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Thomas Caldwell Finley

Male 1757 - 1831  (74 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Thomas Caldwell Finley was born on 11 Feb 1757 in Fishersville, Tinkling Spring, Augusta Co, Virginia (son of John (of Beverley Manor) Finley and Mary Caldwell); died on 12 Dec 1831 in Cedar Springs, Abbeville Co, South Carolina; was buried in Cedar Springs A.R.P. Church Cem, Cedar Springs, Abbeville Co, South Carolina.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Birth: 11 Feb 1749, Tinkling Springs, Augusta Co, Virginia

    Thomas married Elizabeth Ann Austin in 1769 in North Carolina. Elizabeth was born in 1771 in St. James Northam, Goochland Co, Virginia; died in 1821 in North Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Howard Finley was born in 1767 in Mecklenburg Co, North Carolina; died on 5 Sep 1840 in Hopkins Co, Kentucky.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John (of Beverley Manor) Finley was born about 1715 in Ireland or Scotland (son of (..) Finley); died before 19 Aug 1782 in Augusta Co, Virginia; was buried in Tinkling Spring Presbyterian Church Cem, Fisherville, Augusta Co, Virginia.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1738, Beverley Manor, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Residence: Bef 1738, Pennsylvania
    • Religion: 14 Aug 1741, Tinkling Spring Meeting House, Beverley Manor, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Residence: 30 Oct 1745, Augusta Co, Virginia; Augusta co. court
    • Property: 1746, South River, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Property: Mar 1765, Fishersville, Tinkling Spring, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Religion: Oct 1765, Fishersville, Tinkling Spring, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Residence: Aft 1765, Prince William Co, Virginia
    • Residence: Abt 1772, Reed Creek, Montgomery Co (now Wythe Co), Virginia
    • Other-Begin: 1779, Reed Creek, Montgomery Co (now Wythe Co), Virginia
    • Other-Begin: 19 Aug 1782, Montgomery Co, Virginia
    • Census: 1787, Augusta Co, Virgina; this John?

    Notes:

    John Finley, Elder at Tinkling Spring

    John Finley (? - 1782) was, most likely, a first generation Scotch-Irish who arrived in America as a child in the early part of the eighteenth century.

    The earliest records that could be found for him were in Beverley Manor, Augusta County, Virginia, in 1738. He had come to Virginia from Pennsylvania with his two brothers, William and Robert, just a few years after the movement of Scotch-Irish to this area was started by John Lewis. While we do not have a date of birth for him, we do know that he had five children born between 1740 and 1749 and an elder son born before 1740. From this one would assume that he was a fairly young man when he settled in Beverley Manor, born probably not later than 1710.

    His first wife was a daughter of the Reverend John Thomson, her given name unknown. John took an active role in establishing Tinkling Spring Meeting House, a Presbyterian congregation for the Scotch-Irish settlement in and around Beverley Manor. In the first action recorded, John Finley was appointed one of five commissioners charged with purchasing property on which to build their meeting house and collecting money to pay a minister. His brother, William, was one of the signers of this act, dated "August ye 14th 1741."

    However, as early as 1737, the people of Beverley Manor had petitioned the Donegal Presbytery to establish a meeting house. As a result a Christian Society called "The Triple Forks of the Shenando Congregation," was formed.

    Interestingly, their first request was for the services of Reverend John Thomson:

    The Christian Societies in the back part of Virginia on September 5, 1739, united in presenting a supplication to the Presbytery of Donegal for the ministerial services of Rev. John Thomson, Chestnut Level pastor, as an "Itinerant Preacher to Virginia."

    However, the Donegal Presbytery refused Thomson's petition to release him from Chestnut Level, where he was stationed at that time, and the Reverend John Craig was assigned in his place.

    A site to build the first log structure was selected about five miles southwest of where the Finleys were living:

    A cool spring of water issuing from beneath a rock, gathering into a pool from which man lives, overflowing into a stream by which the plains are made alive is a delightful work of nature.

    The earliest pioneers in the Valley of Virginia found a bold spring, whose emerging waters made a musical sound upon the cavernous rocks, and they called it the tinkling spring. The church, located near this spring and named for it, is like "a spring of water willing up to eternal life" for multitudes who have passed this way.

    The first sanctuary was twenty-four by fifty feet, with a simple interior.

    "The floor was the ground over which the sanctuary was constructed. The pews were backless hand-made benches, probably small logs split with the smooth-hewn surface up and supported by wooden legs driven into auger holes. . .[and it was] without heating facilities."

    The Tinkling Spring Commissioners posted their first notice for payment on the log building on 12 November 1744, calling for twelve shillings per family.

    The congregation was divided into three quarters, with John Finley heading one quarter. This was an administrative device for organizing and collecting money 66rom the parishioners. John's brothers, William and Robert, were both listed as members of his quarter at this time.

    Those must have been busy years in the settlement of Augusta County.

    Estimated population of the territory, authorized as Augusta County, was estimated at 2500 in 1742, including about 500 in the bounds of the

    Tinkling Spring Congregation. The first court of law was established in late 1745 and John Finley [Finla in the records] was among those who took the oath of office on 30 October that year. The Augusta County Court was located at "Beverley's Mill Place," now Staunton, contrary to advice of local citizens who were ordered to view the land offered by William Beverley. Prior to that time, Augusta County citizens were served through the Orange County Court and John Finley had been a justice there as well.

    An early road order showed that the Finleys operated a mill, "A Road be cleared from Finley's Mill to the Tinkling spring and thence to McCords Mill That John Finley and Archibald Stewart, John Christy and Robert Cunningham oversee the Same." John and his family had been living on property near South River adjacent to the property he bought in 1746, 892 acres purchased from George Robinson, directly on South River. By then John and his wife had at least two children and brother William had at least three. Presumably the three brothers were living close together. Four years after the purchase of the Robinson property, formal deeds were drawn up in which John split his property into equal thirds and sold two of them to his brothers, William and Robert.

    In 1748 John was made an elder of Tinkling Spring, a position he held until about 1764. Between 1740 and 1749, the only years for which Tinkling Spring baptismal records are available, John and his wife had at least four, and possibly five, children; Elisabeth, William, James, George, and possibly another James (christened 26 March 1749). These are the children listed by Wilson as belonging to one of the two John Finley families in the area (the other being the John Finley family on Middle River). However, John's first wife died prior to 22 May 1750 when he divided his 892 acres and deeded two portions to his brothers. At that time, John's wife was named Mary, and while we do not know the given name of his first wife, we do know it was not Mary, since the Reverend John Thomson had another daughter named Mary who was living at that time.

    Son George was baptized on 4 January 1748 by his grandfather, Reverend John Thomson. One might speculate that Reverend Thomson may have made the trip from Prince Edward County to Augusta County to baptize the last child of this daughter.

    John's second wife was Mary Caldwell, whose cousin Martha Caldwell was the mother of John Caldwell Calhoun. What is known about the Caldwells is discussed in the previous chapter.

    The people of Augusta County lived in relative harmony until the beginning of the French and Indian War in 1755. Augusta County men were then called upon to strengthen the lines at the frontier, but were reluctant to leave their families without protection against the Indians. When George Washington made a tour of inspection in 1756, in and around Staunton, Augusta County, his evaluation was that, "the militia are under such bad order and discipline, that they will go and come when and where they please, without regarding time, their officers, or the safety of inhabitants, but consulting solely their own inclinations."

    Through all this John Finley, as a representative of Tinkling Spring, continued actively in the cause of the church, attending special meetings of the presbytery at Rockfish Meeting House beyond the Blue Ridge in 1759 and in Prince Edward County in 1760. At the next meeting of the presbytery, held at Tinkling Spring on 1 April 1761, the Reverend Richard Sankey of Buffalo, in Prince Edward County, son-in-law of Reverend John Thomson, was "continued" as moderator of the group. Tinkling Spring continued to be a favored meeting place and the Reverend John Craig also often served as the moderator. However, problems mounted after the end of the French and Indian War in 1763. Craig's original mission included serving the Stone House just north of Beverly Manor, as well asTinkling Spring, with the understanding that he would become a full time pastor for whichever could first afford his services. At the spring meeting held 5 May 1763 at Tinkling Spring, the Stone Meeting House asked for a separati on from Tinkling Spring, with a decision deferred until the next meeting.

    At the fall meeting of the presbytery in Cumberland County, 3 October 1764, the first item of business, following "Suplications for Supplies," was that:

    Mr Craig is dismissed from the Tinkling Spring, and sustains the pastoral relation as to the Congregation of Stone meeting House only.The elder representing Tinkling Spring at this meeting was John Finley.

    He put in a request for a supply assignment at Tinkling Spring but none was made except, ". . .ministers in Augusta County, are left to their own discretion, in supplying." . . . Mr. Craig preached his farewell sermon at Tinkling Spring in November 1764.

    Wilson, in discussing post war problems of the French and Indian War, summarized the situation succinctly:

    Tinkling Spring people, with Rev. John Craig as their pastor, pioneered in the practice of religious freedom in the Colony of Virginia . . .

    Her men, though reluctant in aggression, were invaluable in defense against Indian cruelty. They were among the stalwart leaders that turned the tide in the frontier phase of the French-British struggle out of which grew the short- lived English rule over America. Tinkling Spring's first quarter of a century of service left her a changed and weakened meeting house group.

    Alexander Breckenridge, James Patton, John Preston, Archibald Stuart and John Lewis were dead by this time; John Finley, an active elder, disappears from the record, probably transferring his efforts to Brown's Meeting House; and families now removed entirely, or in part, were the Breckenridges, Lewises, Prestons, Campbells, Bells, Thompsons and others.

    Wilson, who published his book in 1954, probably made the same assumptions that earlier Finley researchers made and did not realize there were two distinct contemporary John Finleys in the area. The John Finley who showed up in the records of Brown's Meeting House was the John Finley who lived on South River.

    One can imagine the feelings of dismay which probably overcame John after devoting a good twenty-five years of his life to the building of Tinkling Spring. He sold his remaining interest in the Robinson property, 297 acres, to his brother William in March 1765. It is not surprising that he chose to go to Prince Edward County. This was another Scotch-Irish Presbyterian settlement adjacent to that developed by John Caldwell and the Reverend John Thomson contributed to the Buffalo settlement in Prince Edward County for a while in the late 1740s. John Finley was related by marriage to both the Thomsons and the Caldwells, and while neither were living at the time, his first wife's brother-in-law, Reverend Richard Sankey, was still actively engaged in church work there. In fact, his daughter, Elisabeth, had been living with the Sankeys before John made the move and until her marriage in January of 1764. John purchased 400 acres on Vaughan's Creek on 15 June 1765 from Jacob and Honour Garrett, and his son William bought 430 acres on Vaughan's Creek from John Caldwell on 19 August 1765. Just where this John Caldwell fits into the family in unknown, but he was most likely related to John Finley's second wife, Mary Caldwell.

    John and his family lived in Prince Edward County for only about seven years and then moved on to Reed Creek area in Montgomery County (now Wythe), Virginia. It is unknown what prompted this move, but again he was moving into territory where other family and friends had located. There were two James Finleys already living there and it is strongly suspected that the elder James was a younger brother of John. Reverend Thomson's oldest daughter, Sarah, was living there with her second husband, William Sayers, who was also active in the affairs of the local Presbyterian Church at Reed Creek.

    George Breckenridge, son of Alexander, who had also been one of the original commissioners of Tinkling Spring, was nearby. John settled on a 327 acre parcel on Sally Run, waters of Reed Creek, which he bought from John McFarland in November 1773. Six years later, John and "Meary", his wife, drew up articles of agreement giving their property to sons, David and Samuel, in exchange for life care. John died sometime prior to 19 August 1782, when the court ordered a deposition be taken of Mary to testify the document they drew up in 1773 was done according to his wishes.

    All of the children of John Finley by either marriage have most likely not been identified.
    Carmen Finley
    http://www.joepayne.org/finley2.html


    Religion:
    John took an active role in establishing Tinkling Spring Meeting House, a Presbyterian congregation for the Scotch-Irish settlement in and around Beverley Manor.
    A site to build the first log structure was selected about five miles southwest of where the Finleys were living.



    Property:
    John and his family had been living on property near South River adjacent to the property he bought in 1746, 892 acres purchased from George Robinson, directly on South River. By then John and his wife had at least two children and brother William had at least three. Presumably the three brothers were living close together. Four years after the purchase of the Robinson property, formal deeds were drawn up in which John split his property into equal thirds and sold two of them to his brothers, William and Robert.


    Property:
    . He sold his remaining interest in the Robinson property, 297 acres, to his brother William in March 1765.

    Religion:
    At the fall meeting of the presbytery in Cumberland County, 3 October 1764, the first item of business, following "Suplications for Supplies," was that:

    Mr Craig is dismissed from the Tinkling Spring, and sustains the pastoral relation as to the Congregation of Stone meeting House only.The elder representing Tinkling Spring at this meeting was John Finley.

    He put in a request for a supply assignment at Tinkling Spring but none was made except, ". . .ministers in Augusta County, are left to their own discretion, in supplying." . . . Mr. Craig preached his farewell sermon at Tinkling Spring in November 1764.
    (snip)

    Alexander Breckenridge, James Patton, John Preston, Archibald Stuart and John Lewis were dead by this time; John Finley, an active elder, disappears from the record, probably transferring his efforts to Brown's Meeting House; and families now removed entirely, or in part, were the Breckenridges, Lewises, Prestons, Campbells, Bells, Thompsons and others.



    Residence:
    This was another Scotch-Irish Presbyterian settlement adjacent to that developed by John Caldwell and the Reverend John Thomson contributed to the Buffalo settlement in Prince Edward County for a while in the late 1740s. John Finley was related by marriage to both the Thomsons and the Caldwells, and while neither were living at the time, his first wife's brother-in-law, Reverend Richard Sankey, was still actively engaged in church work there. In fact, his daughter, Elisabeth, had been living with the Sankeys before John made the move and until her marriage in January of 1764. John purchased 400 acres on Vaughan's Creek on 15 June 1765 from Jacob and Honour Garrett, and his son William bought 430 acres on Vaughan's Creek from John Caldwell on 19 August 1765. Just where this John Caldwell fits into the family in unknown, but he was most likely related to John Finley's second wife, Mary Caldwell.


    Residence:
    John and his family lived in Prince Edward County for only about seven years and then moved on to Reed Creek area in Montgomery County (now Wythe), Virginia. It is unknown what prompted this move, but again he was moving into territory where other family and friends had located. There were two James Finleys already living there and it is strongly suspected that the elder James was a younger brother of John. Reverend Thomson's oldest daughter, Sarah, was living there with her second husband, William Sayers, who was also active in the affairs of the local Presbyterian Church at Reed Creek.

    George Breckenridge, son of Alexander, who had also been one of the original commissioners of Tinkling Spring, was nearby. John settled on a 327 acre parcel on Sally Run, waters of Reed Creek, which he bought from John McFarland in November 1773.

    Other-Begin:
    Six years later, John and "Meary", his wife, drew up articles of agreement giving their property to sons, David and Samuel, in exchange for life care. John died sometime prior to 19 August 1782, when the court ordered a deposition be taken of Mary to testify the document they drew up in 1773 was done according to his wishes.


    Other-Begin:
    upon John's death court ordered a deposition be taken of Mary to testify the document they drew up in 1773 was done according to his wishes.


    Census:
    p. 110, Augusta County, list "A"

    Finley, Benjamin 0 0 0 0 0

    p. 121, Augusta County, list "B"

    Finley, John 0 1 0 9 13
    Finley, David - - - - -
    son of John (above)
    Finley, John 1 1 0 6 15
    - wheelright
    Finley, John 1 1 0 11 25
    Finley, Robt. 0 1 0 10 23
    Finley, William - - - - -
    - Robert pays tax
    Finley, William 0 0 3 6 20
    - [Capt.)
    Finey, Robert 0 0 0 2 2

    http://worldconnect.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=mrmarsha&id=I27602

    John married Mary Caldwell on 21 Apr 1741 in Augusta Co, Virginia. Mary (daughter of (..) Caldwell) was born in 1728 in Virginia; died in 1787 in Augusta Co, Virginia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mary Caldwell was born in 1728 in Virginia (daughter of (..) Caldwell); died in 1787 in Augusta Co, Virginia.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Other-Begin: 19 Aug 1782, Reed Creek, Montgomery Co, Virginia

    Notes:

    Other-Begin:
    After John died, 19 August 1782, when the court ordered a deposition be taken of Mary to testify the document they drew up in 1773 was done according to his wishes.

    Children:
    1. Robert Osborne Finley, (son?) was born on 21 Apr 1745 in Augusta Co, Virginia; died after 14 Jan 1820 in Blount Co, Tennessee; was buried in Eusebia Cem, Blount Co, Tennessee.
    2. David Finley, (son?) was born on 10 Jan 1747 in Fishersville, Tinkling Spring, Augusta Co, Virginia; was christened on 20 Jan 1748 in Fishersville, Tinkling Spring, Augusta Co, Virginia; died on 19 Jun 1848 in Orleans, Orange Co, Indiana; was buried in Finley Cem, Orleans, Orleans Co, Indiana.
    3. 1. Thomas Caldwell Finley was born on 11 Feb 1757 in Fishersville, Tinkling Spring, Augusta Co, Virginia; died on 12 Dec 1831 in Cedar Springs, Abbeville Co, South Carolina; was buried in Cedar Springs A.R.P. Church Cem, Cedar Springs, Abbeville Co, South Carolina.
    4. David Finley was born on 1 Jun 1754 in Augusta Co, Virginia; died after 1792 in of, Mercer Co, Kentucky.
    5. Samuel Finley was born before 1758 in Augusta Co, Virginia; died after 1792 in of, Mercer Co, Kentucky.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  (..) Finley was born about 1690; died after 1720.
    Children:
    1. Robert Finley was born about 1714 in Ireland or Scotland; died after 1738 in of, Beverley Manor, Augusta Co, Virginia.
    2. 2. John (of Beverley Manor) Finley was born about 1715 in Ireland or Scotland; died before 19 Aug 1782 in Augusta Co, Virginia; was buried in Tinkling Spring Presbyterian Church Cem, Fisherville, Augusta Co, Virginia.
    3. William Finley was born about 1718 in Ireland; died after 1750 in of, South River, Augusta Co, Virginia.

  2. 6.  (..) Caldwell
    Children:
    1. 3. Mary Caldwell was born in 1728 in Virginia; died in 1787 in Augusta Co, Virginia.
    2. John Caldwell, (m Finley?) was born in 1740 in Virginia; died on 30 Oct 1795 in Halifax Co, Virginia.