William Graham (colonel)

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Born1742
Augusta County, Colony of Virginia
DiedMay 3, 1835
Boiling Springs, US
Place of burial
Twitty-Graham Cemetery, Boiling Springs, North Carolina
AllegianceUnited States
William Graham
Born1742
Augusta County, Colony of Virginia
DiedMay 3, 1835
Boiling Springs, US
Place of burial
Twitty-Graham Cemetery, Boiling Springs, North Carolina
AllegianceUnited States
BranchNorth Carolina militia
Years of service1775–1781
RankColonel
UnitTryon County Regiment, Lincoln County Regiment
CommandsTryon County Regiment, Lincoln County Regiment
Battles / warsBattle of Moore's Creek Bridge[1]
Cherokee Expedition
Battle of Graham's Fort
Spouse(s)Susannah Beller Twitty
ChildrenSarah (Graham) Irvine

Colonel William Graham (1742 1835) was commander of the Tryon County and Lincoln County Regiments of the North Carolina militia and political leader from North Carolina during the American Revolution.

William Graham was born in 1742 in Augusta County, Colony of Virginia. He was the son of Archibald Graham of Scotland. The younger Graham moved to the Province of North Carolina several years before the American Revolutionary War. There he was one of forty signers of the Tryon Resolves. In 1776, he served as a delegate from the extinct Tryon County, North Carolina to the 3rd and 5th North Carolina Provincial Congress. After Tryon County was dissolved in 1779, he lived in Lincoln and Cleveland Counties.[2][3]

He married the widow Susannah (Beller) Twitty before 1780.[4]

Military service

Death

References

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