Delaware County PA Archives Biographies.....THURLOW, John J. February 1, 1795 - aft 1882 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Cyndie Enfinger cyndiee@tampabay.rr.com February 25, 2005, 4:03 pm Author: John Hill Martin John J. Thurlow. Incidents in His Long Life-An Account of His Descendants. We take the following interesting sketch of an old and honored townsman, John J. Thurlow, and his descendants from Martin's History of Chester. It is not often that one has an opportunity of writing of a man who is was born in the last century, and who yet in the flesh and hale and hearty. As will be seen below, Mr. Thurlow will soon enter ion his eighty-eight year, and we know that our readers will be glad to peruse the early history of our time-honored citizen. John J. Thurlow was born February 1, 1795, in the county of Essex, England. He married Mary, the oldest daughter of Richard and Mary Shepherdson, of East Riding, in Yorkshire, where she was born, A. D. 1796. They emigrated to America in the winter of 1818-19, and settled at Newport, Delaware; and during the latter part of 1819 Mr. Thurlow rented the Stage House there and kept it for two years, when, at the solicitation of Major Anderson, he moved to Chester, some time in 1821, to take charge of the hotel then owned by the major, and formerly kept by him. While there he prepared and furnished the supper given to General Lafayette, in the old Court House, on hs visit to Chester. After keeping the "Old Eagle Hotel," near Chester bridge, known as the "National," Maurice W. Deshong secceeded him as the landlord. Major Price was Deshong's successor. After Mr. Thurlow left the "National," he retired to his farm below Chester, where he built a commodious house, which he named "Sporting Hall," a well-known place in its day, "Whose roof once rang with harmless mirth, Where every passing stranger was a guest, And every guest a friend." The scene of much gayety and revelry indulged in there by the young and the old folks of the county; for there was held every year the "Harvest Home, and on the barn floor the beaus and belles for miles around gathered and tripped on the light fantastic toe. In summer the Hall was filled with city boarders from Philadelphia, and evening dances and parties of pleasure were always in order. Mrs. Mary Thurlow died August 1, 1861, regretted by all who knew her. I recall with peasure her handsome, beaming face, as she greeted her friends, and her kind and cordial manners, that made her house feel like home. Some years after her death, June 15, 1867, Mr. Thurlow married Rachel, daughter of Captain William Brewton, of Philadelphia, who was lost at sea, with his vessel and all the crew. The old mansion, "Sporting Hall," was recently town down, being in the way of the extension of Third street of the city of Chester. John J. and Mary Thurlow had two children-a son and daughter. The latter, Emmeline, born at Chester, April 12, 1823, married first, May 24, 1844, John A. McMullin, a merchant of Philadelphia. He accompanied General Walker in his expedition to Nicaraugua, about 1854, and died there. They had issue: Thurlow and Mary W. The daughter is married to ex-Senator Milton S. Latham, of California, and the son, Thurlow McMullin, is in business in the "Golden State." After the death of her first husband, Emmeline married again, December 22, 1859, George O. McMullin, of California, a first cousin of her former husband, by whom she had two children, Georgie Hammond and Emmadonna. She was a very beautiful woman, a brunette, with a sweet, amiable disposition and fascinating manners. Her fate was a sad one: she and her two young children were lost in the Pacific Ocean. The steamer Golden Gate, on which they were passengers, returning to her father's home, near Chester, took fire at sea and was beached, July 27, 1861, on the coast of Mexico, about 15 miles from Manzanilla, and they were drowned in the attempt to reach shore. Thomas T. Thurlow, son of John and Mary, was born in Delaware, December 30, 1819, before his parents removed to Chester. He married June 20, 1844, Susan M., daughter of John Serrill, of Darby, and a grand-daughter of the late well- known old sea captain, James Serrill, who was for years master of the good old ship Tuscarora, one of Cope's line of packet ships to England. Thomas T. Thurlow early took a fancy to military life, and was a captain of militia in Col. John K. Zeilin's regiment. After his removal to Delaware he was appointed by Governor Cannon, of that State, Major of the 6th Delaware Volunteers, and served with the Union Army until the regiment was mustered out of service in 1864, when he was appointed Duputy Provost Marshal of the State of Delaware, which position he held until the terminiation of the Rebellion. He then removed to Washington City, D. C., and was appointed a clerk in the U. S. Hydrographic office, Bureeau of Navigation, Navy Department. He has issue five children, viz: Mary S., John J., and Thomas E., dead and buried in Chester Rural Cemetery; Fannie S., wife of Augustus S. Lane, of Wilmington, Delaware, and Ella Beale, who married March 21, 1877, Joseph C. Addison, of Washington, D. C. Soon after his removal to Delaware, Major Thurlow became an officer of the First City Troop of Delaware. In 1845, upon the breaking out of the Mexican War, the whole Troop, numbering 70 men, tendered their services, with their horses and equpments, to the Government. Additional Comments: Published in Chester Times (21 Jan 1882) Page 2 This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/pafiles/ File size: 5.9 Kb