Nathan growing up in York County, Pennsylvania. In 1780 he married Ann Love (around 1757-1787/88) and after his first wife death he remarried with Ann Lupton (9 June 1767 - 25 December 1833) in 1788. Afterwards the settled in Winchester, Virginia and established a had factory.[4] In 1801 they joined the Quaker migration to the Northwest Territory.[4] In the following year[5] he moved with his family to Mount Pleasant, Jefferson, Ohio.[6] In the same year he became founder and delegate to Ohio's first constitutional convention[7] for Jefferson County.[8][9] Nathan became a leader and minister of the Quakers in that area. He also served as a charter member of the Concord monthly meeting, the first in Ohio. They built up a meeting house in 1806/07 which was the largest one in the state. Mount Pleasant became a center of Quaker activity in eastern Ohio. Due his and other Quakers influence and work the city became a center of the abolition movement.[7] Politically and socially, he not only strongly opposed slavery within the state, but also voted to extend various civil rights, including the right to vote, to Black people.[10]
Updegraff built the first Mill in Mount Pleasant Township, manufactured paper and owned estates of 1,586 acres.[7]
Offspring
Nathan Updegraff and Anne Love (around 1757-1787/88) had following children:[11]
Children of Nathan Updegraff and Ann Lupton (9 June 1767 - 25 December 1833):[11]
Rachel Updegraff (1790-1821)
Hannah Updegraff (1792-1882)
Nathan Updegraff Jr. (1795-1871)
Nancy Updegraff (1801-1855)
Mary Updegraff (1804-1871)
Josiah Updegraff (1810-1881)
Thomas Updegraff (* 1811)
Coat of arms
There is a reference about the Op den Graeff glass paintings of Krefeld with a description of Herman op den Graeffs coat of arms was found in the estate of W. Niepoth (op den Graeff folder) in the archives of the city of Krefeld, who noted a letter dated November 17, 1935 from Richard Wolfferts to Dr Risler: Saw the Coat of Arms glass pane in the old museum: 'Herman op den Graeff und Grietgen syn housfrau' or the like. Coat of Arms - In the sign a silver swan in blue. Helmet decoration (I think): Swan growing.[12]
Ohio's Founding Father's, p 226 ff, by Fred Milligan (2003)
Footnotes
^June (Shaull) Lutz, History of the Op Den Graef / Updegraff Family (Grand Rapids, Michigan; 1433 Elderwood Ct. N.W.: J. S. Lutz, 1988), p. U-172 (Original at University of Wisconsin - Madison)
^ abJune (Shaull) Lutz, History of the Op Den Graef / Updegraff Family (Grand Rapids, Michigan; 1433 Elderwood Ct. N.W.: J. S. Lutz, 1988), p. U-175 (Original at University of Wisconsin - Madison)
^June (Shaull) Lutz, History of the Op Den Graef / Updegraff Family (Grand Rapids, Michigan; 1433 Elderwood Ct. N.W.: J. S. Lutz, 1988), p. 22 (Original at University of Wisconsin - Madison)