Sunday, June 21, 2026

Semiquincentennial - - Revolutionary War - - Captain Jacob Ott II

 - A series of  posts about our family's Revolutionary War soldiers -

250 Years; 1776 - 2026

Our Family was there, from the Beginning

 

Jacob Ott II

14 Aug 1755 SC – c 1820

Son of Jacob Ott I & Margaret Fitchtner

My 5x great grandfather 


Captain, SC Militia, Orangeburg District Regiment 1781 – 1782


Jacob Ott lived & served in the Orangeburg District in SC. He served in General Marion’s Brigade in the Militia.  He also furnished supplies for the Continental Army and South Carolina Militia. 


Jacob Ott II was born 14 August 1755 in South Carolina and baptized on Sunday, 21 December 1755.[i] He spent his life in the area. 

            During the Revolutionary War Jacob both gave supplies to troops and served during the war for freedom. In 1780, 1781 and 1783 Jacob gave cattle, corn and hogs to the South Carolina Militia. In 1781 he gave the soldiers 1,200 pounds of beef. After the wars end Jacob was compensated by the national Treasury for those supplies. In 1783 he was given Four Pounds, Twelve Shillings and Two Pence. Jacob was a Captain in General Francis Marion’s Brigade, serving from 1781 to 1782.[ii][iii][iv][v] General Marion was known as ‘the Swamp Fox’ and is famous for his methods of frustrating and defeating the British troops. 


            Jacob married Mary Elizabeth Ott, daughter of Casper Ott and Mary (Stehely) Ott, his first cousin.[vi] They remained in Orangeburg, South Carolina. In October 1785, when Jacob was 30 years old, he had a plat of 300 acres of land. Some of this land may have been inherited from his father.[vii] Those 300 acres were on Cow Castle Swamp.[viii]

            In 1788 Jacob signed a petition put forth by Protestants in South Carolina to incorporate their churches. He attended the “Frederician’ Church on Cattle’s Creek”.[ix] In November 1793 he served on a Grand Jury which discussed the conditions of the roads in Orangeburgh District.[x]

Jacob clearly remained in Orangeburg District, South Carolina. He can be found in census records there from the first U. S. Census in 1790[xi] as well as in 1800[xii], 1810[xiii] and 1820[xiv]. His exact death date is unknown at this time.

 

 

Read more about our family's pioneers & patriots.



This is my newest book, published in late 2024. It includes chapters on these families:

Alford, Ashely, Brown, Brumfield,
Fortenberry, Hollis, Kelly, Kennington,
Lawrence, Ott, Smith & Spurlock
Buy from me: Price: $95.00 + $10 shipping & packaging. No credit cards.
OR: use credit card & purchase through Troy Book Makers.



[i] Salley, Jr., Alexander S. The History of Orangeburg County South Carolina (Baltimore, MD: Regional Publishing Company, 1969) 157.

[ii] South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Account Audited of Claims Growing Out of the American Revolution; Series S108092, Reel 113, frame 534; digital image (scdah.sc.gov: accessed March 2019) Jacob Ott, Orangeburgh.

[iii] Daughters of the American Revolution, Ancestor Record, Ancestor #A084856, Jacob Ott; digital image, DAR (dar.org: accessed February 2019).

[iv] The American Revolution in South Carolina, The Orangeburg District Regiment Militia; digital image (carolana.com: accessed February 2019) Jacob Ott, Captain.

[v] Wallis, Ruth Ott. Descendants of Jacob Ott of South Carolina and Louisiana (Bogalusa, LA: Privately printed, 1967) 3 – 4.

[vi] Ott, Leo E. Us Otts, The Search for our Family (Yuba City, CA, 1999).

[vii] James, T. Mark. The Nine Jacob Otts of Orangeburgh, South Carolina; digital image, Roots Web (freepages.rootsweb.com: accessed February 2019).

[viii] South Carolina Department of Archives and History, State Plat Books; Series S213190, Volume 15, Page 288; digital image (scdah.sc.gov: accessed March 2019) Jacob Ott, 1785, Orangeburgh District. 

[ix] South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine, Volume 47, No. 4, October 1946; German Protestants in South Carolina in 1788, A Petition for the Incorporation of Their Churches; digital images, Genealogy Gophers (gengophers.com: accessed February 2019) 197.

[x] South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Orangeburgh District, Presentment Concerning the Transactions of the Courts; Series S16010, Year 1793, Item 8; digital image (scdah.sc.gov: accessed March 2019) Jacob Ott, 1793.

[xi] Jarrell, Lawrence E. Early Orangeburgh South Carolina Census. High Point, NC: Alligator Creek Publications, 1998) 35 & 52. Jacob Ott Senr. & Jr.

[xii] Teeples, G. Ronald, Ronald Vern Jackson, and Richard Moore. South Carolina 1800 Census (Provo, Utah: Accelerated Indexing Systems, 1973) 405. Jacob Ott Jr. & Sr.

[xiii] Jarrell, Lawrence E. Early Orangeburgh South Carolina Census. High Point, NC: Alligator Creek Publications, 1998) 35 & 52. Jacob Ott Senr. & Jr.

[xiv] Jarrell, Lawrence E. 1820 Orangeburgh South Carolina Census. (High Point, NC: Alligator Creek Publications, 1998) Jacob Ott in Orangeburg.










Sunday, June 14, 2026

Semiquincentennial - - Revolutionary War - - Richard Dillon

 - A series of  posts about our family's Revolutionary War soldiers -

250 Years; 1776 - 2026

Our Family was there, from the Beginning

Our family had many branches living in the American Colonies, before the United States were formed. In Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina my great grandfathers & great uncles left their farms and their families to break away from British rule. They were soldiers in the Revolutionary War. We can proudly know that our family was there in those early days to help ensure our independence. 



Richard Dillon

7 Oct 1745 Norfolk, Virginia - 7 Oct 1833 Mississippi

Son of James Theopilous Dillon & Mary; Husband of Anne Lawrence

My 5x great grandfather


Soldier in North Carolina Militia; served onboard privateer ‘Greyhound’ & Prisoner of War


Richard Dillon, Revolutionary War soldier, was born 7 October 1745 in Norfolk in the Virginia Colony[i] and became an apprentice to a cooper when he was 12 years old. He was bound to Christopher Harrison until he turned 21 as he was taught the business of being a cooper.[ii] The prevalent theory is Richard’s father died and therefore he was bound as an apprentice to learn a trade and support himself.

            Richard moved on to Bertie County, North Carolina where he witnessed a will in May 1777.[iii] By the time Richard lived in the county it already had a long history.

 

By the start of the American Revolution, Bertie County had undergone two centuries of change. It had evolved from the tranquil home of the Meherrin and Tuscarora to a thriving English colony with large prosperous tobacco plantations worked by thousands of African, Native Americans, and mixed-blood slaves. It had developed lucrative trading ties with its neighbors Virginia and South Carolina, as well as intercolonial and international trade with New England, Britain, and the British Caribbean. By 1774, Bertie County was one of the most prosperous counties in North Carolina. It had benefited greatly from being adjacent to Edenton, the colonial capital, and from serving as home for five colonial governors who guided the colony through difficult times.[iv]

 

            Richard may have become an ancestor whose life’s story faded with time as has happened with many men of that era. However, an important document survives which details his life, especially his military service. His pension application survives.

            On 26 August 1776 the Continental Congress enacted the first pension law which gave benefits to any officer, soldier or sailor who had lost a limb in battle or who was so disabled in service that rendered him unable to earn a living. At that time the Congress actually had no money and relied on the states to give money to the veterans. Over the years pension benefits were expanded to include more veterans. On 7 June 1832 Congress extended those benefits more widely than previously. This act provided for full pay for life for all officers and enlisted men who served at least 2 years in the Continental Line, the state troops or militia, the navy or marines. Men who served less than 2 years but at least 6 months were granted pensions of less than full pay. Almost 28,000 veterans claimed pensions under this 1832 act. One of the veterans who traveled to his local courthouse to apply for a pension was 87-year-old Richard Dillon. Veterans or their widows were required to file applications detailing their military service and other information about themselves and their families. Most of the early documents were destroyed by fire in Washington, D. C. Later documents survive and are protected at the National Archives.[v] Richard Dillon’s original application with his signature is preserved there for the future and the digital image is available for anyone to view.

Richard Dillon married Anne Lawrence, daughter of Humphrey Lawrence and Ann Ashley. Their children were: Joanna (Dillon) Smith, Nancy Ann (Dillon) Stallings, Lawrence Dillon, Clarkston Dillon, Willis D. Dillon, Mary (Dillon) Morris, Theopilous Dillon, Clarissa Clara (Dillon) Smith and Sarah (Dillon) Graves.[vi]

Richard’s pension application clearly shows his early residence in Bertie County, North Carolina. Court records also give evidence of his life there. In August 1785 Richard and Anne sold a tract of land in Bertie County to Benjamin Terlinton.[vii] In February 1787 William Billips, William Cook and Richard Dillon were appointed “searchers in Capt. Ashburn’s District.”[viii] In the same month Frederick James was bound to Richard “to learn the trade of a Cooper.”[ix]In November 1789 Richard and Anne sold another piece of land. They sold this land to Andrew Stanton.[x]

The family next lived in the Barnwell District of South Carolina, moving there about 1790.[xi] The 1800 census report shows Richard in Barnwell District with six family members and six slaves.[xii]

 

By 1810 Dillon was a resident of Amite County (listed in the 1810 Census for that year). In that same year he obtained a land g rant in Marion County in a portion of the county that later became Pike County. This was probably the land that became known as ‘Dillon’s Bridge’.[xiii]

 

At the time of the War of 1812 they were in Mississippi. Richard’s sons, Clarkston, Theopilous and Willis D., enlisted in the Mississippi Territory Militia on 3 January 1815 and served until April of the same year.[xiv] The 1820 census showed Richard with several family members and 13 slaves. His sons, Lawrence Dillon, Clarkston Dillon and Willis D. Dillon lived close by.[xv]

Richard Dillon died 7 October 1833 and is buried in the Smith Cemetery in Dillontown, Mississippi.[xvi] After his death his sons, Lawrence and Willis settled his estate as evidenced by a newspaper notice.

Letters testamentary having been granted to the undersigned last Nov’r. term of the Probate Court of Pike County, on the estate of Richard Dillon, late of said county deceased – Notice is herby given to all those having claims against said estate, to present them, duly authenticated, to the undersigned, within the time prescribed by law, or they will be barred. Willis Dillon, Lawrence Dillon.[xvii]

 


Revolutionary War Series:

#1  William Stark Kelly, Private in the North Carolina Militia

#2 Captain John Kennington, Camden District Regiment, South Carolina Militia 

#3 Sergeant John Brumfield, Patriot & Spy South Carolina Militia 

#4 Charles Brumfield, Gave Patriotic Service

#5 Captain Johannes Ritter, Sr., Northampton Co., PA Militia  

#6 Lt. Moses Hollis, Lieutenant in the South Carolina Militia

#7 Pvt. Jeremiah Smith


Read more about our family's pioneers & patriots.



This is my newest book, published in late 2024. It includes chapters on these families:

Alford, Ashely, Brown, Brumfield,
Fortenberry, Hollis, Kelly, Kennington,
Lawrence, Ott, Smith & Spurlock
Buy from me: Price: $95.00 + $10 shipping & packaging. No credit cards.
OR: use credit card & purchase through Troy Book Makers.


[i] Revolutionary War Pensions and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, NARA, Pension #R2959, Fold3 (fold3.com:accessed November 2017) Richard Dillon.

[ii] Haun, Weynette Parks, Bertie County North Carolina County Court Minutes 1740 thru 1743; 1758 thru 1762. Book II (North Carolina: 1977). 

[iii] Almasy, Sandra L. Bertie County, North Carolina Wills 1761 – 1780 (Joliet, Illinois: Kensington Glen Publishing, 1990) 124. 

[iv] Smallwood, Arwin D., Bertie County: An Eastern Carolina History (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2002) 67.

[v] Graves, Will. An Overview of Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Legislation and the Southern Campaigns Pension Transcription Project; digital image (revwarapps.org: accessed November 2017).

[vi] Conerly, Luke War, Source Records from Pike County, Mississippi, 1798 – 1910 (SC: Southern Historical Press, 1989) 117-119.

[vii] Haun, Weynette Parks. Bertie County North Carolina County Court Minutes 1781 thru 1787. Book V (Durham, North Carolina: 1982) 81.  

[viii] Haun, Weynette Parks. Bertie County North Carolina County Court Minutes 1781 thru 1787. Book V (Durham, North Carolina: 1982) 123.  

[ix] Haun, Weynette Parks. Bertie County North Carolina County Court Minutes 1781 thru 1787. Book V (Durham, North Carolina: 1982) 126.  

[x] Haun, Weynette Parks. Bertie County North Carolina County Court Minutes 1788 thru 1792. Book VI (Durham, North Carolina: 1982) 46.  

[xi] Revolutionary War Pensions and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, NARA, Pension #R2959, Fold3 (fold3.com:accessed November 2017) Richard Dillon.

[xii] 1800 US Census, SC, Barnwell District; digital image, Ancestry (ancestr.com: accessed November 2017) Richard Dillon.

[xiii] Conerly, Luke Ward and E. Russ Williams Jr., Source Records of Pike/Walthall Counties Mississippi, 1798-1910 (Easley, SC: Southern Historical Press, 1989) 117.

[xiv] Compiled Service Records of Volunteer Soldiers Who Served During the War of 1812 in Organizations from the Territory of Mississippi; NARA; Fold3 (fold3.com:accessed Aug 2017).

[xv] 1820 US Census, MS, Pike; digital image, Ancestry (ancestry.com: accessed November 2017) Richard, Lawrence, Clarkston and Willis Dillon.

[xvi] US Headstone Applications for Military Veterans, 1925-1963; March 1957; Old Smith Cemetery, Dillontown, MS; digital image, Ancestry (ancestry.com: accessed November 2017) Richard Dillon.

[xvii] Notice. (Jackson, MS: The Weekly Mississippian, 31 Jan. 1834) 4; digital image, Newspapers.com: accessed January 2018.

 



 Revolutionary War Pension Application of Richard Dillon

 

State of Mississippi, Pike County. On the 22nd day of April 1833 personally appeared in open Court before the Honorable Robert Love, Judge of the Probate Court now sitting.  Richard Dillon a resident of Pike County, State of Mississippi, aged 87 years six months and some days who being duly sworn according to the law doth on his oath make the following declaration in order to obtain the benefit of the act of Congress passed June the 7th, 1832, states that he was drafted under Captain John Faulk in Bertie County, North Carolina, marched from thence to Northwest River Bridge in the month of March, next to headquarters and placed under Colonel Bluntin Maginnis, but has no recollection of the names of any of the subaltern officers nor their places of residence, was also commanded by General Gregory Cloissiant himself, resided when drafted near Edenton Sound Bertie County, North Carolina, claimant entered the service in the year 1781 served in one battle under Gregory at the North West River Bridge and served one three months tour under him, received his discharge and returned home,  Afterwards in the summer of 1781. Enlisted on Board of Privateer Greyhound commanded by Captain Saml Butler and remained on Board until he was taken prisoner by Frigate Baloosa bearing 36 guns and commanded by Captain Kennedy a Scotsman, and has no particular recollection of the length of time he was a Prisoner of War but as well as he recollects nine months, and that parolled upon honor, can't recollect of any man living who can prove the services here referred to, has no documentary evidence at all, and herby relinquishes any claim whatsoever to a pension of annuity except the present, and declares that my name is not on the pension roll of any agency in the state.

 

Question:  Where and what year were you born? A: In the State of Virginia, Norfolk County, on the 7th day of October 1745 as appears from the record of my father and the information of my mother.

Question: Have you any record of your age and where is it? A: In my Bible at home a copy from my father's record, as informed of my mother.

Question: Where were you living when called into service? A: In Bertie County, North Carolina on Edenton Sound.

Question: Where have you lived since, and where do you live now? A: I moved from North Carolina in the year 1790 from Bertie County, North Carolina to Barnesville District in South Carolina and remained there until the 20th of March 1807 and moved from there to Mississippi in Amite County, where I remained about three years, then I moved into Marion County, now Pike County, Mississippi, and have been there ever since.

Question: How were you called into the service?  Were you drafted? A: I was drafted as above stated.

Question: Did you receive a discharge from the service?  If so, by whom was it issued?  What became of it?

A: I received an honorable and written discharge from General Gregery, kept for a number of years, but it has long since been lost.  I can refer to my neighbors Reverend Willis Magee and J. W. Y. McNables Esg., Peter Quin, and to many others who can and will certify to my character, veracity, properly sworn to and subscribed to in open court the 22nd day of April 1833.  

(Signed) Richard Dillon   Jno. Y. McNabb, Clerk

Revolutionary War Pensions and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, NARA, Pension #R2959, Fold3 (fold3.com:accessed November 2017) Richard Dillon.

 




Friday, June 5, 2026

Semiquincentennial - - Revolutionary War - - Jeremiah Smith

 - #7 in a series of  posts about our family's Revolutionary War soldiers -

250 Years; 1776 - 2026

Our Family was there, from the Beginning

 


Jeremiah Smith

Born circa 1755 – after 1800

Husband of Jemimah Hollis

My 5x great grandfather


Jeremiah Smith was the first of the Smith family to be found in historical records. He was born in South Carolina circa 1755 but the names of his parents and their country of origin is still to be discovered.[i] The oldest reference to Jeremiah is in 1770 in Craven County on Lynches Creek, sometimes referred to as Great Lynches Creek or, later, as Lynches River. His name is shown as owning land adjacent to John Kirkley. Most of the land surrounding the property of these two was men was described as ‘vacant land’.[ii] In 1773 Jeremiah’s land on Lynches Creek was again referenced in land records, this time as adjoining the property of James Minzies.[iii]

            Lynches River originates in North Carolina, crosses into South Carolina where it flows for 175 miles and empties into the Pee Dee River. “In the late 1700s the Lynches attracted entrepreneurs who set up saw mills, harvested the long leaf pine, and shipped the lumber downstream to Georgetown.”[iv]

            Jeremiah Smith served in the South Carolina Militia during the Revolutionary War. He served as a private in Colonel Benton’s Regiment for 29 days in March 1782 and 36 days in October 1782. In 1785 he went to the Justice of the Peace in Cheraws District to apply for compensation for his service. He also claimed 109 days service for Richard, Charles and John Smith. Were these other Smiths his brothers? This service amounted to a claim for 87 pounds. He received an additional 16 pounds sterling for beef he gave “for public use” during the war.[v]

 

Beyond the terror and pain of occasional battles, perhaps the most striking aspects of the Revolution were the unrelenting brutal conditions that soldiers were forced to endure. For the Continental Army, food, clothing, blankets, and other necessities were always in short supply, as were guns, ammunition, wagons, and horses needed to face the enemy. … Even foraging parties came up with little; the surrounding countryside had long since been looted of livestock, grain, and firewood. … On top of it all, military pay was low and unreliable; for months at a time, men were not paid at all. … Nevertheless, loyalty to the army grew.[vi]

 

Signature of Jeremiah Smith, 9 April 1790

From: South Carolina Department of Archives and History

Account Audited (File No. 7131) Of Claims Growing Out Of The American Revolution



            On 24 June 1784 Jeremiah married Jemimah Hollis, daughter of Moses Hollis and Rosannah (Hagan) Hollis.[vii]The Hollis family had been in the area for some years. Moses Hollis owned 300 acres on the Wateree River in 1768.[viii]Both Lynches Creek/River and Wateree River carve wandering lines across South Carolina but they run roughly parallel to each other.[ix] Various events, such as visiting the courthouse, could have brought the Smith and Hollis families together. 

            Moses Hollis also served in the South Carolina Militia during Revolutionary War. He served for 30 days in 1780 under General Sumpton.[x] More land records show Moses’ continued residence in the area as well as many other Hollis family members. 

            In October 1785 Jeremiah Smith had 100 acres of land on Rickey Creek in the Cheraws District.[xi] In 1788 he owned 400 acres in the Lynches Creek and Rocky Creek area.[xii]  He was in Greenville, South Carolina in 1790 when the first United States Census was taken[xiii] and in 1800 for the second census.[xiv]

            When researching the death date and location for Jeremiah Smith, I found a wide assortment of dates from 1810 to 1827, from the Carolinas to Mississippi. Because of the abundance of Jeremiah Smiths it cannot yet be determined which date and place relate to this man. 


Revolutionary War Series:

#1  William Stark Kelly, Private in the North Carolina Militia

#2 Captain John Kennington, Camden District Regiment, South Carolina Militia 

#3 Sergeant John Brumfield, Patriot & Spy South Carolina Militia 

#4 Charles Brumfield, Gave Patriotic Service

#5 Captain Johannes Ritter, Sr., Northampton Co., PA Militia  

#6 Lt. Moses Hollis, Lieutenant in the South Carolina Militia

 

Read more about our family's pioneers & patriots.



This is my newest book, published in late 2024. It includes chapters on these families:
Alford, Ashely, Brown, Brumfield,
Fortenberry, Hollis, Kelly, Kennington,
Lawrence, Ott, Smith & Spurlock
Buy from me: Price: $95.00 + $10 shipping & packaging. No credit cards.
OR: use credit card & purchase through Troy Book Makers.




[i] Gurr, Cindy Brock and Dennis Ray Gurr. The Ties That Bind US Together, Volume 5 (Privatley Printed, 2006) Genealogy Gophers (gengophers.com: accessed March 2019) 131-212.

[ii] South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Colonial Plat Books; Series S213184, Volume 17, Page 500, Item 2; digital image (scdah.sc.gov: accessed March 2019) John Kirkley adj. Jeremiah Smith, 1770.

[iii] South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Colonial Plat Books; Series S213184, Volume 18, Page 445, Item 2; digital image (scdah.sc.gov: accessed March 2019) James Minzies adj. Jeremiah Smith, Great Lynches Creek, 1773.

[iv] Stevens, Robert. Lynches River; digital image, South Carolina Encyclopedia (scencylopedia.org: accessed March 2019).

[v] South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Account Audited Of Claims Growing out of the American Revolution; Series S108092, Reel 136, Frame 422; digital image (scdah.sc.gov: accessed March 2019) Jeremiah Smith. 

[vi] Daily Life in Colonial America (Pleasantville, NY: Reader’s Digest Association, INc., 1993) 6128.

[vii] Gurr, Cindy Brock and Dennis Ray Gurr. The Ties That Bind US Together, Volume 5 (Privately Printed, 2006) Genealogy Gophers (gengophers.com: accessed March 2019) 131-212.

[viii] South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Colonial Land Grants; Series S213019, Volume 16, Page 367; digital image (scdah.sc.gov: accessed March 2019) Moses Hollis, 1768.

[ix] Pruitt, A. B. Creeks and Rivers in South Carolina (Privately Printed, 2001) 14.

[x] South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Account Audited of Claims Growing Out of the American Revolution; Series S108092, Reel 72, Frame 596; digital image (scdah.sc.gov: accessed March 2019) Moses Hollis, 1780.

[xi] South Carolina Department of Archives and History. State Plat Books; Series S213190, Volume 8, Page 267, Item 1; digital image (scdah.sc.gov: accessed March 2019) Jeremiah Smith, 1785.

[xii] South Carolina Department of Archives and History. State Plat Books; Series S213190, Volume 22, Page 873, Item 2; digital image (scdah.sc.gov: accessed March 2019) Jeremiah Smith, 1788, Cheraws District.

[xiii] 1790 US Census, SC, Greenville; digital image, Ancestry (ancestry.com: accessed October 2019) Jeremiah Smith. 

[xiv] 1800 US Census, SC, Greenville; digital image, Ancestry (ancestry.com: accessed October 2019) Jeremiah Smith.