32. "SWAGO BILL" WILLIAM
EWING(6)
(photo) was born on DEC 24 1756 in BATH COUNTY, VIRGINIA.
(8)(9)
(6)(3) He owned 745 acres on
Swago Creek in 1774 in GreenbrIER, County,WV.(8)
He served in the military on OCT 10 1774 in Point Pleasant.
(8) He owned Section 11 160 acres on a bend on Racoon River on JUL
22 1817 in HUNTINGTON, GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO.(8)
He died on OCT 7 1822 in EWINGTON, OHIO.
(8)(6)
(3) The town of Ewington,Ohio named after him. He served in Arbuckle's
Company of Virginia in 1774 at the battle of Point Pleasant on Oct. 10, 1774
This is also referred to as the first battle of the Revolutionary war.
BARBARA LOUISE EWING POWELL graciously shared the following historical sketch.
EXCERPTS FROM--BOOKLET--THE EWINGS ONE AMERICAN FAMILY---WALLACE K EWING, GRAND
HAVEN, MICHIGAN--JANUARY 1998.
Frontier nicknames such as "Indian John" and "Swago Bill"
were useful in distinguishing people with identical names, which wasn't uncommon
then.
The year 1774, William obtained by "tomahawk" rights to 745 acres on
Swago Creek not far from his brother. The pioneers claimed land by walking the
perimeter of the acreage they wanted and marking--presumably with a tomahawk--appropriate
trees on the boundary. After living on the land 10 years and never being asked
to leave, the settlers could consider the land their own. A later survey and
grant of the land dated January 1st, 1795 and signed by Robert Brooke, governor
of the Commonwealth of Virginia, gave official title to William. He became known
as "Swago Bill" for the creek which flowed over the land. William
built a small cabin near the foot of the Swago. He married, and as his family
increased, he built a second home, this one larger, two story structure about
a mile away. The land was considered good for farming, with some rough, hilly
topography, including limestone cliffs and scattered rocks.
On October 10, 1774, William participated in the Battle of Point Pleasant. Sometimes
regarded as the first fight of the Revolutionary War, the successful outcome
of the battle subdued the Indians along the outlying settlements for at least
two years. It was part of a larger undertaking called Lord Dunsmore's War.
Lord Dunmore at this time was governor of the Colony of Virginia. Concerned
about the increasingly defiant spirit of the colonists, Lord Dunmore looked for
a distraction by declaring war on the Indians. Two militia units were formed.
One, under the command of Colonel Andrew Lewis, marched along the Kanawha River
in present day West Virginia to it's juncture with the Ohio River, not far from
Point Pleasant, there to wait for Lord Dunmore and his unit. Together, the two
units would cross the Ohio and march into Indian territory. Swago Bill, only
16 years old, enlisted in Captain Stewart's company, part of the regiment commanded
by Colonel Lewis. The company formed at Camp Union, not far from the site of
the Clendennin Massacre, near Lewisburg. Except for a few of the officers, the
men wore no uniforms. Instead, the wore hunting shirts, leather leggins, and
fur caps typical of the pioneers. They carried either flintlocks or muskets,
bullet pouches, hunting knives, and tomahawks.
As Lewis' unit waited for Lord Dunmore's arrival, approximately
1,000 Indians, under the leadership of Chief Cornstalk, began to mass unseen
on the other side of the Ohio, and were able to cross the river without being
detected. They were discovered only by accident when two militiamen who were
out foraging and happened upon the Indians encampment. One of the two militiamen
was killed in the shots that ensued, but the other was able to return to his
post near sunrise. About 150 of Lewis' troops went out in search of their enemy,
but before they had gone a half mile from camp they were attacked by a much larger
force of Indians.
The American forces fought in Indian fashion, keeping as much as possible behind
trees,logs, or anything that provided protection. William was behind a tree
when another soldier,rushing for cover, pushed him from his position and took
it for himself. Instantaneously the soldier fell dead, shot through the head
by an Indian bullet. William would have received the shot if he had not so unceremoniously
been shoved aside.
Under the impression that Lord Dunmore's troops had arrived on the battle scene,
the Indians retreated to the other side of the Ohio River. By the end of the
baffle, eighty-one Americans were killed, and, according to one estimate, 233
Indians. Because of the battle, Lewis had to delay his excursion into Indian
country for a week. During that delay the Indians approached Lord Dunmore seeking
peace. Among the terms of the treaty was a stipulation that no white people should
be allowed to hunt on the north side of the
Ohio River. Most of the militiamen, including Swago Bill, returned to their
homes
immediately following the treaty.
Three years later he (Swago Bill) was back at Point Pleasant, a member of
Captain Matthew Arbuckle's company of militiamen. Arbuckle and his troops had
been ordered to Point Pleasant, to police the frontier in that area and to construct
a fort, replacing Fort Blair, which had burned down for unknown reasons. The
Revolutionary War was well underway, and the Indians, including Chief Cornstalk,
were recruited easily by the British. On November 10, subsequent to an attack
on a small contingent of militia men, the chief, his son, and two other Indians,
who earlier had been taken prisoner, were being held at the fort. William was
guarding the prisoners when a mob of angry soldiers rushed the fort with the
intent of avenging the death of one of their comrades, and they threatened to
kill William, too, if he interfered. Swago Bill protested the impending massacre,
but was unsuccessful. Three of the captives were shot to death and, according
to the report, one was "mangled." The soldiers who had a hand in the
murders were brought to trial, but all were acquitted.
It appears that William's two years at Point Pleasant comprised the extent of
his
Revolutionary War experiences. Neither family folklore nor written records place
him anywhere else. However, in 1783 he had another experience with the Indians,
who were trying one last time to stem the flow of whites into the Greenbrier
Valley, home to the Ewings and many other settlers in West Virginia. Still a
bachelor, William got word that Indians
were in the vicinity. He left the work he was doing and took himself and his
team to the fort, six or eight miles away. A day or two went by with no incidents,
and Swago Bill decided to return to his home to see if everything was in order.
He retrieved the plow he had left in the field, and headed to his cabin when
he heard some menacing noises. Looking up, he saw three gun barrels pointed at
him and heard three clicks in rapid succession. Each gun had misfired. William
dropped the plow and ran as fast as he could, with the Indians in close pursuit.
After going over a crest of a hill, he veered off the path, dodged into the woods
a short distance, and hid behind a benevolent tree. The Indians ran by his hiding
place, and never were the wiser. Swago Bill continued through the woods on his
journey to the fort, where he stayed for a few more days. The Indian threat seemed
to evaporate, and the settlers returned to their homes.
By now the Greenbrier River area was becoming well populated. Among the Ewings'
neighbors was the McNeill family, including little Mary. Born on Christmas Day,
1771, Mary was not quite 14 years old and William was five weeks short of 29
when they were wedded in nearby Lewisburg, West Virginia on November 16, 1785.
They set up
housekeeping at William's cabin on the Swago Creek, and 15 months later their
first born arrived, a daughter they named Elizabeth. By 1807 William and Mary
had ten sons and two daughters, two more children than Indian John and his wife,
Ann Smith, could claim.
The Ordinance of 1787, establishing the Northwest Territory and
encompassing six
eventual states, had been implemented and the westward expansion of the United
States was well underway. In the spring of 1810 Swago Bill and Mary decided to
join Indian John and his family and many of their neighbors who had moved nine
years earlier to the western part of Gallia County, across the Ohio River from
Point Pleasant, where government land could be bought for $2.00 an acre. William's
aim was to get out of the mountains and
procure more arable land for his ever-growing family.
The Ewing train covering the difficult 160 miles consisted of three covered
wagons fitted out with living quarters, 12 horses, and several head of sheep,
swine, and cows. They carried the provisions necessary for the trail, as well
as the equipment and tools they would need to build a new home. They built rafts
at Point Pleasant and made several trips to ferry their train across the Ohio.
- The journey was not over when they regrouped on the northern shore, since their
final destination was a bend on the Raccoon River in Section 11 of Huntington
Township, about 20 miles farther north.
William and Mary had left their home on the Swago without selling
it, but on December 1, 1812 it passed into the hands of Sampson Matthews for
"$1,200
current money of the State of Virginia" Two pieces of red sandstone from
the chimney of the house on Swago Creek remain in the Ewing family today. Swago
Bill and his family were settled in by early July, 1810, the date of the first
election of the newly formed Huntington Township, which William and his son Thomas
attended..
William had bought the entire northeast quarter of Section
11, 160 acres in all, at $2.00 an acre, payable at a rate of $80 down and $80
a year until paid. On July 22, 1817 he received a grant, signed by President
James Monroe, which acknowledged payment in
full. Son Thomas bought an adjoining 80 acres. The task that faced William and
Thomas was awesome, but typical for the frontier settlers: to convert to farmland
240 acres of dense
woods. Trees were cut, stumps pulled, brush burned, and the job was done. They
fashioned the trees into usable lumber for home, outbuildings, and fences. The
land became meadow, crops were planted, and the house was ready for occupancy
by the spring of 1812, allowing the family to vacate the temporary structure
they had lived in for two years. The permanent structure was a two-story building,
made of hewn logs and with a stone chimney.
Sunday Times -sentinel 19 July '81
They.. gave Ewington,OH its name to Honor Bill Ewing
By James Sands GALLIPOUS William Ewing after whom the town of Ewington
was named, was born December 24 1756 in Bath County, Va., the son of James and
Margaret * Ewing. James Ewing was a Scotchman who had lived for some time in
Londonderry, Ireland before coming to America in 1740. William Ewing's first
acquaintance with Ohio came in 1763 when his brother John was captured by Indians
and taken to the Scioto River. In 1774 William joined Arbuckles militia
which became a part of Dunmores army assigned to attack Ohio Indians. At
Point pleasant on Oct. 10, 1774, Ewing found himself in the thick of the fight
when the Indians attacked the Virginians before Dunmore could go on the offensive.
Ewing was later to write that he found himself in this battle firing at "redskins"
from behind a sapling. One of his comrades rushed up to him and pushed Ewing
from his shelter out into the open. From this cover Ewings comrade began
to fire. Ewing was scarcely out of the way before Ewings comrade was struck
in the middle of the forehead by an Indian bullet.
Ewing always claimed that be had trouble in this battle with his rifle. Each
time that he took deliberate aim, his gun flashed in the pan. However, when he
fired at random his gun never failed to go off. "If I ever killed anyone,"
said Ewing, "I never knew it." William was also present at Ft. Randolph
(Point Pleasant) when Chief Cornstalk was killed in 1777. Presumably he was also
present at the fort the following year when the fort was laid seige by Wyandot
Indians led by Chief Half King. In 1785 Ewing, then 28, married the 14-year-Old
girl Mary McNeill and the couple settled on the Swago Creek near Buckeye, W.
Va. In time Ewing was nicknamed "Swago" Bill after the creek. "Swago"
Bill blazed a line of trees around his property some years before he had clear
title as was the custom in those days. The settlers were few and far between
and Indians still posed a problem.
While plowing. Ewing received word that Indians were prepared to attack and so
he sought shelter at the nearest fort. When he returned some weeks later his
plow was covered with weeds and a brood of quails, was nesting under the plowshare.
Ewing shouldered his plow with the intent to return to the fort and thus give
Up claim on his Buckeye land for the time being. He had gone only a short distance
through some woods when he heard thump-thump-thump ... click-click- click. "Swago"
Bill turned and saw three Indians behind a log with their guns stretched out.
It seems that the Indians powder was too damp and all three had misfired.
William Dropped his plow and ran for the fort with three indians in close pursuit.
Over a hill and into a gully they went. Here Ewing changed course and went UP
a ravine. The Indians continued on the gully trail and thus "Swago"
Bill had avoided capture. It was in 1810 that Ewing came to
Gallia County,OH. He bought 160 acres of government land at $2 an acre
and here lived (where Ewington now sits) until his death in 1822 It was in 1812
that Ewing built the first two- story cabin of hewn logs in the north- western
part of the county. Among Ewings other credits was that he served as a
Justice of the Peace most of the time he lived in Gallia County. "Swago"
Bills descendants became numerous in Gallia County as well as in Hancock
County. Ill.. and Hilisdale County, Mich. Mary McNeill Ewing moved in 1839 to
Wilkesville with her son Andrew. In 1853 the 82-year-Old mother Mary Ewing headed
out west in a wagon train along with this son Andrew. They first settled in Iowa
and then five years later moved to Mercer County, Mo. It was here in 1858 that
Mary died and was buried - some 800 miles from her beloved husband, "Swago"
Bill Ewing.
James Sands address is Box 92 Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.
* NOTE Although this Margaret Sargent was once thought to be the wife of James
Ewing it was never proven to be fact by anyone in the family. Further it was
later withdrawn by the person who had it so published. To date we do NOT know
who James married. We also have no bases in fact that James was ever a Capt.
in the Revolutionary war. This was also an error made by early Ewing historians.
There was a James Ewing married to a Margaret Sargent but it appears that he
is NOT "our" James.
The above news article was graciously shared with us by Wally Ewing of Grand
Haven, MI.
He was married to MARY MCNEILL on NOV 16 1785 in GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO.
(8)(6)
33. MARY MCNEILL was
born on DEC 25 1771 in Swago Creek, Pocahontas County Virginia. She died in
1858 in RAVANNA,MERCER CO. MISSOURI.(10)
Children were:
16 i.
ANDREW EWING.
ii.
ELIZABETH EWING was born on FEB 15 1787.
iii.
THOMAS EWING was born on JUL 30 1788.
iv.
JONATHAN EWING was born in 1790.
v. WILLIAM
EWING was born on AUG 4 1792 in GREENBRIER,WV. He died in 1847 in EWINGTON
GALLIA CO. OH.
vi.
JAMES EWING was born on SEP 12 1793.
vii.
JOHN EWING was born on SEP 9 1795.
viii.
ENOCH EWING was born on JUL 31 1799 in OHIO.
ix.
JACOB EWING was born on AUG 17 1802 in OHIO.
x. ABRAHAM
MC NEIL EWING was born on OCT 13 1804 in OHIO.
xi.
GEORGE EWING was born on JAN 21 1807 in OHIO.
xii.
SARAH EWING was born on MAY 23 1797. She died in 1827. Sarah died childless
at the age of 30