John Hogan (North Carolina planter)

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John Hogan
Borncirca 1745
Prince William County, Virginia Colony
DiedApril 1810
Montgomery County, Tennessee
AllegianceUnited States of America
Service/branchNorth Carolina militia
Years of service1775-1776
RankColonel
UnitOrange County Regiment
Commands heldOrange County Regiment (1775-1776)
Battles/warsBattle of Moore's Creek Bridge
Spouse(s)Mary Lloyd

John Hogan (1740 – April 1810) was an American planter and soldier from Orange County, North Carolina. He was a member of the North Carolina state senate in 1779.

Early life[]

It is widely believed that John was born in Prince William County, Virginia. By 1770, he had married Mary Lloyd, daughter of Col. Maj. Thomas Lloyd III (b. abt 1710, d. 1792) who had come to Orange Co, North Carolina in 1753 from Prince George County, Virginia. The couple settled in Orange County, North Carolina by 1772, and bought a farm near Chapel Hills, which is still owned by some members of the Hogan family.[1]

Career[]

On September 9, 1775, he was commissioned as colonel and commander of the Orange County Regiment, North Carolina militia. He served as chairman of the Orange County Committee of Safety in 1776. He was also Justice of the Peace in 1777, county trusty in 1778, and Senator in the North Carolina General Assembly from Orange County in 1779. In 1792, he was one of several donors of 200 acres of land to insure siting of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.[2][3]

In 1793, he contracted to make the bricks to build what is now called 'Old East,' the oldest state university building in the nation.[4] His name is among those of the land donors on a large marble tablet prominently displayed in Memorial Hall at the University.

Move west and death[]

In the fall of 1795, Col. Hogan moved west with his two married sons, Thomas and John, and his only known daughter, Margaret Lloyd (Hogan) Kimble, to Brush Creek, territory south of the Ohio River in Montgomery County, Tennessee. By 1798 he had purchased 1047 acres of land on Brush Creek and the Cumberland River. He is reported to have died in Montgomery County in April 1810. There is a memorial with his name on it at the New Hope Presbyterian Church Cemetery in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.[5]

References[]

  1. ^ Engstrom, Mary Claire (1991). "Lloyd (or Loyd, Loyde), Thomas".
  2. ^ "Board of Trustees Minutes, December 3-13, 1792 [Containing Reports Regarding the Site of the University]". Documenting the American South. University of North Carolina. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  3. ^ Lewis, J.D. "The American Revolution in North Carolina, Colonel John Hogan". Retrieved March 18, 2019.
  4. ^ "Colonel John Hogan donated land and brick for University of North Carolina". The Daily Tar Heel. The Daily Tar Heel. 11 October 1965. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  5. ^ Hogan Genealogy: The Descendants of Colonel John Hogan and Mary Lloyd Hogan of Orange County, NC and Montgomery County, Tennessee
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