A LETTER TO

MARSHALL AND ROHRER COUSINS

on the

200th ANNIVERSARY

of the

DEATH OF JOHN MARSHALL IN OHIO

 

Written by Kelly Marshall

 

 

Website: http://www.genealogy.com/users/m/a/r/Kelly-Marshall/

 

 

27 July 2006

 

To Various Marshall and Rohrer Cousins!

 

          As I was answering an email to our cousin Jane Cooper in California, it dawned on me that today marks the 200th anniversary of the death of our ancestor John Marshall in New Lancaster, Fairfield County, Ohio.   His wife Catharina Truby Rohrer Marshall would survive him only by 13 days, dying on August 9th and leaving as orphans her Rohrer children (Elizabeth Rohrer Robinson and Frederick A. Rohrer) and her Marshall children (Andrew Marshall, Samuel Marshall, John Marshall and Mary Ann Marshall Bailey).  

 

          This family had arrived in the frontier village of New Lancaster sometime in late 1805 or early 1806.  Their Marshall children all had been baptized back in Greensburg, Pennsylvania, in September 1805, perhaps in anticipation of the journey.  They had not yet purchased property in Ohio.  The inventory of possessions from their estate file indicates that they intended to operate a tavern in New Lancaster.  This had been their livelihood in Greensburg, where Marshall was listed in the tax records as an innkeeper; Catharina's father, Christopher Truby, had died in their tavern-home in 1802.

 

          On the Ohio frontier, they “died of a fever".  This simple and tragic set of words was passed down through several lines of their family to our own time.   See the firsthand record of Thomas Ashe concerning this wide-spread fever at the family website.  Ashe visited New Lancaster the same summer the Marshalls died and wrote about the sickness he found there.  

 

          Their son John recorded in his family Bible the dates of his parents' death (apparently carefully remembered by others for these small children) and the place---"New" Lancaster, now merely Lancaster, Ohio.  Most likely, they were buried on the hill above the village.  This site is now a city park.  Memorial stones were erected by the Truby and/or Rohrer families in the Old German Burying Ground on South Main Street in Greensburg.  These stood into the 1930s, when the data on them was recorded (thank God!) by Mary Truby Graff.  The stones disappeared when Greensburg carelessly converted that historic graveyard into a parking lot.

 

          Most likely, the Rev. John Wright (first pastor of the Presbyterian Church in New Lancaster and a native of Westmoreland County) sent word back to the Trubys about the deaths and the survival of the six children.  Their Aunt Hovey---Mary Ann Truby Hovey---wife of Dr. Simeon Hovey, went with others to Ohio and brought them all to her new home in what is now Hovey Township, Armstrong County, Pennsylvania----on the high west bluff of the Allegheny River just north of present-day Parker.  There, and with nearby Truby uncles and aunts, they were reared.  The Hoveys named their home "Happy Retreat".  In time the little cluster of farms and houses near Simeon Hovey's farm came to be called Happy Retreat and continued with that geographic name through the late 1800s.   One hopes that the children knew some considerable happiness there, given the tragedy of their early childhood.

 

          Four of the six orphaned children (Elizabeth Rohrer Robinson, Samuel and John Marshall and Mary Ann Marshall Bailey) in time would be buried behind the Parker Presbyterian Church, close to their "parents", the Hoveys.   Andrew Marshall would die young, lost south of Wheeling, Virginia, in the Ohio River at age 31.   Frederick A. Rohrer would make his home in Greensburg, live to be a very old man (until 1882), and be buried there.  Four of the six children, by the way, lived into their 80s.  Samuel also had died at the young age of 33.

 

          May John Marshall, his wife Catharina Truby, and her first husband Frederick Rohrer all rest in peace with their ancestors---and with their departed descendants, our large and extended Rohrer and Marshall Family.

 

"A family tree can wither if nobody tends its roots."   

 

Your cousin,

 

Kelly Marshall

 

§§§§§§§

 

COPYRIGHT INFORMATION:   The material on this site is under copyright by Gordon Kelly Marshall. Researchers, family members, libraries, or genealogical and/or historical societies are invited to use the information freely, for non-commercial purposes only, with proper credit to me and to this site.  You may not use it at all for commercial purposes.    Please email me if you wish to reference it in any format: marshallfamily@zoominternet.net