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Horsham and the Civil War

A vintage black and white portrait of Robert Kenderdine in a mid-19th-century military overcoat.
Robert Kenderdine

One of tenets of the Society of Friends is pacifism and this caused problems in the new colony going back to Samuel Carpenter. In 1709, the Pennsylvania Assembly voted to send £ 2000 instead of sending soldiers to fight against the French in Canada. Carpenter was treasurer at the time. The war ended before anything was done, though, so it was all forgotten until 1717 when Governor Keith requested payment from Carpenter’s estate. This payment consisted of turning over 1200 acres of Carpenter’s land – in Horsham. Keith later acquired this to be part of his Fountain Low Estate, later known as Graeme Park

The French and Indian War (1755-57) caused more conflict with the Quaker led Pennsylvania Assembly and pro-war groups. In 1760, Benjamin Holt, together with his neighbor John Lloyd, was dealt with by Horsham Friends for assisting in impressing horses for military service for Braddock’s Expedition to Fort Duquesne (Smith p 34) By the start of the American Revolution, beginning in 1775, many younger Quakers joined or supported the fight. This included Friends from the Horsham Meeting which admonished those who fought but did not read them out of meeting.

Later, by the time of the Civil War, the Horsham Meeting (although not all meetings) had come to accept that their members may be needed for military service. Robert Kenderdine, shown here, was one of those from Horsham Meeting who served for the Union in the Civil War. (Abby pp 32-35)

William Penrose

Another civil war soldier with ties to Horsham was William Penrose, the great-grandson of Samuel and Hannah Penrose. Samuel and Hannah had purchased Graeme Park from Dr William Smith in 1801.

Samuel and Hannah’s 4th child was Dr. Everard Penrose. The oldest of Everard and his wife Bridget’s three children, Steadman, married Mary Strawn and moved to the wilderness of Iowa probably in the 1830s. William, the son of Steadman and Mary, was the first “white” child born west of Cedar Rapids, IA.

Steadman went to California in search of gold in 1849 and died there of fever. William became a Union soldier attached to Company D 8th Iowa Volunteer Infantry and was killed at the Battle of Shiloh on April 6, 1862. (Gentile p 15)

References

  1. Gentile, Nancy Jacquelyn, The Penrose Family at Graeme Park Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 1984
  2. Gordon, Abby, The History of Horsham Monthly Meeting Horsham Monthly Meeting, Horsham 2009
  3. Smith, Charles Harper , The Settlement of Horsham Township Privately Printed / Local Historical Society (1973)