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Agnes “Anne” Caldwell Skidmore BIRTH 1705 Somerset County, Maryland, USA DEATH 2 Jan 1792 (aged 86–87) Ruddle, Pendleton County, West Virginia, USA BURIAL John Skidmore Cemetery #22 Ruddle, Pendleton County, West Virginia
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/155183277/agnes-skidmore
Parents
Andrew Caldwell 1675–1750
Margaret Train Caldwell 1680–1735
Agnes Caldwell had been born on the Wicomico River in Somerset County, Maryland, and moved with her parents to Delaware in childhood. Andrew Caldwell lived on a plantation called The Exchange, and the town of Woodside below Dover now stands on this tract together with the old Caldwell Burying Ground. Her father was one of the most influential men in Kent County, and her brother Andrew Caldwell, Junior, represented the county in the General Assembly of Delaware for 12 years from 1745 to 1757. Her nephew, Captain Jonathan Caldwell, was the commander of the “Blue Hen’s Chickens” in the Revolution. His company gave Delaware its state bird, and he gave his name to a young kinsman, Jonathan Caldwell Friend (1774-1856), who died in Braxton County, West Virginia.
Agnes Skidmore survived her husband by many years. She put in a claim at a court held for Augusta County on 18 January 1775 for supplies furnished to the militia a few months earlier on their way to the Battle of Point Pleasant. Mrs. Ann Skidmore and the accounts for Dunmore’s War show that she was paid By Sundry p[er] Aud[it] £1.17.2 Ex.” The list is not itemized, but it may have been for grain ground at her husband's mill after Joseph Skidmore had settled at what is now South Elkins or for diets served to the militia before they left for Point Pleasant. S he was not mentioned in her husband’s will and she seems to have stayed at the mill at Ruddle for its relatively greater comforts and safety. She was probably happy to be there in 1777, a particularly bloody year on the Virginia frontier, when her son Captain John Skidmore was sent out at the head of a company of men to protect the early settlers in the Tygart Valley. Presumably the deed, now lost, for the mill that Joseph Skidmore gave to his son Samuel Skidmore stated (or implied) that he was to support his mother in her old age at her home on SkidmoreMill Run.
Samuel Skidmore died untimely in 1780. Agnes Skidmore made a determined effort after his death to have her dower set off in the Mill Run property by his executors. Presumably this action was successful as she died and was buried there. There are two old graves here; one can still be traced several yards south of the house with a small field headstone (a footstone has disappeared in recent times). The other grave, some distance from this, has been plowed over. One is remembered as the grave of a Skidmore woman (Agnes beyond doubt) and the other was the grave of Mary Elizabeth Hartman, the first wife of John George Dahmer. [Reverend Dahmer married Nancy, the daughter of Captain John Skidmore, as his second wife, and they are buried elsewhere.] Agnes Skidmore was living as late as 2 January 1792 at the age of approximately 80 when the Pendleton County Court ordered that a deposition be taken from her.
7 Agnes joined her husband soon after in Maryland where the majority of her 11 children were born. They stayed there for a time, but then went by way of the gap at Harper’s Ferry up the Shenandoah to what was then the old Augusta County in Virginia.
Joseph Skidmore set out immediately on a search the area that became Pendleton County where he entered surveys of an enormous lot of the choicest bottom tracts which promised easy development. One of the best of these, containing 54 acres on Lick Run near the present crossroads at Ruddle in Pendleton County, he kept for himself where he built a profitable gristmill. His home there, originally a log cabin, was hard by the mill and enlarged several times. About 1840 the original house was sided over for the last time, and the burr stone from the mill used as the foundation for a chimney added to the house. It can still be seen embedded in the sod, and an old photograph taken of the house as it looked after 1840 still survives.
1705 |
April 7, 1705
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Wicomico River, Somerset County, Province of Maryland
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1732 |
1732
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Murderkill Hundred, Kent, Delaware
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1732
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Murderkill Hundred, Kent, Maryland, United States
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1734 |
1734
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Murderkill, Kent, Delaware
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1736 |
June 10, 1736
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Orange County, Virginia
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June 10, 1736
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Murderkill Hundred, Kent, Delaware, USA
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June 10, 1736
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Murderkill Hundred, Kent, Delaware
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June 10, 1736
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Little York, Kent, Delaware
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