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  1. John Harris Jr. (1716 – July 29, 1791 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania ), was a storekeeper and frontiersman who operated a ferry along the Susquehanna River at Harrisburg.

  2. Apr 3, 2024 · John Harris, Jr.was considered the first settler to establish a trading post along the Susquehanna River. It was he who founded the city of Harrisburg, upon the site of what, for three quarters of a century, was known as Harris' Ferry; and what would later become the state capital of Pennsylvania.

    • Male
    • July 29, 1791
  3. Trading post owner John Harris Jr. wrote to the governor and offered to lead an expedition upriver to try to pacify the Native Americans and find out the mindset of those at Shamokin (present-day Sunbury), since the Indians there were known to be friendly to settlers. He gathered a group of 40 or 50 men and set out on October 22.

  4. Mar 16, 2015 · In 1766, John Harris Jr., who was now operating the ferry and trading post, decided that it was time to build a more substantial family home. Choosing a small hill near the trading post, Harris built a grand stone home.

  5. Mar 2, 2008 · John Harris, Sr. died in 1748, and was buried, at his request, beneath the shade of a mulberry tree in River Park below Harrisburg Hospital. He had once been tied to this tree by hostile Indians who were prepared to burn him, but fortuitously, his Indian friends rescued him in the nick of time.

  6. Apr 29, 2022 · John Harris, Jr. is the son of John Harris, Sr., who is considered the first settler to establish a trading post along the Susquehanna River at what would later become the state capital of Pennsylvania. Biography

  7. John Harris Jr. provided Patriotic Service by paying the Pennsylvania Supply Tax and serving as Superintendent of Elections appointed by Provincial Conference in 1776. Numerous descendants of Harris have proven their lineage for the Daughters of the American Revolution.