Person:Andrew Lewis (40)

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Dr. Andrew Lewis
b.Abt 1795 Virginia
d.1875
m. Abt 1788
  1. Agatha Strother Lewis1789 - 1841
  2. Sarah 'Sally' Lewis1790 - 1865
  3. Dr. Andrew LewisAbt 1795 - 1875
  • HDr. Andrew LewisAbt 1795 - 1875
  • WMaria WaltonBef 1799 -
m. 23 Oct 1816
Facts and Events
Name Dr. Andrew Lewis
Gender Male
Birth[1] Abt 1795 Virginia[assumed age 21 at marriage]
Marriage 23 Oct 1816 Botetourt County, Virginiato Maria Walton
Death[1] 1875
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Ancestry.com. Public Member Trees: (Note: not considered a reliable primary source).
  2.   Peyton, John Lewis. History of Augusta County, Virginia. (Staunton, Virginia: Samuel M. Yost and Son, 1882).

    Doctor Andrew Lewis was another member of the Lewis family, who lived and died in Botetourt. He was a son of Capt. Wm. Lewis, who was twice married—first to a daughter of Thomas Madison, and afterwards to Nancy McClanahan, sister of Col. Elijah McClanahan. Dr. Lewis rose to great eminence in his profession—married Maria Walton, who is now living near Salem, and had three children—two daughters and one son.—One of the daughters, Lucy, married George W. Shanks; the other, Mary, married Henry A. Edmundson. The son, Dr. Wm. W. Lewis married a daughter of Rev. Dr. McFarland, and left a daughter and son, Frank Lewis, who is now at Seminary, preparing for the ministry, being the only one of the Lewis name (so far as I know) who has devoted himself to that calling. Having thus traced the Botetourt branches of the Lewis family from their ancestor, John Lewis, of Augusta county, I will now return to my first plan of presenting a sketch of Andrew Lewis, commonly known and referred to as the “hero of Point Pleasant,” which is gathered in part from “Howe’s Historical Collections,” page 204, on Botetourt county—but venturing to suggest a correction in one or two particulars, which will be pointed out—also Charles Campbell’s “Introduction to the History of the Colony of the Old Dominion”—from the same author’s larger work, “History of the Colony and Ancient Dominion of Virginia,” and from Foote’s “Sketches of Virginia,” 2d series, all of which are works of high authority.