Elder Jacob Maryon Coffman Chapter

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Elder Jacob Maryon Coffman is a Chapter of The General Society of the War of 1812 in Texas, formed to perpetuate and extend the institutions of American freedom, and foster true patriotism and love of country.

Members participated in Memorial Day Services at Mt. Gilead Cemetery in Keller, Texas. Members and friends dressed in un...
05/29/2025

Members participated in Memorial Day Services at Mt. Gilead Cemetery in Keller, Texas. Members and friends dressed in uniforms that represented the American Revolution, the War of 1812, the Civil War (Union & Confederate), the Texas Fight for Independence, World War I and II, and Vietnam and provided a firing line in honor of all those who have died keeping this great nation free. The group also posed with an SAR 250th Anniversary Flag.

07/04/2023
Chapter members again this year supported the Mt. Gilead Cemetery Memorial Day Celebration with a firing line made up of...
06/10/2023

Chapter members again this year supported the Mt. Gilead Cemetery Memorial Day Celebration with a firing line made up of men wearing uniforms from the American Revolution to the Vietnam War. Uniforms represented the American Revolution, the War of 1812, Texas Independence, the Civil War (Confederacy & Union), the First World War, the Second World War & Korea, and the Vietnam War. Three volleys consisted of the salute to Veterans. Standing from left to right: Mike Fairchild, Dan Hamilton, Vann Cunningham, Kevin Shellman, Ron Turner, Drake Peddie, Jim Young, Gerry Gieger, Mark Parkison, Bobby Gresham, & Joe Wade. Kneeling from left to right: Jake Behringer, James Alderman, & Paul Porter.

09/23/2022
03/15/2022

War of 1812

"In the War of 1812, the United States took on the greatest naval power in the world, Great Britain, in a conflict that would have an immense impact on the young country’s future. Causes of the war included British attempts to restrict U.S. trade, the Royal Navy’s impressment of American seamen and America’s desire to expand its territory.

The United States suffered many costly defeats at the hands of British, Canadian and Native American troops over the course of the War of 1812, including the capture and burning of the nation’s capital, Washington, D.C., in August 1814. Nonetheless, American troops were able to repulse British invasions in New York, Baltimore and New Orleans, boosting national confidence and fostering a new spirit of patriotism. The ratification of the Treaty of Ghent on February 17, 1815, ended the war but left many of the most contentious questions unresolved. Nonetheless, many in the United States celebrated the War of 1812 as a “second war of independence,” beginning an era of partisan agreement and national pride.

Causes of the War of 1812

At the outset of the 19th century, Great Britain was locked in a long and bitter conflict with Napoleon Bonaparte’s France. In an attempt to cut off supplies from reaching the enemy, both sides attempted to block the United States from trading with the other. In 1807, Britain passed the Orders in Council, which required neutral countries to obtain a license from its authorities before trading with France or French colonies. The Royal Navy also outraged Americans by its practice of impressment, or removing seamen from U.S. merchant vessels and forcing them to serve on behalf of the British.

In 1809, the U.S. Congress repealed Thomas Jefferson’s unpopular Embargo Act, which by restricting trade had hurt Americans more than either Britain or France. Its replacement, the Non-Intercourse Act, specifically prohibited trade with Britain and France. It also proved ineffective, and in turn was replaced with a May 1810 bill stating that if either power dropped trade restrictions against the United States, Congress would in turn resume non-intercourse with the opposing power.

After Napoleon hinted he would stop restrictions, President James Madison blocked all trade with Britain that November. Meanwhile, new members of Congress elected that year—led by Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun—had begun to agitate for war, based on their indignation over British violations of maritime rights as well as Britain’s encouragement of Native American hostility against American westward expansion.

The War of 1812 Breaks Out

In the fall of 1811, Indiana’s territorial governor William Henry Harrison led U.S. troops to victory in the Battle of Tippecanoe. The defeat convinced many Indians in the Northwest Territory (including the celebrated Shawnee chief Tecumseh) that they needed British support to prevent American settlers from pushing them further out of their lands.

Meanwhile, by late 1811 the so-called “War Hawks” in Congress were putting more and more pressure on Madison, and on June 18, 1812, the president signed a declaration of war against Britain. Though Congress ultimately voted for war, both House and Senate were bitterly divided on the issue. Most Western and Southern congressmen supported war, while Federalists (especially New Englanders who relied heavily on trade with Britain) accused war advocates of using the excuse of maritime rights to promote their expansionist agenda. In order to strike at Great Britain, U.S. forces almost immediately attacked Canada, which was then a British colony. American officials were overly optimistic about the invasion’s success, especially given how underprepared U.S. troops were at the time. On the other side, they faced a well-managed defense coordinated by Sir Isaac Brock, the British soldier and administrator in charge in Upper Canada (modern Ontario).

On August 16, 1812, the United States suffered a humiliating defeat after Brock and Tecumseh’s forces chased those led by Michigan William Hull across the Canadian border, scaring Hull into surrendering Detroit without any shots fired.

War of 1812: Mixed Results for American Forces

Things looked better for the United States in the West, as Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry’s brilliant success in the Battle of Lake Erie in September 1813 placed the Northwest Territory firmly under American control. Harrison was subsequently able to retake Detroit with a victory in the Battle of Thames (in which Tecumseh was killed). Meanwhile, the U.S. navy had been able to score several victories over the Royal Navy in the early months of the war. With the defeat of Napoleon’s armies in April 1814, however, Britain was able to turn its full attention to the war effort in North America.

As large numbers of troops arrived, British forces raided the Chesapeake Bay and moved in on the U.S. capital, capturing Washington, D.C., on August 24, 1814, and burning government buildings including the Capitol and the White House.

On September 11, 1814, at the Battle of Plattsburgh on Lake Champlain in New York, the American navy soundly defeated the British fleet. And on September 13, 1814, Baltimore’s Fort McHenry withstood 25 hours of bombardment by the British Navy.

The following morning, the fort’s soldiers hoisted an enormous American flag, a sight that inspired Francis Scott Key to write a poem that would later be set to music and become known as “The Star-Spangled Banner.” (Set to the tune of an old English drinking song, it would later be adopted as the U.S. national anthem.) British forces subsequently left the Chesapeake Bay and began gathering their efforts for a campaign against New Orleans.

End of the War of 1812 and Its Impact

By that time, peace talks had already begun at Ghent (modern Belgium), and Britain moved for an armistice after the failure of the assault on Baltimore. In the negotiations that followed, the United States gave up its demands to end impressment, while Britain promised to leave Canada’s borders unchanged and abandon efforts to create an Indian state in the Northwest. On December 24, 1814, commissioners signed the Treaty of Ghent, which would be ratified the following February.

On January 8, 1815, unaware that peace had been concluded, British forces mounted a major attack in the Battle of New Orleans, only to meet with defeat at the hands of future U.S. president Andrew Jackson’s army. News of the battle boosted sagging U.S. morale and left Americans with the taste of victory, despite the fact that the country had achieved none of its pre-war objectives.

Impact of the War of 1812
Though the War of 1812 is remembered as a relatively minor conflict in the United States and Britain, it looms large for Canadians and for Native Americans, who see it as a decisive turning point in their losing struggle to govern themselves. In fact, the war had a far-reaching impact in the United States, as the Treaty of Ghent ended decades of bitter partisan infighting in government and ushered in the so-called “Era of Good Feelings.”

The war also marked the demise of the Federalist Party, which had been accused of being unpatriotic for its antiwar stance, and reinforced a tradition of Anglophobia that had begun during the Revolutionary War. Perhaps most importantly, the war’s outcome boosted national self-confidence and encouraged the growing spirit of American expansionism that would shape the better part of the 19th century."
History.com Editors

01/11/2022

Elder Jacob Maryon COFFMAN was born on 23 Feb 1777 in Fauquier County, Virginia. In his 80’s, Jacob Maryon died in Cherokee County, Alabama (after 1860 US Census).

Jacob was a farmer and Primitive Baptist preacher, and was on the Board of Trustees of the church known as Robertson's Creek Meeting House, located on the south side of Robertson Creek in Hawkins County, Tennessee. In December 1808, his father gave him 60 acres of land, being the lower tract of 200 acres granted by North Carolina, November 18, 1795, to David Coffman, where Jacob lived on the fork of Bent Creek, adjoining Lovell Coffman.

The Bent Creek Cemetery located in the upper end of Hamblen County in Eastern Tennessee about a mile south of the little village of Whitesburg, marked its 150th anniversary. Settlement in this part of the country had commenced shortly after the Revolutionary War and in 1785 Bent Creek Baptist Church had organized with Tydence Lane as the first pastor, and with Isaac Barton, William Murphy, James Roddye, Jacob Coffman, Samuel Riggs, William Horner, and many others prominent in its growth. The burying ground was given in 1810, 25 years after the organization of the church, by William Horner. Andrew Coffman (1784-1864) (Jacob’s brother) is one of the names on the old tombstones. (The above was published in the Ansearchin News, July, 1960) - (also printed in the DAR magazine on pg. 41, issue dated January 1970).

Jacob sold 244 acres of land in 1837 and by 1840 was in Alabama. Cherokee County, Alabama. The 1860 census shows Jacob to be 83 years old, his wife Nancy age 80. On June 8, 1842 Jacob was granted 120 acres of land in Cherokee County, Alabama and again on February 9, 1852, he was granted another 120 acres for his services in the War of 1812. This land was just north of Cedar Bluff. Here he preached at the Unity Missionary Baptist Church. He died sometime after 1860 and is buried in the Cemetery near this church, four miles north of Cedar Bluff, Alabama. Directions are: from Alabama Highway 9 and Alabama Highway 68 in Cedar Bluff, go 2.2 miles north on Highway 8. Just past a green bridge, turn left on Cherokee County Road #75, go about 2.4 miles to another bridge. Just past the bridge the road makes a Y - go left on Cherokee County Road #82 and the cemetery will be in sight. The church was organized in 1835 and burned to the ground on July 20 1992, according to cemetery records, Cherokee County, Alabama 1840-1960 by Stewart.

Jacob was on the payroll of militia commanded by Captain James J. Laughmiller in the Regiment commanded by Colonel Ewin Allison, 1814, Hawkins County, Tennessee. He was discharged 27 April 1814 on orders of General Jackson, following the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in Mississippi Territory (presently Northern Alabama).

In addition to his Ministry, Jacob owned much land, a gin and cotton factory.

On 11 Nov 1799 when Jacob Maryon was 22, he married Nancy WALKER, in Jefferson County, Tennessee, at the home of James Walker, Nancy’s brother. Nancy was born in 1779, probably in Goochland County, Virginia, where her parents resided.

From the Bible of Jacob & Nancy’s elder son, Lovell Coffman, we learn that they had 10 surviving children;

Lovell b1800; James b1802; Maryon b1803; Franky(Frances) b1805; David b1808; Jane b1809; Elizabeth b1811; Susannah b1813; and Twins, Luiza (Louisa) & Adah b1817.

Virtually all the Coffman Families in Northern Texas, stretching from Bowie County and all in between to Grayson County, and Southward to Upshur County, are descended from Jacob or one of his brothers, sons of David & Mary Ann (Lovell) Coffman.

On January 10, 2022, John Thompson, President of the General Society of the War of 1812 in Texas presented President Ger...
01/11/2022

On January 10, 2022, John Thompson, President of the General Society of the War of 1812 in Texas presented President Gerry Gieger with the chapter's charter.
President Thompson installed officers: Vice President & Treasurer Ron Turner, Registrar Don Woodsworth, Chaplain Chris Blair, and President Gerry Gieger.

01/11/2022

The objectives of the Society are the collection and preservation of rolls, records, books, and other documents relating to the War of 1812; the encouragement of research and the preservation of historical data, including memorials to patriots of that era in our national history; the caring for and marking of the graves of veterans of the War of 1812; the cherishing, maintenance and extension of the institutions of American freedom; and the fostering of true patriotism and love of country. In carrying out these objectives, the State Societies hold meetings for their members and guests at which programs relating to the War of 1812 and intelligent patriotism are presented. Over the years, the membership has been fortunate in attracting gentlemen of high caliber, intelligence, and gracious demeanor.

The General Society and its affiliated State Societies are sensitive to the high ideals espoused by our Founding Fathers and they feel the duty that ever-vigilant defense of our nation and its Constitution entails.

Qualifications for Membership

Genealogical documentation or proof is required for each generation from the veteran ancestor to the applicant. Forms will be provided for this purpose. All application papers are examined carefully by competent genealogists before approval for election to membership is granted. The Texas Society accepts SAR/DAR Record Copies as proof of lineal descent.

Genealogical Qualifications

Any male person (18 or older) who is a lineal descendant of one who served during the War of 1812, in a military service of the United States, offering proof thereof satisfactory to the State Society to which he may make application for membership, and who is of good moral character and reputation, may become a member of this Society when approved of by said State Society, under such regulations as it may make for passing upon applications for membership.

The following service and no other shall be regarded as satisfying the requirements of the preceding paragraph:

(1) Service as an officer, warrant officer or enlisted man in the United States Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Revenue Marine, Flotilla Service or Voluntary Corps at any time between November 7, 1811 and July 18, 1815;
(2) Service at any time between November 7, 1811 and July 18, 1815, as a member of the ship’s company on any public armed vessel of the United States or any vessel sailing under Letters of Marque and Reprisal issued by the United States;
(3) Service in the militia of any state or territory or the District of Columbia duly called out for service against an armed enemy or for coast or border defense between November 7, 1811 and July 18, 1815;
(4) Service in the forces of the United States at the Battle of Tippecanoe on November 7, 1811;
(5) Service as the President of the United States, Secretary of War or Secretary of the Navy between November 7, 1811 and July 18, 1815.
(6) Service as a Governor or Adjutant General of a state or territory of the United States between November 7, 1811 and July 18, 1815.

No service, however, shall be regarded as qualifying if the person who rendered such service voluntarily bore arms against the United States at any time between the dates named or if such person’s latest service between said dates was terminated by a separation from the service under conditions other than honorable.

In case of the failure of lineal descendants of an actual participant in the War on behalf of the United States, one collateral descendant, who is deemed worthy, may be admitted to represent the said participant. Provided, always, that such representation shall be limited to the descendant of either a brother or sister of the participant in the war, in right of whose services application for membership is made.

Address

Fort Worth, TX

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