Showing posts with label Quakers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quakers. Show all posts

Sunday, June 27, 2010

John Cadwallader - circumstances of death




John Cadwallader's tomb on Tortola


John Cadwallader (1) was born in Montgomeryshire, Wales, in 1676, and was minister among the Society of Friends (Quakers), and was very eminent in the early religious history of the Province of Pennsylvania. He made many trips to other provinces in the United States and abroad to other countries. As the Friends do not have ministers as most protestant denominations know them, his work corresponded with that of a missionary in a protestant denomination. A Friend settlement had started on Tortola in 1655, and John Pickering, the governor, wrote to Philadelphia for a minister in 1742. Thomas Chalkley answered the call but died shortly after he arrived there. There was another call and John Estaugh and John Cadwallader answered it. John Cadwallader and John Estaugh both died of fever in 1742. All three men were buried there. Many years later hurricanes wiped out practically all traces of the settlement and the graves of the three men. There is a painting at the Friends Memorial Library, Swarthmore College, made by a descendant of either Chalkley or Estaugh at the site showing the meeting house, tombs, etc., before hurricanes wiped them away.

Friday, June 11, 2010

A brief history of Solomon Cox and his probable ancestors

SOLOMON COX
Ancestors and Descendants of JEHU COX by Wayne D. Stout, pages 13-14,

contains the following story about this Cox line:

Solomon Cox was born about 1745 in Warrington, York County, Pennsylvania.Warrington - a live Quaker community - was the home of the Cox, Hussey, and Garretson families. These clans had stuck togerther for generations.  Many inter-marriages had cemented the tribe into a solid unit. When Solomon was a lad of ten his father John joined the Hussey and Garretsons for a long move to Cane Creek, Orange County, North Carolina, a distance of 300 miles. Cane Creek was a real Mecca for the Society of Friends.

These Quakers hoped to establish a new Zion amongst the slave holders of the South. A Quaker Meething was organized and a progressive community sprang into existence.