Ohio History Journal

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JOHN CAREY, AN OHIO PIONEER

JOHN CAREY, AN OHIO PIONEER

 

By MURIEL KINNEY1

 

I am proud that I have done my share of work.2

John Carey, a mere child, came to Ohio with his parents in

1798 and in 1822 he again migrated into the "New Purchase"

where he "cut a hole in the wilderness" and built a home which

was typical of early American patriarchal plantations. Here he

lived for fifty-three years, taking active part in whatever con-

cerned the development of the new State, Ohio, in which he

always took great pride.

He was descended from a Norman French family somewhat

renowned in the development of England from the time of Wil-

liam the Conqueror, belonging to that branch of the Carey family,

deriving from Sir John Carey, or Carew, who was banished to

Ireland in the disturbances between his friend Richard II, and

Henry, who at a later date became Henry IV, king of England.

The immigrant, Thomas Carey, received his grant to an estate in

Maryland from Cecil, Lord Baltimore, in 1666 and settled on land

called, "Carey's Adventure" on Great Manny Creek, Somerset

County, Maryland.    Thomas's son, Edward, migrated again

into what is now the state of Delaware3 and settled on Her-

ring Branch and Rehoboth Bay, while his brother John settled

further south on the Indian River. This territory later came

into dispute between Pennsylvania and Maryland but ulti-

mately became a part of the province of Delaware. John Carey

of Ohio was descended from Edward of Herring Branch, being

sixth in line from him and counting many a Quaker lady in his

ancestry. His father, Stephen Brown Carey, migrated soon after

his marriage, into Monongalia County, Virginia, where, among

1 Miss Muriel Kinney is preparing a book manuscript of the life of Carey and

should be most happy to receive any items concerning him which may be preserved

in private papers.

2 John Carey in a speech delivered in the House of Representatives, April

13, 1860.

3 This incident occurred after the Penn grant and the beginning of the settlement

of Pennsylvania.

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