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Jacob Sawyer Carter

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Jacob Sawyer Carter

Birth
Mohawk, Herkimer County, New York, USA
Death
16 Oct 1885 (aged 79)
Porter County, Indiana, USA
Burial
Porter County, Indiana, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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JACOB CARTER, one of the pioneers of Porter County, was born in Mohawk country in New York, March 6, 1806, a son of Robert and Eve (House) Carter. The parents were natives of New York. During the Revolutionary war, his mother was taken prisoner, conveyed to Canada and sold, but returned to the States on reaching womanhood.
His father assisted in surveying the State of New York, was for three months a soldier in the war of the Revolution, and narrowly escaped capture by crawling into a potato hole and filling it over him.
Jacob Carter resided with his parents until of age, but received no education, as there were no schools in the neighborhood. On June 18, 1826, he was married to Chloe Doud, of Onondaga County, N. Y. She was born March 31, 1805, and died February 14, 1878 - a faithful wife for over fifty years.
Their issue comprised eleven children, five of whom survive - Charles, Philo, Eleanor, Charity, and Jerome F. Carter.
Jacob Carter came first to Horse Prairie, this county, afterward coming to this township and purchasing some wild land on which a cabin had been erected. He at once began clearing, and has now 312 acres, on which he lives, retired. He has been a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church for more than forty years. He was formerly a Whig, but is now a stanch Republican.

- 1882 History of Porter and Lake Counties, Indiana
- offered by Eva Hopkins
JACOB CARTER, one of the pioneers of Porter County, was born in Mohawk country in New York, March 6, 1806, a son of Robert and Eve (House) Carter. The parents were natives of New York. During the Revolutionary war, his mother was taken prisoner, conveyed to Canada and sold, but returned to the States on reaching womanhood.
His father assisted in surveying the State of New York, was for three months a soldier in the war of the Revolution, and narrowly escaped capture by crawling into a potato hole and filling it over him.
Jacob Carter resided with his parents until of age, but received no education, as there were no schools in the neighborhood. On June 18, 1826, he was married to Chloe Doud, of Onondaga County, N. Y. She was born March 31, 1805, and died February 14, 1878 - a faithful wife for over fifty years.
Their issue comprised eleven children, five of whom survive - Charles, Philo, Eleanor, Charity, and Jerome F. Carter.
Jacob Carter came first to Horse Prairie, this county, afterward coming to this township and purchasing some wild land on which a cabin had been erected. He at once began clearing, and has now 312 acres, on which he lives, retired. He has been a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church for more than forty years. He was formerly a Whig, but is now a stanch Republican.

- 1882 History of Porter and Lake Counties, Indiana
- offered by Eva Hopkins


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