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Levi Cantrall

Male 1787 - 1860  (72 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Levi Cantrall was born on 10 Oct 1787 in Botetourt County, Virginia (son of Joshua Cantrall and Ann Graham); died on 22 Feb 1860 in Cantrall, Sangamon County, Illinois.

    Notes:

    Levi Cantrall, the seventh son of Joshua, was born October 1, 1787, in Virginia. His parents moved to Kentucky in 1789. He was there married to Fanny England, November 30, 1809. Sher was born October 2, 1792. They moved to Ohio, then to Illinois, reaching the place where Springfield now stands, December 4, 1819. They journeyed to a place near where the town of Cantrall now is, and there improved a farm where Mr. Cantrall lived until his death. The following notes are taken from writing left by him:

    "December 4, I camped where Springfield now is a city. December 5, came across the Sangamon River and on the 7th looked for the location I now live on. December 8 set to build a cabin and got one raised and chinked and chimney up to the mantle, and the weather set in so hard that mortar could not be used. December 24 the snow began to fall, one snow after another, until it was two feet on a level and became extremely cold until the 11th of February. On the night of the 11th it moderated and rained until 12 o'clock. At this date there was Wyatt Cantrall, Matthew Holland, Alexander Crawford, Henry Crawford, Kellogg, John Dixon and myself, on the way to the American bottom for provisions. In the evening changed severely cold. Camped at Hickory Point. Met William Proctor with a lot of stock hogs and 112th camped together. December 13th camped at Dory Ford. By this time our company numbered 10 men and seven teams. December 14 camped at Padies on Kohoky Creek. December 15 to the American bottom to the six-mile prairie, then loaded up with meal and flour. On the 18th started home with 14 head of hogs, and the weather was thawing in the day and freezing at night and the waters began to rise and got so we had to head some streams. Some days we had to break the ice so as to let the hogs get through the sloughs. At night was cold. We come to old Father Bans, who was stuck in a snowdrift for three days with a load of corn. He was badly frost bitten. We helped him out and kept him in company with us till we got to Brush Creek. There we cut him a good supply of wood for fire. The water was so high that he was to stay until and water fell, but after we left, the old man ventured in and lost a part of his corn. He was a cripple all summer with the freezing of his feet.
    The next day we got seven miles to Sugar Creek. There we had to cut timber and build a bridge on the ice and drove our hogs on the ice and swim out on the land. We got over and camped. Traveled one mile that day. New Day got to where the steam distillery stand, (where the C. & A. now crosses Sangamon, north of Springfield, and camped. By this time the river got over the banks and no ferry boat or canoe, we got a grubbing hoe and our ax and made a trough, and Bro. Wyatt came across to get tools to build canoe, but did not return for days. Fourth day while I was in camp Stephen England come with a family to the camp, and we sent a boy to Mr. Kelly's, where the city of Springfield now is, for a set of tools and made a canoe and commended swimming and ferrying with the canoe, and on the twenty-first day from the start we and party arrived in good health and spirits.
    The snow yet remained in drifts until the 10th of March. The spring was fine and we began to improve. On the 25th day of April there was a heavy rain and that was the last till the 19th of July. The drought set in the the late planted corn never came up until the July rain, and in May, the 26th, there was a frost that cut the corn to the ground.
    The season was so bad that we thought about moving back to the settlement, but in August went down to the American bottom and got a load of corn, and Bro. Wyatt and as far as where Selly mill stands, and my team stuck fast in the mud. There I had to unload the corn and reload one of the hottest days in August. All the drink was out of a horse track while I was doing this. Bro Wyatt had gone across to Spring Creek to Elias mill to get grinding. In a few days I went down to the Ridge Prairie and bought a set of mill stones and built what we then called a band mill, constructed by a large wheel 40 feet over and a rawhide or a tug around a wheel, and ground the first grain ever on the north side of the Sangamon River in the fall of 1820. Then the people came to my mill for thirty miles and in 1822, in the spring, I built a water mill. that was the only chance for the north for fifty miles for a while.
    In the fall of 1830 I built a saw mill. The season was very dry, so that I could not grand none and had my hands to dig the foundation deep in the bed of the creek and in the month of November there came one shower and I caught enough of water to saw eighty feet of lumber and then it began to snow and snowed one snow after another, till it was four feet on a level and drifted till in covered the stake and ride red fences and in many places was seven or eight feet deep. On my farm, too, it took two good yoke of oxen to haul one shock of fodder and continued so till in February 1831."

    "Levi" was left an orphan when twelve years old and was bound to a man who was a tanner. He was whipped so severely that he carried the scars, showing them in his old age to friends. At the age of fourteen he ran away from his master and made his own living. He taught his children to show kindness to the poor and needy by relating to them his onw hardships when young. Quoted from the book "The Cantrell Family" by Carmi G. Cantrell.

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1694344&id=I1144

    Levi married Frances England on 30 Nov 1809 in Kentucky. Frances was born on 2 Oct 1792; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Thomas Cantrall was born on 11 Oct 1810 in Bath County, Kentucky; died on 22 Jun 1856 in Sangamon County, Illinois.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Joshua Cantrall was born on 8 Aug 1748; died on 9 Sep 1800.

    Notes:

    All of this information about Joshua Cantrell and his brothers and sisters is taken from the book "The Cantrell Family" written by Carmi G. Cantrell, Illinois, 1898.

    "Joshua Cantrell was a soldier in the war for American Independence. He was born in Penn., but moved to Virginia, then to Kentucky in 1789. He was the father of nine sons, but no daughter. Four of his sons died without families, the other five married in Kentucky and moved to Ohio, then to Illinois. There were born to them 64 children, 33 sons and 31 daughters."


    Following info. about the Joshua Cantrill family from Anette Stanley Rardin, posted on the Cantrell Family Genealogy Forum, Aug. 12, 1998.........

    "It is possible that Joshua Cantrill was a relative. He lived in Pittsylvania Co., VA, in the 1780s. In 1794 in Mercer Co., KY., Lewis Castleman sued Joshua Cantrill regarding an unpaid debt. He is found on the 1800 census in Montgomery Co., KY. He signed his will on 20/26 Aug. 1800 and it was probated Oct. 14, 1800, Montgomery Co., KY. He named wife Ann and children: Wyatt, Zebulon, Joshua, and William. Executors: Zebulon Cantrill and James Graham. Witnessed by Thomas Isles/Iles, J./I. H. Jenkins, and Andrew Biggs. (Montgomery County Will Abstracts compiled by Mrs. W.P. Oldham, pp. 77, 83 (another abstract of same will, but Wyatt was omitted and there are a few changes in spellings.) From Kentucky Records - Early Wills and Marriages, Old Bible Records and Tombstone Inscriptions, by Julia Ardery, Baltimore: Genealogical Pub. Co., 1969.) It is possible that Mary Cantrill who married Morris Thomas was also a relative. Morris and Mary left Chester Co., PA., in 1777 and moved to what is now Hardy Co., WVA. Their descendants lived in Hardy Co., now WVA, Pittsylvania Co., VA., and Mercer Co., KY."


    Further info. on Joshua Cantrall, son of Zebulon's son, Joseph...... GEN FORUM
    Children's birth and marriage and death dates posted by Linda Oatman on Aug. 25, 1998.

    Following info. from DAR Lineage Books (152 Vols.)
    Joshua Cantrell (1748-1800) served as a private during the Revolution and took the oath of allegiance, 1776, in Pittsylvania County, Virginia. He was born in Pennsylvania, moved to Botetourt County, Virginia., when quite a lad, and died in Bath County, Kentucky.

    Following from: "Wills, Estates, Inventories, 1797-1879, Montgomery Co., KY.
    Page 14 + Joshua Cantril 1800 26th day, August Wife: Ann
    A Negro gal named, Nancy, willed to Ann. Sons, Wyatt; Zebulon; Joshua; William; Levy.
    Witnesses: ThomasIlez, James H. Linking, Andrew Biggs

    Page 47 -- Inventory of property of Joshua Cantrell ..............

    Following information in regard to Joshua Cantrell comes from the Database on Ancestry.com ........ Daughters of the American Revolution Lineage Books (152 vols.) "Joshua Cantrell (1748-1800) served as a private during the Revolution and took the Oath of Allegiance, 1776, in Pittsylvania County, Va. He was born in Pennsylvania, moved to Botetourt County, Va., when quite young, and died in Bath County, Ky.


    Notes for JOSHUA CANTRELL by Warren G. Cantrell ....................... Done for the CantrellCousin Project.,

    "We know that Joseph Cantrell's son, Joshua, born 8 August, 1748, appears in the Augusta Co., VA court records 17 August 1758, when he was made a servant of John McMahon. We know from Franklin Co., VA Court Records, March Court, 1788, that Stephen Cantrell gave a Power of Attorney to Joshua Cantrell, his half brother, and that it was proven and ordered recorded. We know that Joshua married Ann Graham and lived in Botetcourt Co. 1773 and in 1789 moved to Bath Co., KY, where he died 9 September 1800."

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1694344&id=I1095

    Joshua married Ann Graham about 1772 in Botetourt County, Virginia. Ann was born on 3 May 1751 in Botetourt County, Virginia; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Ann Graham was born on 3 May 1751 in Botetourt County, Virginia; and died.

    Notes:

    Married:
    They appear to have had nine childrn in total.

    Children:
    1. 1. Levi Cantrall was born on 10 Oct 1787 in Botetourt County, Virginia; died on 22 Feb 1860 in Cantrall, Sangamon County, Illinois.
    2. Wyatt Cantrell was born on 20 Dec 1790 in Bath County, Kentucky; died on 25 Oct 1877 in Kansas.