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A Patriot of the American Revolution for PENNSYLVANIA with the rank of Major. DAR Ancestor # A116343
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Christopher Truby was a civil officer, and Captain of Westmoreland Co., Pennsylvania Militia in the Revolutionary War.
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Text provided by Sharon Keith Brown Hamilton (Sept. 9, 2018):
Served as Captain of Militia and with him was his son Micahel as a drummer. He gave valuable civil service in Westmoreland County, as Judge of Common Pleas. They moved west prior to the Revolutionary War to near present Greensburg, Westmoreland Co. He was at Braddock's defeat near present Pittsburgh and a few years later brought his family to Hannastown, later giving land for present day Greensburg. Interred originally at the Greensburg Cemetery, they and their stones were later removed to Zion Lutheran Church in Greensburg with the head stones embedded in the church walls.
He was born in 1736, and settled on land which is now part of the site of Greensburg, Westmoreland (then Bedford) County, about 1771. Commissioner for Westmoreland County in 1774, and justice of the peace June 11, that year. On Aug. 18, 1784, he was reelected justice of the peace and judge of the court of Common Pleas of the county. He owned a blockhouse or fort upon his property in Hempfield Township, Westmoreland County, which was a place of refuge for the early settlers. He built the first courthouse at Greensburg.
During the Revolutionary war he was extremely active in the Colonial cause. In February, 1778, he was a captain of the Westmoreland County militia. Michael (who was an early settler of Kittanning, Armstrong county) acting as drummer whenever the company was called into service. In 1790 Christopher Truby served as lieutenant colonel in General Harmar's campaign against the Indians, he and Maj. James Paull commanding the battalion of Pennsylvania militia. A letter from the war department, Washington, D. C., to Miss Elizabeth R. Robinson, Nov. 11, 1903, shows the following: "Christopher Turby served as a member of Colonel Barr's Detachment of Pennsylvania Militia, Revolutionary war (rank not stated), which was ordered out on an expedition to the Indian country by Bridadier General Hand, commanded by Col. Alexander Barr.
His name appears on a general pay abstract of the detachment. This abstract, dated March 9, 1778, shows the soldiers in service from Feb. 10, 1778, to March 8, 1778."
Christopher Truby died Feb. 20, 1802, and was buried in the German Cemetery at Greensburg. His name appears with those of William Findley, John Kirkpatrick, Frederick Rohrer, Dr. Simeon Hovey, James Hill, and others, as supporters of the government and George Washington, in a petition dated 1794 (inhabitants of Westmoremland County).
Colonel Truby married Isabella Bowman and had seven children, the four sons being
Michael Truby, son of Christopher, is named on the list of pioneers for Revolutionary and military services in Armstrong County, granted pensions as soldiers of the Revolution by Act of the Pennsylvania Legislature March 20, 1838.
Samuel Truby, son of Michael Truby, was born in 1808, and died aged 84 years. He married Anna Sterling, and they were the parents of the following:
A Patriot of the American Revolution for PENNSYLVANIA with the rank of MAJOR. DAR Ancestor # A116343
1736 |
1736
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Pennsylvania, Colonial America
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1759 |
1759
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Virginia, United States
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1760 |
1760
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1761 |
1761
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Pennsylvania, United States
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1762 |
May 22, 1762
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Bucks Co., Pa
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1763 |
1763
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Bucks County, Province of Pennsylvana
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1769 |
1769
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Westmoreland County, Province of Pennsylvania
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1772 |
October 18, 1772
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Greensburg, Hempfield, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, United States
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1773 |
November 16, 1773
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Westmoreland County, Province of Pennsylvania, Colonial America
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