Thank you all for your contributions of time, research, donations, support and feedback.

Many thanks to the good folks at Bassett Historical Center for their input and assistance.

Thank you for visiting our heritage and history.
Please consider making a contribution (any amount is appreciated) to help offset the expense, and help us continually improve the quality and quantity of information.

We Gratefully Accept Yout Old/Odd Bitcoin, and Bit Cents at:
14Q2Cm1pRmUrSGTfn1a66Qe9YbAmdD8Dez

  First Name:  Last Name:
Log In
Surnames
What's New
Statistics

Terms of Use & Privacy
Contact Us
Join Our Community

Family: PATRIOT Major John Boggs / Elizabeth Johnston (F7092)  [1



Family Information    |    Notes    |    Sources    |    All    |    PDF

  • Father | Male
    PATRIOT Major John Boggs

    Born     
    Died  Yes, date unknown   
    Buried     
    Married     
    Father   
    Mother   

    Mother | Female
    Elizabeth Johnston

    Born     
    Died  Yes, date unknown   
    Buried     
    Father   
    Mother   

    Child 1 | Female
    + Elizabeth Boggs

    Born  17 Jan 1775  Greencastle, Antrim Township, Franklin County, Pennsylvania Find all individuals with events at this location
    Died  Bef 1827   
    Buried     
    Spouse  James [Craig] McClanahan | F7091 
    Married     

  • Notes  Married:
    • Children of Major John Boggs by his Wife Elizabeth Johnston:
      I. Andrew Boggs, born 1 September, 1773: Married: (1.) Jane Johnston
      (2.) Sarah Biddle, cousin of Nicholas Biddle of Philadelphia
      II. Elizabeth Boggs, born 17 January, 1775: Married James McLanahan.
      III. Johnston Boggs, born 9 June, 1776; died in Natchez, Mississippi.
      IV. Francis Boggs, born 25 February, 1778; died at twelve years of age.
      V. Anna Boggs, born 24 October, 1779: Married William Wister Miller.
      VI. Mary Boggs, born 19 November, 1781: Married James Miller.
      VII. Jane Boggs, born 13 March, 1784: Married John Royer, and their daughter, Mary Letitia Royer, married the Honorable Cyrus L. Pershing, the late eminent jurist of Schuylkill County.
      VIII. John Boggs, born 18 August, 1787, became a prominent physician. (See ?Eminent Men of the Cumberland Valley?).
      IX. James Boggs

  • Sources 
    1. [S100] Internet Source, http://www.pa-roots.org/data/read.php?43,437119.
      BOGGS?JOHNSTON NOTE TO McLANAHAN LINEAGE

      Elizabeth Boggs, wife of James McLanahan, was a daughter of Major John Boggs by his wife Elizabeth Johnston.
      Major John Boggs, was a son of Andrew Boggs, an early and prominent settler in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. The father is said to have possessed land in that county as early as 1730. On 21 August, 1738, he received a warrant of survey for 250 acres. In 1748, he was Ensign in Captain David McClure?s Company of the Associated Regiment in the ?West End of Lancaster County,? and was in service in the French and Indian War at the that time pending. (Pennsylvania Archives, Sec. Ser. Ii, 510). He was a member of the famous Donegal Presbyterian Church. He died in April, 1765, leaving widow Ann, and the following children: John, James, Jean, Andrew, Ann, Mary, and Alexander. His wife is said to have been at one time a prisoner with the Indians, and is probably the Mrs. Boggs who is mentioned in Watson?s Annals, ii, 188, as follows: ?Mrs. Boggs, of the same neighborhood, (frontiers of Lancaster County, 1755), while riding to a neighbor, (frontiers of Lancaster County, 1755). While riding to a neighbor?s house, ?was fired upon by Indians, and her horse killed. She had a ?suckling child with her, which they killed and scalped, the ?mother they took away.? Three of the sons of Ensign Andrew Boggs,--John, Andrew and Alexander, were officers in the Revolution. Jean, the eldest daughter, married Colonel James Dunlop, the founder of Belle-Fonte, Pennsylvania. Ann, the second daughter, married Joseph Lowery, brother of Colonel Alexander Lowery, and Mary, probably the youngest daughter, married Captain Zachariah Moore, also a Revolutionary officer.
      Major John Boggs was born about 1731, and died at Bellfonte in 1796. He resided at Greencastle, that town was part of Cumberland Count. In 1776, he was a captain in the Cumberland County militia, and was commissioned a major in January, 1777. On 21 October of the latter year, he was appointed a commissioner in Cumberland County ?to seize the personal effects of traitors,? and on 8 November, the same year, he was appointed a commissioner ?to collect clothing? for the Revolutionary Army.
      Major Boggs married, Elizabeth, daughter of James Johnston, one of the early Scotch-Irish settlers in that part of Lancaster County, which, became, in time, Antrim Township, Franklin County. Her brothers were all prominent men, and all held commissions in the Revolutionary service. There were: Colonel Thomas Johnston, Lieutenant-Colonel James Johnston, Dr. Robert Johnston, and Captain John Johnston. Dr. Johnston was a surgeon in the army, and it was at his house that his house that his fellow surgeon, Dr. Barnabas Binney, father of the illustrious Horace Binney, died. Dr. Johnston embalmed the body and sent it to Dr. Binney?s family in Philadelphia.