Person:John Connelly (6)

Dr. John Connelly, Sr.,"Irish Officer" "Surgeon in British Army"
b.Abt 1700 Northern Ireland
 
m. Abt 1684
  1. Edmond Connelly1688 - 1750
  2. Dr. John Connelly, Sr.,"Irish Officer" "Surgeon in British Army"Abt 1700 -
  • HDr. John Connelly, Sr.,"Irish Officer" "Surgeon in British Army"Abt 1700 -
  • WSusanna HowardAbt 1700 - 1753
m. Abt 1742
  1. Dr. John Connelly, Jr., UELAbt 1742 - 1813
Facts and Events
Name Dr. John Connelly, Sr.,"Irish Officer" "Surgeon in British Army"
Alt Name Dr. John Connolly, Sr.
Gender Male
Birth? Abt 1700 Northern Ireland
Marriage Abt 1742 Manor Heights, Armstrong, Pennsylvania, United Statesto Susanna Howard
References
  1.   Patrick Hogue (Samples). The Samples / Semples Family.
  2.   Hanna, Charles Augustus. The Wilderness Trail, or, The ventures and adventures of the Pennsylvania traders on the Allegheny Path: with some new annals of the Old West, and the records of some strong men and some bad ones. (Lewisburg, Pennsylvania: Wennawoods Publishing, c1995)
    Page 84.

    It has sometimes been stated that George Croghan and William Trent were brothers-in-law. How they became so is not clear. William Trent's only sister, Mary, married Nathaniel French, of Philadelphia. Trent himself married Sarah Wilkins, possibly a daughter of one of the Indian Traders of that name. Croghan 's nephew, it will be remembered, was Doctor John Connelly, the Loyalist. Connolly was the son of John Connelly, Sr., a native of Ireland, and of Susanna Howard, sister of Gordon Howard, one of the early Indian Traders of Lancaster County. She first married James Patterson, the Trader, and after his death. Dr. Thomas Ewing, of Lancaster. John Connolly, Sr., was her third husband. Doctor Connolly, their son, married Susanna Semple, daughter of Samuel Semple, the innkeeper of Fort Pitt, who furnished Washington such good entertainment in 1770. If Croghan's wife was a Wilkins, and sister to William Trent's wife, it is possible she also may have been a sister to Samuel Semple's wife, the mother of Susanna Connolly; and this would have made Connolly Croghan's nephew, by marriage. The name of Croghan's own daughter, as shown by his will, was Susanna; which was also the Christian name of Connolly's mother, as well as that of his wife. But it is difficult to see how Croghan could have been a brother-in-law to Trent, who married Sarah Wilkins, and also to John Connolly, Sr., who married Susanna Howard, the widow of Doctor Ewing, unless, indeed, Sarah Wilkins and Susanna Howard may have been half-sisters, and one of them Croghan's wife's sister.