Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Isaac Van Horne (January 13, 1754, Solebury Township, Pennsylvania – February 2, 1834, Zanesville, Ohio) was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania.

  2. Isaac Van Horne (January 13, 1754, Solebury Township, Pennsylvania – February 2, 1834, Zanesville, Ohio) was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania. ==Family== ===Ancestry=== He is the eldest son of Bernard Van Horne and his first wife Sarah Van Pelt Van Horne.

  3. VAN HORNE, ISAAC, a Representative from Pennsylvania; born in Tollbury Township, Bucks County, Pa., January 13, 1754; apprenticed as a carpenter and cabinetmaker; elected ensign of a company of militia in 1775; appointed ensign in the Continental Army by the committee of safety and in January 1776 was assigned to Capt. John Beatty's Company in ...

  4. Isaac Van Horn, b. 13 January 1754, an Officer in the Continental Line of the Army of the Revolution from Solebury, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. During his first tour as an Ensign in 1776, he was captured at the Battle of Fort Washington NY 16 Nov 1776 and held prisoner by the British on Manhattan Island, and at Long Island NY from Nov 1776 ...

    • Male
    • Dorothy Johns
  5. VAN HORNE Isaac , a Representative from Pennsylvania; born in Tollbury Township, Bucks County, Pa., January 13, 1754; apprenticed as a carpenter and cabinetmaker; elected ensign of a company of militia in 1775; appointed ensign in the Continental Army by the committee of safety and in January 1776 was assigned to Capt.

  6. said Isaac Van Horne: That there is no record of the marriage other than the following, contained in an old Dutch testament, to wit: "Isaac Van Horne & Dorothy Marple being married, the first of their offspring was a daughter Jane, born the fourth day of Sept. 1785." the above is in the hand writing of the deceased Isaac Van Horne.

  7. Isaac Van Horne (13 January 1754 – 2 February 1834) was a member of the US House of Representatives (DR-PA 4) from 1801 to 1803 (succeeding Peter Muhlenberg) and from PA-2 from 1803 to 1805 (succeeding Michael Leib and preceding John Pugh).