with fifteen other soldiers of the Continental army, traveled all through Kentucky and the Cumberland county, as Middle Tennessee was then called, prospecting warrants, which had been received for services I the war of independence. Captain Bowen was so pleased with the country that he located some of his land in what in now Smith County, Tennessee, but the larger portion in Sumner County, Tennessee, about twelve miles from Nashville. He moved his family from Virginia in the early autumn of 1784 to Sumner County, where he built a double log house in which he lived for two years: then built a two-story brick, which is still standing near Goodlettsville and in good preservation. Though it was built in 1787, when what is now Tennessee was part of North Carolina. It is said to have been the first brick house built in Tennessee. General Daniel Smith, his fried and fellow soldier built a stone house, known as "Rock Castle," in the same vicinity. The two sent to Lexington, KY., for stone and brick masons to erect the two houses. Captain William Bowen, in 1777 married Mary Henley Russell, daughter of General William Russell and his wife, Tabitha Adams, in Augusta County, Virginia, now Washington County, near where Abingdon now stands. He died in Sumner County on December 15, 1804. He left eight children. Tabitha married Colonel Armstead Moore of Virginia. They moved to Smith County, Tennessee, where they died, leaving eleven children.

Captain Arthur Bowen was in the Battle of King's Mountain (Roster & Soldiers Tennessee Society DAR pgs 307-308) William was ill and unable to go to King's Mountain and seen his brother Lt. Rees, who lost his life.

Moses dies at the age of 20 with smallpox during the Revolution. William, Robert, John, Arthur all were captains. Also, Reese, Henry and Charles were officers in the Revolution. Author: Jayme Hart <a href="/wiki/Bowen-958" title="Bowen-958">Bowen-958</a> and Bowen-455 appear to represent the same person because: Same parents & death info; similar birth info

GEDCOM Note

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Capt. William Rankin Bowen's Timeline

1742
1742
Botetourt County, Virginia
1778
August 22, 1778
Augusta , Tennessee, United States
1780
September 1780
Washington County, Virginia
1781
1781
Augusta County, Virginia
1782
1782
Augusta County, Virginia
1785
March 17, 1785
Gallatin, Sumner County, Tennessee
1787
1787
Gallatin, Sumner County, Tennessee
1787
Age 45
Sumner, North Carolina, United States
1790
December 25, 1790
Gallatin, Sumner County, Tennessee