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Levi Stephens

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Levi Stephens

Birth
Bucks County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
13 Feb 1808 (aged 63)
Fayette County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Fayette City, Fayette County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Mon Valley Biographies Levi Stephens of Washington Twp., Fayette Co.From: History of Fayette County, by Franklin Ellis, Philadelphia, L H Evertsand Company, 1882, p809


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Submitted by: Marta Burns
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Levi Stephens of Bucks County was a government surveyor who in 1769 assisted in surveying southwestern Pennsylvania. He was so well pleased with the land lying along the southern border of what is now Washington township that he made a purchase thre of a large land tract and there concluded to make his home. Although after that busily engaged on his land, he found opportunities to do considerable surveying from time to time as his services were called for. The compass used by Mr Stephens is still in the possession of his descendants.
His sons were four in number and named: Nathaniel Stephens; John Stephens; Levi Stephens Jr; and Thomas Stephens. Of Nathaniel Stephens' sons, Nathaniel Stephens Jr, Levi Stephens and Joshua Stephens are living. Of Levi Stephens Jr's sons the living are: Jehu Stephens; Israel Stephens; Johnson Stephens; and James Stephens. David Stephens is the only living son of Thomas Stephens. The widow of Levi Stephens Jr now resides in Washington township aged eighty five years. Nathaniel Stephens, the eldest son of Levi Stephens the surveyor, was a noted river trader. The Stephens were long lived. Levi Stephens the surveyor died in 1808 aged sixty four, two years after the death of his father, John Stephens, who lived to be ninety one. Levi Stephens Jr was eighty seven at his death in 1878; and Nathaniel Stephens eighty seven when he died in 1869. All those names were buried in the cemetery at the Little Redstone Methodist Episcopal Church.

Contemporaneous with Levi Stephens in Washington township was John Reeves who served as a colonel in the Revolution as did also his father. John Stephens lived on the farm now occupied by Jehu Stephens, upon which once stood a famous red oak that mesured eleven feet in diameter.

Mon Valley Biographies Levi Stephens of Washington Twp., Fayette Co.From: History of Fayette County, by Franklin Ellis, Philadelphia, L H Evertsand Company, 1882, p809


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Submitted by: Marta Burns
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Levi Stephens of Bucks County was a government surveyor who in 1769 assisted in surveying southwestern Pennsylvania. He was so well pleased with the land lying along the southern border of what is now Washington township that he made a purchase thre of a large land tract and there concluded to make his home. Although after that busily engaged on his land, he found opportunities to do considerable surveying from time to time as his services were called for. The compass used by Mr Stephens is still in the possession of his descendants.
His sons were four in number and named: Nathaniel Stephens; John Stephens; Levi Stephens Jr; and Thomas Stephens. Of Nathaniel Stephens' sons, Nathaniel Stephens Jr, Levi Stephens and Joshua Stephens are living. Of Levi Stephens Jr's sons the living are: Jehu Stephens; Israel Stephens; Johnson Stephens; and James Stephens. David Stephens is the only living son of Thomas Stephens. The widow of Levi Stephens Jr now resides in Washington township aged eighty five years. Nathaniel Stephens, the eldest son of Levi Stephens the surveyor, was a noted river trader. The Stephens were long lived. Levi Stephens the surveyor died in 1808 aged sixty four, two years after the death of his father, John Stephens, who lived to be ninety one. Levi Stephens Jr was eighty seven at his death in 1878; and Nathaniel Stephens eighty seven when he died in 1869. All those names were buried in the cemetery at the Little Redstone Methodist Episcopal Church.

Contemporaneous with Levi Stephens in Washington township was John Reeves who served as a colonel in the Revolution as did also his father. John Stephens lived on the farm now occupied by Jehu Stephens, upon which once stood a famous red oak that mesured eleven feet in diameter.



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