Advertisement

Fleming Cobbs Sr.

Advertisement

Fleming Cobbs Sr.

Birth
Buckingham County, Virginia, USA
Death
10 Jan 1846 (aged 78)
Charleston, Kanawha County, West Virginia, USA
Burial
Spring Hill, Kanawha County, West Virginia, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
He is the son Of Thomas Cobb and Nancy Upton Cobb.
[Middle initial of B. has been removed due to lack of documentation, 1 April 2022. Information received by contributor Anonymous (50277040)]
He married Sarah Morris 10 January 1796 in Kanawha County, West Virginia
[In the "History of Charleston and Kanawha County, West Virginia, and representative citizens" it states that Fleming Cobb and Sarah Morris were married 1795 by James Johnson.]
Family Search (https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/collaborate/LKG4-GDR : viewed 1 April 2022) [Unresolved Discrepancy with marriage date of 1795 or 10 January 1796]
Fleming Cobb was a famous scout and canoeman. A chapter in the referenced book is devoted to his military service and home. He had an uncle named Thomas Upton, so it is assumed that his mother's maiden name was Upton. Fleming Cobb served with his cousin, Thomas Upton, Jr., as a ranger at Fort Lee. ["Pioneers and Their Homes on Upper Kanawha" by Ruth Woods Dayton, pp.59-65.] b.One of the legends about Cobb is that he stood on the south shore of the Kanawha and shot an Indian on what is now Wilson's Island. Sarah is supposed to have used the Indian's skull as a soap dish. At one time when Fort Lee was very short of ammunition and expecting an Indian attack, Fleming poled a canoe down the river to Ft. Pleasant for supplies. He saw a war party of Indians apparently on their way upriver to Fort Lee. Fortunately, he was on his way back home, so he managed to evade them in the night, arriving in Charleston ahead of them, and the day was saved. ["From Culpeper County to the Teays Valley" by Gibbs, p. 50.]
Family Search (https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/collaborate/LKG4-GDR : viewed 1 April 2022)

1791-1793 Defense of Frontier,Vol Militia
He is the son Of Thomas Cobb and Nancy Upton Cobb.
[Middle initial of B. has been removed due to lack of documentation, 1 April 2022. Information received by contributor Anonymous (50277040)]
He married Sarah Morris 10 January 1796 in Kanawha County, West Virginia
[In the "History of Charleston and Kanawha County, West Virginia, and representative citizens" it states that Fleming Cobb and Sarah Morris were married 1795 by James Johnson.]
Family Search (https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/collaborate/LKG4-GDR : viewed 1 April 2022) [Unresolved Discrepancy with marriage date of 1795 or 10 January 1796]
Fleming Cobb was a famous scout and canoeman. A chapter in the referenced book is devoted to his military service and home. He had an uncle named Thomas Upton, so it is assumed that his mother's maiden name was Upton. Fleming Cobb served with his cousin, Thomas Upton, Jr., as a ranger at Fort Lee. ["Pioneers and Their Homes on Upper Kanawha" by Ruth Woods Dayton, pp.59-65.] b.One of the legends about Cobb is that he stood on the south shore of the Kanawha and shot an Indian on what is now Wilson's Island. Sarah is supposed to have used the Indian's skull as a soap dish. At one time when Fort Lee was very short of ammunition and expecting an Indian attack, Fleming poled a canoe down the river to Ft. Pleasant for supplies. He saw a war party of Indians apparently on their way upriver to Fort Lee. Fortunately, he was on his way back home, so he managed to evade them in the night, arriving in Charleston ahead of them, and the day was saved. ["From Culpeper County to the Teays Valley" by Gibbs, p. 50.]
Family Search (https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/collaborate/LKG4-GDR : viewed 1 April 2022)

1791-1793 Defense of Frontier,Vol Militia

Inscription

Erected
To the memory of
FLEMING COBBS
Who was born
December 23, 1767
departed this life Jan.
10th 1846

Gravesite Details

This marker was erected by the Daughters of the American Revolution, it is not his original grave stone



Advertisement