Pvt. Edward "Grand Sire Ned" Pedigo, American Patriot

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Pvt. Edward Pedigo (Peregoy)

Also Known As: "Ned", "Grandsire Ned"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Baltimore County, MD, United States
Death: April 26, 1834 (103)
Barren County, Kentucky, United States
Place of Burial: Randolph, Kentucky, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Henry B. Peregoy and Amy Peregoy
Husband of Hannah Pedigo
Father of Joseph Elkin Pedigo, I; Levi E Pedigo; Henry "Jepso" Pedigo; Abel Pedigo; Elizabeth Edwards and 9 others
Brother of Ann Brock; Henry Peregoy; Andrew Peregoy; Joseph Peregoy, Sr. and Robert Henry Pedigo, Sr.
Half brother of John Peregoy; Mary Peregoy and Nathan Peregoy

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Pvt. Edward "Grand Sire Ned" Pedigo, American Patriot

PEDIGO, EDWARD Ancestor #: A087986
Service: VIRGINIA Rank(s): PATRIOTIC SERVICE, PRIVATE
Birth: 12-24-1732 FRANCE
Death: 4-26-1834 BARREN CO KENTUCKY
Service Source: NARA, M881, COMP MIL SERV RECS, ROLL #995; ABERCROMBIE & SLATTEN, VA REV PUB CLAIMS, VOL 2, P 517
Service Description:
1) CAPTS YOUNG, FLEMING; COLS RUSSELL, HETH; 3RD, 5TH, 7TH, & 11TH REGTS;
2) FURNISHED SUPPLIES

HANNAH ELKIN, NOT MARY ELKIN, WAS THE WIFE OF THE PATRIOT & MOTHER OF HIS CHILDREN. SEE DATACF. 3/2021

RESIDENCE
1) County: HENRY CO - State: VIRGINIA

SPOUSE
Number Name
1) HANNAH ELKIN

Child [Spouse #] Spouse
LEVI [1] MARY NEWLAND [2] MARY BLAKEY EDENS
LUCY [1] JESSE CLARK
JOSEPH [1] DOROTHY EDWARDS
ABEL [1] SUSANNAH ROSS
HENRY [1] LEAH COCHRAN
JOHN [1] AMY T. NEBLETT
BATHSHEBA [1] NATHAN COCKRAM

https://services.dar.org/Public/DAR_Research/search_adb/?action=ful...



Edward Peregoy was born December 24, 1732 in Baltimore, Maryland and died April 26, 1834 in Barren Co KY. He was born Edward Peregoy, the son of Henry Peregoy and wife Amy Greene. Amy died while Edward was quite young. His father remarried Providence Corbin. Family lore states that the stepmother was cruel to the youngest children of the first wife, causing Edward and his brother Robert to run away.

Edward and Robert appear in Virginia records when they married. He married Hannah Elkins in 1760 and had fourteen children. His brother Robert married Hannah's sister Mary. Both Edward and Robert had children born in the early 1760s and grandchildren by the 1790s.

Under the spelling Edward “Pediford,” Edward served in the American Revolutionary War, as a private in Capt. Charles Fleming’s Co, 7th Virginia Regiment of Foot, commanded by Alexander McClenacham. He enlisted 13 Feb 1777 for one year. Then he re-enlisted in Capt. Henry Young’s Company of the 3d and 7th Virginia Regiment of Foot; a company muster roll was dated White Plains NY, 4 Aug 1778. On 9 Jan 1779, Edward re-enlisted for the duration of the war. The last extant muster roll was dated 9 Dec 1779, near Morristown NJ.

Edward has been recognized by the DAR for his service to his country. He has been awarded DAR Ancestor # A087986. His DAR file states he was born in France. His ancestry IS French, but he was born in Baltimore. How the story of being born in France came about is unknown.

Land Office MilitaryWarrant No. 2233, was received for Edward Pediford (Pedigo) on 12 Jan 1784 from Commonwealth of Virginia, 100 acres for his three years’ Revolutionary War service as soldier (private) in the Virginia Continental Line.

In a 1787 tax list for Henry Co VA, the names Edward Peregoy, Robert Peregau and Joseph Peregoy occur. Both Edward and Robert had eldest sons named Joseph, probably for their grandfather, Joseph Peregoy, and it is not known which Joseph was included in the tax rolls.

Edward’s wife Hannah is identified by name, but as Hannah Pedigo, not by maiden name, in a Patrick Co VA Deed Book, pp. 282-283, 14 Sep 1809. Edward signed his name on the consent for his daughter Bathsheba’s marriage to Nathaniel Cockran (called Nathan Cockrum) in 1798. While his signature is somewhat difficult to read, son Elijah's, as witness, is clearly Pedego.

Everyone, including the DAR (Ancestor #: A087986), has the same list of his children. Possibly the list came from his bible, which has since been lost. Edward and Hannah’s grandson Edward, a son of Joseph and Dolly Edwards, wrote a Pioneer Story, 1894, telling of his family’s move to KY, 1805. Early Pedigo documents have both useful information and serious error, such as Edward's birth in France.

Children of Edward Pedigo and wife Hannah Elkins:

  • Joseph PEDIGO - (1761-1833) Married Dorothy Edwards, 9 children. Dorothy was not apparently related to Keziah’s husband, James Edwards or to Elizabeth’s husband, William Edwards.
  • Levi PEDIGO - (1763-1816) Married (1) Mary Newland (or Nowlin) and had seven children. Married (2) Mary Blakey Edens; 8 children.
  • Henry PEDIGO (1765-1810) Married Leah Cochran and had 2 children
  • Abel PEDIGO - (1770-before 1847) Married Susannah Ross and had 7 children.
  • Elizabeth PEDIGO (1773- ) Married William Edwards, not apparently related to Joseph’s wife, Dolly Edwards or to Keziah’s husband, James Edwards.
  • Bathsheba PEDIGO - (1778- ) Married Nathaniel Cochran and 6 children.
  • Elijah PEDIGO - (1780 - ) He married Sally Hall. Elijah and Sally, with their only child, drowned while crossing the Smith River.
  • Lucy PEDIGO. - (1783- 1850) Married Jesse Clark .
  • Elkin PEDIGO - (1784- after 1840) Married (1) Martha Harris. Divorced in 1828 in KY. Elkin second married Jane Wilson.
  • Hannah PEDIGO - (1785 - ) Married John Reeves.
  • John PEDIGO. - ( 1788-1867) Married Frances Hill.
  • Nancy E PEDIGO - (1789 - ) Married John Sneed. Confusing claims have been made that she also married a John Tuggle, but this appears doubtful.
  • Amy PEDIGO - (1790- ) Married Benjamin Hardy.
  • Keziah PEDIGO - (1792-1835) Married (1) James Edwards, Joseph’s wife, wife, Dolly Edwards or to Elizabeth’s husband, William Edwards. One child known. Married (2) William Bellair (or Bell) in Barren Co KY.

Links to additional material:

History of the Pedigo family in America Contributed By: Frank Edward Durham · 20 July 2015 · Edward Pedigo (Pediford) (Peregoy) (25 Dec 1730 - 26 Apr 1834)

Edward Pedigo, often referred to as “Grand-Sire Ned” by his family, was the son of Henry Peregoy, Sr. of Baltimore County, Maryland by his first wife, Amy Green. His grandfather was Joseph Peregois (1665-1720), who immigrated to Maryland from France in 1685. According to family tradition, Edward and his older brother, Robert, ran away from home while still in their teens to escape the oppressions of a tyrannical step-mother. The two boys changed the spelling of their name to Pedigo and settled in the York River Valley of Virginia. Later they moved to the wilderness region of the Southern Piedmont, an area now encompassed by Patrick and Henry Counties. It was here that the brothers married the Elkin sisters; Edward to Hannah Elkins and Robert to Mary Elkins. Both families had sons named Joseph, Henry, Elijah and John, and both had daughters named Elizabeth and Amy.

In a letter dated 08 Nov 1904, George Edwin Pedigo (then 86 yrs. old) wrote from Randolph, Metcalfe County, Ky. as follows:

“In the year 1805 my grandfather, Joseph Pedigo, moved from Virginia to Kentucky and settled down near Pleasant Hill. The house is on the land he bought (250 acres in 1816) . Two or three years after this he went back to Virginia and moved Grand-Sire Ned to Kentucky and settled him on part of his land. Grand-Sire Ned lived there until the death of his wife, then went to his son Joseph’s and lived and died there. My mother having died, I was placed at my grandmother’s and grandfather’s (Joseph and Dolly Edwards Pedigo), and I waited on Grand-Sire Ned until he died. He was buried 2 and ½ miles north of Pleasant Hill Church. No graveyard here then.”

Edward Pedigo came to Kentucky with his oldest son, Joseph, who had moved there three years earlier. Joseph Pedigo married Dorothy Edwards in Virginia in 1783, and when the couple moved to Barren County, Kentucky in 1805, they were accompanied by several of Joseph’s siblings, including brothers Henry, Levi and Elkin. Joseph then returned to Patrick County, Virginia to get his parents and bring them to their new home. By then, Edward was an old man of about 73 years of age. He would eventually live to the ripe old age of 104, and he died on 26 Apr 1834, near Randolph, Kentucky (according to the Bible record of John Grogan Pedigo, a grandson of Edward and Hannah). The original homestead was located in Barren County near the village of Randolph but is now in Metcalfe County being formed from Barren in 1860. Edward and two of his sons (Joseph and Henry) are believed to be buried in what was the old Pedigo family graveyard located approximately 0.1 mile south of Randolph. The exact location of the cemetery can no longer be identified, the site having been leveled by bulldozer in recent years.

The present form of the name, Pedigo, was adopted by the Virginia and Kentucky branches of the family, but the Maryland family remains one of the older forms which is Peregoy. However, there are several recognized forms of the same name: Pedego, Perego, Peregory, Peregoe, Perigo, Pedigoy. These forms are taken from various documents, and in one old will there are five of these forms.

Edward Pedigo was an American Patriot and has a long and interesting record, not only in the Revolutionary War, but also in the French and Indian War. He served in the militia of Halifax County, Virginia, recorded in September 1758 as Edward Peregoy, for two periods prior to that date. He was with Washington at Fort Duquesne, the scene of General Braddock’s defeat, being one of the thirty Virginians who left the battlefield alive. When the colonies rebelled against England, Edward saw Revolutionary War service under the name of Edward “Pediford” (along with other variant spellings) and served in the capacity of private with the 3rd, 5th, 7th and 11th Virginia Regiments. After the war he received a land warrant by the Virginia State Land Office for three years service in the Continental Line.

He first enlisted in 13 Feb 1778, for one year and served in Capt. Charles Fleming’s Company, Seventh Virginia Foot, commanded by Col. Alexander McClenachan. As the Virginia Regiments were often combined and reorganized, Edward was soon in Capt. Henry Young’s Company of the 3rd and 7th Regiments, and later in the 5th and 11th Regiments. Certain of his muster rolls have much historic interest, showing him with Washington at Valley Forge, at Morristown, and with the troops aiding D’Estaining’s fleet at Savannah. He saw action at the Battle of Monmouth Courthouse on 28 Jun 1778. The muster roll for Dec. 1778 tells of his re-enlistment for the duration of the war. His last surviving muster roll is dated “Camp near Morristown, 09 Dec. 1779,” but this fails to show his later service, which are proved by his military land warrant of 12 Jan 1784, reciting three years of service. It is almost certain that Edward was with the rest of the enlisted men and officers of the Virginia Line when they were captured by British forces at the Siege of Charleston on 12 May 1780.

The fourteen children of Edward Pedigo were: Joseph, who married Dorothy Edwards; Levi, who married Polly Newland; Henry, who married Leah Cochran; Abel, who married Susannah Ross; Elizabeth, who married William Edwards; Bathsheba, who married Nathan Cochran; Elijah, who married Sally Hall; Lucy, who married Jesse Clark; Elkin; Hannah, who married John Reeves; John, who married Amy Neblett; Nancy, who married John Sneed; Amy, who married Benjamin Hardy and Kisiah, who married James Edwards. https://familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/17676258

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Pvt. Edward "Grand Sire Ned" Pedigo, American Patriot's Timeline

1730
December 15, 1730
Baltimore County, MD, United States
1761
May 3, 1761
Halifax County, Virginia, Colonial America
1763
1763
Halifax County, Virginia, United States
1765
1765
Halifax County, Virginia, United States
1770
1770
Pittsylvania County, Virginia, United States
1773
1773
Pittsylvania County, Virginia, Colonial America
1778
1778
Henry County, Virginia, United States
1780
1780
Martinsville, Henry County, Virginia, United States
1783
1783
Henry County, Virginia, United States