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About Col. Alexander Lowry
A Patriot of the American Revolution for PENNSYLVANIA with the rank of COLONEL. DAR Ancestor # A072136
Lazarus and Elizabeth "Etta" (Campbell) Lowry's children were:
5. Col. Alexander Lowry, Sr. (m. 1st. Ann West and 2nd., Mary Waters) (3rd Sarah Cochran)
Colonel Alexander Lowrey commanded a battalion of Pennsylvania Militia during the Revolutionary War. Colonel Lowrey was in the Battles of Germantown and Brandywine and the New Jersey campaigns.
He served in many important committees in addition to his military duties. He was one of the first in the county or State who advocated independence, and was a delegate to Carpenter's Hall, in Philadelphia, where was passed the resolution in favor of independence, on June 16, 1776, instructing our members of Congress to vote for that measure. He died on his plantation near Marietta, PA. Find a Grave
Born in Northern Ireland Dec. 1727. Parents Lazarus and Etta Campbell, (married 2nd Ann Boggs Lowrey). The eighth child of Lazarus and Ann. Trader: Associated with Crogan and the Barnard Gratz Atlantic shipping company in Philadelphia and Lancaster. 1748 Associated with fur trader Joseph Simon of Lancaster, who provided furs to Barnard Gratz of Philadelphia for trans-Atlantic shipping.
Mr. Lowrey was, from the first, outspoken and ardent for separation from the mother-country. In July, 1774, he was placed on the Committee of Correspondence for Lancaster, and was a member of the Provincial Conference held in Philadelphia on the 15th of that month; and of that convened in Carpenters' Hall, 18th of June, 1776; and of the Convention of the 15th of July following.
He was chosen to the Assembly in 1775, and, with the exception of two or three years, served as a member of that body almost uninterruptedly until 1789. In May, 1777, he was appointed one of the commissioners to procure blankets for the army. In 1776 he commanded the Third Battalion of the Lancaster County Associators, and was in active service in the Jerseys during that year.
As senior colonel, he commanded the Lancaster county militia in the battle of the Brandywine. At the close of the Revolution, Colonel Lowrey retired to his fine farm adjoining Marietta.
Under the Constitution of 1789-90, Lowry was commissioned by Governor Mifflin justice of the peace, an office he held until his death, which occurred on the 31st of January, 1806.
His remains lie interred in Donegal church graveyard. Colonel Lowrey was a remarkable man in many respects, and his life was an eventful one, whether considered in his long career in the Indian trade, a patriot of the Revolution, or the many years in which he gave his time and means to the service of his country.
He was greatly beloved by his neighbors, and,during his long life, shared with his associate and friend, Colonel Galbraith, the confidence and leadership accorded to both in public, church, and local affairs. Col. Lowrey was thrice married: 1st, September 26, 1752, MARY WATERS, b. 1782; d. 1767; Ann, b. 1790 ;d 1864. Jane, b. 1794; d. 1860. PA State Senate
Interesting stories about Alexandr Lowery, including a story about his 3rd wife, here on Rootsweb
Property
- 1755 Purchase his father's plantation after he died.
- 1759 Property He purchased 400 acres of land on the river which his brother John owned in 1748, and after John was killed by Indians in 1750, which was purchase in the fall of 1750 by his brother Daniel.
- 1770 Property He purchased the ground-rents of Maytown and about 800 acres of land, extending east, west and south of that place, from Jacob Downer, who laid out that town.
Colonel 6th Battalion-Revolutionary War, (Indian Trader)
- Reference: Find A Grave Memorial - SmartCopy: Dec 19 2020, 16:28:20 UTC
Col. Alexander Lowry's Timeline
1723 |
December 1723
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Derry, Donegal , Ireland
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1726 |
December 26, 1726
Age 3
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Londonderry, Derry and Strabane, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
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December 26, 1726
Age 3
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Derry, Donegal, Ireland
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1752 |
September 17, 1752
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1753 |
1753
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Pennsylvania, Colonial America
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1756 |
April 21, 1756
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1760 |
May 2, 1760
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1764 |
January 27, 1764
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Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, Colonial America
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1765 |
April 8, 1765
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Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, United States
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