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William Carothers

Male 1771 - 1829  (58 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  William Carothers was born 22 Feb 1771 (son of John Carothers and Alice McTeer); died 26 Mar 1829; was buried , Cumberland, Pennsylvania.

    Notes:

    Administration on the intestate estate of William Carothers of East Pennsboro
    was granted on 7 April 1829 to Frederick May; bond was for $2400 with John
    Harper and Adam Siever as sureties.

    Buried in Silver Spring Cemetery.
    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 40.

    William — Mary. Mary was born 3 Jul 1790; died 6 Mar 1835; was buried , Cumberland, Pennsylvania. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. Carothers

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John Carothers (son of William Carothers and Jean); died 11 Jan 1783, , Cumberland, Pennsylvania.

    Notes:

    During the Revolutionary War John Carothers served as an officer in the
    Cumberland County Militia; from July 1776 through May 1778 he was listed as a
    first lieutenant in the Fifth Company of the Second Battalion; on 10 May 1780
    he was captain of the Fourth Company in the same Battalion; from August 1780
    through September 1781 he appears in the records as captain of the Seventh
    Company in the Third Battalion.

    The will of John Carothers of East Pennsboro Twp., written 10 January 1783,
    probated 13 March 1783, bequeathed to wife Ayles, three cows, a horse, six
    sheep, bed and bedding, her clothes, a chest of drawers and pewter, she to live
    on the place during her widowhood or until the youngest child comes of age; the
    remaining personal estate to be sold and the proceeds to be invested for the
    children; to daughters Mary, Alis and Jean Carothers, 80 pounds each; to sons
    William, James and John, the land; if child expected is female she is to have
    80 pounds, if male he is to share with sons; clothes to sons William and James;
    watch and Bible to son John. Executors: wife Ayles, friends John Quigley,
    James Laird. Witnesses: William Geddis, Nat Nelson, William McTeer.
    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 39.

    John — Alice McTeer. Alice (daughter of James McTeer and Mary Sharon) was born 17 Mar 1746, , Cumberland, Pennsylvania; died 1804, , Cumberland, Pennsylvania. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Alice McTeer was born 17 Mar 1746, , Cumberland, Pennsylvania (daughter of James McTeer and Mary Sharon); died 1804, , Cumberland, Pennsylvania.

    Notes:

    In the 1800 census of East Pennsboro Township Elice Carothers aged over 45
    years was listed as head of a household which included four males, two 26-45,
    one 10-26 and one 0-10; three other females, 16-26, 10-16 and 0-10 years.

    The will of Alice Carothers of East Pennsboro Township, written 1 November
    1804, probated 17 December 1804, bequeathed to her two sons William and John
    Carothers, all her estate and all her rights in the personal estate of her son
    James Carothers "lately deceased"; to daughters Mary and Alice, $2.00 each "in
    lieu of their share of my estate"; to daughter Jane 150 pounds, two
    featherbeds, one case of drawers, tables and a new saddle. Executors: sons
    William and John Carothers (and they to pay the legacies). Witnesses: John
    Orr, William Orr.

    On 8 January 1837 Alice Carothers of Beaver County, Pennsylvania, for $8062,
    conveyed 201 acres 88 perches in East Pennsboro Township, Cumberland County on
    the bank of Conodoquin Creek to Daniel Dietz of York County Pennsylvania.
    Alices's title was explained as follows: Whereas William Carothers obtained
    this land by patent dated 5 May 1762 and by his will dated 16 November 1762
    devised the land to his three sons, William, James and John (he also left three
    daughters, Mary, Alice and Jean); "by the death of their brother James and by
    divers other assurances" William and John Carothers came to possess the law as
    tenants in common until an action of partition on 17 April 1826 gave this tract
    to William, who died intestate on 26 March 1829, leaving a widow Mary and a son
    John Carothers; said widow died on 6 March 1835 and said John died intestate on
    25 May 1835, "leaving neither father nor mother, sister or brother but leaving
    an aunt by the father's side, the said Alice Carothers, the present grantor",
    and several cousins, the children of deceased aunts and uncles by the father's
    side. Thus the patent descended to Alice as "next of kin and heir."
    Witnesses: James Clendening, John Ewing. Acknowledged by Alice Carothers in
    Beaver County on 28 January 1837. Filed 1 April 1837. The tract described in
    this deed includes part of the property now used for Silver Spring Church
    Cemetery.

    Died in the fall of 1804.
    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 39.

    Children:
    1. 1. William Carothers was born 22 Feb 1771; died 26 Mar 1829; was buried , Cumberland, Pennsylvania.
    2. James Carothers died Bef 1 Nov 1804.
    3. Mary Carothers died Bef 25 May 1835.
    4. Alice Carothers died Abt 1848, , Beaver, Pennsylvania.
    5. Jean Carothers died Bef 25 May 1835.
    6. John Carothers was born 15 Oct 1781; died 5 Mar 1811; was buried , Cumberland, Pennsylvania.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  William Carothers

    Notes:

    The will of William Carothers of East Pennsboro Twp., written 16 Nov. 1762,
    probated 6 Jan. 1763, bequeathed to his wife Jean one-third of the real estate
    for her lifetime and one-third of the personal estate to her disposal, also a
    mare and saddle; to son John, all land, two-thirds of the personal estate and
    the white stallion, he to pay daughter Margaret 150 pounds and she to have the
    one third of the person estate after her mother's death. Executors: Nathaniel
    Nelson, Jonathan Hoge. Witnesses: Nelson Hoge, William Orr.
    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 33.

    William — Jean. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Jean

    Notes:

    The will of Jean Carothers of East Pennsboro Twp., written 26 Aug 1783,
    probated 16 Dec. 1783, bequeathed to grandsons William Carothers, 15 pounds and
    a cow, James Carothers, 3 pounds and a mare, John Carothers, 25 pounds; a cow
    each to Michael Deverter and William Ross; a heifer to William Henry; six yards
    of cotton to Joseph and William Henry, shirt cloth to John Quigley, also shirts
    to be made for the aforementioned grandsons, tombstones to be erected for her
    husband and her son John; to daughter Elice (widow of son John Carothers),
    black quilted petticoat and black silk cloak; to daughter Margaret, silk gown;
    to granddaughter Jean P. McTeer, calico wrapper; to son-in-law William McTeer,
    a sliver dollar; to granddaughters Jane Carothers, bed and bedding, Elsie
    Carothers, saddle, Mary Carothers, stuff gown. Executors: William Henry, John
    Quigley. Any remaining estate to be distributed by them "as I have or shall
    hereafter tell them by word of mouth." Witnesses: Samuel Fisher, John Sample.
    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 33.

    Children:
    1. 2. John Carothers died 11 Jan 1783, , Cumberland, Pennsylvania.
    2. Margaret Carothers was born 1702; died 20 Aug 1794; was buried , Cumberland, Pennsylvania.

  3. 6.  James McTeer was born Abt 1697, County Down, Northern Ireland; died 16 Feb 1785, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania.

    Notes:

    "James McTeer came from County Down Ireland with a wife and a number of
    children, the voyage was made in the old sailing vessel, requiring a great
    length of time. An epidemic broke out on board the ship. He saw one child,
    then another, and at last his wife's body lowered into the watery grave. His
    grief was such that the convulsions caused such upheavals of the breast, that
    the buttons were torn from his silk satin vest."

    Sometime about 1730 James McTeer left Northern Ireland with a wife and family.
    On shipboard his children fell ill and died one by one, then his wife succumbed
    also; so the grief-stricken young man arrived alone in Pennsylvania. This same
    traditional has been handed down from generation to generation in both
    Tennessee and Ohio. Though the story is essentially the same in both branches,
    the number, sex, and names of the children vary, and no one has presumed to
    suggest a name or identity for this first wife.

    On 16 Jan. 1746/1747 James McTeer took out a tract of land in East Pennsboro
    Twp., Lancaster Co., 304 acres 120 perches on Warrant #117; on 8 Nov. 1760 he
    took out two additional adjoining tracts containing 72.5 and 37.5 acres, which
    additions were described in the survey as "but thin and ordinary land." At the
    time of the first survey on 10 Nov 1760, the land was in East Pennsboro Twp.,
    Cumberland Co. and the abutting property owners were Anthony McCue, James
    McMeen, Peter Leester and Rowlan Chambers. On 13 May 1767 James took out still
    another 70 acres southeast of the preceding tract and abutting on Yellow
    Breaches Creek; this land was not surveyed until much later, but is mentioned
    in James' will as "warrant land."

    This homestead was successively in East Pennsboro Twp., Lancaster Co., until
    the formation of Cumberland County in 1750; then in East Pennsboro Twp.,
    Cumberland Co., until 1766, when Allen Township was formed. When Allen
    Township was divided in 1850 the McTeer land fell in Lower Allen, "on the road
    from Lisburn to Silver Spring Meeting House."

    In relatively modern terms the location is between St. Johns Road on the east,
    Slate Hill on the south, the Upper-Lower Allen Township line on the west, and
    another range of hills on the north. Identification of exact landmarks within
    the area has been singularly complicated because the property is now traversed
    by the Lisburn Road, the Reading Railroad, The Pennsylvania Turnpike, as well
    as by other local roads coming from New Cumberland on the east and proceeding
    southward to Fairview Twp., York Co. across Yellow Breaches Creek.

    Soon after completing his title to the property with a patent dated 11 Nov.
    1760, James McTeer built a store house near a large flowing spring, probably at
    about the point where Lisburn Road crosses Cedar Run. A Cumberland Co. map of
    the 1860s shows at that time seven houses on what had been the original McTeer
    grant; owners along the southern border were C. Musselman and John Strong, who
    had two Dwellings, one at the junction where Lisburn Road came in from the
    south; then on Lisburn Road going north again after the jog, James Dunlap had
    two houses; David Hurst was still further north but somewhat west of the
    roadway; at last an unidentified building was located east against the hill.

    Records of the Pennsylvania Direct Tax of 1798 for Allen Twp., Cumberland Co.,
    list James McTeer's original house then owned and occupied by his son
    Samuel McTeer, as a stone dwelling, 16 by 22 feet, one story with four windows
    containing 48 lights (panes of glass); the accompanying kitchen was shown as
    an outbuilding 16 by 12 feet with two windows containing 12 lights; and the
    whole property including two acres of land was valued at $600.

    When Major Will A. McTeer of Maryville, Tenn., visited the locality a century
    later this house was still standing and still owned by a McTeer descendant,
    Mrs. Ellen Saxton. The Major wrote his impressions in a letter from
    Mechanicsburg, dated 30 July 1898; "We got here last night. A beautiful town of
    five thousand inhabitants, nestled down in the richest and loveliest little
    valley I have ever seen. I am just now back from a visit to the old homestead
    of my great, great grandfather, four miles out. The main part of the old stone
    house is still standing but very old and dilapidated. The old farm is of the
    very best. A barn as big as Texas ... filled ... with oats by the six horse
    load. I drank from the old spring that slaked the thirst of my ancestors."

    But only a few weeks after this encounter the old place was torn down; so a
    neighboring farmer could use the stones for the foundation of a milk station.
    In Mrs. Saxton's words, "It was hard for me to make up my mind to it but
    thought it best to lay sentiment aside as it was getting unsightly and useless
    and possibly dangerous."

    During the French and Indian War James McTeer was a captain in the local
    militia. He and his lieutenant John Anderson, both of East Pennsboro Twp. were
    commissioned in 1747-1748 in the Associated Regiment of Lancaster Co. Over the
    River Susquehanna. By the time of the American Revolution he was well past 70
    years and so was not included in any of the militia lists of that time; nor is
    there any evidence of his providing other specific assistance to the cause of
    Independance. Yet, since his five sons and three sons-in-law all served with
    the Pennsylvania troops at various times during the war there can be no doubt
    where his sympathies were in that conflict.

    Out of his 400 acres James McTeer provided a farm for each of his four sons who
    remained in Allen Township. On 8 Dec 1770 "for love and affection" he deeded
    100 acres to his son John; on 21 Dec. 1770 he made a similar conveyance to his
    son William; and by his will he also gave land to sons James and Samuel. Son
    Robert moved to Fermanaugh Twp., Cumberland Co., soon after his marriage and
    had already gone on to Tennessee before his father's death. Since he received
    in the will only a token legacy, it is clear that Robert had in some way
    received his share at an earlier date, but the nature of that inheritance is
    now past recovery.

    The will of James McTeer Sr. of Allen Twp., Cumberland Co., written 2 Aug.
    1764, probated 16 March 1785, bequeathed to son James. "the land he now liveth
    on as it is divided by John Creigh", one half "the warranted land adjoining to
    be divided according to quantity and quality", also "the meadow that is fenced
    off for his use"; to daughter Elizabeth Boyd, five shillings; to son Robert
    McTeer, five shillings; to daughter Alce Caruthers, five shillings; to sons
    William and John, five shillings each; to daughter Sarah Pauly, five shillings;
    to granddaughter Elizabeth, daughter of son James, "my chest of drawers"; to
    son James, "my table". Any remainder after payment of the legacies and
    expenses from the sale of personal property to be divided between sons James
    and Samuel McTeer. They to be Executors. Witnesses: Hugh Laird, John Worden.

    An untotalled inventory of the "Goods and Cattels of James McTeer Sen
    deceased", made on 26 Feb. 1785 by Hugh Laird and William McMEan, includes only
    personal property; one horse at 17 pounds; a red cow with a white face at 4
    pounds; seven pewter plates at 14 shillings; a case of drawers willed to
    granddaughter Elizabeth 3 pounds 15 shillings; a table willed to son James, 15
    shillings; other furniture, table, chair, dough chest, walnut chest
    and bedstead totaling 1 pound 2 shillings 6 pennies; two featherbeds, pillows,
    coverlets and blankets, 15 pounds 5 shillings and 2 pennies total; wearing
    apparel, 2 pounds 10 shillings; old books, 1 pound 1 shilling 6 pennies; a few
    tools, flax hackle, pruning chisel and draw knife, 7 shillings 6 pennies; pot
    rack, tongs, fire shovel, two basins, spice box and frying pan, 16 shillings; a
    buckskin, 10 shillings; "a pair of specks and tobacco box", 2 shillings 6
    pennies.
    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 7, 23-26.

    James married Mary Sharon Abt 1745, , Cumberland, Pennsylvania. [Group Sheet]


  4. 7.  Mary Sharon
    Children:
    1. 3. Alice McTeer was born 17 Mar 1746, , Cumberland, Pennsylvania; died 1804, , Cumberland, Pennsylvania.
    2. Sarah McTeer was born 19 Apr 1749, , Cumberland, Pennsylvania; died 19 May 1807/1810, , Mifflin, Pennsylvania.
    3. Samuel McTeer was born 12 Apr 1752, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania; died Abt Sep 1800.