DESCENDANTS OF UNKNOWN HUPP Prepared by Linda Cunningham Fluharty for HENRY MILLER HUPP, 19 Nov 2003 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIRST GENERATION 1. Unknown Hupp1,2. The identity of the parents of the Hupp brothers who settled in Washington County, PA appears to be speculative. Some have concluded that they were Casper or Philip Casper of Culpeper, VA and his wife, Elizabeth. Additionally, the names of the brothers and the number of them is also not entirely known, nor are their exact birth dates. Much of the information about these early Hupp settlers is from the website of Olin L. Hupp, http://hometown.aol.com/olinl/page1.htm - Used with permission. The following was written and published by Olin L. Hupp in Beyond Germanna, March and May 1993, Volume 5,n.2, n1: revised 07/2000: There are eight members of the Hupp family mentioned in early Washington County, Pennsylvania records: The mother, Elizabeth (Hupp) Ault; brothers George Hupp (b. 1734-1737), Everhart (Everhard) Hupp (b. 1745), John Hupp (b. 1747), Francis Hupp, Balser (Palser or Baltus) Hupp (b. 1754). Philip Hupp (b. 1756) and their sister Elizabeth (Hupp) Smith. The early histories of Washington County written by Creigh in 1870, Crumrine in 1882, McFarland in 1910 and Forrest in 1926 tell of the Hupp brothers and state that they came from the Shenandoah region or Culpeper County, Virginia. The wills of Philip (Hoop) Hupp and Mathias Ault give the names of the mother and daughter. Philip Hupp - Father Death of Philip Hupp The Germanna Record Number 6 written by B.C. Holtzclaw (The Memorial Foundation of Germanna Colonies, P.O. Box 693, Culpeper, VA. 22701) on p.86 states: 31. Hupp (Hoop) Philip died in Culpeper Co., VA. 1761, leaving a will which mentions his wife Elizabeth, and children, George, Baltus (i.e., Balthazar), Philip and Elizabeth. Will of Philip Hoop (Hupp) Will Book A of Culpeper Co. records the will of Philip Hoop (Hupp) on pages 264-265. It is dated 21 April 1761 and proved in the Court during the months of September and October of 1761. In addition to mentioning the family members listed above, the will refers to "that land and plantation I had of Robert Hutcheson on the top of Greens and Moors Mounting and all the grain that (is) growing on the same." His estate, valued at L47.15.4, included some Dutch books. Executors of the will were wife Elizabeth and Henry Ayler. The land owned by Mr. Robert Hutcheson was north of the Hazel River, and southwest of Red Oak Mountain in what is currently Rappahannock County, Virginia (previously Culpeper Co.) [Little]. The well traveled "Thorntion's Gap Road" ran through this area [Scheel]. Any record of the land sale to Philip Hupp has not been located. The will does not mention Everhart, John or Francis Hupp. Since George was the oldest son and neither Everhart, John or Francis was living at the home, their inheritance, if any, may have been taken care of at another time. Everhart and John were deeded 250 acres of land on the Hazel River in 1762, and deeded it away again in 1769. After Philip Hupp's death, his wife married Mathias Ault [Sheperd]. Before 1769 and perhaps even before 1766, the Hupp and Ault family moved northwest into the "forbidden" land claimed by both Virginia and Pennsylvania, the headwaters of the Ohio River. The family made their home on the frontier of "old" Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania. The route most commonly taken to he west bank of the Monongahela River in southwestern Pennsylvania followed the Potomac River north to Frederick, Maryland and then west to Hagerstown, then Fort Cumberland, Maryland. From here travel turned northwest into Pennsylvania, on Braddock's Road, past Fort Necessity and Uniontown to Brownsville on the Monongahela River (currently U.S. 40). Then up river (south) to Ten Mile Creek. MOVING TO PENNSYLVANIA Ten Mile and The Monongahela Most early history books on Washington County, Pennsylvania refer to the Hupp Family. Reports differ as to just when the Hupps came to the fork of Ten Mile Creek and the Monongahela River. The older published Washington County histories [Creigh, Crumrine, McFarland and Forrest] agree that the Hupps, Bumgarners [see Hurt] and Teagardens were the earliest "recorded" (filed for land titles) settlers in the region. Crumrine (p.765) says that Everhart Hupp, George Bumgarner (from Culpeper County, Virginia) and Abraham Teagarden came from Virginia together to the mouth of the Ten Mile Creek in 1766. He cites a specific grant of land to Hupp in 1766. Forrest (pp. 44-45) only cites the 1769 date from old survey records in the Washington County Records Office. There is no source given to the 1766 date. It was technically illegal under Pennsylvania law to settle this region in 1766. The law, however, made little difference to potential settlers who "tomahawked" land claims in the region. It was difficult to enforce such laws in a wilderness claimed by both Virginia and Pennsylvania. Many potential settlers were from Virginia and Maryland. Unknown1,2 died ---. Unknown Hupp and Unknown had the following children: +2 i. Philip Hupp (born in 1756). +3 ii. John Hupp (born on March 31, 1750). 4 iii. Francis "Frank" Hupp was born in 1754. He died in 1781. From Olin L. Hupp, http://hometown.aol.com/olinl/page1.htm: DEATH OF FRANCIS HUPP Indians on Middle Wheeling Creek In September 1781, Francis Hupp, Jacob Fisher and Captain Jacob Miller set out from Miller's Blockhouse on Dutch Creek to look for stray horses while scouting the area. At nightfall they returned to the cabin of Jonathan Link on the right bank of the middle fork of Wheeling Creek about 3 miles south of West Alexander, very near the West Virginia line. The following morning, Shawnee Indians killed Jacob Fisher and mortally wounded Francis Hupp after they had stepped to a nearly spring. Francis returned to the cabin to warn his companions. Captain Jacob Miller and Jonathan Link were taken prisoners by the Shawnee. Francis Hupp was taken out of the cabin and scalped. After burning Link's cabin the Indians continued to attack several more frontier homes, burning and taking prisoners. Jonathan Link was later killed by the Indians. Captain Jacob Miller escaped to return home 24 hours later. Captain Jacob Miller, John Miller, Andrew Deeds and Jacob Rowe buried Francis Hupp and Jacob Fisher by the side of the Middle Wheeling Creek, about midway between Link's cabin and the creek, a few feet east of the West Virginia line [Creigh]. 5 iv. Palser Hupp was born between 1752 and 1754. Balser (Palser/Baltus) Hupp, after living for a short time in Millsboro, along Ten Mile Creek, returned across the Allegheny's to the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. He settled on 365 acres, a little north of New Market, Virginia on the Shenandoah River (west of Interstate 81 just above the new Market battlefield). He was married first to Mary (7 children) and then to Barbara Grove (4 children). Balser was buried during 1829 in the Neff-Kagey Cemetery just north of his farm, along the Shenandoah River [Hupp, Timothy]. +6 v. Everhart Hupp (born in 1745). 7 vi. Henry Hupp. If there was a Henry among these brothers, nothing is known about him. 8 vii. George Hupp was born in 1737. From Olin L. hupp, http://hometown.aol.com/olinl/page1.htm: George Hupp is listed as a settler of record at Camp Cat Fish Corte on the Monongahela River (just north of Millsboro) in June 1772. Horn indicates that George apparently helped lay out several roads in the area. Many of Horn's records have been proven false and should be strongly questioned. However, I have not located any reference which disagrees with the following statements. George Hupp was born in New Jersey in 1734. He went to Maryland when he was fourteen, and shipped with a trading vessel for the West Indies in 1750, remaining there until 1753. In 1755, he was in the Virginia Militia at the Battle of Monongahela. After Braddock's defeat, he escaped and went up the Monongahela River to Redstone. In 1763, he was at Fort Queen Elizabeth for about two months. In 1764, he met and later married a Delaware Indian girl living at a small Delaware Indian camp on the Kithning or Chartiers Creek. They had ten children. He settled on the north side of Ten Mile Creek in Washington County in 1767. In 1771, he moved to another tract of land. George Hupp died about 1823. His wife died in 1816 [Horn, p.553]. The Hardtman Horn Poll for 1773 indicates George Hupp arrived in 1765 from Virginia [Horn, p.112].George settled on the west side of the Monongahela River at Teagarden's Bottoms (Millsboro, Pa.) in 1766 [Horn, v.1, p.237]. In 1767, George erected Fort Logan, about one mile from Fort Teagarden on the highland above the Monongahela River. This fort was destroyed by fire in 1773. George served in the Illinois Regiment during the Revolution [Brumbaugh]. On September 5, 1772, Camp Cat Fish Corte found George Hupp guilty of throwing his Indian (Delaware) wife in the river while being "tight and very obnoxious", and ordered the sheriff, with Samuel Jackson and John Teagarden, each to lay seven lashes on George Hupp, between the hour of ten and twelve. John Nardin, the Kentucky pioneer, on a visit to his home at Millsboro in 1800, related how he, George Teagarden, George Hupp and the wood rangers punished a band of Cayuga-Seneca Indians for making raids in Morgan and Jefferson Townships in June 1774 [Horn, p.291]. George Hupp is listed as a land holder in Nelson County, Kentucky in 1787 (then Virginia). After 1791 George moved to Washington County, Kentucky, southeast of Louisville. George at some point took a new white wife and had several children. George's exploits at the Battle of the Monongahela gave him familiarity with the Washington County region and may account for the Hupp family migration to Ten Mile Creek. SECOND GENERATION 2. Philip Hupp (Unknown-1) was born in 1756. He died in 1831. Served in Revolutionary War. Affidavit in Pension Application. From, Olin L. Hupp, http://hometown.aol.com/olinl/page1.htm: Philip Hupp, like other members of his family, was a woodsman and adventurer. Like his older brother Everhart, Philip joined the Sandusky Expedition as a soldier under Col. Crawford [Pa. Archives, 6th Ser., Vol.11]. Philip also served in some of the campaigns of George Rogers Clark's Illinois Regiment as a Matross [English] and received depreciation pay from Fort Pitt [Pa. Archives, 5th Ser., p.405]. He served during the Revolutionary War for 3 years in Virginia's 13th Regiment under Captain Sullivan and subsequently in the 9th Regiment [Brumbaugh]. While in the 13th, he also volunteered to crew the river boat Rattletrap under the command of Captain James Willing, returning to Fort Pitt, Pennsylvania on December 22, 1777 [Kellogg]. Philip Hupp and Lazarus Rhyne sold their Military Land Warrents to John Stokely, a land speculator [Va. archives]. He was married to Mary Buzzard on July 25, 1782 in Hampshire County, VA. Mary Buzzard was born in 1755. She died in 1852. 3. John Hupp1,2 (Unknown-1) was born on March 31, 1750 in Shenandoah Valley, Pa.. He died on March 31, 1782 in Buffalo Creek, Washington co., Pa.. John Hupp was born in 1747 (1750). He married Anne Rowe, daughter of Adam Rowe, and had four children. She was one of the Rowe children who escaped the Rowe massacre at the flats of Grave Creek near Wheeling, West Virginia in 1776 [Sipe]. John settled on the Greene County side of the Ten Mile Creek. His application (No. 3319) obtained a warrant on June 3, 1769 for 131 acres [Leckey]. An adjacent tract at the point formed by Ten Mile Creek and the Monongahela River where the present railroad bridge enters Greene County, called "Sugar Camp", was sold to George Teagarden by John Hop (Hupp) in 1768. This site was later known as "Teagarden's Bottoms." Improvements on the tracts were made in 1765 [Vogt, p.41]. In 1774 John moved to the Dutch Fork of the Buffalo in "old" Ohio County, Virginia now Donegal Township, Washington County, Pennsylvania. He was joined in this move by his brothers, George and Philip, his sister Elizabeth, and Mathias and Elizabeth (Hupp) Ault. Francis Hupp moved to nearby Middle Wheeling Creek [Bell]. John served as a private in Captain Eleazer Williamson's Company, Third Battalion, Washington County Militia [Pa. Archives 6th ser.,Vol II, p.124] and as a private in Captain Williamson's Company of Rangers on the Frontiers from 1778 to 1782 [Pa. Archives 3rd ser.,Vol XXXIII, p.310]. ================================================================== MILLER'S BLOCK-HOUSE By John C. Hupp, MD Wheeling, Va., March 31,1861 Dr. Alfred Creigh: Dear Sir: I have, at your request, elicited the following facts in relation to the siege of Miller's block-house, from the lips of my aged father. He received them from those who, on this day seventy-nine years ago, were its courageous and heroic defenders. They are as follows: In the spring of 1782 Indian hostilities commenced much earlier than usual along the western frontier. As early as the month of March hordes of savages were ascertained to have crossed the Ohio, and were making their way into the settlements. The settlers thus threatened with the massacres, plunderings, burnings, and captivities, with which they had already become so familiar, were filled with spirit-stirring excitement commingled with alarm. In this predicament of apprehension and danger, the settlers along the Buffalo Valley betook themselves with their families to the forts and block-house. About three miles northeast of West Alexandra, on the right bank of the "Dutch Fork of Buffalo," is a peninsula formed by the meandering creek on the one side and "Miller's Run " on the other. The isthmus next to the run is skirted by a narrow strip of bottom land, which expands to many acres towards the creek and its confluence with the run. The side of the isthmus washed by the creek has a bold and precipitous bluff. On this isthmus was located "Miller's Block-house," [The block-house was located about midway between William Miller's spring and the graveyard – from this limpid fount the block-house received its supply of water.] which was besieged by a party of about seventy Shawnees on Easter Sunday, 1782. With their characteristic cunning and caution, the savages arrived in the vicinity the night previous, distributing themselves in ambush around the block- house and along the paths leading thereto. Thus lying concealed among the bushes or "pea vines," behind trees or fallen timber, they awaited the operation of circumstances. The most of the men were absent from the block-house on this occasion, some of them being at Rice's Fort, which was about two miles further down the creek. Of this fact the Indians most likely were apprised, and on this account the attack on the block-house is supposed to have been deferred, and the ambush protracted, in order to destroy the men on their return to the block-house. Of those who were in this rude shelter on that fatal Sabbath morning were John Hupp, Sr., wife [Ann] and four children, Margaret, Mary, John, and Elizabeth; Jacob Miller, Sr., and several of his family; the family of Edward Gather, and an old man named Matthias Ault. The sun had appeared above the eastern hills, tinging with his feeble rays the summits of the lofty trees of the dense forest that surrounded this primitive place of defense. The quietude of the woods was undisturbed save by the occasional chirp of the wooded songster, caroling his morning anthem. One of the matrons of the block-house had fearful forebodings that some awful calamity was about to befall her husband, and followed him to the door, entreating him not to carry into execution his determination to accompany his friend on that morning in search of a colt that had strayed. The night previous she had dreamed that a "coppersnake" struck its fangs into the palm of her husband's hand, and that all her efforts to detach the venomous reptile were unavailing. This she interpreted as ominous of evil to her husband. But despite the entreaties and importunities of his wife, John Hupp, Sr., set out in company with his friend, Jacob Miller, Sr., in search of the stray. They entered the path leading across the run and through the woods in a northeasterly direction from the block-house, and were soon out of view. Soon the quietude of the woods was disturbed by the crack of a rifle, quickly followed by a savage warhoop issuing from that portion of the forest into which Hupp and Miller had just entered. This alarm filled the minds of the women with consternation and apprehensions as to their fate. But Hupp being in the prime and vigor of manhood, fleet and athletic (if not merely overpowered with numbers), his quick return to the block-house was confidently expected by the inmates. But he had fallen a victim to the foe that lay concealed patiently awaiting the approach of some ill-fated person. The two unsuspecting men had been allowed to follow the ambushed path as far as the second little ravine on land, now owned by William Miller. Here, from his concealment behind fallen timber, a savage fired upon Hupp, wounding him mortally; he, however, after he was shot, ran some sixty or seventy yards and sank to rise no more. Miller, being an elderly man, was boldly rushed upon by the merciless wretches, with loud and exultant yells, and tomahawked on the spot. Flushed with success, the savages now left their hapless victims, scalped and pilfered of all clothing, to join in the beleaguerment of the block-house. While this tragic scene was being enacted, the wild excitement and confusion among the woman and children at the block-house, with no male defender but the old man Ault, can be better imagined than described. But at this trying moment Providence panoplied a female hero with a courage sufficiently unfaltering for the dire emergency, in the person of Ann Hupp. Having now realized the dread forebodings of her vision, and shaking off the shackles of despondency, she now turned to calm the moral whirlwind that was raging amongst the frantic woman and children – to inspire them with hope, and to rally the only and infirm male defender. She in the mean time had deputed Frederick Miller, an active lad aged about eleven years, as a messenger to Rice's fort for aid. But in this strategy she was foiled; for the lad had gone willingly and heroically only a few hundred yards down the peninsula on his dangerous embassy, when he was intercepted by the Indians. Retracing his steps, he was pursued by two savages with hideous yells and uplifted tomahawks. This frightful race for life was witnessed from the block-house with anxiety the most intense. Every moment it seemed as though the lad would certainly fall beneath the deadly stoke of one of the two bloodthirsty pursuers, each vieing with the other which should strike the first and fatal blow. A fence was to be scaled by the boy without a blunder, or death -- certain, instant death—was his doom. Summoning all his boyhood and failing strength he leaped the barrier fence, touching it merely with his hand as the foremost Indian's tomahawk struck the rail, accompanied with a yell of disappointment, when both savages fired at him. In his struggle to escape, his arm being flexed, one of the balls took effect, passing through his flexed arm both above the elbow and between that joint and the wrist, whirling him around several times. Now subdued shrieks, commingled with joy and terror, were heard in the block- house as the female hero who sent out the boy ambassador received him in her arms as he bounded to the door exhausted from the race loss of blood. At this moment the Indians, leaping from their concealment, appeared in every direction around the block-house, and a hot and continuous firing commenced. The female band, with Ault as their counsellor, in despair and anguish were forced to the conclusion that the block-house would now soon be taken by storm, or envelop them in its flames, and with no hope of a successful resistance were about to "give up". Again, in this crisis of terrible trail, Ann Hupp proved equal to the emergency. Encouraging the trembling Ault and the weeping women with the consoling language of hope – nerving her arm and steeling her heart to the severe duties of the moment, she, with true Spartanism, snatching up a rifle fired at the approaching savages, and then "ran from porthole to porthole," protruding its muzzle in different directions – to convey the idea of great forces in the house—at each presentation causing the savages to cower behind trees or other objects for protection. This happily conceived and promptly executed strategy of this pioneer heroine, without doubt, saved the inmates from what was otherwise inevitable – an immediate and horrible death. A number of Indians had taken shelter behind a stable that stood not far from the block-house; emboldened by their firing not being promptly returned from the block-house, one of them would occasionally step out to view, holding up before himself as a shield a "clap-board," and then quickly retreat again to his shelter. He at length stepped out boldly into an open space, defiantly stretching his savage frame high in air, at which Ault was prevailed upon to fire; but palpably without doing any harm. This exasperated the savages, causing the assault to become still more terrible. At this stage of the siege the woman saw and recognized three of their men approaching in great haste from the direction of Rice's Fort, when they commenced screaming at the top of their voices, and beckoning the men in the direction they supposed to be the safest point to pass the Indians in gaining the block-house. While the Indians stood in confusion and wonderment, not comprehending the meaning of the screams, the men rushed forward, passing very near to where some of the savages stood, and before the Indians sufficiently recovered from their surprise of fire upon them, they, with faces red and turgid from the race, bounded into the block-house unscathed. The name of these three daring spirits, who thus perilled their lives to save their helpless mothers, brothers, and sisters from savage fury, or perish with them, were, Jacob Rowe, Jacob Miller, Jr., and Philip Hupp. One of these, Jacob Rowe, being about ten years old, in the fall of 1776, when in company with his mother and three brothers, and his father, Adam Rowe, on their way to Kentucky, made a heir-breadth escape from the Indians at a point not far from the mouth of Grave Creek. Here the little caravan was attacked by a party of marauding savages, who killed Mrs. Rowe and her oldest son, and took captive Daniel, the youngest child aged about seven years. Jacob escaped by running into a thicket of willows near at hand, when closely pursued by a large muscular Indian, who had his little brother Daniel a captive on his back, and this is the last account ever heard of the captive boy. After his escape Jacob, trembling with fear, travelled all the day stealthily through the wild and dense woods, along the deep and dark hollows and over the precipitous hills lying in his way, back to Buffalo, and when nightfall overtook him with all its hideousness, in the midst of the deep woods, he, overcome with fright, fatigue, and hunger, nestled himself down amongst the leaves at the root of a fallen tree for the night. (He died with a throat affection which doubtless was founded on that, to him, cold, dread, and dreary November night.) The next day he arrived at Buffalo and was received into the arms of his sister, Ann Hupp, to whom the weeping lad related the tragic scenes he had witnessed on the previous morning. Adam Rowe and his son Adam also returned to the neighborhood and afterwards went to Kentucky; but Jacob remained with his sister, and was her survivor some three or four years. After the arrival of these men in the block-house, the fury and boldness of the savages somewhat abated, and during the rest of the day the firing was less frequent and finally ceased. Evidently filled with chagrin and disappointment, they skulked about the neighborhood till nightfall, and nothing more was heard of them, they, no doubt, fearing a reinforcement, left during the night, bearing away with them only the scalps of Hupp and Miller. After the loss of her husband, Mrs. Hupp and her children, in accordance with her own wish, were taken by her brother-in-law, P. Hupp to his cabin, near where the village of Millsborough now stands, where they remained four years, and again returned to Buffalo, where, subsequently, she married John May, whom she survived several years, and on the 23d day of June, 1823, died in the sixty-sixth year of her age. Two of her children, John Hupp and Elizabeth Rodgers, still survive, and are living on Buffalo Creek, having seen the pioneer heroes and heroines of their youth one by one gathered to their fathers, they now stand the last of a race who learned from their lops those thrilling incidents of pioneer life. The loss of these two men to the neighborhood was severely felt at a time when men were so much needed; but all hearts in that block-house were overflowing with thanks and gratitude to a kind and merciful Preserver for vouchsafing to them his aid and protection when their great and terror-filling peril was impending, and for saving them from the ruthless hands of the merciless savages. About noon on Monday the men ventured out from the block-house, going sadly and cautiously in search of Hupp and Miller, with the purpose of performing for them the last sad rites of the dear departed. About three hundred yards from the block-house they found the body of Miller, lying near the bloody path, and following the traces of blood on the leaves and other objects over which Hupp had run, his body was promptly discovered. Their mutilated and frozen bodies were borne to the peninsula and laid side by side a few yards from the block-house, in the same grave, with "puncheons" for their coffin, and today are lying clustered around the grave of these two pioneers the remains of Jacob Rowe, Jacob Miller, Jr. (Capt.), Frederick Miller, the heroine Ann Hupp, and daughter Margaret Titus. When living, the cement and panoply of affection and goodwill bound them together at once in the tender natal, social, and moral ties of domestic kindness, friendship; and love, and the union for defense, and when dead they are not separated. Frederick and Capt. Jacob were sons of the unfortunate Jacob Miller, Sr. Frederick died on the 27th day of March, 1814, aged forty-three years, and Captain Jacob Miller died August 20, 1830, aged nearly sixty-eight years. Obediently and truly yours, John C. Hupp, M.D. ______ Source: Appendix to History of Washington County, Pa. By Alfred Creigh, L.L.D. pub. 1871 – Note by Mr. Creigh: "After I had consented to write the history of Washington County, I learned that my friend John C. Hupp, MD [This John C. Hupp is a descendent of John Hupp, brother of Philip Hupp, who was killed during the blockhouse raid by the Indians.], of Wheeling, Virginia, had in his possession notes of the attack on Miller's block-house; also of the capture, escape and trials of Captain Jacob Miller in 1781, as well as the murder of five of Miller's friends, which he procured from the lips of his aged and venerable father. I accordingly addressed Dr. Hupp a letter, and he kindly furnished to me the following communication on the subject of Miller's block-house." ______ He was married to Ann Rowe in 1774 in Washington Co., Pa. Ann Rowe1,2 was born in 1757. She died in June 1823. John Hupp and Ann Rowe had the following children: +9 i. Mary Hupp. +10 ii. Margaret Hupp. +11 iii. Elizabeth Hupp. +12 iv. John Hupp (born on July 27, 1780). 6. Everhart Hupp (Unknown-1) was born in 1745. He died in 1824. Everhart was a Lieutenant in Captain Robert Sweeney's Company - 5th Battalion of Washington and Greene Cos., PA Militia. From Olin L. Hupp: Everhart Hupp's land contained two large tracts on the north bank of Ten Mile Creek. These were later surveyed as Hupp's Regard (387 acres) and Hupp's Bottom (295 acres). The land begins about a quarter of a mile north of the Ten Mile Creek bridge on Route 88 near Millsboro, extending back into the hills to the north and west. Included is the present town of Besco and part of the hills above. The tracts include Hog's Hill road to Sandy Plains, called Racine on older maps [Bower]. Forrest (p.49) says that Hupp built a blockhouse on the land in 1769. Russell Bane, a descendant of the Hupps and Millsboro resident, believes that Everhart Hupp's cabin was on the high hill by the Route 88 bridge over Ten Mile Creek [Bower]. Forrest (p.45) agrees. This was in later years known as "the Point." Crumrine (p.373) mentions a 1791 petition for a road "leading from Muddy Creek and Whitely Road, Everhard Hupp's Mill, James Crawford's Ferry, Weatland Meeting House and Nathan Heald's Mill to intersect the Pittsburg Road." Everhard Hupp's Mill is believed to have been on Black Dog Hollow. Everhard later purchased two tracts of land farther up Ten Mile Creek near the present village of Ten Mile [Bower]. Margaret Thomas [see Thomas], wife of Everhart Hupp, was the first known white woman to live west of the Monongahela River. They had eleven children. Their home was a gathering place for men of the settlement of Sandy Plains. The hospitality was extended to white and red men alike. They brought their game for Margaret to prepare when they tired of their own cooking. George Washington is said to have visited on one of his western trips [Bower]. Everhart lived there until his death. Everhart is reported to have died in 1824 by Crimrine (p.765), however the 1830 census list him alive in the East Bethlehem Township. The house was dismantled in the late 1920's by a coal company and hauled down the hill to build houses for miners. The home was a simple two story log structure with two front doors, such as two smaller log homes joined together [Bower; picture p.13]. During May of 1782, Lieutenant Everhart Hupp served under Col. Crawford fighting Indians on the Sandusky Expedition [Pa. Archives, 6th ser., Vol. 11]. During the Revolutionary War, Everhart served for a time as a lieutenant in Captain Sweeny's Company, Fifth Battalion of the Washington County Militia [Leckey]. Everhart is an ancestor of the Clarksville, Pennsylvania Hupps. He was married to Margaret Thomas. THIRD GENERATION 9. Mary Hupp (John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Thomas Smith. Mary Hupp and Thomas Smith had the following children: +13 i. Mary Smith. +14 ii. Betsy Smith. +15 iii. Cyrus Smith. 16 iv. Sarah Smith. 17 v. Unknown Smith. 18 vi. Unknown Smith. 10. Margaret Hupp (John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to John Titus. 11. Elizabeth Hupp (John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Francis Rogers. Francis Rogers died in 1829. Elizabeth Hupp and Francis Rogers had the following children: +19 i. Patrick Rogers. +20 ii. Rosanna Rogers. +21 iii. Nancy Rogers. +22 iv. Isabel Rogers. +23 v. Margaret Rogers. +24 vi. Mary Rogers. +25 vii. Sarah Rogers. +26 viii. Elizabeth Rogers. 12. John Hupp1,2 (John-2, Unknown-1) was born on July 27, 1780 in Donegal, Washington Co., Pa. He died on March 12, 1864. He was married to Ann Cox on January 18, 1813. Ann Cox2 was born on June 7, 1791. She died on November 26, 1875. John Hupp and Ann Cox had the following children: +27 i. Isaac Hupp (born on January 5, 1814). +28 ii. Louisa Hupp (born on June 10, 1815). +29 iii. Joseph Hupp (born on November 14, 1817). +30 iv. John Cox Hupp (born on November 24, 1819). FOURTH GENERATION 13. Mary Smith (Mary Hupp-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Jeremiah Sargeant. 14. Betsy Smith (Mary Hupp-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Enoch Phillips. 15. Cyrus Smith (Mary Hupp-3, John-2, Unknown-1). He was married to Unknown. He was married to Margaret Mullenux. 19. Patrick Rogers (Elizabeth Hupp-3, John-2, Unknown-1). He was married to Harriet Linville. He was married to Eleanor McChaffey. 20. Rosanna Rogers (Elizabeth Hupp-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Joseph Cox. 21. Nancy Rogers (Elizabeth Hupp-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Samuel Cox. 22. Isabel Rogers (Elizabeth Hupp-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Jacob Stoofire. 23. Margaret Rogers (Elizabeth Hupp-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Thomas Davis. 24. Mary Rogers (Elizabeth Hupp-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to George Linville. 25. Sarah Rogers (Elizabeth Hupp-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Isaac Deeds. 26. Elizabeth Rogers (Elizabeth Hupp-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Thomas Davis. 27. Isaac Hupp (John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on January 5, 1814. He died on January 28, 1853. He was married to Mary Ann Atkinson. Isaac Hupp and Mary Ann Atkinson had the following children: +31 i. John Cox Hupp (born on January 4, 1842). +32 ii. Atkinson Hupp. +33 iii. Isaac W. Hupp (born on December 3, 1850). +34 iv. Emaline Hupp. +35 v. Mary Hupp. 28. Louisa Hupp (John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on June 10, 1815. She died on November 30, 1875. She was married to John Clemens. Louisa Hupp and John Clemens had the following children: 36 i. Louisa Clemens. 37 ii. William Clemens. 38 iii. Alonza Clemens. 29. Joseph Hupp (John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on November 14, 1817. He died on April 30, 1886. He was married to Martha Hanen. Martha Hanen was born in March 1848. Joseph Hupp and Martha Hanen had the following children: 39 i. John Hupp. 40 ii. Amie L. Hupp. 41 iii. Arminta Hupp. 42 iv. Josaphine A. Hupp. 43 v. Joseph Calvin Hupp. 44 vi. Garvin Gilbert Hupp. 30. John Cox Hupp2 (John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on November 24, 1819. He died on November 19, 1908. From HISTORY OF THE PAN-HANDLE, West Virginia, 1879, by J. H. Newton, G. G. Nichols, and A. G. Sprankle. Page 265. DR. JOHN C. HUPP Dr. John C. Hupp is a grandson of John Hupp, a pioneer who was killed while defending Miller's block-house, on Buffalo creek, from the Indians, and was born in Donegal township, Washington county, Pennsylvania, November 24th, 1819. He was educated at West Alexander Academy, and at Washington College, from which he graduated in 1844; subsequently, in 1848, taking the degree of A. M. Studied medicine under F. Julius LeMoyne, and at the Jefferson Medical College, whence he graduated M.D. in 1847, settling in Wheeling in general practice. He was one of the founders of the Medical Society of the State of West Virginia, having introduced into the convention called to form that society the resolution "to establish and organize" it; brought chloral hydrate to the notice of the profession of Wheeling, February 21st, 1870; made in 1873 a successful effort before the board of education to extend to the colored children of Wheeling a free-school education, and a like effort before the same body in 1875, to make German a regular branch of study in the public schools of Wheeling; was appointed in 1875 a delegate to the American Medical Association to the European Medical association; was also a member of the executive committee of the Centennial Medical Commission to the International Medical Congress, which convened at Philadelphia, September 4, 1876; and witnessed the cremation of Baron de Palm, at Washington, Pa., December 6th, 1876. His notable cases include the case of a ruptured uterus, reported in the Transactions of the State Medical Society for 1874. He is a member of the American Medical Association, in which he was secretary of the section on the practice of medicine and obstetrics in 1869, and of the committee on nominations in 1875, 1876 and 1878; of the Medical Socirty of the State of West Virginia, of which he is treasurer, having been elected at its formation in 1867 and re-elected annually; of the Medical Society of the City of Wheeling and County of Ohio, of which also he is treasurer, having been in like manner elected at its formation in 1868, and annually re-elected; and of the Historical Society of West Virginia; a corresponding member of the Gynaecological Society of Boston, and a life member and vice president for West Virginia of the Alumni Association of Jefferson Medical College. Among other contributions to medical literature, he is the author of papers on "Placenta Praevia," 1863; "Salivary Calculus," 1863; "Vaccination and its Protective Powers," 1870; "Chloral in Puerperal Insanity," 1870, copied into medical journals from the Transactions of the State Medical Society; "Congenital Phymosis and Stone in the Urethra," 1870; "Opium Poisoning Treated by Belladonna," 1872; "Ruptured Uterus," 1874, copied into medical journals from Transactions of the State Medical Society; and "Encephaloid Abdominal Tumor," 1875; of a "Biographical Sketch of Joseph Thoburn, M. D.," prepared by request of the medical profession of Wheeling, 1865; of a memorial to the legislature of West Virginia on the appointment of a state geologist, 1870; and of a memorial to the same body on the establishment of a state board of health, 1877; and cases of "Phymosis and Adherent Prepuce," 1877, copied into medical journals from the Transactions of the State Medical Society; "Diagnostic Importance of Symptoms," 1878, copied into medical journals from Transactions of the State Medical Society. In 1850 he was physician to the Ohio county almshouse and Ohio county jail; has been physician ordinary to the prisoners of the United States district court from 1863 to the present time; was physician and secretary of the city board of health in 1864; has been physician to the Children's Home of Wheeling since 1863; was commissioned by Governor Pierpoint state vaccine agent, January 1, 1863, and successively reappointed by Governors Boreman, Stevenson and Jacob, making a service of nearly fifteen years; was president of the board of supervisors of the county of Ohio from 1863 to 1866, inclusive; is a member of the board of education of the independent school district of Wheeling, and has been since 1873, and president of the United States board of examining surgeons for pensions. At the formation, in 1863, of the state of West Virginia, including the establishment of its county organizations, he was elected a member of the board of supervisors of the county of Ohio, serving for three consecutive terms, during all of which he was president of the board; but when he was urged, subsequently, to stand for the city council, and also for the State Senate, he declined, the period of civil war and governmental transition, which impelled him to accept public office as a duty, having passed away. In March, 1853, he married Carolene Louisa, daughter of Dr. A. S. Todd, of Wheeling. From "HISTORY OF WHEELING CITY AND OHIO COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA and Representative Citizens," by Hon. Gibson Lamb Cranmer, 1902. Pages 755 & 756 JOHN COX HUPP, A. M., M. D., a distinguished physician of Wheeling, West Virginia, whose portrait appears herewith, comes from a family noted for heroism and sacrifice in the days of Indian warfare. Philip, John, Frank, Palsar and another brother whose name is not now known, came in 1770 to the frontier from the Shenandoah Valley, and settled on the Dutch Fork of the Buffalo, in what is now Washington County, Pennsylvania, then claimed as a part of Virginia. Frank Hupp was shot by an Indian at Jonathan Link's cabin, 12 miles west of Wheeling, on Middle Wheeling Creek, in September, 1771. John, grandfather of John Cox Hupp, was killed while defending Miller's blockhouse on Buffalo Creek from the Indians on Easter Sunday, 1772. Palsar Hupp settled on the banks of the Monongahela, near Millsboro, and Philip settled in Dutch Creek Valley. John Hupp, one of the brothers above members, left a son of the same name (the father of the subject in this sketch), who was two years old at the time of the siege of the blockhouse, in which he was when his father was killed. He was born July 27, 1780, and on January 19, 1813, was married to Ann Cox, by whom he had four children: Isaac, Joseph; Louisa; and John Cox, of whom only the last named survives. The father died March 12, 1864, and the mother, who was born June 7, 1791, died November 26, 1875. John Cox Hupp was born in Donegal township, Washington County, Pennsylvania, November 24, 1819. He was educated at West Alexander Academy and Washington College, Pennsylvania, from which he was graduated in 1844, taking the degree of A. M. In 1848. He was a fellow student in this institution of the illustrious James G. Blaine. He studied medicine under Dr. F. Julius LeMoyne and at Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, from which he was graduated in 1847. He located in Wheeling, December 16, 1847, and commenced practice in a humble way. A hard, close student, with fixed purpose to excel in his calling, success was his reward. He built up a wide and lucrative practice, and reached the pinnacle of his profession. He was the founder of the State Medical Society, and on February 20, 1870, brought chloral hydrate to the notice of the profession in a case of puerperal mania. In 1873 he inaugurated the policy in the Wheeling schools that when a female teacher does the work of a male instructor she shall have the same remuneration and rank as he would. In 1873 he made a successful effort before the board of education to obtain free school education for colored children, and to establish free night schools. In 1875, through his influence, the German language became a branch of study in the public schools, and in 1877 he was equally successful in making industrial drawing a regular branch of study in the schools. For these liberal efforts he was serenaded by his German friends, and the colored citizens presented him with a gold-headed cane. In 1875 he was appointed a delegate of the American Medical Association to the European Medical Association, which met at Brussels, and was a member of the executive committee of the Centennial Medical Commission to the International Medical Congress at Philadelphia in 1876. Dr. Hupp witnessed the first cremation in the United States in 1876, that of Baron de Palm at Washington, Pennsylvania, in the crematory built under the direction of his former preceptor, Dr. LeMoyne, in which Dr. Gross was subsequently cremated. Dr. Hupp has numerous notable surgical cases to his credit, and has contributed many valuable papers to the leading medical journals of the country. In 1850 he was physician to the Ohio County almshouse and jail, to the United States District Court, to the city board of health, and to the Children's Home; and in 1863 he was commissioned by Governor Pierpont as state vaccine agent, and was re- appointed by Governors Boreman, Stevenson and Jacobs, serving in all fifteen years. He was president of the Ohio county board of supervisors, and in 1862 became United States pension examining surgeon. He was president of the board until he resigned in 1888, and was visiting physician to the West Virginia Home for Aged and Friendless Women. He is a consulting physician of the new city hospital. Dr. John Cox Hupp possesses literary ability to a high degree, and has a vast fund of interesting reminiscences of the early days of the border line of Pennsylvania and West Virginia, and has contributed largely to the press, and also to Creigh's History of Washington County, Pennsylvania. An additional testimonial to his qualifications in this respect is found in the fact that by the voice of his college classmates at the reunion held at Washington, Pennsylvania, August 4, 1869, he was chosen to prepare the quarter century historical sketch of his classmates; other duties, however, prevented his performance of this work. He is well equipped with diaries and voluminous scrapbooks, denoting much mental occupation and energetic investigation through all departments of human interest. Dr. Hupp has an extensive circle of friends. He was a strong Unionist during the Civil War. Dr. Hupp was married March 1, 1853, and of his family of three sons and three daughters one son is deceased. Two sons and two daughters live in Wheeling. He was married to Carolene Louisa Todd on March 1, 1853. Carolene Louisa Todd2 was born in November 1832. She died on January 7, 1915. Carolene Louisa Todd was the daughter of Dr. A. S. Todd and Mary E. Jarrett. From "HISTORY OF THE UPPER OHIO VALLEY," Vol. I, page 573. Brant & Fuller, 1890. ARCHIBALD TODD Archibald Todd was one of a family which contained five physicians. He was born April 10, 1798, and received his early education in New York state. He came west in 1820, and for several years resided with a brother, Dr. S. P. Todd, at West Newton, Penn. Here he began the study of medicine. He taught school one winter and came to Wheeling about 1824, continuing his medical studies with another brother, Dr. M. L. Todd, graduating from Transylvania university, Ky., in 1826. After this he practiced in connection with his brother until the latter's retirement, when he continued to practice alone until about 1868. Dr. Todd married Miss Mary A. E. Woods, February 19, 1828. She died October 24, 1829. He was married a second time, June 25, 1831, to Miss Mary E. Jarrett, by whom six children were born. But two of these, with the mother, survive. One is the wife of Dr. J. C. Hupp. Dr. Todd has been prominently identified with the medical organizations of the state. He was one of the organizers of the City Dispensary and Vaccine institution in 1845; of Ohio County Medical society, in 1847; of the State Medical society, in 1867, and of the Medical society of the city of Wheeling and county of Ohio, in 1868. Of the last named he was once the president. In 1872 he resigned his membership in the State Medical society. Previously he contributed to the society two papers on the Medical Botany of West Virginia, which were printed in the Society's TRANSACTIONS. As a botanist and mineralogist he had no superior in the state. For almost half a century Dr. Todd was identified with all that concerned the good name and prosperity of the city. He was for many years a member of the board of education, and of the board of examiners for teachers. Also a member of the city council. Successful in business, he became financially interested in the suspension bridge, the gas works, street railway, banking and other enterprises, and was called to assist in their management. He was to the end of life a charming companion, and always took pleasure in the visits of his friends. He was an active and sincere Christian man, and elder in the Second Presbyterian church. Dr. Todd's continued interest in is profession is shown by a remark he made to the writer long after his retirement from practice, that he "hoped some day to provide a permanent meeting place for the City Medical society." This purpose was perhaps frustrated by the carping criticism of the doctor's technical breach of the code of ethics, persistently heralded by one or two members of the society who had more than once given the same code a "compound, comminuted fracture." Dr. Todd died May 1, 1883, loved and sincerely mourned by many and respected by all, and his memory will long be cherished by all who were honored with his friendship. John Cox Hupp and Carolene Louisa Todd had the following children: +45 i. Archie Todd Hupp (born on October 1, 1855). +46 ii. Amanda Virginia Hupp (born on October 9, 1859). +47 iii. Ann Louise Hupp (born on January 30, 1862). +48 iv. Frank LeMoyne Hupp M.D. (born on July 8, 1865). +49 v. Augusta Genevieve Hupp (born on December 1, 1868). 50 vi. John Cox Hupp was born on March 18, 1871. He died on April 8, 1873. FIFTH GENERATION 31. John Cox Hupp (Isaac-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on January 4, 1842. He died on July 26, 1930. He was married to Margaret Bennett. 32. Atkinson Hupp (Isaac-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1). He was married to Mary Margaret Copp. 33. Isaac W. Hupp (Isaac-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on December 3, 1850. He died on November 17, 1909. He was married to Nancy Ellen Lewman. 34. Emaline Hupp (Isaac-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Unknown Caldwell. 35. Mary Hupp (Isaac-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Edward Gifford. 45. Archie Todd Hupp2 (John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on October 1, 1855. He died on October 17, 1943. He was married to Matilda Adams Coen. Matilda Adams Coen2 was born on October 6, 1857. She died on February 28, 1894. Archie Todd Hupp and Matilda Adams Coen had the following children: +51 i. Kathryn L. Hupp (born on April 23, 1883). +52 ii. Carolene Louise Hupp (born on March 8, 1885). +53 iii. John Cox Hupp M.D. (born on April 24, 1887). +54 iv. Archie Todd Hupp Jr. (born on June 15, 1889). 55 v. Mary Todd Hupp was born on November 14, 1891. She died on October 13, 1893. +56 vi. Matilda Adams Hupp (born on February 24, 1894). 46. Amanda Virginia Hupp (John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on October 9, 1859. She died on March 9, 1949. She was married to Charles V. Harding. 47. Ann Louise Hupp (John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on January 30, 1862. She died on September 24, 1925. She was married to Dr. Robert H. Bullard. 48. Frank LeMoyne Hupp M.D. (John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on July 8, 1865. He died on December 26, 1929. From A HISTORY OF NURSING IN WEST VIRGINIA, Published by the West Virginia State Nurses' Association, circa 1940; pages 29-30. On December 26, 1929, individual nurses in West Virginia, as well as the State Nurses' Association, lost an understanding friend and benefactor in the death of Dr. Frank LeMoyne Hupp. A member of the State Board of Nurse Examiners for ten years and its president for eight years, a regular attendant at the annual meetings of the Association, and always interested in schools of nursing, Dr. Hupp was thoroughly conversant with the problems involved in nursing education. Donating his time, his services and finances, as well, he made many trips both in West Virginia and elsewhere in the interests of nursing. As a member of the surgical staff of the Ohio Valley General Hospital, Wheeling, he was instrumental in having that school of nursing approved by the New York Board of Regents. Sympathetic and approachable, Dr. Hupp was known and loved by nurses throughout the state. Wishing to honor his memory, a Scholarship Loan Fund was formed and named for him. The Fund, organized in 1931 and administered by a board of trustees of the West Virginia State Nurses' Association, may be borrowed in $500 amounts without interest for two years by nurse members who are eligible for the loan. To date (1940), the Fund is $5166.50, of which the Hupp family (the late Dr. Elizabeth Hupp (widow), Miss Elizabeth Hupp, daughter, and Mr. Archie T. Hupp, brother) have contributed $1025.00. The balance was donations from District Associations, Alumnae Associations, and individuals. Twenty-seven nurses have benefited by the Fund. Mrs. Jean T. Dillon, R. N., who was appointed the first chairman of the Board of Trustees, was largely instrumental in the compilation of the loan forms which are still in use. A Board of Trustees of five nurses, two of whom are elected annually, administer the Fund. For the past two years, the entire amount of the Fund has been in continuous use. The first Board of trustees was composed of: Jean T. Dillon, Chairman, Charleston; Ora A. Campion, Treasurer, Elkins; Jennie Fontaine Wilson, Wheeling; Fannie S. Welsh, Martinsburg; Sister M. Stanislaus, Wheeling. He was married to Adel Jeliffe. Adel Jeliffe was born on July 17, 1871. She died on May 25, 1919. 49. Augusta Genevieve Hupp (John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on December 1, 1868. She died on February 14, 1948. AUGUSTA HUPP DICKINSON February 14, 1948 - Source unknown Mrs. Augusta Hupp Dickinson, widow of Charles Fred Dickinson, and daughter of the late Dr. John C. Hupp, died Friday evening at 5:20 o'clock in the Ohio Valley General Hospital after an illness. Mrs. Dickinson had been a patient in the hospital five weeks. Mrs. Dickinson, a member of an old and prominent Wheeling family received her early education in the Wheeling schools, graduating from Miss Hillman's school in Philadelphia, Pa. She was united in marriage to Charles Fred Dickinson on November 6, 1894. Her husband preceded her on June 4, 1909. Mrs. Dickinson was a member of the first Presbyterian church. She belonged to the Fifth Twig of the Ohio Valley General hospital association. Her residence was at 59 14th street. The following brothers and sisters preceded her in death: Archie T. Hupp, Dr. Frank LeMoyne hupp, John C. Hupp, and Mrs. Robert H. Bullard, all formerly of this city. Friends will be received at Kepner's 1308 Chapline street, after 6 o'clock this evening, Funeral services will be conducted in the funeral home Monday morning at 11 o'clock. The Rev. Martin L. Gerhardt, D.D., minister of the First Presbyterian church, will officiate. Interment will follow in Greenwood cemetery. She was married to Charles Fred Dickinson on November 6, 1894. SIXTH GENERATION 51. Kathryn L. Hupp (Archie Todd-5, John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on April 23, 1883. She was married to Wilson P. Burruss. Kathryn L. Hupp and Wilson P. Burruss had the following children: 57 i. Kathryn Burruss. 58 ii. Jane Burruss. 59 iii. Richard Parks Burruss. 52. Carolene Louise Hupp (Archie Todd-5, John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on March 8, 1885. She was married to Dr. M. B. Williams. Carolene Louise Hupp and Dr. M. B. Williams had the following children: 60 i. Carol Williams. 53. John Cox Hupp M.D. (Archie Todd-5, John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on April 24, 1887. He was married to Florence Draher. John Cox Hupp M.D. and Florence Draher had the following children: 61 i. Carolene Hupp. 62 ii. Emma Hupp. 63 iii. John Cox Hupp Jr.. 54. Archie Todd Hupp Jr.2 (Archie Todd-5, John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown- 1) was born on June 15, 1889. He died in October 1977. He was married to Mary Hazel Miller. Archie Todd Hupp Jr. and Mary Hazel Miller had the following children: +64 i. Virginia Miller Hupp (born on December 11, 1915). +65 ii. Archie Todd Hupp III (born on April 18, 1918). +66 iii. Henry Miller Hupp (born on September 22, 1920). 56. Matilda Adams Hupp (Archie Todd-5, John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on February 24, 1894. She died on September 24, 1930. She was married to Alex W. Young. SEVENTH GENERATION 64. Virginia Miller Hupp (Archie Todd-6, Archie Todd-5, John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on December 11, 1915. She was married to James Myron Campbell. She was married to Louis C. Hofmann. 65. Archie Todd Hupp III (Archie Todd-6, Archie Todd-5, John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1) was born on April 18, 1918. He died on April 9, 1990. He was married to Martha Phillips. Archie Todd Hupp III and Martha Phillips had the following children: 67 i. Archie Todd Hupp IV. 68 ii. Sarah Hupp. 69 iii. Mary Cydney Hupp. 66. Henry Miller Hupp2 (Archie Todd-6, Archie Todd-5, John Cox-4, John-3, John- 2, Unknown-1) was born on September 22, 1920. Education: Woodsdale Grade School Triadelphia High School West Liberty College Barritz University in France North Carolina State University U. S. Army - 281st. Field Artillery Batt. 1943-1946 - 19 mo. European Theatre of Operations Employment: 1946 - 1949 Cashier, Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Co. 1949 Wheeling Park Commission - Accounting Dept., then Comptroller, retired 1985 1959-1965 Board of Regents for Revenue Resources Management School. Taught Investment and Cash Control in Revenue Resources Schools for 21 years for which he received two awards. He was liaison between Wheeling Park Commission and the Revenue Resources School for 25 years. He is Certified by the National Recreation & Park Association as a Certified Park & Recreational Professional. He is a member of Simpson United Methodist Church in Moundsville, WV. Member of Marshall Co. Historical Society - Treasurer 1999, 2000, 2001. Marriages: Mary Virginia Brandt 1948 - 1990 Eileen Woods 1991 - 1998 Naomi Parks Lowe 1999 Children: Elizabeth Gray Hupp; married Rev. Peter Jessen Barbara "Heidi" Miller Hupp; married Bradford Wilson Grandchildren: Zachery Thomas Wilson Chelsea Brandt Wilson Jennifer Elizabeth Jessen James Peter Jessen [Information provided by Naomi Lowe Hupp, Nov 2003] He was married to Mary Virginia Brandt in 1948. Mary Virginia Brandt died in 1990. Henry Miller Hupp and Mary Virginia Brandt had the following children: +70 i. Elizabeth Gray Hupp. +71 ii. Barbara Miller "Heidi" Hupp. He was married to Eileen Woods in 1991. Eileen Woods died in 1998. He was married to (Emma) Naomi Parks (daughter of Archie Lyle Parks and Olive May Bonar) on February 13, 1999. (Emma) Naomi Parks was born on October 11, 1919. EIGHTH GENERATION 70. Elizabeth Gray Hupp (Henry Miller-7, Archie Todd-6, Archie Todd-5, John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Rev. Peter Jessen. Elizabeth Gray Hupp and Rev. Peter Jessen had the following children: 72 i. Jennifer Elizabeth Jessen. 73 ii. James Peter Jessen. 71. Barbara Miller "Heidi" Hupp (Henry Miller-7, Archie Todd-6, Archie Todd-5, John Cox-4, John-3, John-2, Unknown-1). She was married to Bradford Wilson. Barbara Miller "Heidi" Hupp and Bradley Wilson had the following children: 74 i. Zachery Thomas Wilson. 75 ii. Chelsea Brandt Wilson.