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Individual:
Birth: 1754 Frederick Co., MD or Ten Mile Creek, PA
Death: 8 OCT 1846 Ripley Co., In
He lived first in the Ten Mile Creek area of what then was Washington CoVA. After the Revolutionary War, he moved to Harrodsburg, KY, livingthere from about 1795 to 1811 and then moving to Indiana and settling intheMadison area. At the time of his death, he apparently still ownedland in Kentucky, for part of his estate was administered there.
Culver to John Hall and this wife, which says, "...father House died10-8-1846, entered in my graveyard." Possibly buried in an unmarkedgrave inRybolt Cemetary, near Napoleon, IN, where several of Aaron’schildren, as well as Aaron and his wife are buried.
at least one born in Indiana.
descendants:
who is known to have served in the Revolutionary Army. He enlisted, inMay, 1777, in Capt. James Hook's Calico Huntingshirt Division, under ColBroadhead's Regiment of the Virginia Line, which came from what was thenWashington Co. VA, and now is Washington Co PA. He served a;lmostcontinuously throughout the Revolutionary War, mostly in WesternPennsylvania, including 9 months duty as a spy along the Ohio River.Family tradition says he served as a ranger and, sometimes dressed andlooking like an Indian, went out from different frontier posts to releaseprisoners from the British and their Indian allies. Tradition furtherstates that he was one of four brothers who all saw this type ofservice. Levi House must have been a colorful character, for Mrs. JosephDoyle, a descendant, says he must have been "quite a scallywag", as shefound court records regarding himtime and time again, beginning inHarrodsburg, KY, in 1795, and in Indiana after 1811. In one case he wasaccused of burning a neighbor's log cabin because he thought he wasunfairly treated. Mrs. doyle did not report the verdict in this case,sad to say.
Bokovan (?) House. He lived first in the Ten Mile Creek area of whatthen was Washington Co VA. After the Revolutionary War, he moved toHarrodsburg, KY, living there from about 1795 to 1811 and then moving toIndiana and settling in the Madison area. At the time of his death, heapparentlystill owned land in Kentucky, for part of his estate wasadministered there.
Pressley.
Culver to John Hall and this wife, which says, "...father House died10-8-1846, entered in my graveyard." Possibly buried in an unmarkedgrave inRybolt Cemetary, near Napoleon, IN, where several of Aaron'schildren, as well as Aaron and his wife are buried.
at least one born in Indiana.
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