Jonathan Lindley

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Jonathan Lindley

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Cane Creek, Orange County, North Carolina
Death: April 05, 1828 (71)
Paoli, Orange, Indiana, United States
Place of Burial: Lick Creek Friends Cemetery, Chambersburg, Orange County, Indiana, USA
Immediate Family:

Son of Thomas Lindley, I and Ruth Lindley
Husband of Martha Henley Lindley and Deborah Lindley
Father of Zachariah Lindley; Hannah Braxtan; Ruth Farlow; Thomas Lindley; William Lindley and 9 others
Brother of Katheren Morrison; Capt. James L. Lindley; Simon Lindley; Thomas Lindley, II; William Lindley, Sr. and 9 others

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About Jonathan Lindley

Jonathan Lindley, legislator and Quaker leader, was born in Orange County, the son of Thomas and Ruth Hadley Lindley and the grandson of James and Elinor Parke Lindley and Simon and Ruth Miller Kearns Hadley. These six of his forebears were all Irish-born Quakers who came to America around 1713. The Lindleys settled in Chester County, Pa., and the Hadleys only a few miles away in New Castle County, Del. Around 1751 Thomas Lindley moved his family to the Cane Creek Valley in what is now the southern part of Alamance County. They were among the founders of Spring Friends Meeting, and Thomas gave the land on which the meetinghouse and cemetery are located.

In 1775 Jonathan Lindley married Deborah Dicks, daughter of Zacharias and Ruth Hiatt Dicks, near neighbors of the Lindleys. Zacharias Dicks was one of the ablest and most widely known of the Quakers ministers in America, and his wife was also a minister.

Between 1786 and 1805, during the critical period of transition following the Revolutionary War, Lindley served five terms in the North Carolina House of Commons and one term in the senate. His continued appointment to committees that dealt with matters of finance leads to the conclusion that the General Assembly recognized his competence in this important field of public interest. While in the House of Commons, he introduced and pushed to a test vote a bill that would have prohibited further importation of slaves into North Carolina. The voters of Orange County elected him as one of the five delegates from that county to the convention that met in Hillsborough in 1788 to consider ratification of the Federal Constitution. He, with other members of the delegation from Orange County, voted against ratification with the view of waiting until a Bill of Rights could be added. A few months later, as a member of the House of Commons, he voted favorably on a resolution calling for a second convention to be convened to consider ratification of the Constitution. This convention met in Fayetteville in 1789 and voted for ratification.

In private life Lindley was a merchant and a surveyor. He had investments in lumber and the turpentine business, and he engaged in numerous land transactions. He is said to have accumulated considerable wealth and is reputed to have taken a large sum of money with him when he migrated to Indiana.

In 1811 he led a wagon train of emigrants from his section of Orange County to the Lick Creek watershed in the southern part of the Territory of Indiana. According to one Lindley tradition, two hundred people went to Indiana in this caravan. A Quaker history indicates that seventy-five of them were members of the Society of Friends. Quaker records further reveal that more than thirty of the emigrants were close relatives of Lindley and that eleven of them were his children, some married and with their own families. Jonathan Lindley's oldest son, Zacharias, had settled in Lick Creek Valley two years before the arrival of the great Lindley caravan. Two years before leaving North Carolina, Jonathan had made a prospecting trip to Indiana and had purchased a large tract of land where Terre Haute now stands, but Indian discontent in that region caused this large caravan of emigrants to stop in the southern part of the territory.

According to tradition, Lindley's unmarried daughters cut trees and hewed logs for the construction of their first home in Indiana. Jonathan was one of the founders of the Lick Creek Friends Meeting, the first in southern Indiana. He also constructed a gristmill along the upper waters of Lick Creek. He was the first judge of the circuit court of Washington County, which at the time covered a large part of southern Indiana. He took the lead in establishing Orange County, named for his native county in North Carolina. His son Zacharias was the first sheriff of the new county. When Indiana attained statehood, Jonathan Lindley was the first representative of his county in the General Assembly of the new state. He also introduced a bill that provided for the organization of a bank at Vincennes. The General Assembly named him to a board that established a State Seminary that later became the University of Indiana.

GEDCOM Source

@R553622825@ U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 1,60525::0

GEDCOM Source

1,60525::3135157

GEDCOM Source

@R553622825@ U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 1,60525::0

GEDCOM Source

1,60525::3135157

GEDCOM Source

@R553622825@ U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 1,60525::0

GEDCOM Source

1,60525::3135157

GEDCOM Source

@R553622825@ U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 1,60525::0

GEDCOM Source

1,60525::3135157

GEDCOM Source

@R553622825@ Ancestry Family Trees Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.

GEDCOM Source

Ancestry Family Tree http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=161133899&pi...



US Politician. A native of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, he served as a Member of the North Carolina State Legislature in 1786, Territorial Court Judge in Indiana in 1814, and a Member of the Indiana State House of Representatives from 1816 to 1817. Lindley who was a Quaker, also founded the city of Terre Haute, Indiana.∼Jonathan Lindley and his wife Deborah were among the first settlers on Orange County, IN. They came with a small group or Quakers to distance themselves from the slavery which existed in Orange County, NC. They cleared and settled this area.* Reference: Find A Grave Memorial - SmartCopy: Sep 4 2022, 4:51:33 UTC


US Politician. A native of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, he served as a Member of the North Carolina State Legislature in 1786, Territorial Court Judge in Indiana in 1814, and a Member of the Indiana State House of Representatives from 1816 to 1817. Lindley who was a Quaker, also founded the city of Terre Haute, Indiana.∼Jonathan Lindley and his wife Deborah were among the first settlers on Orange County, IN. They came with a small group or Quakers to distance themselves from the slavery which existed in Orange County, NC. They cleared and settled this area.* Reference: Find A Grave Memorial - SmartCopy: Sep 4 2022, 6:26:09 UTC

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Jonathan Lindley's Timeline

1756
June 15, 1756
Cane Creek, Orange County, North Carolina
1773
December 28, 1773
Cane Creek, Orange, North Carolina
1776
July 26, 1776
Orange County, North Carolina, United States
1777
October 22, 1777
Orange County, North Carolina
1780
April 25, 1780
Orange County, NC, United States
1782
April 26, 1782
Orange County, North Carolina
1784
June 10, 1784
Cane Creek, Orange County, North Carolina
1785
April 24, 1785
Cane Creek, Orange County, North Carolina, United States
1787
January 18, 1787
Cane Creek, Orange County, North Carolina, United States