Person:William Renick (9)

Maj. William Renick
m. Abt 1744
  1. Maj. William Renick1745 - 1815
  2. Joshua "Chief Moluntha" RenickAbt 1746 - 1786
  3. Thomas Renick1748 - Aft 1779
  4. George Renick1748 - Abt 1748
  5. Margaret Renick1751 - Aft 1795
  6. Betsy RenickAbt 1753 - Abt 1757
  7. Robert RenickAbt 1757 - 1828
m. 7 Jan 1768
  1. Margaret Renick1773 - 1828
Facts and Events
Name Maj. William Renick
Gender Male
Birth? 2 Jun 1745 Augusta County, Virginia
Marriage 7 Jan 1768 to Sarah Ann Hamilton
Death? 26 Mar 1815 Greenbrier County, Virginia

William Renick was one of the Early Settlers of Augusta County, Virginia

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Parentage of William Renick

William Renick is a probable (but not proven) son of Robert Renick, who was killed by Shawnee Indians near the James River in Augusta County on 25 July 1757. He is thought to be one of Robert Renick's seven children taken prisoner, along with their mother, by the Shawnee and later released:


From Chalkley's Augusta County Records:

  • 1757 - July 25th, Robert Renick, at Forks of James River, killed; Thomas Moor, at Forks of James River, killed; Mrs Renick and 7 children, at Forks of James River, prisoners.

Early Land Acquisition in Augusta County, VA

Acquisition of Land from Chalkley's:

  • Page 109.--18th October, 1769. Francis Jackson and Elizabeth ( ) to William Renick, £42, 170 acres on cowpasture; corner land in possession of William Jackson, opposite to land in possession of Alexander Black. Teste: William Mathews, J. Murray, Pat. Lockhart, Arthur Campbell. Delivered: William Renix, August Court, 1776.

Will of William Renick

  • Page 8--Will of William Rennick of Greenbrier County. Niece, Rebecca Rennick, daughter of his brother Robert; nephews and nieces (brothers and sisters of Rebecca), viz: William, Franklin, Sally and Frances Rennick; niece, Polly Rennick, now married to William Dotton; niece, Pheby Kinkead; niece, Margaret Kinkead, wife of Daniel Alison; sister, Margaret Kinkead. Dated 29th July, 1814. Codicil, 16th March, 1815. Devisee, John Vincent and wife. Recorded in Greenbrier, 25th April, 1815.

Records in Augusta County, VA

From Chalkley’s Augusta County Records:

  • Page 32.--20th March, 1783. Privy examination of Jane, wife of Robert Armstrong, late of Augusta, deed to Benj. Tolman, before William Renick, Wm. Ward, justices of Greenbrier.
  • Page 260.--15th February, 1788. Andrew Hamilton's will, of the Calfpasture--To wife, Martha; to son, William; to son, Andrew; to each grandson named Andrew, 250 acres in Kentucky; to all my daughters; to sons William and Andrew, all books. Executors, son William and son-in-law Wm. Rennocks, wife Martha. Teste: Wm. Lockridge, Samuel Lockridge, Thos. Adams. Proved, 21st September, 1790, by the Lockridges. Hamilton and Wm. Renocks qualify.
  • Vol. 2 - APRIL, 1795 (K to Z). - James Write, assignee of William Reneck and William Hamilton, executor Andrew Hamilton, vs. Sampson Mathews and Thomas Hughart--Debt. Augusta, 7th January, 1794.
  • Vol. 2 - CIRCUIT COURT RECORDS. - SEPTEMBER, 1799 (M to G). - William Rennick vs. Major Dowell and William Moore--Debt. Writ to Rockbridge, 3d April, 1798.
  • Vol. 2 - Thomas Masterson vs. John Stuart--O. S. 26; N. S. 9--From Greenbrier. Peter Masterson and Thomas were brothers. William and Robert Renick were brothers; 1800. Presly McClung was stepson of Thos. Masterson in 1803. Thomas Masterson was Joseph and Margaret McClung's son-in-law.
  • Vol. 2 - Wilson's administrator vs. Thompson's administrator--O. S. 226; N. S. 80--George Wilson filed bill in Botetourt, saying: In 1754 a certain Patton (now deceased) came to house of orator and told him that Patton's wife in her last illness had requested him to make provision for orator and his wife, who was Mrs. Patton's niece, and promised to give orator a tract of land on New River. Orator sold his Augusta land and assigned the bonds to Patton to purchase a negro. Before Patton complied with his promises he was killed by Indians. Patton's executors, Buchanan and Thompson, have refused to carry out the promises. Orator sold his Augusta land to Benj. Watson, whose wife afterwards became Mrs. Breckinridge. Saml. Walker, Sr., deposes 6th August, 1789, that in May, 1789, Col. James Patton, James Davis and George Wilson came to deponent's house. George made several moves but finally settled on south side James River, where he remained until 1786, when he moved to Kentucky. William Rennick, son of Robert Rennick of Greenbrier, came of age in 1770. Copy of James Patton's will.
References
  1.   Peyton, John Lewis. History of Augusta County, Virginia. (Staunton, Virginia: Samuel M. Yost and Son, 1882).

    HANNAH DENNIS, THE QUEEN WITCH OR INVISIBLE PRINCESS.

    In 1 76 1, sixty Shawanese warriors penetrated east of the AUeghanies to
    the James river settlements, committing murders and carrying off prison-
    ers — among them Mrs. Renix and her four children. Mrs. Renix was,
    under Bouquet's treaty, brought to Staunton, in 1767, and redeemed, as also
    her son, afterwards Maj. Renix, of Greenbrier, and her other children,
    except her son Joshua, who became so enamored of savage life that he
    took an Indian wife, became a chief among the Miamis, amassed a con-
    siderable fortune, and died, at Detroit, in 18 10.

    Among the captives was Hannah Dennis, a clever and spiritual woman,
    who was sent to reside at an Indian town, near Chillicothe. Instead of
    giving way to grief at her bondage, she applied herself to learn the Indian
    language, performed such labor as they required of her with alacrity, pro-



    HISTOKY OF AUGUSTA COUNTY. 113

    fessed warm attachment to their ways of Hfe, painted her body Hke the
    squaws, and conformed to their manners and customs. She became very
    popular with the tribe, and in order to enhance her influence, professed
    a knowledge of medicine, of the properties of plants and herbs, and com-
    menced practice as a doctor among them. She soon discovered the super-
    stitious character of the Indians, and determined to take advantage of it
    to increase her power and position. Accordingly, she professed witchcraft,
    and affected to be a prophetess. Unlike most witches, Hannah was ex-
    ceedingly beautiful, and employed her charms of person and the seducing
    grace of her manners to enhance her influence. By cunning and craft, by
    pretending to tame horses and wild beasts by whispering in their ears ; to
    divine future events from the various indications that manifest themselves
    in fire, smoke, and in other ways ; by spells and incantations to communi-
    cate with the dead ; to foretell earthquakes, allay storms, drive away pes-
    tilence, cure disease by virtue of a few words pronounced over the sick
    person, — a quicker way than with snake-root or ginseng, — this marvelous
    woman acquired such a reputation among the savages that they not only
    gave her perfect liberty but looked upon her as a female deity, and hon-
    ored her as a Queen. Placing little value upon their homage, she deter-
    mined to escape, and in June, 1763, left Chillicothe, in search, as the Indians
    supposed, of herbs for medicinal purposes, as was her custom, and did not
    return, but, crossing the Scioto, set out for Virginia. Alarm spread
    among the tribe when her disappearance was known ; they ran to all parts
    on foot and on horseback, but she could not be found. The chiefs met ;
    the utmost consternation prevailed ; scouts were dispatched to scour the
    country. Finally the pursuing savages caught sight of her beyond the
    Scioto, forty miles below Chillicothe. They fired upon her but without ef-
    fect, and probably they did not expect to kill her, as their rifles were loaded
    with leaden instead of silver bullets. They forded the river and still pur-
    sued, but Hannah had disappeared as if the clouds had received her up,
    or she had been swallowed by the earth. Awed by the mysterious disap-
    pearance, they gave up the chase, lit their camp-fires, and passed the night
    on the spot. Next morning they set out on their return. When they had
    been gone some time, the invisible princess crept from a hollow log, in
    which she had concealed herself, and dressed a wound in her foot which
    had been received during her flight. Knowing enough of the Indian
    character to feel satisfied they would not return to look after one who had
    gone, in their opinion, to the spirit land, Hannah spent three days at this
    point, nursing her wound and recovering her strength, and then resumed
    her journey for the mouth of the Kanawha. She crossed the Ohio on a
    log of drift-wood, and after travelling for twenty nights, resting during the
    day in a cave or under the branches of trees, subsisting on fruits gathered
    in the forest with difficulty, she finally set down on the banks of a stream



    114 HISTORY OF AUGUSTA COUNTY.

    which supplied her drink, to die. In this condition, ahnost expiring from
    hunger and fatigue, she was discovered by a backwoodsman, relieved by
    the pioneers, and ministered to until restored, then supplied with a horse,
    and conducted to Jackson's river, and thence to her home and friends.