Picking up on your Luke SENIOR Mattingly, I have wondered about these two entries below. I wonder if the Sr. might mean that there were two Lukes in the neighborhood at the time and one was older than the other. I was wondering too if the Luke Mattingly that supplied for the army in Oct 1780 might be Luke 1702-1783 s/o Thomas II, cause he would have been too old to have been drafted but could have been a supplier of the army, and the Luke that was drafted in 1781 might be the son of Ignatius Sr. that come to KY and had 10 daughters and one son, Thomas Leonard. He seems like a sorta hard luck individual. One of my most favorite Washington County KY entries in 1791 refers to him, I think. I'll paste it below. Maybe it's my sick sense of humor, but I laugh every time I read it. He doesn't sound sure how his sight became impaired, but it MIGHT be..... However that does not explain the two Luke Mattinglys on the 1794 St. Inigoes Parish Census while 1) Luke Mattingly s/o Thomas II died in 1783 2) Luke Mattingly of the impaired sight is in Washington County in 1791. (He may be the Luke Mattingly on the 1790 Nelson County Tax list -Jno. Hardin #2 along with Basil, Ignatius, John, Leonard and Robert Mattingly. It looks like it might be the same bunch that ended up in Washington County after 1792 when it was formed. http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/ky/nelson/taxlists/taxes/nelson4.txt Then there are these Census records: Census Records-Soundex-All States Name Home in 1790 (City,County,State) Year View Census (No KY Yet) Luke Mattingley Unknown Township, St Marys, MD 1790 ================== Name Residence (City,County,State) Year View Census (No KY available) Luke Mattingly Not Stated, St Mary's, MD 1800 NOTE: Courtesy Karen Fowler Caldwell, 1805 Washington County, Kentucky Tax List, MATTINGLY, Joseph son of Luke. (Luke s/o Ignatius Sr. didn't have a son named Joseph.) ================== Name Residence (City,County,State) Year View Census Luke Mattingly Not Stated, Washington, KY 1810 Luke Mattingly Not Stated, Saint Mary's, MD 1810 ================== Name Residence (City,County,State) Year View Census Luke Mattingly Not Stated,Washington,KY 1820 Luke Mattingly Not Stated,Washington,KY 1820 ================== Judith ----------------- (Luke s/o Thomas II ??) CALENDAR OF EVENTS ST. MARY'S COUNTY IN THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, Compiled from the Official Records of Maryland for the St. Mary's County Bicentennial Commission by Edwin Beitzell, 1975, p. 78 A return of Beef on the Hoof Purchased by Joseph Ford, Commissary of Purchases for St. Mary's County from the 5th till 14th Octr. 1780 <snip> Date: Oct. 13, No Vou.: 7, Vouchers Name: Luke Mattingly, No. Steers: 2, Supposed Weight: 800, Rate Old Money: 82*10*, Old Money 660*0*0 Archives of Maryland Vol. 45, p. 155, 156. ---------------------------------------------------------- (Luke son of Ignatius, Sr. ??) CALENDAR OF EVENTS ST. MARY'S COUNTY IN THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, Compiled from the Official Records of Maryland for the St. Mary's County Bicentennial Commission by Edwin Beitzell, 1975, p.162 INDEX of Military and Civilian Personnel of St. Mary's County, Maryland in the American Revolution Mattingly, Luke Pvt. Army Draught 8/4/1781 p. 102 --------------------------------------------------------- (Luke s/o Ignatius, Sr.??) CALENDAR OF EVENTS ST. MARY'S COUNTY IN THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, Compiled from the Official Records of Maryland for the St. Mary's County Bicentennial Commission by Edwin Beitzell, 1975, p. 102 August 4, 1781 Col. Uriah Forrest, Leonard Town to Gov. Lee "Humanity" causes him to intercede on behalf of <snip> only two others merit Interposition: Clerk Spalding and Luke Mattingly both of whom are very Poor, Rent Land and have a number of children who must inevitably starve the men are not permitted to return; they bring recommendations from Col. Richard Barnes. <snip> Archives of Maryland Vol. 47, p. 387. -------------------------------------------------------- (Luke, s/o Ignatius, Sr.??) PIONEER HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY, KENTUCKY, Edited and Indexed by Michael L. Cook and Bettie Anne Cook, 1980, McDowell Publ., Utica, KY, p. 251. Abstracted from Record of the County Militia, p. 16 Proceedings of a Court Martial held at Wm. Hayden's Decr. 22nd, 1791 Luke Mattingly, Delinqt. of Capt. Ewing's Co. present. adduces Jno. Mattingly in his Behalf who says he believes he has lost his sight in a great measure by reason of a pen-knife some time past ran into it. The Court after Examining the sd Delinqt. & further being informed of his inability at the time of the Draught are of Opinion he shall be taken off the Muster Roll. --------------------------------------------- ----- Original Message ----- From: "Blaine Burkey" <blaineb@slu.edu> To: <MATTINGLY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, March 21, 2004 11:10 PM Subject: Re: [MATTINGLY] Luke & Barton Mattingly > Judith, Charlie, and all, > > My silence through all the messages flying fast and furiously does not > betoken disinterest. I just thought it best to sit awhile and listen. > > HOWEVER, before I go to bed, let me throw in "another" unacknowledged > Luke Mattingly, or perhaps an unrecognized relationship of one of the > Lukes we already had. > > My reference is to the Oaths of Allegiance to the State of Maryland > which were signed in St. Mary's County in 1778. One of the signatories > was Luke Mattingly, Senior. [Herman E. Mattingly, Mattingly Family in > Early America, 1975, p. 212, citing Chronicles of St. Mary's, July, > 1956, p. 45.] > > It seems to me, if we have a Luke, Sr., there is also a Luke Jr. > somewhere, whose relationship to Luke, Sr., is clear, and who does not > seem to have signed, either because he was already in the military or > because he had not reached 18 years of age by 1778 (and thus was born > after 1760 in Maryland). I think the latter situation is true, since we > have extensive records of military service, with no reference to any > Luke. > ________________________________ > > Now Luke Mattingly, son of Tom II, did not have a son named Luke. > > So who was Luke Sr. -- > > Luke, son of John, son of Caesar? > > Luke, son of Ignatius, son of Tom II? > > Maybe the Luke who married Eleanor Thompson? > > Or some other Luke? > ________________________________ > > And who was Luke Jr. -- > > Maybe Barton's father? > > The Luke who married Betha Cabron? > > Or some other Luke? > ________________________________ > > Before Christmas I put together a jigsaw puzzle -- the hardest I've ever > seen. The picture was over of 101 Dalmatians.-- all closely pushed > together -- with myriad spots. The picture was printed on both sides of > the tiles -- but turned 90 degrees. All the pieces were almost exacly > the same shape, but each slightly different.. > > That puzzle was a piece of cake compared to the Mattingly family. The > shapes of the pieces and the arrangement of the spots are constantly > changing and we have no idea whether or not we have all the pieces. > > But hope springs eternal for a breakthrough. > > Nightie Night. > > fr Blaine > > > > > > > ==== MATTINGLY Mailing List ==== > <Z>WELCOME TO THE MATTINGLY GENEALOGY GROUP<Z> > We also have the MattinglyForum-subscribe@egroups.com > Your Host Website http://www.wvi.com/~wb > Rootsweb Host http://resources.rootsweb.com/surnames/m/a/MATTINGLY/ > To Unsubscribe or contact the List Owner MATTINGLY-admin@rootsweb.com > mailto:MATTINGLY-L-request@rootsweb.com?subject=unsubscribe&body=unsubscribe > mailto:MATTINGLY-D-request@rootsweb.com?subject=unsubscribe&body=unsubscribe > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 >
I'm tossing the following into the pot tonight, just for completeness's sake. Fr. Julius Mattingly's work may not be available to any of you, and what it says about Fr. Ambrose Mattingley's line is not to be found in Fr. Herman's books. And it may yet prove helpful somehow. _____________________________________________ LUKE MATTINGLY =============== Fr. Julius Mattingly, Traditions and Genealogy of the Mattingly Family (West Baden IN: privately published, 1918: "1. CHARLES MATTINGLY. All the different branches of the Kentucky Mattinglys trace their origin back to this Charles, only three of whose issue we have any record: 3. William. 4. Leonard. 5. Luke." (p.1) "3. WILLIAM MATTINGLY. It is positively known that this Wm. Mattingly with his brothers, Leonard and Luke, came to Hardin Creek settlement, Kentucky, in the year 1786, and that they came from St. Mary's County, Maryland." (p.2) "5. LUKE MATTINGLY. The last of the trio of brothers who settled in Hardin Creek in 1786, of whom nothing can be recorded, save that a few years ago, one of his descendants, John G. Mattingly, was living in Manton, Washington County, Ky., a respectable members [sic] of Holy Rosary church." (p. 2) REV. AMBROSE WILLIAM WALLACE MATTINGLEY, O.S.B., born 8 Sept. 1865, near Eurica, Ind., was the son of Wiilliam Mattingly and Elizabeth Hall. Ambrose quotes his own father's biography as saying his father was the son of Thomas Mattingley and Nancy Ann Wood, and continues: "His grandfather, Joseph Mattingly. and great grandfather, Luke Mattingly, were both born near the present city of Hagerstown, Washington Co., Md. From this locality at an early date, they started westward across the Alleghanies to that country explored by Daniel Boone, locating in Marion County, Ky. Joseph Mattingly, under Shelby Hoplins, was with General Jackson at the battle of New Orleans.... In 1832, William Mattingley moved with his parents to Spencer County, Ind..." (p. 62) [to sum up -- Ambrose William Wallace Mattingley William Mattingley = Elizabeth Hall Thomas Mattingley = Nancy Ann Woods Joseph Mattingley Luke Mattingly (BB)] Fr. Ambrose also indicated that he himself had four half sisters and two half brothers (Mark and Luke). (p.62) _________________ Hoye's Pioneer Families of Garrett County (Parsons WV: McClaine, 1988), reprinting a newspaper article from about 1936: "The Kentucky Mattinglys trace their ancestry to Charles, whose sons, William, Leonard and Luke, settled at Hardin Creek, Ky., in 1786." (p. 403) "In 1778, Henry, Barnett, Joseph and Richard Mattingly of Washington Co., Md. took the Oath of Fidelity to the Revolution; they were presumably sons of Luke Mattingly, who resided near Hagerstown, Md." (p. 404) _________________ Fr. Herman E. Mattingly, The Descendents of Henry Mattingly (c. 1750-1823) (Newark OH: privately published, 1969): "Another tradition indicates that Henry was the brother of three Mattinglys, Leonard, William and Luke, who left Leonardtown, Md., and went to Kentucky about 1791. Charles Mattingly (1803-1897) testified that his grandfather (HENRY I) 'was very much hurt when he heard of his brother going to Kentucky without stopping to see him on his way.' Charles also stated that to the best of his memory, the brother's name was William." (p. iv) _________________
Fr. Blaine, that's interesting stuff. Thought provoking. Following up on the mention of the Mattingly family in Hagerstown, MD, I understand that the Hagerstown people went over the state line to Conewago Chapel in York (later Adams County) County, PA for Catholic religious services in the early years when the border was being disputed between Maryland and Pennsylvania. There is only one mention of a Mattingly in the records I have for Conawago Chapel, but there IS one. THE BASILICA OF THE SACRED HEART OF JESUS "CONEWAGO CHAPEL" EDGE GROVE, ADAMS COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, MARRIAGE RECORDS 1796-1883, Translated by Msgr. Thomas J. McGough, Edited by Albert C. Dudrear, Jr., P.E., Arthur S. Cunningham, Col., USAF, Ret., Francis W. Miller, 1980, John Timon Reily Historical Society, McSherrystown, PA., p. M-42 MATTINGLY, Samuel - -DURBIN, Elinora 3-7-1802, Witnesses: Parents and Sisters. No Priest listed. This Samuel Mattingly was the son of Henry Mattingly 1751-1823 and Honor Durbin c 1751-1821 and William R. Mattingly has this family beautifully researched on his web site. They are of the Caesar/Cezar Line. It looks like they took part in the Pennsylvania migration from Pittsburgh down the Ohio River to Zanesville, Ohio where one of the first Catholic settlements were. ----------------------------------------------- You mentioned the sons of Luke Mattingly who lived near Hagerstown Maryland taking the Oath of Allegiance in 1778 in Washington County, Maryland, and I found another reference for those oaths, but to date have not found them on any 1776 census of Maryland: Washington and Montgomery Counties, were formed from parts of Frederick Sept. 6 1776 so they should be on Frederick, Montgomery,or Washington County, but I haven't found them. They are probably there though, cause Henry died in 1823 in Allegany County which was formed from part of Washington in 1789.. "Revolutionary Records of Maryland", Gaius Marcus Brumbaugh & Margaret Robert Hodges, 1978 Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, Maryland, p15 "The Worsipfull Andw. Bruce's Returns, (1 through 81) 9. Mattingly, Richard 11. Mattingly, Joseph 24. Mattingly, Barnet 66, Mattingly, Henry Washington County, 2nd Mch., 1778. I Certify to the Honorable the Governor and Council <snip> subscribed the Oath of Fidelity to the State of Maryland <snip>. ANDW. BRUCE." (There are no other Mattinglys listed in this book but Edward, William and Samuel Durbin are also on the Washington County, Maryland list above, and William R, Mattingly lists Samuel Durbin as the father of Honor Durbin the wife of Henry Mattingly, . This Henry Mattingly, b. July 3, 1751, is listed as the son of John Mattingly and Elizabeth Brewer. JB) The Mattinglys who took the 1778 Oath of Allegiance in St. Mary's County listed by O'Rourke in his Catholic Families are on p. 78. Benet, Benjamin, Clement, Edward, Francis, James Barton, and Luke, Sr. So it looks like it may be two different Mattingly lines, Thomas II and Caesar/Cezar. Where is Luke Jr or the younger of the two? Is he the one that shows up in St. Mary's County in 1781 drafted and excused, son of Ignatius Sr.? Judith ----- Original Message ----- From: "Blaine Burkey" <blaineb@slu.edu> To: <MATTINGLY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, March 22, 2004 9:06 PM Subject: Re: [MATTINGLY] Luke & Barton Mattingly > I'm tossing the following into the pot tonight, just for completeness's > sake. Fr. Julius Mattingly's work may not be available to any of you, > and what it says about Fr. Ambrose Mattingley's line is not to be found > in Fr. Herman's books. And it may yet prove helpful somehow. > _____________________________________________ > > LUKE MATTINGLY > =============== > > Fr. Julius Mattingly, Traditions and Genealogy of the Mattingly Family > (West Baden IN: privately published, 1918: > > "1. CHARLES MATTINGLY. All the different branches of the Kentucky > Mattinglys trace their origin back to this Charles, only three of whose > issue we have any record: > 3. William. > 4. Leonard. > 5. Luke." (p.1) > > "3. WILLIAM MATTINGLY. It is positively known that this Wm. Mattingly > with his brothers, Leonard and Luke, came to Hardin Creek settlement, > Kentucky, in the year 1786, and that they came from St. Mary's County, > Maryland." (p.2) > > "5. LUKE MATTINGLY. The last of the trio of brothers who settled in > Hardin Creek in 1786, of whom nothing can be recorded, save that a few > years ago, one of his descendants, John G. Mattingly, was living in > Manton, Washington County, Ky., a respectable members [sic] of Holy > Rosary church." (p. 2) > > REV. AMBROSE WILLIAM WALLACE MATTINGLEY, O.S.B., born 8 Sept. 1865, near > Eurica, Ind., was the son of Wiilliam Mattingly and Elizabeth Hall. > Ambrose quotes his own father's biography as saying his father was the > son of Thomas Mattingley and Nancy Ann Wood, and continues: "His > grandfather, Joseph Mattingly. and great grandfather, Luke Mattingly, > were both born near the present city of Hagerstown, Washington Co., Md. > From this locality at an early date, they started westward across the > Alleghanies to that country explored by Daniel Boone, locating in Marion > County, Ky. Joseph Mattingly, under Shelby Hoplins, was with General > Jackson at the battle of New Orleans.... In 1832, William Mattingley > moved with his parents to Spencer County, Ind..." (p. 62) > > [to sum up -- > Ambrose William Wallace Mattingley > William Mattingley = Elizabeth Hall > Thomas Mattingley = Nancy Ann Woods > Joseph Mattingley > Luke Mattingly (BB)] > > Fr. Ambrose also indicated that he himself had four half sisters and two > half brothers (Mark and Luke). (p.62) > _________________ > > Hoye's Pioneer Families of Garrett County (Parsons WV: McClaine, 1988), > reprinting a newspaper article from about 1936: > > "The Kentucky Mattinglys trace their ancestry to Charles, whose sons, > William, Leonard and Luke, settled at Hardin Creek, Ky., in 1786." (p. > 403) > > "In 1778, Henry, Barnett, Joseph and Richard Mattingly of Washington > Co., Md. took the Oath of Fidelity to the Revolution; they were > presumably sons of Luke Mattingly, who resided near Hagerstown, Md." (p. > 404) > _________________ > > Fr. Herman E. Mattingly, The Descendents of Henry Mattingly (c. > 1750-1823) (Newark OH: privately published, 1969): > > "Another tradition indicates that Henry was the brother of three > Mattinglys, Leonard, William and Luke, who left Leonardtown, Md., and > went to Kentucky about 1791. Charles Mattingly (1803-1897) testified > that his grandfather (HENRY I) 'was very much hurt when he heard of his > brother going to Kentucky without stopping to see him on his way.' > Charles also stated that to the best of his memory, the brother's name > was William." (p. iv) > _________________ > > > ==== MATTINGLY Mailing List ==== > <Z>WELCOME TO THE MATTINGLY GENEALOGY GROUP<Z> > We also have the MattinglyForum-subscribe@egroups.com > Your Host Website http://www.wvi.com/~wb > Rootsweb Host http://resources.rootsweb.com/surnames/m/a/MATTINGLY/ > To Unsubscribe or contact the List Owner MATTINGLY-admin@rootsweb.com > mailto:MATTINGLY-L-request@rootsweb.com?subject=unsubscribe&body=unsubscribe > mailto:MATTINGLY-D-request@rootsweb.com?subject=unsubscribe&body=unsubscribe > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 >
From what I can tell from looking at the census and tax records there was one adult Luke here early. He was born in the 1760-1765 range. He was taxed on less than 50 acres of land on Prather's Creek (at least on and off from 1797 to 1821). Prather's Creek runs from Raywick to Loretto in present day Marion Co. What year did Luke supposedly make a move to Missouri and then move back to Kentucky? In 1810 he is listed at being over 45 years of age. The list is alphabetical so I can't tell who his neighbors are. In 1820 he was living next to Leonard Cambron, William Miles, John Miles, John Baptist Cambron, William Cambron. This was Hardin's Creek area. The following was written down for me about 15 years ago by an old Cambron researcher now deceased: ."..... Charles T. Blandford had previously purchased a 100 acres from John Liston & wife which lay on Hardin's Creek adjoining Thomas Cambron's 100 acres in 1796. Tax Records 1793 Wash. Co.Ky indicate that Thomas Cambron's 100 acres were originally patented by John Grundy. Thomas Cambron was the father of Nancy Cambron who married Donohoo in Nelson Co. Ky in 1789. He and his wife signed consent for their daughter to marry David Allen, Jr. His (David's) mother, Sarah Mattingly gave consent. Mrs. Sarah Allen married Clement Mattingly in Nelson Co., Ky. There were summoned to court in Wash. Co., Ky to show cause why the children of her first marriage should not be bound out. I believe that Thomas Cambron's widow, Mrs. "Betha" Cambron married Luke Mattingly. Luke Mattingly was the father of Anna Cambron who married William Taylor. This couple moved to Perry Co. Missouri. Luke Mattingly was the step-father of Benjamin Cambron who was bound to James O'Daniel. He my have gone to Missouri with James O'Daniel. There was a Benjamin Cambron in Perry Co. who married Elizabeth Grass." 1830 finds him 60-70 years old and living next to Marcus Lindsey. Marcus lived on Crab Run which is located between Frogtown Road and Loretto Road in Marion Co. This is on the edge of the Mattingly settlement on Hardin's Creek. This is just down the road from where I live. 1840 he is 70-80 years old and is still living next to Marcus Lindsey's widow, Catherine. I loose record of him between 1840 and 1850. The tax records should narrow down the year when I can look them up. His probate records went up in smoke in 1864 when the court records burned since he was living in Marion Co. NOW, if this is the brother to Leonard and William then the old story of him remaining on the island at Fredericksburg in Washington Co. KY instead of moving to Hardin's Creek in Marion Co. just flew out the window. IF this is not the brother to Leonard and William.... then where are records for that Luke? I think it almost has to be him?!? This is a good map to use for looking at the streams and creeks of Marion Co. http://ukcc.uky.edu/%7Emaps/marion.gif Karen ----- Original Message ----- From: "Judith Burger" <bburger1-2@comcast.net> To: <MATTINGLY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, March 22, 2004 7:31 AM Subject: Re: [MATTINGLY] Luke & Barton Mattingly > Picking up on your Luke SENIOR Mattingly, I have wondered about these two > entries below. I wonder if the Sr. might mean that there were two Lukes in > the neighborhood at the time and one was older than the other. > > I was wondering too if the Luke Mattingly that supplied for the army in Oct > 1780 might be Luke 1702-1783 s/o Thomas II, cause he would have been too old > to have been drafted but could have been a supplier of the army, and the > Luke that was drafted in 1781 might be the son of Ignatius Sr. that come to > KY and had 10 daughters and one son, Thomas Leonard. He seems like a sorta > hard luck individual. One of my most favorite Washington County KY entries > in 1791 refers to him, I think. I'll paste it below. Maybe it's my sick > sense of humor, but I laugh every time I read it. He doesn't sound sure how > his sight became impaired, but it MIGHT be..... > > However that does not explain the two Luke Mattinglys on the 1794 St. > Inigoes Parish Census while > 1) Luke Mattingly s/o Thomas II died in 1783 > 2) Luke Mattingly of the impaired sight is in Washington County in 1791. > (He may be the Luke Mattingly on the 1790 Nelson > County Tax list -Jno. Hardin #2 along with Basil, Ignatius, John, Leonard > and Robert Mattingly. It looks like it might be > the same bunch that ended up in Washington County after 1792 when it was > formed. > http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/ky/nelson/taxlists/taxes/nelson4.txt > Then there are these Census records: > Census Records-Soundex-All States > > Name Home in 1790 (City,County,State) Year View Census (No KY Yet) > Luke Mattingley Unknown Township, St Marys, MD 1790 > ================== > Name Residence (City,County,State) Year View Census (No KY available) > Luke Mattingly Not Stated, St Mary's, MD 1800 > NOTE: Courtesy Karen Fowler Caldwell, 1805 Washington County, Kentucky Tax > List, MATTINGLY, Joseph son of Luke. (Luke s/o Ignatius Sr. didn't have a > son named Joseph.) > ================== > Name Residence (City,County,State) Year View Census > Luke Mattingly Not Stated, Washington, KY 1810 > Luke Mattingly Not Stated, Saint Mary's, MD 1810 > ================== > Name Residence (City,County,State) Year View Census > Luke Mattingly Not Stated,Washington,KY 1820 > Luke Mattingly Not Stated,Washington,KY 1820 > ================== > Judith > ----------------- > (Luke s/o Thomas II ??) > CALENDAR OF EVENTS ST. MARY'S COUNTY IN THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, Compiled > from the Official Records of Maryland for the St. Mary's County Bicentennial > Commission by Edwin Beitzell, 1975, p. 78 > > A return of Beef on the Hoof Purchased by Joseph Ford, Commissary of > Purchases for St. Mary's County from the 5th till 14th Octr. 1780 <snip> > > Date: Oct. 13, No Vou.: 7, Vouchers Name: Luke Mattingly, No. Steers: 2, > Supposed Weight: 800, Rate Old Money: 82*10*, Old Money 660*0*0 > Archives of Maryland Vol. 45, p. 155, 156. > > ---------------------------------------------------------- > (Luke son of Ignatius, Sr. ??) > CALENDAR OF EVENTS ST. MARY'S COUNTY IN THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, Compiled > from the Official Records of Maryland for the St. Mary's County Bicentennial > Commission by Edwin Beitzell, 1975, p.162 > > INDEX of Military and Civilian Personnel of St. Mary's County, Maryland in > the American Revolution > > Mattingly, Luke > > Pvt. Army Draught 8/4/1781 p. 102 > --------------------------------------------------------- > (Luke s/o Ignatius, Sr.??) > CALENDAR OF EVENTS ST. MARY'S COUNTY IN THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, Compiled > from the Official Records of Maryland for the St. Mary's County Bicentennial > Commission by Edwin Beitzell, 1975, p. 102 > > August 4, 1781 > Col. Uriah Forrest, Leonard Town to Gov. Lee > "Humanity" causes him to intercede on behalf of <snip> only two others merit > Interposition: Clerk Spalding and Luke Mattingly both of whom are very > Poor, Rent Land and have a number of children who must inevitably starve > the men are not permitted to return; they bring recommendations from Col. > Richard Barnes. <snip> > Archives of Maryland Vol. 47, p. 387. > -------------------------------------------------------- > (Luke, s/o Ignatius, Sr.??) > PIONEER HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY, KENTUCKY, Edited and Indexed by > Michael L. Cook and Bettie Anne Cook, 1980, McDowell Publ., Utica, KY, p. > 251. > Abstracted from Record of the County Militia, p. 16 > > Proceedings of a Court Martial held at Wm. Hayden's > Decr. 22nd, 1791 > Luke Mattingly, Delinqt. of Capt. Ewing's Co. present. adduces Jno. > Mattingly in his Behalf who says he believes he has lost his sight in a > great measure by reason of a pen-knife some time past ran into it. The > Court after Examining the sd Delinqt. & further being informed of his > inability at the time of the Draught are of Opinion he shall be taken off > the Muster Roll. > --------------------------------------------- > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Blaine Burkey" <blaineb@slu.edu> > To: <MATTINGLY-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Sunday, March 21, 2004 11:10 PM > Subject: Re: [MATTINGLY] Luke & Barton Mattingly > > > > Judith, Charlie, and all, > > > > My silence through all the messages flying fast and furiously does not > > betoken disinterest. I just thought it best to sit awhile and listen. > > > > HOWEVER, before I go to bed, let me throw in "another" unacknowledged > > Luke Mattingly, or perhaps an unrecognized relationship of one of the > > Lukes we already had. > > > > My reference is to the Oaths of Allegiance to the State of Maryland > > which were signed in St. Mary's County in 1778. One of the signatories > > was Luke Mattingly, Senior. [Herman E. Mattingly, Mattingly Family in > > Early America, 1975, p. 212, citing Chronicles of St. Mary's, July, > > 1956, p. 45.] > > > > It seems to me, if we have a Luke, Sr., there is also a Luke Jr. > > somewhere, whose relationship to Luke, Sr., is clear, and who does not > > seem to have signed, either because he was already in the military or > > because he had not reached 18 years of age by 1778 (and thus was born > > after 1760 in Maryland). I think the latter situation is true, since we > > have extensive records of military service, with no reference to any > > Luke. > > ________________________________ > > > > Now Luke Mattingly, son of Tom II, did not have a son named Luke. > > > > So who was Luke Sr. -- > > > > Luke, son of John, son of Caesar? > > > > Luke, son of Ignatius, son of Tom II? > > > > Maybe the Luke who married Eleanor Thompson? > > > > Or some other Luke? > > ________________________________ > > > > And who was Luke Jr. -- > > > > Maybe Barton's father? > > > > The Luke who married Betha Cabron? > > > > Or some other Luke? > > ________________________________ > > > > Before Christmas I put together a jigsaw puzzle -- the hardest I've ever > > seen. The picture was over of 101 Dalmatians.-- all closely pushed > > together -- with myriad spots. The picture was printed on both sides of > > the tiles -- but turned 90 degrees. All the pieces were almost exacly > > the same shape, but each slightly different.. > > > > That puzzle was a piece of cake compared to the Mattingly family. The > > shapes of the pieces and the arrangement of the spots are constantly > > changing and we have no idea whether or not we have all the pieces. > > > > But hope springs eternal for a breakthrough. > > > > Nightie Night. > > > > fr Blaine > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ==== MATTINGLY Mailing List ==== > > <Z>WELCOME TO THE MATTINGLY GENEALOGY GROUP<Z> > > We also have the MattinglyForum-subscribe@egroups.com > > Your Host Website http://www.wvi.com/~wb > > Rootsweb Host http://resources.rootsweb.com/surnames/m/a/MATTINGLY/ > > To Unsubscribe or contact the List Owner MATTINGLY-admin@rootsweb.com > > > mailto:MATTINGLY-L-request@rootsweb.com?subject=unsubscribe&body=unsubscribe > > > mailto:MATTINGLY-D-request@rootsweb.com?subject=unsubscribe&body=unsubscribe > > > > ============================== > > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 > > > > > > ==== MATTINGLY Mailing List ==== > <Z>WELCOME TO THE MATTINGLY GENEALOGY GROUP<Z> > We also have the MattinglyForum-subscribe@egroups.com > Your Host Website http://www.wvi.com/~wb > Rootsweb Host http://resources.rootsweb.com/surnames/m/a/MATTINGLY/ > To Unsubscribe or contact the List Owner MATTINGLY-admin@rootsweb.com > mailto:MATTINGLY-L-request@rootsweb.com?subject=unsubscribe&body=unsubscribe > mailto:MATTINGLY-D-request@rootsweb.com?subject=unsubscribe&body=unsubscribe > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237