Samuel
McDowell 1735-1817
my 5th Great
Grandfather
by David Arthur August 6th,
2019
My line thu Jane Reid Pribble
- https://edavidarthur.tripod.com/LucindaPribble/LucindaPribble.htm
During
the past several decades I have seen numerous internet family trees which show
the parents of my 3rd G-Grandmother, Jane Reid 1790 – 1863, as
Andrew Reid 1751-1837 and Magdalen McDowell 1755 -1837 of Rockbridge, VA. I
could find no documentation showing this relationship. After participating in a
DNA test with Ancestry.com, I have seen several DNA matches with distant
cousins who have family trees showing that they descend from Andrew and
Magdalen, and also numerous DNA match cousins (for me and my sister and our 2nd
cousins) who have family trees showing that they descend from the siblings of
the parents of Andrew and Magdalen. This seems to be overwhelming evidence that
my 4th Great Grandparents in this line are Andrew and Magdalen and
that my 5th Great Grandparents are:
Mary
Annette McClung 1734-1827 and Samuel McDowell 1735-1817
and
George
Reid 1719-1786 and Abigail Marguarite Leger
1728-1815
From
the “Journal of Charles Clinton” Kept during Voyage from Ireland to PA 1729
Migrated
from Ulster to America – father Ephraim McDowell, sons John and James and
daughters Mary and Margaret. They sailed in on the ship “George and Anne” and
reached Philadelphia in September. They joined Ephraim’s brother, Andrew, who
had migrated in 1725.
Ephraim’s son, John McDowell relocated his family to Rockbridge,
Virginia in 1737.
Samuel
McDowell (October 29, 1735 – September 25, 1817) was a soldier and early
political leader in Kentucky. He was the father of Dr. Ephraim McDowell.
McDowell
participated in three major wars. He served under George Washington in the
French and Indian War, served as an aide-de-camp to Isaac Shelby in Lord
Dunmore's War, and was part of Nathanael Greene's campaign in the Revolutionary
War. Following the Revolutionary War, he relocated to Kentucky and became a
surveyor. Later, he was appointed one of the first district court judges in
what would become the state of Kentucky. He became a leader of the movement to
separate Kentucky from Virginia, presiding over nine of the state's ten
constitutional conventions.
He
was a founding trustee of Liberty Hall (later Washington and Lee University),
when it was made into a college in 1776.
Early
life
Samuel
McDowell was born in the Province of Pennsylvania on October 29, 1735. He was
the son of Captain John McDowell and grandson of Ephraim McDowell, a
Scots-Irish patriot in the English Revolution of 1688. Captain McDowell
relocated his family to Virginia in 1737. Samuel McDowell was well-educated in
his youth, at one time studying under Archibald Alexander. In 1743, his father
died and he inherited the entire estate, according to the tradition of
primogeniture, but chose to divide the estate with his brother and sister.
McDowell
married Mary McClung on January 17, 1754. They had seven sons and four
daughters. Sons Joseph, Samuel, Jr. both served in the Revolutionary War.
Joseph also served in the War of 1812, as did the eldest son, John. Samuel, Jr.
was also the first United States Marshal in Kentucky. The most famous of
McDowell's sons was Dr. Ephraim McDowell, who performed the first ovariotomy. Ephraim McDowell later married the daughter of
Isaac Shelby, his father's former commanding officer.
He
served as a founding trustee of Liberty Hall, formerly the Augusta Academy,
when in 1776 it was renamed in a burst of revolutionary fervor and relocated to
Lexington, Virginia. Other founding trustees along with McDowell were prominent
men including Andrew Lewis, Thomas Lewis, Sampson Mathews, George Moffett,
William Preston, and James Waddel. Finally chartered
in 1782, Liberty Hall was again renamed, to Washington College and finally
Washington and Lee University. It is the ninth oldest institution of higher
education in the country.
Military
career
At
age twenty, McDowell participated in the French and Indian War. He was captain
of a company, serving under George Washington at Braddock's Defeat at the
Battle of the Monongahela. Later, he served in Lord Dunmore's War,
participating in the Battle of Point Pleasant with future Kentucky governor
Isaac Shelby. Shelby later appointed McDowell as his aide-de-camp. For his
service in the war, he was awarded a large tract of land in Fayette County,
Kentucky in 1775.
In
1773, McDowell represented Augusta County, Virginia in the Virginia House of
Burgesses. He was a delegate to a March 20, 1775 conference in Richmond,
Virginia to make preparation for the Revolutionary War. At this conference, he
and Thomas Lewis were chosen to carry a letter to several delegates to the
upcoming Second Continental Congress, thanking them for their actions. McDowell
and Lewis both served in the Virginia Conventions in 1775 and 1776. McDowell
also attended a second conference in Williamsburg, Virginia in 1776 where he
declared the rights of man and instructed the Continental Congress to declare
the colonies' independence.
At
the outbreak of the Revolutionary War, McDowell was commissioned a colonel over
a regiment from Augusta County. He participated in the Battle of Guilford
Courthouse while serving under General Nathanael Greene. His son John also
participated in this battle. The elder McDowell was present at Charles
Cornwallis' surrender at Yorktown.
Formation
of Kentucky
Following
the war, McDowell presided over a 1782 convention that framed a constitution
for the independent territory of Kentucky. From 1782 to 1784, he served on the
board of trustees for Washington and Lee University. He was appointed surveyor
of Fayette County, where he relocated in 1783. Together with John Floyd and
George Muter, McDowell was appointed to the district court in Harrodsburg, the
first such court in Kentucky. Following his appointment, he moved to Mercer
County, Kentucky. In 1786, he presided over the first county court in Kentucky
District.
On
the night of December 27, 1786, a group consisting of Harry Innes, Thomas Todd,
John Brown, Christopher Greenup, John Belli, and Robert Craddock assembled at
McDowell's residence and formed a debating society known as the Danville
Political Club. McDowell continued to host meetings of the Club at his
residence from time-to-time, and participated in its activities for its entire
four-year existence. When the town of Danville was organized on December 4,
1787, McDowell was named one of its first trustees.
McDowell
presided over nine of the ten conventions that drafted the first Kentucky
Constitution. He was chosen as one of Mercer County's electors to choose the
first governor and senators from the state.
McDowell
died near Danville on September 25, 1817 at the home of his son Joseph.
Deed to Samuel McDowell for
land in Western VA (now in KY) signed in 1786 by Patrick Henry, Governor of
Virginia.
Extract from a Sons of
the American Revolution Application
Download a pdf file of this web page at https://edavidarthur.tripod.com/SamuelMcDowell/SamuelMcDowell1735.pdf