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Joseph Ogle

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Joseph Ogle
BornJune 17, 1737
Died24 February, 1821
PartnerPrudence Drusilla Biggs (m.1762) Jemima Meiggs (m.1780)
ChildrenNancy Ogle (1762-?)

Catherine Ogle (1764-1840) Mary Ogle (1766-?) Prudence Ogle (1766-?) Rev. Benjamin Ogle (1769-1847) Joseph Ogle Jr. (1777-1846) Druscillia Ogle (1780-1812) Mary Ogle (1784-?) Jacob Ogle (1784-1847)

Jemima Ogle (1787-1858)

Joseph Ogle (June 17, 1737 - February 24, 1821) was an American soldier and frontiersman.

Early years

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Joseph Ogle was born in Frederick, Maryland to a Methodist couple, Benjamin Ogle (1715-1779) and Rebecca Browner (1720-1779).[1][2] Ogle married first Prudence Drusilla Biggs (1748–1777), of Frederick County, Maryland in 1762 and had 5 children together.

American Revolutionary War

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In 1777, the family was living on Buffalo Creek in what is today Brooke County, West Virginia. Capt. Joseph Ogle commanded a Virginia company during the Revolutionary War. He was involved in the Siege of Fort Henry in what is now West Virginia.He married a second wife, Jemima Meiggs or Meeks, with whom he had four children. All of the children were born in what was then Virginia.[3]

Illinois

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Ogle left Virginia in opposition to slavery.[citation needed] By 1785, Ogle had settled his family in the Northwest Territory, which is present-day Monroe County, Illinois.[2] Ogle is said to have been the first Methodist in Illinois, and helped found the Shiloh Methodist Church, the first Methodist Church.[1][2][4] Ogle first settled on the road from Bellefontaine to Cahokia. In 1796, he moved to New Design, in what is now Monroe County. In 1791, Ogle was involved in a skirmish with Native Americans near what is now Waterloo, Illinois.

Death

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Joseph Ogle died on February 24, 1821, in New Design, Illinois.[1] He is buried in St. Clair County, Illinois. Ogle had a son who was also named Joseph Ogle. His son was involved in the Black Hawk War, and died in 1846.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Captain Joseph Ogle Chapter Retrieved on July 2, 2007
  2. ^ a b c The Ogle Family Retrieved on July 2, 2007
  3. ^ "Captain Joseph Ogle Chapter NSDAR Main Page". sites.rootsweb.com. Retrieved 2024-11-02.
  4. ^ A Brief History of St. Clair County Archived 2006-03-20 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on July 2, 2007
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