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  REV . JOHN CLARK
     John was born in Province of New Jersey 1756. He resided in Old Town, Maryland c1760. The following was written by Lucien Clark. Located in a book entitled "Lucien Clark" which was published in his memory.
     "My great-grandfather, who was born in 1756 in "The Province of New Jersey", brought up at Old Town, Md., where he enlisted as a soldier in the War of the Revolution, moved to Ohio in 1796. At 28 years of age JOHN became the father of ELISHA CLARK January 21, 1785. At 32 years of age JOHN became the father of BARZILLA CLARK in Old Town, Allegany Co., Maryland, October 3, 1788. He migrated 1796. to Warren County, Ohio
     Rev. John Clark was born near Mt. Holly, New Jersey in 1756 and moved with his parents to Oldtown, MD at the age of 2 yrs. where he grew up on the north branch of the Potomac and resided until 1796 when he first went to Ohio. At that time Oldtown was a part of Frederick Co., MD, when later divided it fell in Washington Co. and then later Alleghany Co., MD.
     John Clark served in the first Maryland Rifles from 1 July 1775 to 30 June 1776 under Captain Michael Cresap. Capt. Cresap was a resident of Oldtown. A description of the First Maryland Rifles was given in the History of Western Maryland as told by a gentleman from Frederick, MD.
     "I have had the happiness of seeing Capt. Michael Cresap marching at the head of a formidable company of upwards of 130 men from the mountains and back-woods, painted like Indians, armed with tomahawks and rifles, dressed in hunting shirts and moccasins: and though some of them had travelled near eight hundred miles from the banks of the Ohio, they seemed to walk light and easy, and not with less spirit than the first hour of their march. Health and vigor, after what they had undergone, declared them to be intimate with hardships and familiar with danger." He described their skill as "expert marksman".
died 27 Dec 1841 in Harveysburg, Warren County, OH

Birth: 14 MAY 1756 in The Province of New Jersey This area of the Province of New Jersery is also know as Mt. Holly, Burlington Co, New Jersey
Death: 21 DEC 1841 in Harveysburg, Warren Co., Ohio
* Note Sources Judy Perdue a Clark Researcher on the death of John Clark working with Norita Shepherd Moss on her 4th great-grand mother Rebecca Clark who married David Shepherd and her father Rev John Clark ( my 5th great- grandfather A Revolutionary soldier) John Clark married for the 2nd time to Abigail Shepherd his son-n-law David's sister. The first settlement in what is now Allegany County, Maryland, Oldtown (canal mile 167) has a rich and fascinating history. A ford in the Potomac led to the establishment of early Indian settlements in the area, and the famous "Warrior Path" from the Indian nations of the north to the southern tribes, crossed the Potomac here. In 1740, Thomas Cresap, an early explorer, established a residence to trade with the Indians. Cresap became a prominent figure in the development of Western Maryland. He made and lost several fortunes, eventually establishing himself as the primary trader in this part of the frontier. Pennsylvanians, interested in attaching the land to their colony, battled with Cresap several times in the 1730s. After spending time in a Pennsylvania jail, he moved to Maryland, and settled in Oldtown in 1744; in 1748, he entertained young George Washington who was surveying the west.  After the Civil War, Oldtown did not benefit from increasing railroad traffic, which goes through West Virginia at this point. Despite construction of the Western Maryland Railroad in 1905-1910 and improved Maryland highways, the town remained isolated. When the canal went bankrupt, the town declined further. Today, its historic buildings are in a state of disrepair, but are not threatened by new development.  Michael Cresap's house is now a museum. The old stone house on Main Street was the home of Michael Cresap, son of Thomas, who moved in with his wife in 1764. Captain Cresap met here with volunteers before their march to Boston to fight the British. There was a jail in the basement-its windows still have bars. The museum, the oldest house in Allegany County, is open only two weekends each year: the first Friday-Sunday in June and the first Friday-Sunday in September from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Donations are accepted. Special tours are available at other times by appointment. Oldtown Bridge—Until mid-1995, a low-water bridge carried traffic from Md. Route 51 across the Potomac to Green Spring, W. Va., charging a toll of $.50 each way. The bridge was closed due to structural problems Posted by Norita Shepherd Moss as information on Oldstown, MD found along the Potomac River in Md. Dec 14, 2001
, A Shepherd Family By Sandra Elaine Heppes Mumah published 1996
Norita Shepherd family notes 1984-2004
(Contributed by Norita Moss Shepard from family research)
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Note: Oldtown is a unincorporated community in Allegany County, Maryland along the North Branch Potomac River. It was established in 1741 by Thomas Cresap, who built a trading post along an old Native American trail. The settlement was called "Shawanese Old Town" because it was the site of a Shawnee village abandoned about a decade earlier. In later years the explanatory prefix was dropped from the name and the place because known simply as "Oldtown."  Cresap's son Michael Cresap was born at Oldtown.

R. B. Wilson
  ROBERT BRUCE WILSON.  In the course of a long active life time Robert Bruce Wilson has performed useful service in a number of different fields, and has been a soldier, a successful Ohio lawyer for upwards of half a century, and in a more exclusive circle is now known for his interest in art and letters.  Since coming to Toledo about twenty years ago Mr. Wilson has applied himself largely to patents, patent cases, trade-marks and copyrights, and is a recognized authority in that branch of law.
     As he has now passed the three-quarter century mark in life, he does not consider himself on the role of active lawyers and is only endeavoring to wind up unfinished business, after which he will retire altogether.  A native of Ohio he was born in Warren County, Dec. 16, 1839, a son of Robert and Martha (Smith) Wilson, parents who gave him the name of the noted Scotch patriot.  His father was a native of Virginia and his mother of Ohio, and were very early settlers in Warren County, where Robert Wilson, though a farmer, too a very prominent part in local affairs, serving as county treasurer of Warren County altogether for fifteen years.  He was also for several terms a member of the Ohio Legislature, and long enjoyed an enviable position among the citizens of that part of Ohio.  He and his wife were the parents of seven sons and one daughter, and only three of them are now living.  The family was distinguished by the fact that six of the sons served in the Civil war.  One of them, Judge William W. Wilson, was a major in the Seventy-ninth Ohio Infantry, while James was a member of the Third Ohio Infantry, with the rank of captain and later breveted major.  Three of these sons attained success as lawyers.  The oldest, Judge Jeremiah M. Wilson, was a leading member of the bar of Indiana, and for two terms represented the Fourth Indiana District in Congress, and subsequently transferred his practice as a lawyer to the national capital and made a national reputation for himself.  The second son, Judge William W. Wilson, of Warren County, Ohio, was as able in the law and in the substantial virtues of citizenship as he was a gallant soldier.
     The army career of Robert Bruce Wilson began when he was in his twenty-first year.  His literary education was completed i the old Lebanon Academy, now known as the National Normal University in Warren County, and he was already pursuing the study of law when the cloud of Civil war settled upon the country.  The day following the firing upon Fort Sumter, in April, 1861, he left his law books and enlisted in Company F of the Twelfth Ohio Infantry.  Upon the organization of the regiment he was made fourth sergeant, and by faithful he was made fourth sergeant, and by faithful performance of duty was promoted to first sergeant, to second lieutenant, later became adjutant of the One Hundred and Ninety-fourth Ohio Infantry, and finally served in the field as assistant acting adjutant general in General McCook's Brigade.  Few men in the Union army served for a longer period.  He was in the army more than four years, from the very beginning of the rebellion until mustered out and given an honorable discharge Nov. 1, 1865.  He belonged to the distinguished Kanawha Division of the Union army, and in the course of his army service came to know the fellow officers in the same division who afterwards reached the distinguished eminence of the presidency, they being President Hayes and President McKinley.  Any man, whether a private or officer, might feel a just pride in having been a member of this division, which furnished to the country a number of major generals, two cabinet officers, a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, Three governors of Ohio and two presidents of the United States.  It was the Kanawha Division which crushed Lee's right wing at South Mountain and opened up a way to his rear.  The "Damascus Blade of the Army of the Potomac," was the descriptive phrase applied to this division in an article published immediately after the battle of South Mountain in the old New York Herald.
     Having acquitted himself so worthily in behalf of his country's integrity, Mr. Wilson returned home, resumed the study of law, and in 1867, after passing the examination, was admitted to the bar.  He did not begin practice immediately, but instead accepted and held for three years the position of deputy assessor of internal revenue.  His first work as a lawyer was done at Dayton, Ohio, but a year later he removed to a larger field at Cincinnati, where he practiced from 1871 to 1895.  It was on account of ill health that he gave up general practice in that year and removed to Toledo, where for a time he lived quietly without making an effort to accumulate a practice.  After recovering in a measure his health he found idleness irksome, and he then opened his office and confined himself exclusively to practice as a patent attorney.  Few members of the bar in Northwest Ohio have found so congenial a success in the field of patent law as Mr. Wilson.  In every way he seems adapted to the work of a patent lawyer, and though for more than a year he has endeavored to retire he finds it impossible to absolve himself entirely from business that ahs accumulated in the past.  Mr. Wilson keeps an office at 610 Spitzer Building, and few besides his old clients know that he is still contracting business as a lawyer.
     His principal business now is an invention perfected by one of his clients.  Mr. Wilson has some financial interest in this invention, which is still pending before the patent office at Washington.  For years metallurgists have sought a practical combination of iron and zinc in an alloy which could be depended upon and which could be manufactured on a commercial scale.  The great value of such an alloy is that it prevents rust absolutely and would be a great factor in prolonging the existence of iron, tin and other metal and would eliminate the necessity of painting, which is a continuous expense for iron structures, especially bridges and such structures as are exposed to the oxygen of the air.  This alloy was discovered by one of Mr. Wilson's clients in Pennsylvania accidentally, and when the process is patented it will doubtless mean a fortune of many millions of dollars to the owners of the patent.
     Mr. Wilson has always been a lawyer, devoted to his profession, and has had little part in practical politics.  He is an enthusiastic member of the Grand Army of the Republic and of the Loyal Legion, is a member of Toledo Post, Grand Army of the Republic, and has never given up his membership with the Fred C. Jones Post at Cincinnati.  He finds his recreation in painting and in various other branches of the fine arts, and for many years has taken part in artists' exhibitions, and is considered one of Toledo's most interesting figures in artistic circles.  He has painted a number of landscapes, figures and other bits of form and color, and some of these have been exhibited in the Toledo artist' collection at the Toledo Museum of Art.  At his home he has a number of paintings, including the coat of arms of the Loyal Legion, done in oil, and including his full record of service in the Civil war.  He is a member of the Collingwood Presbyterian Church.
     He has an interesting family and enjoys a beautiful home life at 934 Grand Avenue, where since the death of his wife, who was his devoted companion for over forty-five years, his daughter, Grace M., has presided over the home.  On Oct. 30, 1869, Robert B. Wilson married Miss Isabella Gould, daughter of John Franklin Gould, who at one time owned Franklin Furnace, one of the large iron furnaces along the Ohio River in Southern Ohio.  Mrs. Wilson was also a niece of Amos Akermann who served as United States attorney general during President Grant's administration.  Mrs. Wilson was born at Franklin Furnace in 1845, and died in the Toledo Hospital at Toledo, Sept. 26, 1913.  She is buried in the Spring Grove Cemetery at Cincinnati.  Her early life was spent at Lebanon, Ohio, and later she lived in Cincinnati until she and Mr. Wilson came to Toledo about eighteen years before her death.  Of her three children, Grace Margaret was for some years a writer on the Toledo News-Bee, and is now dramatic editor on The Toledo Times.  The son, Sterling G., is now deceased, while Cedric Harold is a deputy at the Woodward High School at Cincinnati, while Cedric graduated from the Toledo High School.
~ Page 960 ~ A History of Northwest Ohio by Nevin Otto Winter, Litt. D. - Vol. II - The Lewis Publishing Company, Chicago and New York, 1917

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