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This post follows my daughter's paternal Greenlun line in America. The earliest record of the line I have is for James Greenlun, who served as a Washington Co., PA Ranger during the Revolutionary War. (Ref 1, Note 1). According to census records, he was born in Pennsylvania in about 1764 (Note 2). It is unknown for certain where this line of Greenluns came from originally. However, most of the early permanent white settlers to southwestern PA were English who came from Maryland and Virginia. The surname itself does not offer many other hints. It is a spelling variation of the surname Greenland, which unsurprisingly is just a location based surname for someone who lives by land that is green. It comes from England originally, but is found throughout the UK, and is not very common or particular to any given region. Today it is actually more common in America than in Europe. Interestingly though, the Greenlun spelling variation is by far most common in Minnesota (71%), which seems to be due to my daughter's father's family, as they appear to be the only family with that surname who settled there.
Historical Background
In remote frontier locations like Washington Co., PA (which did not even become a county until 1781), much of the fighting for Revolutionary troops was between Americans and Native Americans, rather than Americans and British. In the decades prior to the war, the British had formed many political and economic trading alliances with Iroquois (Six Nations), Cherokee, and Catawba tribes. Additionally, tensions between the American colonists desire for more land, and the competing British desire to limit Indian-Settler conflicts, had been brewing for some time. Because the British were more likely to treaty with the Native Americans for protection of their lands, the majority of Native Americans sided with the British. Thus, the Revolutionary War was fought on both an eastern and western front line, and James Greenlun was a part of the western line at the future PA-OH border, just southwest of Pittsburg.
Orange line shows the Ohio River boundary line that Native Americans hoped to protect from future White settlement. Yellow line shows a previous "Walking Purchase" boundary line that had been agreed upon before the Revolutionary War.
After the war, many Native American groups joined together to form the Northwestern Confederacy alliance, with the goal of preventing White settlement from encroaching past the Ohio River. From 1785-1795, American frontier troops were continuously called upon to fight against Indians of the Ohio Territory, with the goal of establishing this new land claim. Soldiers were incentivized to participate in these battles by the plan for military bounty land rewards to be paid out of the conquered Ohio territory land. By August 1795, the Americans were successful, and the Native Americans were forced to sign the Treaty of Greenville, giving up their rights to much of the Ohio Territory. James Greenlun was one of the soldiers who fought for this new territory, and thus was later granted an Ohio land claim for his service (Ref 2).
Notes
1) He was part of the 3rd Battalion, 4th Company, who were soldiers from Cecil Twp., Washington Co., PA serving under Captain Andrew Swearingen.
2) This is based on a combination of his wife Judith's year of birth on the 1850 census (about 1774) and the fact that he must have been at least 16 at his time of initial service (1781) in the Revolutionary War.
3) Many veterans either sold such land warrants immediately or held on to them for land speculation purposes, rather than actually setting foot on it. James Greenlun shows up in tax records there beginning in 1806 though, so we know he did not immediately sell it. On census records, his first 6 children claim to have been born in PA (the last of which was born in about 1809), while his youngest, John Henry (b. Feb 1813), states OH, though these are not always correct. I have been unable to locate an 1810 census record that matches the family in either PA or OH. If we assume that they came to OH between 1810-1812, that would match the census data. But they could have come as early as 1803, which would match the land record data. Of note, they are not listed as one of the families of Green Twp., Harrison Co., OH from before 1815 in Eckley, H.J, (1921), pp.444-5 (Ref 6), so I do not think this is where they were initially, but they were definitely there by 1820.
4) The household composition on the 1830 census is a bit different than expected. It is listed as 1M 30-39 (Peter, aged 34), 2M 20-29 (Thomas, aged 21, and ???), 1M 15-19 (John, aged 17), 1F 50-59 (Judith, aged 56), 1F 20-29 (Peter's wife), 1F <5 (Peter's child). Peter's wife and daughter are present again on the 1840 census at the expected age ranges. Margaret and Ruth are clearly married by this time and appear in census records for their own households. As near as I can tell, Daniel is unmarried, but has purchased land out in Coshocton Co. back in 1827, and is probably living there. Regardless, he is about 32 in 1830, so unless coded incorrectly, he cannot be the extra male on the census. I cannot find a marriage record for Catherine, though census records show that she was married to William Bryan (whose first wife died in 1840) by 1850. But it is likely that she was previously married and living elsewhere during the 1830 census. Unless she is incorrectly coded as a male?? Most likely though, the unknown male is a just farmhand of some sort, but it is difficult to say for certain without names.
5) Of the 6 children from this generation who remained in Ohio, 2 (Peter and Catherine) were buried in the Synagogue Church of God Cemetery SE of Hayesville (now next to Grace Fellowship Church), 1 (John) was buried in the Redhaw Evangelical Church Cemetery NE of Redhaw (now next to the Redhaw United Methodist Church) and 1 (Thomas, this line) was buried in the Berlin Methodist Episcopal Cemetery NE of Fredericktown (now next to the Berlin United Methodist Church). 2 (Daniel and Wesley) were buried in Veterans Cemeteries, befitting their Civil War service. Only 1, Margaret, is buried in a non-religious civic cemetery within the city of Ashland.
6) The 1840 census shows Thomas and Lydia Greenlun in Vermillion Twp. with 1 boy and 1 girl who are less than age 5. However, the 1850 census shows their oldest child, (Marion), as only 7 years of age, rather than 10-15, as would have been expected if the first 2 children had lived. I have been unable to find grave markers or names for these first two children.
7) Though there is no record of it, it is likely that the youngest, Lydia, was initially fostered out as well, but returned to the family by 1860 after her father had remarried. There seems to have been special provisions made for her in Thomas' will to ensure that Isabella would continue to care for her after his death, which, combined with not taking the other 3 children back in, makes me wonder about Isabella's willingness to take over as a step-parent for the previous children. Samuel and Ester Jane were sent to live with the Covert family in nearby Lake Twp., Ashland Co., OH. I have been unable to determine where James was placed.
8) It is also a bit unusual that he chose to sell his real estate immediately, to pay his debts and children, rather than waiting until his wife died. Granted, she was quite a but younger than him, and only 11 years older than his oldest living child, so perhaps that was not practical if his goal was to help give his children a start in their lives. Or perhaps he had a lot of debts that needed to be paid. But it does make me wonder again if Thomas trusted Isabella to put her step-children's best interests to heart.
9) It is also a bit confusing as to where Raliefa (age 13) and Michael (age 14) would have been at this time, since Thomas does not mention anything about their ongoing care, despite them still being minors. Perhaps they were living with other families at this point too? We do know that Michael ended up joining the war effort when he was 15, and then moved to TX when it was over, where he married and had 2 kids. Meanwhile, Raliefa married in OH just before turning 19, but died young, at the age of 33, and had no children. Of note, Isabella and Thomas also had a child together, a boy named Franklin, who died in 1861 at 2 years of age.
References
1) "Pennsylvania, U.S., Veterans Card Files, 1775-1916". Pennsylvania State Archives; Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Revolutionary War Military Abstract Card File; Series Number: 13.50. Name: James Greenland; Rank: Private; Enlistment Date: 1775-1783; Enlistment Place: Pennsylvania, USA; Muster Date: 10 Mar 1781; Regiment: Washington Co. Rangers.
2) "U.S., Compiled Service Records, Post-Revolutionary War Volunteer Soldiers, 1784-1811". National Archives and Records Administration (NARA); Washington, D.C.; Compiled Service Records of Volunteer Soldiers Who Served from 1784 to 1811. Name: James Greenland; State or Territory: USA; Service Year: 1791; Military Unit: Second Regiment; Rank: Private.
3) Knepper, George W. (2002) "The Official Ohio Lands Book." Columbus, OH : The Auditor of the State. : . https://ohioauditor.gov/publications/docs/OhioLandsBook.pdf : 2023.
4) "Ohio, U.S., Homestead and Cash Entry Patents, Pre-1908". Original data: United States, Bureau of Land Management. Ohio Pre-1908 Homestead & Cash Entry Patent and Cadastral Survey Plat Index. General Land Office Automated Records Project, 1996. {{Ancestry Record|2077|96650}} (accessed 11 November 2023). Name: James Greenland; Warrantee Name: James Greenland; Land Office: Ohio; Total Acres: 100; Signature: Yes; Canceled Document: No; Issue Date: 28 Dec 1802; Metes and Bounds: No; Statutory Reference: 1 Stat. 480; Multiple Warantee Names: No; Act or Treaty: 1 Jun 1796; Multiple Patentee Names: No; Entry Classification: United Brethren Warrant Act; Land Description: 1 3 US MILITARY SURVEY No 2 N 2 W 3.
5) "U.S., Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, 1800-1900". Original data: Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files (NARA microfilm publication M804, 2,670 rolls). Records of the Department of Veterans Affairs, Record Group 15. National Archives, Washington, D.C (accessed 11 November 2023). Name: James Greenland; Pension Year: 1818; Application State: Pennsylvania; Archive Publication Number: M804; Archive Roll Number: 1125; Total Pages in Packet: 20.
6) Eckley, H.J.; History of Carroll and Harrison Counties, Ohio, (Chicago, Illinois: Lewis Publishing, 1921). Volume 2, pp.444-5. https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/576876/?offset=1#page=464&viewer=picture&o=search&n=0&q=Greenland : 2023.
7) Thane, Pat (2010) "Happy Families? History and Family Policy". The British Academy Policy Centre, pp.45-47, https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/documents/249/Happy-families-History-family-policy.pdf : 2023.
8) Alice Velková & Petr Tureček (2022) Influence of parental death on child mortality and the phenomenon of the stepfamily in western Bohemia in 1708–1834, The History of the Family, 27:3, 434-452, DOI: 10.1080/1081602X.2021.1986738 : 2023.
9) "Ohio, U.S., Wills and Probate Records, 1786-1998". Probate Case Files, Ca. 1808-1920. Isabelle Greenlun probate in 1860-1868.
10) From the obituary of John Jaax dated 30 Jun 1906: "John Jaax, one of the pioneers of Minneapolis, died in his home, 803 Spring street northeast, June 27. Mr. Jaax was born in Germany in 1833 and came to this county in 1854. He lived in Milwaukee about two years, where he married Mary Ries. He then came to Minneapolis with his bride and located on a farm at Medicine Lake."
11) "U.S., Indexed County Land Ownership Maps, 1860-1918". Collection Number: G&M_71; Roll Number: 71{{Ancestry Record|1127|2891957}} (accessed 18 November 2023) Owner's Name: Ida E Greenlun; State: Minnesota; County: Anoka and Hennepin; Town: Anoka; Year: 1914.
12) See bio of "U.S., Find a Grave Index, 1600s-Current" Original data: Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi; URL: {{FindAGrave|139287412}} (accessed 18 November 2023). Maud Greenlun burial (died on 9 Apr 1879) in St. Mary's Catholic Cemetery, Minneapolis, Hennepin County, Minnesota, United States of America. Born in Jan 1879.
13) See bio of "U.S., Find a Grave Index, 1600s-Current". Original data: Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi; URL: {{FindAGrave|139287382}} (accessed 18 November 2023) Wesley Michael Greenlun burial (died in Jul 1880) in St. Mary's Catholic Cemetery, Minneapolis, Hennepin County, Minnesota, United States of America. Born in May 1880.