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Hannah Blair (Millikan)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Chester, Chester, Pennsylvania
Death: January 14, 1852 (95)
New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina, USA
Place of Burial: Springfield MM, Guilford, North Carolina, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of William Israel Milligan, Sr and Jane White
Wife of Enos Blair
Mother of Jessee Blair, I; Sarah Haggart; Jane Blair; Enos Blair, II; Hannah Blair, I and 8 others
Sister of Martha Millikan; Abigail Milliken; Samuel Millikan; Sarah Millikan; David Millikan and 11 others

Managed by: Stephanie Jeanne Olmstead-Dean
Last Updated:
view all 32

Immediate Family

About Hannah Blair

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/blair-hannah-millikan

Hannah Millikan Blair, Quaker revolutionary patriot, was the daughter of William Millikan, first register of deeds of Randolph County, and his wife Jane Roan (or White?). She was born in Chester City, Pa., shortly before the family moved to Deep River in North Carolina. Married to Enos Blair, she became the mother of a new baby every year during the American Revolution yet managed to help soldiers with food, supplies, and other assistance that was in keeping with her Quaker religious beliefs. She was given certificates of appreciation and a small government pension for her service. She carried food and medicines regularly to patriots hiding in the woods from Tory raiders; she mended their clothes, carried messages for them, and occasionally hid them in the house when Col. David Fanning and his raiders appeared.

She was credited with saving the lives of two men when she hid them in a corn crib and continued shucking corn while the Tories searched. On another occasion she ripped the corner of a feather bed tick and pushed a visiting patriot inside with the feathers. She threw the covers back so Fanning could see clearly under the bed, sat down, and began mending the torn ticking, saying "Thee may search as thee pleases." After a skirmish at Dixon's Mill in 1779 she learned that several soldiers were hiding in the countryside and took provisions to them. As she was returning, she was taken by Tories who demanded to know where the men were hiding. Insisting that she had only taken food to a sick neighbor ten or so miles away, she was released without revealing the hiding place. Tories, however, eventually burned the Blairs' house and barn and the family was forced to watch as all their possessions were consumed in the flames.

Between 1776 and 1800 the Blairs had thirteen children, twelve of whom lived to adulthood. Hannah is buried at Springfield Friends Meeting in High Point


The other children list are all children of Colbert's son Enos. They are Jessee, Sarash, Jane, Abner, Solomon, Martha, Hannah, Josiah, Ruth and Nathan.

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  • Religion: Quaker
  • Census: 1850 - Living with son John's family at this time,age 93
  • Residence: Randolph county, part of, Randolph, North Carolina, United States - 1850
view all 17

Hannah Blair's Timeline

1756
May 4, 1756
Chester, Chester, Pennsylvania
1776
January 9, 1776
Archdale, Randolph, NC
1777
April 13, 1777
Archdale, Randolph, NC
1778
September 4, 1778
Archdale, Randolph, NC
1780
May 18, 1780
Archdale, Randolph, NC
1782
March 22, 1782
Archdale, Randolph, NC
1784
April 3, 1784
Springfield, Guilford Co., NC
1785
December 10, 1785
Archdale, Randolph Co., NC
1787
November 27, 1787
Archdale, Randolph County, North Carolina, United States