Er ist verheiratet mit Mary Polly Boyle.
Sie haben geheiratet am 25. November 1758 in Culpepper, VA, er war 29 Jahre alt.
Kind(er):
CaptainJohnStrodeSr
Born11 Jan 1729inVirginia
ANCESTORS
SonofJames Edward StrodeandEleanor (Shepard) Strode
Brother ofSusannah Strode,Samuel Strode,Edward Strode,Letitia (Strode) Van Meter,James Strode,Jeremiah Strode,Eleanor Strode,Abraham StrodeandRebecca Strode
Husband ofMary (Boyle) Strodeâ married 1758 [location unknown]
DESCENDANTS
Father ofElizabeth (Strode) Duncan,Edward Strode,Eleanor Nelly Strode,James Strode,Mary (Strode) McMillan,John Strode Jr,Nancy Ann (Strode) Brooks,Susannah (Strode) Lane,Jeremiah Strode,Letitia Strode,Stephen Strode,Thomas S Strode,Eleanor StrodeandWellsey Waller Strode
Died18 Aug 1805at age 76inWinchester, Clark County, Kentucky
PROBLEMS/QUESTIONS
Profile managers:Carol Lane[send private message],Kyron Hall[send private message], andHolly Overcash[send private message]
Profile last modified16 Feb 2023| Created 9 May 2013
This page has been accessed 2,622 times.
Contents
[hide]
â¢1Biography
â¢1.1Notes
â¢1.2External Files
â¢2Sources
â¢2.1Acknowledgements
Biography
Founder of Strode Station (fort), Winchester, KY[1]
Remains re-interred in Winchester Cemetery in 1965.
John Strode - 1776 -1778
Being a youth from Culpepper County, Virginia Colony, John Strode followed General George Washington and neighbors into the Revolutionary War. He wintered at Valley Forge, crossed the Delaware, took part in the attack at Trenton, and fought at Monmouth.
In early 1776, John Strode came into the Kentucky wilderness, marked, and improved a piece land before he returned to Virginia to fight in the Revolutionary War. He served under Washington in the winter of 1776 when they limped into Pennsylvania. The boys had to build their own shelters to create Valley Forge. Roofs leaked and there wasn't enough food nor clothing to keep warm. Many of the boys died.
December 1776, Washington planned a surprise attack on Trenton, New Jersey. They left the banks of the Pennsylvania side on Christmas Eve. The Delaware River was full of ice chucks. The boys were in their early 20s and late teens. They didn't have enough warm clothing. By the time everyone made it across, it was daylight on Christmas morning.
Washington's boys feared the German Hessians more than the British or Indians. The Germans had hangovers from great celebrating way into the night. After a brief battle, nearly the entire Hessian force was captured, with negligible losses to the Americans. The battle significantly boosted the Continental Army's flagging morale, and inspired re-enlistments.
In 1778, at the Battle of Monmouth, Captain John Strode met Molly Hayes "Pitcher". Years later, he took his daughter Letitia (my GGM), by horseback, to visit Molly "Pitcher". Letitia had asked many questions about the ARW heroine. Being very young and being tired from the journey, Molly "Pitcher" put Letitia in her bed to nap. My 4th GGM, Letitia Strode, slept in Molly Hayes "Pitcher's" bed. (This is a family story passed down by Letitia herself.)
June 1778, Captain Strode fought at the Battle of Monmouth. By 1779, Strode was back in Kentucky, living at Fort Boonesboro. He built his cabin on the waters of Strode's Creek, Clark County. Here he encouraged others to settle around him. By the year 1781, his station included 25 cabin homes. On March 1, 1781, Strode's Station was attacked by Indians. Two pioneers (Jacob Shpar and Patrick Donaldson) were killed and John Judy was wounded. Most of the livestock was destroyed. The first school in Clark County was taught at Strode's Station. John Filson, Thomas Parvin, and Colonel William Sudduth acted as teachers. The stockade was attacked again in 1783 with no casualties in the fort.
Captain John Strode was one of the first trustees for the town of Winchester. In 1793, by commission of Governor Isaac Shelby, he was named coroner for the new town. When Strode died in 1805, he was buried on a hill, overlooking the station.
According to (Draper mss. 12CC61-64 pg79-96): John Filson, author of The Adventures of Colonel Daniel Boone, stayed at Strode Station.
Name:John Strode Sr.[2][3][2][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
Born11 JAN 1729. Berkeley, James, Virginia, USA. Map: Latitude: N37.3231. Longitude: W77.1791.[14][15][15][15][2][3][2][5][6][7][10][11]
Died18 AUG 1805. Strode's Station, Clark, Kentucky, USA.[15][15][15][2][3][2][4][6][10]
BuriedWinchester Cemetery, Winchester, Clark, Kentucky, USA.[2][3][2][6]
Residence22 JUL 1800. Clark, Kentucky, USA. Map: Latitude: N37.9707. Longitude: W84.146.[16][8][9]
Note:#N623.
Photo:#M1510.
(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)@. @(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX) @(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX) @(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
MarriageHusband @(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX) Wife @(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX) Child: @(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX) Child: @(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX) Child: @(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX) Marriage 25 NOV 1758. Culpeper, Culpeper, Virginia, USA. Map: Latitude: N38.4732. Longitude: W77.9967.[17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25]
Notes
NoteN623Kentucky Obituaries, 1787-1854; Page #6: "John Storde, Sen., of Strode's Statio. Died August 18, 1805. "As honest a man as ever God made." KG 8/20"
External Files
â¢Strode Station. built in 1779. Following the Battle of Monmouth, Captain John Strode left the war and took his family to the Kentucky Wilderness. He built Strode Station 1779 to provide protection from Indian attacks. The settlers in central & northern Kentucky territory were at great risk of deadly attacks. Shawnee Indians & other tribes lived in Indiana & Ohio territory. They hunted in Kentucky and thought it was blessed by God..............................Kentucky Historic Marker #1047: Captain John Strode came from Virginia to Boonesborough in 1779. Built Strode's Station, the largest and most important fortified stockade in Clark County during the early settlements and bloody Indian Wars. Indians attacked station 1781 and 1782. Two men killed first attack, none in later. Old burial ground unearthed in 1965. The remains re-interred in Winchester Cemetery.
John Shepard Strode | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1758 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mary Polly Boyle |
Die angezeigten Daten haben keine Quellen.