passing through a variety of adventures returned to
Tuscarora Valley, and, finding her husband dead, proved
his will and took possession of her half of his property.
Grey’s sister was disposed to assert her claim
to the other portion, but Mrs. Grey always maintained
that her little daughter Jane was alive, and would
sooner or later, after the French and Indian wars
were ended, be released and sent back. In 1764
a treaty was made with the Indians enforcing a general
surrender of all their white captives. A number
of stolen children were brought to Philadelphia to
be identified by their friends and relations, and Mrs.
Grey (who in the mean time had married a Mr. Williams)
made the journey to this city in the hope of claiming
her little daughter Jane. Seven years had passed
since Mrs. Williams had seen the child, who might be
expected to have grown out of her remembrance.
But, even taking this into consideration, there seemed
at first to be none of the children who in the least
respect answered the description of the lost girl.
Mrs. Grey probably longed to find her daughter for
affection’s sake. But there was besides
a powerful motive to induce her, inasmuch as she wished
to get possession of the other half of her husband’s
property, which must otherwise be forfeited to his
sister, Mrs. James Grey. One of the captive children,
apparently about the same age as the lost Jane, had
found no one to recognize her. Mrs. Williams determined
to take this girl and substitute her for her own,
and put an end to Mrs. James Grey’s claim.
She did so, and brought up the stranger for her own
child. The Grey property thus passed wholly into
the possession of Mrs. Williams. The girl grew
up rough, awkward and ugly, incapable of refinement
and even gross in her morals. She finally married
a minister by the name of Gillespie.
Meanwhile, the heirs of Mrs. James Grey had gained
some sort of information which led them to suspect
that the returned girl was no relation of their uncle
John Grey, and in 1789 they brought a lawsuit to recover
their mother’s half of the property. By
this time endless complications had arisen. Mrs.
Williams was dead: her half of her first husband’s
farm had been bequeathed to her second husband’s
kindred, and was now in part held by them and in part
had been bought by half a dozen others. The supposed
daughter, Mrs. Gillespie, had died, as had her husband,
and their share had passed to his relations. It
had become almost impossible for the most astute lawyers
to find beginning, middle or end to the claims which
were set forth. Plenty of evidence was collected
to show that Mrs. Williams had substituted a stranger
for her own child, and the decision finally rested
on this, and the property was given up to the heirs
of Mrs. James Grey. This did not happen, however,
until 1834, when few or none of the original litigants
remained.
The real little Jane Grey, so it was said, was brought
up in a good family who adopted her, and afterward
married well and had children, residing near Sir William
Johnson’s place in Central New York.—L.W.