Maj.-Gen. William Montgomery

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Maj.-Gen. William Montgomery

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Chester County, Pennsylvania
Death: June 01, 1816 (79)
Danville, Columbia County, Pennsylvania, United States
Place of Burial: Old Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Danville, Montour County, Pennsylvania USA
Immediate Family:

Son of Alexander Montgomery and Mary Montgomery
Husband of Margaret Mary Montgomery; Isabella Montgomery and Hannah Boyd
Father of Alexander Montgomery, died as an infant 1; Mary Ayres; Margaret Montgomery; MAJ William Montgomery, Jr; COL John Montgomery and 7 others
Brother of Moses Montgomery; William Thomas Montgomery, Major General; Capt John Montgomery; Capt. Daniel Montgomery; David Montgomery and 2 others

Occupation: Soldier: Col. of Chester Co.'s 4th Battalion Militia in the American Revolution, Maj.-Gen. Pennsylvania Militia. Politician: PA's prov. convention and State Assembly and Senate, Cont. Congress, Judge, US Rep. Anti-Admin. party, 1st Postmaster of Danville
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Maj.-Gen. William Montgomery

DAR Ancestor #: A079098

m1. MARGARET NEVINS
m2. ISABELLA EVANS
m3. HANNAH BOYD

William Montgomery

  • Birth: Aug. 3, 1736
  • Chester County
  • Pennsylvania, USA
  • Death: May 1, 1816
  • Danville
  • Montour County
  • Pennsylvania, USA

US Congressman. He served as a Colonel in the Revolution, commanding the Chester County Militia's Fourth Battalion, seeing action on Long Island and in New Jersey. In 1775 and 1776 he was a delegate to Pennsylvania's provincial conventions.

He moved to Northumberland County in 1776 and was elected to the State Assembly in 1779, serving several terms. He was elected to the Continental Congress in 1784. In 1785 he was appointed Judge of Northumberland and Luzerne Counties. In 1790 he was elected to Pennsylvania's first State Senate. In 1791 Montgomery was appointed Justice of the Peace for Northumberland County. In 1792 he was elected to the US House of Representatives as an Anti-Administration candidate and served one term, 1793 to 1795. In 1793 Montgomery was appointed Major General of the Pennsylvania Militia, serving until 1807.

When Danville (named for his son Daniel) was incorporated in 1801, Montgomery was named its first Postmaster, serving until 1803. He was Associate Judge of Northumberland County from 1801 to 1813.

The Danville home he built in 1792 still stands at Mill and Bloom Streets and is operated as the Montgomery House Museum and home of the Montour County Historical Society.

He was the father of Daniel Montgomery (1765-1831), who also served in Congress. (bio by: Bill McKern)

Family links:

Spouse: Margaret Mary Nivin Montgomery (1739 - 1770)*

Children:

  • William Montgomery (1762 - 1838)*
  • John Montgomery (1763 - 1832)* (confirmed by SAR application)
  • Daniel Montgomery (1765 - 1831)*
  • Alexander Montgomery (1777 - 1848)*
  • William 1762-1838 (confirmed by North American Familiy Histories, 1500-2000)
  • William Montgomery (1784 - 1806)* he is listed as BUT does not fit
  • * * William Montgomery, Jr
  • * * Birth: Jan. 8, 1784
  • * * Death: 1806
  • * * Inscription: Died at the age of twenty-two years.
  • * * Burial: Old Presbyterian Church Cemetery
  • * * Danville Montour County Pennsylvania, USA
  • * * https://old.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=21136686
  • Margaret Montgomery Woodside (1784 - 1806)*

Burial: Old Presbyterian Church Cemetery Danville Montour County Pennsylvania, USA

Maintained by: Find A Grave Originally Created by: Bill McKern Record added: Aug 24, 2007 Find A Grave Memorial# 21136544 http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=21136544

===========================

General William Montgomery House, Danville Borough, Montour ...
www.livingplaces.com/PA/.../Danville.../General_William_Montgomery...‎ General William Montgomery House, National Register of Historic Places, 1 Bloom Street, Danville Borough, Montour County, Danville PA, 17821. ... William Montgomery was born August 3, 1736 in Londonderry Township, Chester County.

The General William Montgomery House (1 Bloom Street) was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. Portions of the text below were adapted from a copy of the original nomination document. [1] Adaptation copyright © 2009, The Gombach Group .
Description

The General William Montgomery House (presently a museum owned by the Montour County Historical Society) is a two and one-half story random-laid stone structure with a pedimented gable roof. An interior stone chimney is located in the western gable end. The roof is asbestos tiled and the cornice is wide and boxed. Cornice on the gable ends tends to be wide and forms a small pent, as its upper surface is finished with roofing material. A two-story, gabled roof wing is located on the north (rear) elevation. This roof is tin covered.

The main house is three bays by two bays. Windows throughout the structure are 6-over-9. Lower story windows have paneled shutters, second story louvered, shutters. The window west gable end is 3-over-6.

The interior of this structure is in excellent condition and little altered. Floors are wide plank, all walls are painted plaster with chair rails. Small fireplaces are located on the first story western gable end. The first floor is divided into a wide side hall with two rooms to the west. The wing to the rear has only one room with an enclosed stairway at the rear. There was no interior kitchen in the house. Apparently a separate kitchen building was located to the rear of the house. The second story is divided into three small rooms with two rooms in the wing.

Attached to the stone structure is a gable roofed, two and one-half story log and frame structure. The core of this building is felt to be the first Montgomery House, built in 1777. The structure is three bays by two bays and has been remodeled extensively on the interior and exterior.

Significance

General William Montgomery was the founder of Danville, the county seat of Montour County. He was also an important Revolutionary patriot, general, congressman, postmaster and judge.

William Montgomery was born August 3, 1736 in Londonderry Township, Chester County. Even before the Revolutionary War, he was a prominent man in his native county. His first appearance in public was as a member of the "Associators" of Chester County. Next he was a delegate from Chester to a convention "of the people of the province of Pennsylvania called by the Philadelphia Committee," January 23, 1775.

The "Associators" was an organized body of patriotic citizens mutually bound to each other to resist the "tyranny attempted to be established in the province of Pennsylvania by the court of Great Britain." The convention provided for a call of the group again "if it appears that the state of affairs necessitates in effect a provincial government." Again, as a Chester County delegate, June 18-25, 1776, he was present at a meeting of the Committee of the Province of Pennsylvania in Carpenters' Hall, Philadelphia. He was then referred to as Colonel Montgomery. Montgomery was appointed one of a committee to devise ways and means for raising 4,500 men and to fit them for the field. The province had 1,500 in service at the time which, with the 4,500, made the provincial quota as required by the newly formed Congress of the U.S.

In June, 1776, Colonel Montgomery's Fourth Chester County Militia, known as the "Flying Camp," numbering 450 men, were in New Jersey. They also probably engaged in the battle of Long Island in August of that year. Several of his officers were in Fort Washington when that post was captured in November. When on November 26, 1774 William Montgomery bought 180 acres of land on Mahoning Creek, north side of the east branch of the Susquehanna River called Karkaase, he founded Danville, for this is the land on which the town was originally laid out.

Despite the unsettled state of affairs connected with the war and the general distrust of the Indians, he confidently set about building his grist and saw mills, near the Mill and Bloom Streets intersection. In time he established the first woolen mill as well as the first story (the latter on the site of Montour Hotel, southeast corner of Mill and Market Streets). In fact he started the first of nearly everything, although in truth he guided his son, Daniel, in starting the store.

In the year, 1792, that he began a two year term as member of the Third Congress of the U.S., he built his stone mansion at No. 1 Bloom Street. For many years it was considered the finest house in the region. The old log house adjoining was the first house in Montour County.

William Montgomery became a "General" when Governor Mifflin appointed him to a seven year commission as Major General of militia for Northumberland, Northampton, and Luzerne Counties. Governor Thomas McKean made him an associate judge of Northumberland County in 1801, the only public office he held from then until his death in 1816.

References

  • Foulke, Arthur Toye. My Danville: Where the Bright Waters Meet. N. Quincy, Mass: Christopher Publishing Hse, 1969, p.39-43.
  • A.F. Russell, In Memory of General Montgomery, General Daniel a Montgomery and John C. Boyd. Danville, PA: "Intelligencer" Publishers, 1879.
  • Zacher, Susan M, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, Office of Historic Preservation, General William Montgomery House, nomination document, 1979, National Park Service, National Register of Historic Places, Washington, D.C.

Street Names: Bloom Street

Resource: http://www.livingplaces.com/PA/Montour_County/Danville_Borough/Gene...

SOURCES

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Maj.-Gen. William Montgomery's Timeline

1736
August 3, 1736
Chester County, Pennsylvania
1758
1758
Pennsylvania, United States
1758
New Castle, Chester, Pennsylvania Colony
1761
September 1761
York, York, Pennsylvania Colony
1762
September 21, 1762
Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States
1763
1763
Chester County, Pennsylvania, USA
1765
October 30, 1765
Londonderry Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States
1765
1767
1767
New Castle, Chester, Pennsylvania, United States