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Revolutionary War history: Last Ohio surviving soldier buried in Noble Co.
The Marietta Times (Ohio) ^ | March 22, 2013 | Jasmine Rogers

Posted on 03/22/2013 10:41:47 AM PDT by Pharmboy

Revolutionary War history Last Ohio surviving soldier buried in Noble Co.

HIRAMSBURG-Nestled off the beaten path in Noble County in a small family cemetery are two headstones marking the final resting place of Private John Gray, the last surviving Revolutionary War soldier in Ohio, and the second to last in the nation.

Though Gray fought in many battles during the war, he otherwise did little that would have gained him renown.

He was born the oldest of eight into a poor laboring family near Mount Vernon, Va., and worked most of his life as a laborer. He was not a famous author or poet. Nor did he go on to further military glory after the war.

JASMINE ROGERS The Marietta Times

Joy Flood, the curator and manager of the Noble County Historic Jail Museum and Information Center, overlooks the final resting place of John Gray, the second to last surviving Revolutionary War solider in the country and the last in Ohio. Gray’s plot in the small McElroy Cemetery is marked with his original marker and a veteran’s marker provided by the government.

None the less, the humble man, who lived out much of his life just outside of Caldwell, was an icon, said Salem resident Nina Ronshausen, Gray's fourth-great granddaughter.

"He was one of the last patriots to die," she said.

When he passed away in 1868, Gray was 104 and the war was more than 80 years behind him. But more than 1,000 people came out to attend Gray's funeral, said Ronshausen.

Fact Box

About John Gray

Born Jan. 6, 1764 near Mount Vernon, Va.

Died March 29, 1868 near Hiramsburg, Noble County.

Joined the Revolutionary War at age 16.

Was a companion and employee of George Washington.

Aged 104 at death, Gray was the second to last living Revolutionary War soldier in the nation and the last in Ohio.

Source: Times research.

The Last Man of The Revolution (Written about John Gray)

By: James McCormick Dalzell

In the chill and snow of winter,

A dark and bitter night,

While the wind is mourning sadly,

Like a lone and ruined sprite,

In a cottage in Ohio

A poor lonely man

Sits counting o'er the hundred years

Since first his life began.

In that cabin is one window

With a broken many a pane,

Through which the snow keeps drifting

With all its might and main;

And the old man sits and shivers,

For his fire is very low,

And his blood has lost the fervor

Of a hundred years ago.

His gray head bows in sadness,

His prayer is murmured low,

But God can hear him now as well

As a hundred years ago.

Call the roll of the noble old heroes

Who battled at Washington's side,

And only this voice in the cabin

Will answer -for all the rest died

In poverty, sick, in distress, and alone,

Forgotten, neglected, yet he

Adorns the fair banner he fought for of yore,

And prays for the "Flag of the Free."

And it was not his advanced age or even his participation in the war itself that made Gray such an icon, she said.

"They honored Gray because he had shaken hands with (George) Washington. This was a tremendous thing for people in 1869 that Gray was someone who had known General Washington," she said.

In fact, Gray knew the founding father, said Joy Flood, manager and curator of the Noble County Historic Jail Museum and Information Center and a member of the Noble County Historical Society Board of Trustees.

"He and George Washington were friends," she said.

When 16-year-old Gray joined the war around 1791, he cited that connection as a reason for joining the cause.

"I lived and was born near Mount Vernon, how could I do otherwise?" Gray told James McCormick Dalzell, a Civil War soldier and author who took an interest in chronicling Gray's life.

When the war ended, Gray returned to a life of labor, working at Washington's mill, said Flood. In his work, Gray had several occasions to briefly converse with the founding father who he greatly admired, wrote Dalzell.

"Mr. Gray never tired of speaking of General Washington," wrote Dalzell.

In fact, it might have been his inability to vote for his beloved leader that caused Gray to eventually leave his home in Virginia, where only property owners had the right to vote.

"The fact that he migrated west to such a dangerous place just so he could vote was so unique," said Ronshausen.

Gray eventually made his home near Hiramsburg, about 10 miles outside Caldwell.

There, the humble cottage he built -a symbol of his hard earned suffrage -still stands.

"There is a young couple in the process of restoring it," said Flood.

Just 100 yards from the small wooden cabin is the McElroy Cemetery, the family plot of where Gray was ultimately buried between his third wife and stepdaughter.

Gray's original headstone reads: "The last of Washington's companions/ The hoary head is a crown of glory."


TOPICS: History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: georgewashington; godsgravesglyphs; oh; revwar
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To: Verginius Rufus
I checked with the person I know whose ancestor was supposedly the last Revolutionary War soldier to die--he died on Jan. 8, 1865, more than three years before this man in Ohio. After his death his family received a letter from Abraham Lincoln which referred to him as the last surviving veteran of the Revolutionary War. It looks like Lincoln was wrong about that.

The last survivor of the Americans who were at Lexington Green on April 19, 1775, died in 1864 at the age of 96.

41 posted on 03/23/2013 5:09:44 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: Joe 6-pack

Simon Bolivar Buckner was an American general in WWII who was killed in 1945 near the end of the battle of Okinawa. His father was the Confederate general who surrendered Fort Donelson to Ulysses S. Grant in February 1862.


42 posted on 03/23/2013 5:12:46 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: EternalVigilance

This Revolutionary War veteran died in March 1868. When I was a child I knew a woman who was born in February 1869 and lived into her 90s (the mother of a friend of my grandmother’s)—she was born less than one year after this man’s death and when Lincoln would have been President if he had not been assassinated.


43 posted on 03/23/2013 5:15:24 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: Verginius Rufus

Amazing.


44 posted on 03/23/2013 9:08:32 PM PDT by EternalVigilance (Legislate that down is up if you will, but down will still be down, and up will remain up.)
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To: Verginius Rufus

My great-grandmother was born in the centennial year of the republic, 1876, and lived until 1977...until I was sixteen years old. She was born the same year as Custer led his men to disaster at Little Big Horn. That always amazed me when I was growing up. Still does I guess.


45 posted on 03/23/2013 9:13:39 PM PDT by EternalVigilance (Legislate that down is up if you will, but down will still be down, and up will remain up.)
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To: EternalVigilance
One of my great-grandfathers was born in 1835 and died in 1920. I never got to meet him since I was born long after 1920, but I had a cousin who died in 2000 who lived with him (her grandfather) when she was a child. His father was born in 1780--while the American Revolution was still being fought.

On the other side, one of my maternal great-great-grandfathers served in the Civil War although he was already in his 40s--he was born in 1820. He was 6 years old when Thomas Jefferson and John Adams died. I had a great-aunt and a great-uncle who lived long enough for me to know them, who remembered him (their grandfather).

46 posted on 03/24/2013 11:11:23 AM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: Verginius Rufus

Correction—that should have read 1854, not 1864. Jonathan Harrington, 16, was a fifer in the Lexington militia at the time of the battle of Lexington and died in 1854.


47 posted on 03/24/2013 11:17:02 AM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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