The Reverend Robert Lin Dougan (1765-1837) also served in the war. He became a Methodist-Episcopal minister and by the 1790 Randolph County census had married the Widow Barry, who had three step-children. Two events occurred; which came first, I don't know. His wife died and he moved his family to Sumner County, Tennessee, with his brothers, where in 1796 he married 16-year-old Elizabeth Scoby (1780-1875). Elizabeth came from a large family that included seven brothers, whose father had been killed in the American Revolution. After the war Mrs. Scobey and her sons loaded up their worldly goods on a one-horse cart and made their way across the mountains to Fort Bledsoe (in Sumner County). A week after their arrival the family had another setback when son David was killed during an Indian attack. Nevertheless, the family became well-established in Sumner County, eventually operating a ferry on the Cumberland River.
The reverend and Elizabeth had sons Page, Robert, William and Anthony, and daughters Mary, Eleanor, Caroline, Ruth and Margaret. By 1820 they had moved south across the state and were living in Franklin County, Tennessee, where Dougan assisted in establishing the Methodist Episcopal South Church at Winchester in 1834. He died in Winchester and possessed slaves at his death.
http://raneygenealogy.blogspot.com/2017/08/the-dougan-brothers-after-american.html