Tofterå Slettemoen genealogy

Thomas Reid

Thomas Reid

Male Abt 1675 - 1732  (~ 57 years)

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  • Name Thomas Reid 
    Born Abt 1675  County Down, Ulster, Northern Ireland Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Died 22 Feb 1732  Octororia Twp., Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I20191  Tofterå Slettemoen
    Last Modified 19 Jan 2025 

    Father Alexander Reid,   b. 1657, Ireland Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Abt 14 Oct 1718, County Down, Ulster, Northern Ireland Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 61 years) 
    Family ID F6485  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Mary McKean,   b. 1677, Lancaster Co. Penn Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1759, NC, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 82 years) 
    Married May 1704  Lancaster Co. Penn Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. John R. Reid,   b. Abt 1706, Bert Twp, Lancaster, PA Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1752, Bart Twp. Lancaster Co., PA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 46 years)
    Last Modified 13 Jan 2008 
    Family ID F6484  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Children: Eleanor, Thomas jr., Nathaniel, Alexander (1705), John R. (col.), Mary, James.

      Historic Families of Kentucky by Thomas Marshall Green Regional Publishing House, 1959, Originally Published 1889 in Cincinnati

      REID Among the pioneers of Augusta county, were three brothers,
      of Scottish extraction, who came from the County Down, in Ireland, where they
      were born - Thomas, John and Andrew Reid. The oldest of these brothers,
      Thomas Reid, married a highland woman, named McKean, and had by her three
      children, two of whom married their cousins, daughters of their uncle, John
      Reid, Sr., who bore the title of colonel. These two were Colonel John Reid, Jr.,
      who married his uncle John's daughter, Martha; and Nathan, who married his uncle
      John's daughter, Sarah.The third son of Thomas Reid, Alexander, came to
      Kentucky. It was this Alexander Reid, or his son, who represented Shelby county
      in the legislature in 1801, '02 and again in 1806; and it was a descendant of
      his, an Alexander Reid, of a later generation, who represented the same county
      in the legislature in 1825, '26, '27. Colonel John Reid, Sr., the second of
      the emigrant brothers, married Martha Nisbet, and had by her a numerous progeny,
      besides the two daughters above mentioned, as having married their cousins.
      The third brother, Andrew Reid, Sr., had, among others, a son, Andrew Reid, Jr.,
      who married Sarah, daughter of his uncle, Colonel John Reid, Sr., and Martha
      Nisbet, and the widow of his uncle Thomas Reid's son, Nathan. This Andrew Reid,
      Jr., and Sarah Reid, had six children. One of their sons was General Andrew
      Reid, of Rockbridge, who married Magdalen McDowell, twin-sister of the first
      wife of Judge Caleb Wallace, and daughter of JudgeSamuel McDowell and Mary
      McClung. One of the daughters of Andrew Reid, Jr., and Sarah, was Agnes Ann
      Reid, who married William Alexander, was the mother of Dr. Archibald Alexander,
      of Princeton. Their residence stood on the ground now occupied by the residence
      of the late General Robert E. Lee, in Lexington, Virginia, and in which General
      Custis Lee now resides. A third daughter, Flora, married John Lyle; and Rev.
      John Lyle, who taught a female seminary at Paris, and established the
      "Citizen," was one of their sons. This latter married the widow
      Lapsley, whose maiden name was Irvine, and who was a sister of the wives of
      Samuel McDowell, of Mercer, and Colonel Joseph McDowell, of Danville. One of
      their sons was John Lyle, of Boyle county, who also married an Irvine. The
      fifth child of Andrew Reid, Jr., and Sarah, was Esther Reid, who married John
      Cummings, and was the mother of Elizabeth Cummings, the wife of Andrew McKnight.
      Another daughter of Andrew Reid, Jr., and Sarah-also named Sarah Reid-married
      Joseph Alexander, the fourth son of Archibald Alexander and Margaret Parks,
      brother of William Alexander (who married her sister, Agnes Ann Reid), and uncle
      of the great preacher and theologian. Sarah Reid, the wife of Andrew, Jr., in
      1766, was murdered, and her body thrown into a creek, by a negro whom she had
      reproved. Andrew,son of William Alexander and Agnes Ann Reid-brother of Dr.
      Archibald-married Anne Aylett, and their fifth child, Evaline, was the wife of
      the distinguished General Samuel McDowell Moore, referred to on a previous page.
      Andrew McKnight and Elizabeth Cummings had a son born to them in Virginia,
      James, who married a Miss Paxton in that state. When this child was an infant,
      they removed to Woodford county, Kentucky, where they bought and lived upon a
      farm, and where their other children were born. That they were highly respected
      by all was but natural. For their high character, strong good sense, and
      quick-witted intelligence, they were honored by suchmen as Dr. Louis Marshall,
      and others, who could appreciate their worth.The REIDS AND MOORES The two
      eldest children of Judge Samuel McDowell and Mary McClung, born October 9, 1755,
      were twin sisters, Sarah and Magdalen. The former married Caleb Wallace, a
      graduate of Princeton-a Presbyterian minister at the time of the marriage. She
      died soon, and without issue. Mr. Wallace abandoned the ministry, became a
      successful lawyer, and was one of the first judges of the Kentucky Court of
      Appeals. Magdalen married Andrew Reid. Their oldestdaughter, Sarah married
      Andrew Moore, whose father, also names Andrew, was a soldier in the French and
      Indian War. The son distinguished himself for gallantry at Point Pleasant.
      General Andrew Moore, as he was designated, was a member of Congress from the
      Lexington, Virginia, district from 1789 to 1997; he was re-elected in 1804, and
      that same year was elected to the United States Senate, filling the place until
      1809. He died in 1821. Hisoldest son was a member of Congress from 1833 to 1835;
      was a member of the convention that passed the ordinance of secession in 1861,
      against which he voted. Then a very old man, the efforts of Henry A. Wise to
      dragoon him into the support of secession met with humiliating failure.
      Afterward, he served in the Confederate army. His wife was Evelyn, daughter of
      William Alexander, of Rockbridge. Their daughter, Sallie Moore, married her
      cousin, John Harvey Moore. The second son of General Andrew Moore and Sarah Reid
      was David E.Moore, a lawyer of high standing in Lexington, Virginia. He married
      Elizabeth Harvey, a daughter of Matthew Harvey and sister of Mrs. Wm. A
      McDowell, and had by her eight children; of whom his son and namesake, David E.
      Moore, is a prominent member of the bar of Rockbridge. Virginia married Tedford
      Barclay, and Elizabeth is the wife of the scholarly Prof. Alexander Nelson.
      A daughter of Andrew Reid and Magdalen McDowell married a Mr. McCampbell, and
      their daughter married a Venable, of a family distinguished in Virginia for
      literary attainments. The second and third daughters of Andrew Reid and Magdalen
      McDowell also married members of the Venable family. The fourth daughter married
      Judge Abraham Smith, of Rockbridge. The fifth daughter of Andrew Reid and
      Magdalen McDowell, married Major John Alexander, of Lexington, Virginia. Their
      son, John Alexander, is a lawyer of ability, and a citizen of prominence in
      Lexington, and their daughter, Agnes, was the wife of Rev. Beverly Tucker Lacey,
      the noted Presbyterian divine. The only son of Andrew Reid and Magdalen
      McDowell, was Dr. Samuel McDowell Reid, a skillful and distinguished physician
      of Lexington. He married a Miss Hare, and his daughters married, respectively,
      Prof. James White and Colonel John S. H. Ross. His son, bearing his own name, is
      a wealthy and reputable citizen of Rockbridge.

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