Davis Uriah I | Born 1707

HIETT, Elizabeth

Female 1779 - Yes, date unknown


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  HIETT, Elizabeth was born 6 Jan 1779, Hampshire County, West Virginia (daughter of HIETT, Evan and SMITH, Sarah); died Yes, date unknown.

    Notes:



    Said to have killed a 10' Panther in the Taylor Co. area.
    Greg Jones

    Elizabeth — GOTHRUP, Thomas. [Group Sheet]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  HIETT, Evan was born 24 Oct 1748, Sandy Ridge, Hampshire County, West Virginia (son of HIETT, John); died 22 Jan 1815, Hampshire County, Virginia.

    Notes:



    Evan was a Quaker minister. He and Sarah lived on Sandy Ridge at the farm later owned by A. C. Cowgill. They were known to have been industrious, thrifty and religous people and Evan owned a farm for evry child the couple had, (10).
    -
    Evan was apparently "disowned" for marrying out of the society of friends at the Hopewell Virginia Monthly Meeting on November 11, 1770.
    -
    1784 Heads of Families in Hampshire County, Virginia
    List of Elias Poston (North River Mills area)
    Evan Hyett, 8 white souls, 1 dwelling, 4 other buildings.
    -
    Evan was a Quaker Precher and gave aid to the continental army during the American Revolution. It is belived that Evan and Sarah were buried in the Evan Hiett graveyard (Called Cowgill's during recent years) in unmarked graves. The old house, next to graveyard, and land are owned by Mr. John Whitacre. In 1988 the address is Capon Bridge, W.Vir. According to Quaker records, Evan Hiett was born Oct 24, 1748 and died in Hampshire Co., January 22, 1815. He married Sarah Smith who was a daughter of one of the pioneers to Old Frederick County, Va., Capt. Jeremiah Smith. Hiett was probably born in Hampshire County, where he spent most of his life on Sandy Ridge, farming and ministering. An accompanying photograph of the Hiett graveyard shows the 18th century house in the background. The property is now owned and occupied by John Whitacre. Evan Hiett served as a Quaker minister for thirty-four years. It should be noted that a Quaker minister did not play a traditional role of "Preacher" of evangelist, as in many of the Proestant denominations. A Quaker minister visited various sites to provide spiritual leadership and encouragement to those in the faith, similar to journeys made by apostles in the New Testament. Self-examination was an important practice of the Quakers. The "members" were also subject to a strict church discipline, against which they were measured and disciplined for violating the rules. A minister assisted in administering the system of discipline and examination in the Local Congreation (meeting), both in building up the faithful and in "punishing" those for infractions against the rules.
    -
    1. Capon Valley Pioneers and Descendants, Vol. II, Chapter III, Page 98-99.
    2. Smith of Vir., VOl III, by Dorothy Ford Wulfech, page 31 "11253. April 15, 1946 signed D.B. (Wash)
    3. History of the Hiett Family of Old Fredrick County, Va. by Wilmer L. Kerns, Ph.D. This is part of a book manuscript titled Settlements and Settlers in Old Frederick County, Va.

    Evan married SMITH, Sarah Abt 1768, Hampshire County, West Virginia. Sarah (daughter of SMITH, Jeremiah and Mary Elizabeth) was born Abt 1752, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia; died 1809, Sandy Ridge, Hampshire County, West Virginia; was buried , Hiett Graveyard, Sandy Ridge, Hampshire County, West Virginia. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  SMITH, Sarah was born Abt 1752, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia (daughter of SMITH, Jeremiah and Mary Elizabeth); died 1809, Sandy Ridge, Hampshire County, West Virginia; was buried , Hiett Graveyard, Sandy Ridge, Hampshire County, West Virginia.
    Children:
    1. HIETT, Mary was born 15 May 1769; died Yes, date unknown.
    2. HIETT, Joseph was born 11 Jun 1774; died Yes, date unknown.
    3. HIETT, John was born 1775; died Yes, date unknown.
    4. HIETT, Margaret was born 9 Jan 1778, Hampshire County, West Virginia; died 9 Sep 1846, Hampshire County, West Virginia; was buried , Old McDonald Cemetery On Kennedy Farm, Near North River-Ice Mountain, West Virginia.
    5. 1. HIETT, Elizabeth was born 6 Jan 1779, Hampshire County, West Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    6. HIETT, Jonathan was born 13 Feb 1781; died Yes, date unknown.
    7. HIETT, Jeremiah was born Abt 1784; died Yes, date unknown.
    8. HIETT, Ann was born Abt 1789; died Yes, date unknown.
    9. HIETT, Sarah was born Abt 1790; died Yes, date unknown.
    10. HIETT, Martha was born Abt 1792; died Yes, date unknown.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  HIETT, John was born Between 1693 and 1696, Gloucester, England; died Bef 4 Dec 1764, Will Probated, Hampshire County, West Virginia.

    Notes:



    John "of the Hampshire and colony of Virginia" (as he was called in his Will).
    He came from Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania and purchased land on April 17, 1737, on Opecquon Creek and Sandy Ridge, He was among the first white settler in the region. He married Margaret and purchased 200 acres of land from Thomas and Elizabeth Green on September 4, 1764, in what was then known as Frederick Co., Virginia.

    Children:
    1. HIETT, Joseph
    2. HIETT, Mary
    3. 2. HIETT, Evan was born 24 Oct 1748, Sandy Ridge, Hampshire County, West Virginia; died 22 Jan 1815, Hampshire County, Virginia.
    4. HIETT, James was born 25 Apr 1751; died Yes, date unknown.
    5. HIETT, Ruth was born 30 Apr 1756; died Yes, date unknown.
    6. HIETT, Jonathan was born Abt 1758; died Yes, date unknown.

  2. 6.  SMITH, Jeremiah was born 1711, Cohansey, Salem County, New Jersey (son of SMITH, Jeremiah and Ann); died 25 Mar 1786, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia.

    Notes:

    Capt. Smith Was One of the 1st to Tame Early Western Frontier.

    Was Capt. Jeremiah Smith, of what is now called Gore, the first settler in the western lands beyond the Shenandoah Valley? Well, yes, and no. Local tradition and folklore all but suggest that he was; however, Wilmer Kerns, in his exhaustive history of the Back Creek Valley, somewhat mitigates this claim.

    Kerns maintains that Owen and Isaac Thomas were the first to put down roots as farmers west of the Valley in the 1730s, and that Jeremiah Smith, a native of New Jersey, resided as a squatter on Owen's land. However, as fate and history would have it, the Thomases receded from view, perhaps as early as 1755, while Smith attained prominence as an Indian fighter, road builder, mountain man, land developer, and patriarch of a large clan.

    When Smith and two other men, presumably the Thomases, first laid eyes on Back Creek Valley, Great North Mountain was the western boundary of the American frontier. By all accounts, Smith and his companions, on more than one occasion, ventured down from New Jersey and slipped through a gap in the mountains, to the lands watered by Back Creek.

    By the mid-1730s, Smith was here to stay. It is known that, in 1736, he assisted Col. James Wood in surveying a plantation farm for Isaac Thomas near present-day Gainesboro. He was then living, as a virtual squatter, on the 806 acres owned by Owen and Sarah Thomas. Come 1749, however, when Thomas, Sixth Lord Fairfax made his initial land grants in the upper Back Creek Valley, the original Thomas tract was split between Owens widow, Sarah, and Smith.

    In time, Smiths holdings would exceed 1,000 acres. He claimed, by squatters rights, some 450 additional acres in 1750 when several neighbors joined him in a petition to Lord Fairfax to grant him the property. This petition, in part, said that the, Rye Land, on Smiths original tract was, so Hilley and Stoney that very little of it is tillable. He received the land, and then an additional 263 acres in two grants, one dated 1754, the other 1762.

    By then, the erstwhile squatter had made quite a name for himself. In 1742, he and a certain Robert Heaton were ordered by the Orange County court (Frederick County had yet to be formed out of Orange) to "view and lay" a road between the home of James Caudy (of "Caudys Castle" fame) in what is now Capon Bridge, W.Va., and Isaac Parkins mill near Winchester. This road, for all intents and purposes, was the forerunner of the current U.S. 50. At that time, it seems, Smith built a house along the road; still standing today, it was strategically constructed on a gentle slope so that Indians could be seen coming down off Little Timber Ridge to the west, or through a gap in Great North Mountain to the east.

    In due time, Smith would fight these Indians. In 1756, following the decisive defeat of British Gen. Edward Braddock near the falls of the Ohio, a band of 50 warriors, led by a French officer, crossed the Alleghenies and began preying on frontier settlements. After a meeting of local militia captains, called by Lord Fairfax, proved indecisive, Smith took it upon himself to raise a small company of 20 men and marched in a southwesterly direction to intercept the marauding Indians.

    Near Lost River in present-day Hardy County, W.Va., the two forces collided and, in fierce fighting, Smith and his men killed five of the enemy, including, so the story goes, the French captain, slain by none other than Smith himself. Allegedly, he found instructions on the officers person detailing plans to attack Fort Frederick in Maryland and blow up its powder magazine.

    Records indicate, or, at least, suggest, that Smith sired 12 children by as many as three wives. The story of Thomas, his first-born, is the stuff of legend. Supposedly, the boy and his mother, Smiths first wife, were snatched by Indians sometime between 1740 and 1745. Mrs. Smith died in captivity, but Thomas remained with the Indians, eventually adopting their culture.

    From time to time, Jeremiah would seek information about his son from the myriad traders and hunters who passed by his homeplace heading to and from Winchester. Some said they remembered seeing the boy, but could never pinpoint his whereabouts.

    In his later years, Smith received word from Jacob Shade, a local Revolutionary War veteran, that his son was living with the Catawba tribe in western North Carolina. Summarily, he dispatched a friend with a message for Thomas, asking him to come home, for he, Smith, was getting old. Thomas, it is said, rejected his father's entreaty, saying that he was content living with the Indians.

    Later local historians, T.K. Cartmell, for one, tell a different story. Thomas, Cartmell maintains, went to live with his mothers people in South Carolina and was killed in the Revolutionary War.

    Whatever the case, Jeremiah died in 1787, without ever seeing his first-born son again. However, his place in local history is secure as one of the first men to tame the lands west of the mountain wall in old Frederick County.

    Adrian OConnor is editorial page editor of The Winchester Star.

    Jeremiah — Mary Elizabeth. Mary was born Abt 1714; died Abt 1755. [Group Sheet]


  3. 7.  Mary Elizabeth was born Abt 1714; died Abt 1755.
    Children:
    1. SMITH, Jeremiah was born Abt 1751, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    2. 3. SMITH, Sarah was born Abt 1752, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia; died 1809, Sandy Ridge, Hampshire County, West Virginia; was buried , Hiett Graveyard, Sandy Ridge, Hampshire County, West Virginia.
    3. SMITH, Sampson Samuel was born Abt 1753, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    4. SMITH, George was born Abt 1755, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    5. SMITH was born 1757, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    6. SMITH, Andrew was born 1759, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    7. SMITH, Elizabeth was born 1763, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    8. SMITH, Ann Hannah was born 1768, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    9. SMITH, Abigail was born 1768, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    10. SMITH, Rachel was born 1771, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    11. SMITH, Jonathan was born 1774, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  SMITH, Jeremiah was born 1687, Cohansey, Salem County, New Jersey (son of SMITH, Thomas and PANCOAST, Ann); died Yes, date unknown.

    Jeremiah married Ann Bef 1711, New Jersey. [Group Sheet]


  2. 13.  Ann
    Children:
    1. 6. SMITH, Jeremiah was born 1711, Cohansey, Salem County, New Jersey; died 25 Mar 1786, Gore, Back Creek, Frederick County, Virginia.
    2. SMITH, William was born 1713, Cohansey, Salem County, New Jersey; died Yes, date unknown.