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Family
histories & biographies:
George LIVINGOOD of Snyder Co. Pa.
Jacob LIVINGOOD, Jr. of Snyder Co. Pa.
Jacob LIVINGOOD, Sr.
of Snyder Co. Pa.
Jacob B. LEAVENGOOD of Coshocton Co. Pa.
John LEVEGOOD SEN. of Tioga Co.,
Pa.
John LIVINGOOD of Snyder Co. Pa.
John
Feight (or Velt/Felt) LIVENGOOD of Snyder Co. Pa.
Peter C. LEAVENGOOD of Union
Co. Pa.
Silas G. LEAVENGOOD
of
Wells Co. Indiana
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JACOB LIVINGOOD, SENIOR
A
assessed with 100 acres of land and personal property in Douglass Township,
Berks County, PA, in 1766 and 1767. About 1773, he came to what is now the
southern section of Snyder County, and was assessed there for the first time
about 1776. From 1781 to 1787, he was taxed with 100 acres and personal
property. Jacob, Senior, died in Penn Township in 1794. Jacob, Jr., Feight, John
and Peter, may all have been his sons, if not sons, relatives. One or more men
of the name of Jacob Livingood served in the Northumberland County Militia. It
is possible that Jacob, Sr., as well as Jacob, Jr., served in the forces from
Northumberland County. Letters of administration in his estate were granted to
Peter Livingood (probably a son) on November 18, 1794. John Cummings and
Deitrick Stonebraker were sureties for the administrator. His children were:
Peter, Elizabeth Crawford, Rebecca Bachman, Jacob, Jr., Catherine, Polly and
Esther.
SOURCE: The Snyder County Pioneers, Charles Adam
Fisher, Selinsgrove, 1938
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JACOB LIVINGOOD, JUNIOR
Assessed in Penn Township before 1790. In 1796 when Mahantango Township was
formed from the lower part of Penn Township, he was assessed with 100 acres of
land, personal property, and a sawmill. In 1790 his family consisted of one male
over and three under 16 years and four females. Jacob died in what is now
Chapman Township of Snyder County in 1822. He served as a private in Captain
Michael Weaver's Company of the Northumberland County Militia and Lieutenant
Jacob Spees' Company of Rangers on the Frontier. Christian Livingood may have
been one of his sons.
SOURCE: The Snyder County Pioneers, Charles Adam
Fisher, Selinsgrove, 1938
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LIEUTENANT JOHN
FEIGHT (or Velt or Felt) LIVENGOOD
(also Livingood, Levengood,
Lebengood, Lieberguth, etc.) may have been a son of Jacob Livingood, Sr. who
died in Penn Township in 1794. Feight was assessed in Penn Township for the
first time in 1776. In 1781, he was assessed with 400 acres of land and
personal property. In May and June of 1780, he was a private in Leiutenant in
Captain Jacob Spees' Company of Rangers, at another time he was a Lieutenant in
Captain John Snyder's Company, all of which were organizations of the
Northumberland County Militia. George was his son.
SOURCE: The Snyder County Pioneers, Charles Adam
Fisher, Selinsgrove, 1938
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GEORGE LIVINGOOD
was granted a warrant of
survey for 100 acres of land in Northumberland (now Snyder County) on April 8,
1774. He was assessed in Penn Township for the first time in 1776. It is said
that he died in Penn Township in February 1781. He was a son of John Velt
Livingood. George served as a private in Captain John Moll's Company of
the Northumberland County Militia. On November 16, 1773, he married Anna Maria,
daughter of Henry Werner, Tulpehocken Township. Their children were: Jacob,
John, and George.
SOURCE: The Snyder County Pioneers, Charles Adam
Fisher, Selinsgrove, 1938
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JOHN LIVINGOOD
Supposed to have been a
son of Jacob Livingood, Sr. He lived in Penn Township as early as 1776. In 1790
his family consisted of one male over and three under 16 years, and three
females. In 1796 when Mahantango Township was formed from the lower part of Penn
Township, he was assessed there. On January 30, 1777, he was a private in
Captain Benjamin Weiser's Company of the German Regiment, Continental Line,
stationed at Philadelphia, PA.
SOURCE: The Snyder County Pioneers, Charles Adam
Fisher, Selinsgrove, 1938
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PETER C. LEAVENGOOD
Born in Union County, Pennsylvania, November 11, 1823, son of Christian
and Elizabeth (Keiser) Leavengood. His grandfather, Jacob Leavengood, was born
in Germany, and with his wife settled in Union County, Pennsylvania, near the
Susquehanna River, during the latter part of the seventeenth century. He, with
his brothers John and Fiedel and their sisters, were sold from the ship in which
they crossed the ocean, to pay their passage money. Jacob was married before the
war of 1812. He and his brother John served during that war, and during its
progress John was killed and scalped by the Indians. Twice during their early
life in Pennsylvania Jacob had to flee with his wife across the Susquehanna,
where there were more settlers, in order to save their lives from the prowling
savages. These savages were hostile, and frequently murdered and robbed the
early settlers. At the age of eighteen years Christian began to learn the
blacksmith's trade, and later took charge of his employer's shop.
Previous to his marriage he built a shop on his father's farm,
where he worked at the forge for many years, quitting it in later life to take
charge of the ancestral homestead. On this farm their nine children were
born-Mary, Elizabeth, Jacob, John, Susanna, Daniel, Catherine, Peter C. and
George. In 1830 the family removed to Tuscarawas County, Ohio, where Christian
had bought land before the Indians left that county. Only three houses had been
built in New Philadelphia, the county seat of that county, when he made his
purchase, and one of these he helped to put the rafters upon.
When he selected these lands Indians yet had their cabins in the
woods, and he slept in their deserted wigwams. The parents died on this farm,
the father at the age of ninety years, and the mother at the age of seventy-nine
years. All their children were married before their death, and all are living in
Ohio except our subject and his sister Mary, who married Jacob Stahe in
Pennsylvania previous to the removal of the family to Ohio. Elizabeth married
Abram Deitz; Jacob married Susanna Stahl; John became the husband of Margaret
Homer; Susanna married Jacob Lehmann; Daniel married Mary Lowrey; Catherine
became the wife of George Peshing; George married Magdalene Forney, and Peter C.
married Martha A. Zimmerlee, daughter of Jacob and Clara (Brown) Zimmerlee, of
this county. She was born in Huntington County September 6, 1848. Their marriage
was celebrated March 28, 1868, John Lantz, Esq., performing the ceremony.
In 1849 Mr. Leavengood bought the land upon which he now
resides, and for fifteen consecutive years made annual trips to Ohio, where he
was a contractor in his business, that of a stone mason. His first log cabin is
still standing, fronting their handsome country residence, and it presents a
venerable appearance. It is a monument to the pioneer days when, full of life
and vigor, the young husband felled and hewed the logs which form its
weather-beaten walls. He was a proud and happy husband when his young bride was
installed mistress of what was then an aristocratic mansion. The death of their
first-born, Melinda E., occurred beneath its roof; September 23, 1878. The other
children, Delphena, Silas G., Salome A. and Celeste O., were all rocked to sleep
within its portals. The family have moved into a fine frame building, and
the wealth of the owner has increased with his years. His broad acres are bereft
of the stately oak, and large crops are raised where the Indian once chased the
flying deer. The same that roamed the woods in countless numbers have all
disappeared, and the young men of forty years ago are the aged sires of to-day,
and from their lips are gathered the facts that make the history of their
county.
SOURCE: Biographical and historical record of Adams and Wells
counties,
Indiana. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1887. pp. 758-759.
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JACOB B. LEAVENGOOD
Coshocton county, rich in its natural resources, has in its midst various
enterprising towns and cities which owe their development largely in the
merchants and manufacturers. Each successful business enterprise is an
element in the growth and progress of a city and thus Mr. Leavengood as a
hatter, clothier and men's furnisher, is connecteed with the progress of
Coshocton.
He was born in Mill Creek township, this county, February 23,
1867, and is a son of John and Phoebe (Bretzus) Leavengood. The
father was born in Crawford township, this county, and was the son of Jacob
Leavengood, who was one of the early settlers of that township, coming to Ohio
from Pennsylvania.
The work of development still largely lay in the future, but the
county offered good opportunities because of the rich land and climate favorable
to the production of various cereals and fruits. Much of the territory embraced
within the borders of the county was still government property and Jacob
Leavengood, St., purchased eighty acres of land from the government for one
dollar and sixty-five cents per acre. On this he built a log cabin in the
midst of the forests, and there, amid the wild scenes and environments of
pioneer life, John Leavengood was reared, early becoming familiar with the
arduous task of developing new land and transforming a forest region into
productive fields.
After his marriage he removed to Mill Creek township, where he
still resides and is a well known and successful farmer. His political
endorsement is given to the democracy, while his religious faith is indicated by
his membership in the Lutheran church.
Mr. Leavengood, of this review, was also reared
as a
farmer boy and worked in the fields and meadows from the time of early spring
planting until the crops were harvested in the late autumn. The district
school afforded him his educational privileges and he continued as the main hand
in the farm work until his twenty-third year when he started out in business on
his own account. For three years he had a creamery wagon and later went to
Fresno, where he entered the employ of his brother, W. H. Leavengood, a merchant
at that place, with whom he remained for four years, mastering all the details
of the business and commanding a thorough knowledge of commercial methods.
In 1889 Mr. Leavengood came to Coshocton and for two years was
employed by the Fountain Dry Good Company, with which he continued for four
years. He has been engaged in business on his own account since 1905, in which
year he became associated with B. C. Senter. He was the active spirit in
organizing the firm of Senter & Leavengood, and on March 1, 1905, they
opened a modern men's outfitting establishment. Both of the partners were
practical and experienced merchants and the business succeeded from the
beginning.
On the 27th of January, 1908, Mr. Leavengood acquitted Mr.
Senter's interests in the business, which he has since conducted independently.
He has a well appointed store and the line of goods attracts an extensive
patronage, while reasonable prices and reliable dealing insures him a
continuance of the trade.
On the 21st of March, 1899, Mr. Leavengood was married to Miss
Salome Everhart, of Chili, Ohio. Their friends in Coshocton are many and
their home in notable for its hospitality. Mr. Leavengood belongs to the
Fidelity Lodge, No. 135, K.P. and to Ohio Tent, No. 1264, Knights of the Modern
Maccabees. He likewise belongs to the Lutheran church, and he exercises
his right of franchise in support of the men and measures of the democratic
party. He is a self-made man who has learned to correctly value life's
contacts and experiences. He is a well-balanced man, mentally and
physically, possesses sufficient courage to venture where favoring opportunity
is presented, and his judgment and even-paced energy have carried him forward to
the goal of success.
SOURCE: "County and Family Histories: OH, 1780-1970",
Page #262-263
Disk 1 Leavengood, Jacob Section : Coshocton County, Volume II Page
#: 262-263
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JOHN LEVEGOOD SEN.
One of the pioneer
settlers of Liberty, was born in the southern portion of Pennsylvania. His
father was killed by the Indians. John Levegood sen. was one of the twelve men
who each received a donation of fifty acres of land from the Academy of
Philadelphia to induce them to settle on its lands in Liberty in 1814-16. He was
a brickmaker and shoemaker. His wife was Elizabeth Harpster, of Bethlehem,
Northampton county, Pa, They had six children: Jacob, George, John, Martin,
Fannie (wife of Michael Kehler) and Mary (wife of Rev. Henry Keagle). Mr.
Levegood added largely to the original fifty acres, and cleared a large farm. He
died in 1867 at an advanced age.
SOURCE: History of Tioga County, Pennsylvania, with
Illustrations, Portraits, & Sketches of Prominent Families and Individuals
(1883), (New York: W. W. Munsell & Co., Press of George MacNamara), pp.
191-199.
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SILAS
G. LEAVENGOOD
One of the prominent young farmers
of Union township, Wells county, Indiana, is Silas G. Leavengood, a native of
this township, born December 21, 1871, and a son of Peter C. and Martha A. (Zimmerlee)
Leavengood. Jacob Leavengood, great-grandfather of Silas G., was a native of
Germany and prior to the war of 1812 between the United States and Great Britain
brought his wife to America and settled in Union township, Pennsylvania. They
were in somewhat indigent circumstances, and, in accordance with the custom of
the time, Jacob and his brothers and sisters were "apprenticed" or
bound out to work until they had earned sufficient money to pay for their
passage across the ocean. Jacob Leavengood and his brother Daniel enlisted in
the American army and in one of the sanguinary conflicts with the Indian
auxiliaries of the British forces Daniel lost his life. Jacob Leavengood and his
wife then fled across the Susquehanna river and sought a more densely populated
district, in which they passed the remainder of their lives. Christian
Leavengood, grandfather of Silas G., was apprenticed to the blacksmith's trade
and before his marriage had become master of his own shop. He moved from
Pennsylvania to Tuscarawas county, Ohio, in 1830, having purchased a tract of
land in the woods. He readily accommodated himself to the surroundings, learning
to sleep in deserted Indiana wigwams and to endure many other hardships and
inconveniences, but lived to see the heavy timber cleared away and a fine farm
substituted, and there passed the remainder of his life. Peter C. Leavengood was
reared in Tuscarawas county, Ohio, but was united in marriage in Huntington
county, Indiana, March 28, 1868. He had purchased his farm in Union township in
1849, and on this he passed away March 20, 1889. The union of Peter C. and
Martha A. (Zimmerlee) Leavengood was graced with five children, namely: Malinda
E. died in 1878, aged nine years; Delphine; Silas G.; Salome A., now the wife of
Frederick Platt, of Union township, and Celesta O.
Silas G. Leavengood was reared to agricultural pursuits on his father's farm,
but was given every opportunity to attend school ni the winter seasons, when
farm duties did not require all his attention. He ably and dutifully assisted
his father until the time came about for his own marriage, when he chose for his
bride Miss Lydia Roudebush, a native of Union township, to whom he was married
October 1, 1893.
Peter C. Leavengood was one of the most substantial citizens of Union township
and was greatly honored by all who knew him. Of the Zimmerlee family, Jacob, the
father of Mrs. Peter C. Leavengood, was born in Virginia, yet little is known
touching his ancestry, save the fact that his parents died when he was a boy,
and he then made his home with a brother-in-law, Jacob Miller, until his own
marriage. At the age of fourteen he came to Wells county with this
brother-in-law and was here employed by the latter to drive a team between
Bluffton and Cincinnati, and in this occupation he was engaged at the time of
his marriage, December 25, 1845, with Miss Clara Brown, of Wilkes county, North
Carolina. This lady is of German descent and a daughter of Elisha and Elizabeth
(Redding) Brown. At the time of this marriage Mr. Zimmerlee had but about five
dollars, but four years later he purchased on credit forty acres of land in
Union township, and in order to pay for this land he worked out by the month,
while his wife stayed at home and kept herself busy at weaving, thus adding to
their mutual income. After the land had been paid for, Mr. Zimmerlee cleared,
sold it and purchased the farm now owned by Thomas Powell, on which he lived
until his death. His widow survived him about eighteen years, dying at
seventy-six years of age. Mr. Leavengood still resides on the old farm, a part
of which constitutes the farm of Silas G.
SOURCE: Biographical Memoirs of
Wells County, Indiana 1903, pp. 547-549.
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