JohnWitherspoon
Born in Gifford, East Lothian, Scotland
Ancestors
Son
of James Witherspoonand Anna (Walker) Witherspoon
Brother ofDavid Witherspoon, Susan (Witherspoon) French, James Witherspoon IV, Margaret Ann (Witherspoon) Cantzon andLawrence Witherspoon
Descendants
Father ofAnn (Witherspoon) Smith, James Witherspoon, Frances (Witherspoon) Montgomery and David Witherspoon
Died at age 71in Middlesex, New Jersey
Problems/QuestionsProfile managers:Melissa Kitano [send private message], American Revolution Project WikiTree [send private message], and Laura Scott [send private message]
Profile last modified | Created 31 Aug 2011
This page has been accessed 12,025 times.
| John Witherspoon participated in the American Revolution. Join: 1776 Project Discuss: 1776 |
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Family
- 1.2 Burial
- 1.3 Tombstone
- 1.4 The Presidents of Princeton University
- 1.5 Princeton University History
- 2 Sources
- 2.1 Acknowledgements
Biography
John Witherspoon is Notable.
John Witherspoon served with American Founding Fathers during the American Revolution.
John Witherspoon is a DAR Patriot Ancestor, A127172.
John Witherspoon, Parson and Patriot
- "He was one of the "Signers of the Declaration of Independence"
John Witherspoon, son of James Witherspoon and Anne Walker was baptised in the parish of Yester, East Lothian on 10 February 1723.[1]
John married Elisabeth Montgomerie in the parish of Beith, Ayrshire on 14 August 1748.[2]
John and Elizabeth had at least nine children:
- Ann Witherspoon (bap Beith, Ayrshire 24 July 1749)[3]
- Christian Witherspoon (bap Beith, Ayrshire 14 August 1750)[4]
- James Witherspoon (1751-1777)[5]
- Robert Witherspoon (1753-1754)[5]
- Barbra Witherspoons (bap Beith, Ayrshire 20 February 1756)[6]
- John Witherspoon (bap Beith, Ayrshire 29 July 1757)[7]
- Francis Witherspoon (bap Paisley, Renfrewshire 26 August 1759)[8]
- David Witherspoon (bap Paisley, Renfrewshire 25 September 1760)[9]
- George Witherspoon (31 Mar 1762-27 July 1762)[5]
Family
Dr. Witherspoon was married to his first wife. Miss Montgomery, at an early age, and at the time of his immigration had three sons and two daughters. The oldest, James, was a major in the Revolutionary army, and fell at the battle of Germantown. The two remaining sons were bred to professions, and arose to distinction. Ann, the eldest daughter, was married to the Rev. Dr. Samuel S. Smith, who succeeded Dr. W. as president of the college, and Frances, the second daughter, married Dr. DavidRamsay, the celebrated historian. After the death of Mrs. Witherspoon, the Doctor, at the age of seventy, married a young woman of twenty-three, an alliance which occasioned much gossip and noise in the neighborhood and family circle. He was an affectionate husband, a tender parent and a cordial friend.
Burial
- Princeton Cemetery, Princeton, Mercer, New Jersey.
- Find A Grave Memorial# 1156
Tombstone
- His dust reposes in the grave yard at Princeton, and over it is a stone, bearing in latin the following chronicle of his usefulness, virtues and public services:
- Beneath this marble lie interred the mortal remains of
- JOHN WITHERSPOON, D.D. LL.D.
- a venerable and beloved President of the College of New-Jersey.
- He was born in the parish of Yester, in Scotland,
- on the 5th of February, 1722, O. S.
- And was liberally educated in the University of Edinburgh;
- invested with holy orders in the year 1743,
- he faithfully performed the duties of his pastoral charge,
- during five and twenty years,
- first at Beith, and then at Paisley.
- Elected president of Nassau Hall,
- he assumed the duties of that office on the 13th of August, 1768,
- with the elevated expectations of the public.
- Excelling in every mental gift,
- he was a man of pre-eminent piety and virtue
- and deeply versed in the various branches
- of literature and the liberal arts.
- A grave and solemn preacher,
- his sermons abounded in the most excellent doctrines and precepts,
- and in lucid expositions of the Holy Scriptures.
- Affable, pleasant, and courteous in familiar conversation,
- he was eminently distinguished
- in concerns and deliberations of the church,
- and endowed with the greatest prudence
- in the management and instruction of youth.
- He exalted
- the reputation of the college amongst foreigners,
- and greatly promoted the advancement
- of its literary character and taste.
- He was, for a long time, conspicuous
- Among the most brilliant luminaries of learning and of the Church.
- At length,
- universally venerated, beloved, and lamented,
- he departed this life on the fifteenth of November, 1794 aged 73 years.
[10]
The Presidents of Princeton University
- Colonial Times:Jonathan Dickinson, 1747
- Aaron Burr, Sr., 1748–57
- Jonathan Edwards, 1758
- Samuel Davies, 1759–61
- Samuel Finley, 1761–66
- Revolutionary War
- John Witherspoon, 1768–94
Princeton University History
- Chartered in 1746 as the College of New Jersey — the name by which it was known for 150 years — Princeton University was British North America's fourth college. Located in Elizabeth for one year and then in Newark for nine, the College of New Jersey moved to Princeton in 1756. It was housed in Nassau Hall, which was newly built on land donated by Nathaniel FitzRandolph. Nassau Hall contained the entire College for nearly half a century.
Sources
- ↑ OPR Baptism indexes; WITHERSPOON, JOHN; JAMES WITHERSPOON/ANNE WALKER FR161 (FR161); M; 10/02/1723; 725/ 10 308; Yester; from www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk
- ↑ OPR Marriage indexes; WITHERSPOON, JOHN; ELISABETH MONTGOMERIE/FR163 (FR163); 14/08/1748; 581/ 10 287; Beith; from www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk
- ↑ OPR Baptism indexes; WITHERSPOON, ANN; JOHN WITHERSPOON/ELIZABETH MONTGOMERY FR366 (FR366); F; 24/07/1749; 581/ 20 241; Beith; from www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk
- ↑ OPR Baptism indexes; WITHERSPOON, CHRISTIAN; JOHN WITHERSPOON/ELIZABETH MONTGOMERY FR369 (FR369); F; 14/08/1750; 581/ 20 246; Beith; from www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae; Hew Scott; Vol 3; Edinburgh; 1920; pages 174-176
- ↑ OPR Baptism indexes; WITHERSPOONS, BARBRA; JOHN WITHERSPOONS/ELIZEBETH MUNGOMRIE FR 376 (FR376); F; 20/02/1756; 581/ 20 259; Beith; from www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk
- ↑ OPR Baptism indexes; WITHERSPOON, JOHN; JOHN WITHERSPOON/ELIZEBETH MUNGOMRIE FR 378 (FR378); M; 29/07/1757; 581/ 20 265; Beith; from www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk
- ↑ OPR Baptism indexes; WITHERSPOON, FRANCIS; JOHN WITHERSPOON/ MONTGOMRAY FR235 (FR235); F; 26/08/1759; 573/3 10 226; Paisley Burgh or Low; from www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk
- ↑ OPR Baptism indexes; WITHERSPOON, DAVID; JOHN WITHERSPOON/ELIZABETH MONTGOMREY FR253 (FR253); M; 25/09/1760; 573/3 10 244; Paisley Burgh or Low; from www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk
- ↑ Entered by Laura Lee Scott, June 22, 2014
- Wikipedia - John Witherspoon
- President Witherspoon in the American Revolution (July 1, 1896)
- The Works of the Rev. John Witherspoon...: A Sermon Occasioned by His Death (1802)
- The History and Genealogy of the Witherspoon Family by Joseph Bailey Witherspoon
Acknowledgements
- Melissa Kitano, firsthand knowledge.
- WikiTree profile Witherspoon-160 created through the import of Maltby master 08282011.GED on Aug 30, 2011 by Harry Maltby.
Sponsored Search by Ancestry.com
DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships.It is likely that theseautosomal DNAtest-takers will share some percentage of DNA with John:
- ~0.39%Peter TenEyck :AncestryDNA
Have you taken a test? If so, login to add it. If not, see our friends at Ancestry DNA.
Images: 3
Parson John Witherspoon
Signing the Declaration of Independence
Plaque on Edinburgh University School of Divinity
- Protected Profile addition - Signers Declaration of Indepence Apr 26, 2016.
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Lisa Hems
See also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hector_(ship)
It looks like it was a part owner in the ship Hector that brought settlers to Pictou, Nova Scotia in 1773.
postedby Lisa Hems
Lynn Wiggers
Can someone please show primary source documentation that his middle name was Knox, because I find only that there is no middle name. I'm researching for a member of his family.
postedby Lynn Wiggers
Billy Crawford
John Knox was his ancestor. He was born at Gifford which is the neighbouring parish to the one John Knox was born in. As a minister in the church he might have considered it beneficial to claim he was named after his ancestor..
postedby Billy Crawford
editedby Billy Crawford
Johnny Alexander
There is no evidence that John had a middle name.
postedby Johnny Alexander
Maureen (Henigan) Rosenfeld
Could you add the son James in the data and then include him in the 1776 project?
postedby Maureen (Henigan) Rosenfeld
Rejected matches› John Grier Witherspoon (1837-1863)› John Wesley Witherspoon Sr. (1726-1778)› John Witherspoon (1722-1794)
This week's connection theme is the Puritan Great Migration.John is11 degrees from John Winthrop, 11 degrees from Anne Bradstreet, 11 degrees from John Cotton, 11 degrees from John Eliot, 12 degrees from John Endecott, 12 degrees from Mary Estey, 11 degrees from Thomas Hooker, 9 degrees from Anne Hutchinson, 10 degrees from William Pynchon, 12 degrees from Alice Tilley, 10 degrees from Robert Treat and 10 degrees from Roger Williamson our single family tree.Login to see how you relate to 33 million family members.
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Categories: Patriotic Service, New Jersey, American Revolution | American Founding Fathers | Signers of the Articles of Confederation | Signers of the United States Declaration of Independence | Presbyterian Ministers | Princeton University | Notables | NSDAR Patriot Ancestors