[316552.ftw]
http://www.sheltons.net/genes/133.html Isaac (unconfirmed)
Bilyeu
Born: Abt 1801
Married to Native American Unknown
Died: 1829
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-------------- ------ First Bilyeu Came To County Over 150
Years Ago, by Clyde Lee Jenkins, The Elden Advertiser,
October 26, 1972
Distributed with permission of the Eldon Advertiser, Vernon
Publishing, Eldon, Missouri.
The first Bilyeu in what is now Miller County was, without
any doubt, Isaac. He appeared in the Gasconade River
country on a hunting expedition in late 1818, and having
found game so plentiful, camped for more than a year near
the Shawnee villages by the Big Maries river. During this
time he made several excursions into the wilds of the Big
Richwoods with Indian Chief Rodgers, hunting for dear and
bear. An excellent hunter, old Chief Rodgers was a white
man, having been removed from the breasts of his mother by
Indians raiding settlements near the falls of the Ohio
River before the Revolutionary War.
Isaac found wild game in the Big Richwoods so abounding
that he raised a log cabin near the mouth of the Atwell,
Johnston, and Little Tavern forks, probably on land now
owned by Leonard Keeth. In the summer of 1820, having
married an Indian maiden, Isaac moved with his new bride,
both under 20 years of age, into their log cabin home.
Their closest neighbors were John Wilson by the Barren Fork
Creek, and Daniel Brumley by the Big Tavern Creek to the
north.
Isaac kept his wife supplied with sugar by gathering wild
honey. Every season, at the Missouri River, he got salt
from the canoes coming down from the Boone's Lick. For
three or more years he got corn from James Harrison at the
mouth of the Little Piney River. He kept the corn inside
his cabin, concealed in a hollow-log barrel, and when
needed for bread-stuff, a small portion of the grain was
placed in a bowl-shaped rock and crushed with a round stone
by hand. The bear and deer furnished meat for food, and
skins for leather breeches, skirts, jackets, moccasins, and
hammocks. Having a trio of Indian dogs for chasing bear
made Isaac a wealthy hunter. These animals were vicious, a
cross between early puritan mongrels and domesticated
prairie wolves.
In fact, it may be said, Isaac hunted like an Indian, was
married to an Indian, and generally, lived like an Indian.
Little or nothing is known of his ancestors, and upon his
death in late 1829, his wife returned, with at least two
children, to her own people.
Without any doubt he was a relative of the Bilyeus who
commenced entering the area before his demise. In fact, he
may have been a son of the Isaac who followed him. Isaac
Bilyeu, born in Maryland in 1780, grew to manhood there,
then, after his marriage to Mary Ann, moved into Tennessee,
where they settled in Overton County about 1799.Their known
children included Jacob, born 1803; Mary Ann; John Witten,
born 1809; Elizabeth, born 1813; Margaret Ann, born 1821;
and Stephen, born 1826.
During the War of 1812, Isaac served in the First Regiment
of Bradley's Tennessee Volunteers. After the war he moved
with his family into Green County, Ky., and from this point
in time, Isaac was always on the go, following the fur
trade.
During the 1820's he often visited the area now Miller
County. His first trips were made to obtain saltpeter, a
necessary ingredient for the manufacture of gunpowder. The
soil in the floors of the many caves in Central Missouri,
heavily saturated with nitrate of lime, when leached with
wood ashes, yielded nitrate of potash. In this manner
saltpeter was manufactured by the patriots in Kentucky and
Tennessee for the government during the War of 1812.
By 1830, Isaac Bilyeu and his family were situated in
present day Glaze Township, Miller County, then Crawford
County, Mo. Jacob, the eldest known son of Isaac and Mary
Ann, was married to Catherine Elizabeth Williams, daughter
of William Williams and Sarah Ann Sullens Williams. They
lived in Miller County until the middle 1840's then moved
to Taney County, Mo., and after a few years there, moved to
Carroll County; Ark., where Jacob died in the early 1850's.
He was buried at the head of the Big Indian Creek.
It is known that Isaac Bilyeu, the old fur trader, was
living with his son, Stephen Bilyeu, in Carroll County,
Ark., in 1860, in the 80th year of his lifetime. It is
believed he died soon afterward; his wife, Mary Ann, having
died a few years before in Taney County, Mo.