Noah Zane
Noah Ebenezer Zane was an American pioneer and politician. Born near Fort Henry, he represented several western Virginia counties in the Virginia Senate during the War of 1812.
Early and family life
Noah Zane was one of eleven children born to pioneer Ebenezer Zane and his wife Elizabeth McColloch or McCullough. As an infant, Noah and his sisters survived the siege in September 1782, as his father, Zane uncles, aunt Betty Zane and uncles Major Samuel McCulloch and Major John McCulloch fought Native Americans seeking to expel the settlers. His brothers Daniel and Samuel also outlived their parents, as did several sisters.In 1806 he married Mary Chapline, the daughter of Moses Chapline and Mary Caldwell, thus descended from two other important pioneer families in the area. Their only son to survive childhood, Platoff Zane did not survive his parents, although he did have three sons and two daughters. Noah Zane's four daughters married and survived the American Civil War.
Career
Noah Zane farmed on both sides of the Ohio River near Wheeling, as well as administered the estates of his parents. He owned three enslaved people in 1810, and in 1820 owned seven slaves, with two free Black women also living in his household. In the final census of his lifetime, his household included four free Black women and one enslaved Black man, whereas his brother Daniel Zane who lived nearby still owned four enslaved Blacks.In 1812, Ohio County voters, together with those in several nearby counties of northwestern Virginia elected Zane to the Virginia Senate, where he succeeded James Pindall and was in turn replaced by George J. Davisson in 1816.