Bios: Thomas & Martha Beatty Johnson, 1770s: Antrim Twp, then Cumberland Co, PA This copy contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Cheryl Hemmingway chemingw@iNet.net USGENWEB NOTICE: Printing this file within by non-commercial individuals and libraries is encouraged, as long as all notices and submitter information is included. Any other use, including copying files to other sites requires permission from the submitters PRIOR to uploading to any other sites. We encourage links to the state and county table of contents. _________________________________________________________________ >From "Pennsylvania Women During the Revolution": Description: An index to heads of households in the state of Pennsylvania for the 1790 Census year. Contains surnames and given names of over 72,000 heads of households and a statistical breakdown of additional family members for the counties of Allegheny, Bedford, Berks, Bucks, Chester, Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware, Fayette, Franklin, Huntingdon, Lancaster, Luzerne, Mifflin, Montgomery, Northampton, Northumberland, Philadelphia, Washington, Westmoreland, and York.Bibliography: Egle, William Henry. Some Pennsylvania Women during the War of the Revolution. Harrisburg, PA: Harrisburg Publishing Co., 1898. Martha Beatty, daughter of James Beatty, was born in Antrim township, Cumberland county, Pa., May 21, 1748. Her parents were emigrants from the Province of Ulster, Ireland, and were the first settlers in that locality, some three miles south of the present town of Greencastle. The daughter was the youngest of a large family of children, grew up to be a woman of education and refinement, and about the year 1770 married Thomas Johnston, the son of James Johnston, an intelligent farmer, also an early settler in the neighborhood. Thomas Johnston was brought up on his father's farm in Antrim. At the close of the French-Indian war, which harassed that locality for so many years, Thomas was sent by his father to Philadelphia, where he was educated at the Academy in that city. Returning to his home he was given a portion of a tract of land upon which his father had originally settled; and here we find him as a sturdy farmer on the frontiers when the news of the battle of Lexington spread through the Cumberland Valley. Brought up from infancy to the clash of arms, Mr. Johnston enlisted in the patriot army as an associator. In 1776 he was commissioned an ensign in the Flying Camp, and January 21, 1777, first lieutenant in the State regiment commanded by Colonel John Bull, afterwards Colonel Walter Stewart's, and subsequently in the re-arrangement of the Line, transferred to the Thirteenth Pennsylvania. At the close of the war he was commissioned a colonel in the militia. He was a gentleman of dignified manners, very hospitable and a representative man of the Cumberland Valley. Of Mrs. Johnston, during those troublous times, we have little information. It relates chiefly to her domestic life, and yet much of that life is but the story of the vast majority of frontier dames-so different, alas, from those who "sow not nor do they reap"Ñbut philanthropic and patriotic women, who, although dwelling on the rugged edge of civilization were living examples for the ages to come. Such a one was Mrs. Johnston, generous, honorable, self-sacrificing, and withal a woman of amiability and in whose veins coursed the best blood of the defenders of Londonderry in 1689. She was of dignified bearing, and yet of sweet and amiable disposition, loved and beloved by all who knew her. She died August 12, 1811, her husband, Colonel Johnston, surviving her until the 3d of December, 1819, at the age of seventy-four. Both lie inferred in the Johnston burying ground, near Shady Grove, in a secluded spot some distance from the road. In the same enclosure is buried Dr. Robert Johnston, a surgeon of the Army of the Declaration, brother of Colonel Thomas, and an esteemed friend of General Washington.