Ftmtn (5Flumty Eutiaylbatnia
Cs 4p V~totrrg of ftmtn (5flUmty eutiaylbatnia Who's Who in the Early Records with an Account of the Growth of the County before 1790 by 'oup and Raymond Martin Bell, he Genesis of Mifflin County" ewistown, Penna. 1942 I THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES 'I- Ttf~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~PEWi CONTENTS Page I Introduction - - 11-- Mifflin County 1731-1942. II Who's Who in the Early Records 4 A summary of tax, land, military records; 1500 individuals listed alphabetically. III Early Family Records - --- 23 Alexander, Bell, Bratton, Brown, Buchanan, Carmichael, Galloway, Holliday, Holt, Jones, McDowell, McNitt, Means, Reed, Sigler Taylor. IV Important Persons - --- -- - 34 Indian chiefs *Capt. de Villiers, pioneer ministers, Judge Brown, Col. Buchanan. V The Growth of the County- -- 36 Population 1755-1940, maps, boundaries, roads. The material in this book is largely supplementary to "The Genesis of Mifflin County, Pennsylvania." The list of pioneers, with tax, land and military records, will be invaluable to the researcher. The geneal- ogical records may be useful to descendants of these pioneers. Other important data on early Mifflin County have been added. Copies of this book may be obtained from J. Martin Stroup, 53 North Pine Street, Lewistown, Pa., at 50 cents each, postpaid. Copyright, 1942, by J. Martin Stroup and Raymond M. Bell INTRODUCTION 1 I - INTRODUCTION Mifflin County 1731-1942 Mifflin County was formed in 1789 but as early as 1731 traders had left writ- ten records of the Shawnee Indian village of Ohesson, ruled over by Chief Kishaco- quillas, firm friend of the English. Its site, since 1790, occupied by Lewistown, the county seat, remained an Indian centre until the coming of Arthur Buchanan, trader and first settler, in 1754.
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