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This biography was printed in the Biography
and History of Chester County, 189?, p. 293-296.
This history included many similar subscription biogaphies, in
which the subscriber paid a subscription fee, and in return, had
their biography included in the work.
John Russell McClurg - Landenberg Physician
JAMES McCLURG, of Newton Stewart, County Galloway (now
Wigton), Scotland, was the father of Dr. Walter McClurg, a
surgeon in the royal navy, who married and settled at Hampton,
Virginia, prior to 1746, and who resigned, lived, and died there
in 1783. His only son, Dr. James McClurg, M.D., was born at
Hampton, Virginia, in 1746, graduated from William and Mary
college, 1762; as M.D. University of Edinburgh, 1770; and studied
in Paris during 1771-2. He was urged to locate in London, but was
prevented by his strong Americanism. Returning to Virginia in
1773, he located at Williamsburg, Virginia. Elected a member of
the American Philosophical society of Philadelphia, 1774.
Appointed a surgeon in the Virginia navy, 1776, and later in the
year physician general of hospitals of the southern department,
at Williamsburg. Appointed professor of anatomy and medicine in
the William and Mary college, 1779. Declined the chair of
medicine in the University of Pennsylvania. Removed to Richmond,
Virginia, in 1783. In 1787 was appointed a member of the Federal
convention, sitting in Philadelphia, to frame a constitution for
the United States. He here acted with the Washington-Madison
group. Duty called him home before the final adoption. Received a
grant of land and back pay for services during the revolution.
His only son, Walter, died in 1810. Was thrown from his carriage,
severely injured, and died July 9, 1823. Thus the elder line
became extinct.
James McClurg's younger son, John McClurg, was born at Newton
Stewart, Scotland, November 14, 1726. Came to Hampton, Virginia,
in 1752, and thence to Chester county, Pennsylvania. On the 20th
of October, 1752, he was granted by the Pennsylvania
proprietaries one hundred acres of land in Londonderry (now Lower
Oxford) township, Chester county, Pennsylvania, for £15 l0s., with the yearly quitrent of one
half penny sterling for every acre thereof. One hundred and
nineteen and one-half acres were surveyed November 10, 1752, and
settled by him. In the county records of 1754 he is rated as
"a land owner and taxpayer." In 1753 he married Eliza
Jackson, (daughter of Samuel Jackson, who had come to Chester
county prior to 1737, and who was a prominent land owner and
elder in the Presbyterian church,) and their children were:
Samuel; William, who "went west," to Pittsburg, it is
believed; Elizabeth, no record; and John, who removed to
Slateridge, York county, Pennsylvania, where he married and died,
leaving two children, William and Mary, the former of whom was
killed by a horse, and the male line is extinct.
John McClurg died in Lower Oxford township, Friday, July 12.
1799.
Samuel McClurg, oldest son of John and Eliza McClurg, was born
on his father's farm in Lower Oxford township, Tuesday, July 9,
1754. He removed to Slateridge, York county, Pennsylvania, and
purchased a farm. In 1787 he married Agnes Foulis, of Lower
Oxford township, Chester county, daughter of Archibald and Mary
Foulis. It is told how this devout Presbyterian couple would, on
each communion Sunday, ride on horseback by way of McCall's
Ferry, Susquehanna river, to Oxford, a distance of at least
thirty miles. He died Wednesday, April 4, 1810 of chronic
pnuemonia, resulting from exposure.
Agnes Foulis was born Tuesday, May 24, 1763, in Scotland. Her
father, Archibald Foulis, and James Patton, both loved Mary
Wilson, who married the latter, and before he died, in 1760, bore
him eight children. Archibald Foulis, meanwhile lived in Belfast,
Ireland, having left Scotland when rejected, and now returned and
married the widow, Agnes being their only child. They soon went
to Chester county, Pennsylvania and in 1772, his name is on the
list of "land owners and taxpayers."After the death of
her husband , Agnes, with her children, removed to a homestead
near Oxford, Pennsylvania, where, in 1811, her name appears on
the church records, among the heads of families. Died at Oxford,
Saturday, December 8, 1849. Their children were: Mary, married
James Reyburn; Elizabeth, married William Osmond; Archibald;
Jane, married Joseph Kelso; Rachel, married George Irwin; Nancy,
married John Pollock; John, born Thursday, January 27, 1803, and
died Monday, December 20, 1869 - and who married, first. Martha
Moore second, Nancy Jane Mclntire; and Sarah, married
James Smith. Archibald McClurg, elder son of Samuel and Agnes
McClurg, was born at Slateridge, York county, Pennsylvania, on
his father's farm, on Tuesday, March 25, 1794. Removed in 1810 to
Lower Oxford township. Was a farmer, and assisted in building the
then large bridge over the Susquehanna river, at McCall's Ferry.
On February 27, 1819, he bought forty acres of land near Oxford,
Pennsylvania, from his mother. On Thursday, November 25, 1819, he
married Sarah Russell, of Russellville, Chester county,
Pennsylvania. In1825, he bought a tract of land at Mill Creek
Hundred, Delaware, which he soon sold. In 1839 he bought "a
plantation of one hundred and fourteen acres in West Nottingham
township, Chester county, Pennsylvania, (near Glenroy), subject
to the payment of the original patent." In religion he was a
Presbyterian, in politics, a whig, and later a republican; and in
his earlier life, was an enthusiastic militiaman. Died on his
farm, at West Nottingham, Saturday, May 8, 1864, of acute
gastroeonteritis. Sarah Russell, his wife, was born Thursday,
April 10, 1797, at Russellville, and died at her home, in West
Nottingham, Chester county, Pennsylvania, on Sunday, January 4,
1852. Her father, John Russell, esquire, was born in Chester
county, in 1759, and died Wednesday, May 16, 1804. Her mother,
Margaret McNeil, was born in Chester county in 1770, and died at
Russellville, Friday, December 9, 1814. The children of Archibald
and Sara McClurg were: John Russell; Nancy, born 1822, married
Edward Lloyd; Samuel, born 1823, died unmarried; Margaret, born
1825, married Marshal Wright; Sarah Elizabeth, born1828, married
William Wright; Jane, born 1839, unmarried; James Hervey, born
1832, married Elizabeth Grier - two children, Blanche and James
Patterson; William, born 1834, bachelor; Mary, born 1836, died
unmarried; Archibald Alexander, born at the Battle of
Fredericksburg, Va., December 13, 1862; and Hanna Euphemia, born
1844, unmarried.
John Russell McClurg, M. D., was the oldest child of the
foregoing; and born in Lower Oxford township, Chester county,
Pennsylvania, Saturday, September 23, 1820. Reared on his
father's farms, and educated at the public schools, and the New
London, Pennsylvania, and Newark, Delaware, academies. He taught
in the public schools and in the Newark academy. Studied medicine
under Dr. David W. Hutchinson, of Oxford, Pennsylvania, and
graduated from the Jefferson Medical college, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, as an M.D., March 14, 1846. Located at
Chandlersville (now Landenberg), Chester county, Pennsylvania,
and there practiced his profession until 1858. Removed to
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1859. After a successful
examination before an army medical board, he was commissioned
major and surgeon, United States volunteers, October 4, 1862. His
record of service was: Temporary duty at Jefferson barracks, St.
Louis, Missouri, November 11 to November 21, 1862, when he was
ordered to establish and take charge of a United States general
hospital at Cleveland, Ohio. This duty was performed in such a
thorough and expeditious manner, as to win him much commendation
from his superiors. While stationed here, he delivered a course
of lectures on military surgery at the Cleveland Medical college.
He was commended by Governor Brough, of Ohio, for arming a number
of convalescents in the hospital and sending them to enforce the
draft. Was presented with a sword by the inmates of the hospital
as a token of their appreciation. Was ordered, September 4, 1864,
to Jackson, Michigan, as inspector of recruiting, and here
unearthed many frauds, and on December 8, 1864, to similar duty
at Detroit, Michigan. On December 17, 1864, was ordered, by
telegraph, to Louisville, Kentucky, and established and took
charge of the transfer general hospital. On March 25, 1865, was
ordered to the charge of the "Joe Holt" United States
general hospital, together with the eruptive hospitals, at
Louisville, Kentucky, and Jeffersonville, Indiana, aggregating
about three thousand beds. On July 29, 1865, ordered to the
additional duty of president of an examining board for assistant
surgeons. On August 7, 1865, was ordered to close all hospitals,
destroy infected stores, etc. On September 19, 1865, ordered
home. Breveted lieutenant colonel, United States volunteers,
October 6, 1865; and honorably mustered out October 7, 1865. In
November 1865, located at West Grove, Pennsylvania, and practiced
his profession there until May, 1870, when he removed to West
Chester, Pennsylvania, where he has since resided and
successfully practiced his profession. A perminent member of the
American Medical association, a member of the Chester County
Medical society, of the Oxford Medical society, honorary member
of the Lancaster city and County Medical society, of the
biological and microscopical section of the Academy of Sciences,
of Philadelphia, an associate member of' the Victoria Institute,
or Philosophical society of Great Britain, a founder of the
Philosophical society of West Chester, Pennsylvania, a member of
the Bi-Centenial executive committee, 1876, and a companion of
the Military Order of the Loyal Legion. Was married on January 1,
1851, at Montgomeryville, Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, to
Ruth Ann Higgins, daughter of the Rev. George Higgins and Mary
(born Landreth), his wife. They have two children, Walter
Audubon; and Frank Layard, born March 7, 1857.
Ruth Ann Higgins was born at Milton, Northumberland county,
Pennsylvania, Wednesday, March 2, 1831. She was the daughter of
the Rev. George Higgins, a noted Baptist clergyman, born at
Philadelphia, Monday, December 16, 1799, died at Montgomeryville,
Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, Tuesday, March 9, 1869, and Mary
Landreth, his wife, born at Philadelphia, Monday, August 20,
1804, and died at Philadelphia, Thursday, April 6. 1848. The only
child of George Higgins, a native of England, who married
Margaret Trimble, at Philadelphia, in 1799, and died the same
year at Cape May, New Jersey, of the yellow fever. Mary Landreth
was the daughter of Cuthbert Landreth, who married Pelatiah
Burroughs, at Philadelphia, Saturday, May 25, 1793.
Walter Audubon McClurg, eldest son of the foregoing, was born
Wednesday, February 4, 1852, at Chandlersville (now Landenberg),
Chester county, Pennsylvania, educated at the public schools,
Cleveland, Ohio, Military academy, the Kennett Square academy,
and the Millersville State Normal school; studied medicine under
his father, and graduated as an M.D. on Saturday, March 9, 1872,
from Jefferson Medical college, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Practiced his profession for nearly two years at West Chester,
Pennsylvania, then passed a successful examination before the
Naval Medical Examining board, and was commissioned an assistant
surgeon, United States navy, (ranking with Ensign), February 8,
1874. Promoted to passed assistant surgeon (lieutenant J. G.),
November 2, 1877, and to surgeon (lieutenant), January 25, 1889.
Record of service: Naval hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
June 12 to November 18, 1874; Flagship Pensacola, Pacific
Station, and Tuscarora, Pacific Station, November 18, 1874, to
September 14, 1876; Steamer Plymouth, North Atlantic Station,
January 26, to July 7, 1877; Store-ship New Hampshire, Port
Royal, South Carolina, December 10, 1877, to January 6, 1879;
Naval Hospital, Washington, January 6, to December 2, 1879;
Flagship Tennessee, North Atlantic Station, December 2, 1879, to
December 2, 1882; Naval academy, Annapolis, December 7, 1882, to
May, 1883; Practice-ship Dale, May to September 2, 1883; Naval
academy, September 1, 1883, to October 7, 1884; Naval hospital,
Philadelphia, October 7, 1884, to January 6, 1886; Steamer
Tallapoosa, South Atlantic Station, January 6, 1886, to March 7,
1889; Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Navy department,
Washington, June 1, 1889, on special duty.