Monday, February 11, 2019

The Lucas Family -- Quaker Beginnings To Ohio History




2019 marks the 200th birthday of Lucasville, Ohio. As part of the commemoration of the Lucasville Bicentennial, the Lucasville Area History Society is striving to acquaint local students with the extensive, illustrious history of their town. The story of the Lucas family and their various settlements – from England, to Pennsylvania, to West Virginia, and to Ohio – reads like a fabled work of American biography. It is a historical account of an American family that should be shared with all pupils of local history.

It is my sincere hope that Valley Local and other schools in the area will endeavor to include in-depth instruction of such important area history in their Ohio History curriculum. Doing so will draw upon valuable resources that relate directly to our students. As they are exposed to the past, students can take pride in being part of a living heritage while gaining knowledge that will enrich their lives.

In this entry, to stimulate interest in this educational endeavor, I want to share an excerpt from one source that may enlighten local residents. I hope you enjoy this small lesson about the Lucases, and I also hope reading it encourages you to help us put knowledge like this into our schools. There is so much more to learn about our people and our land.

The historical society is a fountain of information and knowledge available to serve the community. It is one of a very few groups within the county available for your inquiry. Please join the society and feel free to employ them to help you with information about the area. And, don't forget to plan now to enjoy all the events of this Lucasville Bicentennial year.

This information has been taken from the Iowa Biographical Series, edited by Benjamin F. Shambaugh. It is titled “Robert Lucas” by John C. Parish, and it is produced by the State Historical Society of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, 1907. 

Online: https://archive.org/stream/robertlucas02pari/robertlucas02pari_djvu.txt

“The history of the Lucas family is a story of pioneer settlements and frontier life, a tale of Indian wars and boundary disputes, a story with chapters generations long, with ever the same pioneer background and ever the same pursuit of the border-line of civilization from England in the Cromwellian days to the middle of the American continent two centuries later. In a word it is the story of the transcontinental march of the American pioneer — that wonderful tale, already three centuries long and still unfinished, which will some day be the theme when the nation's epic is sung.

“In England the Lucas family had been Quaker; and when the tide of westward colonization set toward American shores there crossed the Atlantic one Robert Lucas who arrived in 1679 and took part in the founding of William Penn's colony.

“Bucks County, Pennsylvania, was his habitat; and here generations sprang forth to carry on the work he had begun. Here Edward Lucas, the grandfather of Governor Robert Lucas (and grandfather of Lucasville founder, John Lucas), was born and reared and married. For his wife he took Mary Darke, a descendent of a Cromwellian soldier named John Rush. This same John Rush had married Susanna Lucas at the close of the war, turned Quaker, and crossed the waters to Pennsylvania in 1683.

“Pennsylvania grew rapidly and prospered ; so that, by the time of Edward Lucas and Mary Darke, Bucks County had ceased to be the frontier. The spirit of their fathers pointed toward the mountains; and so, westward beyond the Blue Ridge peaks and the Potomac River, Edward Lucas led his bride and settled down again on the border land. It was near the year 1735, runs the tradition, that he purchased from Lord Fairfax 10,000 acres of land in Jefferson County, Virginia, and made a home for himself and Mary a few miles above the juncture of the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers.

“In this home, in the course of years, a family of children grew up; and among them, born about 1743, was William Lucas, father of Robert (and father of John Lucas, founder of Lucasville). As he grew into manhood he met and married, at Shepherdstown, Miss Susannah Barnes, likewise of Jefferson County. It was Joseph Barnes, a brother, who a few years later, according to local traditions, successfully propelled against the current of the Potomac River a steamboat of his own invention — Ions; before Fulton's Clermont had plied the waters of the Hudson.

“In William the long slumbering instincts of the Quaker seem to have passed away forever; for when the Revolution convulsed the little line of American Colonies, be enlisted as a private in a company of the 2d Virginia Regiment, captained by Nathaniel Welch. His enlistment was on February 13, 1777, and for a term of three years. Moreover, the army records do not show that be attained in that time higher rank than that of private. His military service, however, did not end with the Continental army.

“In the Shenandoah Valley in those days the Indian troubles were a matter of no small concern. If the colonies needed protection against the civilized nation across the waters, they needed no less protection against the uncivilized nations on the western border. It seems that William Lucas was captain of a company engaged in this frontier duty, and at the muster of this company in January, 1781, was read a proclamation by Governor Thomas Jefferson of Virginia, warning all who had sworn allegiance to England to leave the country.

“It was in these eventful times and stirring environments that Robert Lucas (and brother of John Lucas, founder of Lucasville) was born at Shepherdstown, Jefferson County, Virginia, on the first day of April, 1781.

“To the men who had settled the Shenandoah Valley, the groping for the edge of civilization had become a passion; and to let that enchanted borderline slip out westward and away from them Alas not to be thought of. The Lucas family was no exception to this rule. And so, about 1796, William and Joseph, two older brothers of Robert, left the Jefferson Valley and made their way to the Ohio country, pausing near the mouth of the Scioto River. (John was 12 when he came here with his father around 1800. Another source said he was escorting Joseph's and William’s wives.)

“Where the Scioto empties into the Ohio, they found the land subject to inundations. They therefore moved on up the Scioto River before settling down to Avait (wait?) for civilization. William Lucas became in time a General in the Ohio Militia, in command of the 1st Brigade, 2d Division. Joseph sought more peaceful ways. He entered politics and represented Adams County in the first legislature of the State of Ohio, which convened at Chillicothe in March, 1803. He was also appointed in that year Associate Judge of the Court of Common Pleas; and in this service he continued until his death in 1808.

“Meanwhile, back in Jefferson County, the old Revolutionary soldier felt the spirit of disquiet working in his bones, and the allurements of the west proved too great for him. A Virginian by birth, and a Jeffersonian democrat by everything sacred to politics, William Lucas waited only to cast his vote in 1800 for Thomas Jefferson as President, then moved with his family to the land where two of his sons were awaiting him. Some, at least, of his slaves he took with him and freed in Ohio where they were thereafter known as the Lucas negroes. On either side of the Scioto River he bought land and settled down in what is now Scioto County. Such was the third transplanting of the Lucas family — and the end was not yet.

“The opening of a new century found Robert Lucas just entering upon Ms years of manhood, with the instincts of a Virginia gentleman and the reckless vigor and spirit of a frontiersman. His training under the Scotch schoolmaster in Virginia was just such as would fit him for life in this new country. Land was unsurveyed, claims were indefinite, and boundaries were in dispute. In December of 1803 he was appointed Surveyor of Scioto County; and in this capacity, in connection with Nathaniel Beasley, of Adams County, he ran the line between the two counties of Scioto and Adams.

“In these early days, too, he became interested in the militia movement which throughout his life enlisted his most intense sympathy and support.” (Robert later served in the War of 1812 with his brother John.)


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