- John Bowman (pioneer)
Infobox Person
name = John Jacob Bowman
image_size =
caption =
birth_name =
birth_date = 1733 or 1738
birth_place = Frederick County,Virginia Colony
death_date = death date and age|1784|5|4|1733|1|1
death_place =Harrodsburg, Kentucky ,United States
death_cause =
resting_place =
resting_place_coordinates =
nationality =German-American
known_for = Early Kentucky pioneer and militia officer; first county-lieutenant and sheriff of Lincoln andKentucky County .
title = Sheriff and Lieutenant-General of Lincoln County
term = 1781-1783
successor =Benjamin Logan
religion =Presbyterian
spouse = Elizabeth McCullum (c. 1766-1784)
children = John Bowman
parents = George Bowman
Mary Hite
relatives = Jost Hite, grandfather
Abraham Bowman, brother
Joseph Bowman, brother
Isaac Bowman, brotherJohn Jacob Bowman (1733 or 1738 –
May 4 ,1784 ) was an 18th centuryAmerican pioneer , colonial militia officer andsheriff , the first appointed inLincoln County, Kentucky . He also presided over the first county court held in Kentucky in 1781 as ajustice of the peace . The first county-lieutenant and military governor ofKentucky County during theAmerican Revolutionary War , he also served under GeneralGeorge Rogers Clark during theIllinois campaign .He is the brother of Joseph, Isaac and
Abraham Bowman , all of whom were among the earliest pioneers to settle in Kentucky and prominent officers in theContinental Army . [Hayden, William. "Conquest of the Country Northwest of the River Ohio, 1778-1783". Indianapolis: Bowen-Merrill Company, 1896. (pg. 979)] He was also the brother-in-law of frontiersmanIsaac Ruddell ,Jethro New and George Brinker. His grandnephew, Abraham's grandsonJohn Bryan Bowman , foundedKentucky University and the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Kentucky.Wayland, John W. "A History of Shenandoah County, Virginia". Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1980. (pg. 588) ISBN 0-8063-8011-X] [Johnson, E. Polk. "A History of Kentucky and Kentuckians: The Leaders and Representative Men in Commerce, Industry and Modern Activities, Vol II". Chicago and New York: Lewis Publishing Co., 1912. (pg. 1132)]Biography
Early life
Born to Virginia pioneer George Bowman and Mary Hite (daughter of pioneer
Jost Hite ) inFrederick County, Virginia ,Thwaites, Reuben Gold and Louise Phelps Kellogg. "The Revolution on the Upper Ohio, 1775-1777". Madison: Wisconsin Historical Society, 1912. (pg. 170)] he is first recorded as a captain in the local militia in 1760. Living inBotetourt County during the late 1760s, he was a witness to the land deed ofAndrew Miller , heir-at-law of John Miller, toIsrael Christian for a tract of land (81 acres) in southernCatawba later donated to build the first county courthouse and other public buildings. During that same year, he acted as anappraiser for the estate ofDavid Bryan .Kegley, F.B. "Kegley's Virginia Frontier: The Beginning of the Southwest, the Roanoke of Colonial Days, 1740-1783". Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 2003. (pg. 533) ISBN 0-8063-1717-5]In July 1768, he sold his share of the inheritance received from his father's death, 545 acres of the Bowman family estate in
Linvel's Creek , and settled on the Roanoke. He was later recommended ajustice of the peace inAugusta County in June 1769 and was appointed as commissioner of Botetourt County following its official incorporation into theColony of Virginia .Marrying the widow of David Bryan, he was involved in a minor legal dispute during the early 1770s over land which Bryan had directed in his will be sold to William Cox upon his death. He successfully acquired the 166 acres along
Glade Creek and kept it as part of the Bryan estate until selling the Clade Creek claim to Esam Hannan and the rest of the estate toToliver Craig, Sr. shortly before moving his family to Bowman's Station.oldier and frontiersman
Visiting Kentucky in 1775, he served on the safety committee at
Harrodsburg the following summer and was appointed as colonel of the Kentucky militia by Virginia GovernorPatrick Henry in the fall. The following year, he was named as the first county-lieutenant ofKentucky County on July 14 and, with his officers CaptainsHenry Pauling andJohn Dunkin , marched with two companies numbering 100 men fromHolston River area to Kentucky County stopping atBoonesborough on August 1 and Logan's Fort on August 26 before finally arriving at Harrodsburg on September 2. Immediately after his arrival, he was elected a presiding judge in the first court of quarter sessions held at Fort Harrod and includedRichard Callaway , John Floyd, John Todd and sheriff Benjamin Logan on September 2, 1777. [Hammon, Neal O. and Richard Taylor. "Virginia's Western War". Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books, 2002. (pg. 62) ISBN 0-8117-1389-X]During the
Illinois campaign he received a message from GeneralGeorge Rogers Clark shortly after the capture of Kankanskia requesting support for his planned campaign intoDetroit . Promising Clark at least 300 men, he began gathering men and provisions during the spring of 1779.James, Alton James. "George Rogers Clark Papers, 1771-1781". Virginia Series, Vol. III. Springfield, Illinois: Illinois State Historical Library, 1912. (pg. cviii)] [Dillon, John B. "Oddities of Colonial Legislation in America". Indianapolis: Robert Douglass, 1879. (pg. 397)]Accompanied by
Benjamin Logan andLevi Todd , he led between 160Faust, Albert Bernhardt. "The German Element in the United States, Vol. I". Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1909. (pg. 372)] [Esarey, Logan. "A History of Indiana: From its Exploration to 1850, Vol. I". Indianapolis: B.F. Bowen & Co., 1918. (pg. 88)] and 300 militiamen [Pieper, Thomas I and James B. Gidney. "Fort Laurens, 1778-79: The Revolutionary War in Ohio". Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1980. (pg. 74) ISBN 0-8733-8240-4] against the Shawnee town of Chillicothe in late May. Dividing his forces between himself and Logan, the camp was attacked from both sides but were eventually repulsed. Unable to draw the Shawnee from their single blockhouse, he instead burned much of the camp and left with between 30 to 300 horses valued at $32,000. He and his men marched two days north to meet Clark at the mouth of the Licking River and later participated in Clark's expedition along the Little Miami andOhio River . [Schuyler, Robert Livingston. "The Transition in Illinois from British to American Government". New York: Columbian University Press, 1909. (pg. 52)] [James, James Alton. "Oliver Pollock; the Life and Times of an Unknown Patriot". New York: D. Appleton-Century Co., 1937. (pg. 172)]Although initially blamed for their defeat, as well as the eight or ten casualties suffered, the raid proved a major victory for the Kentuckians. With the destruction of a major Shawnee settlement and the death of
Chief Blackfish , [Zeisberger, David; Hermann Wellenreuther and Carola Wessel, ed. "The Moravian Mission Diaries of David Zeisberger". University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2005. (pg. 506) ISBN 0-271-02522-0] the battle at Chillicothe discouraged further war parties being sent against Kentucky and, according toTheodore Roosevelt in "The Winning of the West", "the expedition undoubtedly accomplished more than Clark's attack on Piqua next year."In the fall of 1779, he founded Bowman's Station on
Cane Run in present-dayMercer County, Kentucky . Originally housing seven families during the "Hard Winter" of 1779-80, the settlement eventually grew to thirty families during the next year. His position was reaffirmed by GovernorThomas Jefferson and he used the settlement as his base of operations although he himself was often away organizing the defense of Kentucky County.Kleber, John E. "The Kentucky Encyclopedia". Louisville: University Press of Kentucky, 1992. (pg. 107-108) ISBN 0-8131-1772-0]Later years
In 1781, he became the first sheriff and county-lieutenant of
Lincoln County, Kentucky . He also presided over the first county court held in Kentucky, when he and several others were appointedjustice of the peace on January 16, 1781. [Harper, Lillie DuPuy. "Colonial Men and Times". Philadelphia: Kessinger Publishing, 2006. (pg. 26)] His position was eventually taken over by Benjamin Logan who succeeded him as county-lieutenant in July 1781 [Whittsitt, William H. "Life and Times of Judge Caleb Wallace: Some Time a Justice of the Court of Appeals of Kentucky". Louisville, Kentucky: J.P. Morton & Co., 1888. (pg. 89) ] and sheriff in November 1783. [Lincoln County Historical Society. "Lincoln County, Kentucky". Paducah, Kentucky: Turner Publishing Co., 2002. (pg. 16) ISBN 1563117-894] Settling down at the station founded by his cousinIsaac Hite , he spent his last years at his home where he hired local residents to tap themaple trees on his property and sold the sugar for a substantial profit. Falling ill, Bowman died at his home on May 4, 1784. Although said to be opinionated and quick to anger, he was both admired and respected by fellow settlers for his bravery.Following his death, his brother Abraham served as executor of his estate with his wife Elizabeth receiving one-third of his property and the residue going towards the education of his son, John. John Bowman, Jr. would build a brick house which still remains near the site of his father's old station.
References
Further reading
*Butler, Mann. "A History of the Commonwealth of Kentucky: From Its Exploration and Settlement by the Whites, to the Close of the Northwest Campaign, in 1813". Cincinnati: J.A. James & Co., 1836.
*Clark, Thomas D. "A History of Kentucky". New York: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1937.
*Cotterill, Robert S. "History of Pioneer Kentucky". Cincinnati: Johnson & Hardin, 1917.
*Giles, Janice Holt. "The Kentuckians". Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1987.
*Rice, Otis K. "Frontier Kentucky". Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1975.
*Sanchez-Saavedra, E.M. "A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations in the American Revolution, 1774-1787". Richmond: Virginia State Library, 1978.
*Wayland, John W. "The Bowmans: A Pioneering Family in Virginia, Kentucky and the Northwest Territory". Staunton, Virginia: McClure Co., 1943.
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