Captain William Tisue (also Tissue, Tyshue, Tyshoe, Tice, Tyse - all spellings for the same man) was in the Revolutionary Service.His first wife was a neighbor, Mary Hendrickson, and they had three children, John, James, and an infant daughter The murders of Mary and their daughter has become legend. William was offered a commission in the army during the Revolutionary War but hesitated to accept until he acquired the services of a young German "redemptioner" in Baltimore.
Assuming the family to be in good hands, William accepted the commission of captain in the 1st Battery of the Bedford County Militia. But tragedy soon struck. The farm hand had developed a strong attraction to Mary, and when she repelled his advances, he bludgeoned her to death and dismembered her body. After burying her remains under the house, he set it on fire.
Unfortunately, the infant daughter lay forgotten in her crib, and also perished. Their two small boys were taken hostage and before their eventual release, he cut out both their tongues. Neither child was ever normal again after this psychological and physical horror.