The following information was assembled from numerous sources and cannot be used directly as proof of Qualifying Service or Lineage.
It is considered a research aid and is intended to assist in locating sources that can be used as proof.
State of Service: GA
Qualifying Service: Chaplain / Patriotic Service
Georgia Society Daniel Marshall Memorial Photos by permission: William Joseph Tankersley, Georgia Society SAR
Directions to Cemetery / Gravesite:
Find-a-Grave: map coordinates have not been set for this cemetery
Photo: 1 of 2
Photo: 2 of 2
Author: Kenneth Scott Collins
Reverend Daniel Marshall b. 1706 d. 1784 COLUMBIA COUNTY, GEORGIA
He served as a Chaplain in the Georgia Troops and received bounty land in Washington County for his services. In 1772, he established Kiokee Baptist Church, the first Baptist Church in the state. He was imprisoned by the British several times.
Buried: Marshall Memorial, center of Appling.
See: (1) Georgia Pioneers and their Times, p. 124.
(2) Georgia Revolutionary Soldiers, Sailors, Patriots & Descendants, v. 1, p. 146.
(3) Georgia's Roster of the Revolution, p. 270, 422.
(4) 'Neath Georgia Sod, p. 26.
(5) Roster of Revolutionary Soldiers in Georgia, v. 3, p. 150.
Source: Georgia Revolutionary Soldiers & Sailors, Patriots & Pioneers; Volume 1, by Ross Arnold & Hank Burnham with additions and corrections by: Mary Jane Galer, Dr. Julian Kelly, Jr., and Ryan Groenke. Edited by: Ryan Groenke.
A Georgia County-by-County compilation of Revolutionary War Patriots who made Georgia their permanent home and died here, including information on service history, birth dates, death dates and places of burial with an index.
Published by the Georgia Society Sons of the American Revolution, 2001.
Printed in the United States of America
New Papyrus Co., Inc.
548 Cedar Creek Drive
Athens, GA 30605-3408
Author: William Joseph Tankersley
Daniel Marshall, a Baptist pastor and itinerant preacher, is generally considered the first great Baptist leader in Georgia.
He founded Kiokee Baptist Church, the oldest continuing Baptist congregation in the state. Born in Windsor, Connecticut, on August 24, 1706, Marshall had no formal education. He began his career as a farmer and served for twenty years as a deacon in the First Church in Windsor, one of the nation's oldest Congregational churches. In 1742 he married Hannah Drake, and they had one child, Daniel Jr.
Coming under the influence of the revivalist George Whitfield around 1745, Marshall became a Separate Congregationalist, a group considerably more evangelistic and charismatic than the establishment Standing Order Congregationalist churches of Connecticut. As a layman he preached in New York and Pennsylvania for about three years. During this time his first wife died, and in 1747 he married Martha Stearns, the sister of an evangelical preacher. Together they had ten children: Abraham, John, Zaccheus, Levi, Moses, Solomon, Joseph, Eunice, Mary, and Benjamin. Marshall's wife later became a preacher in her own right, although she was never ordained.
From 1754 to 1771 Marshall ministered in Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, becoming an ordained Separate Baptist leader second in influence only to Shubal Stearns, his brother-in-law. During these years Marshall was a revivalistic and emotional farmer-preacher who influenced at least fourteen men to enter the ministry and assisted in founding at least eighteen Separate Baptist churches and two district associations.
Marshall moved to Columbia County, Georgia, in 1771, and soon thereafter he organized the Kiokee Church, probably about three and a half miles east of the town of Appling. As the Baptist patriarch in the area, he was a mentor to at least sixteen younger preachers. During the Revolutionary War (1775-83) Marshall was an American patriot; after the war he and others fought for legislation favoring religious liberty. Just before his death he acted as moderator of the Georgia Baptist Association, founded in 1784 at Kiokee Church. Of the 104 known Baptist churches organized in Georgia during the eighteenth century, a large number of them trace their origins to Marshall or to one of his junior colleagues.
Marshall died in Columbia County on November 2, 1784. He was succeeded as pastor of Kiokee by his son Abraham and later by a grandson, Jabez. Thus he founded a sixty-one-year ministerial dynasty, an occurrence rare in Baptist circles. He apparently owned at least 400 acres of land in Georgia (but no ) and left an estate "of considerable value." To his contemporaries Marshall was a man of holy zeal, meekness, and patience, but his gifts, in the words of his son Abraham, "were by no means above mediocrity." One honest friend, Morgan Edwards, described him as "a weak man, a stammerer, and no scholar," and admitted that Marshall's success was "surprising when we consider that he is a man of no bright parts, nor eloquence nor learning. Piety, earnestness and honesty are all he can boast of."
The Marshall Historical Site, near Appling, was dedicated in 1984.
Source: Gardner, Robert G. "Daniel Marshall (1706-1784)." New Georgia Encyclopedia. 09 August 2013. Web. 03 February 2015.
Send a biographical sketch of your patriot!
Patriot biographies must be the original work of the author, and work submitted must not belong to another person or group, in observance with copyright law. Patriot biographies are to be written in complete sentences, follow the established rules of grammar, syntax and punctuation, be free of typographical errors, and follow a narrative format. The narrative should unfold in a logical manner (e.g. the narrative does not jump from time period to time period) or have repeated digressions, or tell the history of the patriot's line from the patriot ancestor to the author. The thinking here is that this is a patriot biography, not a lineage report or a kinship determination project or other report published in a genealogy journal. The biography should discuss the qualifying service (military, patriotic, civil) of the patriot ancestor, where the service was rendered, whether this was a specific state or Continental service, as well as significant events (as determined by the author) of the patriot's life. This is the entire purpose of a patriot's biography.
Additional guidelines around the Biography writeup can be found here:
Send your submission1, in a Microsoft Word compatible format, to patriotbios@sar.org for inclusion in this space 1Upon submission of a patriot biography, the patriot biography becomes the property of the National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution, and may be edited to conform to the patriot biography submission standards.