JOHN ANDREWS, retired farmer, P.O. Evansburg,
was born in Vernon Township, this county, April 6, 1816, son of Robert
and Sarah (Chidester) Andrews, who had eight children, five now living.
Robert Andrews was a native of County Tyrone, Ireland; came to America
in 1784, locating at Harrisburg, Penn., from thence moving to Allegheny
County in 1792, and finally to what is now Crawford County. Here he made
a clearing on French Creek, Vernon Township, and erected a building. In
the fall of 1792 he and a number of others started for Harrisburg,
Penn., but got lost, their pack-horse died of starvation, and they were
obliged to subsist on a couple of snakes which they found and a
deer-skin that was roasted after the hair had been burned off. After
innumerable privations they reached their destination. On their return
home they employed an Indian guide to conduct them to Franklin, but in
him the party placed little confidence, being in constant dread lest he
should betray them. When within a day’s journey of Franklin they came to
a camp fire, a little beyond which they discovered a horse. After
resting a day in Franklin they met there a man named Vansickle, who
informed them the horse they had seen was his; that he and two comrades,
named Power and Wallace, were surprised at the camp fire by Indians
firing on them from an ambuscade. Power and Wallace were killed, but
Vansickle showed the savages his heels, and although chased by one of
them armed with a tomahawk for a considerable distance he succeeded in
outrunning the Indian, who then gave up the pursuit. Robert Andrews
returned to his clearing in Vernon Township the following spring (1793)
in order to hold his title, as the law was that "a settler must have
smoke on his premises every day for five years." This farm is still
owned by his descendants, and on it John Andrews was born and reared.
Our subject learned milling as an occupation. He was married, June 2,
1847, to Mary D. Abbott. By this union were born six children, three now
living: Eva B., Sadie and Ella. The sons are all deceased. Mr. Andrews
is a member of the United Presbyterian Church, in which he is also an
Elder. His nephew, James M. Abbott, with whom he spends many leisure
hours, does a hardware business at Evansburg.
History of Crawford County,
Pennsylvania: containing a
history of the county, its townships, towns, villages, schools,
churches, industries, etc., portraits of early settlers and prominent
men, biographies, history of Pennsylvania, statistical and miscellaneous
matter, Chicago: Warner, Beers & Co., 1885.
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