Person:John Christian (21)

Watchers
John Christian
b.1752 Ireland
  • F.  Christian (add)
  1. John Christian1752 - Aft 1832
  2. William ChristianAbt 1757 - Bef 1820
  3. Andrew Christian1761 - 1837
Facts and Events
Name John Christian
Gender Male
Birth? 1752 Ireland
Death? Aft 1832 prob. Fayette County, Kentucky

Notes

Fayette County, Kentucky 1835 Pensioneers:

JOHN CHRISTIAN, PRIVATE
VIRGINIA MILITIA
$76.66 ANNUAL ALLOWANCE
$229.98 AMOUNT RECEIVED
JANUARY 15, 1833 PENSION STARTED
AGE 82
[Source: http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~kyfayett/pensions.htm]


Revolutionary War Pension Information

Information from “Virginia/West Virginia Genealogical Data from Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Records”, Vol. 1, compiled by Patrick G. Wardell, Lt. Col. U.S. Army Ret. :


Christian, John - entered service 1776 in Washington County, Virginia; born Ireland 1752; to America in 1760 & resided on Church River in Fincastle, Virginia before moving to Washington Couinty, Virginia; moved to East Tennessee, thence to Kentucky, where Pensioned 1832 in Fayette County, having been blind for more than 23 years; wife mentioned byt not named 1832. R-540.


Transcript:


John Christian, Pension Number S-12689 Virginia
State of Kentucky, Fayette County, December 1-1832 personally appeared John Christian, a resident of Lexington, Kentucky age 80; that he was born in Ireland in the year 1752, came to America 1760; that his father had a record of his age but he does not know what has become of it, that he resided on Clynch River in Fincastle and afterwards on Washington County when he was called into service; that after the war, terminated, he lived some years in West Tenn, and then removed to Kentucky, where he has resided ever since. That he entered as a volunteer in Captain D. Smith Company in an expedition against the Cherokee Indians in the year 1776 and remained on duty in that service from 1st August until sometime in September. For two months prior to that time, he had been regularly enrolled in the frontier troops to guard against the Indians and served as such drawing the pay said rations and in the year 1777, 1778-9, 1780-1781; he was each year in less than four months each year in actual service on the same frontier. Col. Arthur Campbell commanded the militia of the company during the whole time. Captain Smith was afterwards promoted to be Col. or Lieut Col and John Kincaid was made Captain, Wm Bowen was also Lieut in the company. He was frequently during his service engaged in short expeditions against the predatory bands of Indians who occasionally infested the frontiers. He was not during that time in any battle with the Indians, before he was engaged in the Battle of Kenhawa in 1774 against the Shawnees, as a private in Captain Andrew Lockeridge's company under Col Charles Lewis, who was killed in the battle. States that he is entirely blind and has been for 23 years. During Monroe administration, he filed application for pension, with the testimony of Capt John Kinkead. He refers also to M M McCall, Dr. Pindell, John Marton, Robert Frazer, W.T. Barry, who testify as to his veracity and etc. In a letter from his representative who was handling the case Mr. M.M. McCalla in 1832 from Lexington says that Mr. Christian's wife was then living, states that he would have been sent to the poor house if it had not been for an old lady who was not really able to take care of them financially.
In a letter from James L Hickman, of Lexington, 1837, he states that Mr. Christian had been in the poor house sometime and had failed to draw his pension and at that time confined to his bed.
[Source: Records of Revolutionary War Pensions of Soldiers who Settled in Fayette County Kentucky]