Home | What's New | Photos | Histories | Sources | Reports | Calendar | Cemeteries | Headstones | Statistics | Surnames
Print Bookmark

Elisha Ebenezer Jones

Male 1820 - 1911  (90 years)


Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Less detail
Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Elisha Ebenezer Jones was born on 31 Aug 1820 in Gibson Co, Indiana (son of Hullum Jones and Sarah Kimball); died on 6 Feb 1911 in East St. Louis, Illinois.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Hullum Jones was born on 17 Apr 1797 in Raleigh, Wake Co, North Carolina (son of Ebenezer Jones and Mary Wroten); died on 27 Sep 1870 in Cynthiana, Indiana; was buried in Old Kimball Cem, Owensville, Indiana.

    Hullum married Sarah Kimball on 2 Oct 1819 in Gibson Co, Indiana. Sarah was born on 5 Mar 1798 in Henderson, Henderson Co, Kentucky; died on 18 Dec 1870 in Gibson Co, Indiana. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Sarah Kimball was born on 5 Mar 1798 in Henderson, Henderson Co, Kentucky; died on 18 Dec 1870 in Gibson Co, Indiana.
    Children:
    1. 1. Elisha Ebenezer Jones was born on 31 Aug 1820 in Gibson Co, Indiana; died on 6 Feb 1911 in East St. Louis, Illinois.
    2. Levi Jones was born on 30 Sep 1823 in Owensville, Gibson Co, Indiana; died on 17 May 1910 in Palmetto, Manatee Co, Florida.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Ebenezer Jones was born on 21 Jan 1763 in Kent Co, or Dover Co, Delaware (son of Zachariah Jones, (immigrant) and Ellen Smith); died on 9 Mar 1862 in Washington, Daviess Co, Indiana; was buried in Old Fellows Cem, Washington, Daviess Co, Indiana.

    Notes:

    Ebenezer Jones, moved west with his family and settled in Indiana in 1811, and there with his family endured a pioneer life. He [---,unreadable] been converted when a boy and became a preacher in the M.E. Church. He lived to see his hundreth year.


    The most definitive research on Ebenezer Jones has been carried out by Gilbert X. Drendel, who has written an important book called ?Footprints in the Frontier.?314 This book clarifies many early myths, based on family traditions, that appear to have germs of truth, but to have been mixed up in many cases. The most important early work, which has shaped much of the thinking about Ebenezer Jones, was done by Mrs. Olive Smith, who wrote a book that was privately published and widely distributed in the early 1970s,315 and a great deal of work by Jesse Mattes Jones, who left reams of notes and wrote dozens of letters to other Joneses, but who had the unfortunate habit of not recording sources. It appears that much of what Mattes discovered and disseminated is truth, but some is speculation that has been taken as fact by the new ?internet generation? of family searchers.

    ********************************
    The following tradition was originally written by Mrs. Olive Smith. More recent research by Gilbert S. Drendel suggests that Ebenezer Jones actually was not a Revolutionary War veteran.

    ?Ebenezer enlisted at Dover, Delaware in the Continental Army on January 20, 1776, in Captain Nathan Adams' Company.316 A family tradition, passed down by Ebenezer's grandson, Enoch Jones, is that "Ebenezer Jones was a husky lad, but wasn't quite tall enough to pass the lax requirements for the Continental Army. Being patriotic and resourceful, he just put padding in his shoes and was accepted. A boy of 13 was as expert with a gun in those days as any man. Ebenezer played a fife as part of his duties during the war. This battered instrument is still in existence somewhere among his descendants." Enoch Jones, son of Hullum Jones, lived to be nearly 99 and knew his grandfather Ebenezer Jones very well. The foregoing story, and others recounted in this essay, were told to Mrs. O. J. Smith. In a letter to the author, dated June 24, 1982, Mrs. Smith said "I knew my great uncle, Enoch Jones (b August 9, 1834 - d December 25, 1932) well, for he lived in Palmetto, Fla. with his daughter Bertha. I was in Palmetto in high school (1912-14) and I often talked with him. He was my favorite uncle! He told me about knowing and talking with his grandfather Ebenezer Jones (b January 21, 1763 - d March 9, 1862). These dates were from O. P. Estes' family bible. O. P. Estes was the grandson of "Gincy" O. Garten, Ebenezer's youngest child."?

    Ebenezer Jones became a minister of the Methodist Church at the age of 18, according to family tradition. According to Rowan County probate records, Minister Ebenezer Jones and the trustees of the Methodist Church bought one acre of land on Cedar Creek in Rowan County for the purpose of erecting a church building. Ebenezer and Mary Jones had 15 children in the 26 years they lived in Rowan County. The entire family was recorded in a bible that was kept by the family in their early years in Indiana. The Bible is on display at the Washington Museum in Washington, Indiana. It was printed in 1816 and is five inches by seven inches in size. The writing in the Bible is very faded and its pages are brittle. Accompanying the Jones Bible is a letter that reads, in part, as follows:

    "June 23, 1969
    Columbus, Ohio
    Dear Elva:
    I received your letter this past week end, yes, I do have an old Bible that I am sure must have belonged to the Jones Family. Aunt Eula gave me the Bible sometime ago, it was with some things that have belonged to the Wallaces' for years. I imagine the old Bible came from the old Jones Fort which I think was also close to my grand-father Wallaces' house.
    Sincerely, Anne Brown"

    Because of the open warfare that existed with the Indians, the early settlers of the Vincennes area erected several forts. Although they normally lived in log cabins on their own farms, the settlers repaired to the forts for refuge during especially troubled times. Each of the forts was about 150 feet square and was constructed from timbers about twelve feet high with sharpened tops. There was a gateway for wagons in one wall. Within the enclosure was a two-story, hewed-log house, called a block house. Other block houses were built at the northeast and southwest corners of the fort. The block houses were about 25 by 18 feet in dimension and the second floors were reached by ladders. Some of the inhabitants lived in the three block houses, while others built huts of various size and form, according to their taste and means. In "forting times" the life was spartan, the settlers subsisting on stores of corn, potatoes, turnips, cabbage, pumpkins, and a little meat. One of the forts, called Comer's Fort, was on Ebenezer Jones' farm.317

    In 1812, Jesse Jones, son of Ebenezer and Anna Jones, was killed in an altercation with Indians. The following account is abstracted from History of Knox and Daviess Counties.318 "In September of 1812, General Samuel Hopkins was assigned the duty of destroying the Indian settlements along the Wabash and Illinois River. With 2000 volunteers, General Hopkins accomplished the destruction of the Kickapoo town at the head of Lake Peoria. He then returned to Vincennes with his mounted forces, most of whom he proceeded to discharge on the grounds they refused to obey their commander. He then assembled a new force, mostly infantry, and sallied forth with the intention of destroying Prophetstown, which had about 40 cabins and huts, and the large Kickapoo village adjoining it on the east side of the river. On September 21 the force discovered a band of Indians on Wild Cat Creek. The Indians fired upon a scouting party and killed a man by the name of Dunn. The next day a party of 60 horsemen went forth to bury their dead comrade and scout out the Indian force. Approaching the spot where the slain man lay, they discovered a mounted Indian. The troopers dropped their burying tools and started in tumultuous pursuit of the Indian. Their quarry at first kept a northeast course, but gradually inclined to the north, until he arrived at the head of a ravine, which was quite steep at the sides, and covered with timber and thick underbrush. When his pursuers had proceeded about 300 yards down the hollow, they received a very heavy fire on both flanks. A general route ensued. Those who escaped the ambush had to cut their way through the enemy lines. The next day the whole army went out to bury the dead, of which there were eighteen, and found the bodies to be 'much mutilated.' Some who were reported missing were never found. Two of those who were killed in this ambuscade were from the settlement at the forks of the White River--Samuel Culbertson and Jesse Jones, a son of Ebenezer Jones." Family tradition holds that Jesse Jones' saddle girth broke, causing him to fall from his horse. It is said that he was scalped by the Indians. Jesse Jones' estate was probated in 1813.319

    The Indian troubles subsided and had virtually ended by the end of 1813. Indiana was granted statehood in 1816 and Daviess County was incorporated in 1817. Its population, which had been but 300 in 1811 when Ebenezer Jones and Joseph Hobbs settled there, had grown to 3432 by 1820. One of the first official activities of the new county was the election of officials. Ebenezer Jones was elected County Treasurer in June, 1817 at a temporary log Court House in the new town. His first report, filed in 1819 showed receipts of $1,126.43 and expenses of $1,064.68. Another of the early activities involved in the establishment of the new county was the creation of a County Seat. The town of Washington was officially established in 1817. Building lots were sold at public auction to raise money for construction of the necessary county buildings. Ebenezer Jones and Joseph Hobbs purchased two of these lots.320

    Ebenezer's wife Mary died in 1829, at the age of 67, near Washington, Indiana. She was buried at Washington in the Old City Cemetery, which was abandoned in the late nineteenth century; in 1936 it was levelled by the WPA to build a public Park.321 Two years later, on June 15, 1831, Ebenezer married the widow Kattarine Slinkard, of Green County, Indiana.313 In addition to being a Methodist minister in Washington, Ebenezer was a cabinet maker. The 1850 and 1860 Daviess County Indiana census records show that Ebenezer lived his last quarter century with his son Wiley.322 He died on March 9, 1862 at the age of 99, and was buried in the Old City Cemetery alongside Mary, his first wife.

    Another account is given by Eileen Phipps:175

    Living in Frederich County, Joseph Sr and Ann Hobbs were neighbors and good friends of the Josiah Roten family. After the Josiah Rotens moved to Rowan County, North Carolina, they maintained close contact with Joseph and Ann, encouraging them to join them in Rowan County. Joseph Hobbs Sr did eventually buy some land in Rowan County, but he and his family never moved there. Instead, they sold their North Carolina land in November of 1784.

    The Josiah Rotens had a grown daughter named Mary who was married to Ebenezer Jones. Ebenezer and Mary Jones were living in North Carolina when they, along with some fifteen other families, decided to move to Indiana. In August of 1810 they formed a train of 35 wagons and headed west. Joseph Hobbs Sr seems to have found Indiana a more appealing destination than North Carolina, as he agreed to join the Ebenezer Jones Wagon Train somewhere in Virginia.

    On this wagon train young Joseph Hobbs Jr met Ebenezer and Mary Jones's teenage daughter Anna. Joseph Jr and Anna began a courtship that lasted some ten months on the wagon train and culminated in marriage in Washington Township, Knox County, on July 12, 1811, about two weeks after the wagons reached Indiana.

    A similar account was told by Mr. Jesse M. Jones, Jr., of Beaumont, TX:161

    ?Sometime around the last of August in 1810, the Ebenezer Jones Wagon Train, consisting of some 35 wagons, and 16 families left the Salisbury District of North Carolina, in Rowen Co and headed westward to Indiana. As the Jones family and the Roten family had been writing to one another, the idea of migrating westward to Indiana interested the Joseph Hobbs, Sr. family and they agreed to migrate with them. They decided to join the wagon train somewhere in Virginia. It was on this wagon train that young Joseph Hobbs, Jr. met Anna Jones and it was the beginning of a ten and a half month courtship which ended about two weeks after the wagon train reached Washington Township, Knox Co, Indiana when on July 11, 1811, Joseph and Anna were married.?

    These last two stories appear to be based on family tradition, probably embellished somewhat by Jesse M. Jones. The part about ?Joseph Hobbs Sr. and Ann Hobbs? refers to a Joseph Hobbs who was married to Ann Maynard in Frederich Co MD. Somewhere along the line, someone decided that this couple must have been the parents of the Joseph Hobbs who married Anna Jones. However, there is good evidence that Joseph Hobbs and Ann Maynard were not the parents of Joseph Hobbs; see miscellaneous notes under Joseph Hobbs for a full explaination.


    161. ?A set of papers authored by Jesse M. Jones, Jr. Bob Robison received a copy of these from Andy McDermott.,? Aug 19, 1999., The cover letter is addressed to Mr. A.E. Worthey, 611 John Page, San Antonio, TX 78228., http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin...brobison&id=I719.

    http://heathcock.org/genealogy/ps01/ps01_227.html
    (see this link for more notes)

    also see Rootsweb site:
    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bobrobison&id=I719#s6?op=GET&db=bobrobison&id=I719

    Ebenezer married Mary Wroten in 1782. Mary was born on 8 Apr 1762 in Frederica, Delaware; died in 1829 in Washington, Daviess Co, Indiana; was buried in Odd Fellows Cem, Washington, Daviess Co, Indiana. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mary Wroten was born on 8 Apr 1762 in Frederica, Delaware; died in 1829 in Washington, Daviess Co, Indiana; was buried in Odd Fellows Cem, Washington, Daviess Co, Indiana.
    Children:
    1. William Jones was born on 10 Jun 1784; died before Aug 1790.
    2. Enoch Jones was born on 23 Oct 1785 in North Carolina; died after 13 Aug 1860 in Walker Co, Texas.
    3. Smith Jones was born on 13 Nov 1786; died in 1861.
    4. Vance Jones was born on 23 Apr 1788; died in 1850.
    5. Lewis Milton Jones was born on 23 Jun 1790 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 21 Jun 1865 in Center, Shelby Co, Texas; was buried in Smith-Jones Cem, near Center, Shelby Co, Texas.
    6. Anna Jones was born on 21 Mar 1792 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 9 Oct 1880 in Nockenut, Wilson Co, Texas; was buried in Nockenut Cem, Nockenut, Wilson Co, Texas.
    7. Jesse Jones was born on 7 Oct 1793; died on 22 Sep 1812 in Indiana.
    8. 2. Hullum Jones was born on 17 Apr 1797 in Raleigh, Wake Co, North Carolina; died on 27 Sep 1870 in Cynthiana, Indiana; was buried in Old Kimball Cem, Owensville, Indiana.
    9. Wiley Roten Jones was born on 5 Nov 1798; died in 1879.
    10. Mary Jane Jones was born on 6 Dec 1799 in Guilford Co, North Carolina; died on 2 Apr 1896.
    11. Nancy Jones was born on 7 May 1801; died on 16 Jul 1873 in Brown Co, Indiana.
    12. Ebenezer Vincent Jones was born on 14 Jun 1802; died in 1857.
    13. Sarah "Sally" Jones was born on 11 Jan 1804; died in 1859 in Illinois.
    14. Deborah Elizabeth "Liby" Jones was born on 23 Jun 1806; died on 2 Jan 1891.
    15. Jincy Owen Jones was born on 17 Nov 1808; died on 2 Jun 1891 in Gibson Co, Indiana; was buried in Saulmon Cem, Gibson Co, Indiana.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Zachariah Jones, (immigrant) was born about 1735 in Wales; died in 1789 in Mispillion Hundred, Kent Co, Delaware.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Immigration: Abt 1760, Wales to North Carolina

    Notes:

    Notes for Zacariah Jones

    My information pertaining to Zacariah Jones and his family was originally obtained from a book entitled "Jones, Zacariah and Descendants, 1735-1971," compiled and published privately by Leoneade A. Ramsey and Olive J. Smith in 1971.315 The author obtained a copy of the book from Mrs. Smith in 1982. At that time she was 88 years old and lived 3350 NE 70th Street, Ocala, Florida 32670.

    Zacariah Jones is said by Mrs. Smith to have been a baptist preacher, who emigrated to the Colonies from Wales in about 1760, settling in what is now North Carolina. His wife was said to be Ellen Smith. Shortly after their arrival in the Carolinas, the Jones' homestead was destroyed by Indians, so the family migrated north to Delaware, where their first son, Ebenezer, was born January 21, 1763. Zacariah married second Sadie Vance and had three other sons, Seth, Jesse, and Robert.

    Another source is Eileen Phipps:327

    ?Ebenezer's father, Zacariah Jones, was born around 1735 in Wales. He is said to have been a Baptist preacher. He and his wife, whose name is said to have been Ellen Smith, emigrated to the colonies from Wales around 1760. They settled in what is now North Carolina, but soon after their arrival, their homestead was destroyed by Indians. They then migrated north to Delaware, where their first son, Ebenezer, was born January 21, 1763. The only further information available about Ebenezer is that he and his second wife, Sadie Vance, had three sons: Seth, Jesse, and Robert.?

    However, these views are based on family traditions that have been changed in the telling over the generations. Gilbert X. Drendel, in his important research book ?Footprints in the Frontier,?314 has brought considerable clarity to the subject. Zachariah was probably not a Baptist prearher, or even a Baptist. This fable seems to have arisen because some researcher in the last 50 years apparently found another Zachariah Jones, of Pencader Hundred, who was the son of a very well documented Baptist preacher. In his Delaware research, Gib Drendel examined the Pencader Hundred Zachariah Jones carefully and conclusively ruled him out as the father of Ebenezer Jones.

    Following is quoted from Gilbert X. Drendel?s book, the most definitive research on Zachariah Jones and his son Ebenezer Jones:314

    ?Zachariah Jones executed a will dated September 25, 1789. His estate was opened on October 22, 1789. He left a bed and furniture to his granddaughter Bersheba Jones and ?to my grandson Robert my plantation where I now live with all my lands thereunto belonging . . . reserving to my daughter Unity Jones the use of one-half of my aforesaid plantation and land . . . during her natural life.

    ?A Guardianship estate was opened for Robert during the May court term in 1790. He was described as over the age of fourteen and the son of Vincent Jones. Vincent Jones was taxed in Mispillion Hundred in 1782, but he was not taxed or listed in the 1790 census. We presume he was dead by that time. Robert?s age between 14 and 18 ties into the age of Robert Jones discussed in Post Script C of the book, who we claimed to be Ebenezer?s half brother.

    ?Robert Jones, ?yeoman? and his wife Ann (or Nancy) and Unity Jones deeded to Isaac Jones, ?gentleman?, all interest in the Zachariah Jones property known as Jones Venture. The deed was dated October 11, 1794. Robert and Isaac were referred to as grandchildren of Zachariah, which makes them brothers or cousins. The land was described as ?in the Forest of Mispillion Hundred . . . and on the west side of the main marsh of Marshyhope?. Robert, Nancy and Unity did not sign the deed. They granted a power of attorney to George W. Call and Stephen Lewis esq. (an attorney) to sign for them. Such a power of attorney was used when the grantor was too ill to sign or not available, as not living in the area.

    ?Twenty-nine days later, Robert Jones, ?late of Kent County, Delaware? and described as a ?planter? (farmer) bought 117 acres of land in Stokes County, North Carolina on November 10, 1794. This land was close to Ebenezer?s first farm and is the Robert Jones described in Post Script C, which I claimed to be Ebenezer?s half-brother. One may conclude Robert used the proceeds from his sale to Isaac to buy the Stokes County property.?

    Thus, Zachariah had a daughter named Unity Jones, a son named Vincent Jones (probably the father of Zachariah?s gradson Robert Jones) and grandchildren named Bersheba Jones and Isaac Jones. It is not known which of Zachariah?s sons were the fathers of Bersheba and Isaac.
    http://heathcock.org/genealogy/ps01/ps01_229.html

    Zachariah married Ellen Smith. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Ellen Smith
    Children:
    1. 4. Ebenezer Jones was born on 21 Jan 1763 in Kent Co, or Dover Co, Delaware; died on 9 Mar 1862 in Washington, Daviess Co, Indiana; was buried in Old Fellows Cem, Washington, Daviess Co, Indiana.
    2. Vincent Jones
    3. Unity Jones