JONAS FRIEND AND FRIEND'S FORT

by Warren Skidmore

Jonas Friend, one of the earliest settlers in both Pendleton and Randolph Counties, was of Swedish descent. His grandfather, Anders Nilsson Frande, was born about 1659 at Upland, Delaware (then Chester) County, Pennsylvania, and died about 1740 near Harper's Ferry. (l ) His father Israel Friend, who was born at Upland by 1693, started to mine iron ore in 1734 on a tract of land on the Potomac River about two miles north of Harper's Ferry in what is now Jefferson County, West Virginia. He may have had a furnace in Virginia for smelting the ore, or taken it across the Potomac to his mill on Antietam Creek in Maryland where there was a furnace later. (2) He is spoken of as a Friend (Quaker) in this period. (3) Benjamin Winslow's "Plan of the Upper Part of Patomack River called Cohongorooto, surveyed in the year 1736" shows the Friends living in that year west of the Potomac four miles south of the mouth of Undietum Creek. (4) If the mill was not Jonas Friend's place of birth it may be taken as certain that he spent his childhood there.

His father-in-law Joseph Skidmore, who had come to western Maryland by 1742 from Murderkill Hundred in Kent County, Delaware, lived no great distance away. He had formally acquired title to a plantation called Monican from Cornelius O'Neale on 11 June 1748 for £50 preparatory to moving to Virginia, but had probably lived there much earlier. Monican is described as being at the head of the Little Antietam. (5)

Jonas Friend went with the Skidmores to what is now Pendleton County perhaps at the time of his father-in-law's second trip south through the gap at Harper's Ferry. (6) He and Sarah Skidmore had married before 9 September 1754 when they returned a deed to Winchester selling 66 1/2 acres to Simeon Rice for £100. This was his share of the 300 acres that he and his two brothers had inherited from their father Israel Friend near Shepherdstown in Jefferson County. (7) In this deed Jonas and Sarah Friend are called "late of Frederick County in the colony of Virginia but now of Augusta County." Their eldest child, a son Joseph, was born probably in 1755 or soon after and named for his grandfather Skidmore. (8)

The middle brother Jacob Friend followed Jonas soon after to what is now Pendleton County, where he married Sarah's sister Elizabeth Skidmore. (9) Charles Friend, who was much younger than his brothers Jonas and Jacob, was still a minor in 1761. (10) He did not sell his share of his father's land until 11 May 1776 while it was still in Berkeley County (Jefferson County was not formed until 1801), and then disappears. (11)

Jonas and his brothers had two sisters, Catherine (of whom nothing more is known), and Mary who married Captain Abel Westfall. He later served in the Eighth Virginia Regiment during the Revolution. The Westfalls went with his brothers to Knox County, Indiana, where he was nominated as a delegate to the first Indiana Territorial Convention in 1802. The balloting survives (he was not elected), and we find that while Abel voted for himself one of his nephews cast his four votes for the opposition (which included William Henry Harrison, the big winner). (12) The Westfalls were back in Ross county, Ohio, in October 1805 when Abel answered a complaint about her father's land in Virginia where they had lived in 1778. (13) Mary Westfall was dead before 3 August 1811 when Abel Westfall (back in Indiana) had a licence in Knox County to marry Polly Rumsour. (14) Abel Westfall himself had died before 30 May 1818 when his brother Cornelius applied in Knox County for a pension for his service in the Revolution in his brother's company.

Jonas Friend was a Corporal in the French and Indian War serving under Captain Abraham Smith, and was also employed as a carpenter in the rebuilding of Fort Seybert after the massacre there, for which he was paid £1 2sh 6d. (15) Jonas Friend was present later on 19 August 1761 when Daniel Smith sold the property at a vendue sale belonging to Jacob Sivers (Seybert) who had perished with most of his family at the fort. (16)

He bought 44 acres, part of a tract of 350 acres on the North Fork of the South Branch of the Potomac which had been patented to Robert Green on 12 January 1746, from the Green heirs on 29 May 1761. The consideration was a modest £8 l5sh. (17) He was appointed a Constable in place of Peter Veneman on 17 November 1767. (18) The constables had essentially the same duties as the sheriff, but earned small fees for executing writs and performing the other chores of their office. More importantly an appointment often proved to be the first step in the career of an ambitious local politician.

He had moved by 1772 to the Tygart River Valley in what became Randolph County. However the Friends didn't dispose of their land in Pendleton County until 22 May 1776 when they got a very good price (£105) from Charles Powers for what must have been his 44 greatly improved acres on the North Fork. (19)

Sarah Friend's father and a part of her brothers followed soon after to what is now Elkins. Edward Skidmore, Jonas' brother-in-law, and his young wife had come out to Virginia by 1772 bringing with him from Duck Creek Hundred in Newcastle County, Delaware, Benjamin and William Cleaver, Joseph Donoho, and probably Jesse Hamilton. These men settled soon after in the Tygart River Valley. (20) Four of the group from Delaware (William Cleaver, Edward Skidmore, Donoho, and Hamilton) entered into a partnership with Jonas Friend to purchase a certificate for 1000 acres from James Walker, a veteran of the French and Indian War, who had a warrant for 3000 acres. Jonas Friend, his teen-age son Joseph, Edward Skidmore, and the other three partners promptly located an attractive site at the mouth of Leading Creek and had their 1000 acres surveyed. They built Friend's Fort soon after which became the chief adornment of the tract. The five partners perfected their title on 1 November 1782 in Monongalia County.

David Armstrong has traced the early land titles in the modern city of Elkins and has published his findings. (21) From his work we learn that the partners became the first residents there below Porter Avenue. Hamilton settled on that portion of the survey that included the present day railroad yards, Harrison Avenue, both hospital buildings, Wilson, Central and Main Streets, the junior high school, and the Armory. Hamilton's cabin may have been on the site of the Youth Health Service mansion across from the Third Ward Apartments. Donoho's settlement was next below Hamilton's in the present day Oak Grove Addition. Edward Skidmore lived below them, and Jonas Friend had Harrison Avenue approximately west of the State Police Barracks, as well as Goff Street, the Third Ward School and the Mall, and part of Crystal Springs.

The fort itself was at Crystal Springs near the Ivan Coberly house. (22) It was undoubtedly modeled after Fort Seybert which Jonas Friend had helped rebuild. The foundation of the fort could still be traced as late as 1915, but the area has since been graded and improved. This leveling effectively destroyed what was once there in the way of postholes or other evidences. The fort is supposed to be have been directly over the present Tastee Freez store at Crystal Springs, still the highest point in the area

Jonas Friend appeared at the store belonging to Felix Gilbert in Rockingham County on Saturday, 4 February 1775. Gilbert, who made periodic trips to London to stock his emporium, preceeded Wal-Mart in the area by about 200 years. Friend made only two purchases, 48 1/8 gallons of rum (for which he paid £10 9sh 9 1/2d) and eight kegs (at 2sh 6d each) to store the rum for traveling. Nearly 50 gallons of rum would keep a solitary drinker supplied for several months, and it is more likely that he was an affable host back at the fort. Rum was imported (then as now) from the West Indies to Virginia and was more highly prized than the local whiskey. In addition to the expense it would have been a considerable job to cart this much cargo over the poor roads back to Leading Creek, although they were probably frozen at this date.

On 16 September 1775 Jonas Friend was appointed a Gentleman Justice for Augusta County and he and Colonel Benjamin Wilson (appointed on the same day) became the first two representatives of the Virginia county system of law and government west of the Alleghenies. Their commissions came up for review at intervals and both were invariably confirmed by the governor until they were finally retired on 19 December 1781 from the Augusta Commission as they now lived outside that county. (23) He had filed a claim in the new Monongalia County for supplies furnished the Revolutionary army but apparently did little other business before the court sitting at Morgantown. (24)

On 15 October 1776 the inhabitants of the Tygart Valley, Edward Skidmore and Jonas Friend among them, signed a petition to the House of Delegates asking that three companies of rangers be stationed in the valley to protect them. According to their petition they numbered about 150 families spread over 50 miles of the valley and about 80 miles from any relief in case of an emergency.

One incident at Friend's Fort will suffice to show that their anxiety was not exaggerated in view of the perils of the time. On an evening in April 1781 Alexander West, a neighbor, was visiting at the fort. He and Jonas were sitting outside when West saw what he thought was an Indian in the shadows. He started for his gun but Jonas Friend stopped him saying the figure in the dark was probably one of his "yaller boys." Both West and Friend had fierce dogs, and not altogether certain of the identity of the figure, the dogs were set loose. However they flew at one another and the intruder vanished into the forest. West wanted to alarm the settlers that night, but Friend talked him out of it. The day following an Indian raiding party descended on the community and killed three of five men returning from the settlement which is now Clarksburg. From there they moved to Leading Creek where they destroyed most of a colony of six families taking three prisoners. This was the most disastrous Indian visitation on record in the Tygart River Valley. There was now little doubt that West had seen a scout from the raiding party and Jonas Friend condemned himself bitterly for not letting West act on his impulse to alarm the settlers. (25)

He and Benjamin Wilson, William White, and William Cleaver appraised the estate of Joseph Skidmore, Senior, on 19 June 1778. (26) His father-in-law had died at what is now South Elkins and was probably the first burial in what became a small family cemetery near the former Odd Fellow's Home. (27)

Edward Skidmore, the Cleavers, and several other families left the Tygart Valley for what is now Nelson County, Kentucky, in 1779, according to the pension application of William Cleaver filed in 1832 from Grayson County, Kentucky. On 24 June 1782 Edward Skidmore was drafted from Nelson County as a Sergeant in the company of Captain James Davis to assist in the construction of Fort Nelson (possibly modelled in part on Friend's Fort back in Virginia) at what is now the city of Louisville. He was stationed there until July 13th when he was paid and discharged. Edward Skidmore's will is dated a few months later on 17 October 1782. He was then "in a weak and low state of body." He left all of his worldly affairs to his wife Deborah. (28) Excepted only was my "rifle gun, powder horn and pouch" which were to be kept for his young son Benjamin. Edward Skidmore seems to have died soon a few days later, although his will was not recorded in Jefferson County (which then included Nelson) until 6 August 1783. Previous to the recording of the will his widow had traveled to Louisville to enter 400 acres of land that Edward Skidmore had a warrant for on the south side of Beech Fork beginning at the east corner of James Nalls' survey.

Nothing further has been learned of the widow Deborah Skidmore. Neither she nor his sons ever appear to have sold the Beech Fork tract, and they also abandoned their interest in Edward Skidmore's land back at Elkins.

At a court held at Clarksburg on 22 September 1784 Jonas Friend was appointed a Surveyor of a public highway from his own house to Eberman Creek. He was to work the tithables on Leading Creek, both sides of the Tygart Valley River, up Eberman's Creek, and across the river to Hezekiah Rosecrances, and to keep it in lawful repair. (29)

He manumitted a slave, perhaps one of his "yaller" boys noticed earlier, in 1791: "Randolph County, Virginia

December 30, 1791

I do hereby certify that I have set the bearer hereof, Negro Tom, at full liberty from servitude to act and do for himself as a free man, as witness my hand the day and date above written.

Jonah Friend" (30)

On 26 March 1792 the Randolph County Court ordered that Jonas Friend be exempted from laboring on the highway, and that Cornelius Westfall be appointed as surveyor of highway in his place. (31) At some point the justices probably relieved him from paying his tax as a tithable (since he disappears from the early tax lists several years before his death), but this does not seem to be on record.

Jonas and Sarah Friend divided the 1000 acre tract on 25 May 1795 and sold 300 acres to their son Andrew Friend for £1000. The remaining 700 acres of the tract was deeded by Jonas Friend on 22 August 1796 for $1.00 to the remaining four partners "my part being laid off and a deed of Bargain and sale made unto my son Andrew for three hundred acres." (32) Years later on 28 September 1801 Cornelius Westfall brought a suit in Randolph County against William Cleaver, Jonas Friend, Benjamin Skidmore (heir at law of Edward Skidmore, deceased), Joseph Donohue, and Jesse Hamilton to try to force the defendants "to make a good and legal deed for the said lands in the bill mentioned at their proper costs and charges." (33)

Jonas Friend perhaps also had the unhappy distinction of suffering from Randolph County's first recorded case of senile dementia. His declining years are reported by Hu Maxwell:

"Jonas Friend lived to be very old, and in his last years his mind was very weak, and his memory existed nearly altogether in the past. He fancied that he was still a soldier fighting the British in defense of his country; and with his knapsack on his back and his gun on his shoulder he would go from house to house, halting occasionally, as if on picket duty, when he would raise his gun and go through the act of firing, exclaiming in exultation that there was one Red Coat less." (34)

He is said to have died on 15 November 1807 at Friend's Fort, and his wife Sarah Friend followed him in death in the year following. (35)

On 18 August 1784 the newly constituted Harrison County court ordered Jacob Westfall to make a list of all the white people living in his former militia district which included the Wilmoth's Settlement on Leading Creek. Jonas Friend was head of a household that included six white persons, one dwelling, and two other buildings. He was the only tithable in the household, so it may be taken as certain that his son Joseph Friend was in the west fighting Indians. (36) In addition to the parents the other four white souls in the household must have been his son Andrew and his three daughters Sarah, Nancy, and Mary.

The birth of Captain Joseph Friend has already been noticed. He married Elizabeth Davisson of Clarksburg on 16 November 1786. She produced his only daughter Mary, and died soon after. On 26 May 1800 William Wilson, Senior, made oath "that in or about December 1, 1798, Joseph Friend by deed executed in the presence of two credable witnesses did grant the custody and tuition of his daughter Polly until she arrived at the age of 18 years to the said William Wilson which deed is now lost or mislaid." (37) She married William Arters (Arthur) on 1 February 1802 at what must have been the tender age of about 15 and became his widow in 1838. She died in Webster County in 1865.

Bill Rice of Elkins has found an interesting entry in the records at Clarksburg relating to one of the earliest tracts acquired by Joseph Friend. In 1784, immediately after Harrison County was formed, it was put on record that "Joseph Friend, assignee of Joseph Hastings who is assignee of Charles Grigsby enters 200 acres on the west side of the Tygart Valley River to include the Mingo Cabin." The exact location of this tract has not been traced, but it shows the type of housing used by the native American in central West Virginia before the coming of the white man. Although their presence in the area was sporadic and never very dense, Joseph Friend's entry is also important since it documents the ethnic subfamily of the natives who once occupied the area. (38)

Joseph Friend will be best remembered as an Indian fighter. He served throughout the American Revolution, and raised a company of volunteers attached to the regiment commanded by Colonel Zackquill Morgan which went to the support of General George Rogers Clarke. Captain Joseph Friend signed vouchers to Benjamin Cutright and others in May 1781 for beef to be used by the Monongalia County volunteers on the march west to join Clarke. (39)

In 1791 he was with General St. Clair at his defeat at the hands of the Miami Indians, and was present again on a happier occasion (so far as the white settlers were concerned) at the Battle of Fallen Timbers. Here in August 1794, along the Maumee River near Toledo, Ohio, an army commanded by General Anthony Wayne (in a battle lasting only 40 minutes) dealt 2000 Indian warriors a crushing defeat from which they never recovered. Joseph Friend was on this occasion appointed by General Wayne as the Captain of the Spy Company. It was his last battle, for while he "often faced the foe, and stood amidst the danger of Many hard fought battles, yet he never received a Scar or a wound from a ball, a sword, or a tommyhawk... but had the Misfortune while acting as Captain of the Spies under the command of Gen. Wayne to break the rim of his belly."

He owned 216 acres including the salt well where the town of Webster Springs now stands, and had moved there with his son-in-law in 1819. He and James Dyer were for a time partners in a salt making business. (40) However, the pain from his hernia increased in his old age, and by 1822 he was unable to earn his own livelihood and had "nearly burnt the lamp of time allotted to man." He signed a deed on 3 December 1826 in Nicholas County (which included what became Webster), and is said to have died there the year after. (41)

His sisters, the daughters of Jonas Friend, should be mentioned briefly. Sarah was born in 1759, and married Major William Wilson (1754-1851) on 19 August 1779. She died on 22 October 1832 and they are buried in the Casner Cemetery on the John Yoho farm one mile north of Mt. Ephraim in Seneca Township, Noble County, Ohio. (42) Nancy married John Currence (1753-1845) and died on 26 September 1851 aged 92 years, 3 months, and 21 days. They are buried in the Currence-Walmsley Cemetery about four miles south of Huttonsville. Mary, clearly the youngest daughter, married Robert Clark on 19 February 1794 in Randolph County. They disappear from the neighborhood and may have gone west.

Captain Andrew Friend, the younger son, married Eleanor, a daughter of Peter McCall, in Randolph County on 1 February 1802. He was appointed a Captain in the room of Boston Hoskins, resigned, on 27 May 1807, and a Gentleman Justice for Randolph County in 1814 by the governor. (43) He was sitting on the bench on 26 March 1816 when it was "ordered that the Sheriff pay unto Andrew Friend One Dollar & 30 Cts. which was Collected from him for a tax on a Mill which he did Not possess. (44)

There was no probate on the estate of Andrew Friend who died a few months later, before 21 April 1817 when a survey was done for his four heirs Joseph, Sarah, Levina, and Jonas Friend. They were now possessed of 100 acres in what is now Braxton County "including the place they live on... on Ben's Run." (45) If Eleanor survived her husband she is not found as the head of a family in 1820, and no second marriage has been found for her. On 24 October 1850 Levisa Friend of Kanawha County, and Jonas Friend together with Jonas and Thomas Canter of Mason County, Virginia, joined together to sell this 100 acres to Samuel S. Williams. (46)

Of the four children of Andrew Friend named in 1817 only Jonas and his sister Sarah have been traced further. Jonas, the first born, was living in 1850 a farmer aged 47 with his wife Tempy and a large family of children in Mason County. They apparently moved to adjoining Jackson County, West Virginia, but in 1880 he and Temperance were in Milton Township, Jackson County, Ohio. In 1880 Jonas Friend's occupation is reported as "digs ore"-a hard life for an elderly man. (47) Neither he or Temperance (nor any of their children) are found buried in Milton Township. His sister Sarah apparently married the James Canter who was head of a family in 1840 in Mason County, and it was her two eldest sons and heirs, orphans, who conveyed their interest in the tract on Kanawha Run in 1850. Jonas and Thomas Canter were both enumerated in 1880 in Union District, Jackson County, West Virginia

The other daughter, Levisa Friend, who is said to have been living in 1850 in Kanawha County, in not found enumerated anywhere in Virginia (as a spinster) in the census taken in that year. She is given as a grantor in the deed of 24 October 1850, but (most curiously) neither she nor her brother Jonas signed it. (48) No marriage has been found for her, and the bond for the marriage of her brother Jonas and his wife Temperance has also not yet surfaced in West Virginia or Ohio.


  1. Peter S. Craig, "The Family of Nils Larsson Frande (Friend)." I am grateful to David Armstrong for the loan of a copy of this manuscript (draft of 42 pages, dated 5 August 1988). It was obtained from the Lester D. Friend Library, P. O. Box 96, Friendsville, MD 21531. Nils had married Anna Andersdotter and was in the New Sweden settlement by 1650, perhaps coming on the Swan in 1648.

  2. Grace L. Tracey and John P. Dern, Pioneers of Old Monocacy, the Early Settlement of Frederick County, Maryland, 1721-1743 (Baltimore, 1987), 55. There was a furnace called Keep Tryst later on Antietam Creek. Israel Friend sold the mill site of 100 acres on the west side of the Cohongo River (granted to him by letters patent in 1730) for £25 to William Stroop on S May 1746. (Frederick County Deeds, I, 264.)

  3. Hopewell Friends History, 1734-1914, Frederick County, Virginia (Strasburg, 1936), 166.

  4. The original of this map is at the Enoch Pratt Free Library in Baltimore. See also John P. Dern's "The Upper Potomac in 1736" in the Western Maryland Genealogist, II, 86-7. On 10 January 1727 Israel Friend had taken the precaution of buying this land from Cunnawchahala and five other Indians (styled "Kings and Rulers of the five nations"), together with all other appurtenances (fishing, fowling, hawking, and hunting) for which he agreed to pay to part of them two ears of Indian corn every year if demanded.

  5. Warren Skidmore, Thomas Skidmore (Scudamore), 1605-1684, of Westerleigh, Gloucestershire, and Fairfield, Connecticut, 2nd edition (Akron, Ohio, 1985), 48-9. (A revised and enlarged third edition is in preparation.) Although Joseph Skidmore is not known to have been in Maryland until 1742 (when he signed a petition asking that a new parish be formed to serve the residents in what is now Frederick and Washington Counties) his name last appears on the levy lists of Kent County, Delaware, in 1736.

  6. Joseph Skidmore and his wife, who had gone south to Pendleton County in 1749, were back in what is what is now Washington County, Maryland, on 1 October 1753 when they signed a deed selling Monican. (Frederick -County, Maryland, Deeds, E, 320-1.

  7. Frederick County, Virginia, Deeds, III, 372. It was part of the 300 acres granted to Israel Friend on 3 October 1734 (anciently in old Orange County) on the south side of the Potomac River, and devised in his last will (dated 12 August 1749) to his sons Jonas, Jacob, and Charles. Jacob, the second son, was to have the part where Israel then lived. Charles, the youngest son, had the remaining 120 acres. He did not sell his inheritance until 11 May 1776 while it was still in Berkeley County; Jefferson County was not formed until 1801. (Chalkley, II, 125.) Israel Friend's negroes were to be equally divided among his three sons, and the will was recorded on 5 June 1753. See also the William and Mary College Quarterly, XI, 149.

  8. I have already dealt with Joseph Friend in a paper published over 40 years ago. See "Captain Joseph Friend's Revolutionary Pension Application" in The Magazine of History and Biography by the Randolph County Historical Society (Number Eleven, December 1954), 19-22. He stated that he was only 19 years old at the time he first served in the militia company commanded by Captain Benjamin Wilson in 1776, and elsewhere that he was nearly 70 (probably a bit overstated) in 1822.

  9. They settled about one mile north of Franklin on what is still known as Friend's Run. Jacob Friend and his wife were both living in Pendleton County as late as 10 December 1817 when his will was signed. For this couple and their nine children see my notes on "The Friend Family" in Pendleton County, West Virginia, Past and Present (1991), 108-9. Overlooked in this account was their daughter Elizabeth, born in 1771, who married William Lawrence in 1791. Lawrence applied for a pension as a Revolutionary soldier in 1819 in Pendleton County.

  10. Wilmer L. Kerns, Historical Records of Old Frederick and Hampshire Counties, Virginia (Revised Edition, 1992), 49. Charles Friend, "orphan of Israel Friend," came into court to make a choice of John Valentine Howe as his guardian. (Frederick County Minute Book, 1761-63, page 152, at the Virginia State Archives at Richmond.) It seems likely that Sarah, the widow of Israel Friend; was also dead by this time. Trissa Haefling of Warren, Ohio, tells me that nothing has been discovered about Sarah Friend's family. She was to have her widow's third of his moveable estate. Catherine and Mary Friend, his two daughters, were also to have a divisional share.

  11. There were several Charles Friends in this period. He is not found in any of the early tax lists for this part of Virginia Nor is he the man who was a miller by 1800 in Fairfield County, Ohio, or (as is sometimes said) the Charles Friend who died in November 1811 in Monroe County, West Virginia. There was a Charles Friend who entered 126 acres on Allegheny Mountain in Hampshire County in 1772, but he belonged to the family in what is now Garrett County, Maryland. He appears to be the Charles (dead 1796) who left a son and heir at law Gabriel Friend who was born in Garrett County on 17 June 1761 and applied for a pension in 1849 at the age of 90 as a Revolutionary soldier. His claim was rejected as he could not produce any living witness to testify to his service, and died in 1863 at the age of 102. He and his wife Jane (Bonnell) sold a part of his father Charles' land in Hampshire County on 10 March 1796 (Chalkley, II, 121-2.)

  12. Indiana Source Book, Material from The Hoosier Genealogist, 1895-1988, compiled by Ruth Dorrel, VI,71-76.

  13. Chalkley, II, 125. They were then living (as tennants of Peter Flick) on that part devised to her brother Charles Friend, who had sold it to Flick two years earlier.

  14. Indiana Source Book, III. His younger brother Cornelius Westfall (1756-1828) had married Sarah Rumsoner (1769-1826), a widow, as his second wife on 12 January 1804 in Ross County, Ohio. Ross County, Ohio Families, (Ross County Genealogical Society, 1982), III, 57-8. It likely that Sarah's name was correctly Rumsouer and that she was nearly related to the second wife of Abel Westfall. She brought two stepchildren named Hale to Cornelius' household.

  15. Lloyd Dewitt Bockstruck, Virginia's Colonial Soldiers (Baltimore, 1988), 202, 205.

  16. Chalkley, III, 65

  17. Chalkley, III, 65. It is probable that land prices were very depressed since so many of the early settlers had fled after the Indian depravations in the area.

  18. Chalkley, I, 140.

  19. Augusta County Deeds, XXI, 456. See also Chalkley, III, 549.

  20. Both of the Cleavers later applied for pensions in Grayson County, Kentucky. Benjamin Cleaver, aged 81, in his application in 1832 stated that he had enlisted to fight Indians in the Tigers (sic) Valley in 1774.

  21. David Armstrong, "Thomas Skidmore: First Settler on Site of Elkins," Hacker's Creek Journal, X, 98-101.

  22. The site of the fort was marked in 1926 by the John Hart Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. The marker reads: "Near This Marker is the Site of Friend's Fort - Built in 1772, Jonas Friend and Joseph Friend Braved the Wilderness and Established a Settlement on the Frontier. Joseph Friend Was Later a Captain in the War of the Revolution. Placed by John Hart Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, Elkins, West Virginia, 1926."

  23. Chalkley, I, 223.

  24. "Revolutionary List of Public Claims, Monongalia County, West Virginia," Daughters of the American Revolution Magazine (September 1934), 559-60.

  25. Lucullus Virgil McWhorter, The Border Settlers of Northwestern Virginia from 1768 to 1795 (Hamilton, Ohio, 1915), 135.

  26. Chalkley, III, 155

  27. This cemetery, long abandoned, is best known for the monument there to Margaret (Johnson) Skidmore.

  28. She was formerly Deborah Dawson who had been born at Philadelphia on 1 January 1748. Her father Benjamin Dawson, a hatter, was a prominent Quaker in Duck Creek Hundred. She had married Edward Skidmore before 27 January 1770 when she offered an acknowledgment at the Duck Creek Monthly Meeting for her "outgoing in marriage."

  29. Harrison County Orders. Eberman Creek is now known as Chenoweth Creek.

  30. Randolph Magazine of History and Biography, IX, 61. So far as is known this is the first slave freed in Randolph County.

  31. Randolph County Orders.

  32. Randolph County Deeds, I, 212. Andrew Friend and his wife Eleanor later sold their 300 acres to Jacob Smith of Frederick County for £500. The witnesses were his brother Joseph Friend and his wife's brother James McCall.

  33. Randolph County Orders. Mark Grimes and his wife Agnes brought a similar suit on 24 February 1806 in the county and got an order that the defendants were to convey 325 acres mentioned in the bill to the plaintiff. Grimes seems to have been unaware that Edward Skidmore, one of the defendants, was long dead. Jesse Hamilton was not named in this bill.

  34. Hu Maxwell, The History of Barbour County, West Virginia, From its Earliest Exploration and Settlement to the Present Time (Morgantown, 1899), 510.

  35. Clarksburg newspaper, 22 January 1933. This was apparently the Sunday Exponent-Telegraph, which (according to an imperfect citation) had an article on the Wilson family. This paper has been microfilmed but unfortunately all of the issues for January and February were then missing. The paper did usually feature a local history story on the last page, frequently an interview with a West Virginian centenarian or the like. Perhaps a clipping may eventually surface in the area.

  36. The list was taken, as ordered, on 30 October 1784. See Violet Gadd Coonts, The Western Waters: Early Settlers of Eastern Barbour County, West Virginia, 2nd edition (Denver, 1991), 229. Joseph Donoha was a neighbor, with ten white person, one dwelling, and one tithable (which suggests that the fort was enumerated as an "other" building).

  37. Randolph County Orders.

  38. Harrison County Entry Book, I, 17.

  39. Clarke Papers, Series C, vol. 2, Virginia State Library, Req. C8455.

  40. 1820 census of Nicholas County. He is not found in the Arthur household in 1830 at Webster Springs.

  41. Randolph County Deeds, IX, 482. Joseph Friend, of Nicholas County, sold to David Holder and Thomas Skidmore, 398 acres on the Cheat River at the head of Coburn's Run, for $600.00. See also Historical Cemeteries of Webster County, West Virginia (Exchange, WV, 1981), I, 1. There was no probate on his estate in Nicholas County. His grandson, Rev. Richard Anderson Arthur (1817-1899), taught and preached in Wheeling and Cincinnati in association with the Methodist Episcopal Church, and was involved with the abolitionists before the war. It is a great pity that no monument exists to memory of Captain Friend there, probably Webster County's most distinguished citizen.

  42. C. J. Maxwell, Descendants of William Wilson, 1722-1801, and Elizabeth Blackburn (Dallas, Texas, 1943), 13. For Benjamin Casner, formerly of Randolph County, see the History of Noble County, Ohio (Chicago, 1887), 475.

  43. Albert S. Bosworth, History of Randolph County, West Virginia (1916), 70.

  44. Randolph County Orders. Andrew Friend, the justice in Randolph County, must be carefully distinguished from his cousin Andrew Pendleton Friend (1780-1865) in this period. Both died in what was to become Braxton County. Andrew P. Friend was one of the first justices named in Nicholas County, and was later an unsuccessful candidate for the House of Delegates. There were also several members of the Friend family of Washington County, Maryland, who patented land in Randolph County, but lived there briefly if at all.

  45. Randolph County Surveys, I, 321. This land was presumably at or near the Kanawha Run Camping Area in Sutton Lake National Park. It is further described as on the dividing ridge of Salt Lick on the waters of the Holly River and Kanawha Run.

  46. Braxton County Deeds, IV, 257. His son Joseph Friend, obviously a minor in 1817, disappears and presumably died young. The Joseph Friend in Kanawha County in 1850, a wealthy salt manufacturer, was probably from Chesterfield County, Virginia, and not related to this family at all despite the coincidence of his name and occupation. (He is said to have been of English ancestry.) This Joseph had a son Thomas R. Friend who married Frances Cabell (born 1 January 1815, died 16 August 1838) on 1 November 1832. Thomas and his wife were apparently both dead in 1850 leaving three adolescent daughters living with their grandfather Joseph Friend. See Alexander Brown, The Cabells and their kin (1939), and W. S. Laidley, History of Charleston and Kanawha County, West Virginia, Chicago, [1911], 139, 150, 200, 717-8, 920.

  47. 1880 census of Milton Township, page 200A. Jonas Friend was apparently overlooked in the 1860 census of both West Virginia and Ohio, and is not found indexed in the 1870 census of West Virginia

  48. There were also younger Canter children who should have had a share in the Ben's Run tract, but who never legally disposed of their interest.

Comments regarding this page to: Deborah Johnson.