James Finley (minister)

James Finley (minister)

James Finley (February 4, 1725 - January 6, 1795) was an American Presbyterian minister and politician who was a Pioneer resident of Western Pennsylvania. Either he or his wife owned the house in which Thomas Jefferson began his first attempt to draft the United States Declaration of Independence.

Early life

James Finley was born on February 4, 1725 in County Armagh, Ireland, the son of Michael Finley and Anne daughter of Samuel O'Neill. He immigrated to America at the age of nine, and studied under Samuel Blair at Faggs Manor Academy, [Dwight Guthrie, "Presbyterian Beginnings in the West," Ever a Frontier: The Bicentennial History of the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, edited by James Arthur Walther, Wm. B. Eerdmanns Publishing Company, 1994, pages 50-51 ] in what is now Londonderry Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania.

In 1752, Finley married Hannah Evans (1715-April 1, 1795), daughter of Robert Evans. The couple had seven sons and two daughters. Eight of their children lived to adulthood. A son, James (1769-1772), died aged three. [Genealogical and Personal History of Fayette County Pennsylvania, Vol. I-II, John W. Jordan, ed. New York, USA: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1912]

James was brother of Andrew Finley and brother and student of the Samuel Finley, (fifth president of the College of New Jersey, later known as Princeton University, from 1761 until 1766) ["Clan Finley", RADM Herald F. Stout, 2d Ed 2 VV bound as 1, Dover OH:1956, V1 p26] . James graduated from Princeton. [Dwight Guthrie, "Presbyterian Beginnings in the West," Ever a Frontier: The Bicentennial History of the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, edited by James Arthur Walther, Wm. B. Eerdmanns Publishing Company, 1994, pages 50-51 ] (He attended and graduated from the predecessor institution then known as William Tennant's Log College, in Neshaminy, Bucks County, Pennsylvania).

Benjamin Rush, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, was a cousin of the Finleys, and moved into the Samuel Finley home at the age of six upon the death of his father. Through his brother Samuel, James was likely acquainted with another signer of the Declaration of Independence, Richard Stockton, as well as Oliver Ellsworth, who became the third Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, and Ebenezer Hazard, who became Postmaster General.

Later life

Finley had a revival experience under the Robert Smith and traveled with noted evangelist George Whitfield. Finley was ordained in 1752 and became pastor of East Nottingham Church, near the disputed Maryland-Pennsylvania border. He traveled to western Pennsylvania three or four times before 1782, possibly as early as 1765. In 1771 Finley supplied sabbath services over the Allegheny Mountains under commission from the Presbyterian Synod of Philadelphia. In 1772 he traveled to Fayette County, Pennsylvania with his son, Ebenezer, to a farm Finley had purchased near Dunlap's Creek. In 1782 he accepted a call from the united congregations at the Forks of the Youghiogheny River to serve as pastor to several congregations and settlements. [Dwight Guthrie, "Presbyterian Beginnings in the West," Ever a Frontier: The Bicentennial History of the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, edited by James Arthur Walther, Wm. B. Eerdmanns Publishing Company, 1994, pages 50-51 ]

In "Ever a Frontier: The Bicentennial History of the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary," a short biography of Finley concludes: "Finley was one of the 'honored seven,'" all graduates of Princeton College, who carried the responsibility of spreading Christianity and Presbyterianism throughout the expanses of the west. This they did in their own way, so very successfully that the whole area was soon called their "Western Zion." Finley died at 1795 at the age of seventy. He left a bequest to Canonsburg Academy, which became Jefferson College, then Washington & Jefferson College. [Dwight Guthrie, "Presbyterian Beginnings in the West," Ever a Frontier: The Bicentennial History of the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, edited by James Arthur Walther, Wm. B. Eerdmanns Publishing Company, 1994, pages 50-51 ]

Finley family history holds that during the American Revolution, he was connected to the house where the Declaration of Independence was initially drafted. Web sources have him as owning the house, in which Thomas Jefferson was so uncomfortable that he moved to a boarding house on the edge of town. [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~cafamilies/finley/famous.html - Accessed: April 9, 2007] Other sources state that the home where Jefferson wrote the Declaration was owned and occupied by Jacob Graff, a local bricklayer. [http://www.ushistory.org/declaration/graff.htm - Accessed: April 9, 2007]

Finley was involved in the border dispute between Virginia and Pennsylvania in furtherance of the interests of Pennsylvania. He made several trips to then Westmoreland County, likely to the area of present Greene and Washington Counties, where he collected signatures on petitions which are now at NARA in Washington. These trips have sometimes been speculated as also being spying missions for Benjamin Franklin and the Committee of Safety. [Clan Finley RADM Herald F. Stout, 2d Ed 2 VV bound as 1, Dover OH:1956, V1 p26] In 1795 Finley was elected to the Pennsylvania State Legislature. [List Members of PA State Legislature, PA State Library, Harrisburg]

The following story was recorded about Finley having a premonition when his third son and fourth child, Ebenezer (1758-1849), barely escaped an Indian attack: " [Ebenezer] came to Fayette county [PA] with his father in 1772 and settled on lands in Redstone township, purchased by his father in 1771. Ebenezer was a daring, hardy lad, and amidst his pioneer surroundings rapidly developed stature and strength. Samuel Finley, who came at the same time, but not a relative, was in charge of the farm, aided by his Negro slaves brought from Maryland. Samuel was drafted for militia duty, but Ebenezer was allowed to go as his substitute. While at Fort Wallace a rider brought news of the approach of Indians, Young Finley was one of the party of twenty men who left the fort, and soon came upon a large body of Indians before whom they retreated, keeping up a running fight. Finley's gun would not go off, and in stopping to fix it he fell behind the others. An Indian with a leveled gun was about to shoot him, when a settler's shot struck him. Finley ran, closely pursued, and soon caught up with the hindmost man, who received the tomahawk, intended for Finley, in the back of his head. Close pressed, but protected by the fire of a comrade, he safely crossed the bridge and reached the fort. A remarkable case of premonition or telepathy, or call it as one may, must here be recorded: During young Finley's running fight and narrow escapes, just mentioned, his father, Rev. James Finley, three hundred miles away, had a strange and undefinable impression that his son was in great danger, but could form no distinct conception of its nature or cause. He fell to his knees and spent a long time in earnest prayer for his son, arising with the comfortable feeling that the danger was past. He made a note of the time, and when a few weeks later he received a letter from his son giving an account of his narrow escapes from death, he saw that the time corresponded exactly with his own strange experience. Rev. Finley was a man of absolute truth -- the reader must settle for himself what was the cause of this wireless intercourse between father and son and separated by three hundred miles of space." [Genealogical and Personal History of Fayette County Pennsylvania, Vol. I-II, John W. Jordan, ed. New York, USA: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1912]

James Finley died on January 6, 1795 in Rostaver Township, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania and is buried at Rehoboth Presbyterian Churchyard. [Clan Finley RADM Herald F. Stout, 2d Ed 2 VV bound as 1, Dover OH:1956, V1 p26]

References

Further reading

Wilfred Jordan, Colonial and Revolutionary Families of Pennsylvania. NY: Lewis Historical Publishing Co., 1935 6 vv.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • James Finley — is the name of:* James Finley (minister) (1725–95), US Presbyterian minister * James Finley (engineer) (1756–1828), pioneer suspension bridge builder * James I. Finley, US politician;See also *James Findlay disambiguation *James Finley Watson,… …   Wikipedia

  • Finley — may refer to: Places *East Finley Township, Pennsylvania, USA *Finley, Washington, USA *Finley, Wisconsin, USA *Finley, North Dakota, USA *Finley, New South Wales, Australia *Finley Golf Course, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA *Finley Hospital,… …   Wikipedia

  • James Moore (Canadian politician) — Infobox CanadianMP honorific prefix = The Honourable name = James Moore honorific suffix = PC, MP riding = Port Moody Westwood Port Coquitlam parliament = Canadian term start = 2004 federal election term end = predecessor = new riding successor …   Wikipedia

  • Martha Finley — (April 26, 1828 – January 30, 1909)[1] was a teacher and author of numerous works, the most well known being the 28 volume Elsie Dinsmore series which was published over a span of 38 years. The daughter of Presbyterian minister Dr. James Brown… …   Wikipedia

  • John Huston Finley — (October 19, 1863 ndash; 1940) was born in Grand Ridge, Il., the eldest son of James Gibson and Lydia Margaret McCombs Finley. His father and mother went out as early settlers on the prairies from the East. His father was the great grandson of… …   Wikipedia

  • Diane Finley — The Honourable Diane Finley PC, MP Member of the Canadian Parliament for Haldimand Norfolk Incumbent Assumed office 2004 …   Wikipedia

  • Liste bekannter Ingenieure — Siehe auch: Liste von Erfindern, Liste der Biographien, Kategorie:Ingenieur, Erfinder, Konstrukteur, Liste Persönlichkeiten der Elektrotechnik A Ingenieur Lebensdaten Erfindungen, Leistungen, ingenieurwissenschaftliche Tätigkeiten Roman Abt… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Liste bedeutender Ingenieure — Siehe auch: Liste von Erfindern, Liste der Biographien, Kategorie:Ingenieur, Erfinder, Konstrukteur, Liste Persönlichkeiten der Elektrotechnik Inhaltsverzeichnis A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • List of civil engineers — This list of civil engineers is a list of notable people who have been trained in or have practised civil engineering. Contents: Top · 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z A …   Wikipedia

  • 2007 Canadian incumbents — Crown= *Head of State Queen Elizabeth II (Prince consort Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh)Federal government*Governor General Michaëlle Jean (Viceregal Consort Jean Daniel Lafond)Cabinet*Prime Minister Stephen Harper*Minister of Finance Jim… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”