Thursday, October 1, 2009

....


Hans Martin Kirschmann
&
Johan Martin Kirschman
Immigrate to America


Johan Martin Kirschman’s immigration story begins in 1752 in the Württemberg domain of the Palatine (Germany today) where he lived with his family. His father is Hans Martin Kirschmann and his mother is Catharine Schloweiss of Kleebrunn in Wurtemburg who was first married to the late Mr. Ehler and then married to Hans Martin Kirschmann (4). He has two sisters that we know of: Maria and Catharina.

Further research into German church records on Hans Martin Kirschmann may reveal he was of advanced age when he married Mrs. Catharine Schloweiss Ehler. It was a second marriage for her, and perhaps for him as wll. Perhaps Hans Martin Kirschmann may have additional older children in Germany. But this is only speculation.



Hans Martin Kirschmann (b. 1715 Germany d. 1760 Lunenburg, Virginia) & Catharina Schloweiss Ehler Kirschmann ( b. 1717 d. 1767)
Johan Martin Kirschman b. abt. 1737 in Württembergl; d. 1804, Bedford Co., Virginia m. Agnes Schwartz 1756, Berks Co., Pennsylvania
Maria Kirschman b. abt. 1740 in Württemberg
Catharina Kirschman b. abt. 1742 in Wurttemberg

Note: Ages are calculated based on marriage dates. Johan Martin married about 1755. When Johan Martin seeks his mother and sisters in 1761 he was not aware of either of them being married yet as he did not use their married last names. Therefore, his sisters were likely younger than him.



Further research into German records will someday tell us more about his family in Wurttemberg, but for now we know Johan Martin Kirschman was a 15-year-old young man(5) who was joining his Lutheran family in the massive German migration to America between 1730-1775 that would encompass more than 30,000 people and 320 immigrant ships.(1)


The Journey to America Begins

In the early spring of 1752 young Johan Martin Kirschman embarked with his family on a difficult long journey that typically took five to six months to complete. From Wurttemberg, the Kirschmann family took passage on a ship down the Rhine River to Rotterdam, Holland (as was customary). This trip down the Rhine lasted around four to six weeks, and over the course of the expedition the ship would be “examined at twenty-six customs houses—all at the convenience of the customs house officials which prolonged the journey. During the process, ships were detained, and the immigrant passengers spent a considerable amount of money.”(6)

Like most German immigrants of the 18th Century, when the Kirschmans finally reached Holland, they were detained with the other passengers for another few weeks while waiting to obtain passage across the Atlantic Ocean to Philadelphia. To save what little money was left, the poor immigrants camped outside the city of Rotterdam and rationed food. The Kirschman’s financial status is not known.

Finally it was time for Johan Martin Kirschman and his family to board the Edinburgh commanded by Captain James Russel. Ship manifests show the captain was experienced making the crossing to America as he had done so once a year since 1748.(7) http://www.progenealogists.com/palproject/pa/1748edin.htm
From Rotterdam the ship always sailed first to Cowes on the Isle of Wight in England to obtain clearance from the British authorities and to await favorable winds. After another week or two passed, the insufferable voyage across the Atlantic began.

Once en route to the Port of Philadelphia, the voyage would last seven to twelve more weeks depending on the winds. Johan Martin Kirschman would have been packed into the densely crowded ship with about 300 passengers, and given insufficient and improper food and water. The conditions were ideal for disease, particularly dysentery, scurvy, typhoid, and smallpox, which resulted in the death of many on board.

Eventually the Edinburgh arrived at port in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on September 19, 1752. Upon arrival, German immigrants were met with skepticism: eighteenth-century Pennsylvania authorities were said to have feared the extremely large number of non-British arrivals, thinking their loyalty was to their homeland and not to the British Crown. The authorities therefore devised a two-fold remedy for their fears:

1) The captains of ships importing non-British immigrants were ordered to submit lists of all the people they imported.

2) Male passengers age 16 and older were ordered to sign the oath of allegiance to the English king.

Fortunately for genealogists, these rules resulted in preserving tens of thousands of names of German ancestors. A thorough search of these names shows that Hans Martin Kirschmann is the only "Kirschman" listed in this entire book. The only other name spelling similarity occurs nearly a decade later with Johan Christian Kirschenman. But these are the only two listed.


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1752 Passenger Lists - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Hans Martin Kirschmann is listed as a passenger on the ship Edinburgh with Captain James Russel, from Amsterdam, last from Cowes, which arrived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on September 19, 1752.
Source: A Collection of Thirty Thousand Names of German Immigrants in Pennsylvania from 1727 to 1776, by Prof. L. Daniel Rupp. Published by Genealogical Publishing Co. Inc. 1985. Pg. 273 FHL 974.8 w2ra.
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Having arrived safely in the port of Philadelphia, Hans Martin Kirschmann and his fellow male passengers who were age 16 or older and deemed healthy were led to the city hall to sign their oath of allegiance to the King George II of Great Britain. On the list is found the following:



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1752 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Oath of Allegiance.
Hans Martin Kirschmann. James Russel, Captain. From Rotterdam. Last from Cowes, England. Qualified Sept. 19, 1752. (No other males 16 and over with the same or similar last name are listed. Record states the ship is from “Rotterdam” but a translation of the ship records state “Amsterdam.” Further research on the ship Edinburgh and Captain James Russel indicates he regularly sailed from Rotterdam between 1748-1753, so the translation of “Amsterdam” was likely a mistake)
Source: Names of Foreigners, who took the Oath of Allegiance to the Province and State of Pennsylvania 1727 to 1775. William Henry Egle, M.D. Pg. 352-352.
Source: http://www.korns.org/misc/PAA-OoA/PAA-OoA-PDF.pdf (This is the book)
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A copy of the original page indicates Hans Martin Kirschman signed his own name. The writing is scribbled by today's standards, but it is his full name without the typical mark "x" as most of the other passengers used. This would indicated he was an educated man.

Once the Oath of Allegiance was signed, Hans Martin Kirschmann next had to settle his debt to the ship’s captain. Immigrants who still had some money left to pay the passage, or those with well-to-do friends or family who could pay the passage, squared their account with the Captain and were released. Many of the Palatinate Germans were too poor to pay their passage across the sea and many were sold as indentured servants to pay off their debt. The term of indenture was anywhere from three to seven years of hard labor and with extreme deprivations.

It is not known whether Hans Martin Kirschmann had sufficient funds to pay his debt or whether he or his family became indentured servants. But we do know by his wife’s account in an ad she placed to find her brother in 1757 that she was living in Luneberg, Virginia, married to Mr. Kirschmann, and was by this time “in a condition to help her brother if needed.”(4) As a result, it is concluded the Kirschmanns had sufficient funds and therefore were not indentured servants.


The New World

In America, the German-speaking Palatine immigrants were referred to as the "Pennsylvania Dutch." They weren't “Dutch” in the modern sense of Holland Dutch; but ethnic Germans or “Deutsch” who fled the Southern Rhineland Palatinate of what is now called Germany. The Pennsylvania Dutch language is ultimately a derivative of Palatinate German.

As soon as they could, the newly arrived German immigrants set off to establish themselves in their new country. The German immigration through the port of Philadelphia by so many people of the same characteristics and with much the same goals soon crowded the counties that were adjacent to the growing city and county of Philadelphia.

In 1752 the Palatine Germans settled beyond the Quakers of Philadelphia County into the Western Frontier of York, Lancaster, and newly created Berks counties. Some say Pennsylvania gave these hardy Germans land on the Western Frontier in an effort to set up a buffer zone between the Indians and the Quakers who would not bear arms. The western frontier of Maryland, Virginia and Pennsylvania were basically at the mercy of the savage Indians who frequently attacked the unprotected settlements. The end of the “Seven Years War” (1754-1762) between the English and the French and Indians would eventually resolve that problem.

When the Germans discovered they were welcome in Maryland and Virginia and could settle on land less exposed to hostile Indians, they left Pennsylvania in force. It was these German families who built all of those marvelous old stone farmhouses and the magnificent barns throughout Pennsylvania, Western Maryland around Frederick County, and in Virginia/West Virginia.

Eventually the Pennsylvania Dutch would settled a region stretching from just north of Philadelphia, west through Lancaster and York, then down through Winchester, the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, through the Piedmont of North Carolina, and central Georgia. By 1790 they had also established colonies in western Virginia territory, which is a region we now call Kentucky.

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County Formations in Pennsylvania: (8)
1749: York (from Lancaster Co.)
1752: Berks & Northampton (from Lancaster Co.)
1771: Bedford (from Cumberland Co.)
1878: Lackawanna (last county to be formed in Pennsylvania)
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See Map of 1752 Pennsylvania: http://www.familyhistory101.com/maps/pa_cf.html /
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Note: Regarding the birth place of Agnes Schwartz Kirschman: Some family tree listings on the internet show Agnes Schwartz was born around the 1730s in or “of” Lackawanna county, Pennsylvania, so it should be noted that Lackawanna was created in 1878, long after Agnes was born and died. It is also in an area several counties north of Berks and not located along the usual migratory path of these Pennsylvania Dutch Pioneers prior to the 1800s. Though it may be possible the Schwartz family may have immigrated to Lackawanna county, it is not where Agnes was born in the 1730s.
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Kirschmans in Pennsylvania
As the Kirschman's journey in America continues, documentation shows many variations in spellings of the German surname as it eventually evolves into the anglicized "Cashman." Hans Martin Kirschman knew how to write, and of course, spell his name as evidence by the ship's log. But his son and grandsons did not learn how to write their names (evidence by their mark "x") so they were dependant on the scribes taking the information to spell the name the way it sounded. Ergo, the variations in spellings are great.

Kirshman Kishman Kiessman Kersman Keshman Cashman

While this narrative will use the main spelling of the name as “Kirschman”to avoid confusion, transcriptions of documents are left as the name was spelled on the original document.


In 1752 Johan Martin Kirschman and his family arrived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Documentation on his early life in Pennsylvania is mostly unavailable, but within a few years Ms. Agnesia Schwartz caught his attention. Though only about 18 years old, a courtship ensued and marriage followed. The year is calculated to be about 1755, about one year prior to the birth of their first child.


1755 Pennsylvania
Johan Martin Kirschman marries Agnesia Schwartz.


The first record of Johan Martin Kirschman living in Pennsylvania is found in Berks County in 1756, which at this time lied on the northern boundary of Philadelphia County. The Germans in Berks County were far more numerous than all the other settlers combined. They settled the best lands and there built homes, churches, and school houses.
http://books.google.com/books?id=FVQVAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA199&lpg=PA199&dq=Moselem+Church+in+Richmond+Pennsylvania&source=bl&ots=Yy0C2FQR1A&sig=UCDePBRtBPaYuI91pUlaJG8bA0g&hl=en&ei=KFN3SsrfPIqmNsHf8LAM&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4#v=onepage&q=&f=false

One of the first buildings erected in Berks County was the old Zion Moselem Church in the township of Richmond.(9) The records of this old Lutheran church show Johan Martin Kirschman and his wife baptizing their infant son Johan George Kirschman.
...

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1756 Berks County, Pennsylvania.
Joh. Georg. Kirschman is born 5 May 1756 to Martin and Agnesia Schwartz Kirschman. Baptized 23 May 1756 in the Moselem Lutheran Church.
Source: Pennsylvania Births, Berks County 1710-1780. John T. Humphrey. Humphrey Publications. Pg. 177; FHL 974.816 k2h.
Source: Berks County Church Records of the 18th Century Vol. 2, F. Edward Wright. Family Line Publications. Pg. 192. FHL 974.816 k2
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Pennsylvania’s Berks County was comprised of several small townships or villages. The Quakers were the pioneers of the town of Maidencreek, named after the stream that flows through it. But in 1756 when the town’s governing assembly declared war on the native Indians – offering rewards for Indian scalps – the peace-seeking Quakers resigned and left. This opened up land and opportunity for other Germans to move in. Maidencreek flourished and grew for nearly a century until it was divided, forming the new town of Ontelaunee in1849.(9)

From 1756 to 1767 Johan Martin Kirschman is documented to be living in Maidencreek, Berks, Pennsylvania. Although birth records of only two of his children are found here, it is concluded all children born to Johan Martin and Agnes Kirschman between 1756 and 1768 were likely born in Maidencreek, Berks, Pennsylvania where they are documented to be living.

Sometime before 1757, Johan Martin Kirschman’s parents and two sisters moved south into Lunenburg, Virginia. The Kirschman family was now, like so many other immigrant families, separated from beloved extended family members with minimal means to communicate. Many immigrants had not heard from family since they left their homeland abroad.

Without an organized postal system or any other means of long-distant communication, how would immigrants find their missing relatives? As was customary among the Pennsylvania Dutch at this time, they placed a notice in the Pennsylvanische Berichte German newspaper. On a trip back to Pennsylvania to visit her son Johan Martin Kirschman and new grandson Georg, Catharina Kirschman published the following notice:


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1757 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Notice in Pennsylvanische Berichte (newspaper) October 29, 1757 reads:
"If there is a person in the country by the name of Joh. Gottlieb Schloweiss, he is informed that his sister Catharina Ehler from Kleebrunn in Wurtemburg, but now living in Lunenberg near Halifax, has come to Phila. and seeks her brother Gottlieb Schloweiss and cannot find him. She is now married the second time to Mr. Kirschmann in Lunenberg and is in a condition to help her brother if he needs it."
Source: Notices by German and Swiss Settlers seeking information of members of their families, kindred, or friends 1742 – 1761. Anita L. Eyster. Pg. 16 FHL 974.8 A1 #526. (4)
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It is not known whether Catharina Kirschmann found her brother. However, Anita L. Eyster, who compiled the above book, did not name the ship on which Joh. Gottlieb Schloweiss immigrated as she did with most everyone else, which means his name isn’t listed on any immigration or oath of allegiance lists. Either he arrived while still under age 16 or perhaps Mr. Schloweiss did not survive the journey across the Atlantic.

Fortunately, her notice gives us additional information about Johan Martin Kirschman’s mother Catharina: Mr. Schloweiss and Catharina Schloweiss Ehler Kirschman are from Kleebrunn in Wurttemberg. Catharina was married previously to Mr. Ehler who died. Gottlieb Schloweiss set sail for America prior to Catharina marrying Hans Martin Kirschmann because she had to tell him about her second marriage to Mr. Kirschmann.

More than three years had passed. Johan Martin Kirschman had not heard from his sisters and now-widowed mother for some time so he sought to find word of them. His wife Agnes also desired to learn of her two brothers. Johan Martin Kirschman published the following notice:


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1761 Maiden Creek Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania
Notice in Pennsylvanische Berichte (newspaper) reads: Feb. 13, 1761 reads:
"Joh. Martin Kirschmann, from the Wurttemberg domain of the Palatine Duke in Weiler, would like to know the whereabouts of his mother, Catharina Kirschmann, his brothers in law Christian & Friedrich Schwartz, and his sisters Maria & Catharina Kirschmann. Joh. Martin Kirschmann is living in Maidencreek Tp. Berks Co. "

Ship Edinburgh, Sep. 19, 1752 Hans Martin Kirschmann (added by author Anita L. Eyster)

Souce: Notices by German and Swiss Settlers seeking information of members of their families, kindred, or friends 1742 – 1761. Anita L. Eyster. Pg. 21 FHL 974.8 A1 #526 (4)

Source: German Settlers of Penn. Sowers Newspaper for 13 Feb. 1761. Pg. 92
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This 1761 notice tell us a great deal about the Kirschman family, including where the Johan Martin & Agnes are living. It also gives the names of various family members, but in particular it names Johan Martin's mother, Catharina, which helps us match her to the earlier notice of 1759.
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Interestingly, Johan Martin Kirschman must have known his father Hans Martin Kirschman had died since he isn’t looking for him. He also isn't looking for any brothers, and since no other Kirschmans can be found in this area, it can be concluded that he did not have any living brothers in America.
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Given the difficulty of travel by covered wagons, it's unlikely the Kirschman family lived in other counties between the time they are found on records of Berks County, Pennsylvania at the birth of their first child in 1756, placed a notice in 1761, and the birth of son Christian in 1766 all in Berks Co.

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1766 Berks County, Pennsylvania
Christian Kirschmann born 9 Feb 1766 to Martin and Agnes Kirschmann.
Baptized on 12 March 1766 in the Moselem Lutheran Church.
Source: Pennsylvania Births, Berks County 1710-1780. John T. Humphrey. Humphrey Publications. Pg. 177; FHL 974.816 k2h.
Source: Berks County Church Records of the 18th Century Vol. 2. F. Edward Wright. Family Line Publications. Pg. 192. FHL 974.816 k2
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In 1767 Johan Martin Kirschman and his family are still living in Berks County, Pennsylvania where he is found on the tax list. During the time from 1756 to 1767 in Berks County, Johan Martin Kirschman kept busy with farming and being a carpenter. Johan Martin did not yet own land.
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1767 Maiden Creek Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania
Martin Kirschman, carpenter, is taxed for 1 horse and 2 cattle. No acres.
Source: Tax List of Berks County 1767. Family Line Publications. FHL 974.816
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~evilsizer/1767berk.html

Note: The Township of Ontelaunee was formed out of Maidencreek in 1849, nearly 80 years after the Kirschman family left Maidencreek, Berks County, Penn.
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Johan Martin & Agnes Kirschman Family:
Johan George Kirschman b. 5 May 1756, Berks County, Pennsylvania
Catherine Kirschman (Abt. 1760) Berks County, Pennsylvania
Johan Martin Kirschman, Jr. (Martin Cashman) (10 July 1762) Berks County, Pennsylvania
Mary Kirschman (Abt. 1764) Berks County, Pennsylvania
Christian Kirschman b. 9 Feb 1766, Berks County, Pennsylvania
Abraham Kirschman (abt. 1768) Berks County, Pennsylvania
Elizabeth Kirschman b. 31 October 1775, York County, Pennsylvania
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The only birth records found are for George and Christian, both of whom were baptized in the Zion Moselem Lutheran Church in Berks County, and the youngest child Elizabeth in York County. All the other dates above in parenthesis are approximated or given by various family researchers, but the names are listed in the same order as they appear on their father’s will. It appears that the Kirschman family suffered the loss of several children as evidenced by gaps in ages between the children.
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Conflicts with the British

The French & Indian War (also known as the Seven Years War) ended in 1763 with a treaty signed by the British Government with the Indians that promised settlers would not cross the Appalachian Mountains – if they did, it was at the peril of their lives with no retaliation from the British. As long as settlers stayed east of the Appalachian Mountains, they had little fear of Indian attacks on the western frontiers of Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia. As a result, the Germans began migrating westward in force, stopping only at the Appalachians.
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By the early 1770s political tensions escalated between Britain’s King George and his Colonial subjects. The British laws became oppressive. Johan Martin Kirschman, like his fellow colonists, was plagued by English taxes used to pay for that Seven-Years War and all the Redcoat soldiers now stationed in the colonies to enforce the oppressive laws. In 1773 news of an “Indian” raid on a British tea ship in Boston had reached Berks County.
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More troubling was the news of fighting between the local militia and British soldiers had started in Massachusetts in 1775. The rebellion (depending on one’s point of view) spread throughout the Colonies: Revolutionaries had gained control of each of the thirteen colonial governments, had set up a Second Continental Congress, and had formed a Continental Army.
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Like so many other settlers, Johan Martin Kirschman had already packed the family's covered wagon and was moving westward. By 1775, the Kirschman family were well on their way following the Monocacy Trail toward the rich, fertile lands of the Cumberland Valley.
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The "Monocacy Trail" to Maryland

One of the many Pennsylvania Dutch early migration routes was the “Monocacy Trail.” It led from Philadelphia southwest through Lancaster and York counties of southeastern Pennsylvania before crossing into Maryland, and then ending in the rich, fertile Cumberland Valley of Frederick County, Maryland. Immigrants traveling from Pennsylvania to Virginia used the Monocacy Trail to Frederick County and then connected to the Braddock Trail to cross the Potomac River into Berkeley County, Virginia where the beautiful Shenandoah Valley begins on the western side. (11)
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See Map of the Monocacy Trail (spring green) – SE Pennsylvania to Frederick, Maryland
http://noel.mcn.org/Westmoreland/MigrationTrails.htm
For description and history of Monocacy Trail:
See Map of 1776 Pennsylvania: http://www.familyhistory101.com/maps/pa_cf.html//
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The Kleikam (Claycomb) family, who would soon become involved in the Kirschman family’s life, left Lancaster County around 1770 on the Monocacy Trail to Frederick, and then traveled on the Braddock Trail to settle in Berkeley County, Virginia around 1773. (12)
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In the spring of 1775 from Berks County, Johan Martin Kirshman and his family started on the Monocacy Trail through southeastern Pennsylvania. They moved quickly through Lancaster County and on into York County where they remained for the winter. A record of them is found in the fall of 1775 when their infant Elizabeth is born in York County:
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1775 York County, Pennsylvania (Formed in 1749 from Lancaster Co.)
Elizabeth Kirschman is born on 31 October 1775 to Martin and Agnes Kirschman.
Source: Pennsylvania Births, York County 1730-1800. FHL 974.841 k2hj
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In the Spring of 1776 after the snows had melted and the ground hardened enough for wagon wheels, Johan Martin Kirschman loaded his family back into their covered wagon and set off again on the Monocacy Trail to the Cumberland Valley.
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Johan Martin Kirschman was eager to get his family safely settled before war reached this area.
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To continue reading this sage of the Kirschman Family's Journey in America, click on "older posts" at bottom right hand corner.
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Wednesday, September 30, 2009


Kirschman & Cashman in Maryland & Virginia

1776

Leaving York County, Pennsylvania and following the Monocacy Trail to the end, Johan Martin Kirschman and his family (including Martin Cashman) arrived in Washington County, Maryland in 1776 shortly after it was created from the division of Frederick County, Maryland. Apparently the Kirschmans arrived after the 1776 tax list was taken as he is not listed. The family settled in Washington County, Maryland along the Potomac River.

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1776 Frederick County, Maryland is divided and Washington County, Maryland formed, named in honor of the young General George Washington who was leading the Continental Army against Britain. Adjacent to Washington County, Maryland is Berkeley County, Virginia. The counties are separated by the Potomac River, which creates a natural border between not only these two counties, but also between where the Cumberland Valley ends and the Shenandoah Valley begins.

Later in the 1830s West Virginia is formed and encompasses Berkeley County. Today the county seats of Hagerstown (old Elizabethtown), Maryland and Martinsburg, West Virginia are a growing metropolitan area.


See Map of 1776 Maryland: http://www.familyhistory101.com/maps/pa_cf.html

See Map of 1776 Virginia: http://www.familyhistory101.com/maps/pa_cf.html

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Disturbing news continued to trickle in to Washington County, Maryland: King George has now declared Congress traitors and the colonies in rebellion. Up until now a substantial percentage of Maryland and Virginia colonists remained loyal to the British Crown, seeking peaceful resolution of their grievances, not physical conflict. But that soon changed. In May 1776 the colonists responded by formally declaring their independence as a new nation, the United States of America, claiming sovereignty and rejecting any allegiance to the British monarchy. (Note: the Declaration of Independence was then written and signed in July 1776.)

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The War of Independence was now fully engaged. Johan Martin Kirschman and his family would do their part to help support the cause. As did all the new colonial states, Maryland law required all able-bodied men ages 18-50 to enlist in the local militia to protect the state against the British army should it invade. Those unwilling to do so were considered Tories or Neutrals and thus treated accordingly. Both Johan Martin Kirschman and his 20-year-old son George became Privates in Captain James Smith's 2nd Battalion. Martin Kirschman Jr. (Martin Cashman) around age 14 was too young to join the militia.

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1776/1777 Washington County, Maryland

Kishman, George. Private, Militia, 2nd Class, Capt. James Smith’s Company, 2nd Battalion. 1776/1777 (Ref: M-239, A-1146).

Kishman, Martin. Private, Militia, 7th Class, Capt. James Smith’s Company, 2nd Battalion. 1776/1777 (Ref: M-240, A-1146). Took the Oath of Allegiance before the Hon. Henry Schnebley in 1778 (Ref: 0-50, J-13, which listed his name as “Martin Kirshman.”

Source: Revolutionary Patriots of Washington County, Maryland 1776-1783. Henry C. Peden, Jr. Pg. 98 FHL 975.291 m28p
Source: The Maryland Militia in the Revolutionary War. S. Eugene Clements and F. Edward Wright. Pg. 239-240
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During this time of political turmoil, life in the Kirschman household went on. Johan Martin’s oldest son Joh. George Kirschman met and married Elisabeth ____. By the fall of 1777 their first child was born and baptized Johanna Kirschman.

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1777 Washington County, Maryland
Johanna is born to George Kiessman and Elisabeth, born 13 Nov 1777 is baptized Dec.7, 1777 at the St. John Evangelical Lutheran Church at Elizabethtown (Hagerstown) Maryland.
Source: Washington County, Maryland Church Records of the 18th Century. Published by Family Line Publications. 1988. Pg. 3. FHL 975.291
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Little fighting occurred in Maryland and Virginia during the first five years of the Revolution; the focus of the war was in the northern colonies. Still, the citizens of Virginia and Maryland along the Potomac were greatly affected by and involved in the war efforts by providing food, clothing, and other goods to the soldiers. Sometimes transportation, shelter, and other services were required.

In addition, loyalties must be declared. In 1788 Maryland and Virginia required all men ages 18 and older to swear an Oath of Allegiance or Oath of Fidelity. An oath was considered unbreakable and no man of honor or virtue would consider doing so as their reputation would be ruined and their integrity lost. (Consider the infamous traitor Benedict Arnold).

Those who were loyal to the Crown, or “Tories,” would not take the Oath or join the Militia. They either returned to England or other British territories, or they left the society of the community to join with other Tories. Some colonists refused to take the Oath or join the Militia claiming to be “Neutral” and unwilling to risk their lives, fortunes, and sacred honor in the fight. Neutrals, including members of the religious Society of Friends (Quakers) who were not permitted to bear arms or swear oaths of allegiance, were often forced to pay triple taxes in addition to having their livestock commandeered or confiscated. As a result, it was hard to stay Neutral for too many years.

Johan Martin Kirschman was neither a Loyalist nor a Quaker, so he took the Oath. This is another reason to consider that Johan Martin Kirschman is not the Hans Martin Kirschman who took the Oath of Allegiance to the British Crown that German immigrants were required to take upon arriving in Pennsylvania. To have made this new oath of allegiance to Maryland would have meant breaking the first oath and would have violated his honor and integrity. Johan Martin Kirschman was free to make this new oath because he had been too young to take the first one in Pennsylvania. Hans Martin Kirschman did not have to face this dilemma as he died prior to 1761.


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1778 Washington County, Maryland
Martin Kirshman took the Oath of Allegiance before the Hon. Henry Schnebley.
Source: Revolutionary Patriots of Washington Co, MD 1776-1783. Henry C. Peden, Jr. Pg. 98 FHL 975.291 m28p
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In 1778 Martin Kirschman Jr. (Martin Cashman) was a young man of about 16 years – too young to be required to take the Oath or join the militia. His older brother George certainly was old enough to take the oath, but a record of it has not been found. However, his service in the militia proves his loyalty to the cause. These records qualify Johan Martin Kirschman & Johan George Kirschman for entry into the D.A.R.

No more records of Johan Martin Kirschman Sr. appear in the Washington County, Maryland records. A search in surrounding counties finds Johan Martin Kirschman on the tax lists of Bedford County, Pennsylvania – which in 1779 was adjacent to Washington County on the northwest. Agnes and five of their children are with him. Martin Jr. and George Kirschman remained in Washington County, Maryland.

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1779 Providence Township, Bedford County, Pennsylvania (Formed 1771 from Cumberland Co.)

Martin Kersman paid taxes on six members of his family. No acres or dwellings.

Source: Bedford County Pennsylvania 1779 Tax List. Family Line Publications. Pg.69. FHL 974.5 A1 No. 430

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.The presence of the Kirschman family is evident in this "tri-County area" of Bedford Co Pennsylvania, Berkeley Co Virginia, and Washington Co Maryland for the next decade or more. They appear periodically as children get married, babies are baptized, and taxes are collected. During this time as the Revolutionary War rages on, settlers and visitors continue to enter this fertile valley, which is fast becoming the "highway" to southern Virginia and its western frontier (now known as Kentucky).

.In 1780 a man from western Pennsylvania, William Hardin, who had returned from an exploration of the Virginia frontier west of the Appalachian Mountains known as Kentucky County, Virginia came through Berkeley County. Mr. Hardin was recruiting single men and families to return with him to help establish and defend desirable land in central Kentucky.

Balser Claycomb and Adam Barr are enticed by William Hardin’s descriptions of Kentucky’s cheap, fertile farmlands that are also rich with abundant wildlife, including herds of elk, deer, and buffalo. Adam Barr, having already served a tour of duty in the War of Independence, will prove handy to have along against Indian attacks. These two men’s adventure will eventually influence two children of Johan Martin Kirschman (Martin Jr. and daughter Elizabeth) to relocate to the Kentucky frontier.

Balser Claycomb’s father, Johan Conrad Kleikam, wrote his will in 1780 naming all his living children, including his two single daughters Mary & Sophia Claycomb. Mary Claycomb will eventually marry Adam Barr and Sophia Claycomb will eventually marry Martin Kirschman Jr. (Martin Cashman). It is important to understand that Johan Conrad Kleikam (Claycomb) and his children are the first and only Claycombs in America at this time, so any Claycomb found in the 17th and early 18th century America is his posterity.

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1780 Berkeley County, Virginia Probate Records
Johan Conrad Kleckham writes his will on 7 Feb.1780. Children listed: Henry Claycomb, Balser Claycomb, Charlotte Claycomb, Conrad Claycomb, Peter Claycomb, Frederick Claycomb, George Claycomb, and single daughters Sophia & Mary Claycomb. Will proved 17 August 1784 in Berkeley County, Virginia. (12).
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In January 1781 the focus of the War of Independence turned toward the Southern colonies. South Carolina was under siege by the British. Then North Carolina was attacked and lost. British General Cornwallis, resupplied and reinforced, was now marching north to unprotected Virginia. In March 1781, General Washington dispatched General Lafayette to Virginia with all hast. (13)

Virginia and Maryland citizens along both sides of the Potomac River prepared for battle, including 19-year-old Martin Kirschman Jr., in Washington County, Maryland and the Kleikams (Claycombs) in Berkeley County, Virginia. It is during these tumultuous war times of 1781 that Martin Kirschman Jr. meets Miss Sophia Claycomb.

Under the threat of General Cornwallis marching to Virginia, the Virginia militia is mustered to duty. At 23 years old, Sophia’s brother Frederick Claycomb is drafted into the Berkeley militia for a six-month tour of duty, of which Martin Kirschman Jr. will later testify as in Kentucky.

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1781 Berkeley County, Virginia

Frederick Claycomb, militia. Capt. Garret under Col. Dart’s Regiment. Marched with said company to Williamsburg, Virginia where other troops were stationed, and had the satisfaction to see General Washington. After the expiration of his time of service he was honorably discharged. The written discharge was lost or misplaced many years ago and he has no documentary evidence to prove his service, but Barney Miller and Martin Cashman of Breckinridge County, Kentucky whose statements will be annexed to this declaration can testify to his service as herein stated.

Source: Pension Claim S. 16083; Certificate #3024. Microfilm: www.footnotes.com/image/14670970
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..

In April, a British force under the recently-turned traitor Benedict Arnold landed in Virginia. Arnold moved through the Virginia countryside, destroying supply depots, mills, and other economic targets, before joining his army with that of Cornwallis. Lafayette skirmished with Cornwallis, avoiding a decisive battle while gathering reinforcements. Cornwallis moved his forces to Yorktown, Virginia in July so the Royal Navy could return his army to New York. It is to this conflict that Frederick Claycomb and the Virginia militia is deployed to Williamsburg. (13)


Through Gen. George Washington’s strategic maneuvering, the war converged in 1781 at Yorktown, Virginia. Washington moved American and French troops from New York, and a combined Franco-American force of 17,000 men commenced the Siege of Yorktown in early October. For several days, the French and Americans bombarded the British defenses. Prisoners are captured on both sides, then marched to prison camps.

The Virginia militia use Fort Frederick in Washington County, Maryland as their prison camp. The Virginia militia marched the British prisoners northwest through Winchester to Berkeley County, then across the Potomac River to Washington County, Maryland. Martin Kirschman is there to help ferry the prisoners across the river. (13) .



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1781 Berkeley County, Virginia
Martin Kershman alld. L7-17 (pounds) for ferriage over Potawmack River. 556 prisoners and guards and 1 wagon & team on march from Winchester, Virginia to Fort Frederick.
Source: Virginia Publick Claims Berkeley County. Janice L. Abercrombie and Richard Slatten. Iberian Publishing Company. Pg. v gives dates 1779-1781 and Pg. 18 lists Martin Kershman. Courtesy of Kris Kerlin.

Unfortunately, this record does not indicate whether this is Martin Sr. (Johan Martin) or Martin Jr. (Martin Cashman). But this narrative supports that it is Martin Jr. for the following reasons:

1) Ferrying 556 prisoners would have taken a great many trips across the river, which likely occurred over several days. According to history, prisoners were being sent from Yorktown to Fort Frederick every day for several days during the seige. Ferrying these passengers would have required considerable strength and stamina. Johan Martin Kirschman, Sr. was an older man in his mid-40s. Would he have had the physical strength and stamina to be working as a ferry man?

2) Would Johan Martin Kirschman, Sr. have left Bedford Co. Pennsylvnia to work as a ferry man on the Potomac River? Or was he a farmer in Bedford Co.?

3) 19-year-old Martin Kirschman, Jr. lived on the Fort Frederick side of the Potomac in Washington County, Maryland. Since he didn't live in Virginia he wasn't mustered into the Virginia militia, and the Maryland militia wasn't called to help in Yorktown. Here was his chance to help in the war. It's very plausible that he would be employed as a ferry man transporting passengers (and prisoners).

4) Martin Jr. became very acquainted with the Claycomb family in Berkeley County, Virginia, particularly with Frederick & Sophia. Perhaps he met them while working on the Berkeley County, Virginia side of the Potomac...

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.

Once ferried across the river, the prisoners were taken to Fort Frederick in Washington County, Maryland. Fort Frederick is an impressive stone garrison constructed in 1756 for protection during the French & Indian Seven Years War. The fort was never attacked, but it served as an important supply base for the army led by then Lt. Col. George Washington. Fort Frederick saw service again during the War of Independence. Under the command of Colonel Moses Rawlings, the old fort was refurbished and used to imprison thousands of captured British and Hessian (Germans) soldiers from the battles of Saratoga in 1777 and Yorktown in 1781. Fort Frederick is now a state park open to the public. (14)

http://www.dnr.maryland.gov/publiclands/ftfrederickhistory.html


Toward the end of the year General Cornwallis' position quickly weakened, and he surrendered his entire army of 7,000 men on October 19, 1781. With the surrender at Yorktown, there were no further major military activities on land, though the war continued on sea against France allies until 1783. America had won its independence! (13)

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With the fight for Independence won and peace restored in Virginia and Maryland, life among the citizens resumed. In 1781 of Providence, Bedford, Pennsylvania, Johan Martin Kirschman’s daughter Catharine Kirschman married David Buck, and they raised their family here until Catherine died in Bedford County, Pennsylvania in 1816. One of Catharine’s daughters Elizabeth Buck marries David Garlick and later joins The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons). Immediately the family is subjected to religious persecution. The family moves to Nauvoo, Illinois and eventually joins the Mormon pioneer trek across the plains to Utah.

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1781 Providence, Bedford County, Pennsylvania
Catharine Kirschman marries David Buck.
Source: http://hatchfamilyhistory.googlepages.com/DavidGarlickandElizabethBuckHistory.pdf
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In Maryland, a record of George Kirschman’s daughter being baptized appears in the same Lutheran church as their first born. Likely they had other children born during this time, but no other records are found.

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1782 Washington County, Maryland Church Records
Maria, daughter of George Kirshman and Elisabeth, born 13 March 1782 is baptized 7 July 1782 at the St. John Evangelical Lutheran Church at Elizabethtown (Hagerstown) Maryland.
Source: Washington County, Maryland Church Records of the 18th Century. Published by Family Line Publications. 1988. Pg. 5. FHL 975.291
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//

In early 1783, Martin Kirschman Jr. married Sophia Claycomb who lived with her family across the Potomac River in Berkeley County, Virginia. In July 1783 the new Mrs. Sophia Kirschmann of Washington County, Maryland is the sponsor witness for the baptism of a friend’s baby. This record provides significant evidence that Martin Cashman of Kentucky is Martin Kirschman Jr. of Washington, Maryland, and it gives an approximation of when he married Sophia and where they were living.

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1783 Berkeley County, Virginia
Martin Kirschman Jr. marries Sophia Kleikam/Claycomb of Berkeley County, Virginia.

Source: Genealogy of Claycomb Family(12). Bride is from Berkeley County and her siblings are found marrying there, so it can be concluded this couple married in Berkeley County as well – though no marriage record is yet found.

Sophia Kleikam/Claycomb b. 27 Aug. 1765, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania to Johan Conrad Kleikam & Anna Elizabeth Lutzen, immigrants from Germany. Sophia was baptized/confirmed in the New Hollard Luthern Church of Lancaster, Pennsylvania on 19 April 1767.
Source: New Holland Luthern Church at Lancaster Pennsylvania. FHL 975.291 kw


1783 Washington County, Maryland Church Records

Susana Marstus, dau of Johannes and Maria Matalena Marstus baptized on 21 Jul 1783. Sophia Kirschmann witnesses. Reformed Church in Washington County, Maryland.
Source: Washington County, Maryland Church Records of the 18th Century. Published by Family Line Publications. 1988. Pg. 41. FHL 975.291

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The 1783 Tax List of Maryland provides a snapshot in time of the Cashman/Kirschman family and the Claycomb family. The tax list also shows the German surnames are starting to take on the Anglicized spellings; by 1783 George has already made the leap from “Kirschman” to “Cashman” and the Kleikam is being spelled “Claycomb.”

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1783 Maryland State Tax Assessment List
George Cashman. Washington Co., Marsh p. 2.
Martin Kershman. Washington Co., Salisbury and Conocheague p. 45.
Henry Claycomb. Washington Co., Salisbury and Conocheague p. 43.
www.msa.md.gov/msa/stagser/s1400/s1437/html/1437wa.html
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Interestingly, the 1783 Maryland tax list showing “George Cashman” provides a clue that his father, Johan Martin Kirschman, is still living nearby in Bedford, Pennsylvania, because dad is well aware of his son’s new spelling as evidenced by Johan Martin’s will in 1804 wherein he names his son “George Cashman” but leaves all the other son’s last name spelled the same as his. This clue may help in pinpointing when Johan Martin moved to Virginia.


1784 Washington County, Maryland
Martin & Sophia Kirschman’s first child is born, a son named Conrad Kirschman (Cashman), named for Sophia’s father. The family is known to be living in Washington County, Maryland although no birth records are yet found.


During the Revolutionary War, the General Assembly of Virginia had required the citizens to provide livestock, foodstuffs, arms, and other supplies or services for the use of the militia and Virginia and Continental armies. Military officers borrowed, bought, impressed, or sometimes simply took necessary supplies from the citizens. Many of the officers provided certificates, or receipts, for the articles or services they took so the owners could seek reimbursement from the state government or from Congress.

As mentioned earlier, Martin Kirschman Jr. had ferried 556 enemy prisoners in Berkeley County, Virginia across the Potomac River to Washington County, Maryland. In 1784 the Virginia court was ready to pay its war debts, so Martin Jr. went to Berkeley County, Virginia to file his claim for payment of services.

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1784 Berkeley County, Virginia
Martin Kershman alld. L7-17 (pounds) for ferriage over Potawmack River. 556 prisoners and guards and 1 wagon & team on march from Winchester, Virginia to Fort Frederick.
Source: Virginia Publick Claims Berkeley County. Janice L. Abercrombie and Richard Slatten. Iberian Publishing Company. Pg. v gives dates 1779-1781 and Pg. 18 lists Martin Kershman. Courtesy of Kris Kerlin.
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Sometime in 1874 Balser Claycomb and Adam Barr returned to Berkeley County, Virginia from their exploration of the frontier Kentucky territory with William Hardin. (15). They tell of their adventures fighting the Indians, and they speak highly of Kentucky’s fertile farmlands. However, it will be another eight years before Balser Claycomb moves to Kentucky, and even longer before Adam Barr joins him.


The next year, Lt. Adam Barr married Balser’s little sister Mary Claycomb in 1785. The marriage record indicates the couple married in the home of her mother in Berkeley County, Virginia. Little is know about this couple until 1797 when they are found again in Breckinridge, Kentucky with the rest of the Claycomb clan and Martin Cashman. More about this couple and their family can be found in the book "Family of Adam and Mary Claycomb Barr" by Steve Barr.


While still living in Washington County, Maryland, Martin & Sophia Kirschman continue to have the following children as named in Martin’s will in Breckinridge County, Kentucky in 1833 and in other Breckinridge sources. It is interesting to note that children Martin and Agnes are named after their paternal grandparents Johan Martin & Agnes Kirschman, while most of their other children are named after Sophia Claycomb’s side of the family: her father is Johan Conrad. Son John is named after both his grandfathers. This is additional evidence of Martin Jr.'s connection to his German immigrant parents Johan Martin & Agnes Kirschman.

//

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Martin & Sophia Kirschman (Cashman) Family

Conrad Kirschman b. 1784 in Washington County, Maryland d. (last found on 1840 census in Lewis Co. Missouri)

Peter Kirschman b. 18 Dec 1785 in Washington County, Maryland m. 15 or 19 Nov. 1809 to Mary Bruington in Breckinridge County, Kentucky m. Eliza (1860 Census) d. 16 May 1873 in Breckinridge Co.

Sophia Kirschman b. 1787 in Washington County, Maryland

Agnes Kirschman b. 1789 in Washington County, Maryland m. Daniel Hays d. Last found in Perry County, Indiana

Charlotte Kirschman b. 1790 in Washington County, Maryland m. 15 Sept. 1814 to Abraham Miller in Breckinridge county, Kentucky d. Last found in Perry County, Indiana

Sarah “Sallie” Kirschman b. 1791 in Washington County, Maryland

John Kirschman b. 1792 in Washington County, Maryland d. 1818 in Breckinridge Co. (unmarried)

Martin Kirschman b. 1795 in Hardin County, Kentucky ???? m. Jane d. Last found on 1840 Census in Perry Co., Indiana

Note: When this family moved to Kentucky they anglicized the spelling of their last name to “Cashman.”

The above are the names and dates of their children as I have found records for in Breckinridge County marriage records, court records, and information recorded in Weaner & Shull’s book Cashman Surname in America. I am seeking further clarification and documentation.
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Although few tax records of Washington County, Maryland are available, Berkeley County Virginia tax records show members of the Claycomb family during the 1780s. Since Martin & Sophia Kirschman (Cashman)’s departure for Kentucky is closely connected to the Claycomb family, these tax records are helpful in determining where members of the Claycomb family are living during this time.



1784 Berkeley County, Virginia Tax Assessment List
Johann C. Kleikham is listed (Father of Sophia Claycomb Kirschman)

1785 Berkeley County, Virginia Tax Records
Frederick Claycomb, male 21+ owns 3 horses and 2 cattle

1787 Berkeley County, Virginia Tax Records
Elizabeth Claycomb (“Mother Claycomb” – Husband Johan Conrad has passed away)

1788 Berkeley County, Virginia Tax Records
Frederick Claycomb

1789 Berkeley County, Virginia Tax List
Frederick Claycomb



When the 1790 Census (or tax list) was taken several farmers were missed. Why this happened is unknown, but Johan Martin Kirschman was known to still be living in Bedford County, Pennsylvania in 1790, and although Martin Kirschman Jr. is not listed either, it makes logical sense that he is still in Washington County, Maryland as there is no evidence to suggest he has yet moved away. Several Claycomb brothers are also missing from the 1790 Census, yet we know they have not yet migrated to Kentucky.

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1790 Census
George Kershman – Washington County, Maryland
George Claycomb - Washington County, Maryland
Frederick Claycomb – Washington County, Maryland

Frederick & George Claycomb are neighbors in Washington County, both listed with wife but no children. Neither Johan Martin nor Martin Kirschman, Jr. is listed on the 1790 Census and several Claycombs are also missing.
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Although Johan Martin Kirschman is not listed on the 1790 Census, the following marriage record of Johan Martin Kirschman’s daughter Mary Kirschman in Berkeley, Virginia indicates Johan Martin and his family members are still living nearby in the adjacent county of Bedford, Pennsylvania - the "tri-stake area." Mary & Jacob Bassell (Paitsel) eventually move to Franklin County, Virginia where Mary dies around 1856.

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1790 Martinsburg, Berkeley County, Virginia
On 8 December 1790 Mary Kershman and Jacob Bassell (Paitsel) are married.
Witness: Peter Myers.
Source: Marriage license & bond in possession. Courtesy of Kris Kerlin.

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Between 1790 and 1800, no other records of Johan Martin Kirschman are found in the tri-county area of Washington County, Maryland or Berkeley County, Virginia, or Bedford, Pennsylvania. However, it’s possible that his son Christian (spelling of name changes on different records) is found on the 1800 tax list of Berkeley, Virginia. It does look like Johan Martin Kirschman’s grandsons appear in various records of this tri-county area.

It is proposed that Johan Martin Kirschman and his son Martin Cashman do not appear in records of Maryland or Pennsylvania during this decade because they have migrated south. In the spring of 1794 Martin Kirschman Jr. (Martin Cashman) and his family headed to Kentucky with the Claycombs. By 1797 records in Kentucky show Martin Cashman in Hardin County, Kentucky with all but two of his Claycomb brothers-in-law and Adam Barr (married to sister-in-law Mary Claycomb). Only Henry Claycomb and Conrod Claycomb remain in Berkeley County, Virginia, as evidenced by the 1800 Census tax list of Berkeley co., Vir.

This is the same time period that Cashman Surname in America’s Jacob Cashman is still found living in Pennsylvania, indicating again that these are two different men. More on Martin Kirschman Jr. (Martin Cashman) is found in the section of this document titled “Martin Cashman’s Journey to Kentucky.”

Around the same time Martin Cashman’s family left Washington County for Kentucky 1794, his father Johan Martin Kirschman was also itching to migrate to new lands. Johan Martin Kirschman, his wife Agnes, and their youngest daughter Elisabeth Kirschman, moved southward to Bedford County, Virginia where he is listed on the 1800 tax list. He is listed again as Martin Cashman with 2 bushels of corn on another Bedford County, Virginia record found on the internet at: http://jscott.tierranet.com/scottfam/stithfam/estie/frances/p027.gif


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1800 Tax List - Bedford County, Virginia Lists: Martin Cashman

This is Johan Martin Kirschman with his Anglicized name. Like other pioneers of his time, Johan Martin Kirschman could neither read nor write (as evidence by his mark “x” on his will in 1804), so the spelling of his name was dependant on the person taking the tax roll or writing his will.

Source: The Virginia Genealogist, Vol. 7, 1963 by John Frederick Dorman. Pg. 124. Courtesy of Phil Reyburn who provided documentation.
Source:
http://www.binnsgenealogy.com/VirginiaTaxListCensuses/Bedford/1800PersonalB/03.jpg
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As the only Cashman listed on this tax record, it appears that none of Johan Martin and Agnes’s sons went to southern Virginia with their father. We know Martin Cashman went to Kentucky, but where are George, Christian, and Abraham in 1800? The 1800 Virginia tax lists of Berkeley suggests Christian Kirschman may have stayed in the area.



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1800 Tax List - Berkeley County, Virginia
Peter Cashner (1-2 Residence: Stephens Neck)
Christopher Cashman (1-2 Residence: Stephens Neck)
Henry Claycomb (2-3 Residence: Tuscarora)
Conrod Claycomb (1-5 Residence: Stephens Neck)

The first number after each name is the number of white males over age 21 in household, the second is the number of horses owned.
Source: The Virginia Genealogist, Vol. 8, 1964 by John Frederick Dorman. Pg. 19. Courtesy of Phil Reyburn who provided documentation
.

Note: This is a transcription of the original document’s handwriting. It’s possible the transcription of the handwriting is not accurate, but should be compared to other sources. One comparison shows Christian Cashman instead of Christopher. It’s possible this is one of the four sons named in Johan Martin Kirschman’s will of 1804.

Although one might suppose that “Peter Cashner” is Peter Cashman the son of Martin Cashman in Kentucky, this is incorrect. Reasons shows there are two things to take into consideration:
1) Peter Cashman, son of Martin Cashman, was born in 1785, which means he was 15 years old in 1800. His age would not have qualified him to be listed as a “white male age 21+" indicating this person was born prior to 1779 - before Martin was having children.

2) The commonly occurring surname Kirshner could have easily been anglicized to Cashner


No “Bruington” is listed in the 1800 Tax List of Berkeley, Virginia.

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In 1803, Johan Martin & Agnes’ youngest daughter Elisabeth Kirschman or “Betsy,” whose birth record is found in York, Pennsylvania, marries Jesse Orendorff in Bedford County, Virginia (or Botetourt County – not yet determined). After her parents’ deaths, Elisabeth & Jesse join her brother Martin Cashman in Breckinridge County, Kentucky where she dies in 1847


By 1804 Johan Martin Kirschman and wife Agnes have moved to Bedford County, Virginia where he writes his will and passes away.

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1804 Bedford County, Virginia
Johan Martin Keshman’s will is probated. Will names “my beloved wife Agnes” and “my seven children” as follows: George Cashman, Catherine Buck, Martin Keshman, Jr., Mary Batesel, Christian Keshman, Abraham Keshman, Elizabeth Orandorff. Estate is inventoried and it appears Johan Martin Keshman is a farmer of means for that time. Will was written on 7 April 1804 and signed with J. Martin Keshman’s mark. Will was proved in court 24 Sept. 1804.
Source: Bedford County, Virginia Will Book 3, pg. 40-41. Inventory on pg. 62. Courtesy of Kris Kerlin who provided documentation.


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Eventually, Conrod Claycomb joins his brothers in Kentucky. Of the Claycomb men, only Henry Claycomb remained in the tri-county area of Berkeley. In 1806 Henry Claycomb married Susannah Holley on 3 April 1806 in Washington County, Maryland. During the War of 1812 he enlisted as a private in the 67th Regiment of the Virginia Militia in 1815. He later moved his family to Bedford County, Pennsylvania as evidenced by the 1820 Census.

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To continue reading the sage of the Kirschman Family’s Journey in America, click on “older posts” located at the bottom right hand side.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

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Martin Cashman in Kentucky



Kentucky County, Virginia

Prior to the Revolutionary War, the frontier region we now know as Kentucky was Virginia territory. The British Government’s treaty with the Indian tribes at the conclusion of the French and Indian Seven-Years War promised that settlers would not cross the Appalachian Mountains into these frontier territories. However, in 1776 Virginia declared its independence from Britain and its treaty with the Indians, achieved statehood, formed the frontier territory on the other side of the Appalachian Mountains into Kentucky County, Virginia, offered an abundance of cheap land for settlement, and defied Britain to stop them. Britain’s armies were too occupied fighting the Colonists’ rebellion against the Crown to concern themselves with settlers.

Many new settlers came to Kentucky during the Revolutionary War, looking for a fresh start west of the mountains. The majority of those early pioneers were Germans and Scots Irish who came primarily from Virginia and secondarily from Pennsylvania. Kentucky experienced its peak migration period between 1775 and 1795.

The Bluegrass region of “Ken-tah-keh” (as the Cherokee called it) was attractive to settlers from east of the Appalachian Mountains because of the fertile farmlands, rich with abundant wildlife. However, the settlers frequently encountered hostile natives of the area who were not friendly towards strangers coming to hunt and settle on the land they also used. Some of the encounters were violent.

William Hardin and his brothers were raised on the western frontier of Pennsylvania and it was here that they became adept at Indian fighting. They had to in order to survive on the western frontier. So the threat of Indian encounters in Kentucky did not deter them.

In 1779 William Hardin and his brothers lead a small party of settlers from southwest Pennsylvania and Virginia down the Ohio River into central Kentucky County, Virginia. William was so pleased with the country that he went back to western Pennsylvania and Virginia, recruited a group of 12 adventurous families and some single men (which included Balser Claycomb and Rev. War soldier Adam Barr from Berkeley County), and in 1780 they set out again for the Kentucky territory.

In 1780 the large number of settlers made it necessary for Kentucky County, Virginia to be divided into three main counties including Jefferson County, Virginia, where William Hardin and his group were headed. In March 1781 the Hardin group arrived on the bank of Hardin’s Creek and began clearing the land for Hardin’s Fort, which later became Hardinsburg, Kentucky. (15)
Skirmishes with the Indians broke out. So William Hardin recruited 80 men settled along the Ohio River, and they fought what is reputed to have been one of the bloodiest Indian battles in the settling of Kentucky. With their advance weaponry, the settlers won the battle and settled the land. Of the eighty men who fought in this intense Indian battle, Adam Barr and ____ Claycomb are listed. (15) The original record shows the first name as illegible, but he is believed to be Balser Claycomb since Balser is the first Claycomb on record in this area as early as 1792.

William Hardin remained in Kentucky, but in 1784 Adam Barr and Balser Claycomb returned to Berkeley County, Virginia. Adam Barr married Balser’s sister Mary Claycomb in 1785. Adam and Balser convinced most of the Claycomb family to move to William Hardin’s new settlement in Kentucky, though it would take several years before they all made the move. By this time, Martin Kirshman Jr. had married into the Claycomb family through his wife Sophia Claycomb. He too would soon join this new settlement with his new anglicized name: Martin Cashman.

In 1785 William Hardin received grants from the state of Virginia for 3800 acres of land on which he had settled. That same year Jefferson County was divided and Nelson County was formed, wherein William Hardin’s land resided.

Kentucky achieved statehood in 1792 with more than 70,000 settlers as reported by the census. In 1793 Nelson County divided to form Hardin County, named for William’s brother who died while fighting the Indians.

Balser Claycomb was in Kentucky as early as 1792 according to a record of the Hardin County Court that assessed him for back taxes of 1792, 1793, and 1794. This indicates Balser was in Kentucky as early as 1792, however Hardin County wasn’t created until 1793. So Balser would have been in Nelson County before it divided into Hardin County. With Balser Claycomb already in Kentucky, the rest of the family made preparations to join him.



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1799 Hardin County, Kentucky Court Order Books A & B
Balser Claycomb ordered to pay back taxes for 1792, 1793, 1794
Source: Several published books list tax records and can be found at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah
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In the Spring of 1794, Martin & Sophia and all their children packed provisions and what few belongings they could fit into a covered wagon and headed for the Kentucky frontier – a place where they could own their own land and raise their families.

After saying final farewells to Sophia’s brothers Henry & Conrod Claycomb and Martin’s brother George Cashman in Washington County, Maryland, the Martin Cashman family crossed the Potomac River into Berkeley County, Virginia. Here they joined with Sophia’s Claycomb other brothers as well as her sister Mary who married Adam Barr, and their pioneer journey began. Departing in early spring was paramount in order to cross the rugged Appalachian mountain range before inclement weather hit.

When the Claycomb/Cashman/Barr party departed Washington County, Maryland and Berkeley County, Virginia area for central Kentucky in the spring of 1794, they were traveling with covered wagons and oxen without any roads. They could only follow rivers or the routes which passed through Southern Virginia following old buffalo traces and Indian trails. The Claycomb/Cashman/Barr party had two options:

Option 1: Follow the Ohio River as William Hardin had many years ago. However, the river was controlled by Indians in Ohio territory who raided at will, so this route was deemed too dangerous for families (until the Indians were defeated at Fallen Timbers in 1796).

Option 2: Take the route most traveled and the most practical: Follow the Great Wagon Road to the Cumberland Gap. Hordes of early German and Scotch-Irish settlers followed the Great Wagon Road from Pennsylvania southward through Berkeley County and the Shenandoah Valley, and then followed the Great Trading Path through southern Virginia to the Cumberland Gap. (In Pennsylvania the Great Wagon Road was the old Monocacy Trail that Johan Martin Kirschman followed to bring his family to Washington County, Maryland in 1776). To cross the Appalachian Mountains, they followed “the Wilderness Road” through the treacherous Cumberland Gap. (It was not officially named "the Wilderness Road" until 1796 when it was widened enough to allow Conestoga wagons to travel on it) After crossing the mountains at Cumberland Gap, they followed the Warrior Path across Kentucky to the falls of the Ohio River, where Louisville now stands. Hardin County was just another couple of days westward.
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From 1775 to 1800 it is estimated more than 300,000 settlers traveled on what is now called the Wilderness Road. For additional information about the full route from Pennsylvania to Kentucky, and the Cumberland Gap, please see notes in Bibliography #16 & #17.


According to early Hardin County, Kentucky tax lists and deed books, evidence of the Claycomb/Cashman/Barr party in Kentucky first appears in 1795. One of the first deeds found is George Claycomb purchasing land from William Hardin in 1795. Martin Cashman and Adam Barr aren’t listed on a tax record until 1797, but that does not mean they weren’t there yet as some of these early records are missing. Note that George Claycomb buys land in 1795 but is also not listed on the tax lists.

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1795 Hardin County, Kentucky Tax Records
Peter Claycomb
Balser Claycomb
Source: Several published books give this information and can be found at Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah


1795 Hardin County, Kentucky Deed Books
George Claycomb purchased land from William Hardin
Source: Several published books give this information and can be found at Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.


1797 Hardin County, Kentucky Tax Records
Martin Cashman
Adam Barr
Peter Claycomb
Frederick Claycomb
Balser Claycomb
Source: Several published books give this information and can be found at Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.


1799 Hardin County, Kentucky Court Order Books A & B
Court orders a ferry to be established across Ohio River at the mouth of Hardin’s Creek, and Jacob Crist is appointed ferry keeper. Jacob Crist and Balzer Claycomb entered into a bond to execute the performance of the ferry as outlined by the court.
Source: Several published books give this information and can be found at Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.
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1799 Hardin County, Kentucky divided; Breckinridge County formed


As Kentucky continues to grow, Hardin County divides in 1799 to form Breckinridge County, with the county seated named Stephens Port. Eventually, Hardin County will be divided into 12 more counties. The 1800 Census of Kentucky lists 220,000 people. (1790 was 70,000 people). 144 households are listed in Breckinridge County, Kentucky dated 19 August 1800. Kentucky grew so fast that by 1820 it was the sixth largest state in America. Kentucky’s economy was primarily based on farming.
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Martin Cashman, Adam Barr, and the Claycomb brothers find themselves in the newly formed county of Breckinridge. The book Genealogy of the Claycomb Family has a wonderful page that shows the land survey of the Claycomb brothers and Adam Barr in Breckinridge County, Kentucky, which shows them all living in close proximity to each other. (12)


1800 Breckinridge County, Kentucky Organization of Quarterly Court Records
After the Court of Quarterly Session was organized the first Grand Jury was impaneled for Beckinridge County, which included Peter Claycomb and Frederick Claycomb.

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1800 Breckinridge County, Kentucky Tax List
Adam Barr
Martin Cashman
Balser Claycomb
Frederick Claycomb
Peter Claycomb
Source: 1800 Census, Tax lists of Kentucky

Note: Martin & Sophia Cashman’s oldest sons Conrad Cashman and Peter Cashman would be about 17 and 15 respectively in 1800 so were not old enough to be listed on the tax records.


Caution:
1800 Tax List - Berkeley County, Virginia
***Peter Cashner (1-2 Residence: Stephens Neck)
Christopher Cashman (1-2 Residence: Stephens Neck)
Henry Claycomb (2-3 Residence: Tuscarora)
Conrod Claycomb (1-5 Residence: Stephens Neck)
*** This is not our Peter Cashman, the son of Martin Cashman in Kentucky, but is the anglicized name of Peter Kirshner. Our Peter Cashman, son of Martin Cashman, was born in 1785, which means he was 15 years old in 1800. His age would not have qualified him to be listed as a “white male age 21+. ” This Peter was born prior to 1779 – too soon for Martin to be having children.

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1801 Breckinridge County Kentucky Marriage Records
George Claycomb marries Charlotte Wheeler (2nd wife)

1802 Breckinridge County, Kentucky Court Records
John Claycomb and Michael Claycomb buy 180 acres for $180.00 between the head waters of Hardin’s Creek and Bushes Run. Witnessed by Peter Claycomb and Peter Daniel.

Note: On October 8, 1821, John Claycomb and Peter Claycomb, heirs at law to Michael Caycomb, deceased, sell these 180 acres to John Murray for $630.00.


1803 Breckinridge County Court Records
Jury duty: George Claycomb; Martin Cashman (3 different times)


1805 Breckinridge County Court Records
Conrad Cashman and his cousin John Claycomb are both charged by the Grand Jury for profane swearing. October 23, 1805.

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Breckinridge County is growing fast with new families moving in daily. Ludwig “Lewis” & Elisabeth Barger Shelman family and her brother John B. Barger’s family arrive in Breckinridge in 1805. They have migrated from Pennsylvania through Virginia.

About this same time Leonard Cart also arrives in Breckinridge. Not long afterwards the Bruington family arrives. Children of these families will eventually marry children and grandchildren of Martin & Sophia Cashman.


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1806 Kentucky Marriages 1802-1850
Leonard Cart marries Mary “Polly” Shelman on 28 March 1806.
Source: Several published sources provide early marriages of Kentucky. Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Mary “Polly” Shelman b. abt 1775 in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania (which becomes Dauphin County, Pennsylvania) is the daughter of Rev. War militia Ludwick “Lewis” Shelman and Elizabeth Barger (daughter of John Barger, Sr.) Leonard & Mary Cart are the parents of Elizabeth Cart who marries John H. Cashman, son of Peter & Mary Cashman.

Source: History of Dauphin County, Pennsylvania. Google Books. http://books.google.com/books?id=ZRQVAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA205&dq=History+of+Dauphin+County+Pennsylvania+Book#v=onepage&q=History%20of%20Dauphin%20County%20Pennsylvania%20Book&f=false This book shows Ludwick or Ludwig Shelman on the 1780 Tax list of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania and on the 1781 militia list.

Source: 1790 Census of Dauphin Co.: http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cenfiles/pa/dauphin/1790/indx-m-z.txt

Source: Immigrated from Germany with his father Ludwick Schellmann who is listed on the book "30,000 Names of German Immigrants."

Ludwig/Ludwick anglicizes his name to “Lewis” when he moves to Kentucky. Martin Shelman and Adam Shelman are sons of Lewis Shelman.

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1807 Breckinridge County Court Records
Leonard Cart, John Cart, and John Claycomb serve on Jury Duty on April 20, 1807
Conrad Claycomb and Martin Shelman serve on Jury Duty on July 20, 1807.
Martin Cashman ordered by judge to pay a debt with interest since April 1, 1806.
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1808 Breckinridge County Court Records
Martin Cashman serves on Jury Duty twice. Also defends himself in court, but nature of offense not mentioned.


1808 Breckinridge County, Kentucky Deed Books
George Claycomb and wife Charlotte sell land to Conrad Claycomb of Berkeley Co., Virginia.

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1809 Kentucky Marriages 1802-1850
Peter Cashman married Polly Bruington on 19 Nov. 1809 “Polly” is the nickname for Mary
George Barger marries Susannah Shelman on 30 Sept 1809
Jacob Barger to Elizabeth Seaton on 13 Sept 1809
Source: Several published sources provide early marriages of Kentucky. Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.

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Peter & Mary Cashman Family

Peter Cashman is the son of Martin Cashman.

Mary “Polly” Bruington was born abt 1794 in Virginia as calculated from marriage date and census records. Her brother George Bruington also lives in Breckinridge, Kentucky. No other information on family known, but one theory is that she arrived in Breckinridge with her father George, her brother George, and her sister Elizabeth.


Children - all born in Breckinridge Co., Kentucky:
John H. Cashman b. 25 January 1812 m. Elizabeth Cart 14 Dec. 1842
Joseph Cashman b. 1816 m. Ellen Melissa Dunn
Nancy Cashman b. 1818 m. Jacob Black on 6 Jan 1826
Martin H. Cashman b. 1821
George B. Cashman b. 1824
Thomas J. Cashman b. 1825
Louisa Cashman b. 1827

Note: Peter’s cousin John Barr marries Elizabeth Bruington who is a sister of Peter’s wife Mary Bruington.

Note: A photograph of Peter Cashman’s tombstone is posted on www.ancestry.com
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1809 The township of Union Star is formed in Breckinridge County.

While many families continue to move into Breckinridge, Kentucky, several of the early settlers of Breckinridge find it’s getting too crowded and opt to move across the Ohio River to the southern area of Indiana in Knox County. Abraham Lincoln is one of these families.

Abraham Lincoln was born in Hodgenville, Hardin County, Kentucky on February 12, 1809 to a pioneer family. His parents struggled to earn a living, and later moved to Indiana in search of a better life.

One of the first settlers to southern Indiana from the Claycomb and Cashman families is Sophia’s brother Frederick Claycomb who served in the Revolutionary War in 1781. Several more from these families will eventually also move here - many to Perry County, Indiana.



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1809 Breckinridge County, Kentucky Deed Books
Frederick Claycomb of Knox County, Indiana sold part of his land in Breckinridge Co, Kentucky to his brother Conrad Claycomb and another part of his land to John Barger.
Source: Several published books give this information and can be found at Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Note: For researchers of Elizabeth Cart (daughter of Leonard Cart & Mary Shelman) who marries John H. Cashman (son of Peter Cashman, grandson of Martin Cashman) this John Barger who purchases Frederick Claycomb’s land is John Barger, Jr. who is the brother of Mary Shelman’s mother Elizabeth Barger Shelman.
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The 1810 Census of Breckinridge shows the tremendous growth of the county as well as the state of Kentucky.

During this time, Martin Cashman oldest son Conrad Cashman decides to leave Breckinridge and venture off on his own. By 1810 Conrad was living in Livingston County, Kentucky. Through the years, Conrad Cashman continued to move and eventually settled in Missouri where he appears on the 1840 Census of Lewis County, Missouri.

On the 1810 Census there are three Cashman heads of household in all of Kentucky: Martin Cashman and his son Peter Cashman are found in Breckinridge County, while Martin’s son Conrad Cashman has ventured southward in Livingston County, Kentucky.

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1810 Census: Breckinridge County, Kentucky Tax List
Barr, Adam 22111-11101
Bruington, George 20010-01100 (George age 26-45, wife age 16-26)
Barger, John Sr. 01001-01001 (Father of Adam, George, Jacob, John Jr. & Elizabeth Barger)
Barger, John Jr. 11010-21210
Cart, John 30010-30210 age 26-45, wife age 26-45)
Cart, Leonard 10010-10010 (age 26-45, wife age 26-45)
Claycomb, Balser 00001-32110
Claycomb, Conrad 10100-30010
Claycomb, Fredrick 110100 (son of one of the Claycomb brothers)
Claycomb, George 10220-10210
Claycomb, Peter 21201-32010
Cashman, Martin 11301-11120
Cashman, Peter (see original record) Peter & Martin are listed together..
Shelman, Lewis 10101-00101 (Father of Adam & Martin Shelman, & Mary Cart)
Shelman, Adam 10100-00100
Shelman, Martin 10010-30010


1810 Smithland, Livingston, Kentucky Tax List
Conrad Cashman Living alone between the age of 16-25. Son of Martin & Sophia Cashman.
Source: 1810 Census, Tax Lists of Kentucky.

To continue reading the sage of the Cashman Family’s Journey in America and Kentucky, click on “older posts” located at the bottom right hand side.

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War of 1812

In 1812 the United States went to war against England. The battle of New Orleans was the third most important battle of the war, which began on the 8th of January, 1815. America won the battle and the war ended, which was then settled by treaty. Kentucky troops played an important role in the Battle of New Orleans.

Conrad Cashman, Peter Cashman, John Cashman, and their cousins Adam Barr, Jr. John Barr, and George Barr were soldiers in the War of 1812.
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Conrad Cashman volunteered as a Kentucky Ranger. At this time he was living in Livingston County, Kentucky. Through the years Conrad Cashman continued to move and eventually settled in Missouri where he appears on the 1840 Census of Lewis County, Missouri.

Peter Cashman, John Cashman and their Barr cousins traveled to New Orleans during the winter of 1814 on flatboats and keelboats down the Ohio River. They fought with Andrew Jackson in the Battle of New Orleans. After the war was over they walked all the way back to Union Star, Breckinridge, Kentucky, as the boats could not go back up stream.
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Kentucky Militia & Service Records - War of 1812

Private Conrad Cashman, Rangers, U.S. Volunteers

Private John Cashman Capt. Wm. Walker’s Co. 3rd Regiment. Detached Militia 1 Sept. 1812 – 25 Dec. 1812

John Cashman served a second tour of duty as a substitute for Thomas L. White for $8.00 per month. This put him in the same regiment as his brother Peter Cashman and Adam Barr, Jr.


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List of Kentuckians at the Battle of New Orleans

Captain William Walker’s Company
13th Regiment
Tour of Duty: 15 Nov. 1814 – 10 May 1815

Privates:
John Barr
Adam Barr
George Barr
Cashman, Peter
Cashman, John

Source: The Battle of New Orleans…. 8th of January, 1815. Zachary F. Smith
http://www.archive.org/stream/battleofneworlea00smit/battleofneworlea00smit_djvu.txt


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Declaration of Soldier for Pensions – Peter Cashman

The following is from Peter Cashman’s pension claim for service in the War of 1812:

At the time he entered service he was a citizen of Breckinridge County, Kentucky and a married man having married Mary Bruington to whom he was married on the 15th day of November 1809. He states that when he entered the service he was sound and healthy. He was in a rifle company who took all their old bear and deer guns which killed the British at an astonishingly long range at New Orleans. “We went down in flat and keel boats and in all manner of craft that we could get.”

Claim is signed by Peter Cashman with his mark “X.” He had also made a Bounty Land Claim and received 80 acres as a result of his service.

Sources:
Record of Kentucky soldiers including Peter Cashman, John Cashman, and Adam Barr.
http://www.archive.org/stream/no19publications00filsuoft/no19publications00filsuoft_djvu.txt

History and Legend of Breckinridge County, Kentucky. Bill Thompson. Pg. 51
FHL 976.9254 H2t

http://www.galafilm.com/1812/e/events/orl_amer.html (provides more
information on the battle of New Orleans and Andrew Jackson)
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Flatboats, which were simple flat-bottomed rafts with shacks built on top, were a cheap way to
carry families of settlers floating down the river. The boats could not be moved upriver against
the currents. Keelboats had vertical boards on the bottoms that made it possible, thoughdifficult, to steer them and move them upriver.


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1813 Breckinridge County, Kentucky Court Records
George Claycomb is deceased. Wife Charlotte Claycomb is administratrix of estate with Adam Barr, Nelson Jolly, and John Helms as bondsmen. August 16, 1813 pg. 19


1814 Breckinridge County, Kentucky Marriage Records
Charlotte Cashman marries Abraham Miller on 15 Sept. 1814


1816 Breckinridge County, Kentucky Court & Land Records
Leonard Cart and Mary his wife sell land on the waters of Shot Pouch Creek to John Pullin for $225.00. Recorded 26 October 1816.


1817 Breckinridge County, Kentucky Court Records
Martin Cashman appointed overseer of the road leading from the mills at the falls of Sinking Creek. December 15, 1817.
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.
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Though some records report John Cashman died during the War of 1812, the following Breckinridge Court record indicates he actually died in 1818.

1818 Breckinridge County, Kentucky Court Records
Martin Cashman appointed by court to administer the estate of John Cashman, deceased. February 16, 1818. The estate is not settled until the court order of 19 Feb. 1821.


1818 Court & Land Records – Breckinridge County, Kentucky
George Bruington buys 248 acres on the waters of Sinking Creek, part of William May’s 18,000 acre survey, for $235.50. Recorded August 31, 1818.


1818 Court Records – Breckinridge County, Kentucky
Peter Cashman records his stock mark as a crop off the left ear and two slits. Dec. 21, 1818.


1820 Court & Land Records – Perry County, Indiana
Martin Cashman (son of Martin & Sophia) moves across the Ohio River into Indiana and buys 40 acres in Perry County, Indiana on 24 April 1820.
Source: Perry County Indiana deeds on www.Ancestry.com. 1830 Census & 1840 Census of Perry County, Indiana.


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1820 Census Stephensport, Breckinridge County, Kentucky
Bruington, George 120010-40010 age 26-45
Bruington, George age 50-60, no other males; wife 40-50 plus two young girls
Bruington, Thomas 00001-10001 age 20-30; wife and daughter
Cart, Leonard 210010-22110 (age 26-45; wife 26-45)
Claycomb, Frederick 310010-30010 age 26-45
Claycomb, Peter 010201-21301 age: over 45
Claycomb, John 300100-20100 age: 20-26
Claycomb, Conrad 410011-13010 age: over 45
Cashman, Peter 200010-31100 age 26-45 wife: 16-26
Cashman, Martin 000101-01101 age over 45; Wife over 45
Shelman, Martin 211010-22110
Shelman, Adam 300010-30010
Shelman, Lewis 000001-00001

Note: This Frederick Claycomb is not the Revolutionary War soldier, but a son of one of the Claycomb brothers.

Source: http://www.us-census.org/pub-ftp/ky/breckinridge/1820/index.txt
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1820 Court Records – Breckinridge County, Kentucky
Martin Cashman appointed overseer of the road. February 21, 1820


1821 Court Records – Breckinridge County, Kentucky
Ordered by the court that John Barger, Sr. be exempt from paying county levy in future. (pg. 221) June 18, 1821 (Indicates he is old.)
Note: This is actually John Barger Jr. the brother of Elizabeth Barger Cart, only now he has a son who is John Barger Jr, which now makes him Sr.)


1821 Court Records – Breckinridge County, Kentucky
Lewis Shelman on his motion is exempt and exonerated from the payment of county levy in this county in future. (pg. 186) February 19, 1821 (Indicates he is old)


1822 Court Records – Breckinridge County, Kentucky
Court orders to view and mark the road leading from the mouth of Sinking Creek to Elizabethtown…through the land of Lewis Shelman to where the old road intersects the old Elizabethtown road at Sugartree run…. 20 May 1822. Signed: George Barger, Martin Shelman, Thomas D. Helm.


1822 Court Records – Breckinridge County, Kentucky
On the motion of Adam Shelman for leave to administer on the estate of Lewis Shelman, dec’d., Mrs. Elizabeth Shelman widow of the deceased having declined acting, it is ordered that administration be granted of said estate to the said Adam Shelman, whereupon he said Adam Shelman took the oath required by law and with Martin Shelman…..Ordered that Adam Barr, John Barger, John Beauchamp and Thomas C. Bandy or any three of them being duly sworn do appraise in currently money the slaves if any and personal estate of Lewis Shelman, dec’d, and make report thereof agreeably to law. 16 September 1822. (vol. 3)
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1822 Court Records – Breckinridge County, Kentucky
An inventory and appraisement of the estate of Lewis Shelman, dec’d., was exhibited in court by Adam Shelman, the administrator and ordered to be recorded. An account of the sales of said estate was also exhibited in court and ordered to be recorded. 16 December 1822 (vol. 3)

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1830 Census – Stephensport, Breckinridge County, Kentucky
Cart, Leonard 01111001-00111001 (age 50-60, wife age 50-60)
Cashman, Martin 0000000001-000000001 (age 70-80, wife age 60-70)
Shelman, Martin
Claycomb, Frederick 1013001001-3311001 (age 70-80, wife age 40-50)
(All the above are on the same page)

Cashman, Peter 3111001-102201 (age 40-50 years, wife age 30-40 years)
Claycomb, Benjamin
Claycomb, John
Claycomb, Henry
Claycomb, Conrad
Claycomb, Peter
Claycomb, Elizabeth

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1832 Knox County, Indiana - Revolutionary War Pension Application; D.A.R.
Frederick Claycomb applies for pension for his war service in 1781. Martin Cashman of Breckinridge Co, Kentucky testifies to Frederick’s service. (For Martin to testify of Frederick’s service in 1781, he had to have personal knowledge of Frederick’s service by being present in his life during that time, which gives further evidence that Martin Cashman was associating with the Claycombs in Berkeley Co. Virginia in 1781).


1832 Indiana/Breckinridge County, Kentucky
Frederick Claycomb files for his pension for his service in the Revolutionary War. Names Martin Cashman of Breckinridge, Kentucky as a witness. Martin Cashman of Breckinridge, Kentucky makes his statement testifying to Frederick’s service, which is annexed to Frederick’s declaration.
Source: Pension Claim S. 16083; Certificate #3024. Microfilm: www.footnotes.com/image/14670970


1833 Breckinridge County, Kentucky – Probate Records
Martin Cashman, Sr. deceased. Wife, Sophia Cashman, Executor, wife Sophia. Witnessed by George Barger, William Wheeler and Philip A. Axton. Will written 16 June 1833, probated August term 1833 County court. Pg. 69
Source: Breckinridge County Kentucky Records. Vol. 4. Michael Lewis Cook and Bettie Ann Cummings Cook. Cook Publications 1984. FHL 976.9254 v2c v.4

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The Last Will & Testament of Martin Cashman
In the name of God amen, I Martin Cashman Sr. of Beckinridge County, Kentucky being weak in body but of sound and perfect mind and memory (blessed be almighty God for the same), do make and publish this my last will and testament in the form following, that is to say First, I wish to be buried in a plain and decent manner and I direct all my just debts to be paid. Secondly, I give and bequeath to my beloved wife Sophia Cashman all my property both real and personal to dispose of at her discretion. I testify whereof I have here unto let my hand and seal this 16th day of June in the year of our Lord 1833. - Martin Cashman (signed by his mark X)

County Court, August Term 1833 - Martin Cashman’s will is proved by the oaths of George Barger and William Wheeler. Executrix is Sophia Cashman.
Source: Breckinridge Kentucky County Court - Book 1, pg. 69 (Thanks to Phil Reyburn for providing a copy)

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Additional Family Information:

John H. Cashman b. 25 Jan 1812 d. 1863 Breckinridge, Kentucky
Married Elizabeth Cart b. 21 Aug. 1807 d. 7 June 1869 m. 14 Dec. 1832 Breckinridge Co.

See http://www.ancestry.com/ “Cashman/Krischman Family Tree” for more information on extended family.

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For the Bibliography of research sources from the Kirschman Family's Journey in America, click on “older posts” located at the bottom right hand side.