The Worthingtons
Thomas Sr.
Eleanor Sr.
Mary
Sarah
James
Albert
Thomas Jr.
Ellen
Margaret
Elizabeth
William
Francis
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ELEANOR WORTHINGTON (1777-1848) "Wife, mother,
manager." Eleanor Swearingen was born into a wealthy
Virginia family near Shepherdstown, in the Shenandoah Valley in 1777. Her
mother, Phebe Strode Swearingen, died when her daughter was just nine years
old and the child's aunt (and namesake) Eleanor Shepherd became an
increasingly important part of the young girl's life. Eleanor's mother and
aunt taught her the genteel skills that were desired in a lady of her
background, including music, dancing, and needlework. An unfinished sampler
made by young Eleanor attests to this part of her education. They also
taught her the skills needed to manage an estate, including the rudiments of
reading, writing, and math and the social graces required for formal
entertaining. She also learned to sew, to attend to relatives during
sickness or childbirth, to take care of chickens, and to milk cows.
When
Eleanor met Thomas Worthington, from nearby Charles Town, is not known. The
young couple was married at the home of Abraham and Eleanor Shepherd on 13
December 1796. During much of the time that Eleanor Worthington lived at
Adena, her primary role was that of mother. For a period of approximately
twenty-two years, Eleanor was pregnant with or nursing one of her ten
children. Eleanor was more fortunate in childbirth than many women of her
day: all ten children survived to adulthood and she herself survived their
births. Eleanor's youngest daughters began bearing children at the time
Eleanor carried her last children. By all accounts, Eleanor was a devoted
mother, and letters from her children indicate a sincere affection on their
part. Correspondence indicates that she kept a close watch on her children.
Later in life, one of the few negative comments she made about her
daughter-in-law Julia was that she did not take close enough care of her
sickly baby and left it in the charge of a servant who "does not [take] that
care of it . . . as I should wish were it mine."
Religion seems to have
been a unifying force for the young couple. In his first letter to Eleanor
after their marriage, Worthington urged "Oh, my dear, do not forget to pour
forth your soul to Him [God] whenever opportunity serves!" Although both
Thomas and Eleanor professed strong religious beliefs, they may have
differed over how their faith should be expressed. During an 1810 camp
meeting, a participant wrote, "Mrs. Worthington . . . was among the penitent
seekers of religion, and under the strong emotions and in this state of
feeling she was taken away by the General who was displeased with these
outward manifestations of inward feelings."
Eleanor also played an
important role in business affairs at Adena because her husband was so
frequently away from the homeplace. Eleanor kept the accounts of the farm,
dealt with the bank and supervised tenants. In 1807, Worthington wrote that
a member of Congress had remarked to him "You certainly lose money by your
attendance here; but I am informed on good authority that if it was not for
Mrs. Worthington you would lose more."
Following her husband's death on a
business trip to New York, a journey Eleanor implored him not to take,
Eleanor lived on at Adena, raising the youngest children. Her eldest son,
James, took over the day-to-day affairs of the farm. Worthington left many
debts and the economy was sluggish, so the years immediately after his death
were difficult ones. Two of her adult children died during the last years
of Eleanor's life, a source of great pain to her. Eleanor Worthington died
at Adena on Christmas Eve, 1848, having lived 71 years.
TIMELINE:
ELEANOR WORTHINGTON: |  |
| 22 September, 1777:
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Eleanor Swearingen born in Berkeley County,
Virginia. |
1786: |
Eleanor's
mother died. |
1795: |
Eleanor's
father died. |
1796: |
Married
Thomas Worthington in Shepardstown, Virginia. |
| 1797-1819: |
Survived the birth of ten children, who all lived to
adulthood. |
1798: |
Moved with
her family to the Ohio Country. |
1807: |
Moved into
and took charge of the completed Adena mansion. |
| 1827: |
Thomas
Worthington died and Eleanor traveled to New York City to get her husband's
body. |
1837: |
Took in
the orphaned children of her daughter Mary. |
1844 24 December: |
Eleanor Worthington died at
Adena. |
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