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Jesse
Corn, Sr.
Jesse Corn,
Sr. was born October 31, 1753, in Albemarle Co., Virginia, to Matthew &
Mollie Corn. The family is
believed to be of German-Irish descent and arrived in America from England in
the early 1700s where they immigrated to Virginia, then a colony of
Great Britain. Jesse Corn, Sr. served in the 7th Virginia Regiment under Capt. Matthew Jo’ett, commanded by Colonel Alexander McClenachan. He was with Washington’s Army at winter quarters in Valley Forge May of 1778 and he assisted General Nathaniel Greene at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse in 1781, as an ensign. The veteran’s marker bearing the American Revolutionary War insignia was erected at his gravesite in Patrick County Virginia on May 16, 2000, and lists Jesse Corn’s last rank as ensign, however testimonials and affidavits given in his widow’s application for pension stated he was a captain and a major. Jesse Corn also served in the Virginia Militia after termination of his service with the Continental Army. Jesse suffered several wounds during his military service which eventually led to the loss of one leg (Muster Rolls show him in hospitals at Trenton and Black River).
Henry
Lansford -
Patriot and Ensign in Militia
On
April 18, 1781, Lansford produced his commission and took oath, thus being
appointed ensign in Captain Lemuel Smith’s Company. Lansford
was born ca. 1742 in Brunswick, Virginia.
His date of death was before January 11, 1819, in
Oglethorpe Co., Georgia, where his will dated March 4, 1818, was
filed. Married around 1770 to
Elizabeth Edwards (b. 1750, Pittsylvania Co., VA;
d. after March 4, 1818, Henry Co., VA), they had ten children.
Peterson
Goodwyn
National Society Daughters of the American Revolution The content contained herein does not necessarily represent the position of the NSDAR. |