CEMETERY: Old Saint John's Church Yard, Pequea, Lancaster County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Abby Bowman Copyright 2005. All rights reserved. http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/copyright.htm http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/pa/lancaster/ ________________________________________________________________________ PAPERS READ BEFORE THE LANCASTER COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY Friday, December 6, 1917. Vol. XXI. No. 10, Lancaster, PA., 1917; Pages 155-161 ________________________________________________________________________ (155) OLD ST. JOHN'S CHURCH YARD, PEQUEA. "Great families of yesterday we show And lords whose parents were the Lord knows who." --Defoe. Pennsylvania, obviously, was not named after William Penn the Quaker, but in honor of his father, Admiral Penn, the Churchman. Had William Penn his way the Province (1) might have been called New Wales. It was Charles the Second who insisted on the name Pennsylvania. The Charter issued in 1681 for Pennsylvania decreed: "And our further pleasure is and we do hereby, for us, our heirs and successors, charge and require, that if any of the inhabitants of the said Province, to the number of twenty, shall at any time hereafter be desirous and shall by any writing, or by any persons deputed for them, signify such their desire to the Bishop of London that any preacher or preachers to be approved of by the said Bishop, may be sent unto them for their instruction, that then such preacher or preachers shall and may be and reside within the said Province without any denial or molestation whatsoever." There was no congregation of the Church of England within the limits of Pennsylvania, notwithstanding the stipulation in the Charter allowing such, until 1695. As soon as the petition for a parish (Christ Church, Philadelphia) was presented, the Quaker magistrates arrested the attorney who drew it up and several of the principal signers. The Quakers called the first rector of Christ Church, Philadelphia, the Reverend Thomas Clayton, "the minister of the doctrine of devils." Probably with a knowledge of the Charter given to William Penn a sufficient number signed the unique petition which is found in the old Vestry Book belonging to "Saint John's Church, Pequea, in ye county of Chester and Province of Pennsylvania," and printed in Vol. 13, p. 135, of the proceedings of this Society. A wooden church was erected in 1729 upon a plot of ground containing one acre and one perch, and a portion of this ground was reserved for a graveyard, where: "Each in his cell forever laid The rude forefathers of the hamlet sleep." Perhaps no grave in the old churchyard attracts more attention than does that of Peter Bezaillion, the Indian Trader. He was born in Canada, of French parentage, and came to this region with Letort, the Indian Trader and other French Protestants in 1686. Bezaillion traded with the Indians in what are now Delaware, Chester and Lancaster counties prior to 1696; and was particularly active in the trade at Conestoga Indian town. About this time he owned a plantation on the west side of the Schuylkill (2) referred to in the minutes of the Board of Property in February, 1717, as: "The old plantation where Peter Bezaillion formerly dwelt." He did not remain there long, as he began to roam about the Province. He penetrated the distant wilderness; bartered with the Indians for peltries; and established trading posts at various points. (156) About the year 1729 he settled down on a farm in Cain township (3) Chester county. From papers now in the possession of Mr. Joseph Beale, of Coatesville, it is evident that Bezaillion was only a tenant when he located there, for, in 1729, he paid the owner of the tract, John Bezor, eighty-three dollars quit rent. In 1737, Bezaillion and his wife Martha took title from John Warden, of Philadelphia, successor of John Bezor, for five hundred acres of land located now partly in Coatesville and partly in East Cain township. This tract extended from the Smith's of the North and South Valley Hills; and embraced the full width of the Chester Valley. From the Bezaillions the land descended to the Harts, and from them to the Gardners. One hundred and ninety acres of the original tract are in possession of the Beale family to-day. The house in which Peter Bezaillion lived was located within the limits of the present city of Coatesville, and stood near the southwest corner of Olive and 12th streets. a part of this house was standing twenty years ago. Peter Bazaillion did not have his trading post (4) at his permanent residence, as his headquarters were among the Paxtang Indians, where, in 1721, it has been recorded that he had a trading post. His brother Richard was associated with him. Peter Bezaillion was a cunning, crafty trader . . . .one who was treacherous in his business deals not only with the aborigines but the Colonists as well. His dishonest methods aroused the ire and suspicion of the Provincial authorities. On December 19, 1693, the Bezaillion brothers, and the Letort's (husband and wife) were accused before the Provincial Council by Thomas Jenner and Polycarpus Rose of having carried on a secret correspondence in the year before with "the strange Indians called the Shall-Narooners (Shawanees) and the French of Canada." That his treachery was known to many is evident from a letter which William Markham (5) wrote to the Governor of Maryland under date of June 26, 1696, the Governor of Pennsylvania says: "Upon the copy of what Col. Herman gave unto your Excellency and Council, I shall require security for Bezaillion tho' I know that will not satisfy the Coll. He (Bezaillion) will still be uneasy until he get all the Indian trade to himself." In 1701, the case of Peter Bezaillion was brought to the attention of William Penn and the Council. He was suspected of being "a very dangerous person in his traffic with the Indians in this troublesome conjuncture of affairs." The Provincial Council resolved that: "It was absolutely necessary that the Frenchman should be restrained from trading or inhabiting amongst the Indians." Two years later Peter Bezaillion was required by Council to give bonds in the amount of 500 pounds and was admonished "to behave himself as a good and loyal subject of Queen Anne." In 1710 he was referred to by the Governor of the Province "as a Frenchman, a Roman Catholic, and a suspicious person generally who trades with the Conestoga Indians." In 1711 his fidelity (6) was again suspected, and this time he was thrown into prison. Despite his unscrupulous business methods, Peter Bezaillion was a man of some importance (7) in the Province, as the following record in the Minutes of the Provincial Council dated May 18, 1704, would seem to indicate: "Peter Bezaillion, ye French trader, coming to town (Phila.) and being sent for informed ye board that he had heard that those of ye Five Nations who intended shortly down this way, had a design of carrying off the Shawanah Indians, both those settled near Conestoga and those near Lechay, they being colonies of a nation that were their enemies." His services as interpreter (8) were employed on numerous occasions. When Governor John Evans visited the Shawanese Indians of Pequehan or Pequea on June 30, 1707, the Indian King Opessah received him and delivered a speech in behalf of the youth of the town. Peter Bezaillion, who accompanied the Governor on this trip, acted as interpreter. (157) In November, 1708, Bezaillion was given permission by the Property Commissioners to erect a home and plant fields for his own use on the lands above Conestoga. In May, 1712, he was licensed by the Governor to trade with the Indians. In July of the same year the Governor told the Indians that Peter Bezaillion was the only trader who had ever been allowed by the Governor to settle amongst them. In 1714 he again received a warrant from the Commissioners of Property allowing him to "seat himself at Paxtang, or at any other Indian town or place on the Susquehanna, in this Province, and to erect such buildings as are necessary for his trade." On July 18, 1717, he acted as interpreter for the Delawares at a conference held at Conestoga. His name appears on the first tax list of Conestoga township after its erection in 1718. In 1728 he acted with Nicholas and John Schull as interpreters at an Indian conference held in Philadelphia. He died on July 18, 1742, at the advanced age of eighty (9). His personal property was appraised at 573 pounds; and he names eight slaves in his will. One of these slaves Ceasar Gloss by name, Bezaillion brought with him when he settled in Cain township. Tradition says that Gloss was the handy man about his place . . . . he built the house and had supervision over the workmen. He lived to an advanced age; and the house in which this slave dwelt was located on the site of the present Drumpelier Hospital at Coatesville. Some of his descendants are living in Coatesville to-day. One of the earliest Indian paths (10) that led from Philadelphia westward and the one which Peter Bebaillion [sic] followed in his trading trips between Philadelphia and his trading posts at Conoy Town and Paxtang, crossed Delaware county diagonally and branched at Tom Moore's mill in the Chester valley, now Downingtown. This path followed the "Old Road" to a point in Lancaster county just beyond the village of White Horse, where it branched to the right and led on through Springville, past Roland's Church to the present power house on the New Holland pike. From this point it followed the dividing line between Earl and Leacock and Penn and Hempleld [sic] townships, past the old Donegal Church to Conoy creek and from thence to Conoy Town. A few miles of the eastern part of "Old Peters Road" in Salisburg (11) township, remains and is known by that name to-day; that part extending from Mount Joy Borough to Conoy creek via Donegal Meeting House has lost its name, but it remains as it was laid out nearly two hundred years ago. In 1740 the inhabitants of Warwick township petitioned the Court that "the old road or trail commonly called "Peters Road" which was made and used in early times would answer the inhabitants better "than a new road recently laid out. The Court ordered the road to be reviewed as to course and distance and that the proceedings of the same be reported to the Court. After several petitions and revisions it was finally confirmed in the November sessions; and so this part of "Old Peters Road" became absorbed in one of the highways of our county. Peter Bezaillion married Martha Combe, a sister of Moses and John Combe, Indian traders, and a woman whom tradition has associated with St. John's in high praise. In 1732 a report was sent from St. John's to the Venerable S. P. G. in which Martha Bezaillion is mentioned as "a principal benefactrix." About this time she had contributed one hundred pounds towards the purchase of a glebe of one hundred acres "for the use and behoof of a clergyman rightly ordained and regularly licensed and authorized to officiate in said church under the Jurisdiction of the Bishop of London." In 1753 she contributed 5 pounds 8 shillings toward the erection of a stone church. (158) In 1764, the Rev. Thomas Barton wrote to the Secretary of the S. P. G. that Martha Bezaillion's character deserved to be recorded. "She contributed so generously to the Church at Pequea, and it pleased Providence, weak as I am to bring that woman into the Church. I baptized her when above forty years old, and she is a sober pious Christian and zealous for our Church." Barton was mistaken about her age. She was at least seventy. Barton was ordained in 1755; and came to St. John's in 1759. It is highly improbable that he should have baptized her before this year . . . . certainly not before his ordination in 1755. She died on June 18, 1764, aged 71 years. The statement (12) of Reverend Wilson Walters that both Peter Bezaillion and his wife were members of the Church of England is erroneous. As far as could be learned Peter neither contributed to the support nor became a member of the parish. In all probability he was of Huguenot extraction, and not a Roman Catholic as the Governor of Penna. claimed him. In 1719 a patent (13) was granted to Martha Bezaillion for 700 acres of land on the east bank of the Susquehanna between Chickasalunga and Conewago creeks, adjoining the Conoy Indian town. She gave 158 acres of this land to John Hart by deed of Dec. 22, 1762. Moses Combe, (14) a brother of Martha Bezaillion, was successfully engaged in the Indian trade in Donegal township where he had a post of Conoy creek before 1716. He died about 1736 and was buried beside his sister Martha. The John Hart to whom Martha deeded 158 acres of land in 1762 is said to be her nephew. He was licensed as an Indian trader in 1744, and was a son of John Hart, the "Shamokin trader," who was accidently [sic] killed while hunting with the Indians on the Ohio 1729-1730. John Hart (15) had a brother Thomas who was a merchant in Philadelphia. Peter Bezaillion purchased from him such goods and trinkets as were needed for his trade; and in return sold to Thomas Hart the peltries, etc., which he procured from the Indians. Thomas Hart died May 18, 1774, and was buried by the side of Peter Bezaillion. The Clemsons (16) became connected with the parish of St. John's early in its history. The progenitor of this family was Jacob Clemson, who was one of the early Swedish settlers in Delaware before 1650. His son James married Jean Coates who came from England with her parents in 1682. The Coates' family were strict Friends; and are said to have a common ancestry with William Penn. It was through this marriage that the Clemsons became identified with the Friends. The first James Clemson and his wife are buried in the old Friends Burying Ground, 4th and Arch streets, Philadelphia. His son, the 2nd James Clemson, and Thomas are buried at old Sadsbury Burying Ground. The 3rd James Clemson was the first of his family to leave the Quakers. In 1750 he married Margaret Herd – a daughter of Stephen Herd and a strict Presbyterian. She was a member of the Octoraro Church. He refused to go with her to the Presbyterian Church, and she refused to go to Quaker meeting. They compromised and joined St. John's Protestant Episcopal Church, Pequea. In 1753 James Clemson the third was one of the fifty-two subscribers towards the erection of the first stone church. He later served in the Vestry. He died on July 13, 1792, aged 63 years, and was buried in the church yard. The first James Clemson, who lived and died in Philadelphia, took up three tracts of land in Salisbury township in 1716 for his son James the second. He also purchased a tract of land on the "old road" near White Horse, Penna. The house built in 1735 for the second James Clemson was standing until a short time ago. John Clemson, son of John the first, had but one child – a daughter Hannah, who on Oct. 31, 1747, was married to John, son of Adam Buckley, of Brandywine Hundred, New Castle county. What is now known as Buckley's farm, (159) Hannah inherited. Hannah's daughter Ann married Ammon Grubb. Ann's niece, Harriet Amelia, daughter of Daniel Buckley, married Henry Bates Grubb on Dec. 1, 1808. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Levi Bull at Daniel's homestead called "Competence Farm." Louisa Clemson, a descendent of Thomas Clemson, married Dr. Samuel Washington, a grandnephew of General George Washington. Another noted family buried in the churchyard is that which bears the name of Douglass (17). Tradition claims them direct descendants of the famous robber- baron clan that terrorized all Scotland generations ago. The progenitors of this family are Andrew, James and Archibald. These three brothers were engaged in the rebellion of 1715 in favor of the Pretender, and for that cause were obliged to leave their native land. They came from near Edinburgh, and landed in America sometime during 1725-1728. They settled near the fertile valley of the Pequea; and were associated with St. John's Parish from its inception. The history of this sturdy family of pioneers is so closely interwoven with that of the parish, that one cannot write of the former without including the latter. The names of Andrew, James and Archibald appear on the first list of subscribers in 1729. When funds were solicited for a stone church in 1753, Archibald's contribution was the largest received. In 1740 Andrew Douglass served as Commissioner of Lancaster county. He died Jan. 20, 1742, and was buried in the churchyard. His son George married Mary Piersol and settled in Berks county, where he was a justice of the peace before the Revolution. From 1772-1784 he was one of the judges of the County Court. James Douglass took up one hundred acres of land in Lancaster county in 1738. He died on Nov. 8, 1757. He left one son, Edward, who with his uncle Archibald took up 500 acres of land in Lancaster county in 1743. Archibald Douglass died Nov. 26, 1756, and was buried in the churchyard. He was the father of eight children. His son, John, was a Judge in the Lancaster County Court; and a member of the Assembly (18) in the years 1756, 1761, 1762, 1763. Another son, Thomas, born in 1722 and died May 27, 1794. He, too, was buried in the church yard. In his will probated on June 23, 1794, he stipulated among other things that: "fifty pounds be given to the use of Saint John's Church at Pequea, for building or repairing the same, to be applied as the Vestry and Congregation may think proper. "Item. I give fifty pounds to be let on land securely and interest thereof to be paid annually forever to the Church and Minister of St. John's Church at Pequea, and his successors in that place. "Item. I give ten pounds to purchase a hearse for the use of the Congregation of St. John's Church. "Item. I give sixty-five pounds to be distributed amongst the needful (not meaning the poor who are a public charge of the township of Salisburg) to be divided as my executors and a majority of the township may think proper. "Item. I require that my executors forever shall pay to the use of St. John's Church aforesaid every first day of May the sum of two pounds lawful, to be paid to those who may be legally authorized to receive the sum of two pounds. "This is also my order ---- desire that the Church and Clergy and the poor always have preference in their payments, and that these my orders may fully and truly to every true meaning be fulfilled as soon as the money can be collected, having reference to his as my last will and testament." James Douglass had one son, Edward. Edward's son, Archibald, married Rebecca Richardson. (160) The father of Rebecca Douglass was William Richardson, who came to the Pequea valley before 1720, and settled along the "Old Peters Road" near what is now White Horse. The old King's Highway was the southern boundary of his land. He was one of the founders of St. John's Parish. Upon a pyramidal monument (19) in the old church yard may be seen this inscription: Adelaide Born Jan. 31, 1835 Died May 31, 1856 The following is a brief version of her unhappy romance: The Reverend Edward Purdon Wright was rector of St. John's from 1854-1856. Just before coming to the parish he married a widow by the name of Corryell, who had two children Adelaide and Thomas. In the summer of 1855, a young foreigner, presumably a Spaniard, by the name of Joseph Hazazer was employed to paint the church. He and Adelaide fell in love with each other, and the mother looked with much disfavor upon the attachment. The young people taking advantage of the absence of the parent, walked to the parsonage of the Pequea Presbyterian church and were married by the Reverend John Wallace. In his diary he records it as follows: "Tuesday, June 26, 1855, 4 p.m. by the Rev. John Wallace Joseph Hazazer to Adelaide Corryell, Philadelphia and Salisbury, Lancaster county." The mother would not allow the man to claim his bride. Adelaide died at the age of twenty-one. Her child was taken away by the mother and neither of the parents ever knew what became of it. Mrs. Wright had the monument erected with the name Adelaide Corryell inscribed upon it. Sometime afterwards Mr. Hazazer visited the grave and had his name carved on it. This the Wrights' had taken off and left the name "Adelaide" there, and thus it remains to this day. Joseph Hazazer married again and had children. He was a member of the firm of Haldy and Hazazer, painters and artists, of Philadelphia. The oldest tomb in the churchyard bears the date 1731 and was erected to the memory of George Boyd (20). His son, George Boyd, Jr., died June 12, 1763, aged 48 years. George, Jr., married Mary, daughter of Archibald Douglass. They had eight children the eldest of whom John, was a Colonel of the 7th Battalion of Lancaster county Militia in the Revolution; and he also participated in the Jersey Campaign. A daughter Margaret became the second wife of Captain James Hamilton, who for fifty years kept the Bulls Head Tavern on the old road in Salisbury township, now the private residence of Arthur Burt. In 1764 the Reverend Thomas Barton writes: "A stone wall encloses the graveyard, but it is not yet covered." None of the incumbents of St. John's Parish have been buried in the churchyard. References. 1. History of St. John's Parish, by W. R. Yeakel. 2. The Wilderness Trail, by Hanna, Vol. 1, page 165-181. 3. History of Chester County, by Futhey & Cope, page 482. 4. Ellis and Evans' History of Lancaster Co., page 15. 5. The Wilderness Trail, Vol. 1, page 165-181. 6. Ellis and Evans, pages 7-8. 7. The Wilderness Trail, Vol. 1, page 136. 8. Ellis and Evans, pages 7-8. 9. Futhey & Cope, page 482. 10. The Wilderness Trail, Vol. 1 page 181. 11. Ellis and Evans, page 309. (161) 12. History of St. James' Parish, by Wilson Walters. 13. Futhey & Cope, page 482. 14. The Wilderness Trail, Vol. 1, pages 165-181. 15. Futhey & Cope, page 483. 16. Data in possession of Miss M. B. Clark. 17. Biographical Annals of Lancaster County. 18. Penna. Archives Series, 2 Vol., 9 pages, 795-196. 19. Data procured from Miss E. Baldwin. 20. Data in possession of Miss M. B. Clark.