Capt. Samuel Wilson

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Capt. Samuel Wilson

Also Known As: "Willson"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: County Tyrone, Ireland, or possibly Chester County, PA, Colonial America
Death: October 10, 1774 (43-44)
Point Pleasant, Augusta County, Virginia (Killed in the Battle of Point Pleasant - Lord Dunmore's War)
Place of Burial: Point Pleasant, Mason, WV, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Col. John Wilson, House of Burgesses and Mary Wilson
Husband of Mary Wilson
Father of Sampson Babb Wilson; Ralph Babb Wilson; Eli Babb Willson I; Ruth Babb Hamilton; Mary "Polly" Davis and 1 other
Brother of William Wilson, Jr; Matthew Wilson; Lt. Col. George Wilson, of Hampshire And Augusta Co, VA; Elizabeth Taylor; Martha Willson and 5 others
Half brother of Annie Taylor; Robert Willson; Eleanor White; Mary Willson; Unknown McKennan and 2 others

Occupation: Captain
Military Service: Capt. (USA) Rev
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Capt. Samuel Wilson

From https://www.werelate.org/wiki/Person:Samuel_Wilson_%2837%29

Early Land Acquisition in Augusta County, VA Acquisition of Land from History of Highland County, Virginia, by Oren Frederic Morton:

In 1757 one George Wilson, a land speculator, bought of James Trimble, another speculator, the Elliott survey at Doe Hill (which was located in the "Bull Pasture" area of early Augusta County), and the next year sold a part of it to Samuel Wilson (likely his brother). Very soon afterward, we find William Wilson in this neighborhood. These two men, progenitors of the Wilsons of Doe Hill, were brothers and were sons of John, the first delegate from Augusta to the House of Burgesses.

Acquisition of Land from Chalkley's:

Page 37.--15th August, 1758. George Wilson and Elisebeth to Samuel Wilson. £40, 200 acres, part of tract deeded to George by James Trimble, on the Bullpasture River. Delivered: Wm. Elliott, October, 1759.

▼ Will Abstract From Chalkley’s Augusta County Records:

Page 289.--82d August, 1774. Samuel Wilson's will--Executors, wife Mary and Thomas Hugart; to eldest son. Ralpli, 5 shillings; to next eldest son, Elibable, plantation testator lives on; to youngest son, Sampson, £100, infant; to daughter, Ruth, infant; to wife, Mary. Teste: John Jordan, John McCoy, Joseph Gamwell. Proved, 16th November, 1774, by McCoy and Gamwell. Hugart refuses to execute. Mary qualifies with Thos. Hugart, Robert Armstrong. Page 331.--21st March, 1775. Recorded. Capt. Samual Wilson's appraisement by John McCoy, Joseph Gamwell, Joseph Malcom. Page 384.--19th November, 1783. Thomas Hughart's settlement recorded of his guardianship of Ruth Wilson. [Note: Ruth was the youngest daughter of Samuel Wilson]

▼ Processioning List of 1767-68 "Processioning" was the process or periodically reviewing and agreeing upon property lines between settlers. Processioning Lists can be useful in determining the area of a settler and the neighboring settlers at a specific time period: Page 451.--1767-68: Processioned by Samuel Hamilton, in Cowpasture, from his house down the river to James Baird's: For Samuel Hamilton, Andw. Sutlington, John Dickenson, William Sprowel, John Donaly, Hugh Caffey, Joseph Watson, Andw. Muldrough, Wm. Dougherty, John Clendenning, William Maze, James Beard. Processioned by John Botkin: For Samuel Wilson, Abraham Haptonstall, Robert Duffield, James Burnsides, Robert Carlyle, Richard Botkin, John Carlyle, Samuel Black, Edward Hynds, John Botkin, David Bell. (Note: Abraham Haptonstall married Samuel Wilson's wife, Mary Babb, after his death in 1774).

[edit] ▼ Records on Samuel Wilson in Augusta County, VA Page 186. AUGUST 15, 1775. (84) John McCoy, overseer of road from head of Bull Pasture to Peoples's and from Samuel Wilson's (deceased) to Bell's place, Cow Pasture. Vol. 2 - William Wilson's Declaration, September 25th, 1832: Was born November 7, 1745, in Augusta County; first he volunteered in Capt. Alexander McClenachan's Company, in which William McCutchen was Lieutenant and Joseph Long was Ensign; they assembled at Staunton and marched to Point Pleasant in August, 1774, having joined several companies commanded by Capt. John Morrison, Capt. Samuel Wilson, Capt. George Mathews, Capt. John Lewis, at the Great Levels, in Greenbrier; they had a severe engagement at Point Pleasant, in which Col. Charles Lewis, Capt. McClenachan, Capt. Morrison, and Capt. Willson were killed; the whole number of killed and wounded amounted to 160; thence they werent eighty miles to the Indian Towns, thence back to Point Pleasant; there they remained six or eight days awaiting provisions, when they set out on the return home, where they arrived and were disbanded after serving five months; the officers he recalls were Andrew Lewis, Commandant; Charles Lewis, who was killed, was his Colonel. He volunteered again in Capt. John Lyle's Company, in which Wm. McCutchen was Lieutenant and Joseph Long Ensign; assembled at Lexington in July, 1776, and marched to Holston River, under William Christian; then returned home and were disbanded in the middle of December; Joseph Bell served with him on the tour. On 11th January, 1781, he marched from Widow Teas's as Sergeant; marched to Richmond, thence to Fredericksburg, thence to Portsmouth, where they joined the main body of soldiers under Baron Steuben; was in two slight skirmishes with the British at this place; returned home and were disbanded about the 17th April; was under the command of Sampson Mathews; William Bowyer was his Colonel; Alexander Robinson was Major; the Company Officers were Capt. Thomas Rankin, Lieut. Col. Alexander Scott, Ensign William Buchanan. On his fourth tour, he served as volunteer private in the company of cavalry of which Zachariah Johnston was Captain, Charles Baskins, Lieutenant; Richard Madison, Ensign; they assembled at Widow Teas's about the first of June, 1781; marched to Richmond. The British were leaving Richmond and retiring to Williamsburg, and declarant's company joined the main army of Americans pursuing the British; the British remained but a short time at Williamsburg; after leaving that place they were attacked by the Americans after part of the British had passed over to Jamestown Island; many were killed on both sides; after this declarant's company returned home; his Colonel was William Christian; General Wayne and Colonel Campbell were regular officers he knew. Caution, there are some researchers that have claimed that this Samuel Wilson married Sarah Burke, but that appears to be a different Samuel Wilson. Note Rootsweb.com post below:

From: "Fulcher" <fulcher@@gdsys.net> Subject: Re: [VAFLOYD] Samuel Wilson Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2005 13:00:12 -0500 References: <00db01c5393d$bdede540$3786480c@@vaio>

All we seem to have come up with so far is exactly what you presume...that most of the web sites have it wrong and the "Samuel Wilson" of Point Pleasant is not the one who married Sarah Burke and was the father of Mary Wilson Lucas. The dates are all wrong and he was clearly married to Mary Babb.

I once contacted a prominent Burke researcher and discussed this because he had the incorrect info on his own site. We both agreed that we needed to keep looking for the correct Samuel Wilson.

I'm with you--if anyone ever DOES come across info about the right one, I will be thrilled. That would surely open up another whole line of the family which is currently a dead end. I am even more interested in tracing down this man as the Wilson name also appears in my own family history and I'd love to know if Clay and I are "kissin cousins" from a long way back. Who knows??!!

Keep searching!

Ole MizzKat (now officially "Ole" as of April 1st! If cars are antique at 50, I guess I can be, too! Everybody have a pine float on me in celebration. Just head up to Ole Paul's house and he will fix you right up. Of course, if he starts to pour you something from a jug...run! That stuff will make you do crazy things, like want to kiss him or something!)

Original Message


From: "sanndy kelly" <SandyKelly@@worldnet.att.net> To: <VAFLOYD-L@@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, April 04, 2005 12:42 PM Subject: [VAFLOYD] Samuel Wilson

This may have been discussed on the Floyd list before but thought I'd throw it out again, since I'm new. A Mary Wilson married my John Lucas in 1777. Her father was a Samuel Wilson. Many of my family's researchers think it was the Samuel Wilson who died at the Battle of Point Pleasant in 1774. I don't. The man who died in 1774 left a will naming a wife Mary who was Mary Babb. My guy had a wife Sarah Burk or Burke. And there are a number of fact bits on a Samuel Wilson living in the same area as John Lucas way after 1774. Anybody have anything on this? Sandy in California

http://www.geocities.com/thehepps/AbeTimeLineUpd.html

1775 - Abraham HAPTONSTALL married Mary Babb Wilson, widow of Capt. Samuel Wilson of Augusta County, VA. 1775-- page 16, Mary Willson, (married?), Hempenstall, (March), recording Willson's Inventory; (Source Chronicles of the Scotch-Irish in VA by Chalkley)

From Rootsweb.com post:

Samuel Wilson son of ( Col John & Martha Wilson ) b. 1730 d.10/10/1774 m. Mary Babb 10/11/1753 they had four children as follows. Eli Babb, Ralph, Sampson and Ruth

-----------------------------

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/57834778/samuel-wilson

* Reference: MyHeritage Family Trees - SmartCopy: Feb 11 2020, 3:32:09 UTC



Capt Samuel Wilson
BIRTH 1730 Virginia, USA DEATH 10 Oct 1774 (aged 43–44) Point Pleasant, Mason County, West Virginia, USA BURIAL Tu-Endie-Wei State Park Point Pleasant, Mason County, West Virginia, USA PLOT The Magazine MEMORIAL ID 57834778 · View Source

MEMORIAL PHOTOS 1 FLOWERS 9 Of the Augusta Co., VA. Regiment. Capt. Samuel Wilson married Mary Babb 11 Oct 1753 Chester Co., PA. S/O Col. John Burgess Wilson & Martha Crouchman, Samuel is my 5th Great Grandfather

Family Members Parents Photo John Burgess Willson 1702–1774

Photo Martha Crouchman Willson 1695–1755

Siblings Photo Sarah Willson Crawford 1726–1787

Photo James Wilson 1739–1824

Children Ralph Wilson 1753–1814

Ruth Wilson Hamilton 1760–1848

Inscription Virginians Killed in the battle of Point Pleasant Burial of the Dead. The day after the battle, the bodies of the men slain therein, together with those who died of wounds that night were buried in different places; the following Officers-Colonel Charles Lewis, Colonel John Field, Captain John Murray, Captain Robert McClennahan, Captain Samuel Wilson, Lieutenant Hugh Allen, John Frugg, George Cameron-being laid to rest inside the magazine directly on the upper point of land, at the confluence of the rivers-now Tu-Endi-Wei Park. All were interred without the pomp of war. But that day the cheers of many a Virginia-West Virginia mountaineer were bedewed with tears.

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/57834778/samuel-wilson


https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/57834778/samuel-wilson

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Capt. Samuel Wilson's Timeline

1730
1730
County Tyrone, Ireland, or possibly Chester County, PA, Colonial America
1749
1749
Strasburg, Shenandoah, Virginia, United States
1751
1751
Augusta County, Virginia
1751
Augusta County Virginia
1756
1756
Augusta County, Virginia
1760
April 6, 1760
Augusta County, Virginia
1774
October 10, 1774
Age 44
Point Pleasant, Augusta County, Virginia
1789
March 4, 1789
Virginia
????
Tu-Endie-Wei State Park, Point Pleasant, Mason, WV, United States