Person:Joseph Henderson (40)

Watchers
Joseph Henderson
 
  1. John HendersonAbt 1762 - 1832
  2. Margaret Henderson1762 - 1835
  3. Jane HendersonAbt 1765 - Abt 1800
  4. Isabella HendersonAbt 1766 -
  5. Jean HendersonAbt 1770 -
  6. Joseph HendersonAbt 1771 -
  7. Jones HendersonAbt 1774 -
  8. Hannah HendersonAbt 1778 -
  9. Sarah HendersonAbt 1780 -
  10. Rebecca "Becky" HendersonAbt 1781 -
m. 2 Feb 1799
Facts and Events
Name Joseph Henderson
Gender Male
Birth[1] Abt 1771 Augusta County, Virginia
Marriage 2 Feb 1799 Augusta County, Virginiato Hannah McCutcheon

Joseph Henderson was one of the Early Settlers of Augusta County, Virginia

Contents

Welcome to
Old Augusta

Early Settlers
Beverley Manor
Borden's Grant
Register
Data
Maps
Places
Library
History
Index

……………………..The Tapestry
Families Old Chester OldAugusta Germanna
New River SWVP Cumberland Carolina Cradle
The Smokies Old Kentucky

__________________________

Marriage Bond

  • Vol. 2 - Marriage Bond: 1799--February 2, Joseph Henderson and Jones McCutchen, surety. Joseph Henderson and Hannah McCutchen, daughter of Robert McCutchen. Consent teste: John Risk.


Records in Augusta County, VA

From Chalkley’s Augusta County Records:

  • Vol. 2 - John McCutcheon's Declaration: Of the Little Calf Pasture, in Augusta County; aged eighty-two years on the thirteenth of August, 1832; entered the service in the early part of 1777 or 1778 (he thinks in 1777), when he was drafted for three months against the Indians; marched to Clover Lick, where he remained until the latter part of the next November, when he was discharged with the rest of the troops. His officers were Capt. Andrew Lockridge, Lieut. Wm. Kinkead, Ensign James Gay. About June, 1779, upon an alarm raised that Donnelly's Fort was being attacked by Indians, he was drafted and marched to the Warm Springs, were he was left with twenty or thirty others under John Wackub (either Lieutenant or Ensign)to guard that place, where he remained twelve or fifteen days and was discharged. In January, 1781, he was drafted for three months and rendevouzed at Staunton on the 8th of January, 1781; thence marched via Charlottesville, New Kent, and Suffolk to Portsmouth, where remained until the 7th or 8th of April, 1781, when he was discharged. He was under the command of Col. Sampson Mathews, Lieut.-Col. Wm. Bowyer, Capt. Wm. Kinkead, Lieut. Jacob Hamrick, Ensign Jonathan Humphreys (Major's name forgotten); no regular troops were stationed there at the time; Gen. Muhlenburg and Col. Dick visited the troops; he was in no engagement but a skirmish with the picket guards. In June, 1781, he was drafted for 20 days, with his wagon and team, and he, as driver, marched from Staunton under Maj. Alexander Robertson. He joined the main army in New Kent, where he remained his time, and longer, which was shortly after the battle of Jamestown, when he was discharged. He thinks Gen. LaFayette and Gen. Wayne were among the general officers. James Stuart (now too old to attend Court) was his companion soldier at Clover Lick. William Graham, aged sixty-nine years, deposes, that he served the last three tours with declarant. Joseph Henderson, of the Little Calf Pasture, aged sixty years, testifies to declarant's good character. William Armstrong, of the Little Calf Pasture, aged seventy-two years on the 12th of December, 1831, testifies to declarant's good character. Jacob Leas, aged sixty-seven years, also testifies to his good character. (Note: John McCutcheon was the brother-in-law of this Joseph Henderson. This record places Joseph as living on "the Little Calf Pasture" in Virginia, which was then in Bath County).
References
  1. Ancestry.com. Public Member Trees: (Note: not considered a reliable primary source).