William CHENOWETH

Birth:
10 Jun 1760
Hampshire co, Va, Usa
Death:
16 Aug 1828
Deatsville, Nelson co, Ky, Usa
Marriage:
Oct 1781
Hardin co, Ky, Usa
Sources:
Chenoweth Family Site
#12
Notes:
                   http://www.sonic.net/~prouty/prouty/b223.htm#P625

Major William CHENOWETH360,521 was born on 10 Jun 1760 in USA, Virginia, Hampshire Co. (now West Virginia). He signed a will on 15 Apr 1828 in USA, Kentucky, Nelson Co..360 In the name of God Amen
I, William Chinowith, of the county of Nelson and the state of Kentucky considering the uncertainty of this mortal life and the certainty of Death, I being of sound mind and perfect mind and memory, thanks be to the Almighty God for the same, do make, publish and declare this to be my last will and testament in manner and form following, Viz:
First of all I want my all just debts to be speedily paid, after which I give and bequeath to my beloved wife Mary Chinowith the one third part of my home plantation including the dwelling house and as much of the household furniture as she may choose to keep, also negro Bets and give her choice of all my horses also her choice of two milch cows, during her natural life and at her death, the above mentioned property to be sold and the proceeds thereof equally divided amongst my children in manner and from herein after mentioned.
Item, I give & bequeath to my youngest son, James H. Chinowith (as I expect he will live with his mother until her death, maintain and take care of her) one negro boy named Jack and his choice of two of my horses, one waggon and four pairs of waggon gears, two plows and two axes, two hoes and all the coopers tools and my crop, cut saw and it is my express will that he shall receive three hundred dollars mentioned in a note accompanying this will as a compensation for his three last past years services, and work which he did for me, also my noted silver watch, in token of my love, which he is to have over and above his equal portion and it is my desire for him to keep it during his life, after it is my will and desire the above mentioned articles (the watch and the note above mentioned excepted, at their mention, as, a part of what he is entitled to as one of my heirs, and as I keep a book of charges and accounts and receipts against him and all my other children so that each may have an equal share of my estate, it is my wish that what now stands on the book against him or the rest of my children, or what receipts or book accounts I may hereafter have against any of them. It is my express will and desire that may be estimated and accounted as so much of their part of what they may be entitled to as my heirs and deducted from their part accordingly. The amount of what I now have against my son Hardin Chinowith, is at this time, is as the part which I wish to be deducted out of his part of the proceeds of my estate is one thousand five hundred ninety seven dollars and forty cents. To my daughter Letitia Hawkins and her children lawfully begotten of her body, I give the plantation which she at present resides in Hardin County and State of Kentucky, said to contain one hundred seventy one and a half acres which is to be considered & valued as five hundred dollars of the part to which she be entittles to as one of my lawful heirs. After deducting what each of my heirs may have received as above, I wish my children to receive and equal portion of my whole estate. Beginning at my son Jacob Chinowith, Abraham Chinowith, Isaac Chinowith, Miles Chinowith, Hardin Chinowith, Letitia Hawkins, Ruth Foreman and James H. Chinowith. It is also my will and desire that my negro man Wat shall be manumated and set free upon his paying to my heirs above named or to my executors for their use, the sum of five hundred dollars. Last of all I do ordain and appoint my son James H. Chinowith and William Forman my whole and sole executors of this last will and testament revoking all other wills and confirming this to be my last will and testament. In testimony where of I hereunto set my hand and affix my seal this fifteenth day of April in the year of our Lord one thousand and eight hundred and twenty eight.
William Chenoweth (seal)
Signed sealed and acknowledged to be his last will and testament in the presence of:
John R. McAtee

Jeremiah Barger
John Burdine
At a County Court held for nelson County on Monday the 12th day of May 1828 this last will and testament of William Chinowith deceased was proved by the oaths of John R. McAtee and Jeremiah Barger subscribing witnesses thereto and ordered to be recorded. And on motion of James H. Chinowith and William Foreman the executors therein named, they having given bond with John Samuels, of six thousand dollars conditioned as prescribed by law and having taken the oath the law in such case directs, it is ordered that a certificate of probate of said will be granted them
Teste: Tho. T. Grayson, C.C.
He died on 16 Aug 1828 in USA, Kentucky, Nelson Co., Deatsville (near). He was buried in USA, Kentucky, Nelson Co., Deatsville (near), Wilson Creek Baptist Church Cemetery. Born in Hampshire Co., Virginia (now WV), William was the fourth and last child of William and Ruth Calvert Chenoweth. Like his two older bothers, John and Jonathan, he would serve in the Revolutionary War. William served from Virginia sometime before 1780. Though no details of this service are known, William did receive a land grant in Kentucky afterwards. Later he saw service in the Kentucky area, primarily against Indian raiders.
In March 1780, at the age of nineteen, he joined a small party of settlers at Fort Pitt planning on going to Kentucky. William's Uncle Richard had gone to Kentucky a couple of years earlier. The group was made up of Col. Isaac Cox, his wife, several other Cox families, and some Negro slaves. They rafted down the Ohio to the falls, where Louisville now stands.
This journey proved harrowing as Indians attacked them and, though William escaped, two of the party were killed. Near the mouth of the Great Kanawha river, hearing what they thought to be wild turkeys on the river bank, William, two of the Cox men and one of the slaves rowed to the bank in a canoe to replenish their food supply. As soon as they touched the shore, they were attacked by Indians who had deceived them by imitating turkey calls. The Negro slave and one of the Cox's were killed. William, unhurt, jumped into the river and swam for his life. The other Cox man escaped in the canoe, picked William up, and they made it safely back to their flatboats in the middle of the river. The bereaved party voyaged on to reach the Falls of the Ohio (now Louisville).
William joined the Militia to protect and fight for the new Kentucky settlements. Records show him on the payroll of Capt Swan's Company of Militia under Col. W. Linn in the command of General George Rodgers Clark on July 18, 1780 and again for 35 days, Oct-Nov 1782 in the Jefferson Militia activated to "repel an invasion of the enemy Indians" under Gen. Clark. On June 28, 1792, he was elected Lieutenant in the 3rd Regiment (Logan and part of Nelson Counties) and on Nov 16, 1797, he is listed as a Captain in the celebrated "Cornstalk Militia".
In the course of this he met his future wife, the widow Mary Henton, daughter of Jacob Van Meter and Letitia Strode. In the fall of 1779, the Van Meter family had begun their migration from Virginia to Kentucky. This group included their daughter Mary, her husband David Henton, and their two young children, Hester and John. During the journey David Henton accidently drowned in the Ohio River. Mary and the children continued on to Kentucky with the rest of the family. On March 1, 1781, in Jefferson Co., KY, William Chenoweth was appointed administrator of the estate of David Henton. Just 7 months later he and the widow Mary married in Nelson Co., Kentucky.
William and Mary's lives centered around his land claim in Nelson Co., near Cox's station and near present day Deatsville. A few years after their marriage in the late 1790s they built a grand stone house on their farm there. This house stood into the 1960s until a fire burned it down. The ruins are still there. The records of Logan Co., Ky indicate that William sold 400 acres of land there on August 3, 1796. They would remain on their farm in Nelson Co. and raise eight children to adulthood.
William died in Nelson County at the age of 68. Mary outlived him by four years, dying at age 76. They are buried in the cemetery of Wilson Creek Baptist Church near Deatsville, on ground that William gave to the church when it organized there in 1801. The graves of William and Mary are well preserved and marked with stones. Their graves are still there, but the church moved and was renamed the New Salem Baptist Church, and is now located on the Deatsville-Lenore road, about midway between the two towns. A plaque above the pulpit in the new church bears the names of William and Mary along with 6 other founders of the original church. In 1982, a new memorial monument located in the cemetery grounds of the new church was dedicated to the memory of William and Mary Chenoweth.

SOURCES: The Chenoweth Web Page, which lists Richard Harris's book "The Chenoweth Family in America", Peter Chenoweth of Texas, and Kyle Nunn for the Perceful family.


Major William CHENOWETH and Mary M. "Polly" VAN METER were married on 4 Oct 1781 in USA, Kentucky, Nelson Co.. They appeared in the census in 1820 in USA, Kentucky, Nelson Co., Bardstown.522 William Chenoweth 0 0 0 1 0 1 / 1 0 1 0
1 male 16-26, 1 male over 45. 1 female under 10 and 1 26-45

521. Who Was Who in Hardin County - Jacob Van Meter, Sr. (Hardin County Historical Society. two pages copied and mailed by Shirley Lillie, April 1998), p. 160.
522. Heritage Quest Online. Subscription database through the Sonoma County Public Library. 1820 > KENTUCKY > NELSON > BARDSTOWN Series: M33 Roll: 19 Page: 168.
360. Egge, Jon., Chenoweth Web Page - The Chenoweth's in the U.S. - the decendants of John Chenoweth and Mary Calvert (Woodinville, WA: Jon D. Egge, http://chenowethsite.com/chenweth.htm Email: jegge@chenowethsite.com c 1999-2002.).
                  
Mary ÒPollyÓ M. VAN METER
Birth:
12 Feb 1757
Berkeley co, Va, Usa
Death:
19 Jun 1832
Nelson co, Ky, Usa
Sources:
Chenoweth Family Site
Notes:
                   http://www.sonic.net/~prouty/prouty/b223.htm#P625

Mary M. "Polly" VAN METER523 was born on 11 Feb 1757 in USA, Virginia, Berkeley Co. (now West Virginia).524 She died on 29 Jun 1832 in USA, Kentucky, Nelson Co.. She was buried in USA, Kentucky, Nelson Co., Deatsville (near), Wilson Creek Baptist Church Cemetery. Mary Van Meter was born Feb 11, 1757, Berkeley Co., Virginia (Now West Virginia), the daughter of Jacob Van Meter (Mar 1723-NOV 16, 1798) and Letitia Strode (1725-1799). She travelled to Kentucky with her husband David/John Hinton as part of her family's migration west. In 1780 she was left with two children when her husband drowned in the Ohio River during the journey. Husbandless, she settled in what was then Jefferson Co. and part of Virginia (now Hardin Co., KY), during a time of Indian unrest when many white settlers where losing their lives. She became known in the area as the Widow Hinton.
In 1781 she was living at Squire Boone's Station on Brashear Creek, sometimes called "Painted Stone" near present Shelbyville, KY. In April of that year the station was attacked around sunrise by a band of Indians led by the white renegade, Simon Girty. Squire Boone, "in his shirt tail" and ten to twelve others grabbed their guns and rushed to protect the retreat of a work party that had left early to put in the corn crop. Squire was wounded in the fray, one arm was so shattered it never healed properly. By Sept of 1781 it was decided to abandon the Station because the Indian troubles were so bad. Everyone left except Squire, who was still weak and recovering, his 12 yr old son Moses, and the widow Hinton, as there weren't enough pack horses. The travelling party was ambushed 21 miles away and still 8 miles from Linn's Station. A day or two later about 300 men from the Falls of the Ohio (now Louisville) and other nearby settlements marched out, buried the dead and rescued Squire's family and Widow Hinton's, along with the stock which had wandered back and much of the lost belongings of the moving families.
During 1779 Major William Chenoweth came to Pottenger's Creek in Kentucky and entered lands in Jefferson (now Nelson) county, adjacent to present day Hardin Co. He had been granted land for his Revolutionary service. On March 5, 1781 he was appointed administrator of the estate of John (or David) Hinton. Later he married the "Widow Hinton." They raised nine children together. They built a large stone house near Dateville, about ten miles from Bardstown in Nelson Co. where they lived until their deaths. Mary died June 29, 1832, Nelson Co., Kentucky, four years after his husband William.

523. Thompson, Jess M., The Jess M. Thompson Pike County history : as printed in installments in the Pike County republican, Pittsfield, Illinois, 1935-1939. (Pittsfield, Ill.: Pike County Historical Society, 1967, 582 pgs.), p. 384-5.
524. Ibid., p. 384.
                  
Children
Marriage
1
William CHENOWETH
Birth:
22 Sep 1782
Ky, Usa
Death:
8 Jul 1805
 
Marr:
 
2
Birth:
2 Mar 1784
Deatsville, Nelson co, Ky, Usa
Death:
29 Jul 1851
Perry, Pike co, Il, Usa
3
Birth:
27 Dec 1785
Nelson co, Ky, Usa
Death:
31 Mar 1861
Perry, Pike co, Il, Usa
4
Birth:
6 Jul 1789
Deatsville, Nelson co, Ky, Usa
Death:
23 Jul 1858
Hardin co, Ky, Usa
5
Birth:
7 Jul 1791
Deatsville, Nelson co, Ky, Usa
Death:
12 Jul 1845
Andrew co, Mo, Usa
6
Birth:
5 May 1793
Nelson co, Ky, Usa
Death:
31 Jan 1844
Collin co, Tx, Usa
7
Birth:
11 Jun 1796
Nelson co, Ky, Usa
Death:
3 Nov 1875
Hardin co, Ky, Usa
Marr:
20 Jan 1814
Nelson co, Ky, Usa 
Notes:
                   http://www.sonic.net/~prouty/prouty/b222.htm#P622

Letitia Van Meter CHENOWETH360,361 was born on 11 Jun 1796 in USA, Kentucky, Nelson Co. (later Hardin Co.).362 She appeared in the census in 1870 in USA, Kentucky, Hardin Co.. Letitia, age 74, was living with her son, James Monroe, and his family during the 1870 Census. She died on 3 Nov 1875 in USA, Kentucky, Hardin Co..362
                  
8
Birth:
18 Jan 1798
Nelson co, Ky, Usa
Death:
23 Oct 1868
Plano, Collin co, Tx, Usa
9
Birth:
7 Jul 1801
Nelson co, Ky, Usa
Death:
18 Apr 1882
Perry, Pike co, Il, Usa
FamilyCentral Network
William Chenoweth - Mary ÒPollyÓ M. Van Meter

William Chenoweth was born at Hampshire co, Va, Usa 10 Jun 1760. His parents were William Chenoweth and Ruth Calvert.

He married Mary ÒPollyÓ M. Van Meter Oct 1781 at Hardin co, Ky, Usa . Mary ÒPollyÓ M. Van Meter was born at Berkeley co, Va, Usa 12 Feb 1757 daughter of Jacob Jansen Van Meter and Letitia Strode .

They were the parents of 9 children:
William Chenoweth born 22 Sep 1782.
Jacob Van Meter Chenoweth born 2 Mar 1784.
Abraham Chenoweth born 27 Dec 1785.
Isaac Calvert Chenoweth born 6 Jul 1789.
Miles Hart Chenoweth born 7 Jul 1791.
Hardin Thomas Chenoweth born 5 May 1793.
Letitia Van Meter Chenoweth born 11 Jun 1796.
Ruth C. Chenoweth born 18 Jan 1798.
James Hackley Chenoweth born 7 Jul 1801.

William Chenoweth died 16 Aug 1828 at Deatsville, Nelson co, Ky, Usa .

Mary ÒPollyÓ M. Van Meter died 19 Jun 1832 at Nelson co, Ky, Usa .