04 January 2020

Horses, Coffee, Ships, Intrigue


Horses, Coffee, Ships, Intrigue
Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber

I was first introduced to, teacher,  Mary Johns of Cambridge, Ohio via correspondence while we were residing in New Jersey.  Distant cousins through our mutual Mains and McGrew families, I have written before about her via my blog in an article called Mains Family Research Opens doors to Friends posted 14 April 2011.

One of her oral stories involved James Cox McGrew, a brother of a double sister line. Rebecca McGrew married James A. Mains while sister Margaret McGrew married William Wilson. They were daughters of Finley McGrew and wife Dinah Cox, Quakers from Pennsylvania.  Rebecca stayed in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania. Margaret’s family moved to Washington County, Ohio and brother James Cox McGrew ended up in Guernsey County, Ohio where Mary Johns lived.

On a pleasant fall afternoon in 1983 I fixed Mary a cup of tea.  We settled on her pink couch, surrounded by pink floral drapes and carpet and she began telling stories. No notes, no documents, just her memories of her own former research.  James Cox McGrew she quickly calculated would have been my fifth great grand uncle. 

“The McGrew’s lived in Pennsylvania and he was said to have raised horses.  James Cox McGrew is said to have made a goodly sum on one trip during the period of the Louisiana Purchase.  While there he met a man named Dillon who talked him into buying a ship to go to Java for coffee. On the return trip, the ship was attacked by a man-o-war and they were left on an island.  Everyone thought them dead.  It was two years before McGrew and others were rescued.  When James came home he found himself broke.  He then moved to Ohio opening a grist mill near Birmingham, Guernsey County, Ohio.  Soon the government announced compensations for loss.  After much correspondence, McGrew found that Dillon had settled in Zanesville, Muskingum County, Ohio.  Dillon did not tell the government that McGrew financed the ship nor that McGrew had been the captain.  Dillon received all the money.  James Cox McGrew continued to live in Birmingham until his death while Dillon prospered in Zanesville.  I saw the letters family kept between Dillon and McGrew.”

With no dates and not even a first name of Dillon, I attempted to ask who had the letters and did she keep any further information from her research.  The only answer I got was “I researched it and it is all true.”

From wonderful Quaker records, I had already gleaned that James Cox McGrew was born 1761 in York County, Pennsylvania, British America, and married 1 January 1795 Rachel Walker.  Plus, I had listened in high school history and knew the Louisiana Purchase was bought from France in 1803.

The name Dillon was well known in Muskingum County.  Our family enjoyed Dillon State Park and drove through the Dillon Falls community when out and about.  Muskingum histories all cited Moses Dillon and his son John Dillon as worthy, wealthy patrons of the county. A Quaker family,  Moses built the first iron furnace between 1805 and 1808 in Ohio.   During this same time John Dillon was still in Baltimore, Maryland where his father had empowered him to sell 275 acres including houses and a mill.[i]  By 1813 he is in Muskingum County, Ohio, next door to Guernsey County, Ohio.

The first bump in the oral story.  If John Dillon or father Moses met McGrew it may not have been in Pennsylvania.  All research on Dillon placed them in Baltimore.   John Dillon was invested as a partner in shipping with a brother-in-law Clement Brooke.  Clement Brooke was declared to be insolvent by 1808.  A genealogy of the family mentioned the cause as the “Jefferson Embargo” and mentioned a diary written by John Dillon.

Both Britain and France were plundering American Ships. The Jefferson Embargo was signed December 1807.   The embargo's were an economic failure for the government and citizens.  Like most oral stories with some validity I confirmed that Dillon was in shipping and during the right time frame.

Dillon invested in inland shipping after settling in Muskingum County, including the steamboat Indiana, in Louisville, Ky in 1822. John Dillon, Esq., one of the oldest and most enterprising citizens of Muskingum county, died at Zanesville, Aug. 17, 1862, in his 86th year. 

I continued to question other McGrew researchers on the where-about of McGrew/Dillon letters, without success. I finally had a lead on the diary of John Dillon and received a transcription from J. H. Florea in Illinois.  It reads more like a biography:

“Zanesville, sept. 29th, 1846…according to the record of my venerable and lamented parents I am seventy years of age ...I had met with several severe and heavy losses before this Viz. one vessel and cargo worth about fifty thousand dollars entrusted to James McGrew who never returned me one cent. The Guadeloupe adventure was a desperate attempt to reinstate me in all I had ever made and would no doubt more than succeeded had the Capt. Obeyed orders and not been quite so avaricious himself. This voyage would have cleared over a million dollars had no accident happened and probably been the result the most prosperous voyage ever made. Since Adam came into the world – but so it was ... I did not suffer it to break down my adventurous spirit. At the request of my father, who was growing old and unable to attend to business of the furnace forge I was induced to move my family to the Falls…After I failed in Baltimore and gave up my property to a trustee my credit was still so good that W. Sullin(?) let me have a new Brig called the Caprius…”

At this writing the author is aware that a letter book belonging to John Dillon from 1808 to 1863 is at the William L. Clements Library in Ann Arbor, Michigan.  The brief finding aid states that the earliest letters were to his father (1808 – 1811). Future researchers should visit and review them.

There is mention of an accident  but not of the Captain being left on an island.  During research I located one petition, with court citations beginning in 1810 from John Dillon to the Government for compensation of the Schooner Rachel seized in 1808.   John Dillon of Baltimore, Maryland’s petition stated he wished reimbursement for Rachel seized and condemned in the district court of Orleans. She was seized in the port of New Orleans for violation of law to suspend commercial intercourse between the United Sates and certain ports of the Island of St. Domingo Her furniture, apparel and tackle sold to the credit of the US. [ii] Is it coincidence that McGrew's wife was Rachel?

Another day trip in Guernsey County, Ohio to Birmingham and nearby Salt Fork State Park was pleasant but shed no light on the McGrew family.  After Mary John’s death her composition book full of notes, did not mention the oral story of James Cox McGrew.  The only mention other than cut and dry birth/death dates was an unidentified clipping, assumed out of the Cambridge newspaper, titled “Do You Remember.”  The article was submitted by Mrs. John Barton. John Barton married Grace Irene McGrew who was born 3 April 1881 in Guernsey County and died 12 April 1970.  Grace’s father was Edmund Engle McGrew and great granddaughter of James Cox McGrew.



William G. Wolfe, in a popular series of articles called Stories of Guernsey County published in the Daily Jeffersonian, wrote about Birmingham listing Finley McGrew as one of the original lot owners. Finley was the son of James Cox McGrew.  The burrs brought to the other grist mill by Finley C. McGrew were manufactured by a 2nd cousin Nathan McGrew.
  
James Cox McGrew made his intent to marry Rachel Walker at the Redstone Monthly Meeting in Pennsylvania in 1795.  Once he migrated to Ohio he never owned any property, in Guernsey County, prior to his death in 1836.  Son James Walker McGrew first appears on the Guernsey personal property tax list in 1825. James  Cox McGrew appears to have lived to see all of his children married prior to his death in 1836. One of his nine children Ebenezer pre deceased him in 1800. 

So I end this tale with a bit of dissatisfaction.  Who was the villain in the story, John Dillon of means in Muskingum County or James Cox McGrew with little to no means in Guernsey County, Ohio?  I like Mary Johns, who dangled clues before me as I learned more about my forebearers, leave future researchers to access John Dillon’s letters in the Clements Library.  Remember there is always some truth gleaned from Oral stories in your quest.
























[i] Lancaster Intelligencer Lancaster PA 2 Sep 1808[ii] Supreme Ct of US Schooner Rachel v. United States, 6 Cranch 329 (1810)
Alexandria va gazette in 1811 states the amount requisitions was 7000 dollars