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CPT Mathias Barringer

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CPT Mathias Barringer

Birth
Stuttgart, Stadtkreis Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Death
Jul 1776 (aged 48)
Morganton, Burke County, North Carolina, USA
Burial
Burial Details Unknown. Specifically: location unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Captain Mathias was killed on the John's River, in the Quaker Meadows area near Morganton, in Burke County, North Carolina during the late summer of 1776.

Husband of Margaret Bushart (born August 15, 1742 - passed October 5 1839 in Lincoln County North Carolina

At the beginning of the Revolutionary War both the English and the Americans sought Indian help and the British got help because they had defended the Indians previously and they supplied them with rifles

King George III of Great Britain and Ireland (ruled from 1760 to 1820) encouraged the Cherokee Indians to attack the settlers and burn their houses (particularly when they were considered revolutionaries working to the disadvantage of the King) as the British advertised the Americans would be unrestrained in their western expansion. General Rutherford of the Colonies was ordered to collect all companies in his district and drive the Indians beyond the mountains to the West. In the late summer of 1776, Captain Mathias Barringer with a small squad of soldiers was sent in advance of the army to search for the Indians. On John’s River [near Morganton, NC] they found the Indians as they came from ambush armed as well as the Militia—all men except one [Phillip Frye] were killed. General Rutherford ordered his men to bury the dead and no one knows of the final resting place for Captain Mathias Barringer who died at age 46.

An Indian ambush trapped them. Barringer was killed in the first round of fire. Only Philip Frye escaped when he hid behind a log under 2 feet of dead leaves. Frye said later that he did not move as the Indians scalped Barringer and the others, even when one brave stood on the log and looked right at the spot where he had hidden.

Tradition relates that Captain Barringer's wife, who was at home with her children, Matthias and Catherine, told her friends on the day of the battle that she knew her husband was either dead or badly wounded, because she had heard him groan.
.

The monument @ the Old Newton Courthouse reads...

A tribute to
Matthias Barringer,
Lipsidom Adam,
Grunot - Hass - Wilson
and another, who were
massacred on John's River in
Gen. Rutherford's
forced march against the
Cherokee in 1776 and to
Philip Fry
who is one escaped and to
Conrad Tippong,
One of Lafayette's men,
by a grateful posterity.
July 2, 1897
Captain Mathias was killed on the John's River, in the Quaker Meadows area near Morganton, in Burke County, North Carolina during the late summer of 1776.

Husband of Margaret Bushart (born August 15, 1742 - passed October 5 1839 in Lincoln County North Carolina

At the beginning of the Revolutionary War both the English and the Americans sought Indian help and the British got help because they had defended the Indians previously and they supplied them with rifles

King George III of Great Britain and Ireland (ruled from 1760 to 1820) encouraged the Cherokee Indians to attack the settlers and burn their houses (particularly when they were considered revolutionaries working to the disadvantage of the King) as the British advertised the Americans would be unrestrained in their western expansion. General Rutherford of the Colonies was ordered to collect all companies in his district and drive the Indians beyond the mountains to the West. In the late summer of 1776, Captain Mathias Barringer with a small squad of soldiers was sent in advance of the army to search for the Indians. On John’s River [near Morganton, NC] they found the Indians as they came from ambush armed as well as the Militia—all men except one [Phillip Frye] were killed. General Rutherford ordered his men to bury the dead and no one knows of the final resting place for Captain Mathias Barringer who died at age 46.

An Indian ambush trapped them. Barringer was killed in the first round of fire. Only Philip Frye escaped when he hid behind a log under 2 feet of dead leaves. Frye said later that he did not move as the Indians scalped Barringer and the others, even when one brave stood on the log and looked right at the spot where he had hidden.

Tradition relates that Captain Barringer's wife, who was at home with her children, Matthias and Catherine, told her friends on the day of the battle that she knew her husband was either dead or badly wounded, because she had heard him groan.
.

The monument @ the Old Newton Courthouse reads...

A tribute to
Matthias Barringer,
Lipsidom Adam,
Grunot - Hass - Wilson
and another, who were
massacred on John's River in
Gen. Rutherford's
forced march against the
Cherokee in 1776 and to
Philip Fry
who is one escaped and to
Conrad Tippong,
One of Lafayette's men,
by a grateful posterity.
July 2, 1897


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