Col. John Hammon, Sr.

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Col. John Hammon, Sr.

Also Known As: "(Rev) VA", "John Hammond", "Hammonds"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Maiden's Adventure, Goochland, VA
Death: before June 21, 1868
Owenton, Owen County, KY, United States (Very old age)
Place of Burial: Owen County, Kentucky, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of James Hammon and Mary Holbrook
Husband of Polly Hammond and Mildred Ann Hammon
Father of Lewis Denney Hammond; Frances Hammond; Thomas Hammon; Ambrose Hammon; Elijah Hammon and 15 others
Brother of James Hammond
Half brother of John Holbrook, Jr.; Randolph B. Holbrook; Robert Holbrook; Mary Susan Holbrook; Larkin Canaday Holbrook and 1 other

Occupation: solder and registered patriot
Managed by: Dan Hammon
Last Updated:

About Col. John Hammon, Sr.

DAR Ancestor #: A050576
HAMMOND, JOHN Ancestor #: A050576
Service: NORTH CAROLINA Rank(s): PRIVATE
Birth: 1-29-1760 GOOCHLAND CO VIRGINIA
Death: POST 9-22-1852 OWEN CO KENTUCKY
Pension Number: *S9559
Service Source: *S9559
Service Description:
1) CAPTS CLEVELAND, GAMBREL
2) COL BENJAMIN CLEVELAND
Residence 1) County: WILKES CO-ENL - State: NORTH CAROLINA

Spouse Number Name
1) X X
2) MILDRED ANN MORGAN

Child [Spouse #] Spouse

  1. ROBERT [1] NANCY MORGAN

John Hammon BIRTH 29 Jan 1760 Goochland County, Virginia, USA DEATH 21 Jun 1868 (aged 108) Owen County, Kentucky, USA BURIAL Mussell Shoals Cemetery Owen County, Kentucky, USA MEMORIAL ID 90168091 · View Source

MEMORIAL PHOTOS 3 FLOWERS 5 John Hammon, Marker Number: 1575, Owen County, KY., near Mussel Shoals Baptist Church, 8 mi. E. of Owenton, KY 330. Reuben T. Durret, in writing of Bryan,s Station, lists John Hammond and his wife Sarah Clement Hammond, along with Martin Hammond as having been among those in the fort on the 15th of August 1782. His authority was a letter he received from William D. Hixon. John's first wife Sarah Clement Hammon died at Bryan's Station. Married second Mildred Ann Morgan.

Family Members Children Photo Colby Hammon 1805–1881

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/90168091/john-hammon

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https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/hammon-john

John Hammon, second-to-the-last Revolutionary War veteran to die, was born in Goochland County, Va. He was the son of James Hammon[d], who died in 1763, and Mary Hargis Hammon, who later married John Holbrook of Goochland County. In 1774, his uncle, William Hammon, moved to Wilkes County, N.C., apparently with the other members of the Holbrook and Hammon families, and became minister of the Roaring River Baptist Church.

In January 1777, John Hammon enlisted in the North Carolina militia under the command of Captain (later Colonel) Benjamin Cleveland of Wilkes County to fight the Tories and also the Indians in the west. He was at Kings Mountain and served to the end of the Revolution with the Wilkes County unit.

Almost immediately after the war ended, Hammon's mother died, and he moved to Kentucky, stopping by Charlottesville, Va., to sell a 319-acre farm. He settled near Bryan's Station (on the outskirts of present-day Lexington) and participated in the action against the Indians there. He also was present at the disaster of Blue Licks in August 1782. Subsequently he marched with Colonel Benjamin Logan on the punitive Miami River Expedition against the Ohio Shawnee towns.

The petition to the Virginia General Assembly of October 1788 for separation from the old Commonwealth was signed by John, James, and Edmund Hammon. John married about this time and settled in that part of Scott County, Ky., which became Owen in 1819. His last military experience was in 1794, as a captain, under "Mad Anthony" Wayne at Fallen Timbers. After the death of his first wife, he married Mildred Ann Morgan, daughter of Major Charles Morgan, also from Wilkes County, N.C. In all, Hammon had twenty-two children.

In 1822 he moved to Cincinnati, barely forty miles north of his Owen County home. There he and his sons contracted to build "steamboat Gothic" superstructures for river steamers. He must have been a citizen of some stature, for he numbered among his acquaintances William Henry Harrison, Vice-President Richard Mentor Johnson, and Congressman Robert Todd Lytle. Hammon never gave up his membership in the Mussel Shoals Baptist Church in Owen County and was said to have commuted regularly by horseback to the old home place on weekends. He was last listed in the Cincinnati directory in 1843 and probably returned to Owen County at that time. He lived with his daughter Lucinda (Mrs. Zachariah Holbrook) until he died at the extreme age of 108, the penultimate Revolutionary soldier to die.


References

  1. death date also seen as 10//1852
  2. WikiTree contributors, "John Hammon (1760-1868)," WikiTree: The Free Family Tree, (https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hammon-271 : accessed 09 January 2025).
    1. "Virginia Births and Christenings, 1584-1917," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/VRRC-2VZ : 5 December 2014), Mary Hargiss in entry for John Hammond, 29 Jan 1760; citing , reference ; FHL microfilm 975.5 V2D.
    2. Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/90168091/john-hammon : accessed 25 March 2022), memorial page for John Hammon (29 Jan 1760–21 Jun 1868), Find a Grave Memorial ID 90168091, citing Mussell Shoals Cemetery, Owen County, Kentucky, USA ; Maintained by David Reese ne' Likins (contributor 47131508) .
    3. Kleber, J.E., The Kentucky Encyclopedia, The University Press of Kentucky, 1992.
  3. See Stratton, Owen Hammon, The Saga of John Hammon, Revolutionary War Hero and Owen County Kentucky Pioneer (Louisville 1979).
  4. https://services.dar.org/Public/DAR_Research/search_adb/?action=ful...
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Col. John Hammon, Sr.'s Timeline

1760
January 29, 1760
Maiden's Adventure, Goochland, VA
1782
1782
Frankfurt, Franklin County, KY, United States
1784
1784
Frankfort, Franklin County, KY, United States
1792
1792
Owen County, KY, United States
1794
1794
Wilkes, NC
1794
Scott County, Kentucky, United States
1794
North Carolina, United States
1795
1795
Owen County, KY, United States
1796
1796
Scott County, KY, United States
1800
1800
Owen County, KY, United States