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1815 - 1897
Catherine
Ambrose
82
82
Marriage (seven children)
Marriage
Marriage (ten children)
Marriage (twelve children)
Divorce (eleven children)
Marriage (four children)
Marriage (eight children)
Marriage (fourteen children)
Marriage (twelve children)
Marriage (ten children)
Marriage (nine children)
Marriage (seven children)
Marriage (four children)
Marriage (five children)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (seven children)
Marriage (eleven children)
Marriage (seven children)
Marriage (ten children)
Marriage (eleven children)
Marriage (three children)
Marriage (ten children)
Marriage (five children)
Marriage (five children)
Marriage
Marriage
Marriage (five children)
Marriage (seven children)
Marriage (five children)
Marriage (six children)
Marriage
Marriage (eleven children)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (seven children)
Marriage (ten children)
Marriage (six children)
Marriage (three children)
Marriage (four children)
Marriage (eight children)
Marriage (ten children)
Marriage (nine children)
Marriage
Marriage
Marriage (five children)
Marriage (eight children)
Marriage (nine children)
Marriage (seven children)
Marriage (eight children)
Marriage
Marriage
Marriage (a child)
Marriage
Marriage (six children)
Marriage (four children)
Marriage
Marriage (two children)
Marriage (two children)
Marriage (five children)
Marriage (seven children)
Marriage
Marriage (three children)
Marriage
Marriage (ten children)
Marriage
Marriage (nine children)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (four children)
Marriage (six children)
Marriage (five children)
Marriage (two children)
Marriage (eight children)
Marriage (eleven children)
Marriage (four children)
Marriage (four children)
Marriage
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Marriage (five children)
Marriage
Marriage
Marriage
Marriage
Marriage (eight children)
Marriage (six children)
Marriage (two children)
Marriage (six children)
Marriage
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1824 - 1867
Ann
Ambrose
43
43
~1837
Richard
S.
Prather
~1839
Mary
M.
Prather
~1841
Sarah
J.
Prather
~1843
Thomas
H.
Prather
~1845
Benjamin
Prather
~1848
Ruth
Prather
~1852
Daniel
Prather
1844 - 1915
Henry
Clay
Ambrose
71
71
Attended Otterbein University. Left school to enlist. Had just recently been elected to City Council at time of his death. He was also a preacher according to his grandson, Richard Henry. I have his New Testament which is heavily underscored and annotated and filled with clippings. It was a gift to him from his daughter, Mary Etta on July 4, 1908. After his death, it was returned to her and she added a note: "After fathers death Nov 18-1915 This book came back to me and I want Richard to have it, as his book, + to read it for grand-pa's and Mothers sake - Etta C." Barbara Predmore Williams found the book among her parent's effects and sent it to Richard Henry at Christmas, 1974. Richard Henry gave it to his daughter, 15 May 1990.
1805 - 1886
William
Hanby
Ambrose
80
80
My family information says his name was William Clyde; but since I have not documented this, I have used William Hanby, Jr., as he is known to most other researchers. William was a preacher. I do not know if he was ordained. William and his brother George continued to operate the brick kiln established by their father. Later, Lewis Ambrose took over the operation of the business. Lewis was also a builder.
1810 - 1872
Rachel
Gibler
62
62
1849 - 1925
Catherine
R.
Ambrose
76
76
res Hillsboro, OH in 1915.
1825 - 1900
Nancy
H.
Dilts
75
75
1847 - 1864
Sarah
M.
Ambrose
17
17
Did not marry.
1836 - 1906
Susannna
Ambrose
70
70
No Children.
1840 - 1914
Elizabeth
"Lizzie"
Ambrose
73
73
A Mrs. Elizabeth Rizer attended the marriage of Gladys Brunner and Carl Hauck. She came from Marion, OH.
1842 - 1913
Leah
Ann
Ambrose
71
71
1833 - 1917
Mary
Jane
Ambrose
83
83
Kay Roberts Martin relates this family story. At the age of 70, Mary Jane decided it was her time to die. She went upstairs and went to bed, and stayed there until she did die -- 14 years later. Her daughter, Mary Belle Rizer Roberts, had to take care of her.
1776 - 1855
Susanna
B.
Crum
78
78
Susanna's father, Christian (1748-1820), was one of the ministers who ordained her husband, William in 1815. Christian, and his twin brother, Henry, were both ministers. Apparently Christian was generally considered to be United Brethren, and Henry a Methodist. The two brothers, however, worked together closely as did these two early off-shoots of the German Reformed Church. They would often follow each other to the pulpit; Christian preaching to the German United Brethren, and Henry preaching in English to the Methodists. Her grandfather, Anthony CRUM, was born in Germany about 1713. An "Anthon Krum" shipped from Rotterdam, Holland, on the ship Edinburgh, on 2 Oct 1753, landing at the Port of Philadelphia. While not confirmed, this appears to be Christian's father. One historian says the family settled first in or near Media, Delaware Co., Pennsylvania. A descendant of Anthony's says they settled by Mauch Chunk, Carbon Co., Pennsylvania. Either location was temporary for by 1774, Anthony had purchased 600 acres of land from Lord Fairfax, and was settled in Frederick Co., Virginia, where he would remain permanently. It is reported that he paid 1500 English pounds for the property, an extraordinary sum for the time. This would have paid for the labor of 15 men for 8 or 9 years.
1770 - 1850
William
Hanby
Ambrose
79
79
Historical Records of Old Frederick County, Virginia, Pg. 34, lists a William Ambrose as the owner of a saw mill in a survey of Berkeley County mills taken in 1813. William became an early convert of the German itinerant evangelist preachers frequenting the predominately German Settlement. In 1789, at age 19, he joined the Church of the United Brethren in Christ. He was licensed as a minister of the United Brethern Church in 1792. In 1808, he was "authorized to solemnize marriage, to attend to the burial of the dead, to administer the ordinances of baptism and the holy sacrament." This instrument is signed by George A. GEEDING, Christian NEWCOMER and Christian CRUM. Note should be taken of the relationships between these men. Christian CRUM was William's father-in-law. George GEETING was no relation at the time, but in 1822, William's daughter Christina will marry Geeting's grandson, Jacob SONNER in Highland County, Ohio. William Hanby was a frequent traveling companion of Bishop NEWCOMER and in 1812, accompanied the Bishop on an extended missionary tour through Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Kentucky. William must have liked what he saw because it was apparently during this trip, on 13 Aug 1812, he purchased 133 acres of land on Paint Creek in Highland County, Ohio, for $360. On 27 Aug 1815, he was ordained in his own house (in Berkeley Co. Va.) by C. NEWCOMER, Bishop; and C. CRUM, Elder; and that same year, he moved his family to Highland County. William, Susannah, and their nine children (the 10th, Lewis Duckwall, was born in Ohio) loaded their belongings on a covered wagon and, without benefit of paved roads or bridges, set out on their 400 mile journey. The trip lasted three tiresome weeks and took them through Columbus, Ohio, according to daughter-in-law, Margaret. From this description, we can guess at their route. The Cumberland (or Baltimore) Road was the eastern end of what became the Old National Road. It continued on to Washington Co., PA, and to the Ohio River at Fort Henry, now Wheeling, West Virginia. Zane's Trace, an early trail through Eastern Ohio, was improved to handle stagecoach traffic in the early 1800's; and it is likely they took this route from Wheeling to Zanesville. From there they could have followed a loop of the old Great Warriors Path; which followed the Licking River west to the Scioto River at Columbus. Present day U.S. 62 follows another old Indian Trail from the Iroqouis in New York to the Ohio River. It goes from Columbus, right through Hillsboro. The sentiment of the Church was very strongly anti-slavery; and William's grandson, Mathias Hathaway, has suggested that one reason for the move to Ohio was to escape the pro-slavery feelings in Virginia. He also says "they camped for the night by a spring on a hillside, about four miles from Hillsboro. The next day, going on to Hillsboro where there was a Government Land Office, William found that the land around the spring was still government land, subject to entry. He purchased 620 acres, including the coveted spring, for $1.80 per acre." While William did, indeed, purchase this land, it was not recorded until the following year on 9 Dec 1816, so William and his family may have settled first on the land he purchased in 1812. William was a brickmason by trade and he and his sons soon established a brick kiln on their farm. A number of early county buildings were constructed by the Ambroses from their own brick, including the Ambrose Chapel completed in 1835, and the present (1972) Methodist Church in Hillsboro. Eventually, he replaced his own log cabin with a large two-story brick house. Soon after their arrival, meetings were held in the Ambrose home which resulted in the organization of a United Brethern Church. Their home served as a church for the congregation until 1834 when the trustees decided to erect a building. In 1834-1835, William built a church called Ambrose Meeting House. It was built on a plot of his land, with the Eastern part being the Chapel, and the Western Part being the Cemetery. On 6 Jun 1839, William and Susannah deeded this plot of land to the Trustees of the United Brethren Church, one of whom was his son, George. On 12 May 1859, son William Ambrose and Rachel, his wife, deeded a plot of land across the road from this cemetery and meeting house to the Trustees of the United Brethren Church. In 1861 the old meeting house was abandoned and the congregation moved into their new meeting house built on the land deeded to them in 1859. Gladys (Brunner) HAUCK told me many years ago that William AMBROSE had built the first United Brethern Church in Ohio, "the old brick chapel on Danville Rd". Whether she referred to the original or the second building, this must have been one of the earliest United Brethern Congregations in Ohio. Eventually the second church was abandoned and the congregation erected a new building in Hillsboro. The old church was used for a time as a dwelling house, but was no longer standing by 1980. The cemetery was still being used for burials in 1972. ------------------------------ While but a youth, William Hanby Ambrose Sr. his parents removed to Virginia where he embraced religion and joined the Church of the United Brethren in Christ, in the 19th year of his life. In his 23rd year he was licensed to preach and was accounted a faithful minister of Jesus Christ. In 1796 he married Susanna Crum, daughter of Christian Crum, Sr. with whom he lived until his death. In the year 1808, he was authorized to perform sacraments of marriage, burial of the dead, baptism, and the holy sacrament. The instrument was signed by George A. Geeting, Christian Newcomer, and Christian Crum, Sr. In 1812 in company with Bishop Newcomer, he went on a missionary tour through the states of Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Kentucky preaching the gospel. On the 27th day of August 1815, he was ordained in his own house in Berkeley County Virginia by Bishop Christian Newcomer and by Christian Crum, his father-in-law. In the same year he removed his family to Highland Co. Ohio where he established the new denomination of United Brethren in Christ and established an Ambrose Chapel southwest of Hillsboro, Ohio. He had been instrumental in establishing an Ambrose Chapel in Berkeley County, Virginia (now in Morgan County, West Virginia) on land donated by his father Henry Ambrose. The Ambrose Chapel in West Virginia continued to serve the area for over one hundred years. The last building is still standing, though unused as a Church. The last Ambrose Chapel in Highland County was converted to a residence and used by the Hottle Family (distant family connections) until it was demolished for highway relocation about 1965. The Ambrose Cemetery is across the highway from the site of the last Ambrose Chapel. Rev. William Hanby Ambrose and wife Susanna, and other Ambrose family members are buried in the Ambrose Cemetery. At his death, a special tribute was published by the Sciota Conference in Ohio. Two of Rev. Wm. Hanby Ambrose's sons also became ministers. Other Ambrose descendants also became ministers in the Methodist Church. The Ambrose Family played an important part in the history and development of Highland County, Ohio and especially Hillsboro. There are several old brick homes in the Hillsboro area that were built by the Ambrose Families from bricks made in Kilns on Ambrose Property. Most of these homes were built from 1830 to 1850 and are still in good repair. We visited an Ambrose descendant in one of these old fine homes in 1993 and saw others. I was informed that each generation that has moved into one of these homes have made modifications to the interior to suit their own desires within limits. When we were in Highland Co. in 1993, the Methodist Church of Hillsboro was undergoing remodeling and expansion. Found on interior walls in the oldest part of the Church Building which was built in the early 1800s, were bricks with the Ambrose imprint on them. I have photos of the Ambrose Chapel in West Virginia and the 2nd Chapel Building in Highland County, Ohio. The Ambrose Family is of German origin with the immigrant Mathias Ambrose coming to America from Germany in the early 1700s and settling in the Pennsylvania area and some family members moving into Virginia and Maryland areas. Most had large families, consequently there were many Ambroses in those early areas and they migrated to the Midwestern States or Territories. The Ambrose Families have made an important contribution to the development of our Nation. Lowell W. Shire, March 26, 1998. ---------------------------------- Some additional information shared by Saundra Akers of Columbus, Ohio. Saundra is a Crum descendant who lived in Highland Co. Ohio in her earlier years. Saundra has recently talked with Dwight Crum, another Crum descendant who has also researched the Crum Family History. Dwight Crum had found that Christian Crum's Bible was donated to the Otterbein College in Westerville, Ohio (also the site of Ohio Wesleyan University). Saundra made a trip to Westerville. Ohio (not too far from Columbus). She found the Bible in the Historical Archives Office. Otterbein College was a United Brethren Denomination school. The United Brethren in Christ Denomination was founded by Bishop William Otterbein of Baltimore with the help of several Ministers of the day and general area. Our ancestor, Christian Crum was a Co-founder of the denomination which later was merged with the Methodist Denominations to become the United Methodist Church. Bishop Christian Newcomer was also a "driving force" in the formation of the new denomination in America. Both Christian Newcomer and Christian Crum were "Circuit Rider Ministers" of that era and area. Saundra was able to hold the Bible and look at it. There were several pages where he had written his name in English. Other pages he had made notes in German. The Bible is brown and of normal length but seems to be narrower in width. It is thick. Other notes in it appeared to be Masonic Symbols. Christian and his brother Henry were believed to have sat in Masonic Sessions with George Washington in Winchester, Virginia in the 1700s. Saundra was also able to view an old Church History Book. The Book shows that Christian Crum was present at almost all of the yearly conferences and that one of his "Charges" was to spread the Gospel into Ohio and Indiana. Saundra believed this may have been a reason some of his sons came to Ohio and became Ministers. Some of his Ambrose descendants also became ministers in these newly settled lands. Saundra's discovery is important to the Crum Family History and that of related family lines. Lowell W. Shire
1740 - 1811
William
Henry
Ambrose
71
71
There were AMBROSES in the Maryland/Virginia area as early as 1635, but they appear to have been English. This Henry AMBROSE was definitely German and probably a first or second generation immigrant as German appears to have been the family's first language. The Morgan County Historical Society has a prayer book which belonged to Henry's son, Mathias. His notations are written in English, but the book was printed in German. The family belonged to the United Brethren Church and the German language dominated in that General Conference until 1833. Many researchers have thought William Henry was the son of Mathias (1696-1784), who immigrated from Germany in 1732; settled in the Monocacy area in Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania and later moved near Thurmont, in Frederick County, Maryland. Contributing to the confusion was the German naming practice whereby a child's first given name was a baptismal, religious name; and the second or middle name was the secular, "call" name by which the child was known both in the family and the community. Thus, William Henry (Wilhelm Heinrich?) and Mathias' son, Augustus Heinrich, both appear in contemporary records simply as "Henry Ambrose". Augustus Heinrich was named the son of Mathias when he was deeded a part of "Arnold's Chance" by his father in 1759. When he sold this land in 1761, his wife was shown as Mary Eve. In March of 1771, he sold his portion of "Arnold's Delight" to his brothers, Philip, Jacob, and Mathias. Again, his wife is shown as Mary Eve. Most researchers indicate William Henry was married to Sarah during this same period. I have found no primary source to support this assertion. However, a Henry Ambrose of Hampshire County, Virginia, and his wife Sarah sold a 50 acre parcel located on Sleepy Creek in August of 1815, almost four years after Henry Senior's death. Presumably this is Henry Junior. Could an earlier researcher have mistakenly assumed this deed was executed by Henry Senior? In fact, we have no proof that William Henry was born in 1740, or indeed, that his name was "William" Henry. Curiously, Mathias' son, Augustus Heinrich, disappears from the records of Frederick County after his sale of "Arnold's Delight" in 1771. Is it coincidence that William Henry first appears in the records in Berkley County, Virginia, in 1772? At this point, we still have many more questions than answers, and any relationship to Mathias remains unproven. On 17 Nov 1772, our Henry AMBROSE signed the lease (for 5s.), and purchased the following day (for £375 Pennsylvania currency), 400 acres on the middle branch of Sleepy Creek in Berkeley Co., Virginia. This is near present day Berkeley Springs in Morgan County, West Virginia. Formerly called Bath, it was called Medicine Springs on a map drawn in 1747 by Thomas Jefferson's father. The 74 degree mineral water flowing from Warm Springs Ridge drew Indians to this site long before colonial settlers arrived; and the State Park Service operates a spa there today. In 1772 it was located in Berkeley County, Virginia, which included that part of old Frederick Co., Virginia, which is now Berkeley County, West Virginia, plus a western portion of what is present-day Morgan County, West Virginia. Morgan County was not formed until 1820, and West Virginia was formed in 1861 when Virginia seceded from the Union and the counties of western Virginia refused to secede and organized a separate government supporting the Union. The deed refers to Henry Ambrose "of the County of Berkeley and the Colony of Virginia". Thus, we know that Henry was living in this area of Virginia prior to his purchase. His son, William, indicated on the 1850 census that he was born in Maryland, so they must have moved sometime in 1771 or early 1772. Henry AMBROSE is found on the Rent Rolls of Berkeley Dist., Virginia, in 1772, between 1774 and 1781 and again in 1787. He is also listed in Land Owners, 1st Battalion, Berkeley, Virginia, between 1784 and 1794; except for 1786 when only the 2nd Battalion was listed. According to Cecil Ray Ambrose, the farm owned by Henry at the time of his death was "located on the Old Frederick grade (now Morgan-Frederick grade) and as of 1980 belonged to Paul Myers. Henry may have served in the Revolutionary War. The records of his service have been lost; but according to Cecil Ambrose [1975] the military pension file for private Michael WIDMYER [National Archives No. S-11857] contains a deposition by Mathias AMBROSE in which he states that "his father, Henry AMBROSE, was a Captain in the Berkeley Co., Virginia, Militia in which Michael WIDMYER was a private; that Mathias' brother and Michael WIDMYER were drafted into the Army from the Militia Company in September 1780; and that his brother was subsequently killed at the Battle of Guilford Co., North Carolina (50 killed on 15 Mar 1781)". Cecil Ambrose thought this referred to Mathiasâ(tm) brother, Peter. But Peter, if born in 1772, would have been too young to have served in the Militia. Another pension application file for Jesse WALLER (S-4719), states that he was a resident of Berkeley County when he entered the service, that he served under Captain AMBROSE (as well as several others); and that after rendezvousing at Martinsburgh, Virginia, he served at Fort McIntosh until his term expired in February 1779. Family legend says Henry was present at the surrender at Yorktown. On October 19, 1781, Charles Lord Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, Virginia, to General George Washington, thereby ending the War for Independence. Henry did provide supplies to the Army of the State of Virginia during the war. Public Service Certificate No. 414 dated 6 Feb 1781 is a receipt to Henry AMBROSE and five of his neighbors for 16-1/2 bushels, 6 quarts of wheat; for which they are to be paid "333 pounds, 15 shillings current Money". The family was intimately involved with the establishment of the United Brethren, and later the Methodist Church in this country. In 1963, Fred T. Newbraugh, a church historian, referred to the Berkeley area as "a crossroads for the Christian soldiers going to and from the West". One of the early Bishops of the United Brethren Church was Rev. Christian Newcomer, whose journal (translated from the German) mentions the Ambroses: July 25, 1799 - went to Ambroses where a two day meeting had been appointed. Aug 7 1800 - began a meeting on Sleepy Creek which lasted through Sunday. Never have I witnessed the power of God in so great a degree among so many people. Meeting was protracted till late at night and many found peace. Next day crowds greater, Lutherans, Presbyterians, Mennonites, Baptists and Methodists all drew near the Lord's table. Aug 9, 1800 - Our meeting [was] at Sleepy Creek. Brother Geeting followed me. We stayed the night with brother Ambrose. Aug 30, 1811 - I reached the place of meeting, Crum, Duckwall and Reiser were there. Christian Crum spoke first. At night we had a meeting at Ambroses. A separate building, to be used only for church services, was a luxury these early settlers could not afford. Services were held in a member's home. The Ministers were itinerant. They traveled from one congregation to the next and several months might pass before they returned. When a church was finally built, it was often shared by several congregations of different faiths. Great meetings were held once and sometimes twice a year. Usually, someone would have a barn which could accommodate the huge crowds, who would travel for miles to hear famous preachers. "The preaching was positive and dogmatic. 'Thus saith the Lord' settled all questions. After going over the circuit and preaching gratuitously, they [the preachers] went home. They built no houses of worship, gave no attention to the training of the young, set in motion no working activities, and collected no money, unless for the benefit of the poor. So the preacher came, preached, and went home, and he paid his own way. He worked on his farm. All the people had to do was to hear the preacher, feed him and his horse, and wait till he came again." I have not found mention of William Henry as a lay preacher, but it would be surprising if he were not. At least one son, two grandsons, and one great grandson are known to be ordained ministers; and many descendants and in-laws were lay preachers. The Ambrose Chapel in Berkeley Springs is built on land which Henry deeded to his son, William, and others "for the erection of a free meeting house where any minister of the Gospel of Jesus Christ might preach his doctrine". The present Chapel is said to be the oldest church in Morgan County and has recently (1999) been restored. It was built in 1851, near where a much older church had stood. According to Cecil Ambrose, the church is built on land which was originally a part of the 400 acres purchased by Henry in 1772. He divided this land among his children about 1797 and set aside one acre for a Free Meeting House. Mathias purchased all the other's shares, and after his death, the 400 acre parcel was advertised for sale "with the exception of one acre reserved for a Meeting House". The named heirs in the estate of Henry AMBROSE, were sons Mathias and William, and daughters Margaret RIZER and Catherine CLAUVER. He died intestate, so why his other children were not named as heirs in the Chancery Court proceedings is not explained. At least six of the eight others were probably still living at the time of his death. His son-in-law, George RIZER, was named administrator of his estate. Henry died owing a bond of £300 to Susanna B. STORM. In September 1814, Susanna obtained a judgment against the estate for £150, plus interest, plus $15.51 costs. George RIZER filed an account on 13 May 1815 showing a balance of personal property of 257 dollars and 2-1/2 cents. Since the estate had insufficient (cash) funds to pay the judgment, Mathias paid Susanna $200, for which sum, Susanna signed an acquittance of all claims and demands against the estate. At the time of his death, Henry owned 142 acres on the South Fork of Sleepy Creek. It is not clear why this land was not sold to close the estate. Perhaps Henry's widow was still living and wished to stay on this land. Perhaps there was difficulty getting releases from William and Catherine, who had both moved to Ohio. In any event, after Mathias' death in 1842, his estate made application to force the sale of the 142 acres, to repay the $200 advanced to Henry's estate by Mathias. The sale was ordered and the land was sold at Commissioner's auction on 25 Mar 1844. An interesting, but unexplained sidelight to these proceedings, is that according to the 1787 Census of Virginia - Berkeley County Tax List A, Henry AMBROSE paid the taxes for himself, son Mathias, and a "P. STORM". Lease from George Darr 17 Nov 1772:http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~pasher/documents/deeds/amb-henry1772.htm Promissory note for grain furnished to the Army of Virginia 6 Feb 1781:http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~pasher/documents/misc/revwarpay.htm
Sarah
1797 - 1877
Elizabeth
Anne
Ambrose
79
79
Elizabeth and David moved to Ottumwa in 1849.
1814 - 1850
Susannah
"Susan"
Ambrose
36
36
1801 - 1871
Christena
Ambrose
69
69
1810 - 1883
Mathias
Ambrose
73
73
He was an United Brethren Minister. According to the Methodist archives, Mathias served during the Civil War in the same unit (113th OVI) as his son, John.
1817 - 1892
Lewis
Duckwall
Ambrose
74
74
Marriage Records of Highland County, Ohio (1805-1880) lists the marriage of ARLEDGE Carey P. m. Sarah HORTON July 2, 1835, by Lewis Duckwall, M.G. The following was written by son, Mathias Hathaway AMBROSE in 1910: "For a number of years after their marriage they lived on a farm of 100 acres, part of his father's homestead in Ohio. Here six of the oldest children were born; two, Jacob and Mary were born in Pickaway Co. near Circleville, whither the family moved, and for some years lived before going to Illinois. Three children were born in Ill., David, George, and Harry. "The great family event, at least in the lives of the older children, was the removal from Ohio to Illinois in October 1855, and the making of a new home on the prairies, among foreigners, with strange and romantic surroundings. The homestead in Ohio from which we moved was a ten acre farm four miles east of Circleville in Pickaway, Co. A year or so before we moved the house burned down, but little being saved from it. "The purpose of moving to Illinois....a far away and strange Eldorado to us all...was to get more land where the boys might be put to work and aid in making a living. A year or two before this removal Father and a friend made a prospecting trip to Illinois in a one horse buggy. On this trip he bought a fine quarter section of fertile prairie land in McLean Co., a few miles east of Bloomington. But in arranging to make the Western move he united, for company's sake and mutual helpfulness, with a friend from Fairfield Co., Solomon Lincoln, who was moving to Illinois that fall. Lincoln was a distant relative of Abraham Lincoln of Springfield, near which was to be our future home. This friend, Solomon Lincoln, had relatives living in Logan Co., and so it happened that father went direct to this county instead of McLean Co. "In that early day nothing could be done with land until it was fenced and sod broken up for a season before planting. Fencing cost as much as the land was worth....sometimes a good deal more. Father had not the means for these improvements or to build a house to live in. With friends in Logan Co. he could pass the winter there more easily. Before spring he bought an 80 acre farm partly improved, with a small two-room house on it, two miles west of Mt. Pulaski, and three or four miles from where we spent the winter. He soon traded the McLean Co. land for the mortgage notes he gave for this land. "But we have run ahead of our story. The journey was made in October 1855. A two-horse wagon and a one-horse buggy was the means of travel. The buggy had two seats, one small and low with the dash board for a back, for two or three children to occupy. The wagon contained a few household goods, including a barrel of flour and other provisions, and some cooking utensils. Father drove the wagon and Mother the buggy, having with her two or three of the smaller children. Daniel was old enough to help a good deal, driving the buggy part of the time. The trip took about two weeks. Until the first Sunday our teams were in constant company of a hundred or more covered moving wagons. Father and Mr. Lincoln rested over the next Sunday, the others going on. The balance of the journey the wagons of these two families were the only ones in sight for hours at a time. Our route lay through Dayton, Richmond, Indianapolis, Terre Haute, Paris, Ill., and on across the virgin prairies to Decatur, Ill., then on to the vicinity of Mt. Pulaski. For the first winter the two families lived in a small three room cabin near Salt Creek, a tributary of the Sangamon. "Uncle Matt moved out in the spring and bought a farm of 120 acres a short distance east of our farm. There we began to make a home in true pioneer fashion, on the level, undrained prairie, and with not a little privation, and longing to be back in good old Ohio. In a year or two an addition was built to the house of one and a half stories, of four rooms. "All our nearest neighbors were recent immigrants from Germany, who could speak little if any English. The work was hard and a few years unremunerative. But the wild beauty of the prairie, rank in the spring and early summer with strange vegetation, profuse with wild flowers and wild birds, an abundance of wild turkeys, geese, ducks, prairie chickens, and quails in the winter time. The water flooded stretches in the spring time, and the weird awe inspiring prairie fires in the fall, still fascinate me after the lapse of half a century. To view a little patch of prairie grass, or the sun flower like bloom of the old despised rosen weed, brings in most vividly, a rush of long dormant memories. "The great event of all our family history in Illinois was the Civil War of 1861-1865. We lived in the midst of the great historic forces involved in this war. We lived only about 20 miles from Springfield, the home of Abraham Lincoln. The first political speech the writer [Mathias Hathaway] ever heard was when he accompanied his father to Lincoln, the county seat, and heard A. Lincoln speak from the steps of the old Court House. "The two Ambrose families living side by side, were in many respects, as one family. At the outbreak of the War there were four sons in these two families old enough to bear arms in the martial strife. They inherited from abolition and patriotic fathers and mothers the animus that bore them without delay to the front, and before the strife ended there were four more with them. At the close of the conflict, all returned home unscathed except the oldest son of Uncle Matt, Levi P. who was killed at the battle of Corinth, Miss.,Oct. 5 1862, his body being buried where he fell. "That was closed, a new era for our family began. Our family had a heritage of desire and ambition for more education than was afforded by the meager facilities of our still country home. The older ones never attended a district school closer than two miles, and that across fields and unbridged sloughs, but as our going was only during two or three winter months these sloughs were often glacially bridged. "Daniel spent a year in college before the War and a year after, and all the others followed more or less faithfully his example. With one or two exceptions all taught school for various periods. "In 1873, the writer and his bride of less than a year went to Avalon, Missouri to take charge, as Principal of Avalon Academy. A year later, father sold his farm in Illinois and moved to Avalon, that the younger children might have better educational advantages than they had in Illinois. There they lived for more than twenty years, and there five of the brothers found life companions. Father and mother enjoyed church and social privileges that made calm and peaceful their declining years, and there, side by side, their dust lies; and all nine children scattered far and wide, rise up and call their memories blessed." ------------------------------------- There are few men better known in this part of Livingston county and the surrounding country than the father of the subject of this Sketch, Lewis D. Ambrose, and it is eminently proper that an outline a brief of his life work be given proper mention in this connection. Lewis D. Ambrose was born in Highland county, O., May 23, 1817. His grandparents were natives of Germany and soon after the close of the Revolutionary War came to America, locating in Berkeley county, W. Va., where they reared a large family of children. It was there that Lewis' father, William Ambrose, was born, reared and married, his wife being Miss Susanna Crum, of the same locality. In 1813, they moved to Highland county, O., cleared and improved a heavily timbered tract of land and there passed the remaining years of their lives, leaving at their death nine children, Lewis being the youngest. They were earnest Christian people, and for years Mr. A. was an itinerant minister in the U. B. Church. The early life of Lewis D. Ambrose was as uneventful as that of most farmers' boys and the only education he could secure was what the early subscription schools afforded at the time. When 13 years old he became converted and connected himself with the U. B. Church, and when only 20 years and he began ministerial labors for that organization. January 17, 1839, Miss Nancy Leib became his wife, her birth having occurred in Fairfield county, O., April 8, 1819. In 1855 Mr. A. moved to Logan county, Ill., continuing farming and the work of the ministry for 19 years, when he sold out and came to his present location in this county and township. Since then he has for the most part given his attention to agricultural pursuits, though his earnest and laborious efforts in local ministerial work and in behalf of the Avalon College, in which he has always taken such a warm, active interest, have occupied him not a little of the time. He has labored zealously for the success of both school and church, and it is an acknowledged fact that much of the prosperous condition of each of these bodies at present is due to Mr. Ambrose. The following children have been born to himself and wife: Susan C., Catherine, Daniel L., a journalist of Mt. Pulaski, Ill.; William H., an attorney of Delavan, Ill., Matthias H., a self-educated man and a graduate of Otterbein University, of Ohio, and the first principal of Avalon College; Samuel W., a merchant at Avalon; Mary E., the only living daughter, wife of A. W. Jones, M. D., of Westerville, O.; Jacob G., a farmer and carpenter of Mitchell county, Kan.; David E., also a graduate of Otterbein University and now a teacher in Sangamon county, Ill.; George F., a dentist of Garnett Kan., and Hugh M., referred to below. Three of these sons served in the late war, Daniel L., William H. and Matthias H., who were members of the 7th Illinois volunteer infantry; Daniel held a lieutenant's commission in Co. H. Hugh M. Ambrose is numbered among the representative men of Livingston county. He attended Avalon College, where his course was marked with unusual brilliancy, and subsequently he was called to the chair of Ancient Languages in that institution, a position he has since filled with universal satisfaction and credit. Thorough and proficient in all that he does, those who are favored with his instruction can not but he benefited. He has also been brought into official prominence in this county through his election to the position of county surveyor and at present he is the incumbent of that office. His life work has indeed been of great good, but the future holds out for him still greater and brighter prospects.
1798 - >1866
David
Pusey
Inskeep
68
68
~1810
Hugh
Meharry
1797 - 1872
Johann
Jacob
Sonner
75
75
Jacob's grandfather, George Adam GEETING (1741-1812), was an ordained minister in the German Reform Church (1783-1804); and an ordained minister and Bishop in the United Brethren Church (1804-1812). He was a close friend of William OTTERBEIN, the founder of the United Brethren Church. The site of the Mt. Hebron Cemetery and Geeting Meeting House (near Keedysville, Washington Co., Maryland), is designated as Historic Site Number 31 of the United Methodist Church. Jacob's father, Anthony SONNER (1760-1843) " built a very substantial grist mill on the north bank of the East Fork of White Oak Creek, which was operated by members of the family until 1900. Sonner's mill was a Highland Co. landmark for over half a century. The Sonners also established a saw mill near the grist mill." The land was granted him for his war service, on Massie and Kerr Survey No. 3849 in the northeastern corner of White Oak Township. Anthony SONNER is sometimes credited with organizing the first United Brethern Church in Highland County. Since he arrived a year before William AMBROSE, this seems plausible. Services were held in the Sonner's log home for several years. Eventually, the congregation purchased a blacksmith's shop on the south bank of White Oak Creek, about opposite Sonner's Mill, and this structure was converted for use as a church. It was called Sonner Chapel. A cemetery was laid out about a half mile from the Chapel on the New Market-Mowrystown Pike. In 1871, a new church was erected about a quarter of a mile south "on the cross roads". The land for the cemetery apparently was donated to the church by Anthony as later deed transfers except "one acre near the center of the farm for the grave yard".
1762 - 1842
Mathias
Ambrose
80
80
1768 - 1823
Catherine
Ambrose
55
55
1766 - <1843
Margaret
"Peggy"
Ambrose
77
77
~1772
Peter
Ambrose
Cecil AMBROSE suggests this might be Mathias' brother who was killed in the Revolutionary War according to the Widmyer pension file. However, the IGI lists his birth in 1772.
~1774
Philip
Ambrose
Was killed by Indians in Virginia.
1781 - 1849
Frederick
Ambrose
68
68
According to "Howe's Historical Collection of Ohio" by Henry Howe, he was one of the first settlers in Champaign County. The History of Champaign County says he came to Ohio in 1799. He settled on the Mad River, in what later became Champaign County. When Urbana was later laid out, he moved to town and started a pottery. He also engaged in the mercantile business, was quite active in local politics, and served as one of the early sheriffs of the county, from 1821 to 1825 and 1833 to 1847. He was listed as an Elector for Champaign County, 8 Oct 1811; no. 22 in a list of 87 voters. He was also elected Treasurer of the County from 1840 to 1847. He and and his first wife, Jennie, had nine children, but only four have been found. In Chancery Records for Champaign Co. Vol. 1, there are 11 references to Frederick Ambrose. No other Ambrose is named. The early references are to service on the grand or petit jury. In 1833 Frederick Ambrose was appointed guardian ad litem for the Hanback children [pg. 78]; and for the Taylor children [pg. 80]; also for Lung children [pg 92]. Frederick Ambrose admin. of Alexander Allen vs.. Sally Allen et al. Has to do with selling of a lot owned by Alexander Allen. In 1838 Frederick Ambrose admin. of Wm. Winsor deceased v. Hannah Weldon et al. Again, having to do with lot in Urbana.
1784 - 1869
Jacob
Ambrose
85
85
The following deed record appears in Champaign County Deed Book Vol. N, page 496: 1836 John Goddard and wife Mary sell to Joseph Ford For fifty five and one half dollars. ( Land study by Pat Stickley says 77 acres) parcel of land to wit: being part of sw 1/2 of SEC. 20 in t. five of range eleven...beginning at the nw corner of a 20 acre lot deeded by Thomas Ford to Jacob AMBROSE, thence west forty-two and one half poles, thence s to the nw corner of a nine (?) acre lot deeded by said Thomas Ford to Josiah Richards, thence e to said 20 acre lot, thence n. to the place of beginning, Save and except two acres lying in a square out of the NE corner of the above described land heretofore deeded by the said John Goddard and wife Mary to Nancy Porter in trust for her eldest child, supposed to contain nine and one fourth acres more or less.
~1781 - ~1865
John
Bell
Ambrose
84
84
1785 - ~1865
Daniel
Ambrose
80
80
Daniel was in attendance, and purchased several articles at the public sale of William Henry Ambrose's personal estate on 26 December 1811.
1787 - 1856
Solomon
Ambrose
69
69
1774 - ~1835
Rosanna
Clover
61
61
1751 - 1844
Henry
Clover
93
93
He is mentioned in his brother-in-law's will (Mathias) 15 Nov 1843. [Ambrose Family History, Book IX, page 205]. Purchased 200 acres on Kings Creek, Twin Twp., Ross County, Ohio, 10 Jul 1804 (Deed Book 4 p475). Henry sold this property 27 Jul 1807 (Deed Book 7 p232). [JVT] He is mentioned in his brother-in-law's will (Mathias) 15 Nov 1843. [Ambrose Family History, Book IX, page 205].
1767
George
W.
Rizer
Moved to Cumberland, Allegany Co., Maryland with his Father between 1793 and 1794. The family Bible as published in the NGS Quarterly, Vol 83, No 1, gives a death date for George RIZER of 7 Jan 1853. It is not clear if this refers to George Senior, or Junior.
~1785 - ~1819
Sophia
Marquart
34
34
1802
Anna
Nancy
Rizer
1825 - 1840
Maria
Inskeep
15
15
~1803 - 1880
George
Ambrose
77
77
1797 - 1850
Sarah
Wolfe
53
53
John
Yost
~1792 - 1853
Elizabeth
61
61
~1824 - 1880
Jacob
Henry
Ambrose
56
56
~1812
Julia
S.
Hendricks
1807 - 1894
Margaret
"Polly"
Rizer
86
86
"Aunt Polly" lived to become a legend. She delighted in telling her children and grandchildren, nieces and nephews about the early pioneer days and the long trek from Virginia to Ohio.
1806 - <1815
Christian
Ambrose
9
9
1819 - 1896
Nancy
Lieb
77
77
Her family lived in Greenfield, Ohio.
1799 - <1839
Jacob
Ambrose
40
40
1823 - 1905
William
Sonner
81
81
1824 - 1901
George
A. G.
Sonner
77
77
The initials, A. G., appear on the official records pertaining to George, including his tombstone. It is possible he was named for his great grandfather, George Adam GEETING. On Nov 5, 1850, he left Highland County for Ripley Co., Indiana, where he remained until 1857, On 12 Nov 1857, he removed to Union Twp, Wells Co., Indiana. The initials, A. G., appear on the official records pertaining to George, including his tombstone. It is possible he was named for his great grandfather, George Adam GEETING. On Nov 5, 1850, he left Highland County for Ripley Co., Indiana, where he remained until 1857, On 12 Nov 1857, he removed to Union Twp, Wells Co., Indiana.
1826 - 1910
John
Sonner
84
84
1830 - 1911
Anthony
Sonner
80
80
1832 - 1917
Isaac
Wilker
Sonner
84
84
1837 - 1925
Mathias
Sonner
88
88
1828
Elizabeth
Ann
Sonner
1840
Rachel
Sonner
1808 - 1889
Lewis
Ambrose
80
80
~1810 - <1870
William
Ambrose
60
60
~1844
William
Eliphaz
Ambrose
1813 - 1854
Sarah
M.
Perkins
40
40
1816
Mary
Ann
Weller
~1831
Sarah
Elizabeth
Hurtt
1797 - 1883
Mathias
"Ticey"
Ambrose
86
86
Listed in Deed Book 4, page 166, Morgan County records, 26 Dec 1846, 324 acres on Sleepy Creek. Henry and William AMBROSE are mentioned in this deed. Also David and Mathias are deceased.
~1798 - 1888
Mary
Ann
Buck
89
89
1826 - 1876
Jacob
Ambrose
49
49
1844 - 1892
Mary
Lavinia
Ambrose
47
47
1840 - 1846
Susanna
Crum
Ambrose
5
5
1840 - 1842
Catherine
Ambrose
2
2
1843 - 1922
Daniel
Lieb
Ambrose
79
79
1844 - 1931
William
Henry
Ambrose
87
87
1847 - 1926
Mathias
Hathaway
Ambrose
78
78
By 1872, Mathias had graduated from Otterbein University, Westerville, Ohio, with a B.A. degree. Later, he took an M.A. degree at the same university. He taught school for a time after graduation. At the time of his marriage in 1872, he was Principal of the High School in Knoxville, Illinois. In 1873, Mathias and his bride went to Avalon, Missouri, to take the position of Principal of Avalon Academy. His father, Lewis Duckwall, sold his farm in Logan Co., Illinois, and also moved to Avalon at this time. Mathias entered the Ministry and held Pastorates in Ohio, Iowa, and Illinois, before going to Palestine, Illinois, in 1895, as Pastor of the old Presbyterian Church on Main Street. After retiring from the ministry, he and his wife lived in Chicago until her death in 1918. After that, he spent much time in travel. He lived in Puerto Rico for two years where he became especially interested in the Mission School and the Spanish Language.
1849 - 1914
Samuel
Wesley
Ambrose
65
65
1851
Mary
Elizabeth
Ambrose
1853 - 1950
Jacob
Glossbrenner
Ambrose
96
96
He was named for Bishop Jacob GLOSSBRENNER, a charter member of the Virginia United Brethren Conference.
1861
Hugh
Meherry
Ambrose
1822 - 1903
Jacob
D.
Ambrose
80
80
~1839 - 1864
Emily
Ambrose
25
25
~1840 - 1842
Ambrose
?
1
1
infant
1833 - 1901
John
Ambrose
68
68
1843
George
Ambrose
1845 - <1850
Lydia
Ambrose
5
5
1838 - 1862
Levi P.
Ambrose
24
24
1840
Lewis
Ambrose
1842
Henry
Ambrose
1848 - 1888
John
C.
Ambrose
40
40
1804
John
Bell
Ambrose
According to the birthplaces shown for his children on the 1850 Census, John Bell came to Ohio some time between 1841 and 1845.
1827 - 1906
Ann
"Nancy"
Fenner
78
78
1813 - 1864
Nicholas
T.
Ambrose
51
51
1817 - 1879
Elizabeth Ann
"Bethany"
O'Brien
62
62
After Nicholas death, Bethany married Peter Shirley, father-in-law to her son George Henry.
1836 - 1915
John
Daniel
Ambrose
78
78
1839 - 1917
Mary
Elizabeth
Ambrose
78
78
1844 - 1908
Peter
Smith
Ambrose
64
64
He was known as "Black Pete", identifying him among several Peter Ambroses in the area, because he was very handsome and of dark complexion.
1819 - 1905
Mathias
D.
Ambrose
86
86
1814 - 1870
Anna
M.
Vanorsdall
55
55
1849 - 1916
Catherine
Belle
Ambrose
66
66
According to descendant Elizabeth Schulze, she was christened as Catherine Belgium AMBROSE. However, she always wrote her middle name as "Belle".
~1846 - <1900
Daniel
Ambrose
54
54
~1847
Sarah Frances
"Fannie"
Ambrose
1853
John
William
Ambrose
He worked for the B&O railroad.
~1860 - <1900
Elizabeth
Ann
Ambrose
40
40
1833 - 1919
Alcinda
Inskeep
85
85
1827 - 1830
David
Inskeep
2
2
1818 - 1894
William
Pusey
Inskeep
75
75
1820 - 1843
Rachel
Inskeep
23
23
1823 - 1897
Susannah
Inskeep
74
74
1831 - 1832
Mary
Lane
Inskeep
1
1
1836 - 1920
Carey
Inskeep
84
84
1839 - 1897
Anna
Eliza
Inskeep
58
58
1841
Marian
Inskeep
1827 - 1896
Lewis
Ambrose
69
69
1828 - 1855
James
Madison
Ambrose
27
27
1831 - 1921
Katherine
Ambrose
90
90
1840 - <1887
Joseph
W.
Ambrose
47
47
1844 - <1890
E. Ann
Ambrose
46
46
1848 - 1868
Emma
J.
Ambrose
19
19
1842 - 1843
Susannah
M.
Ambrose
9m
9m
1854 - <1890
Isaac
W.
Ambrose
36
36
~1836
Wesley
Meharry
~1830
Susan
Meharry
~1832
Emily
Meharry
~1834
Francis
Meharry
~1827
Catherine
Ambrose
1829 - 1896
Peter
V.
Ambrose
67
67
~1782 - <1860
Elizabeth
"Betsy"
Crum
78
78
~1772
Henry
Ambrose
Henry purchased 50 acres "on the drains of Sleepy Creek" from Edward Crabb and his wife Rachel on the 25th of September, 1801. He is listed as having purchased personal property from the sale of his father's estate on 26 December, 1811. In August of 1815, he sold the 50 acres purchased in 1801, and the deed indicates he is a resident of Hampshire County, Virginia.
1853 - 1935
James
Thomas
Ambrose
82
82
~1850
John
W.
Ambrose
1827
Elizabeth
Ambrose
1830
Rosanna
Ambrose
1832 - 1884
Robert
Buck
Ambrose
51
51
1836 - 1912
Susanna
Ambrose
76
76
1841 - 1862
Mathias
Albert
Ambrose
21
21
1840 - 1926
Robert
Buck
Ambrose
85
85
Believed to have fought in the Civil War, on the opposite side from his brother, Tice.
1849 - 1917
John
W.
Ambrose
68
68
John followed his brother Jacob to Oregon in about 1888. They went by covered wagon and were stranded for a time in the desert when they ran out of water. John struck out on his own, found water, and came back for his family. They settled in the John Day valley where he became a sheep rancher. He was elected sheriff of Grant County Oregon and served two terms in the 1890's. A shackling device called the "Oregon Boot" was used by him, and is now in the museum in Canyon City.
~1809 - 1865
Henry
Ambrose
56
56
Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Cert. No. 5966 shows Henry Ambrose of Montgomery County, Ohio purchased on 16 Mar 1837; "the North East quarter of South East quarter of Section thirty six, in Township four South of Range three East, in the District of Lands subject to sale at Lima, Ohio, containing forty acres. A Henry Ambrose appears on the census of Monroe Twp., Miami County, Ohio, in 1835, and again in 1840 (pg 434). This Henry purchased lots 23 and 24 in Frederick, Miami County, on 1 Mar 1844 from Alexander Helmick [Book 21, pg 243]. His estate was filed for probate on 25 Jul 1865 [case No. 04162]. Another estate was filed for probate 27 Nov 1869 for Henry AMBROUSE [Case No. 04791, Bk C1, pg 0072].
~1820
Joseph
B.
Ambrose
~1817
Lucy
Ambrose
~1837
Mary
E.
Hyre
~1797
Margaret
Ambrose
~1797
Martha
Ambrose
~1795 - >1860
David
Ambrose
65
65
He is listed as an appraiser in the Morgan County estate of Thomas BARNEY, filed 4 Feb 1851.
1812 - 1892
George
Ambrose
79
79
While not proven, we believe this George is the son of Mathias AMBROSE and Rosanna CLOVER. An earlier researcher suggested a birth date of 1794, but also indicated he died in Ogle Co., Illinois. Circumstancial evidence includes his birth place (Morgan Co.) as given in his obituary, and the fact that his brother, David, also migrated to Illinois, although some miles distant, in Macoupin County. Obituary from THE DAILY HURONITE, Huron, South Dakota Friday, July 22, 1892, page 4 column 3. Mr. George Ambrose died at his home on the corner of Illinois and Second streets in this city at 1 o'clock Friday morning, July 22, 1892. Had he lived until the 30th inst., he would have been 80 years old. He was born in Morgan county, Virginia in 1813. Married Miss Anna Hess in Rockingham county, Va, in 1848, and in 1854 removed to Rochelle, Illinois, where they resided until 1881, when Mr. Ambrose came to Huron and settled upon a homestead four miles south of this city. He resided upon his farm the required time and then made final proof. In the spring of 1882 his family joined him here, he having built a comfortable home for them on the corner of Second and Ilinois steets [sic]. Mr. Ambrose was the father of six children, five of whom with their mother, are now living, viz: Mrs. Hotalling, who resides with her husband and family on a farm few miles south of this place; Mrs. Davis, wife of Rev. W. B. Davis of Clarence, Iowa; Mrs. John Cain, of Olympia, Washington, and Mr. Charles and Miss Georgia Ambrose of this city. Mr. Ambrose was a quiet, unassuming man; he was devoted to his home and family and was an exemplary citizen. Arrangements have not yet been completed for funeral services, but is understood they will be held on Sunday. Miss Georgia Ambrose who was visiting in Olympia is expected to reach here with Mrs. Cain and Mrs. Davis tomorrow evening. Other relatives are also looked for, and until their arrival the hour of service will not be named.
1801 - 1872
Mary
"Polly"
Ambrose
71
71
1803
Rosanna
Ambrose
~1808
Hannah
Ambrose
Moved to Troy, Ohio.
1805
John
Ambrose
1808 - ~1847
Susannah
Ambrose
39
39
1810
William
Ambrose
1787 - 1842
Peter
Clover
54
54
Peter taught school as early as 1817/1818 in a little log cabin built and located in the "Clover Settlement" along with farming his land. Peter became the guardian of the deceased Daniel Teter's two children: Daniel Jr. and Margaret (Polly) in 1818. Was elected Justice of the Peace for Franklin County in 1820, 1823, and 1829.
1789 - 1841
Joshua
Clover
52
52
1791 - 1834
Jacob
Clover
42
42
1794 - 1867
Solomon
Clover
73
73
1796 - 1871
Margaret
Clover
75
75
1798 - 1865
Henry
Clover
66
66
1801 - 1872
Samuel
Clover
70
70
1803 - 1878
Philip
Clover
75
75
Deed: case no. 010279, Vol.9, pg. 326.
1805
Rosanna
Clover
Benjamin
Lilley
1807
John
Clover
A John CLOVER married Elizabeth Burnet HUBBARD in Trumbull County, Ohio on 23 Dec 1831. However, there is no proof this John was the son of Henry.
1809 - 1858
William
Clover
49
49
Deed: case no. 03883, Vol. 4, pg. 307. Will: Case # 03883 (1859) Clover, William Est. Vol. 4, page 307. Census: 1850, Microfilm 432, Roll M 432 608 (Part 2), National Archives 000 030. Census: 1860, Microfilm No. H 653, Roll 962. Census: 1870, Microfilm.
1810 - 1871
Aaron
Clover
61
61
D. >1890
Elizabeth
Ambrose
1812 - 1880
Nelson
Ambrose
68
68
1814 - 1898
William
Henry
Ambrose
84
84
Listed in Deed Book 8, page 264, 26 Mar 1861 -- 150 acres 2-1/2 miles south of town of Bath. Served in the Confederate Army in the Civil War. This family lived next to a FENNER family: Daniel 55, Mary 50, William 26, Sarah, 19, Mary 16, Susannah 14, Daniel 12, Christena 11. Daniel a farmer with property valued at $400. The next family to them are Christopher YOST 30, Ann 25, Sarah 6, George 5, John 9/12. Christopher is a farmer with property valued at $500.
~1809 - 1865
Wiley
Barton
56
56
~1810 - 1856
Susan
Elizabeth
Ambrose
46
46
~1803
Thomas
Prather
~1836
Mary
Ann
Harlan
1853 - 1915
Jesse
Harlan
Ambrose
61
61
1854 - 1910
Aaron
Daniel
Ambrose
55
55
1855 - 1923
George
Wheeler
Ambrose
67
67
1858
E. F.
H.
Ambrose
~1860 - ~1894
Jeremiah
N.
Ambrose
34
34
~1805
Julia
Ann
Green
1835 - 1918
Sarah
Catherine
"Kate" Ambrose
82
82
Sarah C. A. Smallwood is listed as Relative of Jacob Ambrose who died either 1854 (Film #184108:403:14496) or 1859 (Film # 184108:403:14495). Kansas: March 2 1876 Witness that knew of Smallwood and Payne marriage: Elias Shull, Pension Clerk Kansas April 29 1876 Guardianship Paper Kate Payne for Wilkinson, Jr. Declaration for Pension of Children Under Sixteen Years of Age June 6, 1876 Witness knew for 20 years and just Wilkinson as child of Smallwood marriage Mary F. Tice Kansas June 11, 1876 Witness Married for six months to Wilkinson Statement of only child, Wilkinson--George McDaniel, of MO, the post master who helped her get $63 from commanding officer Spellman sent to St. Francisville, Clark County, MO. August 1, 1876 Another Declaration for Pension of Children Under Sixteen Years of Age--Lewis Smallwood as a witness July 14, 1876 Kate Payne (age 41) gave Attorney Bishop Coumine? power to pursue Claim for minor child, Wilkinson Smallwood born 4 Dec. 1862 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah: May 16, 1901 Declaration of a Widow for Restoration of Pension Kate Smallwood Payne (age 65) Harden Payne died Dec. 14, 1892 at Topeka, Kansas Witnesses: John P. Doolan and Mrs. Rosetta Doolan (knew her four years) September 20, 1916 Request for Increase Sarah C. Payne (age 81) born August 11, 1835 in Virginia
Samuel
Brooks
~1844 - >1900
Mariah
Alice
Whisner
56
56
~1805
Sarah
Toland
~1800
Maria
Waugh
~1821
Susan
Ambrose
~1821
Ella
Ambrose
Napoleon
Ambrose
Alfred
Ambrose
1827 - ~1868
John
Wesley
Ambrose
41
41
~1800
George
W.
Aulabaugh
Bushrod
Aulabaugh
He does not appear on the 1850 census, so he may have died as a child.
~1825
Susan
Aulabaugh
~1832
Lucy
Ann
Aulabaugh
Maria
Aulabaugh
She does not appear on the 1850 census, so she may have died as a child.
1827 - 1907
Robert
Bruce
Aulabaugh
80
80
George
Durham
John
Wesley
Durham
George
W.
Durham
William
Durham
Mary
Frances
Durham
Sarah
Durham
She married Mr. HEFFNER.
Martha
Durham
~1809
John
Kitchen
~1840
Charles
Kitchen
~1845
Emiline
Kitchen
Louis
Yost
1834 - 1923
John
Wesley
Ambrose
89
89
1787 - 1862
Christena
Teter
75
75
Died at age 75yrs 8mos 9days in Koscuiko Co., Indiana.
1812 - 1881
Catherine
Clover
69
69
1814
Elizabeth
Clover
1816 - 1864
Elkannah
Clover
48
48
Civil War: 40th Ohio Vol Infantry. Gardner Cemetery, Franklin Co., Ohio, died at age 48yrs 4mos 12days. 1850 Census lived in Pleasant Township, Franklin Co., Ohio.
1822 - 1852
Henry
Clover
29
29
1824
Samuel
Clover
1825
John
K.
Clover
1828 - 1852
William
A.
Clover
23
23
1831 - 1852
Austin
Birchard
Clover
20
20
1794 - 1868
Rachel
Wroten
73
73
1843 - 1917
Anna
Jane
Ambrose
74
74
1853 - 1930
Mathias
Washington
Ambrose
76
76
1821 - 1907
Anna Eliza
Virginia
Snowdeal
85
85
She was listed as a member of the Missionary Baptist Church in 1865.
~1845 - <1860
Margaret
Ann
Ambrose
15
15
1843 - 1923
Mathias
Skinner "Tice"
Ambrose
80
80
Believed to have fought in the Civil War, on the opposite side from his brother, Robert. The name "skinner" is a nickname from when he worked as a mule skinner on the Maryland side of the Potomac on the C & O Canal.
1851 - 1951
Jacob Daniel
"Jake"
Ambrose
99
99
He was a school teacher for a time, and also ranched sheep in Eastern Oregon.
1854
Mary
Jane
Ambrose
1859 - 1938
Anna Eliza
Virginia
Ambrose
79
79
1857
Jacob
Wesley
Ambrose
1858 - 1880
William
Nicholas
Ambrose
22
22
1861 - 1928
George
Henry
Ambrose
67
67
Arthur
N.
Danley
~1810
Mary
Ann
Ambrose
John
S.
Gordon
~1816 - <1870
Martha
A.
Cook
54
54
1827 - 1917
Mary
Caroline
Touchstone
89
89
1808 - 1867
Elizabeth
Hawkins
59
59
~1813
Juliet
Ann
Lock
1797
Sophia
Rizer
~1811
Maria
Jane
Rizer
1799
George
W.
Rizer
1805 - 1853
Benjamin
F.
Rizer
47
47
1795 - <1870
Catherine
Rizer
75
75
1790
Anne
Rizer
1794 - >1870
Rezin
Barnes
76
76
Jacob
Portmess
D. ~1818
Richard
Thralls
~1809
Hetty
Ann
Rizer
1802
William
Rizer
He is not mentioned in Henry AMBROSE's will, so he may have died young.
1793
Jacob
Rizer
He is not mentioned in Henry AMBROSE's will, so he may have died young.
1807 - 1837
Philip
Rizer
29
29
Martha
~1839
George
W.
Rizer
~1849
S. M.
Ambrose
1831
Archibald
M.
Ambrose
1856 - 1939
David
Edward
Ambrose
82
82
1858
George
Franklin
Ambrose
1808
Mary
Bowers
~1795
Mary
Ann
Poff
~1826 - ~1856
Gatch
Ambrose
30
30
"The war with Mexica made no great stir among the people of Champaign, through the progress of the victorius troops from Vera Cruz to Mexico was hailed with enthusiasm similar to that over the country generally.... The newspapers of the county do not return any names of the volunteer soldiery who were at Buena Vista, the heights of Monterey, of the storming of Chapultepec, but a green memory has kept in remembrance of names of Evan Jenkins, ... and Johnson K. Putman - all of whom were from Champaign, who volunteered in the Army of the Rio Grande. To these may be added the name of Gatch Ambrose, youngest son of Frederick Ambrose, whose name has appeared in these pages as one of the oldest pioneers. Young Ambrose was engineer on a Mississippi River steamboat, which he left for the war. Passed safely through its dangers; afterward joined the ill-starred expedition of William Walker, "the gray-eyed man of destiny," and, with other young men deceived into participation in the Nicaraguan expedition, paid the penalty with his life." [The History of Champaign County, Ohio, W. H. Beers & Co., 1881, p265]
1790 - 1824
Jane
"Jennie"
Tanner
34
34
1824 - 1901
Margaret
J.
Ambrose
77
77
1827 - 1848
Elizabeth
Ambrose
21
21
D. <1859
Samuel
Bailey
1827 - 1899
Joseph
F.
Stone
72
72
~1822
Wilson
J. Neil
1822 - 1906
Anna
Hess
84
84
1819 - 1884
Newton
Ambrose
65
65
1830 - 1898
Alice
Ann
Ward
68
68
1849 - 1930
Frederick
W.
Ambrose
81
81
~1829
William
M.
Ambrose
~1832
Mary
F.
Ambrose
~1837
Edury
Ambrose
~1839
Lydia
P.
Ambrose
~1841
James
W.
Ambrose
~1845
Caroline
V.
Ambrose
1863 - 1899
Mary
Alice
Stone
35
35
1865 - 1948
Thomas
F.
Stone
83
83
~1807
Jacob
Ambrose
~1810 - <1854
Peter
Ambrose
44
44
From Champ. Co. Guardianship book pg. 45 of book but #507: 20 Sept 1854 Benj F. Goodrich gdn. of Francis Amrrose 13; Maretha Ambrose 11; John Ambrose 9; Minor heirs of Peter Ambrose decd. Surety: Evans Glen.
~1839
Susan
Ambrose
~1809
Elizabeth
Mc
Cumsey
Mary
Glenn
1820 - 1900
Jacob
Ambrose
80
80
1852
Mary
E.
Ambrose
~1855
Alice
Ambrose
~1858
Margaret
Ambrose
Emma
Ambrose
Anna
Belle
Ambrose
~1869
Newton
Ambrose
The IGI shows a marriage for a Newton AMBROSE to Josie R. MOYERS on the 26 Oct 1881 in Highland County, Ohio. While not proven, this is probably the same man.
1857 - 1898
Charles
Benton
Ambrose
41
41
~1836
George
D.
Ambrose
~1845
Mary
S.
Ambrose
~1848
Elizabeth
C.
Ambrose
~1831 - 1890
Phoebe
Ann
Adair
59
59
It is not certain that Phebe is the daughter of Jacob Sr. She appears in his household on the 1850 census, but may be a first wife for Jacob, Jr.
~1849 - 1900
Rebecca
J. "Becky"
Ambrose
51
51
Mary
Blocher
~1818
Henry
Ambrose
1853 - 1920
Ella V.
Ambrose
67
67
~1864
Columbus
J.
Ambrose
>1870
Nathan
Ambrose
~1812
Catherine
Ann
Ambrose
~1815 - <1870
Christian
C.
Ambrose
55
55
~1806
Rachel
Ambrose
Boggs
~1854 - >1928
Georgia
Ann
Ambrose
74
74
>1860 - >1928
Eva M.
Ambrose
68
68
1849 - 1926
Rosanna
Catherine
Ambrose
77
77
~1829
Mathias
Aulabaugh
~1834
Elizabeth
Aulabaugh
~1838
George
Aulabaugh
~1841
Joseph
Aulabaugh
~1843
Ann
Aulabaugh
1833
Mary
Clover
1838 - 1886
Jeremiah
Clover
47
47
Marriage record: Franklin County Ohio Marriage Records, No. 7-496. Franklin County Genealogical Society. Page 210. William H. Lambert Civil War records, no. 723071. IGI File, Batch M513353, Source no. 285144, Film. Death Record for William H. Lambert, No.26386. Ohio Historical Society, 1985 Velma Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43211. Census: 1880, Microfilm Reel 1015, 211 third Column left, 58 page right. Franklin County Genealogical Society, 570 West Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
1811 - 1889
Sarah
Graham
78
78
~1833
Elizabeth
Jane
Clover
1839 - 1853
James
W.
Clover
14
14
~1835
Thomas
H.
Clover
Marriage Certificate of Thomas H. Clover and Martha Brown, 18 May 1859, Certificate No. 7-277, Franklin County Marriages, Ref. No. 1803-1864 TEA, Complied by Franklin County Genealogical Society, 570 West Broad St., Columbus Ohio 43216.
1842 - 1853
Nancy
E.
Clover
10
10
~1847
Rose
Ann
Clover
1850
William
Charles
Clover
1816
Solomon
Clover
1817 - 1886
Orin
Clover
68
68
~1820
Zebulon
Clover
1824 - 1899
George
M.
Clover
74
74
Clover Exchange Newsletter: Vol. 2, Issue 2, Nov. 1986, page 20,21.
1829
Rachel
Clover
Marriage: Franklin County Marriages Records, page 212, Doc. No. 5-119, Franklin County genealogical Society.
1827 - 1831
Levi
Clover
3
3
~1836
Joshua
Clover
Marriage: Book: Franklin County Marriages No. 7-172.
1837
Millia
Jane
Clover
Experience
Hazel
1833 - 1910
Willis
Clover
77
77
Civil War Vet: 95th Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry Company D.
1827 - 1844
Catharine
Clover
16
16
1807 - 1870
Joshua
Cole
63
63
Marriage: Book: Franklin County Marriages No. 2-213.
1833
Thomas
Cole
1838
John
Cole
Resided in 1870 and 1880 in Koscuisko Co., Indiana.
1838 - 1883
Elizabeth
Cole
45
45
1805 - 1864
Mary
Ann Mc
Kendre
59
59
Marriage: Book: Franklin County Marriages No. 2-114.
1824
Nancy
Maude
Clover
~1827 - 1881
Rosanna
Clover
54
54
Moved to Doniphan Co., Kansas.
1837 - 1899
Benjamin
Hutchinson
Clover
62
62
Served in Congress from 4 March 1891 to 3 March 1893. When first married he moved to Illinois and then to Kansas. Moved to Cowley County Kansas in 1871. Served in Congress, representing the Third Congressional District of Kansas. Claim in section 16, township 31, range 7, east, in Grouse Valley. Benjamin was very active in securing bonds fot the Southern Kansas Railway. At the town of Lazette he built a sawmill and a gristmill. He had one of the largest and most fertile farms in the county, 1,600 acres in Grouse Valley. He was the first justice of the peace in Windsor township. He was a Populist,served as county commissioner in Illinois, and was a candidate for the state legislature in Kansas. Religious views: Methodist. Engaged in agricultural pursuits: member of the board of school commissioners 1873-1888, twice president of the Kansas State Farmers' Alliance and Industrial Union and twice vice president of the national organization of that order, selected as the candidate of the Farmers' Alliance Party. Obituary Topeka Daily Capital, Dec. 31, 1899.
1841 - 1896
John
Clover
55
55
Civil War Vet: Company D, 186th OVI. Served from 16 Feb 1865 to 18 Sept 1865. Child: Gracie Clover: Daughter of Laura Beasley, born 31 Dec. 1887. John Clover raised this girl. Question as to who her father may have been, pension papers state that the mother swore the child to John Clover. It does not say who her father was.
~1804 - 1862
Sidney
Walker
58
58
1829
George
Clover
1832
Margaret
Clover
Nathan
Clover
1836
Mahala
Clover
1840
Catherine
Clover
1806 - 1872
Rachel
S.
Keene
66
66
1843 - 1905
Phillip
K.
Clover
62
62
City Directory of Columbus, Ohio, 1874 lists Philip Clover.
~1818 - 1861
Sarah
Atha
43
43
~1835
Thomas
H.
Clover
~1836 - 1861
Elijah
H.
Clover
25
25
1841 - 1906
Eliza
Clover
64
64
Marriage record: Book 2, Page 144. Clover Chapel: Methodists, built in 1835 just north of where Alton Station. Alton Cemetery: Franklin Co., Ohio Cemeteries, Vol VIII, page 26.
~1845
Russell
B.
Clover
Civil War: Co. G, 185th Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
~1848
Harriett
Clover
1852
Samuel
Clover
~1835 - 1903
William
H.
Clover
68
68
Civil War Vet: Co. G, 185th OVI. Certificate No. 564528, National Archives Records.
1814 - 1896
Mary
Ann
Clover
82
82
1834 - 1844
Rose
Ann
Cole
9
9
~1835
Martha
Clover
1826 - 1836
Adron
Clover
10
10
James
Monroe
Clover
~1851 - 1905
Charles
B.
Clover
54
54
1850 - 1917
Leonard
B.
Clover
67
67
1807 - 1875
Effie
Widner
68
68
~1832
Aaron
Clover
1837 - 1897
Effie
J.
Clover
59
59
~1840
Mary
E.
Clover
~1845 - 1928
Solomon
Clover
83
83
Will: Book: Index To Estates Assigments And Trusts, Probate Court, Franklin Co, Ohio, 1801-1897 Vol. 1. Case No. 06360 (1867) Clover, Solomon, Est. Vol 6, page 141. Civil War Vet: Co. G, 185th. OVI. Census: 8 Aug 1870 in Ohio.
1849 - 1854
Rebecca
Clover
4
4
~1842 - 1920
Caroline
Clover
78
78
1825 - 1899
Margaret
Jane
Clover
73
73
1845 - 1846
Fred
C.
Clover
1
1
1831 - 1834
Jacob
Clover
2
2
1839
William
Clover
~1865
Anna
E.
Ambrose
1866 - 1938
Charles
E.
Ambrose
72
72
1868 - 1957
Mary Elizabeth
"Mollie"
Ambrose
89
89
1870
Elmira
Frances
Ambrose
~1842
Mary
E.
Ambrose
~1846 - 1910
Laura
F.
Ambrose
64
64
According to Dale Dalton, this family later moved to Abilene, Texas. A Laura Coffey appears on the 1880 census in Grainger County (pg 504), but she is 29 and seems too young to be this Laura.
~1849
John
H.
Ambrose
~1849
Hamilton
P.
Ambrose
1832 - 1902
John
W.
Ambrose
69
69
1835 - 1887
Sarah
E.
Ambrose
51
51
1837 - 1911
Lucy
E.
Ambrose
73
73
1840 - 1882
Christian
C.
Ambrose
41
41
1843 - 1915
Henry
W.
Ambrose
71
71
1844 - 1909
Francis
H.
Ambrose
64
64
1847 - 1923
Eliza
Ann
Ambrose
75
75
~1837
George
W.
Ambrose
~1839 - ~1890
Carter
B.
Ambrose
51
51
~1841
Winifred
C.
Ambrose
~1843
Eliza
Ambrose
~1845
Martha
A.
Ambrose
~1847
Lucinda
F.
Ambrose
1818 - 1898
John
C.
Ambrose
79
79
Moved to Champaign County, Ohio in 1831, then to Quincy, Logan County, Ohio. Worked as a carpenter, then went into the hotel business. In April, 1861, he sold out and went to Mason City, Mason County, Illinois. He purchased 40 acres to farm, then in Nov 1864, he opened the first restaurant in Mason City, which he ran for 3 years.
1826 - 1907
Rosanna
A.
Yost
81
81
~1832
Susan
~1852
William
J.
Ambrose
~1854
Flora
B.
Ambrose
~1856
Walter
Ambrose
~1859
Charles
C.
Ambrose
1841
Francis
M.
Ambrose
~1843
Maretha
Ambrose
~1847
John
G.
Ambrose
~1842
Rebecca
Rachel
Ambrose
~1832 - <1900
Mary
Electra
Powell
68
68
Mary Electa Ambrose is listed as an heir of Henry Powell in pg. 515 of will book and pg. 122 of "Will Abstracts of Champaign Co., Ohio, Books A thru F 1810-1888". Henry Powell's will was probated 18 Nov 1868.
1832
James
Roe
Ambrose
1837
Mary
Ann Mc
Cumsey
Henry
Ambrose
~1816 - ~1886
Nancy
Leopard
70
70
Marriage 1 George DUGAN * Married: 19 DEC 1833 in Berkeley County, Virginia 7 Marriage 2 Jonathan LECHRONE b: ABT 1818 in Maryland * Married: 12 AUG 1837 in Washington County, Maryland 8 7 Children 1. Catharine LECHRONE b: ABT 1839 in Berkeley County, Virginia 2. Adam Demetrius LECHRONE b: ABT 1842 in Berkeley County, Virginia 3. Ann Lucine LECHRONE b: ABT 1844 in Berkeley County, Virginia 4. Jonathan R. LECHRONE b: ABT 1847 in Monroe Twp., Miami County, Ohio 5. Sarah Caroline LECHRONE b: ABT 1855 in Monroe Twp., Miami County, Ohio Marriage 3 Henry AMBROSE b: ABT 1809 in Berkeley County, Virginia * Married: 16 NOV 1863 in Miami County, Ohio
1857 - 1908
Jacob
Henry
Ambrose
50
50
Sarah
1874 - 1953
Samuel
Nelson
Ambrose
78
78
1875 - 1953
William
Cyrus
Ambrose
78
78
1879
Levi
Asburry
Ambrose
1880
Eva
Masselle
Ambrose
1872
Lillie
May
Ambrose
1816
George
Rizer
Barnes
1819 - 1911
James
Thomas
Barnes
92
92
1823 - 1831
Rebecca
Ann
Barnes
8
8
1825 - 1842
Sophia
Frances
Barnes
17
17
1828 - 1904
Benjamin
F.
Barnes
76
76
1832 - 1854
Rezin
Liles
Barnes
22
22
1834 - 1913
William
Marian
Barnes
78
78
1840 - 1925
Jacob
Andrew
Barnes
84
84
~1833 - <1880
John
Ambrose
47
47
~1835
Nelson
Ambrose
~1839 - 1872
Richard
M.
Ambrose
33
33
~1843 - 1929
Rebecca
Ambrose
86
86
~1844
James
Ambrose
Eliza
Ann
Bailey
D. 1892
Margaret
(Gee)
Noble
~1823
Sarah
Ambrose
~1833
Samuel
Ambrose
~1839
George
Ambrose
Thomas
Jones
~1823
Margaret
Ambrose
1858 - 1880
Samuel
Seibert
22
22
1823 - 1901
Henry
Seibert
77
77
1826 - 1892
Rosannah
Ambrose
65
65
~1846
Philander
R.
Seibert
~1849
Jacob
Seibert
~1851
Mary
Seibert
~1854
George
Seibert
1855 - 1929
Malcomb
Bowers
Seibert
74
74
~1860
Charles
Seibert
1852 - 1911
George
Edward
Ambrose
59
59
~1862
John
C.
Ambrose
He was murdered in either Seward or Grand Island, Nebraska.
~1866
Elmer
E.
Ambrose
"At one time, lived in Skidmore, Nodaway County, Missouri. One evening he got drunk, left his mother's house, and was never heard from again." [Charles Ambrose]
~1854
Rosina
Ambrose
~1864
Mary
G.
Ambrose
~1868
Martha
J.
Ambrose
~1871
Laura
Avalena
Ambrose
~1859
William
L.
Ambrose
Went West and settled around Mirriam, Kansas.
1809
Mary
Ann
Ambrose
~1843
Mary
E.
Ambrose
~1851
Lycurgus
E.
Ambrose
1855 - 1916
John
Ferdinand
Ambrose
61
61
1861 - 1939
Newton
Isaac
Seibert
77
77
~1846
Martha
J.
Ambrose
1850 - 1918
Hiram
W.
Ambrose
67
67
1852 - 1905
Lewis
R.
Ambrose
53
53
D. 1832
Franklin
Inskeep
1851 - 1917
Ann
Elizabeth
Ambrose
65
65
~1852
Henry
B.
Ambrose
1857
John
G.
Ambrose
1858
George
W.
Ambrose
1860
Edward
C.
Ambrose
~1864
Thomas
R.
Ambrose
~1808
Isaac
Clark
~1812 - <1869
Peter
Ambrose
57
57
(-)
Crabb
Eliza
Crabb
Emma
Crabb
~1830
Mathias
E.
Ambrose
~1822
William
Ambrose
~1849
William
H.
Ambrose
~1843
Joseph
L.
Kitchen
~1838
Peter
Clark
1830
Jacob
Ambrose
Clark
~1834
John
Clark
~1836
Ann
Clark
~1837
Joshua
Clark
~1845
Isaac
Harrison
Clark
1856 - 1927
Nancy
Virginia
Ambrose
71
71
~1858
Alice
V.
Ambrose
~1859
Charles
L.
Ambrose
~1865
Ason
McCumsey
Ambrose
~1846
John
Neil
1848
Elizabeth
Neil
~1832
John
Ambrose
1851
Peter
H.
Ambrose
~1854
Mary
L.
Ambrose
1835
Mary
A.
~1848
F. C.
Ambrose
1883
Harry
W.
Ambrose
1886
Amanda
J.
Ambrose
~1852
Joseph
D.
Ambrose
~1853
Sarah
T.
Ambrose
~1855
George
M.
Ambrose
~1857
Mary
M.
Ambrose
~1859
Charles
E.
Ambrose
~1870
Nettie
Ambrose
~1873
Judson
W.
Ambrose
1864
William
Ambrose
1779 - 1839
Rosina
Crum
60
60
~1781 - 1854
Christian
Crum
73
73
1782 - 1860
Christiana
Crum
78
78
1784 - 1860
Mary Ann
"Polly"
Crum
76
76
1787 - 1861
Lewis
Crum
74
74
1790 - 1865
Henry
Crum
75
75
~1797
John
Crum
~1801
Rachel
Crum
She settled in Belmont County, Ohio.
1792
Catherine
Crum
~1795
Anna
Maria
Crum
She settled in Highland County.
1799
Sarah
Crum
~1811
Magdalena
Crum
~1823
George
W.
Crum
~1838
John
W.
Crum
~1801
Rachel
Mc
Cartney
Elizabeth
Moles
1787
Sarah
"Sally"
Eagle
Martin
Wolford
~1713
Anthony
Crum
An "Anthon Krum" shipped from Rotterdam, Holland, on the ship Edinburgh, on 2 Oct 1753, landing at the Port of Philadelphia. While not confirmed, this appears to be our Anthony CRUM. One historian says the family settled first in or near Media, Delaware Co., Pennsylvania. A descendant of Anthony's says they settled by Mauch Chunk, Carbon Co., Pennsylvania. Either location was temporary for by 1774, Anthony had purchased 600 acres of land from Lord Fairfax, and was settled in Frederick Co., Virginia, where he would remain permanently. It is reported that he paid 1500 English pounds for the property, an extraordianry sum for the time. This would have paid for the labor of 15 men for 8 or 9 years. The first census of the United States (1782-1785) shows Anthony Crum, Sr., and his sons, Anthony, Jr., Christian, Sr., and Henry, were Heads of Families in Frederick Co., Virginia. ---------------------------------- Anthony Crum, Sr. was born about 1713 in the Lower Rhineland, Germany; shipped from Rotterdam on the Ship Edinburgh, landing in the Port of Philadelphia October 2, 1753. He settled first in Pennsylvania and a few years later moved to Frederick County, Virginia. He died about 1804. There is some belief that the Crum Families lived near the Holland Border and the origin may be Dutch rather than German. Anthony Crum purchased 600 acres from Lord Fairfax only a few miles from Winchester. He was apparently a wealthy man. His son Christian married Christiana Schmidt in Pennsylvania before the family moved to Virginia. None of the Crums were slaveholders. Christian Sr. and Henry Sr., identical twins, were ministers of the Gospel and had their own Churches in Winchester. Christian's Church became known as "Old Crum's Meeting House." Christian preached in German while Henry worked with Bishop Francis Asbury of the Methodist Movement and is said to have preached in English. Christian and Henry were said to have been Chaplains in Washington's Army and were believed to have been with him at Yorktown. They are also said to have sat in Masonic Meetings in Winchester with George Washington. Christian made some Circuit Rider missions into Maryland and Pennsylvania. He worked closely with Bishop Christian Newcomer, Bishop Otterbein of Baltimore, and several other leading ministers of the area to organize the new denomination, United Brethren in Christ, largely a German speaking church. It grew and spread as immigrants moved westward into new states and territories. Its doctrines were very similar to the English Methodists and in about 1960, the United Brethren in Christ and Evangelical United Brethren and the Methodist Churches united to form the United Methodist Church denomination. Quite a few Crum descendants became Ministers. The Crums tended to have large families. Christian Sr. had thirteen. Ten of his children migrated to Ohio, mostly in Highland County. The Crums were Farmers, Carpenters, and Laborers, and a significant number were Ministers. There are thousands of descendants of Anthony Crum, Sr. scattered throughout the US. There was also another Crum immigrant -- Mathias Crum, Sr. -- who was believed to be a brother of Anthony Sr. There were two distinct lines of "CRUMS" that spread across the country. The descendants of Mathias Sr. early on migrated farther to the West to the states of Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, Kentucky and the South. Many of Anthony Sr.'s descendants either stayed in Virginia or moved to Ohio. Two Crum descendants have authored histories of the Crum Families in America. Judge Lybarger of Ohio covered primarily the Anthony Crum Sr. line which is our line of descent. Ferris B. Crum covered primarily the Mathias Sr. line but did include much of Lybargers' research. Winston Crum of Tennessee was planning a revision of his father's book in 1996-97 but was going to restrict his coverage to the Mathias Crum Sr. line only. Lowell Shire
Phillip
Stone
Margaret
Hotsenpillar
John
Dedrick
Bidaman
~1819
Alcinda
Crum
~1820
Rachel
Lizner
Crum
~1827
Strawder
M.
Crum
~1831
Elijah
L.
Crum
~1833
Sarah
M.
Crum
~1835
Ann
Crum
~1837
Millie
Crum
John
Harrison
Crum
~1833
John
S.
Crum
~1812
William
E.
Crum
1824
Christian
John
Crum
1825
Joseph
Delop
Crum
1823
William
Crum
Hannah
Barr
~1795
Sarah
"Sally"
Mc Intyre
Ridgway
He settled in Highland County, Ohio.
Robert
Lowry
Johns
John
Wells
Gibson
Gardner
~1748 - 1819
Johann
Henry
Crum
71
71
"Henry, and his wife, Modlena, on 17 Nov 1817, conveyed to certain trustees thirty-two poles of land for the erection of a Methodist Church." This is quoted from Ferris B. Crum; A CRUM FAMILY IN AMERICA; but he does not say where this land was located.
Mary
Magdalena
~1717
Freny
Cyphret
~1740 - 1824
Anthony
Crum
84
84
~1750 - 1819
Mary
Crum
69
69
~1752 - <1804
Catherine
Crum
52
52
~1754
Anna
Crum
~1756
Elizabeth
Crum
Anna
Elizabeth
~1765
Henry
Crum
Daniel
Heckendorn
~1830
Christina
R.
Crum
~1833
Mary
V.
Crum
~1835
Catherine
R. G.
Crum
~1836
Emily
A.
Crum
~1831
Sally
M.
Crum
~1839
A M
Crum
~1748 - 1820
Christian
Crum
72
72
Christian and his twin brother Henry were both ministers. Apparently Christian was generally considered to be United Brethren, and Henry a Methodist. However, the two brothers worked together closely as did these two early off-shoots of the German Reformed Church. They would often follow each other to the pulpit; Christian preaching to the German United Brethren, and Henry preaching in English to the Methodists. Christian, and his twin brother, Henry, were both ministers. Apparently Christian was generally considered to be United Brethren, and Henry a Methodist. The two brothers, however, worked together closely as did these two early off-shoots of the German Reformed Church. They would often follow each other to the pulpit; Christian preaching to the German United Brethren, and Henry preaching in English to the Methodists.
~1752 - >1831
Christiana
Schmidt
79
79
~1727 - 1802
Philip
A
Clover
75
75
Children 1. Barbara CLOVER b: in Germany 2. Henry CLOVER b: 1 APR 1751 in Virginia 3. Christena CLOVER b: 11 AUG 1761 in Virginia 4. Philip A. CLOVER b: BET 1765 AND 1770 5. Margaret CLOVER b: ABT 1771 in Virginia 6. Rosanna CLOVER b: 1774 in Virginia They may have had 2 more children besides those listed, i.e. Peter and George.
~1728 - ~1778
Elizabeth
50
50
1762 - 1838
Mathias
G.
Rizer
76
76
1762
Mary
Michael
1803
Catherine
Rizer
~1809
Rachel
Rizer
1800
George
Rizer
D. <1890
Ambrose
?
~1805
Ambrose
~1805
Ambrose
~1805
Ambrose
~1834 - <1850
Clover
16
16
~1819 - <1830
Ambrose
11
11
~1805
Ambrose
~1805
Ambrose
~1797
Ambrose
~1827
Ambrose
1807 - 1894
Margaret
"Polly"
Rizer
86
86
"Aunt Polly" lived to become a legend. She delighted in telling her children and grandchildren, nieces and nephews about the early pioneer days and the long trek from Virginia to Ohio.
Mary J
B
Jarboe
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