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Rev. Thomas Crawford McBride, Sr.

Rev. Thomas Crawford McBride, Sr.

Male 1777 - 1857  (80 years)

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  1. 1.  Rev. Thomas Crawford McBride, Sr.Rev. Thomas Crawford McBride, Sr. was born on 27 Jan 1777 in Clinch River, Virginia (son of Rev James McBride, Sr. and Mary Crawford, (not dau of John)); died on 29 Apr 1857 in Carlton, Yamhill Co, Oregon; was buried in McBride Cem, Carlton, Yamhill Co, Oregon.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Religion: 1801, Roaring River Baptist Church, Overton Co, Tennessee; messenger
    • Residence: 1801, Overton Co, Tennessee
    • Residence: 1811, White Co, Tennessee; tax list
    • Residence: Abt 1814, Missouri; moved to
    • Religion: 1816, Howard Co, Missouri
    • Religion: 1817, Salt Creek Christian Church, Howard Co, Missouri
    • Religion: Sep 1831, Christian Conference for Missouri, Tarbo Grove, Lafayette Co, Missouri
    • Residence: 1847, Oregon; from Missouri
    • Census: 1850, Yamhill Co, Oregon
    • Census: 1850, Yamhill Co, Oregon
    • Will: 23 Feb 1856, Yamhill Co, Oregon
    • Research Notes: 19 Mar 2013; parents

    Notes:

    Thomas Crawford McBride was born during the Revolutionary War near the site of a major battle, Guilford Courthouse. He became a very famous minister of the Disciples of Christ Church or Campbellite Church (Christian Church). There is a website that has much information on him and his two sons (Thomas McBride, Jr. & James McBride) that also became ministers in the same church. The website (compiled by Charles Dailey) is in incredible story of the Christian Church and its members especially in Oregon is as follows:
    http://ncbible.org/nwh/ProMcBrideTC.html After you view Thomas Crawford's information, go back to the Pioneer Index. There you can click on James McBride's information. This website has information about Thomas Crawford McBride's three wives. I believe that he was married to these three women, but I am not sure which children were born to which wife. The information about his mother being a sister to Andrew Jackson's mother is family tradition and should be taken as so. He cites some sources, but I am sure these sources came from information from family members. Those family members were a lot closer to the actual activities, but as of yet no proof has been found. Pat Linton

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    The Stockton Valley Association
    http://www.danielhaston.com/places/churches/bigfork/big-fork-sv-assn.htm

    1806 At Roaring River Meeting House in Overton County, TN
    Caney Fork Baptist Church was newly constituted as of this 1806 meeting. This church changed its name to Big Spring Baptist and later to Town Creek Baptist. It was located in White County, TN.
    Note: John Mulkey, Philip Mulkey, & Thomas McBride were prominent in the early years of the Stockton Association (particularly, John Mulkey who was the association's moderator). They were all three in this 1806 meeting. These men all defected to the "New Light" (Stone-Campbell "Restoration Movement") movement a few years later.

    1808 At Big Spring Meeting House "on the waters of the Caney Fork" in White County, TN
    John Mulkey preached the introductory sermon. (Philip Mulkey and Thomas McBride were also present here in this meeting in White Co.).

    Note: Apparently, in the 1811 meeting, association representatives had been appointed "to look into the standing of Big Spring (of White County, TN), Sinking Creek (of White County, TN), Middle Fork (of Jackson County, TN...where Thomas McBride was or had been the pastor), Brimstone (of Clay County, TN...where Philip Mulkey was the pastor), and Martin's Creek (of Jackson County, TN)" churches. At the time of the 1812 meeting, "With respect to Big Spring, Sinking Creek, and Middle [Fork] churches satisfaction is received..." The report indicated that they doubted that the Martin's Creek Church "has ever been legally constituted and ...we agree to drop her out of our union." "And in consequence of the Brimstone Church being disorderly we agree to drop her from our union and declare that we will be no more accountable for her conduct."

    Big Spring, Sinking Creek, and Middle Fork had all been represented at the 1810 meeting, so the investigation into their "standing" was probably not because of having missed associational meetings (although they could have missed the 1811 meeting, since we have no record of that meeting). Were they all three being examined for possible involvement in the "New Lights" (Stone-Campbell) movement, now being led in this region by John & Philip Mulkey? We do know that Thomas McBride of the Middle Fork Church was influenced by the Mulkeys and soon headed west as a missionary-church planter for this movement. In this meeting, nothing is said of Thomas McBride, although his church was mentioned. Probably, failing to lead his church to follow the views he adopted from the Mulkeys, he left the church. Thus, the Middle Fork Church was cleared of charges of being disorderly. However, for whatever reason, there was no representative from the Middle Fork Church at this 1812 meeting.

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    EARLY TENNESSEE AND KENTUCKY PREACHERS
    by R.L. Roberts
    http://www.mun.ca/rels/restmov/tests/resources/TNKY.htm

    The writer has for a number of years attempted to compile a complete list of preachers active in the Cumberland region before A. Campbell's influence was felt. The list consists of approximately 200 names, all of whom, either directly or indirectly, were influence by Barton W. Stone. Name of Baptist ministers - representing the earliest influence by Campbell in Tennessee - are included, e. g. John Calvin Smith, Jonathan H. Young, Joshua K. Speer, Calvin Curlee.

    #103. McBride, Thomas 1777-18

    ************

    Ansearchin' News
    Vol. 18 1971

    White County Tennessee 1811 Tax List, Polls & Taxable Property

    Pg 110 McBride, Thomas 1 white poll 100 acres Location: Where he lives

    ************

    History of Boone County, Missouri
    http://digital.library.umsystem.edu/cgi/t/text
    Page 1105

    Thos. McBride, Sr., came from Madison county, Kentucky, to this county in 1816. He had three sons, who had nearly attained manhood when they came to the new country. They were named, Jacob, James and Thomas. Old Thomas McBride was the first preacher in Rocky Fork, and was an earnest, zealous one, who test-book was the Bible alone. Of his sons Jacob was a farmer and a justice of the peace for many years; James was a physician;Thomas, Jr., was a school teacher. Altogether the McBride were men of more than average learning and ability. the father and James and Thomas removed to Oregon in an early day, and there the old gentleman lived to see one of his grandsons governor of the State and a congressman. Jacob McBride died in this township, and the family resides in the county, except one member, a daughter, who removed to Oregon.

    Samuel Caldwell came to the township with the McBrides and married a daughter of Thomas, Sr. Caldwell served as constable of the township for fifteen years. He settled on section nine, township fifty, range twelve, where John Philips now resides, and died in 1881, at an advanced age.

    ************

    Errett Gates' The Disciples of Christ: Chapter X (Excerpt)
    http://www.mun.ca/rels/restmov/tests/egates/tdoc/TDOC10.HTM

    Early Growth and Organization

    The state of Missouri lay in the path of emigration to the west and was among the first to receive visits from Christian preachers from Kentucky. Thomas McBride came under the teaching of B.W. Stone in Kentucky, moved to Missouri in 1816, and was the first Christian preacher who crossed the Mississippi River to preach the Bible alone as the basis of Christian union. He preached and established churches in Howard, Boone, Franklin and other adjacent counties lying along the Missouri River. Samuel Rogers was the second Christian preacher to go to Missouri. He made his first journey in 1819 and found many churches already established by McBride. These early Christian churches, together with many Baptist churches, provided congenial soil for the teachings of Alexander Campbell and out of them came the first churches of the Disciples in the state. The reformation was devloped in the early period under the preaching of such men as J.H. Haden, T.M. Allen, M. P. Wills, F. R. Palmer, Absalom Rice, James Love, Jacob Creath, Allen Wright, Jacob and Joseph Coons, Henry Thomas, and Duke Young.

    ************

    Autobiography of Elder Samuel Rogers
    edited by his son, Elder John I. Rogers
    3d edition, Cincinnati
    Standard Publishing Company
    1881

    "After traveling over the burnt prairie for a few hours, I cam e to timber, and, from the direction of the streams, I knew that I was on the waters of the Missouri. I was not long in finding a cabin, where I inquired after Thomas McBride. The inmates knew him, and gave me directions that soon led me to his cabin. He was at home, and was glad to see me. Thomas McBride was a plain, uneducated man, but he had fine sense and a sound judgment. He was the first Christian preacher who had crossed the Mississippi to preach the Bible alone, as the only basis of Christian union. He was a poor man, and led an humble life, but he was rich in faith, and had been battling alone for years against error and superstition. His home was now in the upper end of Howard county. He had recently moved to this place, but he made me welcome and comfortable in his log cabin. I related to him the success of the meeting at Ramsey's Creek, at which he seemed overjoyed. For a long time he had been in Missouri, and he had almost despaired of ever receiving any assistance from any source. When I informed him that Hughes and I had determined to make a lengthy tour through this county the coming spring, his feelings completely overcame him....

    "On the following day, arrangements were made for a meeting to be held at Brother Cyrus Bradley's house. We had a pleasant season, but, being anxious to see other friends and relations before I should return home, I left for Salt Creek, in the lower part of Howard County, where Brother McBride had labored for some time, and had gathered together a small band of disciples.....

    "From this place I went to Franklin county where Brother McBride had lived and had made his mark. I found many here who loved the Bible cause, but they had no leader."

    ************

    RED TOP CEMETERY
    Hallsville, Missouri
    http://www.geocities.com/Heatland/Valley/7991/redtopcm.html

    Located 1 mile west of Hallsville, Missouri on Hwy 124

    RED TOP CHRISTIAN CHURCH - Rocky Fork Township - The Christian Church at Red Top is one of the oldest churches in this part of Missouri. The germ or parent organization was founded October 5, 1822, with the following members: Elders---Wm. Roberts, Thos. W. McBride and Richard Cave. Deacons---Nathan Roberts and Isaac Davis.
    Members---Peter Stice, Richard Wainscott, Richmond T. Roberts, James Roberts, Priscilla Roberts, Sally Davis, Nancy Wainscott, Charlotte Caldwell, Charlotte Stice, Mary Turner. This organization was before the formation of the Christian or Disciples church. The members took for a guide and were ruled by the Bible, and by the Bible alone. They subscribed to no creed or confession of faith. They recognized the elders of the church as pastors, and to them all questions of difference were referred. Afterwards the organization was merged into the Christian church.

    The pastors of the church have been Thos. McBride, Richmond T. Roberts, Joe hayde, Richard Cave, Thos. M. Allen, M. Wills, Wm. White, Thomas Thompson, Elder Davis, Elijah Chrisman, John T. McCune, T.J. Marlow, M.M. Davis, Joel A. Heddington, and others. From the History of Boone County, Missouri.

    ************

    Historical and Biographical Sketches of the Early Churches and Pioneer Preachers of the Christian Church in Missouri by T.P. Haley
    Kansas City, Mo: J.H. Smart & Co., 1888 Chapter III Boone County Page 138

    The first church organized in this county was called "Red Top", a country church, situated some twelve miles north of Columbia. The church was organized on the fifth day of October, 1822, with William Roberts, Thomas W. McBride, and Richard Cave as elders........(there is more about Thomas McBride, but it has related elsewhere in these notes - Pat Linton).

    Page 138 "Bear Creek Church," situated some three or four miles north of Columbia, and now called Antioch, was the next congregation organized. The congregation was organized on the 6th day of June, 1824. Hon. Jesse Boulton, to whom I am indebted for these facts, says: "As a curiosity i give you a copy of the record verbatim: (Page 139) "June 6, 1824, we the undersigned subscribers being called upon to Examine in to the faith and ability of the Brethren living on and near Bear Creek (north of Columbia) desireing to be constituted, we find them in our opinion sound in the faith, and possessing the abilities of keeping in order the house of God. We have therefore pronouced them a church of Jesus Christ, under no other discipline or Rule of faith and Practice but the old and new Testament, professing at the same time to have charity enough as a church to let each other judge of the doctrines contained in the Scriptures for ourselves. Given under our hands who are Elders and have Constituted the undersigned names. Elder present: Thomas McBride, William Roberts, John M. Thomas. "Assigned the day and date above."

    Page 141, Rocheport church was organized in the year 1837, by Thomas M. Allen, kindly furnished me by his son, Colonel W.H. Allen, I find the following (page 142) minute: "October 7th. I went to Rocheport and met Brothers Thomas McBride, James mcBride and Joel Prewitt. Brothers Prewitt, James McBride, myself and Thomas McBride preached today in the order we are named. 8th Second Lord's day. Old Brother McBride and I preached to a very large congregation today. After preaching we planted a Church of Jesus Christ with thirty-four members."

    Page 145 Elder Thomas McBride, whose name has been mentioned so frequently already, came from Madison county, Kentucky, to Boone County, in 1816. He was, I think, from the best information I can gather, the first advocate of primitive Christianity in the State of Missouri. In my childhood no name was more familiar among the disciples than that of Thomas McBride. He preached in Missouri first among the Baptists and was among the first to advocate reform. In addition to his labors in Boone county he is mentioned in connection with the early churches of Callaway, Howard, Monroe, Randolph, Cooper, Saline and Lafayette. He was a "tall, fine looking man of splended appearance." I know nothing of his peculiarities as a preacher, but he must have been a man of rare powers to impress himself as he did upon all the preachers and churches in an early day. He labored in Missouri for about thirty years and then removed with his children to Oregon, where (page 146) he lived to see one of his grandsons Governor of the State and a member of Congress. I have no information concerning his last days.

    ************

    Biographical Sketch of Mrs. Lorretta (Warren) Reavis, Johnson County, Missouri
    From "History of Johnson County, Missouri," by Ewing Cockrell
    http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ifetch2?/u1/data/mo+index+771093015956+F

    Mrs. Loretta (Warren) Reavis, one of Johnson county's most highly esteemed pioneer women, was born in Lafayette county, Missouri in 1826 and when a mere child came to Johnson county with her parents, martin and Nancy (Hubbard) Warren of Virginia........................Frequently a young lady would go to church barefooted, carrying her shoes with her and putting them on when she had reached the church. Amonth pioneer preachers, whom Mrs. Reavis recalls, were Reverend Thomas Mulkey and Reverend Thomas McBride. There were no churches in the early days and religious services were held in the log cabin homes. Sometimes a traveling preacher would visit the settlement and then the settlers would comes miles and miles to hear him preach. The pioneer preacher was a settler just like the rest. He was always welcome and even the poorest settler was glad to share all he had with him.

    *************

    1830 US Census, Howard County, Missouri
    Page 14

    Thomas McBride

    1 male 50 - 60 Thomas b 1777 (53 years)
    1 female 50 - 60 (maybe 2nd wife)

    ************

    History of Lincoln County, Missouri
    http://digital.library.umsystem, edu/cgi/t/text

    CHAPTER XV
    ECCLESIASTICAL

    As mentioned elsewhere the date of organized efforts in behalf of church organization in Lincoln County is closely allied to the early settlement of the country. In these worthy movements pioneer ministers bore an important part.

    Among these pioneer ministers of Lincoln County were Andrew Monroe, David Hubbard............And, commencing with 1830, the record shows the following: 1830, James W. Campbell and Thomas Bowen; 1832, Elder Thomas McBride of the Christian Church........

    ************

    Johnson County, Missouri
    Original Land Grant

    Sec 3 Twp 45 R25
    E1/2 SW1/4 Thomas McBride 30 April 1839

    ************

    1840 US Census, Johnson County, Missouri
    Page 119

    Thos. McBride

    1 male 60-70 Thomas b 1777 (63 years)
    1 female 50-60 maybe Nancy (3rd wife)

    ************

    History of Johnson County, Missouri
    by Ewing Cockrell
    http://digital.library.umsystem.edu/cgi/t/text
    Page 251 &

    Early Churches. -- Like other sections of Johnson county, the cause of religion was given early attention in the pioneer days.

    Mount Zion Church of Christ was the first religious society established in the township. It was organized May 31, 1840, with the following members: Charles Thornton, George Thornton, .......................Among some of the early pastors of this denomination, who filled the pulpit here were, Thomas Mulkey, Dr. Thomas McBride, Duke Young, Elder Price, Allen Wright, etc.

    ************
    Oregon Donation Land Claims
    Volume 1

    #128 McBride, Thomas, Yamhill Co., b 1777 Guilford Co. NC; SC 4 July 1848; m Ann 28 Sept 1851 Yamhill Co. Ore. T. Aff: Thomas W. Wright, Andrew K. (X) Wright, Conflicting boundary between James Fulton & McBride. Adj. c. settle by Jas McBride, son.

    Oregon Donation Land Claims in Oregon
    Volume 5

    128 McBRIDE, Thomas, Yamhill Co., T3S R4W secs. 17, 18, 19, 20, 392.79 acres; b 1776/7 son of James and Mary Crawford McBride, d 1857; m 1st m2nd 9-28-1851 Yamhill Co. O. T. Ann; 1860 Yamhill Co. census shows Ann McBride 64 b Va residing with James mcBride family #11 Yamhill Co. Wills - DAR Collection

    ************
    History of Laclede, Camden, Dallas, Webster, Wright, Texas, Pulaski, Phelps and Dent Counties, Missouri
    http://digital.library.umsystem.edu/cgi/t/text
    Page 687

    The Christian Church has grown steadily ever since the preaching of Elders Thomas McBride and Samuel Rogers in the earliest decades of this century.

    *************

    Past & Present of
    SALINE COUNTY MISSOURI
    by Hon. William Barclay Napton
    CHAPTER XXVIII

    The inhabitants of Saline county were always a religious and devout people, many being the descendants of Scotch Presbyterians. The pioneer preacher was a fighter as well as a preacher, and his services in either vocation were voluntary and without pecuniary compensation.
    Before the settlers had time to erect churches, religious services of the various religious denominations were held in the private residences that were most convenient to the neighborhood, and such a thing as a salaried preacher of the Gospel was unknown. The preacher gained his living as did his fell settler, by daily toil in the fields and clearings, and the aid of his rifle. It was a part of his religion to lend his aid in devotional exercises without any pecuniary compensation whatever.

    Other pioneer proclaims of the Gospel were Ebenezer Rogers, Thomas McBride, Robert King, Caleb Weedin,..........

    ************

    History of Howard and Chariton Counties, Missouri
    http://digital.library.umsystem.edu/cgi/t/text
    Page 342

    CHRISTIAN CHURCH
    (Prepared by Elder James Randall)

    Two of the Christian churches of this county were organized at a very early day -- between 1816 and 1820. They were organized substantially on the same basis as those which were afterwards known as the Disciples of Christ and Christian churches, that originated from the ministry of B.W. Stone, of Kentucky. The ministers who organized and who became the pastors of these churches, were Thomas McBride, and James McBride, his son; he and his son left the county at an early day. Joel H. Hayden came to the county in 1827 or 1828, and labored with the McBrides. He was a man of strong mind and spotless reputation. Joel Prewitt was among the early ministers, coming in 1830, and did much for the cause of Christ.

    Page 343

    Church of Christ was organized by Elder Thomas McBride or Joel H. Hayden, about 1830. Among the original members were Thomas McBride and family, Joel H. Hayden and wife, Joel Prewitt..............

    page 345

    Richland Church -- This is the oldest church of this denomination in the county, having been establish in 1816; Elder Thomas McBride officiating. Sion Bradley and wife, John Thomas and wife and ----Holt and wife were a few of the early members. McBride and son preached for the congregation until 1832.

    *************

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=patlinton2&id=I739

    -----------------------------------------------------------
    Pioneers of South Benton County Oregon
    rootsweb (contact Benton County GenSoc, Dorothy C. Burt, burt.dorothy@yahoo.com)
    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=sbenton&id=I13078

    also:
    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=patlinton2&id=I739

    also:
    http://ncbible.org/nwh/ProMcBrideTC.html

    Churches of Christ & Christian Churches
    in the Pacific Northwest

    He was raised in North Carolina [sic] and Tennessee.
    Preached: TN, KY, MO, Yamhill County, OR
    (it's been proven he never lived in N.C. and he was grown before he went to TN)

    Emigrated: On horseback using the Barlow Road - 1847
    Settled: West of Carlton, OR

    Cousin to President Jackson
    Thomas Crawford McBride, 12 years older than Alexander Campbell, was raised in North Carolina and Tennessee. His mother, Mary Crawford McBride, was a sister to Andrew Jackson's mother.

    McBride's Republican grandson and eventually executor of his estate, U. S. Representative John R. McBride, writing in his memoirs, said:
    My grandfather and all my relatives were democrats. My grandfather was first cousin of Andrew Jackson, and it seemed to him like family treason to be anything but a Jackson democrat; but they were all anti-slavery in their opinions . . . ."


    Thomas married Eliza Womack in 1796, the same year that Tennessee became a state. Since the Womack clan had also migrated from Guilford County, N.C. just like Thomas and his parents [sic] it is probable [sic] that Thomas knew Eliza before arriving in the new country of Tennessee.
    (it's been proven that Thomas never lived in N.C.)

    McBride was a highly respected frontier preacher with ties to Barton W. Stone and reformer John Mulkey of Kentucky. Stone had studied in Dr. David Caldwell's Log College, a school that trained a generation of North Carolina's leaders. It was located in what became Guilford County where Thomas Crawford McBride originated [sic]. It is reasonable to think that Barton Stone and Thomas C. McBride became acquainted while still in North Carolina. [sic]
    (it's been proven that Thomas never lived in N.C.)

    We can locate Thomas McBride as a messenger of the Roaring River Baptist Church in Overton County, Tennessee in 1801. He would have been 24 years old.
    The History of Overton County is on line. Look under History for Thomas McBride's name. Because of its spelling, a search tool may not find it.

    Thomas McBride followed the lead of John Mulkey (influenced by Stone) in leaving the Baptist Movement about 1810. He taught that those who obey the Lord become just Christians and are not part of any denomination. This was years before Alexander Campbell came to that view.

    On to Missouri
    McBride preached in what became White County, Tennessee, then moved his family on to Missouri in 1814 or 1815. His wife Eliza may have died and Thomas remarried before Margaret was born in 1809.

    Records show him establishing the first church in Howard County, Missouri in the fall of 1817. The congregation was first called the Salt Creek Christian Church, but eventually became known as The Red Top Christian Church. It began with 13 charter members from Virginia and Kentucky. It was reputed to be the oldest Christian Church west of the Mississippi River.

    From the Missouri Historical Review and provided by Patsy Scott and the White River Valley Historical Quarterly.
    One record says he was the first preacher (1822) in the Rocky Fork Township. He was a "an earnest, zealous one, whose textbook was the Bible alone." Thomas C. McBride was preaching the plan of the New Testament Church here years before the Disciples Movement came to Missouri.
    The Cemetery at the Rocky Fork Christian Church has its own web page. It has an incorrect initial for T. C. McBride.

    From the History of Boone County, Missouri and provided by Patsy Scott.
    Errett Gates, writing in 1905 says,
    The state of Missouri lay in the path of emigration to the west and was among the first to receive visits from Christian preachers from Kentucky. Thomas McBride came under the teaching of B. W. Stone in Kentucky, moved to Missouri in 1816, and was the first Christian preacher who crossed the Mississippi River to preach the Bible alone as the basis of Christian union. He preached and established churches in Howard, Boone, Franklin and other adjacent counties lying along the Missouri River. Samuel Rogers was the second Christian preacher to go to Missouri. He made his first journey in 1819 and found many churches already established by McBride.

    Mr. Gates original remarks are online.
    We get a clue about the appearance of Thomas McBride from the pen of T. P. Haley writing in Historical and Biographical Sketches of the Early Churches and Pioneer Preachers of the Christian Churches in Missouri. He wrote on page 145:
    He was a tall, fine looking man of splendid appearance. I know nothing of his peculiarities as a preacher, but he must have been a man of rare powers to impress himself as he did upon all the preachers and churches in a early day.

    Researcher Jim Morgan located Thomas Crawford McBride's name at the top of the membership list for the Lone Jack Church of Christ, Lone Jack, Jackson County, Missouri. He became a member in 1840. Actually, it appears that he established the congregation. He was "dismissed" in 1842. This merely means that he left the congregation to work elsewhere.

    McBride appeared that same year at Dover, Missouri. Alfred P. Jones, writing to the Millennial Harbinger reported,
    Lexington, Missouri, August 17,1842.

    The good cause of our Redeemer is still on the onward march in this Western Country. The brethren have just closed a protracted meeting at Dover, ten miles from this place where forty-four made the good confession and were buried with the Lord in baptism. Some five or six of the number were from the Presbyterian ranks, and one from the Methodists, and seven by letter, making in all fifty-one.

    The preaching brethren were father McBride (that old pioneer in the good Cause in Upper Missouri,) and T N. Gaines. . . .
    Millennial Harbinger, 1842, page 476.

    But soon after the wagons of his son James McBride (he and James Lovelady began first church in Platte Co Missouri, Bear Creek, later called Salem) left for Oregon in 1846, Nancy McBride fell sick and died, leaving Thomas with dimming vision and without a mate. Many of his children and grandchildren were gone and the others were making plans to go. He would soon be alone.

    Attracted to Oregon
    The decision was made. He would find his loved ones in Oregon! Approaching 70, T. C. McBride set off on horseback with Andrew and Ellen Wright, their son James and Elisha Bedwell to reach Eden. They rode horseback the 2,000 miles in 41 days, bringing only what they could with two pack horses. They slept on the ground at night without shelter. It was September 13, 1847 when the weary travelers arrived at the James McBride residence west of what was to become Carlton.
    --
    Stephenie Flora lists Elisha Bedwell as among the travelers of 1847.
    The grandchildren - the whole family - were astounded that Thomas Crawford McBride had come west. He had been the first person to preach restored Christianity in Missouri and now he would be among the first few men to preach it in Oregon. Here are the words of John Rodgers McBride as he recalled his grandfather's arrival:

    Early in September after a day of rain, which had mistened the parched earth and cleared the skies of autumn haze, a little party of five on horseback, with one or two pack animals, rode around the point of the lofty hill which fronted our house.

    My father was absent, but the family were at their usual duties. I was engaged under my mother's instructions in digging a small channel that would lead a stream of water that flowed from a spring through a little piece of ground devoted to a vegetable garden.

    We saw that the party were travelers, and that they had dismounted at the house. My mother hurried over the few yards between where we were and the door, and I followed full of curiosity.

    My elder sister had brought seats before we arrived, and there seated quietly was my grandfather, Thos. and two others, both of whom I recognized, and one woman and a little boy about two years old. One of the men was the husband of a cousin of mine, the other a man from the same county in Missouri, and his wife and little boy. Without one word of their having even contemplated the journey, or having started from their Missouri home, they had thus suddenly come upon us.

    My grandfather was then 70 years of age, and his hair was white as winter?s snow. He looked wearied from his long travel of 2,000 miles, and he had ridden for 41 days continuously on horseback, sleeping in his blankets on the ground at night without shelter, to find us.

    The party had left the train at Ft. Hall, on Snake river, in the month of August, and reached our home on the 13th of September. The lady, Mrs. Ellen Wright, had performed the same feat while her husband and herself, seating the little boy on a pillow in front of them, had by turns carried him all that long distance. It was of such stuff that the early pioneer was made.

    When we left Missouri the year before, my father's mother was living, and his brother and sister were domiciled in good homes, with not a suggestion that any of them contemplated any change, much less that which involved the long journey to Oregon. But before they had heard from my father?s experiment they had all been seized with a desire to "go west," and all followed by the next year's train.

    Location of McBride's grave marker:
    Go west from Carlton 2.5 miles
    to McBride Cemetery Road. Turn
    north to Stout (lane) at top of hill.
    Open cattle gate and continue
    to the cemetery.

    My father's mother had died a few months after our departure the year before. My uncle, Caleb Woods, and my father's brother, Dr. Thomas McBride, two of my cousins, by the name of Davis, and their brother-in-law, Elisha Bedwell, were of the party, and the latter had accompanied my grandfather on his horseback journey in advance of the train.

    It is characteristic of all the old frontier people that what they did they did promptly, and so without warning or suspicion of their coming, they had arrived in our midst.
    From Overland to Oregon: Yamhill County, 1846 by John Rodgers McBride. Available in the McMinnville, Oregon Library.

    The grandson just quoted matured to become a U. S. Representative from Oregon. The elder sister referred to later became the wife of Sebastian Adams, the founder of McMinnville College.

    The Lord granted Thomas C. McBride ten more years to preach and farm his 393 acres in Oregon. He married 55 year-old Mrs. Margaret Ann Wright of Virginia in the twilight of life. Following his death in 1857, Ann lived with James and Mahala McBride. This is based on the 1860 census.

    Wright family researcher Charles Chicks reports that Ann married Elijah Barton Davidson in 1864 and died at McMinnville. Most historical accounts list her as Margaret McBride Davidson.

    As You Enter
    Still Preaching at 77

    Jerry Rushford comments on the life of Thomas C. McBride,
    On his 77th birthday, July 25, 1854, Thomas Crawford McBride was preaching in a gospel meeting in Hillsboro with his son and Harrison H. Hendrix. There were four additions to the church. The sight of his venerable father in the pulpit led (James) McBride to observe: "My father has been preaching fifty-nine years (this is the sixtieth). He abandoned all human creeds in 1810 . . . and has been pleading the Bible alone doctrine ever since; and though too blind to read, he still preaches." -- Christians On The Oregon Trail, Second Edition, page 197.

    Three years later his earthly labors were over. The prince of pioneer proclaimers had passed on. Now he could see the Lord that he had extolled for more than 60 years.
    --
    -
    Death of a Preacher Son
    Thomas Crawford McBride had a son also named Thomas Crawford McBride. He had met Martha Ann Brink when his father was preaching at Rock Fort Township. They married in 1835 and came overland in 1847, the same year that Thomas, Sr. left Missouri. Evidence is good that they left for Oregon at the same time. Like his older brother James, young Thomas was a physician as well as a preacher. He and Martha had settled on land several miles directly south of present-day Perrydale in Polk County. The nearest church would have been Bethel, about four miles northeast. But tragedy struck less than a year after reaching Oregon.
    Thomas had been preaching on the east side of the Willamette River and was returning home with a yoke of oxen. Night had fallen before he reached the ferry at Oregon City. When the ferry boat started to move, the oxen were frightened and gored McBride's horse, causing horse and rider to fall into the Willamette River. He drowned leaving Martha with five children and another on the way.
    ---
    Census taker's entry in the 1850 Census.
    H. C.,14, is probably Herbert, named for his
    maternal grandfather, Herbert Brink. (no, it's Henry Clay)
    Lavina, 11, named for her aunt Lavina McBride Davis.
    Elizabeth, 9, named for both grandmothers.
    Nancy, 7, named for her step-grandmother.
    Mary, 5, possibly named for her paternal g-grandmother.
    Thomas, 2, named for his late father and grandfather.
    The 1850 census shows widowed Martha Ann McBride and her children living with her father-in-law, Thomas Crawford McBride, in Yamhill County. That same year, she married John Bird Bounds.

    He brought 10 children to the marriage and Martha Ann brought six. They settled on his farm at Buena Vista.
    A family genealogy shows John Bird Bounds first marriage, but not his second to Martha Ann McBride. The reader may want to read our entry on Buena Vista.

    The McBride farmhouse must have been quiet after Martha's family of seven left. Perhaps that's why he decided to marry Ann Wright the next year.



    Residence:
    Capt William Ridges' Company of Militia
    181 White Co, Tennessee
    acres Location of property
    McBride, Thomas 100 Where he lives
    McBride, Joseph 40 In name of Jesse Wammick
    McBride, John 150
    McBride Andrew 167
    McBride, Isaac

    Religion:
    Records show him establishing the first church in Howard County, Missouri. Lloyd Pelfrey of Moberly, Missouri writes of McBride's work:

    The church was founded in late 1816 with eight members. A building was erected, and it was dedicated on November 22, 1817. The original building was 16' x 24', made with unhewn logs and chinked with mud. It had two chimneys. This is in Howard County, about eight miles south and then west from Fayette, Missouri (where J.W. McGarvey lived after being graduated from Bethany). Alexander Campbell visited in the area and stayed with a Brother Carson, eight miles south of Fayette.
    The congregation was first called the Salt Creek Christian Church, but eventually became known as Ashland Christian Church because of the many ash trees in the area. The building was replaced with a frame structure in 1849.

    http://ncbible.org/nwh/ProMcBrideTC.html

    Religion:
    Records show him establishing the first church in Howard County, Missouri in the fall of 1817. The congregation was first called the Salt Creek Christian Church, but eventually became known as The Red Top Christian Church. It began with 13 charter members from Virginia and Kentucky. It was reputed to be the oldlest Christian Church west of the Mississippi River.


    Religion:
    Christian Messenger: Part 1: (by Ruth E. Browning)

    Christian Conference for Missouri met in September in Tarbo grove, La Fayette County. (Letter from Joel H. Haden, Retireing Valley, Howard Co.). Elders present: Thomas McBride, Duke Young, Zachariah Linville, Sion Bradley, Bryam Lewis, and Joel H. Haden. Unordained: Richmond Roberts, William Burton, James Lovelady. Lovelady was made an elder. Letter mentions that followers of Joseph Smith are settling in Jackson County near the boundary line, perhaps 100 in number, and plan to rebuild the Temple.

    Census:
    1850 Yamhill, Oregon Territory

    218 McBride James 49 1801 Tennessee Camelite minister
    218 McBride Mahale 39 1811 Missouri
    218 McBride Martha 19 1831 "
    218 McBride John 18 1832 "
    218 McBride Alvina 16 1834 "
    218 McBride Louisa 15 1835 "
    218 McBride Lucinda 14 1836 "
    218 McBride Nancy 13 1837 "
    218 McBride Mary 12 1838 "
    218 McBride Emily 9 1841 "
    218 McBride Judith 7 1843 "
    218 McBride Thos 3 1847 "
    218 McBride James 2 1848 OT (Oregon Territory)
    218 McBride Susan 0 1850 "

    219 McBride Thomas 73 1777 " farmer
    219 McBride Martha A 33 1817 North Carolina
    219 McBride H C 14 1836 male Missouri
    219 McBride Lavina 11 1839 "
    219 McBride Elizth 9 1841 "
    219 McBride Nancy 7 1843 "
    219 McBride Mary 5 1845 "
    219 McBride Thomas 2 1848 "

    Census:
    218 McBride James 49 1801 Tennessee Camelite minister
    218 McBride Mahale 39 1811 Missouri
    218 McBride Martha 19 1831 "
    218 McBride John 18 1832 "
    218 McBride Alvina 16 1834 "
    218 McBride Louisa 15 1835 "
    218 McBride Lucinda 14 1836 "
    218 McBride Nancy 13 1837 "
    218 McBride Mary 12 1838 "
    218 McBride Emily 9 1841 "
    218 McBride Judith 7 1843 "
    218 McBride Thos 3 1847 "
    218 McBride James 2 1848 OT (Oregon Territory)
    218 McBride Susan 0 1850 "

    219 McBride Thomas 73 1777 " farmer
    219 McBride Martha A 33 1817 North Carolina
    219 McBride H C 14 1836 male Missouri
    219 McBride Lavina 11 1839 "
    219 McBride Elizth 9 1841 "
    219 McBride Nancy 7 1843 "
    219 McBride Mary 5 1845 "
    219 McBride Thomas 2 1848 "

    Will:
    Will of Thomas Crawford McBride

    In the name of God Amen. I Thomas McBride of Yam Hill County and Territory of Oregon being of sound mind and memory do make ordain and declare this to be my last will and testament.

    First - I give to my wife all the beds and bed clothes she had when we were married and all that she has made since - the Cupboard and its ware together with the cooking stove and all cooking utensils - all the bedsteads and the bureau table and other household furniture and wearing apparel for herself. I also give to my wife a three year old maer which I bought of Frederick Bunn a young cow called Browny - a two year old heifer that come of a cow called Cherry a two year old heifer called Splinter Heels - also all of Browny?s increase - all the hogs that I shall own at my decease.

    Next I give to my son James McBride all the bedding I had when I was married to my present wife.

    I also will and desire that my wife shall have the use of the pasture and homestead together with everything necessary to the free enjoyment of the same so long as she shall remain my widow.

    Next I desire that all my property real and personal not otherwise disposed of be sold at public sale to the highest bidder and the proceeds thereof together with all moneys I may leave at my decease be distributed among my lawful heirs according to the following rule viz Each one to take according to the number of children which he or she may have living at my death & in case the father or mother of such children be not living then such children shall be entitled to the part of such parent & the same shall be divided equally among them. That is to say in explanation of the above my meaning is that my estate to be distributed shall be divided into as many shares as I have grandchildren living at my death and the parent of such grandchildren shall take as many shares that he or she may have children.

    And I hereby constitute James McBride my son the executor of this my last will and testament and in case of his death or failure to act I nominate and appoint John R. McBride executor of the same.

    In witness whereof I have hereunto subscribed my name this the 23rd day of February 1856
    Thomas McBride

    Witness:

    John R. McBride
    Sebastian C. Adams
    http://ncbible.org/nwh/ProMcBrideTCwill.html


    Yamhill County Probate Records
    Letter to Executor Regarding Grandchildren in Missouri

    John R. McBride

    Sir.....Yours the 15th of Nov last came to hand sometime since & it was not until today that I obtained the information you desired & I herewith give it to you,

    Samuel Caldwell, son in law of your gr father had 4 children living on the 1st of May 1857, - all of whom, I believe are still living -

    1. Thomas Caldwell (son of Samuel Caldwell) married Lucinda McBride (daughter of Jacob McBride)
    2. Vinkade Caldwell
    3. Jas R. Caldwell
    the Post Office for all the above persons, is - "Bowers Mill, Jasper Co. MO -
    4. Serinda m. Caldwell, now the wife of Jas. H. Roberts, Hallsville, Boone County, MO is their p.o.

    Jacob McBride had 5 children living in May 1857, all of whom, I believe are still living.
    Viz 1. Lucinda McBride, now Mrs. Caldwell, above named
    2. Joel H. McBride
    3. David M. McBride
    4. Jas. H. McBride
    5. Warren W. McBride
    Hallsville, Boone Co, Mo is their p.o.
    All of the above children are of age

    Sir - Peggy McBride is still living at her old place of abode.

    Bro Saml Caldwell is also living with his children in Jasper County, Mo -
    I trust the above information this day given me, by Bro Richmond Roberts will be satisfactory. I am sorry it has been so long delayed

    2nd page

    Remember me kindly to your father, {James McBride} - I often think of him with a heart full of affection. I hope he reads the "Mil Har" & the "A.C. Review", thru them, he oftens hears of me.
    I suppose you have heard that your mothers Uncle, Sam Miller is dead. Great change have taken place in this Country since your father left it.

    Wishing you health happiness & prosperity, I am truly & sincerely yours

    Respectfully

    T. M. Allen

    ************

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=patlinton2&id=I739


    Research Notes:
    Thomas Crawford McBride of Virginia and Thomas McBride of South Carolina have been confused and thanks to much study, work, research and resources in the part of Glenn Morton, they do seem to be two different people. Attached is a very thorough study of Thomas Crawford.


    Died:
    Obituary
    Thomas Crawford McBride's obituary appeared in the Oregon Argus where it was no doubt written by W. L. Adams, his friend for at least 10 years. The obituary was reprinted in the Millennial Harbinger of 1857, page 599.

    Died, of old age, at his residence in Yamhill county, Oregon, on Wednesday, April 29th, 1857, Thomas Crawford McBride aged eighty years and three months.
    The deceased was born in Virginia in 1777, and emigrated to Oregon from Missouri in 1847. He became a preacher of the gospel in the Baptist church at an early age, in which capacity he labored zealously until his union with the Christian or Disciple church, after which he labored, as a devoted and untiring minister up to a few years before his death, when he was incapacitated for preaching on account of his feebleness.

    During his lifetime he was emphatically of that class of men who make it the great business of life to lay up treasures where neither moth nor rust corrupt, nor thieves break through and steal. His precepts were always enforced by his own example, and his long life was marked by a series of blameless acts that made up a Christian character such as seldom attaches to men in the flesh, and it is doubtful whether he had an enemy living.

    He departed calmly and tranquilly, as an infant gently falls to sleep; and as the sun of his natural life went down in full orbed splendor, the great Sun of Righteousness threw a rainbow of glory over his tomb, on which his dim eye rested, and lighted up with lustre as it read, "There remaineth a rest for the people of God."

    He leaves large circles of friends in Virginia, Tennessee, Missouri, and Oregon, all of whom feel a pang at the news of his departure, but none of whom are warranted in sorrowing as those who have no hope. Oregon Argus.
    - - - - -

    The obituary says that Thomas C. McBride was born in Virginia, but McBride himself stated that he was born in Guilford County, North Carolina when he filed for this Donation Land Claim. The author of the fine obituary was mistaken on that point.*

    http://ncbible.org/nwh/ProMcBrideTC.html
    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=sbenton&id=I13078
    -------
    * ~ss Indeed, the obit is correct, he was born in Virginia. See attached file "James and Mary Crawford McBride" by Glenn Morton for substantiation. Per an email 17 Mar 2013, from Glenn:
    (snip) "the ODL form. It is the only indication of an NC birth and it was signed by who knows who (there are 5 or 6 different signatures on various ODL forms all purporting to be T. C) and written at a time when everyone acknowledges that the old man was too blind to read. To me that is a very slender thread to hang a hat on.
    What I have found is a 1861 autobiography by a Reverend Abner Hill who attests that Thomas Crawford McBride was the brother of Andrew, Isaac and Joseph McBride of White Co., TN. Having just spent a bunch of money getting documents out of Henry and Patrick Counties, I have excellent documentation of Andrew, and Joseph being from Virginia. there are lots of threads connecting them to Patrick County. I have so much information, I don't know how to send it to you."


    Buried:
    Location of McBride's grave marker:
    Go west from Carlton 2.5 miles
    to McBride Cemetery Road. Turn
    north to Stout (lane) at top of hill.
    Open cattle gate and continue
    to the cemetery.


    T. C. McBride's grave marker.
    Placed in October of 1998
    by his spiritual heirs.
    Tammy Lewis located Thomas Crawford McBride's obscure and broken grave stone in the McBride Cemetery west of Carlton, Oregon. A tour group, led by Jerry Rushford and this scribe, had the headstone replaced. The new one is impervious to being damaged by mowing equipment, yet modest in cost and appearance. Thomas McBride was among the first buried in the cemetery that bears his name because it was established in 1857, the year of his death.

    Other relatives without the McBride name are buried there including Lavina Davis, the fourth child of T. C. McBride and Eliza Womack.

    Those turning off of McBride Cemetery Road to drive back to the cemetery proper should notice the narrow gauge rail that forms the gate. It has a 2.5 inch working surface and is 4.25 inches from the working surface to the bottom where a standard rail may be six inches to the ground with a three inch working surface. The first trains in the area were of the narrow-gauge variety. The rails were 30 inches apart rather than the standard 56 1/2 inches. Jim Schmauder of Dayton says he can remember the gate being constructed by the Oberg brothers in the late 1960s.

    Thomas married Eliza Womack in 1796 in Tennessee. Eliza was born in 1780 in of, Gilford Co, North Carolina; died before 1809. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Married:
    Thomas married Eliza Womack in 1796, the same year that Tennessee became a state. Since the Womack clan had also migrated from Guilford County, N.C. just like Thomas and his parents, it is probable that Thomas knew Eliza before arriving in the new country of Tennessee.
    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=sbenton&id=I13078

    Children:
    1. Jacob McBride was born in 1798 in White Co, Tennessee; died before 18 Mar 1842 in Boone Co, Missouri.
    2. Charlotte McBride was born in 1796 in Kentucky; died in 1839 in Rocky Ford, Boone Co, Missouri.
    3. Dr/Rev James A. McBride was born on 9 Feb 1802 in Nashville, Davidson Co, Tennessee; died on 18 Dec 1875 in St. Helens, Columbia, Oregon.
    4. Lavina McBride was born on 15 Jul 1804 in Tennessee; died on 9 Sep 1860 in Oregon City, Oregon.
    5. Dr. Thomas Crawford McBride, Jr. was born in 1806 in White Co, Tennessee; died on 23 Jun 1848 in Willamette River, Oregon City, Oregon.

    Thomas married Mrs. Nancy (..) McBride about 1808 in Tennessee. Nancy was born about 1780; died before 1846 in Tennessee. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Margaret McBride was born on 27 May 1809 in Tennessee; died on 27 Jan 1871 in Buena Vista, Polk Co, Oregon.

    Thomas married Ann Wright about 1851 in Yamhill Co, Oregon. Ann was born about 1800; died after 1850 in of, Oregon. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Rev James McBride, Sr. was born in 1726 in Wigtown, Wigtownshire, Scotland (son of (..) McBride and (Mrs.) McBride); died after 10 Feb 1812 in White Co, Tennessee.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Immigration: 1732, Virginia
    • Residence: 1754, Fort Necessity, Pennsylvania
    • Other-Begin: 1755, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Military: 1755, Braddocks Defeat, French and Indian War, Pennsylvania
    • Residence: 1759, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Military: 1760, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Other-Begin: 26 Mar 1764, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Other-Begin: 17 May 1764, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Immigration: 1772, "Lord Dundee," Co Antrim, Ulster, Ireland ; xx
    • Military: 1774, Lord Dunsmore War, Virginia
    • Other-Begin: 8 Jun 1775, Botetourt Co, Virginia
    • Military: Between 1776 and 1778, Virginia
    • Residence: 1779, Henry Co, Virginia
    • Residence: 1782, Henry Co, Virginia
    • Property: 1785, Patrick Co, Virginia; 250 acres
    • Other-Begin: 6 Aug 1793, Patrick Co, Virginia
    • Other-Begin: 12 Nov 1793, Patrick Co, Virginia
    • Property: 28 Aug 1799, Patrick Co, Virginia; sells 150 acres
    • Other-Begin: 1802, Patrick Co, Virginia
    • Other-Begin: 27 Jul 1802, Patrick Co, Virginia
    • Other-Begin: 10 Feb 1812, White Co, Tennessee
    • Research Notes: 19 Mar 2013

    Notes:

    Extensive study of Glenn Morton found that James never lived in the Carolinas.

    email from Glenn 18 Mar 2013:
    documented history of the Patrick Co. VA James McBride. I know this is the correct one because 1. his signature is the same on the 1793 wedding bond as it is on the 1802 wedding bond of Joseph McBride and Elizabeth Brammer, who moved to White Co., TN and are attested by Abner Hill to be a brother of Thomas Crawford McBride. There are no Brammers in Guildford NC, but there were lots of them in Patrick Co. at that time. I have searched the records for Brammers in NC.

    Note below that at no time did James live in NC or SC. I have an 1840 interview by the son of the William McBride mentioned above who died at Blue Licks which speaks of his Uncle James who was the guy who carved his name in a tree in Kentucky in 1754. That interview lists correctly where James lived in VA. James was a neighbor to John Colyer on Buffalo Creek, which is what the 1840 interview says.



    Immigration:
    As related by an obit of Morton Lewis McBride, son of James A. McBride, where it states "He cmes of Scotch and English ancestry, his paternal ancestors coming to Virginia in 1732. Of the four brothers that came over at that time three were killed in the French and Indian war."
    (clipping supplied by Glenn Morton)

    Residence:
    At Ft. Necessity, PA 1754 Jun Age: 29

    Name found in records of George Washington. 1840 interview with his nephew, William McBride, puts him in that part of the world in 1754-1755 (Glenn Morton)

    Other-Begin:
    Delinquent Augusta Co. Taxes GRM: He was in the wilderness at this time per the 1840 interview
    1755 Age: 30
    Augusta Co., Virginia
    Chronicles of Scotch-Irish Settlement, Vol. 2. p. 418





    Military:
    From T. J. McBride History of McBrides 1895

    Residence:
    1759 21 Sep Age: 34
    Augusta Co., Virginia
    witness to sale to John Colyer of 44 acres on Colyer's Creek of Beffelow John Davis was also a signatory as Witness.
    source: Chronicles of Scotch-Irish Settlement Vol 3, p. 359


    Military:
    Skipped out on Military Obligation; 1760 Age: 35
    Augusta Co., VA
    1760 Fled a debt to John Collier (Colyer?) estate signed up for 2nd VA regiment; got 10 pounds security then fled. source Virginia's Colonial Soldiers. p. 198

    Other-Begin:
    lawsuit: Augusta Co., VA
    Joshua Mathews &c vs. James McBride Abates by death of plaintiff Chronicles of Scotch-Irish Immigration, vol. 1, p. 113


    Other-Begin:
    Samuel Davis vs James McBride, Writ, 17th May 1764. Defendant, a soldier Chronicles of the Scotch-Irish settlement in Virginia Vol. 1, p. 332


    Military:
    Name on Capt. Buford's Va volunteers Virginia's Colonial Soldiers, p. 153


    Other-Begin:
    Petition of Cecelia Collier, executrix of the will of John Collier, dec. James McBride enlisted as a soldier in the 2nd Virginia Regiment in 1760 under Col. Byrd and received bounty of 10.0.0 and afterwards deserted.


    Military:
    With the 5th VA regiment. served as Private promoted to Sergeant. Was at Fort Ticonderoga


    Residence:
    For first time found on Henry Co. Tax list 1779 Age: 54
    Henry Co., VA Precursor to Patrick Co.


    Residence:
    James is found on the Tax lists and since we know his sons were in Patrick Co, formed from Henry in 1797, this is likely "my" (Glenn Morton) James McBride


    Property:
    Patrick Co., VA bought 250 acres of land from Patitiah Shelton.

    Other-Begin:
    Signed Marriage Bond for Maggie McBride and Ezekiel McPeak


    Other-Begin:
    on a jury, Isom vs Poteet

    Property:
    sells 150 acres to Samuel Harris

    Other-Begin:
    signed wedding bond of his brother Joseph McBride and Elizabeth Brammer.


    Other-Begin:
    Signs Marriage bond for Joseph C. McBride and Elizabeth Brammer 27 Jul 1802 Age: 77
    Patrick Co., VA
    This is the Joseph who moved to White Co., TN and was brother to Thomas Crawford McBride.


    Other-Begin:
    Witnessed land sale of 145 acres from his son John McBride to Roland Lee. (Glenn Morton)


    Research Notes:
    Extensive study of Glenn Morton found that James never lived in the Carolinas as has been recorded elsewhere.

    email from Glenn 18 Mar 2013:
    documented history of the Patrick Co. VA James McBride. I know this is the correct one because 1. his signature is the same on the 1793 wedding bond as it is on the 1802 wedding bond of Joseph McBride and Elizabeth Brammer, who moved to White Co., TN and are attested by Abner Hill to be a brother of Thomas Crawford McBride. There are no Brammers in Guildford NC, but there were lots of them in Patrick Co. at that time. I have searched the records for Brammers in NC.

    Note below that at no time did James live in NC or SC. I have an 1840 interview by the son of the William McBride mentioned above who died at Blue Licks which speaks of his Uncle James who was the guy who carved his name in a tree in Kentucky in 1754. That interview lists correctly where James lived in VA. James was a neighbor to John Colyer on Buffalo Creek, which is what the 1840 interview says.

    Died:
    From: Glenn
    To: lumoto@aol.com
    Sent: Saturday, November 02, 2013 12:49 PM
    Subject: James McBride died in White co., TN

    I finally found a date for a land sale (I have a partial copy of the sale lacking the date) of 145 acres from John McBride to Roland Lee, witnessed by James McBride Sr. The guy who gave it to me didn't copy the date and told me it was from Virginia in the 1790s. Roland Lee was there in the 1790s along with James and John, his son so that seemed reasonable. But it was wrong.

    I just proved that the sale took place in White Co., TN where the McBride brothers and Roland had moved to. The signature suddenly took on significance. It was witnessed by James McBride Snr. meaning, he had a son named James, and that he was alive on Feb 10, 1812 which then means his birth was probably 1726 per Thomas Jefferson McBride's statement that he was 86 when he died.

    James 1726 doesn't show up in the White county tax records because old men without land ownership didn't pay taxes back then. The deed is a courthouse copy, handwritten so the signatures are in the script of the copyist.

    I know where James Jr was. He appears in 1801 on the Patrick county land records 3 miles from where the other McBrides lived (a short walk back in that day and age. He stayed on the tax list until 1829. I believe I know (can't prove) 3 children and maybe one grandkid.

    James married Mary Crawford, (not dau of John) in 1757 in Virginia. Mary was born about 1740 in Lancaster Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1790. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mary Crawford, (not dau of John) was born about 1740 in Lancaster Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1790.

    Notes:

    It is family tradition that James [Alexander} McBride married Mary Crawford who was supposed to be a sister to the mother of President Andrew Jackson. This has not been proven, even though it is recorded in many books.

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=patlinton2&id=I1432

    note by ss: First, James does not appear as Alexander anywhere.
    (per Wikipedia) Andrew Jackson's mother was Elizabeth Hutchinson. She and Andrew's father (Andrew Sr.) emigrated from Ireland 2 yrs before Andrew Jr was born in 1767, bringing with them 2 sons, Hugh b 1763 & Robert b 1764.
    A rumor of Jackson having "colored blood", meaning having "Negro" ancestry,[8] was unproven. He referred to a charge that his "Mother ... [was] held to public scorn as a prostitute who intermarried with a Negro, and [that his] ... eldest brother [was] sold as a slave in Carolina.

    She was widowed 3 wks before Andrew was born. During Rev War, Jackson and his brother were captured. She secured their release and then volunteered to nurse prisoners of war on board two ships in Charleston harbor where there had been an outbreak of cholera. She died of the disease in Nov 1781 and buried in an unmarked grave. Andrew Jackson was 14.

    If Mary Crawford were her sister, why wouldn't her name be Hutchinson?


    -------
    His mother, Mary Crawford McBride, was a sister to Andrew Jackson's mother. McBride's Republican grandson and eventually executor of his estate, U. S. Representative John R. McBride, writing in his memoirs, said:

    My grandfather and all my relatives were democrats. My grandfather was first cousin of Andrew Jackson, and it seemed to him like family treason to be anything but a Jackson democrat; but they were all anti-slavery in their opinions . . . ."
    John R. McBride in Overland to Oregon: Yamhill County, page 73.
    For additional documentation on this disputed point, see History of the Pacific Northwest: Oregon and Washington, by Elwood Evans. 2 volumes [ Portland, OR: North Pacific History Co., 1889], 2:445-447).

    http://www.usgennet.org/usa/or/county/union1/1889vol2/volumeIIpage431-450.htm
    Search on the page for "Crawford"

    http://ncbible.org/nwh/ProMcBrideTC.html

    -----------------
    From: Glenn
    To: 'lumoto1'
    Sent: Saturday, December 14, 2013 8:54 AM
    Subject: RE: Are you still there?
    (snip)

    Mary Crawford is James McBride's wife mentioned on your page above. As with James, I have found documents that cast doubt on the widely held view that she is the sister of Andrew Jackson's mother. Your question on your web site goes to the heart of this issue: If Mary Crawford were her sister, why wouldn't her name be Hutchinson?

    I do beleive I know who she is but I have proven whom she isn't. She isn't the daughter of John Crawford of Lancaster and Mary McConnell. That belief springs from the work of Nellie King Daubenspeck. She missed finding an interview in the Draper manuscripts that disproves any connection between John Crawford and the Waxhaws.

    The attached picture is part of the original. Here is the transcript of it. the main point is that John's daughter,Mary Crawford died of Smallpox about 1763

    "Ponteack's war was breakingout shortly after the return of Arthur Crawford. He was commissioned a Captain of a ranging company and the people had great expectations from his services but in this they were disappointed for shortly afterwards he caught the small pocks and died together with his sister Mary."

    Mary couldn't have married James Crawford. Col. John Crawford of Lancaster had no son named James. His widow after remarriage, had a son named James McKinney.

    That family is a dead end. A century of genealogists have been misled by that mistake, including me.

    So who is Mary Crawford? I believe she is the sister of James Crawford of Waxhaws, uncle to Andrew Jackson. James Crawford (Crofford--spelled exactly as Thomas Jefferson McBride spelled it in his History of his family), moved from Paxtang PA to the Waxhaws about 1760. He was a wealthy man and I believe the shame of a daughter who ran off with the cobbler caused him to move to South Carolina. Back then, such events could literally destroy a noble family (I have documentation of this). That maintains the truth of the family tradition that they are related to Andrew Jackson, via marriage not blood, but blood was an impossibility anyway. Andrew Jackson's mother was a Hutchinson, not a Crawford.

    Notes:

    from Glenn Morton:
    From my Great Grandfather's manuscript held at the University of Wisconsin

    Now sometime about the close of this war, so the story runs, it was the custom of the country then to hire a shoemaker to come to your home and make the shoes for the whole family. There was in that neighborhood a rich old planter by the name of Crofford, who hired James McBride, Sr. to make shoes for the entire family. I never learned how many children there were, but anyway he had a daughter about eighteen years of age at that time, so it turned out that while James was making the shoes for the family he fell in love with the girl and the girl with him, and that by the time the shoemaker was ready for his money she was ready to go with him. Now, the young couple knew it would not do to let the old folks know, because the Croffords were a wealthy family and would not consent to the marriage, so they planned that when he left she would meet him at a certain place that evening. So James took his pony bob and his blankets, his old trusty gun with plenty of ammunition, his stew kettle in which he stowed his grub. This stew kettle he used to cook with, and went to the place appointed. And the young lady true to her promise met him there, so she rode the pony bob and her lover walked by her side to lead and guide the pony, and so they traveled all night to the Southwest. And you must remember that one hundred forty years ago Southwestern Virginia was a wilderness, so that by daylight the next day they were way out in the wilds of Western Virginia. Their departure was taken so slyly that that the Crofford family could find no trace of them, so they continued their journey to the southwest part of Virginia to the Clynch River Country, and there they made their home, and this young lady who was my great-grand-mother on my father's side lived away from her people for there was bad blood between the Croffords and James McBride, Sr. but when the oldest son, William McBride, was sixteen years of age he went back to visit his mother's people and was welcomed by them. Now I want to say that to this woman there were ten sons born. The oldest one was named William. I can not now recollect all of the named but I have heard Father speak of his uncle Joseph, Andrew, John, and so on.

    William is my ancestor, but he is not the one of Botetourt Co.

    Married:
    He was single at Braddock's defeat. This marriage date is supported by Thomas Jefferson McBride's History of McBrides. He says she was 18 when she eloped with him. She was nobility, he was a cobbler/gun smith

    Children:
    1. William McBride was born in 1758 in Virginia; died about 1817 in Campbell Co, Tennessee.
    2. Daniel McBride, (son?) was born in 1760 in Henry Co, Virginia; died after 1770.
    3. James McBride, Jr. was born about 1765 in Virginia; died after 1829 in Patrick Co, Virginia.
    4. Isaac McBride was born about 1770 in Patrick Co, Virginia; died after 1811 in of, White Co, Tennessee.
    5. John McBride was born in 1770 in Virginia; died after 1812 in of, White Co, Tennessee.
    6. Maggie McBride was born about 1773; died after 1775.
    7. 1. Rev. Thomas Crawford McBride, Sr. was born on 27 Jan 1777 in Clinch River, Virginia; died on 29 Apr 1857 in Carlton, Yamhill Co, Oregon; was buried in McBride Cem, Carlton, Yamhill Co, Oregon.
    8. Andrew McBride was born in 1779 in Patrick Co, Virginia; died in 1853 in Cherry Creek, White Co, Tennessee.
    9. Joseph Crawford McBride was born in 1780 in Botetourt Co, Virginia; died in 1818 in White Co, Tennessee.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  (..) McBride was born about 1687 in Wigton, Galloway, Scotland; died about 1739.

    Notes:

    as posted in Ancestry by Glenn Morton:
    Per book on Kansas History, said of A.P. McBride:
    "He is of Scotch, Irish and English lineage, and his first American forefathers, settled in Old Virginia as early as 1730. From Virginia the family went west to Tennessee. There is a record that James McBride accompanied by four brothers left the highlands of Scotland in 1730 and settled in the colony of Virginia. The names of the brothers were William, Jaseth, John and Andrew. All these brothers fought in the French and Indian wars in the notable campaign led by Braddock through the western wilderness of Pennsylvania. Three of them were killed at Braddock's field. William and James were left to carry on the family lineage. William McBride subsequently lost his life at the hands of an Indian. Frost's "History of Kentucky" records that the name of James McBride was found cut in the bark of a beech tree with the accompanying date of 1755. Evidently the owner of the name carved it in that tree after settling in the state. Thus he was identified with the earliest westward movement about the time Daniel Boone located in the Kentucky country. James McBride married Miss Crawford, who was descended from the English nobility. Their son, William, married a Miss Lee,..."

    (..) married (Mrs.) McBride about 1720 in Scotland. (Mrs.) was born about 1705 in of, Ireland; died after 1740 in of, Atrim, Ireland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  (Mrs.) McBride was born about 1705 in of, Ireland; died after 1740 in of, Atrim, Ireland.
    Children:
    1. William McBride was born in 1719 in Scotland; died on 9 Jul 1755 in Braddock's Field, Pennsylvania.
    2. Andrew McBride was born about 1721 in Scotland; died on 9 Jul 1755 in Braddock's Field, Pennsylvania.
    3. John McBride was born about 1722 in Scotland; died on 9 Jul 1755 in Braddock's Field, Pennsylvania.
    4. Joseph McBride was born about 1724 in Scotland; died on 9 Jul 1755 in Braddock's Field, Pennsylvania.
    5. 2. Rev James McBride, Sr. was born in 1726 in Wigtown, Wigtownshire, Scotland; died after 10 Feb 1812 in White Co, Tennessee.