Shenandoah University and Fort Harrison, Dayton Virginia
Shenandoah University originated here.
Dayton VA, just a short way southwest of Harrisonburg VA, is the area Shenandoah University got its beginnings in 1874 and moved to Winchester VA in 1960.
.
Full of Civil War sites
near by such as the retreat to Port Republic , the spot Turner Ashby was killed, and a skirmish in Mt Crawford, among many.
.
Augusta County was Huge+
Click or Touch to Enlarge. See link for interactive map.
Along with Frederick Co, both were carved out of Orange in 1738. See how large Augusta Co was at one time here in this link.
.
And these were the Indian battles in it.
.
See old pictures of the Daniel Harrison House and other places in this area from the Handley Library Archives.
.
.
Source of Rivers
In this county is High Town to the west, the source beginning of many rivers:
.
The South Branch of the Potomac River flowing north. This river has many forts, ordered by Colonel George Washington to be built.
.
The Jackson River flowing south. This river has many forts. Colonel George Washington visited them in 1756.
.
.
.
Rockingham County
was established in 1778 from Augusta County. Harrisonburg was named as the county seat and incorporated as a town in 1780.[12] Harrisonburg was incorporated as a city in 1916 and separated from Rockingham County (all cities in Virginia are independent of any county), but it remains the county seat.[citation needed]
.
The county is named for Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham, a British statesman (1730–1782). He was Prime Minister of Great Britain twice, and a keen supporter of constitutional rights for the colonists. During his first term, he brought about the repeal of the Stamp Act of 1765, reducing the tax burden on the colonies. Appointed again in 1782, upon taking office, he backed the claim for the independence of the Thirteen Colonies, initiating an end to British involvement in the American Revolutionary War. However, he died after only 14 weeks in office.[citation needed] By 1778, it was unusual to honor British officials in Virginia, fighting for its independence. The same year, immediately to the north of Rockingham County, Dunmore County, named for Virginia’s last Royal Governor, John Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore, an unpopular figure, was renamed. The new name, Shenandoah County, used a Native American name.[citation needed] However, long their political supporter in the British Parliament, the Marquess of Rockingham was a popular figure with the citizens of the new United States. Also named in his honor were Rockingham County, New Hampshire, Rockingham County, North Carolina, and the City of Rockingham in Richmond County, North Carolina.[
.
Source:
.
.
All this other stuff, but?
What about the house itself?
.
We wanted to provide context.
We wanted to give you an idea of what Daniel Harrison saw and what was going on nearby.
.
But, here’s the file on the house:
.
.
The Virginia Dept of Historic Resources:
.
.
.
.
Fort Harrison lies just south of Harrisonburg VA in Dayton Ohio. Woops! We really do mean Dayton Virginia.
See event being held at this fort, Saturday 10am to 3pm, 2 April 2022.
For Winchester VA readers,
Dayton Virginia is where Shenandoah University got its start before it moved to Winchester VA in 1960 as the Shenandoah College and Shenandoah Conservatory of Music.
For Fans of Teddy Roosevelt,
this link shows a toy Bear that was one of the first made Steiff stuffed toy bears that became known as the Teddy Bear. There was also another company at same time making them.
For Fans of early 1900s
this link shows a story about Dr Ashby Turner treating a woman near this place who got a wooden leg.
They still have the wooden movable leg.
And the story of who made that leg.
And maybe they still have that original Steiff Teddy Bear that was given to that woman with the wooden prosthesis leg. You'll have to find out.
For Fans of Civil War History,
You saw that reference to a Dr Ashby Turner? His name is in the right order, based on the actual Turner Ashby whose monument is nearby. Turner Ashby died in a battle nearby.
For Fans of the fort itself
and how to determine its age,
this link shows how
counting the rings
and other parts of
Dendrochronology
confirm that some of these logs
of this Fort Harrison
were cut in 1749 from trees
that were alive in the 1650s,
but the oldest beam indicates
it was alive earlier in 1629.
For Fans of George Washington,
we show evidence he knew of this place
and stayed near it
and rode by it
during the French and Indian War
and then one year after the Revolutionary War.
Four Times George went by.
For Fans of American Presidential History,
we show this area around the fort is connected to two President Harrisons and one President Lincoln.
For Fans of Revolutionary War History,
This County was originally part of Augusta County created in 1738. Augusta was the wife of Frederick Prince of Wales. He was King George II son. Frederick was next in line to be King, but died in 1751. He died some time after a Cricket game accident. Unclear if that accident was a catalyst to a dormant health issue. He was very, very popular when he died. So it was Frederick's son who later became King - King George III in 1760, when grandfather King George II died. Augusta County Courthouse was an important gathering for military affairs in this time. More on that further below.
But then in 1778 the county split off and became named as Rockingham County after a Prime Minister who is known for repealing the Stamp Act of 1765. That Prime Minister supported the American colonies' pleas for understanding. Many counties in the colonies named themselves for appreciation of this British Prime Minister.
Imagine naming your county for a British Prime Minister in the heart of war against Great Britain?
For Fans of the French and Indian War,
we show all the forts and attacks nearby that shows Fort Harrison in the danger zone.
View an example of one of the Virginia Regiment Mercer Company's reenactment fighting the French and their Indian allies:
Life in the Danger Zone.
View the Forted house.
Use this map to see location of fort.
.
If Laptop:
Touch or click on Icon. Sidebar appears on left. Scroll through to read. Go to bottom to see all pictures.
.
If Mobile:
Touch Icon. Sidebar appears on bottom. Touch sidebar to expand. Scroll through to read. And see pictures at bottom.
If you zoom back out of this map, you will see attacks nearby.
.
They might look remote or far away.
But … News travelled faster than you think back then.
Like a crime committed in your town,
the force multiplier effect
of many people knowing
about the horror
certainly did magnify the fear.
And great distances were travelled.
.
When Indians took hostages, they took them from this area all the way to Ohio or then to Montreal Canada.
And the picture showing an Alarm gong, it wasn’t only used for dinner.
.
Below is not a still photo.
.
Click to Touch to move Google Car by this Fort, which was once surrounded by a palisade stockade fencing.
That is the end of our lead story.
To dive into more detail and proof of claims made above, skip around and read bits and pieces below.
Compiled by Jim Moyer, March 2019,
updated April 6, 2019, 4/7/19, 4/9/19, 4/10/19, 4/11/19, 4/12/19, 12/13/2019, 4/1/2022, 4/2/2022
Questions we try to answer:
Where is this Fort Harrison?
Did George Washington come by this place?
Did George Washington use the road Daniel Harrison allegedly built?
Did Daniel Harrison build that road?
What transpired at the Augusta County Court House about the French and Indian Threat?
Is Daniel Harrison and his brother Thomas Harrison related to the 2 Harrison Presidents, and a 3rd President, Abraham Lincoln?
Compiled by Jim Moyer, March 2019,
updated April 6, 2019, 4/7/19, 4/9/19, 4/10/19, 4/11/19, 4/12/19, 12/13/2019, 4/1/2022, 4/2/2022
There's a lot here.
Skip around.
Read bits and pieces.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Research Notes
.
The following is research. This research indicates but does not prove that George Washington travelled this way in September and October of 1756 and later in 1784.
.
.
.
Henry Harrison, who replaced his brother Carter Henry Harrison as captain of one of the companies in the Virginia Regiment in December 1755, remained in the regiment until GW reorganized it in May 1757.
.
.
.
1. Smith was probably Jeremiah Smith (died c.1787), a captain in the Frederick County militia who was sometimes employed by GW as the leader of scouting parties. Smith’s plantation was on Back Creek where the wagon road from Winchester crossed on the way to Joseph Edwards’s on the Cacapon.
.
.
.
.
Daniel Harrison House, also known as Fort Harrison, is a historic home located near Dayton, Rockingham County, Virginia. It was built in 1748, and is a two-story, three bay limestone dwelling with a brick extension added in the early 1800s. It has a steep gable roof and wide chimney caps. It was originally surrounded by a palisade and stories of an underground passage to the nearby spring. During the French and Indian War, the legislature of Virginia designed the house “Fort Harrison.” The house is one of the oldest in the Shenandoah Valley, and is closely associated with the early history of Rockingham County.[3]
Captain Daniel Harrison was one of the first to use the plentiful supply of limestone for building. His stone house is referred to in one of his first deeds dated February 28, 1749 in Rockingham County Deed Book 2, p. 586 – “Daniel Harrison, Gent. to Arthur Johnson, 190 acres; 10 acres; Cook’s Creek–Harrison’s stonehouse”. Captain Harrison was appointed along with brother John and Robert Cravens as overseer by the Court of Orange County in 1745 to lay out and clear the old Indian Road – “The Long Grey Trail” – through what is now Rockingham County. This was destined to be the most traveled highway in the Shenandoah Valley. In 1751 Daniel became Under Sheriff of Augusta County[4]
Fort Harrison is open to the public on Friday and Saturday in the summer and by appointment.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.[1]
Because Daniel Harrison was Under Sheriff of Augusta County which made a visit to the Augusta Courthouse necessary, then
Maybe Colonel George Washington and he crossed paths for 3 reasons in 1756:
as overseer by the Court of Orange County in 1745 to lay out and clear the old Indian Road – “The Long Grey Trail” – through what is now Rockingham County. This was destined to be the most traveled highway in the Shenandoah Valley.
.
interesting link
[DIARY ENTRY: 30 SEPTEMBER 1784]
2. 2. Jane Harrison Smith (1735–1796), widow of Daniel Smith (1724–1781), lived at Smithland plantation about two miles northeast of Harrisonburg, Va.
The eldest daughter of Capt. Daniel Harrison,
she married Smith in 1751
and subsequently gave birth to at least 12 children.
Her husband was a justice of Augusta County until 1777 and of Rockingham County after that date. He served as a captain at the Battle of Point Pleasant in 1774, became county lieutenant of Rockingham in Mar. 1781, and died in the fall of that year from injuries sustained when his horse threw him during a militia review in celebration of the Yorktown victory (HARRISON [7] description begins J. Houston Harrison. Settlers by the Long Grey Trail: Some Pioneers to Old Augusta County, Virginia, and Their Descendants, of the Family of Harrison and Allied Lines. 1935. Reprint. Baltimore, 1975. description ends , 200, 245, 318–19).
His wife was Jane Harrison, sister of Benjamin Harrison, of Rockingham
Jane Harrison “Jane Harrison , (1735-1796) the eldest daughter of Capt. Daniel Harrison, Sr. and 1st wife Margaret, was born in Delaware, and in childhood brought by her parents to Augusta, later Rockingham County, Virginia, where, about 1751, she married Daniel Smith, the son of Capt. John Smith
.
Biography
“Daniel Smith, son of John, was for some time presiding justice of the County Court of Augusta. In 1776, he was Captain of the Militia. When Rockingham County was organized in 1778, he was one of the first justices of the peace. He was appointed also Colonel of Militia and one of the coroners. The first County Court of Rockingham was held at his house. His wife was Jane Harrison, sister of Benjamin Harrison, of Rockingham. On the return of the troops from Yorktown, the victory was celebrated by the military of Rockingham at a grand review in Nov 1781. Colonel Smith’s horse, taking fright at the firing, sprang aside, and spraining his rider’s back, caused death in a few days. Three of his sons participated in the siege of Yorktown: 1. John, father of the late Judge Daniel Smith; 2. Daniel, who was also at Pt. Pleasant; and 3. Benjamin, father of Benjamin Harrison Smith, of Kanawha.” Posted 31 Aug 2010 by dmppmp
Jane Harrison “Jane Harrison , (1735-1796) the eldest daughter of Capt. Daniel Harrison, Sr. and 1st wife Margaret, was born in Delaware, and in childhood brought by her parents to Augusta, later Rockingham County, Virginia, where, about 1751, she married Daniel Smith, the son of Capt. John Smith, the immigant frequently referred to on former pages. Daniel Smith and his wife, Jane, settled at historic Smithland, on the early “Great Road,” a short distance north of present Harrisonburg. (pg 238) The land, 660 acres had been patented by Capt. Daniel harrison, and his son Robert, and was purchased by Daniel Smith, 22nd November, 1764, from his brother, Abraham, who had purchased it from Robert Harrison’s executors. At various times, Daniel Smith served as one of the justices of Augusta court, his last term ending with the formation of Rockingham County For many years, until October 1777, he was a member of the Courtmartial for West Augusta district. In the battle of “Point Pleasant, he was a Captain under Gen. Andrew Lewis, and is mentioned by Waddell as of this rank in 1776. In 1775 he was a member fo the “Third Virginia Convention. On September 20th, 1781, he was commissioned Deputy Purveyor”, Southern Department, in the Revolutionary Army. Upon the formation of Rockingham County, he was one of the first justices and was commissioned Colonel of the militia. On the 25 May, 1778, he took the Oath of fidelity to the State as Vestryman. On March 26, 1781, he took the oath as County Lieutenant of Rockingham. Being one of the wealthiest men of his day in the county, his house was probably the most commodious, and in it, at the order of Virginia Assembly, was held the first Court of Rockingham County. It was here that his father died, in 1779, of the “dangerously malignant Fever,” mentioned the old Court Order Book.”
.
18- Daniel Smith, a younger brother of Abraham, was a captain of
militia in 1776, and in 1778 was one of the first justices of Rockingham,
being presiding justice at the time of his death in 1781. He lived at
Smithland, two miles below Harrisonburg, and the first sessions of the
county court were held at his house. His wife was Jane Harrison. He
had been a justice in Augusta County, and had held the office of sheriff
in that county. When the troops returned from Yorktown, in the fall of
1781, he was colonel of militia, and was thrown from his horse and fatally
injured in the grand review held in Rockingham to celebrate the victory.
See Waddell’s Annals of Augusta, pp. 150-152.
‘Smithland, ” now the residence of Geo. W. Liskey, stands on the southeast side of the Valley Pike, just a mile or two below Harrisonburg. It is one of the finest old country homesteads in many a mile. Situated near the brow of a lofty eminence, it commands a splendid view of vales, hills, and distant mountains. At the sharp turn of the pike just below the house, on the high bank at the left-hand side, the site of an old building may still be discerned: there, tradition says, the first justices of the county sat in their initial sessions. At the same time that Smithland was selected as the temporary seat of justice, it was ordered that Daniel Smith and Josiah Davidson be empowered to contract with some person for building a “square Log Jayl or prison 12 feet square, laid with square Logs above & below, 8 inches thick at the least, with one Window & a Door made of Iron barrs so as to suit the public Jayl when built, with a good Lock & a Cabin rooff over the upper flour, to be fixed on the most con- venient spott of the sd. Daniel Smith’s plantation, and in the meantime that the Sheriff be empowered to hire a Guard to watch such prisoners as are taken into his Custody.” After this action the court was adjourned to the next monthly session. The minutes of the second day are signed by Daniel
Smith. It is likely that he or Peter Hog made the entries
the pages that are now yellow with age and worn with much
handling.
The second court for Rockingham County was held on
Monday, the 25th of May, 1778.
Among other transactions, Josiah Davidson was sworn
in as sheriff, under a commission from the governor dated
May 7, 1778; GabrielJones was appointed deputy attorney for
the commonwealth for Rockingham County, with a salary of
£40 a year.
Under commissions from the governor, Abram Smith
took an oath as County Lieutenant; Daniel Smith, as Colonel;
Benjamin Harrison, as Lieut. -Colonel; William Nalle, as
Major.
.
.
.Harrison’s cave mentions weyer’s cave
CHAPTER XXIV.
NATURAL CURIOSITIES.
First, let us take a walk through some of the underground
palaces. Rockingham has a dozen or more beautiful caves.
In point of discovery, Harrison’s Cave, six miles north-
east of Harrisonburg, is perhaps the oldest. Few persons in
the county now know of its existence. I found a reference
to it in Kercheval’s old history of the Valley, and, upon
inquiry, succeeded in locating it. It was discovered by David
Harrison (born in 1775), and is in a cedar-covered rocky hill
a short distance northeast of Melrose, and a few hundred
yards west of the Valley Pike. The hill is in plain sight
from the pike, and is a part of the farm of Mr. Thos. A.
Moore.
Wednesday afternoon, September 20, 1911, 1 visited Har-
rison’s Cave. My guide was Mr. Daniel Harrison, a grandson
of the man who found the cave, so many years ago. William
Harrison, a son of David, put a building over the entrance,
but this went into decay before the civil war, and now the
opening is altogether without protection. In fact, we had
some difficulty in getting down the first ten feet, so much
mud and so many leaves had washed in ahead of us.
Once in, there was plenty of room. Several of the
apartments are very large. One room, near the end, is
larger in circumference, I think, than any room in any other
cave I have visited except, perhaps, the Grand Cathedral in
Weyer’s. The ceiling, however, is not higher than 15 or 20
feet.
Vandals have defaced Harrison’s Cave shamefully— have
broken off tons of stalactites; and the smoke from candles
and torches has blackened the whole interior; yet in spite of
all this it is a great wonder, and presents many striking
Descendants of John Smith, Sr.
Generation No. 1
1. COLONEL JOHN1 SMITH, SR. was born 1698 in England, and died 1776 in Smithland, Rockingham, VA. He
married MARGARET 1719 in Ulster, Ireland. She was born 1700 in Holland, and died 1774 in Smithland,
Rockingham, VA.
Notes for COLONEL JOHN SMITH, SR.:
“Capt. John Smith born 1698, in England, settled with his parents in Province of Ulster, Ireland; is said to have
been a Colonel of the British Army, and married in 1719 to Margaret, immigrated to America about 1730 with his
wife & children, settled, 1st in Chester Co. PA about 1740 moved with the McDowells and others, to what is now
Augusta Co. VA, then Orange Co. and on 26 Jun 1740 proved the importance of himself, his wife Margaret, &
their sons Abraham, Henry, Daniel, John & Joseph from the colony of Pennsylvania 26 Jun 1742, John Smith
qualified at Orange Court House as Captain of the Militia for Augusta Co.
As a protection against the inroads of Indians. He had several crude forts, or block houses, constructed in the
Valley, one of which was in the county of Botetourt, on the James River, where Pattonsburg was subsequently
located. These forts became the scene of memorable events. Capt. John Smith, with 17 men, held a fort
Harrison family research
.
This beautifully restored home was built around 1749 by Daniel Harrison, Dayton’s first settler. Daniel was the brother of Thomas Harrison, the founder of Harrisonburg. This site will provide excellent insight into what life was like on the frontier in the mid 18th Century. It is often referred to as Fort Harrison due to the fact that the sturdy building often provided refuge from Native American attacks during the earliest settlements of the Valley.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Peter Hogg
.
Hog remained at Fort Dinwiddie from Sept. 1755 until after GW ordered him on 21 July 1756 to take charge of building a chain of forts along the frontier below Dinwiddie. While still in command at Fort Dinwiddie, Hog took his company on Andrew Lewis’s unsuccessful Sandy Creek expedition against the Shawnee towns, in Feb. and Mar. 1756.
.
.
.
.
During the French and Indian
numerous acts for the defense
substantial houses were designated as “forts”. This house was one of these
and was known as “Fort Harrison1′. Originally it was surrounded by a palisade 1
and stories of an underground passage to the nearby spring have long existed. !
i
The brick extension to the north which was constructed in the early 1800’s
contains s i x rooms with a boxed staircase which ascends to the a t t i c in the
stone section. There are four significant fireplaces i n t h i s section with
original mantels. The mantels and s t a i r in the stone section are not
original but were added during the renovation in the l a t e 1800’s. The stone
walls also were stuccoed a t that time. The window casings in the brick
section are tapered and very fine in their execution. The windows in the
stone section were enlarged in the renovation. Floors and doors may be origj
although the locks have been changed. A l a t e r front porch has since been
removed.
The original house was b u i l t of limestone with two foot thick walls. It
contained four rooms and center hall with end chimneys serving fireplaces in
each room. The limestone chimneys here are not a part of the wall constructi~n
but are separate units. There i s no evidence of a cellar to this house at
present and whether one ever existed i s undetermined. It i s probable that
other f a c i l i t i e s were housed within the fort in other buildings which no
longer exist.
I
i I i
i ,
I I
The stone and brick sections of this house are in a bad s t a t e of deterioratic
and have been deemed unsafe for occupancy. Despite the alterations the house
maintains i t s early p r o f i l e with steep gable roof and wide chimney caps.
.
.
The austere Daniel Harrison House is one of the oldest houses in the
Shenandoah Valley, and is closely associated with the e a r l y h i s t o r y of
Rockingham County. The builder, Daniel Harrison (1701-1770) was t h e e l d e s t
son of Isaiah Harrison and his second wife, Abigail Smith. The Harrisons
came to America around 1688 and s e t t l e d a t Oyster Bay, Long Island. They
l a t e r migrated to Sussex County, Delaware, and then moved into Rockingham
County around 1738. Daniel Harrison s e t t l e d near the headwaters of Cook’s
Creek, i n the v i c i n i t y of the present v i l l a g e of Dayton, and b u i l t his
massive stone house between 1746 and 1749. The house became a center of
f r o n t i e r l i f e and served as a defensive s t r u c t u r e during the French and
Indian War,at which time it was designated “Fort Harrison”. The Vestry of
Augusta Parish authorized a Chapel of Ease a t “Daniel Harrison’s Plantation
with Anglican services being held e i t h e r i n the house or an adjacent
s t r u c t u r e . Nearby, Harrison operated a g r i s t m i l l , d i s t i l l e r y , and general
store.
Daniel Harrison, his brothers and descendants were men of prominence
i n Rockingham County. The c i t y of Harrisonburg was named for Thomas
Harrison, a brother. Daniel Harrison’s son, Benjamin Harrison (1741-1819),
commanded a company of Augusta County troops a t t h e B a t t l e of Point Pleasan
and also commanded Rockingham County m i l i t i a units during the Revolution.
A grandson, Peachy Harrison (1777-1851) was a prominent physician, as was
his son, Peachy Rush Harrison. Another of Peachy Harrison sons, Gessner
.Harrison (1807-1862),was a prominent educator, and served for many years
as professor of ancient languages a t the University of Virginia.
The house remained in the Harrison family through succeeding generatio
for a hundred y e a r s , i n h e r i t e d f i r s t by Benjamin Harrison in 1819, and then
Peachy Harrison in 1848. In 1849 it became the property of John Allebaugh,
aild i n 1856 it was purchased by J. N. Liggett. In 1866 it was purchased by
William H. and Solomon Burtner. Solomon Burtner became sole owner in 1870,
and under hh the house was altered extensively. The i n t e r i o r was largely
r e b u i l t , the windows altered, and the stonework stuccoed. The house was
purchased by the present owner, E. L. Koogler, i n 1917.
.
.
unrelated note.
is this the Ambrose of Fort Frederick?
.
.
.
.
.
A note about Rockingham County
Rockingham County was established in 1778 from Augusta County. Harrisonburg was named as the county seat and incorporated as a town in 1780.[12] Harrisonburg was incorporated as a city in 1916 and separated from Rockingham County (all cities in Virginia are independent of any county), but it remains the county seat.[13]
The county is named for Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham, a British statesman (1730–1782). He was Prime Minister of Great Britain twice, and a keen supporter of constitutional rights for the colonists. During his first term, he brought about the repeal of the Stamp Act of 1765, reducing the tax burden on the colonies. Appointed again in 1782, upon taking office, he backed the claim for the independence of the Thirteen Colonies, initiating an end to British involvement in the American Revolutionary War. However, he died after only 14 weeks in office.[citation needed]
By 1778, it was unusual to honor British officials in Virginia, fighting for its independence. The same year, immediately to the north of Rockingham County, Dunmore County, named for Virginia's last Royal Governor, John Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore, an unpopular figure, was renamed. The new name, Shenandoah County, used a Native American name.[citation needed] However, long their political supporter in the British Parliament, the Marquess of Rockingham was a popular figure with the citizens of the new United States. Also named in his honor were Rockingham County, New Hampshire, Rockingham County, North Carolina, and the City of Rockingham in Richmond County, North Carolina.[citation needed]
Rockingham County is the birthplace of Thomas Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln's father.[14] In 1979 when the Adolf Coors Brewing Company came to Rockingham County it caused an uproar; some citizens thought it would corrupt the morals of the area while others wanted the new jobs
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Comments