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William Powers

Birthdate:
Birthplace: County Wicklow, Leinster, Ireland
Death: 1770 (59-60)
Staunton, Virginia, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Herbert Powers and unknwn Powers
Husband of Anne Wills
Father of Sgt John Powers

Managed by: Edward Leo Neary
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About William Powers

EARLIER ON BEFORE - THEY STARTED IT ALL TAKEN FROM - THE CHRONICLES of BORDER WARFARE ( Page 122 ) AROUND: 1768 Soon other emigrants arrived under the guidance of Samuel Pringle. Among them were, John and Benjamin Cutright, Who settled on Buchannon, Where John Cutright the Yonger, now lives; and Henry Rule who improved just above the mouth of Fink's Run. Before The Arrival of Samuel Pringle, John Hacker had Begun to improve the spot which Pringle had chosen for himself. To prevent any unpleasant result, Hacker agreed that if Pringle would clear as much land, on a creek which had been recently discovered by the hunters, as he had on Buchannon, they could then exchange places. Complying with this condition Pringle took possession of the farm on Buchannon, and Hacker of the land improved by Pringle on the creek, which was hence called Hacker's Creek, ( which in Indian signified Muddy Water ). John and William Radcliff, then likewise settled on this stream - the former on the farm, where the Rev. John Mitchell now lives; the latter at the place now owned by ( William Powers Esq. ) - These comprise all the improvements which were made on the upper branches of the Monongahela in the years 1769 - 1770. THEY STARTED IT ALL by Joy Gregoire Gilchrist In the earliest days, the Hacker's Creek area was a part of West Augusta District, Virginia, and under the rule of the King of England. In 1776, the Virginia House of Burgesses created Monongalia County and two others fromold West Augusta. Until the Mason-Dixon line was run in 1779 and it was discovered that a part ofwhat was considered Virginia (now Washington and Green counties in Pennsylvania), the county seat was in Washington, Pennsylvania; afterwards it was in Morgantown, now West Virginia. In 1784, Harrison County was created from Monongalia and the first seat of government for the county was at Bush's Fort (now Buckhannon); it later moved to Clarksburg. The Hacker's Creek area remained a part of Harrison until 1818when the new county of Lewis was formed with Weston as the county seat Leaders of the early Harrison County government included several Hacker's Creek pioneers. John Hacker, John Sleeth, and Colonel William Lowther each served as sheriff for the county. The first justice registered with the new court was John Sleeth; others included William Hacker and Jacob and William Cozad. Other firsts for the Hacker's Creek area included the first white child born in the confines of present Lewis County (William Hacker, son of John), the first grist mill (at the home of John Hacker), the first religious services (again at the home of John Hacker), and the mother church of Methodist Protestantism west of the Alleghenies. Additionally, the first book to be published west of the mountains, Chronicles of Border Warfare, was written as a manuscript by two Hacker's Creek men, William Hacker and( William Powers ) ; it was later edited and added to by Alexander Scott Withers. Progress has continued in the Hacker's Creek area for well over two hundred years. What began as a spot of civilization in the wilderness progressed to a quiet rural community; now, with the coming of I-79, the spot has become anindustrial development with property values doubling, tripling and even quadrupling in the past ten years. What began as a point at the end of a long blazed trail became an east-west travel route as settlers moved on to Ohio and points further west; during the Civil War, the area served as a highway for troops from both sides; and, in modern times, it has become a main thoroughfare as travelers move from Canada to Florida in a stream of traffic north to south. Descendants of these early pioneers have scattered to the four corners of the United States and beyond. Many were the first settlers in areas as far-flung as other counties in western Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Oregon, and Washington state.They took with them the hardiness, courage, and reliability of their early ancestors and helped to make this nation what it is today, "the land of the free and the home of the brave." Sale of Delinquent LandsThe Republican Vindicator August 24, 1860 Trailer: R. Turk, Sheriff of Augusta Co. Names: Addie, S.F. ; Armstrong, John ; Reed, M.S. ; Alexander, James ; Anderson, Joseph ; Blackwell, Elizabeth ; Bryan, Matthew ; Bridge, James A. ; Bowyers, Joseph ; Bryan, Edwin and Matthew ; Brown, Robert II ; Blackburn, William ; Butler, Launcelat ; Campbell, Robert ; Crawford, William ; Coffee, John W. ; Calhoun, John ; Coleman, John J. ; Cox, Samuel ; Daverich, John ; Dickerson, N.W. ; Edwards, Martin ; Erwis, John ; Foster, Thomas ; Foster, Rebecca ; Flanagan, William ; Fitzgerald, Michael ; Fix, Margaret ; Fauber, John ; Fifer, Jeremiah ; Green; Griffith, Robert ; Gwin, Thomas ; Grave, John ; Glade well, Andrew ; Gilkeson, Robert ; Garten, Ellen ; Johnson, Susan ; Hardy, Richard W. ; Harlow, Nathaniel ; Hayes, James ; Brook, James ; Hughes, John ; Hunter, Samuel ; Hanger, Robinson ; Henderson, Nancy ; Henderson, David ; Holt, Thomas ; Hall, John ; Harman, M.G. ; Harris, John ; Jones, Francis ; Iserman, William ; Keeran, William ; Kinney, William ; Kiger, David ; Kyle, William ; Lotts, John ; Lyon, Allen ; Levi, Ezekiel ; Lines, M.B. ; Lange, David ; Lambs, John ; Long, E. ; Lewis, Charles ; Lahman, Peter ; Moore, David ; Mines, Samuel ; McCrory, David ; McCarty, Thomas ; McDonaldson, William ; McChesney, A. ; McCray, Daniel ; Michell, Thomas ; McCheaney, W. ; O'Brien, Sarah ; Powers, William; Penn., C. ; Paxton, Rebecca ; Putney; Watts; Dooley; Rhodes, H. ; Ray, Mrs. John ; Reynold, J.R. ; Reese, Emmanuel ; Rosenberger, Asa ; Reed, John ; Rohr, James ; Sawyer, John ; Smith, Thomas ; Shank, Henry ; Sweres, John ; Sanger, John ; Stuart, St. Clair ; Snyder, Martin ; Shott, Hugh ; Sandridge, Nicholas ; Simons, James ; Turk, William ; White, John ; Wallace, John D. ; Zimmerman, Peter ; Breat, Kendall ; Cline, Mary A. ; Gregory, Jacob ; Gulley, William ; Henderson, Daniel ; Haldeman, John ; Jackson, Mrs. Catharine ; Michael, John C. ; Myer, Christian ; Smith, William ; Wayland, Louis ; Cowse, Thomas W. ; Hardy, Richard ; Kurtz, Maria ;Turk, R. Summary: A list of property retained for non-payment of taxes. Includes names of former More About WILLIAM POWERS: Confirmation: Bet. 1769 - 1770,Helped To Settle Hacker's Creek



http://hackerscreek.com/norman/POWERS/HERBERT.htm

DESCENDANTS OF HERBERT POWERS

                   =========== == ======= ======
                          Don Norman

1.HERBERT POWERS

   Herbert Powers was born in County Wicklow Ireland about 1680.

Known children of Herbert Powers.

 2.  (1). William                 b.c.     1710

2.WILLIAM POWERS 1.HERBERT POWERS

   William Powers, a son of Herbert Powers, was born in County

Bicklow Ireland about 1700 and died in Staunton, VA.

Known children of William Powers.

 3.  (1). John                    b.Mar  3 1736   d.Oct 26 1823
        m.Prudence White
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William Powers's Timeline

1710
1710
County Wicklow, Leinster, Ireland
1736
March 3, 1736
Princeton, Mercer, New Jersey, United States
1770
1770
Age 60
Staunton, Virginia, United States