Isaac VAN METER

Birth:
10 Dec 1757
Old Fields, Hampshire co, Va, Usa
Death:
13 Dec 1837
Hardy co, Va, Usa
Burial:
Old Fields, Hardy co, Va, Usa
Marriage:
27 Jun 1780
Mother:
Sources:
#8
Notes:
                   or 12 Oct 1757

9 whites  4 blacks


1791 Deed:
Hite & Vanmeter Agreement

Memorandum of Agreement made and Entered into this 24th day of December One thousand Seven Hundred and Ninety One between Abraham Hite of the county of Jefferson & District of Kentucky of the one part and Isaac Vanmeter and Joseph Vanmeter both of the County of Hardy & State of Virginia of the other part. Witnesseth, that the sd. Abraham hath this day sold to the said Isaac & Joseph four Tracts of land lying on Vanmeters Mill Run Late the property of Abraham Hite Deceased and Patented in his name amounting to One thousand and fifty Acres for the Sun of Nine hundred Pounds Current money of Virginia, for and in Consideration of which the ad. Isaac & Joseph doth agree to pay to Mr. Jas. Mercer for and on Acct. of the sd. Abraham Hite Decease on or before the first day of March One thousand seven hundred and ninety three the sun of Four Hundred and Eight Pound thirteen Shillings and ten pence half penny being the amount of award against the sd. Abraham, deceased & Interest to the sd. first day of March 1793 and further the sd. Isaac & Joseph doth agree to pay to Mr. Gabriel Jones a bond of the sd. Abraham Deceased to the sd. Gabriel for Two Hundred Pounds, when the sd. Jones shall demand the same and to pay the Annual Interest thereon from the first day of April in the year One Thousand Seven hundred and Ninety Eight with legal Interest to be pd. annually from the first day of April One thousand Seven Hundred & Ninety five and the remaining part of the sd Nine hundred pounds to wit Ninety one pound Six shilling & Six penny half penny to be pd in the settlement of a bond from the said Abr. a. Hite deceased to Garret Vanmeter Deceased for the sun of One hundred and fifteen Pounds Payable the Second day of April 1788, for the true performance of the above Articles the parties bind themselves firmly by these present Witness our hands this day above written
Teste .
Isaac Cade Abr. A. Hite
William Snyder Isaac Vanmeter


1797 Letter
August 20th 1797

Mr. Isaac Van Meter


Sir
I received yesterday yours of _____ 25th Inst by Mr. Smith, Stating your pretensions to _____ SurveyÑÑ Assume the Mr. Lane you mentioned had _____ for the land he settled on within the limits of my survey, and that Lord Fairfax granted him a deed for 1550 acres adjoining in consideration of any little improvements he might have made. The one survey, which was run out about a year after the ______ or was not concidered as a part thereof nor subject to the same rules of settlement In respect to Mr. Ashbys pretension, I believe it will be in our power to prove as well by his own confessions as by other testimony, that he had simply a permission from Lord Fairfax to settle on the land and remain as long as he pleased, with a view to keep off intruders But let us even suppose for a moment that Lord Fairfax had given him permission to live on the land during his and his wifes land ÑÑ is it possible you can be of opinion that such a permission implied a power to transfer it to another? Can any man reasonably suppose that Lt. Fairfax even intended to make such ablis position of so valuable a tract of 1550 acres of land? I appeal to your candour for a Ñ. It is true Sir, that both Mr. Man and Myself are very Averse to going to law with you _____ occasion we fully expected that the you came _____ reflect on the futility of your claim that you ____ under the property Ñ but Sir, in case you should determine otherwise we cannot, out of respect to you, submit _____ longer to the top of so valuable a property Ñ I shall thank you therefore to write me by post your final determination in this respect that I may govern myself accordingly Ñ I mentioned to you in conversation, and I believe by letter also ______ we would not sell this property subject to any claim however fictitious Ñ when we have possession, I shall get sumone to examine the land minutely, and shall be governed by their _____ the value Ñ it will then I expect be offered for _____ will be given to you as a purchase. This much I can say at present, and I hop on ______ on, that you will spare us the disagreeable necessity of having recourse to conceive measures for the recovery of out right.
I am very respectfully,
Sir,
Rawleigh Cataton

1808 Deed:

Know all men by these presents that we Henry Vanmeter, Nathaniel Cartmill, Joel Hinkle and Saul Hinkle are held and firmly bound unto Isaac Vanmeter in the just and full sum of two thousand pounds lawful money to the payment of which will and truely to be made to the said Isaac Vanmeter his heirs or assigns we bind ourselves and our heirs jointly and severally firmly by these presents, sealed with out seals and dated this twenty sixth day of September 1808. The condition of the above obligation is such whereas the said Henry Vanmeter, Nathaniel Cartmill and Joel Hinkle and Saul Hinkle have sold to the above names Isaac Vanmeter the two following tracts of land to wit one tract or parcel of land situate laying and being in the County of Hardy formerly Hampshire containing one hundred acres, in the trough of the south branch of Potowmac with all and singular rights numbers and appertenanies thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining, the other tract or parcel of land containing one hundred and eight five acres, joining the aforesaid tract which aforesaid tract is know by the name of Carrols, for the consideration above stated, now if the above bound Henry Vanmeter, Nathaniel Cartmill, Joel Hinkle and Saul Hinkle who are entitled to four sevenths of the said tracts of land and which they have hereby sold to the said Isaac Vanmeter shall on or before the twenty sixth day of September 1810 make to the said Isaac Vanmeter a good sure perfect and indefeasible title in fee simple to for four sevenths part of the aforesaid tracts or parcels of land with General warranty, then the above obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue.

Witness Henry Van Meter Seal
the word and our hands Nathaniel Cartmill Seal
in fifth line from top interlined Joel Hinkle Seal
before signed Saul Hinkle Seal
Enoch Smith as to HV
Abel Seymour as to NC
Edw. Waggoner as to NC
James Gray & Thomas Vause as to J.H.

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Database: West Virginia History, Vol. 1 - Miller, Thomas Condit and Hu Maxwell. West Virginia and Its People, Volume 1. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Co., 1913.

The Virginia convention which assembled at Williamsburg, May 6, 1776, and adjourned July 5, 1776, framed the first Virginia constitution. That document was among the first of its kind and became a model for many subsequent state constitutions. It had defects, but was better than anything of the kind that had gone before. Territory now embraced wholly or in part in West Virginia, sent six delegates to that convention. Berkeley county elected Robert Rutherford and William Drew; Hampshire county sent Abraham Hite and James Mercer; while the District of West Augusta, which embraced most of Virginia's settled territory West of the Alleghany mountains, as well as part of the present state of Pennsylvania, to which Virginia at that time laid claim, sent Charles Simms and John Harvie.
On June 2, 1788, a convention assembled at Richmond to ratify or reject the United States constitution which had been framed at Philadelphia the preceding year and was sent to all the states for rejection or approval. There was much opposition to it. Many Virginians opposed it because they considered that it placed too much power in the Federal government and too little in the states. Patrick Henry was leader of the opposition and James Madison conducted the fight for ratification. Territory now in West Virginia had sixteen members, and fifteen of these voted for ratification and one, John Evans of Monongalia county, against it. Following is a list of West Virginia delegates.
Berkeley county--William Darke, Adam Stephen.
Greenbrier county--George Clendenin, John Stuart.
Hampshire county--Ralph Humphreys, Andrew Woodrow.
Hardy county--Isaac Van Meter, Abel Seymour.
Harrison county--George Jackson, John Prunty.
Monongalia county--John Evans, William McCleary.
Ohio county--Archibald Woods, Ebenezer Zane.
Randolph county--Benjamin Wilson, John Wilson.

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OLD FIELDS CHURCH open saturday only

Also known as the Fort Pleasant Meeting House, Old Fields Church holds special significance in the history of the South Branch Valley. It is the second oldest church in West Virginia; and because it also served as a school house, it is believed to be the oldest extant school house in the state.

The church was built in 1812 on land donated by Isaac and Elizabeth VanMeter, early settlers in Old Fields who, in 1832, built Fort Pleasant, an 18-room mansion of mixed Georgian and Federal styles nearby.

The original deed for the church stipulates that while the property is to be owned by the Methodist Church, it must be available for use by any denomination at any time. This ecumenical goodwill reflected a strong sense among early Protestant settlers that church attendance took precedence over congregational parochialism.

Religious tolerance did not extend to racial equality. While black slaves were allowed to attend services, they were segregated in a balcony accessed from an outdoor staircase. The balcony, which had become unsafe, was removed in later years.

Members of the VanMeter and other local families continue to be buried in the church yard as their ancestors have been for the past seven or eight generations.

Old Fields Church has been restored and is maintained by the Duffey Memorial United Methodist Church of Moorefield.

Open courtesy of the Duffey Memorial United Church of Moorefield DIRECTIONS: US 220 north from Moorefield, watch for the green
                  
Elizabeth (Bettie) INSKEEP
Birth:
3 Feb 1763
Hampshire co, Va, Usa
Death:
20 Sep 1827
Hardy co, Va, Usa
Children
Marriage
1
Rebekah VAN METER
Birth:
16 Jan 1781
Old Fields, Hampshire co, Va, Usa
Death:
7 Feb 1781
Old Fields, Hampshire co, Va, Usa
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   Dates of birth and death from Joanne Eustice.
                  
2
Birth:
1 Sep 1784
Hampshire co, Va, Usa
Death:
12 May 1871
Hardy co, Wv, Usa
Marr:
6 Apr 1809
Old Fields, Hardy co, Va, Usa 
Notes:
                   age = 65, real estate value = $130000, owned 36 slaves

real estate value = 40,000, owned 24 slaves

real estate value = 25,000


Dates of birth and death from Joanne Eustice.  Records from Old Fields Church Cemetery (as reported at www.vanmetre.com) state "David VanMeter b. 1784, d. 1871"

Benjamin F. VanMeter, Genealogies and Biographical Sketches, pp. 56-57 (Louisville, 1901): "David, second child and eldest son of Isaac VanMeter, Esq., was born September 1, 1784; married Hannah Cunningham, daughter of William Cunningham 3d.

" . . .

"David, first son of Isaac here mentioned, lived on a part of the old Fort Pleasant estate to the age of eighty-seven years, and raised to be grown this above named large family of children, and saw many of his great-grandchildren.  He died May 12, 1871, as full of honor as of years.  He was for many years magistrate, and filled other places of honor and trust, and was for many years a ruling elder in the Presbyterian Church at MoorefieldHe retained his mental and physical  capacity, to a very remarkable degree, up to a few months before his death.  When he was past eighty-five years of age he could mount his saddle-horse from the ground with apparent ease, and rode around over his large landed estate on horse-back, just as he had done when a much younger man."


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1814 Letter

To
Capt. David Vanmeter
on Tour of Duty near Norfolk Virginia
-------------------------------------

August 25th 1814 Fort Pleasant

David
I sit down in order to drop you a line before I start out to Green or to Mr. Warricks - I expect you will receive no small packet of letters by the next post & probably I shall only add one to a considerable expense you will be at for postage and perhaps for little purpose only as a mark of Friendship
I shall enclose herein a Commission for W. Wilton just Received with my sincere respect to him with a request that he will favour me with a line by post.
By Gen'l. order we have detailed 140 men more from this Reg't. who have rendesvozed & has order to hold themselves in readiness to march at a moments warning Capt. Wilton and Capt. Simmons are detailed to Command who all appear in tolerable good spirits Colo Vanse was Due appointed in the Clerkship & in Consequence Resigned his Commission in order to prepare to move to the Western County. There is a Colo detailed from the Brigade Lofton is absent & in all probibility I shall be ordered on this tour which I believe suits me as well as any other time could but as yet have received no orders. Your Aunt appears alarmed at it but I feel resigned & determined to go if ordered But I was told the other Day by Geo. Newell that Wm. Wilton had Lodged several Complaints before the Gen. against me & perhaps I may be arrested & try'd be a Gen'l Court Marshal. There is nothing material or interesting taken place since you left this. Friends Generally I believe enjoys health & have been closely engaged at their hay which the season has afforded a most bountiful crop o. I feel very anxious to hear of the health & welfare of your troops and what is conjectured from the movements of the British - What they mean to be at in all probibility some thing of importance will shortly desplay itself between the two nations. The Girls tells me Cousin Hannah appears well resigned to her situation. We have had intimations of an Armistice should it take place you will no doubt feel a great anxiety to be off home. But do not be too precipitate if an opportunity should offer. I must concluded as I expect you have a number of letters from your friends with this to Read. Believe me to be with sincere Regard to yours affectionately.
Jacob VanMeter

Moorefield VA
Aug. 27th 1814
                  
3
Birth:
8 Sep 1791
Hardy co, Va, Usa
Death:
9 Apr 1867
Marr:
13 Jul 1809
Hardy co, Va, Usa 
4
Birth:
11 Nov 1793
Old Fields, Hardy co, Va, Usa
Death:
27 Oct 1859
Moorefield, Hardy co, Va, Usa
Marr:
14 Feb 1822
Hardy co, Va, Usa 
Notes:
                   or 11 Oct

age 56


Lost an eye as a child
                  
5
Birth:
5 Nov 1795
Hardy co, Va, Usa
Death:
29 Aug 1829
Marr:
16 May 1812
Hardin co, Ky, Usa 
6
Birth:
24 Feb 1798
Old Fields, Hardy co, Va, Usa
Death:
3 Aug 1875
Chillicothe, Ross co, Oh, Usa
Marr:
11 Apr 1826
Piketon, Pike co, Oh, Usa 
Notes:
                   Benjamin F. VanMeter, "Genealogies and Biographical Sketches" p. 60B:   "The Honorable John I. VanMeter, youngest son of Isaac Van Meter, Esq. . . . and who married Polly Harness, represented his native county of Hardy in the Virginia General Assembly while yet so young as to be barely eligible to the office according to the laws of Virginia, and then removed to a fine farm on the Scioto River in Ohio, where he lived until quite an old man, and then removed to Chillicothe, Ohio, where he spent the remainder of his life.  He reared a family of children, only two of whom are now living, viz., Judge John Marshall Van Meter, who is a very prominent lawyer as well as a large and successful farmer, and has served a term as Circuit Judge in the Chillicothe Judicial District, and resides in that city, although he still retains his large and excellent farm on the Scioto River.  His sister Mary, who has never married, resides in the excellent homestead of her parents and immediately adjoining the residence of her brother. . . . The Honorable John I. VanMeter represented his district in the United States Congress from Ohio for two or more terms.  He lived to be more than seventy years of age, and was a very influential and prominent man.  His wife died many years before he did. . . ."

Henry Holcomb Bennett, "The County of Ross" p. 181 (Madison, WI 1902):    "born in 1798 of New York colonial Dutch descent, graduated at Princeton, practiced law in New jersey and Virginia, but after removing to Pike county in 1826, engaged in farming.  He followed the same vocation in Ross county, living at Chillicothe from 1855 to his death in 1875, and was one of the most prosperous landowners of the county.  He married Mary Harness, in Virginia.  In 1836-39 he represented Ross and other counties in the legislature.  He was one of the 'Silver Gray' Whigs, and when that party died joined no other."

Biographical Directory of the American Congress, 1774-1949
Biographies
V
page 1951
VANMETER, John Inskeep, a Representative from Ohio; born near Moorefield, Hardy County, Va. (now West Virginia), in February 1798; attended William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va., and was graduated from Princeton (N.J.) College in 1821; studied law at the school of Judge Gould in Litchfield, Conn.; was admitted to the bar of Virginia in 1822 and commenced practice in Moorefield, Va.; member of the Virginia House of Delegates in 1824; retired from practice; moved to Pike County, Ohio, in 1826 and engaged in agricultural pursuits; member of the State house of representatives in 1836; served in the State senate in 1838; elected as a Whig to the Twenty-eighth Congress (March 4, 1843-March 3, 1845); unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1844 to the Twenty-ninth Congress; affiliated with the Democratic [p.1951] Party in 1856; moved to Chillicothe, Ross County, Ohio, in 1855, where he resided until his death August 3, 1875; interment in Grand View Cemetery.


VANMETER, John Inskeep, a Representative from Ohio; born near Moorefield, Hardy County, Va. (now West Virginia), in February 1798; attended the College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Va., and was graduated from Princeton College in 1821; studied law at the school of Judge Gould in Litchfield, Conn.; was admitted to the bar of Virginia in 1822 and commenced practice in Moorefield, Va.; member of the Virginia house of delegates in 1824; retired from practice; moved to Pike County, Ohio, in 1826 and engaged in agricultural pursuits; member of the State house of representatives in 1836; served in the State senate in 1838; elected as a Whig to the Twenty-eighth Congress (March 4, 1843-March 3, 1845); unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1844 to the Twenty-ninth Congress; affiliated with the Democratic Party in 1856; moved to Chillicothe, Ross County, Ohio, in 1855, where he resided until his death August 3, 1875; interment in Grand View Cemetery.

Vanmeter, John Inskeep (1798-1875) Born in Virginia, 1798. Member of Ohio state legislature; U.S. Representative from Ohio 8th District, 1843-45. Died in 1875. Interment at Grandview Cemetery, Chillicothe, Ohio. See also: congressional biography. political graveyard. com.

Date of death: Death index, Probate Court, Ross County, Ohio (Book 1, p. 69); cause of death: heart disease.
                  
7
Birth:
3 Sep 1800
Old Fields, Hardy co, Va, Usa
Death:
31 Jan 1882
Marr:
28 Nov 1826
Hardy co, Va, Usa 
8
Birth:
7 Aug 1802
Old Fields, Hardy co, Va, Usa
Death:
5 Feb 1882
Hardy co, Wv, Usa
Notes:
                   age = 48

age 58, Moorefield PO

age 68
                  
9
Birth:
5 Dec 1805
Old Fields, Hardy co, Va, Usa
Death:
24 Aug 1853
Marr:
11 Dec 1833
 
FamilyCentral Network
Isaac Van Meter - Elizabeth (Bettie) Inskeep

Isaac Van Meter was born at Old Fields, Hampshire co, Va, Usa 10 Dec 1757. His parents were Garret Van Meter and Ann Markee.

He married Elizabeth (Bettie) Inskeep 27 Jun 1780 . Elizabeth (Bettie) Inskeep was born at Hampshire co, Va, Usa 3 Feb 1763 daughter of Joseph Inskeep and Hannah McColloch .

They were the parents of 9 children:
Rebekah Van Meter born 16 Jan 1781.
David Van Meter born 1 Sep 1784.
Sarah ÒSallieÓ Van Meter born 8 Sep 1791.
Garrett Van Meter born 11 Nov 1793.
Joseph Van Meter born 5 Nov 1795.
John Inskeep Van Meter born 24 Feb 1798.
Elizabeth ÒBetseyÓ Van Meter born 3 Sep 1800.
Jacob Van Meter born 7 Aug 1802.
Ann Markee Van Meter born 5 Dec 1805.

Isaac Van Meter died 13 Dec 1837 at Hardy co, Va, Usa .

Elizabeth (Bettie) Inskeep died 20 Sep 1827 at Hardy co, Va, Usa .