Person:David Douglass (5)

m. Bef 1782
  1. David Douglass1781 - 1861
Facts and Events
Name David Douglass
Alt Name _____ Douglas
Gender Male
Birth[1][2] 9 Nov 1781 Cynthiana, Harrison, Kentucky, United States
Death[1][2] 23 Jan 1861 Decatur, Indiana, United States
Burial[1][2] Mowrey Cemetery, Clay, Decatur, Indiana, United States
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Family Recorded, in Daily, William Allen. History of the descendants of David Morgan in America: geanology [sic] traced through the Morgan and Howard families. (Indianapolis [Indiana]: [s.n.], 1909).

    p 8 -
    ... In the summer of 1792, two forts or stockades were built on Slate Creek, named Morgan's and Gilmore's Stations respectively, and were occupied and corn raised in what is now Montgomery county, Kentucky, but owing to prowling bands of Indians and the remoteness to other forts, three men being killed, they were abandoned in September of the same year, the settlers returning to Boone's and Bryan's Stations. In February, 1793, six families, in all twenty-seven persons, again occupied Morgan's Station ; Ralph Morgan's family being one.

    During the last days of March, Ralph Morgan and wife took four pack-horses and went to Boonesborough to get their household goods, leaving their two oldest children, David Douglas and Abel Morgan, at the fort. On April 1st, Easter Monday, say the Historians, at 10 a. m., 1793, the men all being out looking after the planting of their crops, no man about the fort except one, and he old and infirm, the gates wide open, thirty-five Indians rushed in and captured the fort, killing the old man above named, and one woman who was unable to travel, and carried off the remainder, nineteen persons, as prisoners, after setting fire to the fort. David Douglas and his half-brother, Abel Morgan, the former twelve years of age and the latter less than eight, at the time the rush was made on the fort, were playing in Slate Creek, and on hearing the yells of the Indians and the screams of women and children, at once fled for their lives pursued by four Indians. The boys knew of a large standing sycamore tree, hollow at the bottom, which they ran to and quickly entered, and there hid, standing on rotten portions of the tree until their pursuers had passed and repassed to their party, when they came out and made their way to Boonesborough and rejoined their parents. On the alarm being given, pursuit was made, which the Indians discovered, and massacred such of their prisoners as were unable to keep up in their rapid retreat. The pursuit was abandoned, but the captives were restored after Wayne's Treaty two years later.

    The two brothers lie buried side by side in a country graveyard, not more than eight feet apart, about five miles west of Greensburg, Decatur county, Indiana. The writer visited their graves in February, 1909, and copied the following inscriptions from their headstones:

    "David Douglas, Born Nov. 9, 1781. Died Jan. 23, 1861."
    "Abel Morgan, Born March 14, 1786. Died July 16, 1863."

  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 David Douglass, in Find A Grave.