Person:Nathan Veatch (1)

m. 29 Oct 1751
  1. Nathan Veatch1752 - 1829
  2. Rachel Veatch1754 -
  3. Isaac Veatch1756 - 1780
  4. Elias Veatch1759 -
  5. James Veatch1762 -
  6. Eleanor Veatch1765 -
  7. Amos Veatch1768 -
  8. Charles Veatch1771 -
m. 1778
  1. Rev. Kinzey Veatch1779 -
  2. Martha Veatch1781 -
  3. Mary Veatch1783 -
  4. Rev. Isaac Veatch1786 - 1833
  5. Eleanor Veatch1788 -
  6. Nathan Veatch1791 -
  7. Elijah Veatch1793 -
  8. Elizabeth Veatch1796 -
  9. Keziah Veatch1801 -
Facts and Events
Name[1] Nathan Veatch
Gender Male
Birth[1] 15 Aug 1752 Frederick, Maryland, United States
Military[2] Abt 1776 North Carolina, United StatesRev war - Lt.
Marriage 1778 probably North Carolina, United Statesto Elizabeth Craig
Residence[2] Bef 1811 Knoxville, Knox, Tennessee, United States
Death[1][2] 1829 Harrison, Indiana, United States
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Burke, John Bernard. Burke's American families with British ancestry: the lineages of 1,600 families of British origin now resident in the United States of America. (Baltimore [Maryland]: Genealogical Pub. Co., 1983).
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Guthrie, Laurence Rawlin. American Guthrie and allied families: lineal representations of the colonial Guthries of Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Maryland, Delaware, Virginia, North and South Carolina, some post-revolutionary emigrants and of some allied families. (Chambersburg, Pa.: Kerr Print. Co., c1933)
    611.

    1. Nathan Veatch, b. Aug. 15, 1752. ...

    Nathan Veatch, (above) eldest child of James Veatch, Jr., and Eleanor Raymer, tradition informs us, was a soldier in the Revolutionary War. This is no doubt true, though no record has been found of his services.

    He married Oct. 24, 1778, Elizabeth Craig, who was probably of the same family as the Rev. Elijah Craig, the noted pioneer Baptist preacher of Kentucky. She was a talented woman, the mother of a gifted family. Three of her sons were pioneer Baptist preachers.

    At the close of the Revolution Nathan Veatch and family settled on Pigeon River, a branch of the French Broad, at a point thirty-four miles eastward from Knoxville, Tenn. They lived there until 1811, when he moved with all his family except the eldest son, to Harrison County, Ind.

    Nathan Veatch died there in 1829, his widow Elizabeth in 1833. ...