PICTON OF EGLWYSWRW, NEW JERSEY, NEW ORLEANS AND TEXAS

Rev Thomas Picton and Descendant Pictures
Picton Family Favorites Cook Book- by descendants of Rev. Thomas Picton (Another cousin related line)

Below information researched and provided by

Brian Picton Swann



Rev. THOMAS PICTON, MA, son of Owen Picton of Nantgwyn, Eglwyswrw (see PICTON of Whitechurch and Trelech), was born on 1 May 1775. As his father and mother were both dead by 1787 he lived with his uncle, Thomas Picton, between 1787 and 1796. He decided to emigrate to America; and he sailed from Milford Haven and arrived in New York on 14 May 1796. He was appointed Minister of the Presbyterian Church at Woodbury and Timber Creek, near Camden, New Jersey, on 18 October 1799.

He married Mary Zantzinger of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on 18 November 1802 at Cumberland, New Jersey. He went to the Presbytery of New York on 18 April 1805, and from there he was appointed to Westfield Presbyterian Church, New Jersey, on 24 October 1805. He launched the Great Revival of 1808 from there. He graduated from Princeton University with an honorary AM in 1811. A letter survives to his uncle, Thomas Picton, written in 1813.

He resigned from Westfield in 1818, and was appointed Chaplain and Professor of Geography, History and Ethics at the Military Academy, West Point, New York on 23 July 1818. He succeeded Christian Zoeller, who had resigned his position. Thomas Picton was thus the first person appointed to teach law at West Point. For the next 58 years the Chaplain at West Point was responsible for law instruction. He was assisted by junior officers, most of whom were recent graduates of the Academy, and sometimes by cadets.

His wife, Mary Picton, died in 1821 and was buried at West Point. He resigned from West Point on 1 January 1825. He was a member of the North River Presbytery, without charge, in 1828. He was sent with others to form Bedford Presbytery in 1830. He taught afterwards for several years in a select school in New York City. Letters survive written to his cousin, Owen Picton of Glanrhyd, Trelech, between 1845 and 1858 (Carmarthen Record Office, ACC 4199-4204). He is recorded in the 1850 Census at Hoboken, New Jersey, aged 70, in the house of his son-in-law, Edwin Stevens. Thomas Picton died at Hoboken, New Jersey, on 6 February 1861. He was originally interred at Hoboken, but in 1865 his grand-daughter, Mary Garnet, obtained permission from the Secretary of State to remove his remains to West Point for burial beside those of his wife. Thomas and Mary Picton had two children:


E-Mail to Owen Picton
Return to Home Page
Last Modified December 2009
This site designed and maintained by Owen Picton.