Person:Jacob Seay (3)

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Name Jacob Seay
Gender Male
Birth? 6 Dec 1758 Amelia, Virginia, United States
Marriage 21 Nov 1791 Amelia, Virginia, United Statesto Rebecca Davis Jenkins
Death? 25 Jun 1850 Springfield, Washington, Kentucky, United States

Jacob Seay

  • A SHORT SKETCH OF THE SEAY FAMILY
By James A. Seay
Editorial Note - The following brief sketch of the Seay Family written by James A. Seay in 1906.
The family, headed by Jacob Seay, a Revolutionary Soldier, a Justice of the Peace, and a prominent pioneer resident of Washington County, was long identified with the history of the county. Revised from James A. Seay letter which was written to his son, Dr. E.V. Seay of Salvisa, KY.
  • To All Whom It May Concern,
The writer James A. Seay desires to leave with his children after he may be dead, a little history of the Seay Family that left the State of Virginia about the year of 1790 and went to the four winds, as it was. There were six brothers who agreed among themselves that they would all leave Virginia and settle in different states, never to meet again. This they did about the year 1790.
My grandfather, Jacob Seay, one of the six brothers, came to the state of Kentucky and settled in Washington County, two miles west of Springfield on the Bardstown road. He bought lands, built good houses, owned slaves (one lived to be one hundred and thirty years old) reared a family consisting of six boys and two girls. There names are as follows: John, Barnett, Booker, William, Austin, Nancy and Besty.
Betsy married Reuben Mock, a gunsmith by trade.
Nancy married a man by the name of Dean, and she and husband and brother Barnett moved to Graves County, Kentucky, in an early day before there were any steamboats or railroad in Kentucky. They went down the Ohio River on a flat bottom boat.
John moved to the State of Indiana and reared a family. Booker, William, Austin and Richard all died in Washington County, Kentucky.
My grandfather, Jacob Seay, was a very healthy man. He lived to be ninety-two years old. He served in the Revolutionary War with Great Britian and was present at the surrender of Lord Cornwallis. He never belonged to any church, but was an honest, truthful and upright man in all his dealings. The land he owned and reared his family on lies between the Bardstown Road and Cartwright Creek and is now owned by the Sisters of Charity or Nuns.
The maiden name of my grandmother, wife of Jacob Seay, is not known to the writer. She lived to a good old age and was baptised three days before death by a Christian Preacher. They were both buried on the old burying ground near their old home but the tombstones that marked their sleeping place have long since been broken down and now nothing marks the place.
My grandfather on my grandmother's side was Phillip Mattingly. He lived in Washington County, Kentucky, and built the first flour mill at Beechland, then known as Poortown. He also dug a race one and a half miles longs to furnish water to run his mill which cost him a large sum of money. His mill has passed through the hands of several men since his day (to wit); Jimmie Ryan, Samuel Reding, Evan Rogers, Samuel Vanarsdall and others. Parts of the old mill and the race still remain and furnishes bread for the people of the place.
My grandmother, wife of Phillip Mattingly name was Yeager, daughter of Cornelius Yeager.
My father Austin Seay and Rosa Mattingly were married in the year of 1841. To this marriage were born nine children, five girls and four boys. Their names are as follows: Jas. A, William, Mary, Ann, Hettie, Booker, Steven, Mattie and Sudia.
William was killed by the fall of an old dead tree when four years old.
My father, Austin Seay, never belonged to any church but loved to read the Bible, loved truth and was honest to the letter.
My mother, Rosa Seay, belonged to the Catholic Church and reared eight children out of nine in that faith, the writer of this sketch being the exception who joined the Christian Church in a grove near the noted Tatum Springs on Chaplin River in the year 1860 and was bastised in Glends Creek by one, Preacher Price about three hundred yards it's mouth.
My mother's people all left Washington County in the year 1848 and settled in Lincoln County, Missouri.
My father died August 29, 1872.
My mother died in the year 1879. He was buried at Willisburg, Kentucky and she at St. Rose in the Catholic Cemetary.
Jas A. Seay, son of Austin and Rosa Seay, was born near Springfield, Washington County, Kentucky March 2, 1842 was reared on a farm near Willisburg, Kentucky. Served in the War between the States. Married Dec 19, 1863 to Sarah Mayes, daughter of James and Elizabeth Mayes. To this marriage was born seven children (to wit) William M, James B., Stephen M., Ezra V., John H., the other two died in infancy. Sarah J. Seay, the mother of these children died September 5, 1880 and is buried at Willisburg, Kentucky.
On Oct 16, 1881, J.A. Seay was married to Nancy A. Mayes, sister of first wife. To this marriage was born five children (to wit) Asa F, Effie M., Herbert P., Ollie and Hettie. Nancy A. Seay, the mother these children died March 23, 1894.
On Dec. 10, 1894, J.A. Seay was married to Paralee Mayes, sister of the two former wives. To this marriage was born four children, one dying in infancy; the others are as follows; Austin L., Harold Thomas and Maurice.