Tag Archives: Land Grant

John Pryor – Was He Really Killed by Indians? When?

west-virginia

From Fort Randolph to Fort Donnally

In my last post I hope I cleared up that the Major John Pryor who received the 4000 acres of bounty land in Kentucky was not killed by Indians.

William Pryor of Amherst Co., formerly Albemarle Co., gave an account of his service as part of his 1832 application for a Revolutionary War Pension. He states he moved to the Kanawha area in 1773 but was driven out by Indian attacks.  He mentions his brother, John Pryor, who in 1778 was living at Fort Randolph (located at Point Pleasant in Kanawha County) and traveled more than a hundred miles to Fort Donnally to warn of an Indian attack:

Capt. McKee called for two men to go and appraise the Greenbrier settlements. John Intchminger and John Logan volunteered, but returned; then Philip Hammond and applicant volunteered, but applicant’s brother, John Pryor, took his place, being more experienced. They followed the Indians and passed them about ten miles from Donnelly’s Fort, where they arrived and gave the alarm.

I’ve seen some researchers who combine John Pryor’s death into the events at Fort Donnally. William didn’t say he died in the attack.

I found a wonderful source at Fort Randolph.org (Wayback Machine link. This site compiles accounts from letters written close to the time and Revoutionary War pension applications to draw out the facts that John Pryor was living at Fort Randolph in 1778 and that by July 1779 the fort had been burned out by the Indians. John Pryor is not on the list of wounded nor recorded as one of the men killed.

The story related in History Of The Great Kanawha Valley published in 1891 states that in about 1780 John Pryor was traveling with his wife and a child. His wife and child were taken by the Indians, he was shot and he returned to the settlement only to die that evening. His wife and child were never heard from again. Many a fine researcher have noodled over the fate of this John Pryor– Did this line end with the death of his wife and child? Were other children and potential heirs left at home to carry on the line? Were his wife and child later released to carry on the family line?

I’ve found this story elsewhere. In Collections of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, published in 1916.

John Pryor was from Albemarle County, had served in Dunmore’s War, and was stationed at Fort Randolph. According to the pension statement of his brother William, who was the first to volunteer, John was chosen in preference because of his superior knowledge of Indian ways and customs. …John Pryor was killed and his family carried into captivity during an Indian raid in 1780.

I think we can say for sure William’s brother was not killed by Indians at the time of the 1778 attack, but was he the same man killed in 1780? I found a petition filed in May 1784 requesting land for Philip Hamman and John Pryor. I also found that it was rejected.

We do certify that Phillip Hamman and John Pryor by their Resolution and Vigilance rendered an Essential Service to this Country in the year 1778, when it was discovered at Fort Randolph that a large Body of Indians had marched toward this country (Fort Donnally), they with great and imminent hazard followed after them near two hundred Miles, and having overtaken them when almost arrived at the Inhabitants did at the resque of their lives pass by and come and advertise us of their Approach… (read Wikipedia article)

So John requested land 4 years after he was killed by Indians?  I considered that perhaps John Pryor HAD died and the grant was for the benefit of his family… but what family? Doesn’t the account of his death say his wife and child were carried off by Indians?

The Wikipedia article on Hamman cites a 1830 newspaper article about an event where Philip Hamman, then living in Jackson County, AL, was honored with a toast to his and John Pryor’s heroics.  Interjected in the toast is this tid-bit “John Pryor (who was afterwards killed by the Indians).” I’m not ready to says that this confirms John’s death by Indians, but it does confirm that the story is attributed to the correct John Pryor.

I found Philip Hamman on the 1830 Census in Jackson Co., AL. His age helps to put John Pryor into perspective. Hamman was 70 to 79 years old, making him born between 1751-1760. I like this timeframe also for the birth of John Pryor. It makes sense that 2 young men in their 20’s, probably a couple years older and a bit more experienced than William Pryor, made the 100-miles or more trek through the wilderness to save the fort.

Was Pryor’s death at the hands of Indians an embellishment? The raid occurred in 1778 and then historical accounts place his murder in 1780 –Was he killed in 1780, yet he was able to request a land grant in 1784? Was he killed after 1784? Did Hamman embellish the story of the attack on Fort Donnelly with Pryor’s later death?– Read carefully the facts on FortRandolph.org: most sources state there were between 200 to 300 Indians gathered for the attack while in 1830 Hammon was claiming 900!

I often feel that upon examining a Pryor I’m left with more questions than before I began! After the burning of Fort Randolph in 1779 did John Pryor retreat from the Kanawha to live near Fort Donnally in the Greenbrier area? In 1780 was he living outside the fort when he was killed by Indians? Was John killed by Indians in 1780 or after 1784?

Just a final note. There are no Pryors on the 1784 Tax List for Greenbrier County.

No answers yet. Just more pieces to the puzzle. Elizabeth Pryor Harper in her book mentions that John Pryor’s death at the hands of Native Americans was mentioned in the July 1825 Louisville Morning Post. Has anyone seen this article? It may be the oldest source for this event.

Since first posting I was able to locate a copy of the 1825 Louisville Morning Post [read more]

Identity of John Pryor – Revolutionary War Bounty Land in Kentucky

major-pryor-warrant2


Long ago I stumbled upon the data from Elizabeth Pryor Harper’s book Twenty-One Southern Families: Notes and Genealogies. It references a  4000 acre millitary land warrant to John Pryor in Kentucky.  In addition she states the same John Pryor was “Supposed to have been killed by Indians before 1825.” [view online]  It’s time to reveal which John Pryor got the military land and prove Ms. Harper wrong– this is not the John Pryor who was killed by Indians. And this may not be the John Pryor you expect!

It’s Major John Pryor of Richmond, VA.  The aging Revolutionary War vet who was deserted by his first wife, Anne Beverly Whiting. Don’t know who he is? Read more…

The Major’s second wife, Elizabeth Quarles Graves, filed for a widow’s pension for his Revolutionary War Service. There’s a easy-to-read transciption of the pension application online at https://revwarapps.org/w12064.pdf. It’s important to read the application, especially the last paragraph on page 2. This paragraph states that John Pryor held the ranks of Lieutenant and Captain-Lieutenant. I don’t think he ever held the rank of Major– it was probably a respectful title like “Colonel” in the South.

The land warrants and the pension application match up. On both records John Pryor is a Captain Lieutenant. The Warrant number matches up to John Pryor’s land grant: The grant number was  0126.0 while the pension states it was 1760 (I think the “2” was misread as a “7”) on the transcription of his pension (above).The actual land warrants can also be viewed online through the state of Kentucky website.  apps.sos.ky.gov/land/military/revwar/Revdetail.asp?Type=w&warrant=0126.0.

There were 4 grants given to John Pryor under this warrant number.

1.  Location: Kentucky – on the Cumberland River, near upper corner of C. Carrington’s survey.
Assignee: John Tayloe Griffin
Grant date 9/17/1785.
Received 1000 acres

2. Location: Kentucky – on the Muddy River
Assignee: John Tayloe Griffin
Grate date (surveyed) 7/15/1786
Received 1000 acres

3. Location: On the east side of the Little Miami, later pencil note on document states “land is in Ohio”
Assignee:  John Tayloe Griffin, assigned to Robert Morris
Grant date: (surveyed) 4/17/1788
Received 1000 acres

4. Location: Cypress Creek
Assignee: John Tayloe Griffin, Robert Morris assignee
Grant Date: (surveyed) 12/28/1786
Received 1000 acres

major-pryor-warrant

There’s no indication that Major John Pryor resided anywhere but Richmond, VA and probably never saw his bounty land in Kentucky.  He assigned or sold the land to John Tayloe Griffin who was also from Richmond.  I wonder what Griffin’s connections were to the Tayloe family: Major Pryor bought a race horse named Federalist from the estate of John Tayloe per an 1829 racing journal.

With the mention of “Captain” Pryor and a Tayloe connection, it may be time to read another post again and decipher the mystery of Grandma’s Clock [read the post]. And who is the C. Carrington on the first warrant. Could this be Codrington Carrington, son of George Carrington of Cumberland  Co., VA [see deeds] and Fayette Co., KY?

And it’s time to dig out the July 1825 edition of the Louisville Morning Post to find out which John Pryor that Elizabeth Pryor Harper found had been killed by Indians.

Widow Pryor’s War of 1812 Land Bounty Letter

Colonial Woman-Tappan Historiical Society 9-25-2010 (11) I have some more information on the widow of War of 1812 general Brazure Pryor. Mrs. Pryor was alive in 1851 and had started a query into her husband’s military bounty land. I have obtained a letter from the Library of Virginia.

Envelope: from Newtown, 5 February, 1851
To John K. Martin, Esq, Richmond, Virginia

Letter:

New Town, King and Queen County
February 5, 1851

Mr. John K. Martin

Dear Sir, I am unacquainted with you but seeing your card in the Richmond Enquirer as a collector of claims, I wish you to attend to a claim for Mrs. E A Pryor who is entitled to a claim by the act of Congress in Sept. last. It is for the services of  her husband in the War of 1812. Her husband’s name was Brazure Williams Pryor. In the commencement of the war he was Captain of the Artillery Company and before the war closed was promoted to Brigadier General  and served at Hampton.  He was married to Elizabeth A De Neufville the 24 Sept 1807 by Parson Bracken at the time Professor of Wm. And Mary college.  There is a private record of her marriage ina Bible which Mrs. Pryor has—she thinks there is one in the clerks office at Williamsburg where she was married.  Her age is 58 years— is still a widow.  Her husband died in Norfolk on the 15 April 1827.  Are the facts can be established here, except in what company he served that I suppose can be established from the pay roll.  Mrs. Pryor refers you to John G. Mosley, R. G. Scott, —-? Richmond, and President Tyler, who were all intimately acquainted with her husband.  Perhaps the member from Hampton S___? Esquire could give you some information on the subject.  I should like to hear from you as early as possible to know if any thng can be done with her claim.  My address in New Town, Post office, King and Queen County, Va.

Very Respectfully yours,

Carter B. Fogg

The letter helped to establish that she was living in King and Queen County and can be found on the 1850 Census (see census extract).  I hadn’t found anywhere online a reference to the marriage date of Brazure Williams Pryor to Elizabeth A Deneufville— we now know it was in 1807.  I had in my notes that Brazure had died on the 21st, however that later date may have been when his death was announce in the press.

I suspect that we also discovered that Brazure and Elizabeth also had children.  I found an article: Hawes Family of Caroline Co., Va. Elizabeth Hawes Ryland, The William and Mary Quarterly– it states that Walker Hawes (the head of household on the 1850 Census) was married to Mary Pryor. I’m not finding any other writing which even speculates on the parents of this Mary Pryor. She’s certainly the right age to be a daughter of Brazure and Elizabeth Pryor.

I love it, so many loose ends in VA and they are getting tied up!

Pryors in Tennessee Land Warrants

From Laws of the State of Tennessee: Including Those of North Carolina …, Volume 2

Can we match these warrants to the correct Pryor in the correct Tennessee county?

“… one warrant issued by the commissioners of West Tennessee to JOHN PRYOR and since transferred by assignment to James Walker , No. 121, for 249 1-2 acres, dated November 8th, 1808.”

“… one duplicate military warrant issued by ———- to John Carter, jun. and since transferred by assignment to GREEN PRYOR, No. 236, for 640 acres dated May 30, 1817.”

Chapter 70, An act to provide for establishing a new Court House in the County of Morgan (1820)
“… Be it enacted, That PHILIP PRYOR, Ezekial Philpot, John M. Davis, Benjamin Hagler, and Joseph England, shall be, and they are hereby appointed commissoners to carry this act into effect, and a majority of them shall at all time be competent to transact any business, or perform any duty imposed upon them as commissioners.  (I suspect this is Philip Pryor of Marion County since some of the names on this document appear in Roane County records).

Newsletter #20

Do you WIKI? Have you visited WIKIPEDIA the online encyclopedia? In December I submitted an article on John Benjamin Pryor, son of Luke Pryor and Ann Batte Lane. I recently updated the Wikipedia article on his brother Senator Luke Pryor of Limestone Co., AL. If you are interested in what Luke looked like, his portrait is on the website of the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/bibdisplay.pl?index=P000557

____________________________________

More information on NORTON PRYOR – Norton owned land in Middle TN in the early 1800’s. The Internet sleuthing of researcher Barbara VanHout has uncovered information that confirms Norton Pryor was a Philadelphia land speculator. Although he held large amounts of land in Tennessee, he probably never even visited Tennessee.
(Wayback Machine link)

____________________________________

Added another Pryor to the TN Pryor list. SARAH PRYOR born about 1810 in Tennessee, married Stephen Paxson. They lived in Scott Co., IL, Pike Co., IL (houses away from Isaac Pryor on the 1850 Census), and in St. Louis, MO.
____________________________________

Found Ann E. Pryor Simmons (daughter of Allen L. Pryor of Sumner Co.) on the 1900 Census in Collin Co., TX. Apparently she and her family accompanied her brother Lycurgus Pryor to Texas and lived near their other brother, William Thomas Pryor.
____________________________________

New PHOTO added to the TN PRYOR GALLERY! Family Portrait of Allen L. Pryor of Sumner County with daughter Bettie Pryor Gregory’s family (about 1895).

____________________________________

List of Killed and Wounded in the action of morning of January 27, 1814. Captain Owen’s Company: Allen Pryor, wounded slightly. — Memoir of Gen. David Blackshear. (During War of 1812?)

May 29th, 1794?
Allen Pryor to James Wood, Lieutenant-Governor– Enclosed I submit to the Board the contract entered into by me with  Mr. Cavendish, to supply the Troops raised for the defence of Kanawha with provisions.

— Calendar of Virginia State Papers and Manuscripts

____________________________________

New on Ancestry.com…PHOTOS!
http://www.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1093
Search by name and keywords (like county or town name). I saw photos of Pleasant Pryor of Johnson County, TX (born Overton County TN!) and Nannie B. Pryor Lorance of Cannon County. Not just photos… there are copies of death records, wills, marriages and more.