HomeCemeteriesMountain View Cemetery

Located on Elizabethton Highway off 19E southwest of Bluff City. GNIS 1294943.

Link to transcription on FindAGrave


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Mountain View Cemetery — 2 Comments

  1. I am searching for all BRINDLEY/BRINKLEY/BRINLEY/BRINLEE AND
    BRINDLE GRAVES, but specifically RICHARD BRINDLEY/BRINKLEY
    who with WILLIAM BRINDLEY/BRINKLEY were supposedly at
    THE SALEM CHURCH where Rev. Samuel Doak is buried.
    I have learned that the NORTH FORK OF THE HOLSTON RIVER
    SETTLEMENTS were really in SULLIVAN COUNTY.
    FRAZIER BRINDLEY/PHOEBE RIGGS BRINDLEY WOULD BE MY GREAT-GREAT GRANDPARENTS. THANK YOU.
    BETTY JANE BRINDLEY CHALFANT 615-373-4119

    • SOME INFO YOU MIGHT USE—AT ONE POINT EVERTHING NORTH OF THE RIVER WAS PART OF THE OLD DOMINON (VA)

      http://home1.gte.net/ben42/story.htm The First of record.

      Family tradition holds that Caleb Cragun was born in England in 1700 and lived at Huntingdon, Huntingtonshire until he relocated to Ireland perhaps as a part of the Plantation Movement to settle lands forfeited to the British Crown by deposed Irish nobility. This settlement effort was being made using English and Scottish workers at the same time that other settlements were being established in Colonial America.

      Caleb had a son named Patrick who was born c1745 in Ireland, perhaps in County Armagh, Ulster. However, Heiner reports that a book entitled, History of Cass County, Indiana found at the Indianapolis Library states on page 214 that, “the family of CRAGUN was founded in America by Patrick Cragun who came from Dublin, Ireland prior to the Revolutionary War ( 1776 ) and who took part in the struggles of the American Colonists that resulted in the winning of Independence.” She also reports that a genealogical history of South West Virginia states that one Patrick Cragun had been arrested for the fourth time by the King’s officers for his revolutionary tendencies. The identity of his wife, Rose Alley (or Abby) or Hanna Elsy (perhaps a second marriage) is unclear as is the date (1780’s) and place of marriage. They are however, tied to Russell County, Virginia located in the extreme southwestern part of the state 20 miles north of Bristol, through the record of their eldest son Isaac as recorded in the Cass County history. Otherwise the family is more closely identified with Sullivan County, Tennessee which borders Virginia and shares the city of Bristol.

      The first record of Patrick known to exist is his listing in 1779 as a taxable in Washington County, N.C. which became Sullivan County, TN after 1780. In this record he is entered as Patrick Craguner where he is shown to have been assessed on: 170 acres of land, value L100; four horses, value L510; three cattle, value L30; and ready money, four shillings; for a total taxable estate of L640 and four shillings. While Negros were taxable property at that time, none were taxed to Patrick.

      A 1784 listing of 5,486 North Carolina land grants in the new state of Tennessee shows at page 47, grant #1274 to be a general purchase grant to Patrick Cragon for 170 acres on Indian Creek, Sullivan County, Tennessee, a tributary of the Holston River. This farmsted was located only a few miles from Booher Creek, a tributary of Indian creek and the likely location of members of the Booher family. The Cragun and Booher families were later near neighbors in Boone County, Indiana. Patrick’s greatgrandson, S. N. Cragun married Adelaide Booher at Worth Township, Boone County, in 1883, nearly one hundred years following their familiy’s neighboring settlements in Tennessee.

      The last known listing for Patrick was in 1812 showing that Patrick Creggon sold 164 acres on Indian Creek to Charles Barnette on Feb. 19, 1812. However, a bit earlier he is found as Patrick Cragun of record in Russel Co., VA in 1806, about 30 miles North of the Indian Creek farm, when he was exempt from County levies on account of age and bodily infirmity.

      The various spellings of his surname were characteristic of the times when clerks and recorders often wrote what they thought they heard without knowing whether the name was being spelled correctly or not. Doubtless these records all refer to the same individual.

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