Mary Catherine Long

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Mary Catherine Long (Julian)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Winchester, Frederick County, Province of Virginia
Death: 1812 (61-70)
North Carolina, United States
Place of Burial: Long Bottom, Russell, Kentucky, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Isaac Julian and Barbara Jean Julian
Wife of Edwards Solomon Long, Sr and Rev. Solomon Edward Long
Mother of Lydia Scott; Solomon Long; Samuel Long; Abigail Long; Joel Long and 1 other
Sister of Mary Martha O'Dell; Mary Martha Julien; Abigail Trogdon; Rene Julien, III; Rebecca Frazier and 6 others

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Last Updated:

About Mary Catherine Long

Resource:
Find A Grave

Birth: 1746 North Carolina, USA Death: unknown Russell County Kentucky, USA

Lydia was born in North Carolina I believe. She married Solomon Long in 1774. They were the parents of 7 children.

I dont know the birth and death dates for sure only estimates.

Family links:

Parents:
 Isaac Julian (1716 - 1778)
 Barbara White Julian (1722 - 1778)
Spouse:
 Edward Solomon Long (1744 - 1827)
Children:
 Lydia Long Scott (1777 - 1870)*
Siblings:
 Mary Martha Julien O'Dell (1743 - 1834)*
 Rene Julian (1746 - 1840)*
 Mary Catherine Julien Long (1746 - ____)
 Rebecca Julian Frazier (1748 - 1838)*
 Isaac Julian (1751 - 1831)*
 Abigail Julien Trogdon (1759 - 1801)*
  • Calculated relationship

Burial: Beech Grove Cemetery Long Bottom Russell County Kentucky, USA

Edit Virtual Cemetery info [?]

Created by: Respectfully, Linda Jone... Record added: Mar 27, 2013 Find A Grave Memorial# 107402841

Notes: It seems all the girl's were named Mary, Mary Margaret, Mary Catherine, Mary Abigail etc.

buried Gray Cemetery, Randolph, NC?? Looked into 2/3 cemeteries with Gray in title on FAG but no interm. listed with older dates in Randolph Co. listed to this date 10/2013

8. ISAAC3 JULIEN (RENE2, FATHER1) was born December 13, 1716 in St. Ann's Parish, Cecil County, Maryland, and died July 08, 1778 in Randolph County, North Carolina. He married BARBARA WHITE October 10, 1741 in Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia, daughter of ROBERT WHITE and MARGARET HOGE. She was born 1725 in Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia, and died July 08, 1778 in Randolph County, North Carolina.

Notes for ISAAC JULIEN: Notes for Isaac Julien: He died from a snake bite. More about Isaac Julien: Burial: Trogden Graveyard Isaac took a land grant of 280 acres on a branch of Pole Cat Creek next to his brother John, December 29, 1762. Both Grants issued the same day, he inherited John's land. The descendants still owned the land in 1944. He took a N. N. Grant from Lord Fairfax in Frederick County, Virginia for 414 acres, January 8, 1752 adjacent to Peter Julien's land which he sold to James Magill, February 3, 1755. ...................................................................................................................................................................................... Isaac Julien I resided near Winchester, Virginia, at the time of General Braddock's defeat. His wife, Barbara, was the daughter of a surgeon in the British Navy, Doctor Robert White. Doctor White was one of the most prominent and best remembered pioneer settlers of that region. According to Foote, he was a graduate of Edinburgh, Scotland. At one time he visited William Hoge, in Delaware, and later married Hoge's elder daughter, Margaret. Subsequently he and his family took up their residence near North Mountain, Virginia, on a creek which now bears his name. Three sons- -John, Robert, and Alexander-survived Doctor White in 1742. Alexander, residing near Winchester, became a lawyer of eminence. Robert became a doctor and was a member of the First Congress of the United States and of the Virginia Convention which adopted the Federal Constitution. George Washington made a report to Governor Dinwiddie, under date of October 11, 1755, of an incident which transpired at the plantation of Isaac Julian I about twelve miles from Winchester. Washington, at the age of twenty-three was then in command of Colonial troops at Winchester, Virginia, which had become the center of a craze of terror, under which the most commonplace incidents were magnified into portents of savage invasion, devastation, and slaughter. One of Isaac Julian I's children had seen a Mulatto and a negro in quest of cattle, and, mistaking them for Indians, had alarmed his father, who alarmed the neighborhood. The result was a tremendous increase in the prevailing panic. Washington's report to Dinwiddie is to be found in Sparks' collection of his writtings, Volume II, page 106, and the particulars referred to above are also to be found in Irving's Life of Washington, Chapter XVIII. Isaac Julian I was a close personal friend of George Washington and often saw him in connection with his business. There were certain Indian captivities involving the Hoge and White families, based on clearest traditions of ancestry, and, at least in their main features, hold to be unquestionably authentic. Barbara White, who married Isaac Julian I, was a granddaughter of William Hoge. She had two sisters, each of whom married a man named Morgan, both of whom had a child made captive by the Indians. There is no record of the precise time or the place where these events transpired. A daughter of one of the sisters who was captured was recovered after several years by exchange at some treaty, but a son, Amaziah Morgan, was captured, at about four years of age, by the Indians. His father saw him captured and went to see him after several years. He found that he had been adopted into an Indian family and had become so much like them that, greatly to his father's chagrin, he could get nothing out of him, though a French or half-breed woman, who had charge of him said he understood English. He had grown to manhood and was taken in battle fighting against the whites, and solicited to return with his relatives, but, to their disappointment, coming to the Ohio he met his Indian wife, she enticed him into a canoe, they voyaged away together, and his white kindred saw him no more. Such is the faint, imperfect narrative which has come down to us of what must have been a very romantic series of incidents. The Indian murders and depredations continuing and growing more threatening caused many to flee the state. Among them was Isaac Julian I and his family, and all of his brothers except Stephen, the eldest. This was about 1760. So great and imminent was the apprehended danger that Isaac I abandoned his well-stocked farm, standing crops, sheep and other stock, his house and most of the contents, retaining only his horses to aid in his flight, and sped night and day southward. Their flight began after night and was, to a large extent, so continued. They passed occasional camp fires and other indications that their neighbors were also fleeing, but saw no white people during their journey. Arriving at their destination, however, a joyful surprise awaited them. A brother, George Julian, had preceded them all the way about a day's journey, without either party being aware of the fact. They settled in North Carolina. Isaac Julian I purchased a homestead of a thousand acres in Randolph County, his brothers who fled with him settling, for the most part, in South Carolina. The original deed to the North Carolina home bears the date 1762. Here Isaac I passed the remainder of his life. His death was caused by the bite of a rattlesnake. The White Family Bible records the death of Isaac Julian I, July 8, 1778. The Bible record referred to contains the record of seven children-five daughters and two sons-of Isaac and Barbara Julian. They were all born in the vicinity of Winchester. The marriage of Isaac Julian I with Doctor White's daughter, Barbara, took place September 10, 1775. This record has been copied from an old Bible which belonged to the White family. Isaac I and Barbara afterwards moved to Randolph County, North Carolina. There a son of theirs, likewise named Isaac Julian II, married Sarah Long, a Quakeress. Her grandfather, Edward Long (spelled Langue in his Will), had accompanied William Penn to America, probably on the occasion of the latter's second visit, in 1699. Isaac and Sarah came to Indiana Territory in 1816. They followed their third son, the pioneer Justice of the Peace, who had settled here in 1808, and then came nine of their family of twelve children. Isaac Julian II, like his grandfather, Rene, was a man of strong convictions, which he did not hesitate to make known whether or not they coincided with the views of his associates. The physical strength of the Julians was sometimes a neighborhood asset, a fact which might be illustrated by numerous stories that have taken their places in local tradition. The Julians were also noted for their sense of justice, love of reading, and longevity. Record of whose birth is in St. Ann's Parish Register:December 30, 1716. Died July 8, 1778, Randolph County, North Carolina of bite of a rattle-snake. N. N. Grant from Lord Fairfax in Frederick County, Virginia for 414 acres January 8, 1752 adjacent to Peter Julien's land which he sold to James Magill February 3, 1755, Grant Orange County, North Carolina December 29, 1762 for 280 acres adjacent to John, his brother, whose land Isaac inherited upon John's death. Married: September 10, 1741 Frederick County, Virginia Barbara White, daughter of Doctor Robert White, born 1694, Paisley, Scotland, died: 1755 Winchester, Virginia Surgeon British Navy, married: Margaret Hoge. Also have marriage date Ancestry.com: 10 September 1741; for Isaac Julien and Barbara White. In the war that is known as the French and Indian War, fought between the French and her Canadian Colonies and Britain and her American Colonies. The French stirred up the Indians against the American Colonies. There were many attacks on the frontiers of Virginia, Pennsylvania and New York. There was much fear of the Indians in the area where the Julians lived. Fearing an attack from the Indians was eminent, Isaac Julian loaded a wagon with the most necessary things to survive and fled down the Colonial Road that ran from Pennsylvania to North Carolina. It is said that he traveled by night and hid in the day time to prevent being sighted by the Indians. This occurred in September 1755. He finally came to Deep River near present Worthville, North Carolina. Here he located. He later received a grant from Earl Granville for 640 acres of land. His descendants live on the same land today. This is copied from The Rouths of Randolph County, North Carolina, by Lawrence W. Routh. About 1755 the family moved from Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia to Pole Cat Creek in then Rowan County, North Carolina. Near what is now Randleman, Randolph County, North Carolina. In 1762 Isaac Julien received a grant for 280 acres along Polecat Creek. Different birth date: December 30, 1716. FamilyTreeMaker: Died of rattelsnake bite. Isaac came to Randolph County, North Carolina about the time of the French and Indian War. He obtained a large tract of land and became a farmer. His land was near Hooper's Ford, Deep River, and Hooper's Mountain, N. C. He died of snake bite and was buried in the Trogden Cemetery. (The above information was found in the "Julian Jamboree" February 1991) This information was compiled from material received from Dorothy deWitt Baldwin, Richmond Heights, California, and John T. Aichele, Fort Wayne, Indiana. Sources: "Historical Records of Old Fredrick & Hampshire Counties, Virginia, "by Wilmer L. Kerns, Heritage Books, Inc., Bowie, Md, 1992. Indiana Biographical Series, Volume I, "George W. Julian, " by Grace Julian Clark, Indiana Historical Commission, 1923. "Hopewell Friends History, 1734-1934, Fredrick County, Virginia," compiled by Joint Committee of Hopewell Friends, 1975. "The Julian Family," by Frances Julian Hine. "Male Descendants of Rene Julian and Mary Bullock," by Gary Julian. "The Julian Family in Bohemia Manor," by Rebecca Downey White. "History of the Julian Family in America," from the Jeannette R. Trotter Papers, McClung Historical Collection. "The Julians and Allied Families," by Elizabeth Cate Manley, 1972 From "Julian Jamboree" May 1991, notes sent by F.J. McAllister, Chicago. Different marriage date: September 10, 1741 in Winchester, Virginia. ................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ The following is from Cecil O'Dell's book: "Pioneers of Frederick County, Virginia, published in 1995. Same book, page 201 In 1741, Isaac Julian married Barbara White, daughter of Doctor Robert White and Margaret Hoge [daughter of William Hoge, Sr. and Barbara Hume Hoge]. Isaac and Barbara were parents of seven children and moved to Guilford and Randolph Counties, North Carolina. Daughter Mary married Nehemiah O'Dell, a Regulator, Margaret married John Alred and Abigail married Samuel Trogden. They all lived near Deep River, North of Ashboro, North Carolina. [Referred to Rebecca Downey White, The Julian Family in Bohemia Manor, Cecil County, Maryland, 28 July 1745. Located at Handley Library, Winchester County, Virginia]. Family Trail: Maryland, Virginia, NorthCarolina, Indiana 1840-1860 Generations in Indiana, Tennessee, Missouri Allied Families: White, Allred, Madden, Long, Morgan, Hoover, Pearson Isaac is unique amongst Rene and Mary's sons in that his birth was recorded. His parents had Isaac's birth registered at St. Snne's Parish in Annapolis in 1716. Evidence cited in his father's Section suggests they were living at the time near there---possibly in Anne Arundel or Prince Georges County. Isaac and his wife Barbara White began a male line that produced a large number of grandchildren and great-grandchildren. There are also records of a number of females in this line. One of the Julian family tradition tales involves the hasty departure of Isaac and his family for the Carolinas together with the families of some of his brothers. This move was said to be the result of pressure from the Native Americans in the Northern Neck region of Virginia. Examination of the land transactions for the brothers who did move south shows that the disposal of properties took place over a period of time indicating a rather more deliberate move, although the Indians may have played a role. As with Stephen's and his sons move westward to Ohio, Isaac and his brothers made use of a nearby road. The Great Wagon Road went south to the Carolinas, running from Philadelphia through Hagerstown, Maryland and thence south to Salisbury, North Carolina. The first record of Isaac was as a signer of the circa 1750 petition to Lord Fairfax. For the next five years or so he left records in Frederick County, Virginia; having been, for example, appointed constable in 1753. In 1755 he sold the Hogg's Creek farm that was probably the result of a Lord Fairfax grant. In 1762 he acquired land in the [then] Orange County, North Carolina. The lands were on Polecat Creek, which is located in the northeast part of present Randolph County. [There is today a small town of Julian located just across the border in Guilford County. This town was clearly named for the Julian brothers who settled the region in the early 1760s---see also Sections 3, 5, and 6]. Isaac, along with other members of the Julian families who moved south, was listed as a debtor of Colonel John McGee. The record is from a 1773 inventory of the estate, which included a record of debts owed McGee's Ordinary by, apparently, his customers. In 1779 both Isaac and his sons Isaac and Rene were included in a Randolp[h County, North Carolina tax and property list, with a note that they had not taken 'the oath'. This oath may be interpreted to be either one of loyalty to the Crown or to the new Nation. This record is the first of a number that indicates the political climate of the times, which affected all of the Julien/Julian descendants of Rene and Mary who resided in the Carolinas. The conflict for independence there occurred over the 1776-1782 period when British strategy shifted the war effort south and away from New England and New York.

More About ISAAC JULIEN:

Burial: Trogden Graveyard, Randolph Co., North Carolina

Notes for BARBARA WHITE: Notes for Barbara White: Also have date of marriage 10 September 1741 in Winchester, Virginia. Also have marriage date 17 October 1741? Also have birth date 1714

More About BARBARA WHITE:

Burial: Randolph County, North Carolina

Children of ISAAC JULIEN and BARBARA WHITE are:

24. i. MARY MARTHA4 JULIAN, b. May 10, 1743, Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia; d. May 10, 1843, Gray's Chapel, Randolph County, North Carolina.

 ii.   MARGARET JULIAN, b. Abt. 1746, Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia; m. JOHN ALLRED; b. Abt. 1744.  25. iii.   REBEKAH JULIAN, b. March 17, 1747/48, Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia; d. September 23, 1838, Knox County, Tennessee.  26. iv.   RENNE JULIAN, b. March 29, 1749, Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia; d. Abt. 1840, Knox County, Tennessee.  27. v.   ABIGAIL MARY JULIAN, b. 1751, Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia; d. February 17, 1831, Gables Creek Planta., Randolph County, North Carolina.  28. vi.   ISAAC JULIAN, JR., b. 1751, Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia; d. February 17, 1831, Henry County, Indiana. 
 vii.   CATHERINE JULIAN, b. 1753, Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia; d. Abt. 1812; m. REVEREND SOLOMON EDWARD LONG, Abt. 1775; b. 1749; d. 1835. 
 Notes for CATHERINE JULIAN:
Different birth date: 1746. 
 Notes for REVEREND SOLOMON EDWARD LONG: Notes for Solomon Edward Long: Methodist Minister, brother of Tobias Long. 
 More About REVEREND SOLOMON EDWARD LONG:
Occupation: Methodist Minister
About Beech Grove Cemetery

Beech Grove Cemetery contains over 500 burials (including about 300 unknowns). A few burials were originally interred here in the late 1800s, but the majority were reinterred from other cemeteries prior to the creation of Wolf Creek Dam and Lake Cumberland in the early 1940s.

This cemetery was formerly known as the Warriner Cemetery and became known as Beech Grove Cemetery following the reinterments. It is also called Government Cemetery and Long Bottom Cemetery in some old newspaper articles. The old Beech Grove school and church were located immediately behind the cemetery.

Plot numbers for reinterred graves indicate the original cemetery number and original grave number. All of the reinterred graves that were unknowns (or otherwise didn't have legible stones) were provided with cheap concrete markers with metal plates attached, listing the name and plot number. Many of these have degraded and are now missing the identification plate or have been completely destroyed. As of Feb 2012, several of these have been re-marked with brick markers. Added by: BC 2/09/2012

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Mary Catherine Long's Timeline

1746
1746
Winchester, Frederick County, Province of Virginia
1776
1776
Maryland, United States
1777
December 13, 1777
Wilkes County, North Carolina, United States
1779
1779
North Carolina, United States
1782
June 22, 1782
North Carolina, United States
1784
1784
North Carolina, United States
1788
1788
Burke, North Carolina, United States
1812
1812
Age 66
North Carolina, United States