Person:Jonathan Hoge (1)

Jonathan Hoge, Esquire, "of Silver Spring Presbyterian Church"
m. Abt 1720
  1. Rachel Hoge1722 - 1810
  2. Rev. John Hoge1723 - 1807
  3. David Hoge1725 - 1804
  4. Jonathan Hoge, Esquire, "of Silver Spring Presbyterian Church"1725 - 1800
  5. Elizabeth Hoge1730 - 1812
m. 1755
  1. Lt John Hoge1757 - 1834
  2. Mary HogeAbt 1764 -
Facts and Events
Name Jonathan Hoge, Esquire, "of Silver Spring Presbyterian Church"
Gender Male
Birth[4] 23 Jul 1725 Lancaster County, Pennsylvania
Alt Birth[3] 23 Jul 1727 Lancaster, Pennsylvania, United States
Marriage 1755 East Pennsboro, Cumberland County, Pennsylvaniato Isabella Armstrong, "of Silver Spring Presbyterian Church"
Death[3][4] 19 Apr 1800 East Pennsboro, Cumberland, Pennsylvania, United States
  • Patrick Hogue (Samples). The Samples / Semples Family.S5
SEMPLE, JOHN, East Pennsboro Township. February 15, 1758 3 March 1758. Oldest son John, 2nd son James, 3d son David, 5th son Samuel, 4th son Robert, son Joseph. Dau. Jannet Semple. Exs: sons John Semple and David Semple. Wit: Johnathan Hoge "Hogue."S5
1764 - He was a justice of the peace from 1764 until the American Revolution.
  • Nevin, Alfred. Centennial biography: Men of mark of Cumberland Valley, Pa., 1776-1876 (1876)
Page 42 – Meeting At Carlisle – 7. That the committee consist of the following persons, viz: James Wilson, John Armstrong, John Montgomery, William Irvine, Robert Callender, William Thompson, John Calhoun, Jonathan Hoge, Robert Magaw, Ephraim Blane, John Allison, John Harris and Robert Miller, or any five of them. (12 Jul 1774)
16 July 1776 - Was a member of the Constitutional Convention
04 March 1777 - Was a member of the Supreme Executive Council
September 1777 - Was one of the commissioners to remove the public loan offices
09 November 1778 - Stopped being a member of the Supreme Executive Council
02 October 1786 - Was one of the committee to superintend the drawing of the Donation Land Lottery.
17 August 1791 - Was appointed by Governor Mifflin as associate judge.
26 September 1799 - A Last Will & Testament of James Pollock is duly signed and sealed by said Pollock and witnessed by Jonathan Hoge, John Hulings and Francis Silver, and was probated Nov. 2, 1800.
Jonathan Hoge having died before this will was probated.
  • From the Western Repository of Knowledge, Cumberland County Pennsylvania, 1786-1800:
"Carlisle Gazette" (Newspaper) dated 23 Apr 1800
"Jonathan Hoge, died Saturday in his 71st year, after an illness of two days, which we are informed was by a stroke of the palsey, one of the Associate Judges of this county."
References
  1.   Nevin, Alfred. Centennial biography : men of mark of Cumberland Valley, Pa., 1776-1876. (Philadelphia: Fulton Pub. Co., 1876)
    Page 42.
  2.   Jonathan Hoge, Esq, in Find A Grave.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Tyler, James Hoge. The family of Hoge: A genealogy. (unknown: J.F. Hoge, [Self Published]  Jos. J. Stone & Co., printers, 1927)
    Page 24.

    Jonathan Hoge, b. July 23, 1727; m. Isabella Armstrong; d. April 19, 1800. Was a prominent man in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. He received a liberal education; was justice of the peace of his county; member of the Constitutional Convention of Pennsylvania. Member of the Supreme Executive Council of the county; was apointed by Governor Mifflin as associate judge of his county, and held other positions of honor and trust.

  4. 4.0 4.1 Egle, William Henry. Pennsylvania Genealogies; Scotch-Irish and German. (Harrisburg, Dauphin, Pennsylvania, United States: Lane S. Hart, Printer and Binder, 1886)
    Page 634.

    Page 634 – Jonathan, b. July 23, 1725; d. April 19, 1800, of paralysis. He received a liberal education, and was brought up a farmer. He was a justice of the peace from 1764 to the Revolution; was a member of the constitutional convention of July 15, 1776; member of the Assembly in 1776, and again from 1778 to 1783; member of the Supreme Executive Council from March 4, 1777, to November 9, 1778, and from November 3, 1784, to October 20, 1787; member of the Council of Safety from October to December, 1777; one of the commissioners to remove the public loan offices in September, 1777; one of the committee to superintend the drawing of the Donation Land Lottery, October 2, 1786; member of the Board of Property in 1785-86; and, by Governor Mifflin, appointed one of the associate judges of Cumberland county, August 17, 1791. Judge Hoge was a prominent and influential man-his entire life was an active and busy one. He married and left issue. One of his daughters married David Redick, who was quite conspicuous in the early history of Western Pennsylvania and vice President of the State in 1788.

  5.   Patrick Hogue (Samples). The Samples / Semples Family.

    SEMPLE, JOHN, East Pennsboro Township. February 15, 1758 3 March 1758. Oldest son John, 2nd son James, 3d son David, 5th son Samuel, 4th son Robert, son Joseph. Dau. Jannet Semple. Exs: sons John Semple and David Semple. Wit: Johnathan Hoge "Hogue."