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THE
BIOGRAPHICAL
ENCYCLOPEDIA
OHIO OF
THE NINETEENTH CENTURY.
CINCINNATI AND PHILADELPHIA:
GALAXY PUBLISHING COMPANY. 1876.
Entered, according to Act of Congress, in
tlie
year 1876, by
CHARLES ROBSON, In
tlie Office
of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington,
I).
C.
i
'
^
Mm
v
w
1
.V'
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%ractice, w'hich
embraced, as may be readily inferred from
these instances,
some of
the most important civil actions
brought to the attention of the State and Federal courts,
had up
year 1841 wholly engrossed his attention, and
to the
he had kept aloof from right of citizenship.
sometimes
He
had been an independent
Democrats,
supporting
He
Whigs.
politics except in the exercise of his
more
but
voter,
commonly
had acquired an abhorrence of the
institution
of slavery, and this feeling was greatly stimulated by his personal contact with for
one of
in the courts.
it
It
was impossible
energy and force of character to remain a
his
passive witness of the efforts for the extension of slavery in
He
the States.
North, which
gave his support
to the
that time 'seemed
at
Whig
party of the
more favorable
an
to
organized resistance to the growing institution, but even the doctrine of this party failed to satisfy liim. fore,
he united
to slavery
held
and
for a
in a call its
convention of those opposed
further extension.
Columbus, Ohio,
at
in
In 1S41, there-
This convention was
December of
that year,
and
it
resulted in the organization of the Liberty party of Ohio,
and placed
in
the field a gubernatorial
Chase wrote an address
to
candidate.
Mr.
the people, defending the doc-
and purposes of the new
The
cessity for
the organization of a party which should
be
wholly and heartily committed to the complete denational-
A
the slave power.
ization of
second national
Liberty
convention was held in 1847, l^at body he argued against making any national nomination at that time, since it
was highly probable
more general
that a
anti-slavery
sentiment would be created in the agitation of the Wilmot Proviso, the action of Congress
the non-action of the
and
that of the
two other
In the following year, anticipating
political organizations.
Whig and Democratic
parties
on the
question of slavery extension, he issued a call for a “ Free at Columbus, and obtained for more than three thousand voters of all This meeting was both large and enthu-
Territory” State Convention it
signatures of
th'e
political creeds. siastic,
at
and resulted
New
Buffalo,
W’hich
in the
York,
in
holding of a national convention
August of the same year, over
The
Mr. Chase presided.
standard-bearers nomi-
nated by this body were Hon. Martin
Yan Buren
dent,
and Hon. Charles Francis Adams
The
election
of United
States
for Presi-
for Vice-President.
Senator from Ohio W'as ^ combination
appointed for P'ebruary 22d, 1849,
members of the Legislature, w'ho gave united vote, and some of the P’ree-Soil members,
of the Democratic
him
their
W'ho favored their views, Mr. Chase was elected by a hand-
some
majority.
It
should be remembered that the
cratic party of that State
resolution of
its
had
Demo-
just previously declared by-
State convention that slavery
was an
evil.
Mr. Chase sympathized with them in their general views
and supported their nominees for State them distinctly to understand, how-ever, that the movertient, and in 1843 ^ national convention of the he would sever his connection with them should they, in The Committee State or national conventions, abandon their anti-slavery Liberty party met at Butfalo, New York. In 1852 this point was reached, in his opinion. on Resolutions, of which Mr. Chase w'as, perhaps, the most position. distinguished member, had referred to it a resolution which At the Baltimore Convention of the Democratic party a proposed “ to regard and treat the Third Clause of the Con- platfonn w'as adopted approving the compromise acts of trine
political organization.
anti-slavery element in other sections of the North indorsed
whenever applied
of State
policy,
offices; giving
1850 and denouncing the further discussion of the slavery no part of question. Upon this platform Mr. Pierce was nominated The party in Ohio gave in their adthe Constitution of the United States, whenever we are for the Presidency. called upon or sworn to support it.” Mr. Chase opposed herence to this departure, and Mr. Chase withdrew. He it was negatived in the committee, but its author directly urged the organization of an Independent Demoit, and
•stitution,
as null
to the case of a fugitive slave,
and void, and consequently
as forming
moved
its adoption in the body of the convention, and this convention of the southern was done. In June, 1845, and western Ljberty people, which had been projected by Mr. Chase, met in Cincinnati. In his call for that meeting he said that it was designed to embrace all who believe that
whatever
is
worth preserving
in
republicanism can only be
cratic party,
was
and drew up a declaration of
substantially ratified
the Independent
principles,
which
by the Pittsburgh Convention of
Democracy
in the
same
year.
With
this
party he remained identified until the development of a
new and powerful principles
organization,
indoctrinated
with the
he had so long avowed, and which was one
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*• hes the Bible assumed a more ])rominent place as a part doctrines and the men, the causes and the consequences, he of the regular curriculum, a place whiclt it has ever since re- had heard discussed from his boyhood, and in the reunion Dr. Fisher's views of the of the two branches of. the church he was relied upon as tained, for the advantage of all. increased.
ends and methods of education are contained in several ad-
which he delivered
ilresses
at
and which
different times,
were afterwards collected and published. The very subjects of these are suggestive of broad and careful thought.
They
such as “Collegiate Education,” “Theological
are
Training,”
“The Three
he discriminates
Education” (by which
school and society), “ Female
child-life, the
“The Supremacy
Education,”
of
IMind,”
“Secular and
“ Natural Science in
Christian Civilization,” to Art
-Stages of
Relations
its
These addresses arc eloquent and
and Theology.”
sound.
The most complete
gural, in
which he endeavors to develop his idea of what he
calls the
American
of them, perhap.s,
his inau-
is
The whole
collegiate .system.
address
among and
the most judicious counsellors in the very delicate
difficult
ened
questions that
to prevent
its
impeded
jirogress
its
He was
consummation.
and
threat-
one of the able
committee of conference appointed by the two assemblies,
which reported the plan of reunion in 1869. Nor does he seem to have doubted the beneficent result. In behalf of the committee, he
joint
proposed the resolution
for
raising
$1,000,000, immediately afterward raised to $5,000,000, as a memorial fund.
with
all
His
last
work
to
which he gave himself was to
the confidence and enthusiasm of his nature
prepare a paper for the General Assembly of 1870, an as-
sembly which he was never
Dr. Fisher received the
to sec.
Doctorate of Divinity from Miami University in 1S52, and
Laws from the University of the city of As a preacher, Dr. Fisher must be In 1862, in the midst of our civil war, held to rank among the ablest of the Presbyterian boclv. to the last degree. occurred the semi-centennial celebration of the founding of With all that may be said by way of detracting criticism, it Hamilton College, a memorable occasion, marking the age must still be allowed that our religious communities move
is
The
an argument for breadth and loftiness of culture.
scheme which
it
defends and enforces
and progress of the
noble and generous
institution as with a tall
The address
visible from afar.
is
memorial
of Dr. Fisher
shaft
an admira-
is
ble sketch of the college hisSoiy, iiortraying in picturesque
language the events of
early
its
and
later life,
with enthusi-
the Doctorate of
New York
in
1859.
along a pretty high level of intellectual experience and of religious feeling.
To
which,
demands of our
satisfy the reasonalde
congregations requires a continuous
when we come
to
measure
intellectual exertion,
its
force,
something
is
many poor sennons re and friends, and predicting its future prosperity. “ It was,” preached, but rather that there are so many good ones. But he said, “ amid the smoke and thunder of war that, fifty Dr. Fisher moved above, far above the common level. years ago, the foundations of this college were laid and Within the ample dome of that forehead, you felt, at sight, when they passed away, lo on the hill-top had sprung into there dwelt a jrowerful brain. He brought to his discourses being a power mightier than the sword, more glorious than a mind well stored and well disciplined. There was a fulasm and
faith
commending
it
to the
good
will of
alumni
its
startling.
It is
not a
wonder
that so
:
;
!
its
triumphs.
It
is
amid the heavier thunder and darker ness and richness of thought which
when
clouds of this dread conflict, precious jubilee.
is
we
in peril, that
This thunder shall
])erse before
all
that to us
is
celebrate our semi-centennial roll
away and
the cloud dis-
the uprising patriotism of twenty millions of
freemen and the red right arm of the I^ord of hosts.” w.as indeed light
was
most
to the
an hour of darkness,
nation
as darkness, but
he never “bated one
That
when
jot
the
of heart
or hope,” or failed to act
up
sendee of eight years
Hamilton College, Dr. Fisher was
in
to his patriotic faith.
solicited to accept again the position of pastor
minster Church of Utica,
November
New
After a
by the West-
York, and was installed as
in that direction to desire. fail
to
An
left
you
little
or nothing
intellectual hearer could not
be attracted by his vigor.
His
style
was
sometimes picturesque, almost always clear and
words were well chosen and exuberant.
often bold, direct.
Thus
full
His
and
weighty in matter, affluent in language, with no ambiguity in
expression, fertile in imagery
and illustration, with a manner somewhat au-
voice clear and penetrating, and a thoritative, fir to
not surprising that he was constantly sought
it is
address public bodies on important occasions, a duty
which he always performed with dignity and tion of his hearers.
The
to the satisfac-
subjects of his discourses
were va-
mind was mainly occupied with grand and active and progressive work the church enjoyed the minis- lofty themes, so there was a certain nolileness, freedom, and trations and stimulating energies of this able, active, and power of development, the natural and necessary fruit of his jiastor
8
15th,
1867.
For nearly four years of
rious,
and
as his
BIOGRAI'IIICAL ENCYCLOr.EDIA.
5S
No man
general studies and habits of thought.
Dr. Eisher
listen to
when engaged upon
with which his soul was
tilled,
could ever
those great themes
without a persuasion that he
spoke from absolute conviction of the truth and an over-
dimmed,
ing, the bright eye
the eloquent tongue
His half-executed plans,
incoherent.
mute or
his high expectations,
his large purposes arrested, nothing
with childlike
remained for him but and sweet patience to await the final
trust
the importance of the message he bore summons, which, January i8th, 1874, at Cincinnati, Ohio, embassador of Christ and a “ legate of the skies.” came in kindness to call him home. The temporary torpor His ordinary discourses were full of thought as well as of of his faculties was at once dispelled, the clouds and the feeling. Those who heard the course of sermons on the shadows that gathered about his setting sun have all been
whelming sense of
as an
Hebrews,” and on the “ Life of Christ,”
dissipated, the darkness has passed and light perennial and more remarkable series of discourses eternal beams on him, for, in his own beautiful words, has seldom been heard from an American pulpit. There “Another Teacher, infinitely wise and good, is now leading were puljlic occasions also when he discussed great topics him up the heights of knowledge, and in a moment he has with a fulness and a power that left nothing more to be learned more than men on earth can ever know.”
“Epistle
to the
need not be told
said,
and with
ditors
that a
results of conviction
nothing
that
in the
minds of even
shake, nothing
could
his au-
disturb.
There are several di'courses of Dr. Fisher that would alone make a distinguished reputation for any man, and that are to
be ranked
among
But not
day. ally
is
CHENCK, JAMES
F'., Rear Admiral United Navy, son of William C. and Elizabeth (Rodgers) Schenck, was born in Warren county,
c)
the highest efforts of the pulpit of his
in the pulpit
States
So unusu-
only did he shine.
m.rrked excellence as a preacher combined with an
equal excellence as a pastor, that strange
if
Dr. Fisher had proved comparatively inefficient
his father in 1821,
Military
States
in
Nevertheless he did prove to be an excep-
pastoral work.
Upon
Ohio, January ilth, 1807.
would not have been
it
the death of
he was appointed
.School
to the
United
West Point by
at
his
mem-
guardian and namesake. General James Findley, then
good pastor. He gave living demonstration that ber of Congress from Cincinnati. There was no naval one man may be both great preacher and good pastor. In academy at that time, but having a disposition for sea service, his guardian procured him an appointment as midshipall the families that made up his congregation, his name was March ist of that year he sailed in the Carrying everywhere an atmosphere of man in 1825. a household word. tionably
cheerfulness and sunshine, no one ever met him life
in social
without feeling the charm of his manners and conversa-
tion.
Slow
“ Hornet,” on his till
retired
first
cruise,
and continued
on the superannuated
list,
in the service
January nth, 1869.
condemn and quick to sympathize, shrinking He passed successively through all the grades up to that of wounding the feelings of any, and prompt Rear Admiral. During the Mexican war he served in the of kindness and love, he won the hearts of his Pacific squadron on the staff of Commodore Stockton, and
to
instinctively from
in all offices
people
to a
Never was any pastor more did
most singular degree.
universally beloved.
The
minister most covetous of the love
of his people might well be satisfied with the measure of
A
common
military duty in
with the whole naval force in
After the conclusion of
seizing California.
that struggle
and the discovery of gold, the government subsidized a
pri-
affection
accorded
prince he was, not by
vate line of steamers to carry the mails via the Isthmus of
virtue of
any patent of nobility bestowed by an earthly mon-
Panama, upon the condition of appointing the commanders from the officers of the navy, and Mr. Schenck was detailed
to Dr. Fisher.
arch, but by the direct gift of Heaven, with the royal signet
of the giver legibly impressed thereon; a prince in intellect,
Captain of one of the vessels of the
a prince in large and liberal culture, but
till
a prince in active sympathies,
human to
warm
o',
all
and a great
soon as he could be called home, which was not until 1862,
persistent consecration of the gifts
was endowed earned the
to
title,
was
and
the practical and
and graces with which he
secured the honors and obtained the
in
in
Israel.
re-
Such, most
the merest outline sketched, was Dr.
Samuel Ware Fisher up flood-tide of his
the
these "large and beneficent ends, that he
wards of a prince and a great man imperfectly,
in
all,
and de-
voting his best powers and faculties to the good of It
to the
day and hour when,
at the
and apparently in the meridian and moral powers, he was, by the
influence,
fulness of his intellectual
he held
that pertained
sin-stained, or desjiised,
world and the glory of God.
line, a position
The breaking out of the great Rebellion found Mr. .Schenck in China, Commander of the “ Saginaw.” As
and above
affections,
heart going out impulsively toward
man, however lowly, or
er
1855.
he was promoted
Captain and ordered to the western frigate “St.
Lawrence.”
Here
duty was simifly blockading, and he saw no very active
his ser-
In 1864 he was promoted to Commodore, and in the two attacks on Fort Fisher commanded the third division of vice.
the
fleet,
being his
consisting of seventeen vessels, the “
hottest of the
fight,
officers of a party of
and
lost a third of his
one hundred with
escaped untouched himself. ma.ster at the time
opening of the
leaving him with the bounding pulse of
for the gallantry
first
Powhatan ”
In both engagements he was
flag-ship.
mysterious stroke of an unseen hand, suddenly struck down, life faintly flutter-
to
Gulf squadron, on the
whom
in
men and
the
four
he landed, but
His son, Caspar Schenck, pay-
on the “Juniata,” was wounded on the engagement, and afterwards promoted
he displayed
in the battle.
After the close
tn-J.
lR[E\f..SAKOIU[£[L
WAOSTE
irDSOilllllS,
®„®.
SIXTH PBESIDEN'I' Of RAVTITON COI.LEGE
BIOGRAnilCAL ENCYCLOr.^;DIA. some time
of the war, Mr. Schcnck was for the United Stales naval station at
Mound
command
in
City, Illinois,
of
and
September, 1868, he was raised to the rank of Rear Adsixtymiral United States Navy, and upon reaching his in
59
to Iowa, where she died, leaving a numerous family. Schenck had several times been a member of the Ohio
moved •Mr.
Legislature, and died, while occiqrying that position, at Columbus, January nth, 1821. His wife survived till 1855.
second year, June nth, 1S69, was regularly retired on the superannuated roll. July 24th, 1829, he married Dorethy
Woodhull Smith, of Suffolk county. Long
A., daughter of
Idand, and
many
for
made
years
his
home
NDREWS, GENERAL GEORGE
In 1836
there.
W., Senator
he brought his family to the West, and took up his home in D.iyton, where he now resides in his retirement. He has had Sarah S., who married Col. Joseph G. Crane, four children
from the Thirty-second District of Ohio, Lawyer,
of Dayton, murdered in 1869 while acting military mayor of the city of Jackson, Mississippi, under the provisional
drews and Anne (Lewis) Andrews; the former
was born
—
government; Jane, married
A. Burr Irwin; Caspai, pay-
to
Navy; Woodhull
inspector United States
of the
S., chief
Such
imperial maritime customs of China at Shanghai.
a
in
September
He
1S25.
His grandfather on the maternal
was a major
An-
in
agricultural
side,
John Lewis,
Revolutionary army, and descended
the
in
'S’ork,
the son of Joel
is
was a Quaker, and was engaged pursuits.
New
Medina, Orleans county.
ist,
from the Lewises of Rhode Island, a Baptist family, whose
Admiral Schenck there is no need to praise. Laudation could only taint.
members took a prominent part in the religious controversies and movements of Roger Sherman’s time. His earlier He has spent his life in the service of his country, and he education was received at the Quaker institution known as the “ Nine Partners’ College,” in Dutchess county. New still lives to enjoy that country’s confidence, and partake of that of
life as
The
facts
speak for the man.
York, and also
the frcedo n he has helped to preserve.
at the
Licking county, Ohio, and in
CHENCK, HON. WTLLIAM
C.,
Member
Ohio Legislature, and General of the State
«
was born
in
Monmouth His
uary nth, 1773.
J
New
county.
p.arents
The
Militia,
Jersey, Jan-
were Rev. W’illiam
and Anna (Cummings) Schenck. nine children.
of the
He was
one of
Dutch
origin,
family are of
but have been in America for nearly two hundred years. Mr.
Schenck graduated from Princeton once came
to Cincinnati,
office for a while,
1793 or 1794, and at in the land
in
where he was engaged
He
and afterwards became a surveyor.
acquired an immense tract of land in the northwestern part of
Warren county,
in the valley of the
Miami, on which he
out the town of Franklin, and established his home. During the war of 1812 he commanded a brigade of militia,
laid
and though not ten other
Indian depredations.
men who had
was
made
In
acquired the hand
projected and laid out the city of
personally
he had a duty
in active service,
guariling against
Toledo
to jjerform in
company with
in the vicinity,
in 1817,
he
but having
the surveys in an unfavorable season, he
stricken with a
swamp
and became so disgusted
fever,
at
the town of
Newark
in
Licking county, Ohio.
married lilizabeth Rodgers, of Huntington, with
whom
James
he had seven children
F. (rear admiral United
general in the
war of the
to
In 1798 he
Long
Island,
States navy), Robert C.
member
(a
of Congress,
England), Woodhull
lieutenant in the United States navy), T. S.
laid out
— William R., Salley R.,
rebellion,
and United States Minister
he
.S.
(a
He
subsequently entered on
During
three years in this place, he established
marked
Linn Argus.
the
ability,
In
and edited, with
1848 the
to
county, the southern one, and
there established
glaize Democrat.
In the
same
same year he was
position.
and again
in
in
1850 was
re-
1858 secured a re-elec-
i860 was re-elected.
quest of Governor Dennison, he to his
The Au-
elected Prose-
In 1856 he was elected to the
lower branch of the Legislature, tion,
counties
Wapakonetta, Auglaize
cuting Attorney for Auglaize county, and in elected to the
was
his stay of
were divided, and he removed
left
In 1861,
at
the re-
the Legislature, returned
home, within two days raised a company of volunand entered the ser-
teers to assist in crushing the rebellion,
vice of the
He was positions
United States with a commission of Captain.
afterward promoted successively to the following :
Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, Colonel, and Brevet
Leaving the service
Brigadier-General. brilliant
and useful career
tice of his profession.
made Chairman
Jersey,
1S45 was admitted to the bar
once elected Prosecuting Attorney.
thousand dollars.
New
then,
Granville,
at
the practice of his profession in Linn, Allen county, and
on the Democratic
John M. Cummings, of Newark,
in
Norwalk, Huron county.
with the enterprise that he sold his whole interest for a In connection with his uncle. General
He
the Oberlin University, Ohio.
in
age of eighteen, began the study of law
as a soldier,
in
1864, after a
he resumed the prac-
In 1873 he was elected to the Senate
ticket,
and upon the organization was
of the Judiciary Committee
—
that intrusted
with the conduct of the most important matters
member and
;
Salaries, of that
on the Soldiers’ and
Sailors’
Orphans’
Home, of that on Privileges and Elections, and also man of the Committee on Military Yffurs. He is guished
also a
of the Committee on Public Works, of that on Fees
at
Chairdistin-
the bar, and has conducted to successful issues
many important
cases; while, as a public
official,
he has a
Edwin, and Egbert
record free from blemish, and, often under trying circum-
His only daughter married Egbert T. Smith, and
stances, has laborcvl successfully for the interests of his con-
—
;
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA.
6o slituency
was
ami the welfare of the general comnuinily.
re-elected
Senate
the
to
October,
in
lie
1875, without
Cincinnati and Lhiiled States Depository by President Lin-
With the outbreak of the rebellion became one of vital
coln.
nati
being the
di,-,tributing
yUNN, ANDREW, was born
M.
D., Surgeon
Ills father, a well-to-do farmer,
traction,
was of Scotch ex-
and owned and cultivated a large and
which was
beautiful farm,
In 1834
and Physician,
Poland, Maine, April 24th, 1S04.
in
son's birthplace.
his
Andrew graduated
Buudoin Medical
at
Reuben
College, under the instruction of Professor
Mus-
1 ).
and was selected out of the graduating class to be one Professor of his assistant dissectors for the ensuing class.
sey,
•sion to
honored him with an invitation
also
Soon
India.
after leaving college
York, and entered upon the practice of
to
go on a mis-
he settled
in
his profession,
New
which
he continued with great energy and success during many years. skill in
He
known
soon became widely
for his
remarkable
midwifery, his record showing the loss of no patient
in a period
embracing
forty years of constant practice.
In
the earlier part of his career his attention was directed to that formidable disease called hernia (rupture), with
which
the ablest physicians and surjeons feared to encounter.
terrible
new
devising
efforts in
affliction
His
point for the armies .South, ques-
soundest judgment to decide correctly between clashing
During
terests.
At the
on deposit.
close of the
war he
retired
of Equalization
nominee of both
by an almost unanimous vote, being the he rendered signal
parties; in this position
pointed Commissioner of Costs and Fees of Hamilton county; also a
member
cinnati.
In
order.
of the
Board of Park Commissioners of Cin-
he became a member of the Masonic
1S45
In
Grand Commander of
he was elected
1871
Knights Templar of Ohio; and about that time also Lieu-
Commander
tenant
of the Northern
.Supreme Conned of
Masonic Rite, 33°.
the order of the Scottish
German works
the world, including English, French and
and
his large private library
especially rich in illustrated
is
.Shakspearian literature.
and found there practice, and has had
for
fiehl
speci.rl delight in
JOSEPH
R.YNE,
IL, an
Ohio, and
is
a
man
of generous impulses,
the society
.\ugust
and education of
the service.
He
for several
was born
eminent
Common
Judge of the Court of gress,
the young.
member
terms a
Elizabethtown,
in
armv.
^^''.VRSON, ENOCH T., was born in Greene township, Hamilton county, Ohio, September l8th, 1822. He is the son of William J. Carson and His maternal ancestors,
Margaret Terry.
came from
settlers in
Virginia, and were
Cincinnati.
father’s farm,
and there remained
years of age,
when he served
on the Cincinnati
at his
&
until
He was
among
in
war of the Revolution, and lost a limb in the was a brother of Commodore William M.
married
Julia,
daughter of John
United States army, and stationed
one of the frontier
posts.
He
at
the regular
Surgeon
Vincennes, then
November, 1851,
died in
having had a large family, most of
in
Elliot,
whom
died young.
bred on his
Harrison turnpike, there making
to
Jersey,
His father was a Major
31st, 1782.
the
three years as a collector of
From 1S4S
of Con-
New
the
he was twenty-three
leisure the deficiencies of his early eilucation
systematic reading.
in the
He
Lawyer and
Pleas of Dayton,
Crane, and of Ichabod B. Crane, a Colonel
up
Mr. Carson
has one of the largest private libraries on secret societies in
Cincinnati,
to
He
the treatment of hernia.
tolls
was ap-
In 1871 he
service to the taxpayers of Cincinnati.
astonishing results in his favorite branch of his profession
first
from the
In 1870 he was elected amendjerof the State Board
office.
A
were crowned with perfect success.
a large and remunerative
Terrys,
in-
sometimes ten millions
his administration
per day were received, and thirty millions were frequently
'
-
office
Cincin-
appliances to permanently cure this
few years since he removed
and takes a
from an
interest.
most perplexing character, requiring the
tions arose of the
Mussey
this
of minor importance
opposition
by
1850 he served ns a
RANE, COLONEL JOSEPH H. and
G., son of Joseph
was born, October Dayton, Ohio. He was a lawyer
Julia (Elliot) Crane,
25th, 1825, at
by profession, and
at
Montgomery county.
one time Probate Judge
for
At the breaking out of the
rebellion he was living in Indiana, and at once Deputy in the sheriffs office of Hamilton county; from December, 1850, until November, 1852, he was in the em- entered the service of his country. He served through the ployment of tha Handiton & Dayton Railroad Comirany, whole war on the staff of General Robert C. Schenck, and and became their first Depot Master at the Sixth Street De- at the close accepted the commi.ssion of Captain, with the pot, Cincinnati. From November, 1852, until November, brevet of Colonel, in the regular army. While acting In military Mayor of the city of Jackson, Mississippi, under the 1856, he was Chief Deputy Sheriff of Hamilton county. 185S he went into the lamp and gas business, in which oc- provisional government instituted for the reconstruction of cupation, after an intermission of many years, he is now. the States, he was assa.ssinated in the street by the notorious He was a man In May, 1861, he was appointed Collector of the Port of Colonel Yerger of the Confederate army.
:Puh Co.
FkOaddvy^-
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOP.EDIA. of cultivated
Cincinnati, and
not only the qualities to endeai'
the dissolution
mind and amiable disposition, and possessed him to his friends but those which distinguished him among his fellow-men. He
also
married Sarah, daughter of Admiral James F. Schenck, 1852, with whom he had two sons that survived him.
in
6i
many
importance.
others of equal
Church
firm has been the architect of the Congregational
Ironton, Ohio
Kanawha
;
Clay Pool Building, Church,
Presbyterian
Charleston, W’est Vir-
many
Niles Tool Works, at Hamilton, Ohio, and
ginia;
at
Indianapolis, Indiana;
at
at
Since
former head of the
of the partnership the
other public and private buildings throughout the country.
He was one of
i^OGSWELL, BEN’JAMIN S., Clerk of the of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County,
Court Ohio,
the founders of the Cincinnati Chapter Ameri-
can Institute of Architects, of which he was Secretary.
the
Political
for several years
he has never sought and
office
never accepted. He entered the Federal army in 1861 and was born, April 6th, 1831, at Oxford, Huron served throughout the war in various capacities, princijrally county, Ohio, and is the son of Benjamin and engineering department. He is a thoroughly publicHe was educated at the in the Susan tBill) Cogsweli. spirited man, and although he has not allowed his name to Ibrldwin University, Berea, and after leaving come into marked prominence, he has been a warm and school became a clerk in the post-office at Berea, where he active supporter of every public enterprise of merit, and to remained until March, 1859. At this period he removed to his active and well-directed labors Cincinnati, the city of clerk’s office department, entered the where he Cleveland, his home, owes not a little of her advancement. In 1872 he was continuing there for a considerable time. 1
County Clerk for the term of three and entered upon the duties of his office, February energy and good business ability, 1873.
elected to the position of years, 9th,
ENTGN, ROSW ELL
the duties of his office to the entire
well calculated to
fulfil
satisfaction of the
community.
He was
IL, County Treasurer of Hamilton County, Ohio, was born, February 27th,
married, April 5th,
Helen M., daughter of Chester Gee, of Thompson,
1855, to
Ohio, and
is
county, being
1821, in that
two children, one son and one
the father of
daughter.
York, followed through
and
NDER.SON, EDWIN,
Architect,
a native
is
Ohioan, having been born in Clermont county on
»
His father died
the 24th of February, 1834.
January,
1841, and
removed
to
in
soon afterwards his mother
j
o
He
engineer.
civil
Here Edwin was edu-
Cincinnati.
cated, with a
view
to
adopting the profession of
devoted special attention while attend-
ing the public schools to mathematics, and
when he
school he continued the study of civil engineering.
some
years he
struction
in
was engaged
left
For
in the business of railroad con-
Ohio, Indiana and Illinois.
In the meantime
he had pursued the study of architecture with Messrs. Hamilton
&
Rankin, of Cincinnati, and
in
1857 he formed a part-
nership with Samuel Hannaford, and
which he henceforward devoted
as architect, to
and
skill.
commenced
The
his
in his
a very extensive patronage.
derson
& Hannaford
While the
firm of
House
;
may he mentioned
the Cincinnati,
senger Depot,
nati
Ohio; ;
St.
at
Hamilton
Cincinnati
John’s
An-
continued, they were the architects of
Among
buildings aggregating in cost over $80,000,000. these buildings
;
the
Cincinnati
& Dayton
settled in
Work-
Railroad Pas-
Turner’s C)|)era House,
German Lutheran Church,
at
and the Jewish Synagogue, Eighth and Mound
at
Day-
Cincinstreets.
Hamilton county
neers to that section
of seven
fifth
—
in
agricultural pursuits,
life
— becoming one of
the pio-
He
the spring of 1806.
subse-
quently located permanently in Greene township, where he
November 30lh, 1830. His wife was a native of Pennsylvania, her parents being among the earliest settlers of Hamilton county, Ohio. She died on resided until his death,
March
There were but limited
19th, 1855.
the
facilities for
early education of Roswell, his instruction being conducted at
a country school-house.
meagre advantages by developed a
When
taste
for
He made
family then
to
confined to this charge
fall
for
farm and cultivated
direction he the meat
moved
his years.
and
The
years.
as the “ .Se\'en-
i
attention being exclusively
it,
hauling
After this he went
wood
to the city in
After five years’ labor
to Cincinnati in 1847,
in this
and embarked
in
and provision business, which he has since suc-
cessfully conducted.
His present establi^hment
182 and 184 M’est .Sixth street. 1
books, and
Harrison tunqiike, and Ros-
two years.
and winter months.
ith
Cincinnati,
what was well known
well took charge of the place, hi
the
to
occupation for seven
this
moved
to
grew w
reading, which
mile House,” situated on the
a
the best use of his
assiduceis application
twelve years old he hauled wood
steadily followed
own name. upon
has attained very high rank in his profession, and com-
mands
ton,
energy
firm continued until January ist, 1871, since
which time he has continued the business
He
business
the
whose parents were Roswell and Ann (McFaren) Fenton. His father, a native of New
children,
irgely of his
means and time
to
advance the
township and of Hamilton county, and was his support of the
government.
is
at
Nos.
During the war he gave
In
Treasurer of Hamilton county, and
interests of his influential
in
1873 he was elected
now
holds that imjior-
BIOGRAPHICAL E.NXVCLOP.-EDIA.
62 laiit
and responsible
duties a ripe
are
affiliations
office,
and brings
knowledge of
to the discharge of
Democratic, and his
first
UCHANAN, ROBERT,
its
vote was cast for
Merchant, was born, on
15th of January, 1797, in western Pennsyl-
the
Ilis political
financial affairs.
vania, of Scotch- Irish parentage
— of Revolution-
James K. Polk for the Presidency. He is lilieral in religious opinion, and generous in impulse, and his career is that of an energetic and prosperous business man, whose conduct,
war stock. The rudiments of an English education were obtained at a country school lout learn-
though without ostentation, has won the great respect of
unsought, for the nearest school was two miles away, and
his fellow-citizens. to
He
was marrieil on February 23d, 1842,
Sarah Bray, a native of Hamilton county, and
the
is
ary
;
that distance the
day
there his
^/^AVLOR, EZRA
Lawyer, was born, July
B.,
1823, in Portage county, Ohio, and
is
New
England
9th,
a son of
The
Elisha and Theresa (Couch) Taylor.
on both sides are of
family
birth, they
having removed from Berkshire county,^ Massa-
and settled
chusetts, in 1813,
Portage county.
in
Mrs. Taylor was a relative of the celebrated General
The
M.assachusetts.
circumstances, and
were oidy
fa.r.ily
in
N.
I).
moderate
Ezra was only able to attend school
during the winter months, the balance of the year being devoted to labor and
toil.
He
went
to the
however, up to the age of seventeen
was obtained by
part of his education exertions.
Every moment
that
daily task and the evening hours all this
common
school,
years," but the greater
his
own
indefatigable
he could snatch from
were devoted
to study,
his
and
He commenced
without the aid of an instructor.
consequence of
his jirofession.
In 1862
Warren, Trumbull county, where he has
since continued to reside, and in
1854 was elected Prose-
cuting Attorney of Portage county (this was, of course, before he
went
to
Warren).
His practice has been very large
bereavement he
this
left
In the year 181
a store in Pittsburgh.
as-
1,
school and entered
when only
fourteen
years of age, he was sent by his employers to East Liverpool,
Ohio, to
assist in a
branch store they had established there.
His stay there was made memorable by a sight of the steamboat (“ the Orleans ”) built on the Ohio
river.
returned to Pittsburgh the same year, and his return
made memorable by
the fact that
— in
partnership with his
himself carried
it
is
first
He also
was on the day before
In 1816 he entered into business for
the great earthquake.
former employers
— and
on with varying success in West Union, Ohio,
it
He was the first Ohio merchant who shipped He had his grain conveyed on flatboats
until 1S21.
grain to Europe. to
New
Orleans, where
boat “ Mary'sville.”
once commenced the practice of
made
Shortly after this his father died, and in
of Cleveland, and was admitted to the bar in 1845, and he
to
In 1808
year from the lime he entered the school he was sistant teacher.
In the year
he removed
walk each
attending the Meadville Acadenly, and in a
reading law under the direction of (udge Robert F. Payne
at
to
this source.
advantages were greatly increased.
educational
He commenced
Couch of
young student was obliged
he sought knowledge from
that
he removed with his father to Meadville, Pennsylvania, and
father of four children.
t
come
ing in his case, as in every other, did not
1823.
In
Charles
1
was loaded on ships
it
for Liverpool.
82 1 he was employed as Captain of the steam-
that
He
year he
Mac.Allister,
continued in entered
of
this
Philadelphia,
grocery business in Cincinnati.
The
position until
a partnership with
into
in
the
wholesale
firm for several years
was largely engaged in the pork -packing business, in addiIn 1825, in tion to the grocery and commission business.
and widely extended he is among the best-known lawyers in the .State, and though regarded as most excellent in all
connection with his partner, he established the Phoenix Cot-
the different branches of his profession, he
Covington Cotton Factory.
;
distinguished as
an advocate.
docket of nearly every court
in
particularly
is
His nanre occurs on the northern Ohio, and few
at-
ton Factory in Cincinnati, and in the year 1828 he built the
About 1825 he and
his partner
formed a business connection with William Tift, and established the first manufactory for producing steam engines and
number of sugar mills for the Southern sugar plantations. The busicases as he. During the late war of the rebellion he was ness was carried on under his superintendence from 1827 During this time he a private in the Home Guard, and when Governor Brough to 1832, when it was discontinued. When the called out the militia during the invasion of Ohio by the was also part owner in four or five steamboats. guerillas, instead of hiring a substhute, he shouldered his sugar mill manufactory was closed he commenced the comtorneys in the State have appeared in as great a
musket and marched
The
to the
defence of the southern border.
was captured by the celebrated and notorious John Morgan, after a hard battle, who took them to Cynthiana, Kentucky, where they were released on parole and returned home. During the construction of the Atlantic & Great Western Railway he served as a Director of that company; and since the completion of the line he has lieen its force
attorney and counsel.
He was
M., daughter of Colonel
and
is
the father of
married
William
two children.
in
1849
Fjazier,
Harriet
of Ravenna,
mission business in his
own name.
It
did not suffice for
him, however, and in 1844 he bought a fourth interest in In 1S60, in the Cooper Cotton Factory, at Dayton, Ohio. connection with William Manser, he leased the Covington Rail Mills, and continued his interest in them until 1872. In addition to all these enterprises, he has, with his various partners, built
no
less
than thirteen dwelling-houses and
stores in difierent parts of the city.
.Secretary
Moreover, he was Presi-
Commercial Bank from 1831 to 1835; was of the Little Miami Railroad Board of Directors
dent of the
—
—
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOP/EDIA. from 1836
Company
to 1S41
was President of \Vhite Water Canal
;
1841, and
in
President of the Spring
still
is
Grove Cemetery Company, which was organized house
He
in 1844.
the Cincinnati Historical Society,
was President of
his
at
President of the Cincinnati College,
is
Academy
elected President of the Cincinnati
and
He was
Trustee of the Cincinnati Orphan Asylum.
is
a
also
of Natural
The
63
made
can be
fact that iron
in
Cincinnati so as to com-
pete with the large establishments of Pittsburgh has long
been manifest
many
in the
prosperous and growing mills in
In this industry Mr. Kinsey labored with-
the former city.
the beginning of the year 1866,
out rest until
when
the
copartnership expired by limitation, and the firm irroperly
was put
company, comprising the original
into a joint stock
owners and others who had long been connected with the it with most tired from business in the fall of 1872, and in the following management of the business, and still conduct December he was elected a Director of the City Infirmary, favorable and growing prosperity. Pie gave up business in Sciences
at
the time of
organization, in
its
He
1835.
re-
he still continues to hold. In 1837 he was engaged to purchase gold and silver for the Lhiited States
which
office
He
Bank.
the duties of this position for
fulfilled
two
he bought over $5,000,000 in He specie and about $1,000,000 in Southern banknotes. was married in October, 1822, to Miss Browning, of Kenyears,
tucky,
and during
who
that time
On
Massachusetts. fill
a
He was
ery,
His parents, Oliver and
land, in the year 1828.
Sarah
Baltimore, Mary-
Kinsey, were members of the
(Griffith)
His mother died when he
Society of P'riends.
not sorry to retire at the close of his term of ser-
liberal
is
now
He
When Joseph was five years old the Richmond, Indiana. His father was a patron of schools and education, giving his boys the to
best advantages the place afforded, which, that early period of
however, was,
history, rather limited.
its
at
Living on a
when out of school “ there must be no idleness ” but
farm, he found constant einployment his father’s
maxim being
—
is
and
is
a
and
is
members and
He
member
also a leading
to
all
money.
of
all
fine,
he
men who
is
are of the
numerous family.
ment of the whole community.
At the age of fourteen he was engaged
he remained two years. the age of seventeen he
he changed
After another year at school,
removed
business. to take
&
About
ir8
Main
Groesbeck, in this
an overland
one of the most
influ-
;
nor
is
League of
he wanting
in the
freely both
his
liberal
greatest
time and
and public-
advantage
and whose personal welfare tends
to the
to
any
advance-
at
to Cincinnati, in the year J.
K. Ogden
street.
laiger house of Clark
to the
Clark
(piently
at
of his
by William Owens, where
1845, and engaged with the firm of
hardware merchants,
great
all
one of those
society,
the retail country store kept
in
public enterprises and charitable institutions,
spirited
in
that
in
of the Industrial
which he contributes In
is
;
all intoxi-
a Vice-President of the Board of Trade,
Cincinnati and the United States
support of
from
prominent leader
business and social relations. ential
broadest sense
its
ardent, energetic, and generous in
This idea was
recreation.
Co.,
a Republican of the
is
in total abstinence
thoroughly and persistently instilled into the minds of his
plenty of time for innocent
&
giving active service in the management of
temperance he believes liquors,
removed
pleasing to him.
kinds of railway supplies and machin-
all
the exercise of religious charity in
cating
with one exception,
tiot
house of Post
“ straitest sect;” in religion a liberal thinker, believing in
reform.
of
Councilman was
interest in the great
In politics Mr. Kinsey
whom,
all
reached maturity. family
and
its affairs.
was only three years of age, leaving a family of nine children,
Ward, where he resides with sons and three daughters.
the Eleventh
family, consisting of three
his
manufacturers of
in
his family in
1868, he was elected to
a term of two years in the City Council of Cincinnati as
member from
He now owns an
IXSEY, JOSEPH, was born
two years with
s])ent
his return, in
vice, as the position of
living.
is still
and
the spring of 1866,
trip to California in
Co.,
ISHER, GEORGE,
Merchant, was born
heim, Rhenish Bavaria, December
&
He came
Booth, subse-
the wholesale
time Mr. Kinsey
&
After two years
hardware
made arrangements search of gold
;
but
to the
United
.States
in
Durk-
25111,
1829.
with his father in
1837, and settled in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he enjoyed such educational advantages as were afforded by the schools of that city until
He was then apprenticed to the mcrch.ant tailoring 1841. mind and accepted business, and continued in that capacity until the cxiiiration their offer. In the meantime he became acquainted with a of his term, in 1845, "hen he removed to Cincinnati and young lady from Massachusetts, the daughter of E. D. engaged as a journeyman with Samuel Thomas. He left Ammidown, whom he married in Boston in 1851. After the employ of the latter, in 1847, enter that of his patient service as salesman he was admitted as partner in brother, doing Inisiness on Central avenue, and there conthe house of Tyler, Davidson & Co., where he continued till tinued until 1850, when he formed a copartner^hip with he completed in all eight years of steady work. He then /\dam Epply, under the firm -name of George Eisher & Co., bought into the fllobe Rolling Mill Comjrany, the business invested all his savings amounting to $75 in the new being conducted under the style of Worthington 8; Co. enterprise, and embarked in business on his own aecount. having a good
offer to
Tyler, Davidson
&
go
into the old-established
Co., he
changed
house Of
his
—
BIOGRAl'IIICAL EXCYCLOI'-EDI A.
64
Here he
and
l)rought lo bear his energy
part of
latter
East Pearl
when
1852,
share in the business amounted to
his
street,
Tlie firm was dissolved in 1854, and
$2800.
who
edness was assumed by our subject,
he w'as not
P>ut
all
paid
its
all
indebt-
liabilities
and found himself about even with the
dollar for dollar,
world.
and by the
skill,
they changed their location to
crushed by misfortune, and
to be-
with characteristic energy set about the restoration of his loss,
and engaged
tliat
est integrity
his
his
own
safe,
brilliant
and demonstrator
turer
has
adherence
won
a
proud position
This success
He
well established.
has served
and advantage
He was
to the public.
Mary Ellen Masury, of Cleveland, and
married in 1861 to is
the father of four
L.,
was born Decem-
children.
and the
to his
own
as a patriotic
M'illiam Ruffin and Elizabeth Rue.
to
though he
for
which, though modest and unassuming in is
all
recognized as the leading house.
The former
was a native of Virginia, who came to Ohio at a very early age, and served with gallantry under
calls
citizen, his best
energies have been given to the furtherance of his business
his operations, he
1S13, in Cincinnati, and was the eighth
22(1,
of eleven children, whose parents W'ere Major
nor deaf to the
spirit,
ber
mercantile and
legitimate pursuits;
and benevolent
CAPTAIN JAMES
I^^UFFIN,
strict-
measure due
in the
in great
is
has never been wanting in public
interests, in
is
City Councils for four years with credit to himself
in the
individual account
close attention to business
community.
upon him
a surgeon he is generally known to be having performed many operations with success; and his reputation as a fine clinical lec-
store,
and by
prosperity,
social
on
As
and
257 Walnut street, in Day’s building. period he has pursued a career of uninterrupted
at his present
Since
in business
instructive. skilful
General
Miami cinnati
Wayne
in
successful
his
campaign against the
After this service he returned to Cin-
river Indians.
and resided there
his
until
death, in
He
1834.
manifested great interest in the public welfare, and was frequently selected for public office, having been Clerk of
Cincinnati and Sheriff of Hamilton county.
His wife, a
native of Maryland, died in 1831 at Cincinnati.
II.WER, PROCTOR, M. fessor of
Surgery and Medical Jurisprudence in
Cleveland
the
D., Physician and Pro-
Medical
October i6th, 1823,
Williamstown, Berkshire
at
county, Massachusetts, and
Daniel died
when
educated
graduating
when
a son of the late
is
Thayer, a farmer of that section,
his son
at the
was born on
College,
was but seven years of age.
who
Pie w'as
Western Reserve College, Hudson, Ohio,
the scientific department of that institution
in
nineteen
years
old.
Shortly
entered the office of I'rofessor
Cleveland, where he jirosecuting the
same
J-
commenced in
after
the study of medicine,
Medical College,
the Cleveland
from which school he graduated
he
event
this
Delamater, M. D., of
in the class of
unusual advantages
when young, and were pursued
His finishing studies
Cincinnati College, an
wide
James had
educational advancement
by them.
profited
extinct, but then of
celebrity, his
institution
now
mentor having been
Milo G. Williams, an educator of some renown.
At the
completion of his academic career he accepted in 1832 a
& McCullough,
position as clerk in the house of Nesbitt
of
and remained in it one year, when he became clerk on an Ohio river steamboat, upon w hich he stopped two years. In 1835 he began the trade of book-binding, Cincinnati,
and continued
at
it
for four years.
was followed by one of enforced rendering
ment.
1849.
at
in the w'ay of
This season of labor
idleness, acute
rheumatism
impossible for him to engage in any employ-
it
In 1839 he was
made Deputy Clerk under General
Common Pleas, Hamilton Mean- county, Ohio, and remained in that office until 1840, when while he W'as appointed, in 1852, Demonstrator of Anatomy he was made Deputy to Daniel Gano, Clerk of the Superior P'rom 1841 to in the Cleveland Medical College, and in 1856 was chosen Court, and acted in that capacity one year. to fill the chair of Anatomy and Physiology in the same 1842 he served as clerk to Moses Brooks, a prominent became
turning to the office of his preceptor, he
with him
in his practice
named
In the
until 1862.
and Practice of Surgery, which he yet
A
Surgeon
Returning
portion of the years 1862 in
to
the
army during the
and 1863 were spent
w'ar of the rebellion.
Cleveland, he resumed the practice of his pro-
fession in addition to his duties as Professor.
teen hundred lectures delivered by
him
been given from written notes, as he withi a fine
all
he hxs attended to a large medical and surgical
this period
practice.
retains,
During
with the addition of Medical Jurisprudence.
as
last-
year he w'as transferred to the Professorship of the
Principles
command
Harrison, Clerk of the Court of
for a period of ten years.
which position he held
institution,
associated
of language;
and
is
In the eigh-
lumber merchant, and from 1842 of Constable. office
of
of the public. tion
detective.
fidelity
to
and
to the satisfaction
1857 he again
filled
the posi-
1857 to 1858 he acted as the election to the mayoralty of N. W.
Upon
Thomas, he was appointed Chief of Police of Cincinnati, and held that office two years, and was re-selected to the 1863 lo 1871.
master of his subject, the lectures are always interesting and
From 1856
of Constable, and from
discharge of
a complete
to 1849 ''dd the office succeeding years found him in the
of City Marshal of Cincinnati, the responsible duties
a fluent lecturer, is
six
which he discharged with
not one has ever
as he
The
has
filled
its
grave responsibilities during the period from Since his retirement from that position he
others of a public nature, always winning the
good opinion of the public
for his zeal
and
rectitude.
He
BIOGRAPHICAL E^XYCLOP/LDIA. was married on December He was Elizabeth Grindle.
what
1840, in Cincinnati, to
8th,
in jralitics originally
a Whig,
now
the city of Cincinnati
and
same county, from Symmes, its original proprietor, on it. Here he followed, until his death, June His wife was a na1812, the occupation of a farmer.
1st,
settled
death occurring in 1835.
tive of Pennsylvania, her
had few
don, England, June tion
was obtained
studied in
in
London
1st,
Editor
was born
of in
frontier type
He
as a landscape engraver,
subsequently pursued his profession
demand
;
an education, but
P'rancis
order to be ready for better ones.
— irregularly of
nece.ssity
im-
fully
The
— was of the old
but rude as the appointments of this were,
they enabled him to form a strong taste for reading, and
His earlier educa-
1824.
in
school he attended
the
Lon-
Southampton, England.
for obtaining
facilities
proved these
Official Gazette, Patent Office,
Shortly after
in 1790.
in the
wealth and of great social and political influence.
3 NIGHT, EDWARD HENRY,
—
he purchased section twenty-eight of Sycamore township,
this
and has been a Republican ever sinee the organization of He resides at Clifton, and is now a man of that party.
is
65
whetted his ambition
He commenced
in Cincinnati,
which he
for a substantial education,
and eventually secured by
and unaided exertions.
his individual
farm labor early in
life,
and has followed
with some slight interruptions, ever since.
P'or some work being rather limited, he qualified himself to act as a years he was actively engaged in trading and speculating in In 1864 he took charge the Southern States. surveyor and mechanical engineer. In i860 he moved to Lebanon, Warof the preparation of the Patent Office Report, and in 1868 ren county, Ohio, and resided there for about ten months, In the beginning and then returned to his original estate to resume agriculof the classification of the Patent Office.
Ohio.
About
thirty years ago, the
of 1872 he was, at
for that
kind of
it,
foundation, appointed Editor of the
its
His
tural pursuits.
and
political affiliations are with the
lican party,
& &
aspired to public office, and has declined to accept
Co., Riverside Press,
Houghton,
New
his
first
While taking a deep
Cambridge, Massachusetts (Hurd
York), a work in three volumes, con-
has been active in
Repub-
vote was cast for General Jackson.
His principal literary production is a Offcinl Gazette. “ Mechanical Dictionary,” published by H. O. Houghton
interest in civil affairs,
efforts to
he has never it.
He
improve the system of popular
and embracing education observed in his section, and has. succeeded in volume of perfecting it. Though raised in what was known as the poetry published recently in New York, entitled “A Library Seceder Church, and a constant attendant upon worship, of Poetry and Song.” It was honored by an introduction He his religious views are not narrow and circumscribed.
taining 2600 pages, with 6000 illustrations,
20,000 subjects.
He
the compiler also of a
is
He is a man of pleasing in general by William Cullen Bryant, and has believes in religious tolerance. had a greater success than any other collection of poetry social qualities, and of good, strong common sense, and is
on the subject
A
ever published in this or perhaps any other country. vised and extended edition has lately been published.
everywhere respected
re-
His
rity
as
erected the
first
magazines and newspapers, and consist of
year 1801.
He was
chinery and the progress of the useful
may be mentioned
arts.
particularly current “
on ma-
Among
line
these
M.
moved
sterling integ-
married on March 6th, 1855, to Caro-
Bryant, a daughter of John Bryant, an old citizen
of Hamilton county,
Reviews of Recent
Weekly, and monthly contributions to Harper's Magazine on “ The Mechanical Progress Inventions,” in Harper's
and
brick house in Sycamore township, in the
miscellaneous literary productions are to be found in various articles
for his enterprise
His father had the honor of having
a citizen.
who
in the
latter years
of his
and died there
to Platte county, Missouri,
life
in 1863.
of the Century” (December, 1874, to March, 1875), which form a portion of an extended series on our “ Centenary of
CHWAB, MATTHIA.S,
Progress.” More recently he was placed in charge of the arrangement and appointed custodian of the Patent Office
German by
this
Organ Builder, was a in Baden in He was still quite young when country. He was taken to Cin-
in
that city the principal portion of
birth,
display at the
Government building. Centennial grounds,
the year 1810.
Philadelphia.
He was
he came to
Maria
to
married in 1848,
at
Dayton, Ohio,
Richards.
J.
cinnati, his
and
having been born
the widest and truest sense of the
L ^'MIN'GHAM,
FRANCES,
Farmer, was born in
jilace;
October, 1806, in Sycamore township of Hamil-
to pass in
its
in
citizen of the
best interests,
which he might
and
suf-
fittingly
and was the youngest of ten show his regard for his adopted city. His education was a whose parents were James and Jennette thoroughly good one, and he brought to all his enterprises (Parker) Cunningham. His father, a native of and all his intercourse a fine culture and a rare intelligence. Pennsylvania, settled in Kentucky at an early He possessed a fine combination of musical taste, mechani-
children,
tj
day, remaining there, however, only a short time.
moved
identified himself with all
no opportunity
word a
ton county, Ohio,
mi X.3
e-
&
fered
He became
remaining years were passed.
to
I'ort
9
Washington, Hamilton county
He
— the
then
site
of
cal I
aptitude,
and unyielding jierseverance
;
so
when he
decided to enter upon the work of organ building, he
BIOGRAPHICAL EXCVCLOIVEDIA.
66
brought to his work the elements that insure ultimate success.
He
was one of the very
in Cincinnati,
and
to
first
engage
his earnestness, his fitness
ness, his patient industry,
and
his
in the
for
work
the busi-
intelligent perseverance
enabled him, in the development of his chosen
field
of
labor, to attain a celebrity probably unequalled west of the
achieved perfection
mechanism, and the instruments
in
produced by him became famous
their richness of tone.
and
a
into
copartnership with
his
and woollen
Isaac, in the clothing .
the leading partner,
Abraham.
however, under the style of
1.
was soon reorganized,
It
& D.
The
Wolf.
firm relin-
the mercantile business in 1869, and went into the
brokerage
which
line,
line
it
has since continued
to pursue'.
Wolf was originally a W’hig; but when The high places of the Know Nothing party was organized he left the ranks hard struggle, how- of the Whigs and entered those of the Democrats. He
for their delicacy of touch,
prosperity were not reached without a
Abraham and
goods business, under the firm-name of A. & 1 Wolf & Co. This firm was dissolved in the year 1865 by the death of
By hard work and sympathetic study he quished
Alleghenies.
their range
and then entered
1842,
brothers,
In politics Daniel
At one time, after his marriage, while he was at continued in the Democratic faith until the breaking out of work at the foundation of his reputation, his means were so the war of the rebellion, in 1861, and then he considered meagre that one room served for his factory and for the that the time had come to revoke his allegiance to any mere home of his wife and himself. He married early in life party and yield it alone to his adopted country. He was Solomence Yeck, a native of Pennsylvania, and the result earnestly devoted to the preservation of the Union in its inever.
of the marriage was eleven children. after
In the year
1865,
having lived to enjoy to some extent the prosperous
other prominent and infiuenlial citizens of the old Fifth and
member
In politics he
of the church.
;
and
patriotic
public-spirited,
he was philanthropic
in a
large degree, and always gave generously of his means, large or small, to promote the welfare of benevolent institu-
and
to
for
He, together with
the adjacent wards of the city, started and organized the
was a Democrat but he was a patriot, never a jiartisan. He steadily and earnestly worked for the support of the government in its efforts to crush the rebellion, and at his instance three of his sons enlisted in the Union army and Not only was took part in many of the battles of the war.
tions
energy every measure
all his
he died, widely and sincerely
nent and influential
he
and supported with
the vigorous prosecution of the war.
In religion he was a Catholic, and was a promi-
results of his early struggles,
mourned.
tegrity,
meet the
calls of private charity.
first
company
of
home
the “ Stoner Rifles,’’
military.
The company was
armed and equipped themselves at This organization formed the nucleus panies that entered the the hardest
work of
W’olf was elected a
called
and was composed of old men, who
army and
the war.
member
own many of
expense.
their
of
the com-
participated in
In the year
some of
1865 Daniel
of the City (,'ouncil in place of
Benjamin Eggleston, who had been chosen to a seat in Congress. He was put forward by the best citizens of the ward, was elected by a large majority, and performed the by successive
duties of his position so accejitably that elections he has
been kept
in the position ever since.
re-
For
was a member of the Board of City Improvethe present time he is Chairman of the He was born in the town of P'reidesheim, at Finance Committee. He was married in 1847 'o Rebecca Ten cbildren have been born to Rheinpfalz, in that country, on the 2d of April, Bruel, of Cincinnati. His eldest daugh1819, and continued to live there until he was them, and of these nine are now living. fourteen years of age. While still living in his ter is the wife of H. S. Mack, of the firm of H. S. Mack & native town he secured the rudiments of a good, Co., of Milwaukee, Wisconsin and his second daughter is four years he
DANIEL,
LF,
Broker,
is
a native of Bavaria.
ments, and
at
;
With
substantial education.
opportunities
came
to
his residence there his school
an end, and such mental training as
he subsequently obtained was wholly due aided
efforts.
to this country,
his father
went
to his
own
the wife of A. Meyer, of the firm of Meis sale boots
and
settled in Stark county, Ohio,
into business as a butcher
butchering business
come up
He
Cincinnati.
in
Meyer, whole-
un-
In the year 1833 he came with his parents
and
TIMSON, RODNEY M., Marietta, Ohio, was lorn at Milford, New Hampshire, on October 26th, 1824. He was descended from John Stim-
where
hotel keeper.
In the following year he went with the family to find a
home
&
and shoes.
;
assisted his
father there in the
son,
to his desires,
and he concluded
Accordingly he accepted a position
to relinquish
in a store at the
at Marietta College,
it.
dazzling
who came from England
chusetts, about 1640.
but the profits of the business did not
1847.
He
then
commenced
He
to Boston, Ma.ssa-
received his education
from which he graduated in
the study of law, and in 1849
P'or six months he con- was admitted to the bar. But his fancy for newspaper life and on these terms, and being greater, he abandoned the law and established the This new work then, in the year 1837, when he was eighteen years of age, Register, at Stouton, Lawrence county. he went again to work with his father, who had gone into received his best energies, and until the spring of 1862 he
salary of three dollars per month.
tinued to
work
in
this
the clothing business.
situation
He
remained with
his father until
gave
his entire attention to that paper.
He
then
moved
to
# 1 .
? I
••
—
.
B I OG R A PH I C A L Marietta, and Rtgister, in that he has
between
published the
Marietla
May, 1872.
until
and study, possessing a
the ensuing
He
carefully selected volumes.
two thousand
be found among them.
The
.Senate as a Republican.
bater, in the current political
1863 he was admitted
universal satis-
tice of his
faction felt by his constituents caused his re-election to the
same
office in
1871, where he served in
all
getic
men
him
as
married twice;
first
He
during his time.
and then again
in 1851,
teaching
in
and
In
of the State.
and entered on the prac-
In the spring of 1865, General E.
profession.
Noyes
after the election of
whom
he had read
to the
In the
was
of 1866,
fall
Probate Judgeship of the
county, he was appointed by the City Council to
has been
vacancy
in 1862.
and
in the Solicitor’s office,
was elected
the
fill
following spring
in the
Solicitor^hip for the term of
to the
in
an orator and de-
movements
to the bar
appointed by him Assistant Solicitor.
one of the ablest and most ener-
in the Legislature
New
law, having been elected City Solicitor of Cincinnati, he
record while in the Legislature was highly honorable, and the record shows
part, as
Noyes, since Governor of Ohio, with
F.
His
four years.
meantime taking an active
the
In 1869 he was elected to the
he was engaged
for three years
schools, continuing also the study of law,
in private
can always
presided over an academy at Lisbon,
In the early part of 1S61 he removed to Cin-
where
cinnati,
over
His contributions, which are many,
are of the highest order.
fall
Hampshire.
Since
fine library of
67
1
been out of business, and has devoted his time
leisure
Ohio State
and
edited
there
which he continued
E XC VCIX) P JiD A
two years.
1869, he formed a law partnership
Retiring from office in
with his father-in-law, and since then has been constantly
fORRILL, HENRY ALBERT, v.X^I
third son of .Stmuel
Morrill
Lawyer,
engaged
the
is
done
and was horn in Potsdam, X'ew York, February 13th,
who
in early life
from X'ew Hampshire to Caledonia county, Ver-
the
They were men
Tilton,
His maternal grandparents, whose
were members of a family prominent
circles in northern
New
riage, settled near the
was engaged
home
in various
varied success, until
the affairs of
his
His
father,
pursuits,
fearless
whom
still
retains that
He
position.
is
a
— and
in political matters,
while holding him-
and outspoken
in
is
delivering his views and senti-
Anna McGuffey,
He
w'as
mar-
eldest daughter of A.
H.
McGuffey, a prominent lawyer of Cincinnati.
meeting with
decease, which occurred about
a
man
of inflexible integrity in
AI.DWIN,
and was endowed with more than powers. At the age of four years, his
Dealer
he remained
until
their death;
His parents were from the
.State
of
seven years. Cat tain Waugh married Miss Goodwho was a lineal descendant of one of the best families Our subject acquired his educathat name in England.
officer
at-
and was there engaged
native town,
win, of
a large commission
house. At the close of his engagement with that establishment he returned to his home, whence, after completing a
preparatory course of studies, he entered D.artmoulh College
North
traction. His mother was the daughter of CajiSamuel Waugh, who enlisted in the Revolutionary war when he was but sixteen years of age, and served as an
tion
in
in
tain
tended also the village school and academy. Conceiving about that period a distaste for agricultural pursuits, he visited St. Louis, proposing to turn his attention to Inisiness,
months
H., Wholesale and Retail
Pianos and Organs, was born
15th, 1821.
who had succeeded to the homestead as head of the household, continued to reside there until he had attained his eighteenth year. During
for six
DWIGHT
Connecticut, and were of English and Irish ex-
then
time he was engaged in working on the farm, and
in
East, Erie county, Pennsylvania, on September
with their married daughter,
this
In 1S70 he was appointed Law, Contracts, and Evidence, in
from the machinations of corrupt partisanship,
ried in 1S67 to
mother dying and leaving a large family of young children, he removed to Vermont to live with his paternal grandparents, with-
work he has
School of Cincinnati, he
ments concerning every important measure.
business
soon after mar-
life,
ordinary intellectual
and
.School,
Presbyterian
name was in
Law
self apart
of his wife’s parents, where he
business
He was
thirteen years ago. all
York.
Law
remunerative
zealous and prominent officer and v'orker in his church
of prominence in church, benevolent, and in Christian enterprises.
extensive and
an
in connection with the
Professor of Mercantile
emigrated
mont, then a wilderness, and there became ultimately the possessors of large and productive farms.
on
carrying
has devoted his entire attention.
His paternal grandfather was one
1835.
of five or six brothers
in
practice, to which, with the exception of the
and Martha Morrill,
principally in the public
and
schools
select
and subsequently entered Oberlin
of his
College.
After spending several years as a student in jireparing for the ministry, on account of failing health he 1
to
abandon
his studies
and
college,
was compelled
and relinquish
his cher-
1856, and graduated with honor in i860. During his! ished object of becoming a regularly educated minister of college course, and also while fitting himself for it, he the gospel. Having thus been frustrated in obtaining the taught school in the winter, and in the summer vacations yrrofession of his choice, he visited Kentucky and engaged in
!
j
worked for hire on the farms, thus defraying his entire expenses, receiving no outside help from any source. After
continued several years in that State and
graduating he at once began the study of law, and during
He
in
teaching music, which he found agreeable, and therefore
then removed
to
in that business.
Ripley, Ohio, and after remaining
c
68
r.
IOC ; u A p 1 1 1
I
'
A
,
i:
nc v c i.o p. p:
i >
i
a
.
there a few years, being engaged in
teaching music, he the idea of entering some profession, and, holding that dewent to Cincinnati, Ohio, where he has since resided. sign steadily in view, employed himself in teaching a During the first seven years of his residence in the Queen common school, thus securing the desired opportunity City of the West he was engaged in teaching music in the which enabled him to complete, in a measure, his store of public schools. qualified to
It
know,
has been estimated by those
he has given music lessons
that
than one hundred thousand pupils in
cla'sses,
who to
are
more
and more than
one hundred persons are now teaching music who were one time
way
to sell pianos
This business has gradually
and organs.
now
but constantly increased until
it
extends over ten or
lie began with the determination
twelve different States.
of building up a large business on a basis of
and the
results
tations, his
have
sales
far
strict integrity,
surpassed his most sanguine expec-
and organs being more than
of pianos
double that of any other house
name D. H. Baldwin on
a
bill
in is
a sufficient guarantee that
good
in
every respect as
it
In his remarkable success
the salesman.
not for an instant forgotten
come
had been represented
how
in
is
to
quite
be by
business he has
ardently he desired to be-
Although defeated by position, he has found many
a clergyman by profession.
ill-health
in
attaining to that
opportunities in the church and Sabbath-school to labor for
In July, 1863, he was elected a Ruling
his Divine Master.
Elder still
Third Presbyterian Church of Cincinnati, and holds that honorable and responsible position. Since in the
1868 he has been the
efficient
and
tireless
The
of the Sunday-school of that church.
course of drilling, to receive
system of training.
Upon
profitably a higher
the outbreak of the rehellion,
however, he temporarily relinquished his student entered the service of the United States to
maintenance and defence of the Union. private
sioned
and
officer,
and the
83d Ohio Volunteer Infantry, he served
the
in
life,
assist in
Enlisting as a
actively during the ensuing three years as a
participating in
at all times,
many
non-commis-
hard-fought battles,
under the most trying and perilous circum-
stances, acquitting himself with intrepidity
The While
the State of Ohio.
every musical instrument sold from his warerooms as
at
In 1863 he began in a very small
his scholars.
crude acquirements, and to prepare his mind, by a consistent
and
efficiency.
acting in a military capacity he was recognized as
an ardent and useful soldier, and upon various occasions
was favorably mentioned by discharge
in
Receiving his
his superiors.
August, 1865, he re-entered the college
beginning of the September term of
this year,
at the
resuming the
prosecution of his former studies, and through indefatigable exertions and economical
Miami
of 1868 at
fall
management graduated
University, Oxford, Ohio.
in
the
In the
following September he received the aiipointment of Professor of
Mathematics
at
the I'armers’ College, located a'
College Hill, Ohio, which position he a period of two years.
filled
with ability for
In the meantime, also, having re-
Superintendent
solved to embrace the legal profession, he studied
printed reports
under the directions of Dickson
& Murdoch,
law
of Cincinnati,
of the Sabbath-schools of the Presbytery of Cincinnati, for
and attended the Cincinnati I.aw School, whence he gradshow that the school over uated April 19th, 1870, receiving his diploma in that year. which he presides had a larger number of pupils than any In the ensuing June, the college session having closed, he other. Every day, at an early hour in the afternoon, he removed to Cincinnati, and entering at once upon the active leaves the cares of his business and devotes the remainder practice of his profession, rapidly secured an extensive and the
year ending May,
1875,
of the day in visiting the families of the pupils of his school,
remunerative clientage.
thus reducing to practice the religion which he iwofesses.
Assistant Prosecuting Attorney of Hamilton county being
On December 30th, 1844, he married Emerine Summers, of Elizaville, Kentucky.
his appointment.
In the
functions of his
it, and in January, 1S73, received During 1873-74, having performed the office with faultless ability and well-directed
he was widely named
as a
tion of Prosecuting Attorney,
Attorney
for
Hamilton county, Ohio, was born
Newtown, Hamilton 20th,
Prosecuting
1842.
county,
they located themselves
in
September
His ancestors were known as
teemed companions of the settlers in the
Ohio,
earlier pioneers
es-
and
fit
candidate for the posi-
in
1875
unanimously
for his present office,
ultimately securing an election by a m.ajority of over five
thousand
in
the county, running far ahead of his ticket.
Nominated by acclamation by the Democratic Convention, elected by an overwhelming majority, he was installed in
new
his
when
tous
now
and
nominated by the Democratic party
southwestern section of Ohio, where that part of our country,
of 1872, the position of
tendered him, he accepted
zeal,
^jERARD, CLINTON W., Lawyer,
fall
office
on January 4th, 1875, under the most feliciThroughout his administration his
circumstances.
so thriving and populous, was sparsely settled and wholly
course and actions have been invariably characterized by a
undeveloped.
fearless
(lerard.
determination to repress the growth and spread of the criminal classes, and an undeviating attention to eveiy detail
lived
His parents were Isaac Gerard and Maria Until he had attained his seventeenth year he
on a farm, engaged
summer
in
agricultural labor during the
season, and in the winter months attending the
neighboring country schools, where he received a limited and preliminary education. He subsequently conceived
and impartial construction of the law, an
connected with the proper fulfilment of his
many
inflexible
important
what may be termed, in the fullest sense of Encompassed with diffithe expression, a self-made man. duties.
He
is
r.Tor.RAPiiicAi, culties
his outset
;it
he met them with vigor and
in life,
— holding
now
determination, and
F.\cvcLnp.Kr)iA. with a
an honorable and im-
— reaps
deservedly the reward of his tireless ex-
These papers were jiublished
in
GEORGE OSGOOD,
Ilis father.
M.
November
Marietta, Ohio,
D.,
in the
to
his practice.
in
York Medical
A\'w
1824 he published in the riiiladclphia yournal of Medical Science a full history of the great Epidemic Fever that visited the Ohio valley and Marietta in 1822 and 1823; and in 1S25, in the Western fournal of Repository.
born
1822 a “ Treatise on
in
Siamese twins, which occurred
that of the
ertions.
'ILDRETII,
the Plant;”
Hydrophobia,” and another on a curious case similar
portant office, an esteemed and prominent citizen, a skilful
lawyer
Drawing of
(>(}
was
In
Medictne, of Cincinnati, an account of the minor diseases
17th, 1812.
In 1826 he became the author of a series
of the epidemic.
Dr. Samuel Prescott Hildreth, widely I
known scientist,
medical
a
as
was born
in
practitioner, author
and of papers on the “Natural and
Methuen, Massachusetts,
I
j
September 30th, 1783, descending from a distinguished New England ancestry, traced directly to Richard Hildreth, who emigrated from England more than two
I
Civil Histoiy of
Washington
County,” printed in Silliman's Journal of Science, New Haven. From that time until his death he w'as a frequent contributor
to
that
on conchological, geological,
journal
j
meteorological and medical subjects.
These were
all
very
I
valuable, especially those treating on the salt-bearing rock
His boyhood was passed on his father’s
centuries ago.
j
farm and
common school. "were made at
in studies at a
in Ohio, and Andover settlement in
His preparations
i
the history of salt manufacture from the
first
he entered upon the study of medicine with Dr. Thomas
His “ Diary of a Naturalist” was exceedingly interesting and instructive. In 1837 he became one of the assistant geologists on the Ohio State Geological
Kittredge, at Andover, North parish.
Survey, and
course
for a collegiate
Academy, but before the completion of
Phillips’
his college training
In May, 1805, not
then twenty-two years of age, he began practice in
Rockingham county.
stead,
New
Hampshire, and he
sixteen months’ residence in this place
Hampafter a
started, Sep-
tember 9th, 1806, on horseback for the West, arriving
Here he remained nine
Ohio, October 4th.
Marietta,
weeks, and then went
to
Belpre, twelve miles distant, to
Here, on August 19th, 1807, he married Rhoda,
practise.
daughter of G.rptain Pardon Cook.
New
at
.She
was a native of
Bedford, Massachusetts, and came to Ohio in 1804
with her mother, then a widow. fifteen
months
in Belpre, Dr.
and there resided wife, a lady of
In 1808, after a stay of
Hildreth returned to Marietta,
his death, July 24th,
until
His
1863.
most estimable qualities and many accom-
plishments, died at the
same
place,
June
21st,
1868.
In
when twenty-seven
that State.
1839 became
in
President of the
Society of Ohio, and delivered before
it,
Medical
Cleveland, as
at
the annual address, a “ History of the Diseases and Climate
of Southeastern Ohio from
its F'irst
Settlement,” which w'as
printed by the society and widely circulated.
In the same year he published a “ History of the Settlement of Belvllle,
Western Virginia,” which was continued through several numbers of the Hesperian, a magazine issued in Cincinnati. In
1842-43 he contributed
Pioneer
frecpiently
to
published monthly in the same his “ Pioneer History,” an octavo
he issued
pages, which was
“an account
of the
first
American
the city.
In 1S48
volume of 525
examinations of
the Ohio valley and early settlement of the Northwest Territory.”
This was followed
in
1852 by his “ Lives of the
Early Settlers of Ohio,” an octavo volume of 539 pages. In 1830 he began a cabinet of natural history, from the
years of age. Dr. Hildreth was Ohio Legislature, and re-elected in 1811. fossil insects, shells and plants of Ohio, to which were At that time he was a supporter of the Jefferson and Madi- addeJ minerals, insects and marine specimens from other son administrations. His unsuccessful opponent in 1811 quarters. In a few years he had gathered four thousand was the late Judge Ephraim Cutler, a Federalist. In later specimens, including many relics from “ancient mounds.” 1810,
elected to the
years both acted in concert as Whigs.
Upon
the expiration
of his second term he declined to act further in that capa-
He was
city.
a
man
of decided political opinions, and of
such unswerving integrity that there was no inducement that could lead him against the right. He was a Republican from the formation of that party, in 1854.
lature of
which he was a member,
in
The
Legis-
1811, elected him
In 1855 he donated this valuable cabinet to Marietta Coltogether with his scientific libraiy, and many rare
lege,
works pertaining to the pioneer history of the West. These occupy a room knowm as “ Hildreth’s Cabinet,” and by this donation he became one of the leading benefaclors of that
He was
institution.
where esteemed
a
for his
man
of sincere piety, and
profound learning and
was every-
his attractive
Collector of Non-resident Taxes, at a salary of $250 per social (pialities. George Osgood Hildreth, his son, was annum, and he held that office for eight y'ears, when, in educated at the Ohio University, at Athens, from which he 1819, it was abolished. Upon leaving this institution he In 1810 he became clerk of the graduated in 1829.
Trustees of the Ministerial Lands, and retained that position until his death.
At home and abroad he was highly
Among
esteemed
for his scientific labors.
were,
in
1808, a “ History of the Plpidemic of the
1807
” ;
in
his publications
entered at once upon the study of medicine with his father,
and soon
Year graduated
1812 a “ Description of the American Colombo,
after entered
the medical depaitment of Transyl-
vania University, at Lexington, Kentucky, from which he in
1835.
He commenced
ciated with his father, at Marietta,
practice at once, asso-
and has uninterruptedly
.
BIOGRAPHICAL E N C V C L O IL:E D A
70
I
continued
it
time, with the
until the present
when he was
four years, from 1S49 to 1853,
exception of in in California,
“gold fever” had impelled him. professional duties upon his return, and
its
skirmishes and battles.
Subsequently he went as
Assistant Surgeon in the Marietta Hospital, Georgia,
he was stationed
in the hospitals
and
of Atlanta until
to w'hich the prevalent
after this
lie resumed
the troops were ordered out of that city, in contemplation
his
continued alone in their performance since the death of his June, 1863, he was appointed
In
1863.
in
father,
aminer of United States Pensioners, and position.
P'or a
the
Ministerial
the
Eirst
Bank;
a
Society
and
National
Bank and
member
of
the
in
as clerk of
a stockholder in
is
Marietta National
the
Washington
County Medical
Putnam
occupies the family homestead on
;
retains that
still
number of years he has acted Trustees of Marietta;
Ex-
street,
unmarried.
is still
march
of Sherman’s
to the sea.
Kentucky, and
where he remained
for
then went to Louis-
about
months
l.
His
regiment was then ordered to the Atlantic coast, and
at his
request he joined
six
it
during the balance of
mington and 24th, 1865,
paired health, he
Hospital No.
in
January, 1S65, and acted with
service in North Carolina, at Wil-
He was
Saulsltury.
at
in
its
and returned
medicine two years.
JOHN
He
two months served in Crittenden Hospital, when he was ordered to Nashville,
ville,
mustered out, June
to Cincinnati,
where he practised
Then, on account of
moved
to
it
his father’s im-
Oxford, Ohio, where the
latter
M. D., was born, Febru- was residing, and followed his profession in that place for ary iSth, 1830, at Mount Pleasant, Westmoreland two years; and upon the expiration of this period located in county, Pennsylvania, and was the third of six Glendale, where he has since lived. He is a physician of children whose parents were A. O. and Maria S. great skill, and his long hospital service in the army has (.Speer) Patterson. Ilis father, a native of Fay- been of great benefit to him and his patrons, as well as to the science of which he is a leading exponent. ette county, Pennsylvania, was a graduate of He is a Washington College, Pennsylvania, and became a jiromi- gentleman of great energy of character, of fine culture and He was a attractive social qualities, and is highly esteemed for his nent clergyman of the Presbyterian church. learned and eloquent divine, and during the last year of public and private services. He is a member of the his life preached at Oxford, Ohio, where he died, Decem- Presbyterian Church, and is a Republican in his political His wife was born at Chillicothe, and affiliations. ber 14th, 1868. was a woman of many virtues and accomplishments. John E. had in youth the advantages of a liberal education, and became at quite an early age a student in Washington ColARD, WILLIAM W., Lumber Merchant, was lege, which he left in 1850, going in that year to Cincin-
I'TERSON,
E.,
I
where he commenced to read medicine with Dr. I. J. Dodge. He remained with this gentleman three years, and in this period attended three courses of lectures at the Medical College of Ohio, from which, in the spring of He at once located 1855, he graduated with high honor.
born
nati,
in
Cincinnati as a practitioner, remaining there for seven
months, when he went
to
Pittsburgh,
and followed
his
profession in that city until the breaking out of the rebellion.
In
Assistant
1862
he entered the United
Surgeon, and was stationed
tuckv, having charge of the hospital-boat “
He
remained here about
six
Paducah, Kenftr.
Robinson.”
months, when he moved his
boat to Columbus, Kentucky, where he was stationed for
1811, and was the
fourth
child in
a
whose parents were William Ward and Anna (Spenser) Waid. His father, a native of Vermont and the direct defamily
of
seven
children
scendant of Revolutionary ancestry, followed agricultural pursuits through
and was a man of influence and edu-
life,
cation; he died in East Poultney, Rutland county, Vermont,
1S50.
States service as at
Underhill, Chittenden county, Vermont,
in
July 6th,
cut,
His mother was a native of Hartford, Connecti-
noted for fervid piety; she died, January 3d, 1819.
His grandfather, Hon. William Ward, was one of the first Rutland county, Vermont, and during
settlers of Poultney,
the Revolutionary
war took an
active
and zealous
part, as
Here also he was assigned charge of an officer, in the Continental army in his country’s defence. another half year. the hospital-boat “ N.rshville,” which he retained for six He was a member of the convention which framed the months.
Surgeon
Then he accompanied to
this
boat
as
Assistant
Vicksburg, where he was stationed for a year,
being part of the time
in the hospital of that
city
constitution of the State,
of the Judges of the
and
for six years
presided as one
County Court of Rutland county.
and the twenty-two years he was Judge of Probate
For
for the District
remainder of the time on the boat.
of Fairhaven
went
Peace; and during eighteen years represented the town
to
In March, 1864, he Columbus, Ohio, and was there commissioned as
Assistant Surgeon of the
itSth Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
the
.State
;
served
Legislature.
for
forty
years
as
Justice of the in
Also, for more than a half century,
and, after a short sojourn with this regiment, was placed on he made a public profession of religion, and for nearly forty He was a direct dethe “ Operating Board of Surgeons ” of the 2d Division of years served as deacon of a church. the 23d
Army
Corps, and was actively connected with that
corps during the active campaign against Atlanta, engaging
scendant of General Artemas Ward, of the Massachusetts Continental troops.
He was
engaged
in
labor at an early
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOICLDIA. age, and his elementary education, obtained solely
own
was limited
exertions,
degree and kind.
in
by
his
When
but twelve years of age he was compelled to maintain him-
and up
self,
i8jO remained
to
in
Vermont, employed
He
laborious but honorable pursuits.
then, in
with Horace Greeley, afterward so famous,
on foot
.State
His
the West.
for
dollars, while Greeley’s capital
New
Albion, Orleans county.
He was married, September 13th, i860, to Rosanna C. Jobson, a native of Germany; and again, July i8th, 1875, to Caroline Henzler, of Cincinnati.
in
company his native
left
was nine was eighteen dollars. At York, he was attacked by capital
total
HON. JOHN ative
him
comrade, and, the
he proceeded on
to remain,
This was the
beginning of a friendship between the fortune-seekers that lasted through
and which was abundantly evidenced
life,
by the correspondence and exchanged favors of subsequent
He was
years.
detained
Gaines,
at
three
from
miles
Albion, by sickness, for about one month, at the expiration of which time he found employment as a clerk there, and
served in that capacity during the ensuing three years.
1833 he went by stage
New .sale
to Silver
In
Creek, Chautauqua county,
York, where he established his head-(iuarters for the In 1839 he set out for Cincinnati, and, ac-
of goods.
complishing the journey on in the .spring of 1840,
foot, arrived at
He had accumu
New
York, but had
thing in trading ventures on the lake.
was the measuring and
in Cincinnati
his destination
without a cent in his pocket and with
not even an acquaintance in the town. bated a few dollars while in
His
lost
Captain Calvin Corvin,
whom, two months St.
every-
occupation
first
lumber
selling of
panied on business
to
for
he accom-
later,
Louis, where he succeeded in
At the expiration of two months he returned to Cincinnati, and there engaged in
gaining $300.
with his employer
lumber
selling’
months from
this
on
his
own
Within
account.
time he laid aside a
sum
eighteen
of ^10,000, and
has since continued to prosecute the business in which he met with such speedy and extraordinary .success. In 1856, exhausted by sickness, he was taken to western New York,
presumedly
to die,
and simultaneously was crushed by
Two
astrous reverses in business.
county, where
and county.
poor as upon his
by the aid of a
little credit,
soon again on the
full
of his failure to the
moneyed far-seeing
first
obligation,
tors
Republican party, and
a zealous abolitionist. a pro-slavery
mob
at
for
and lived
in
Rensselaer
Gowey
the son of Hartland D.
was a native of Madison county. New York, and in Ohio engaged in mercantile pursuits in the town of North Lewisburg, Champaign county. His education was acquired
and
University;
at
primarily in the Ohio Wesleyan
the age of twenty he began the study
of law under the preccptorship of Hon. John of Urbana.
1869 he was admitted
In
once entered on the practice of
was
H. Young, and at
to the bar,
In 1872 he
his profession.
elected, on the Republican ticket, to
a vacancy in
fill
the House,
and in 1873 was re-elected for the next full While a member of this body he has served on the Committees on Privileges and Elections and on Insane term.
Asylums.
In
1875, declining a re-election to the
House,
he was elected Prosecuting Attorney of Champaign county.
To undertake to estimate the life and career of one so young as he, would be a premature proceeding but, marked as it has been by integrity and the profitable exer;
cise of
that
many
sound
his
abilities, there
can be no danger in predicting
hope of
future will satisfy every reasonable
He
friends.
was married, April 25th, 1867,
to
his
Clara
McDonald, of Champaign county, Ohio.
ELTZER, VAN born still
Politically,
many
he
is
attached
years was noted as
At the time of Lovejoy’s murder by
Religiously, he
believing firmly in the immortality of
communication with friends
is
man and in
advocacy
a Spiritualist,
the possi-
the spirit
land.
S.,
Physician and
Columbus, Ohio,
resides,
August
Seltzer,
31st, 1834.
Surgeon, was
house where he
in the
His grandfather,
emigrated from Germany, and
at
an early day settled in Pennsylvania, where he
engaged
recognized as a is
in
George
the time
His lumber yard
his denunciations of the outrage, fearless in his
bility of
is
dis-
Alton, Illinois, he was energetic in
of true right and justice.
He
father
resumed,
From
now widely
and able man of business.
located at 156 Harrison avenue. to the
his ancestors settled
York.
after his arrival
present day he has never given a is
originally
Champaign December yth, spelled Goewey, in
His mother, whose anceswere natives of Connecticut, was Irorn in Ohio. His
former business, and was
tide of prosperity.
and he
resides,
still
General
Sixty-first
was born
years elapsed before his
arrival in the place;
his
New
he
Lawyer and Represent-
and
and Eliza A. (Willey) Gowey.
health was re-established, and he then returned to Cincinnati, as
F.,
Sixtieth
The name was
1846.
latter not permitting
his journey.
the
in
Assemblies of Ohio,
illness, and rested there temporarily with a friend. Greeley had then but nine dollars left, out of which sum he gave
five dollars to his
71
in
mercantile
business.
He was
the
organizer of Johnstown, Lebanon county, in that State, and
was widely recognized as an able man of business and useHis family consisted of three sons and two citizen.
ful
daughters; his oldest son, Samuel
Pennsylvania
in
1831 and settled
in
Z. Seltzer,
M.
D.,
left
Columbus, Ohio, where
he was engaged in the practice of medicine until his death, His mother, Mary (Tansnacht) Seltzer, of Johnsin 1852. town, Pennsylvania, was the mother of thirteen children.
He was
the third son,
and was educated preliminarily
in
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.LUI A.
72
In 1848 he entered tireless student, and now, at the age of sixty-two years, is a where he remained as a student profound scholar, a man of valuable and varied literary during the ensuing three years. lie then began the study and general knowledge, and one of the ablest preachers of of medicine under the instruction of his father, with whom the Disciple Church. In 1856 and 1857 he served as a
the public schools of his native place.
the Capitol
he read
University,
death carried off his preceptor, in
until
1852.
Later, he entered the Starling College, and graduated from
He
that institution in 1855.
commenced
then
the practice
member from
slavery cause
an extensive and lucrative business.
sesses in the capital
one of the
first
House
three Abolition-
of hts county, and from the earliest days of the anti-
ists
extending over twenty years, and
present time pos-
He was
this county.
of his profession where his father had labored for a period at the
Ohio House of Representatives, from Rich-
of the
land county, the only Republican ever elected to the
was one of
He
porters.
its
most ardent and
has always taken an active part
fearless sup-
in the political
For three years, 1869-70-71, he held the position of Physi- movements of the day, and is widely recognized as a valuFranklin County Infirmary. At able ally by those to whom he offers the assistance of his
cian and Surgeon to the the present time he
Asylum
Physician and Surgeon of the Ohio
is
Deaf and Dumb.
for the
In politics, be
He was
attached to the Republican party.
Minerva
19th, 1856, to
1
is
strongly
married, August
1863 he served
Ohio Volunteer
the 65th
fall
of 1861
to the spring of
army
the PInited States
in
as Chaplain of
commanded by Colonel
Infantry,
Harker, who fell at Kenesaw Mountain, in the division commanded by General Wood. Colonel Harker was a Brigadier-General when he fell. Mr. Burns has probably
Smcltzer, of Zanesville, Ohio.
.
F'rom the
sterling abilities.
held more public debates on religious topics than any other
OOMIS, WILLIAM Seventh
the
was born ruary
Judicial
New
in
Marietta,
District,
Ohio,
London, Connecticut, on Feb-
New
England, and the family date their
dence
in this country
two hundred and
come from England.
back, originally having
of
His parents were natives of
1837.
1st,
Lawyer and ex-Judge
B.,
resi-
fifty
years
In
1840
living
preacher in the West, and
the support of his
to
views and arguments brings a formidable store of natural
and masses of knowledge bearing
talents
directly
preached
for
forty
years,
twenty-four States of
Chagrine
F'alls,
and
He
heavily upon the points held under consideration.
and travelled and preached
the
He now
Union.
resides
has in at
Cuyahoga county, Ohio.
Christopher C. Loomis, the father of the subject of this
Ohio and engaged
sketch, emigrated to
the mercantile
in
William B. Loomis attended the Marietta Acad-
business.
emy, and finished
education
his
at
Marietta
the
^ ARGENT, EDWARD, retired
High
'
After leaving school he assisted in the mercantile
School.
business, but only for a few months,
when he was employed
in the Clerk’s office of this county,
and while there began
tbe study of law, and in
profession, in
he engaged
office
was born 2d, 1820.
In 1832 he
Frederick county, Maryland. with
his
father’s
family
Cincinnati,
to
came where
In 1833 his father died, age he was compelled to begin the busi-
he has since resided.
in the prac-
which he has always been em-
Publisher,
Pennsylvania, April
His father was Rev. Dr. Thomas Sargent, of
1857 was admitted to the bar.
Leaving the County Clerk’s tice of his
Philadelphia,
in
and
at that early
This he did by entering the In 1868 he was elected ness of life for himself. Judge of the Court of Common Pleas and District Court, Methodist Book Concern as a clerk. Here and in the which position he filled until 1873, his time then having employ of Mann & Clark, wholesale grocers, he remained engaged in river comexpired. He is now engaged in the practice of his profes- until 1841. From 1841 to 1845 ployed when not on the bench.
and
sion,
Alban and
is
the senior
& Oldham,
lucrative
practice.
of the firm of Loomis, merce, as clerk and part owner of the steamer “ Queen of where they enjoy a large the West.” This boat operated on the Ohio and MissisThis was married in i860 to sippi, running from Cincinnati to New Orleans. adventure not proving altogether satisfactory, and a new
member
of Marietta,
He
Frances Wheeler, of Marietta.
field offering,
B. Smith
&
he entered the book publishing house of W. This firm was then, in a small way, pub-
Co.
lishing “ Ray’s Arithmetics ”
jURNS, REV.
ANDREW,
M. Burns, was born
ness.
in
ing,
Pennsylvania, in the year 1813, July 24th,
and
is
of Scotch-Itish extraction.
While
still
a
Wilson
&
Hinkle.
gent, Wilson
limited
means
originally
throughout his
for life
obtaining
an
a close and
that
of impaired
East Walnut Hills in 1868.
home
family to Richland county, Ohio, then a wilder-
With
By reason
of
Sargent,
health
Mr.
Sargent retired from this house and active business to his
small lad, in 1820, he emigrated with his father’s
education, he has been
and “ McGuffey’s Readers.” this house it was
Hon. Andrew After seventeen years’ connection with Berks county, near Read- dissolved, in 1862, and succeeded by father of
at
&
Hinkle became the
The house
largest
of Sar-
and most suc-
cessful school-book publishing establishment in the
world
;
and, although the world has been scarcely cognizant of the
inOGRAPIIICAL ENCVCLOP/EDIA. fact,
it
has for years been quietly but certainly exerting a
widespread influence of
interests
the
known
Series,” so well
“ Eclectic
The
country.
Hamburg, hoping
Educational
One
attention.
constantly exerted in selecting
from time
to time,
works of the greatest
cedented popularity as those of
of every stranger; but he obtained lodgings at the
this
wig-Holstein,
house, and no gentlemen
of the youth of the land than the
members of
Since retiring from active
is
some
whom
for
society
must provide.
Mr.
])lace
Pattern in his
to deserve
it.
Schles-
The
same house with Moritz, was in his
citing the soldiery to mutiny.
They were betrayed by some
whom
dangerous task of ex-
they had intrusted their scheme,
The house was surrounded
in irons.
by the Austrian soldiers and the keys of every drawer de-
manded
most eminently a
;
but the hostess fainted from terror, and the duty
of answering the officer devolved upon Moritz,
with those
in
life
as
life
who have made the world better by their He commenced business with little of the ad-
at
accompanied by the landlord
were seized and put
lie
an active worker in his church, and has so followed the
great
quartered in a fortress
agent, being quartered at the
Sargent has given his attention more to the amelioration of loyal soldiers to the condition of
with despatches
and combine with the German
revolt
to
Hamburg
induce the Hungarian soldiers of the
patriots for the re-establishment of their lost liberties.
this vast
business
sent an agent to to
who were
Austrian army,
intrinsic worth.
our business history more deservedly rank as benefactors
establishment.
and a passport de-
found the Austrian army
and the greatest care was In 1851 Kossuth and adding to this series, and instructions
Iso school publicationS"on the globe have gained such unpre-
in
the Schleswig-Holstein complications,
to
house of a member of the Revolutionary Club of Hamburg.
million o^ these books were annually put
in the schools over the country;
in some Hamburg, watching
manded
schools of the country, engaged for years almost their entire
be able to work his passage at
He
vessel.
the class-books of the public
as
After weeks of waiting he went to
ticket in the post-office.
good on the educational
for untold
73
^
The
then a youth of eighteen.
who was
carpet-bag containing the
vantage of the schools of which he became one of the most
papers had been placed under a bed, and the youth, com-
extensive and successful builders and p.atrons.
prehending the
During
his
fine
English education, and
may
certainly be justly
arrjong the self-educated architects of their
of Christopher Smith, well
of Cincinnati.
lie
own
fortunes.
married to Mary Smith, daughter
In October, 1845,
known among
the old citizens
has three children and
As
situation,
determined
to
outwit the soldiery.
and beds with his placed sword, Moritz threw the feathers over the bag and thus
long connection with the school-book interest he acquired a
two grand-
the captain ripped
saved
it.
open
jiillows
This failure to secure such
important papers
caused great rejoicing among the Revolutionary Club of
Hamburg, who delegated Moritz Loth papers to Kossuth,
who was
still
in
to
convey these
He
London.
accepted
and was, by the aid of a small boat at midnight, placed on board a steamer bound for London whose captain was a member of the club. He, with his
children.
the perilous mission,
OTII, of
MORITZ,
Hebrew
Merchant and Author, was born
parents, at
Milotiz, in the province of
Moravia, Austria, December 29th, 1832.
He
is
the
twelfth son in a family of twenty-two children, born
of one father and mother. instruction in the
He
received elementary
German, Hebrew and Bohemian
languages, showing remarkable aptitude in their acquire-
despatches, was stowed
among
the water-casks,
where he
remained two long and dreary days, on account of foggy weather, which prevented departure and entailed anxiety
upon the messenger.
After the steamer had passed the
lighthouse the captain ventured to take
Having arrived
in
London
him
last
into his cabin.
a day after the departure of
Kossuth, he delivered his papers to Baron Kemeny, Presi-
ment; but his father died when he was nine years of age, dent of the Hungarian Revolutionary Club in London. and he was soon after thrown upon his own resources. He The latter expressed his pleasure and gratitude, and offered went to Pesth, the capital of Hungary, in 1842, where his him pecuniary reward, which was declined but he rebrother Joseph assisted him to a situation in a lace and quested the baron to procure him a passage to the United ;
ribbon establishment.
Here he devoted
his evenings to a
systematic course of study, and laid the foundation of the extensive culture he attained in after
life.
He
served in
one of the I.andsturm during the revolution of 1848-49; after the Hungarian defeat, in the latter year, Joseph came to the United States, promising to send Moritz a passage ticket if he met encouraging prospects. Moritz was shortly
States.
The
baron's death, a few weeks
later, blasted his
hopes
and he sought and found employment at a caji factory near Regent street, where he remained until the coup d' ctat of Napoleon,
in
December, 1851.
He
resolved to join the
from Pesth to Berlin without a passport, but his recom-
news of the overthrow of the republic by Napoleon caused him to abandon the design, and he shortly after accepted the offer of Lord Dudley .Stuart, who, in behalf of Najioleon and the Emperor of Austria, gave free passage and four jxnmds in money to all revolutionary republicans who would emigrate
mendations from the Republican
to the
directed to
go
to Berlin,
where he would
waiting containing the ticket.
He was
find
a letter in
obliged to travel
Revolutionary Club
at
Pesth secured him friends, and, though he accomplisherl his
hazardous journey 10
in safety,
he
failed to find the passage
revolutionary party at Paris, but the
United States.
He
landed
in*
New
^'ork in
May,
1852, and proceeded immediately to Hartford, Connecticut,
where he found
his brother
doing a flourishing dry-goods
a
BIOGRAFIIICAL ENCVCLOP.EDIA.
74
had been
business, and ascertained that the passage-ticket
and
sent according to promise,
marked “ Cannot be found.”
and continues
long time returned
ability.
own
commenced
master, and
He
to
that
fill
also
is
ators;
account with the fraction of
office
of
which he was one
was President of the
Convention held
with great dignity and
President of the Union of American
Hebrew Congregations,
Joseph offered him a clerk-
own
ship, but he resolved to be his
peddling notions on his
after a
first
in Cincinnati,
of the origin-
Hebrew Congregational
1S73;
President of ihe
first
memorable four pounds, and so successful was he that Council of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, in 1853 he opened a dry-goods store at Hartford, which held at Cleveland, July, 1S74. He was one of the originwas continued with marked success for four years, lie ators of the Hebrew Union College, established at Cincinnati, and free to all students without regard to race then relinquished the dry-goods business and purchased He was married, Februa'iy 5th, i860, to F'redpatent-right on a spring gun for ^tiooo, which he also or creed. patented in Russia, and for which he was offered ^40,000 ericka Wilhartz, of New York city, and this union is blessed by a family of seven interesting childr l)y a joint stock company; but he believed there was a the
.
greater fortune in
a
and devoted two years of arduous it in the end
it,
beside an e.xpenditure of $7700, to find
laltor,
complete
Ilis
failure.
being thus reduced
capital
to
S1300, he removed to Cincinnati in 1859 and engaged in the wholesale notion business at his jiresent location, 121
Main
Here
street.
won immediate
his perception,
HCPl,
promptness and system
recognition in business circles, and he
rinks as one of the most thorough business
men
now
At the outbreak of the war, in 1861, opened a branch house at Louisville, Kentucky, under firm-name of M. Loth & Co., and the annual sales of two houses soon reached the sum of $1,000,000. At
was born
at
Oak
I2lh,
of
the
Thorjie, in 1
795.
His
1
father with his family landed at Baltimore,
of the
City.
E., ex- Brigadier-General
Militia,
Derbyshire, England, August
j
Mary-
land, August 30th, iSoi, and'after a residence in
[
Queen
RIIESE
Ohio State
he
that
j
city
of five
years
removed
to
Cincinnati,
the
where he lived until his death, November 19th, 1S21. His the education was limited in degree and kind, but he had been the early accustomed to labor, and the lack of school training the Louisville house was more than balanced by his natural powers of observaj
1
j
close of the
war he sold
and commenced also
to
his interest in
draw
in his
1
own
extensive trade at
!
and discrimination. In the peculiar abilities demanded life, and by the requirements and exigencies of from the rapid and continued decline in goods which fob a frontier home, he was excelled by none; u ith his keenreal lowed, and enabled him to give his attention to es'ate edged axe he would enter the wilderness of trees, and from transactions; and streets which were heretofore considered sunrise to sunset cut, split and stack from the stump three unavailable for dwelling and building purposes were, He also manufactured millions of full cords of wood. through his sagacity and energy, made the most desirable At bricks to be used in building the houses of Cincinnati. in the city, and he erected a large number of model dwellthe age of twenty-six he found his father’s estate was insolings for families of limited means, giving each family one vent at the age of thirty-four he could point to it cleared, floor, with all the modern improvements, for its own use. by his exertions, from every incumbrance. He acted at one Apart from business he has devoted considerable attention time as Brigadier-General of the Ohio State Militia, and for to literature, and wields the pen with no ordinary talent, many years was prominent and influential as a zealous upCincinnati.
This policy saved him from the serious
tion
loss
[
by pioneer
[
(
;
j
|
i
He
has been a liberal contributor to the huielite under the
plume of “
noni de
Milotiz,”
ami also wrote
for
it
,
the tale j
entitled
“The
Miser’s Fate.”
He
is
also the author of
He is now holder of anti-slavery principles and measures. from business relations, and widely known as one of
free
the most useful and benevolent men of Cincinnati; he reTale of Real Life,” a work of 377; While in his sides in a superb mansion on Price’s Hill. pages, published by Robert Clarke & Co., of Cincinnati, in thirtieth year he was married to Sarah Matson, daughter which he vividly portrays the misfortunes that befell a of Judge Matson. family through the thoughtless extravagance of the wife and
“Our
Prospects:
!
A
;
This was followed by “ The Forgiving Kiss; Our Destiny,” published by George W. Carleton & Co.,
daughters. or.
of
New York
city.
It is
a
work of even
HELLABARGER, HON. SAMUEL, I.awyer, ex-
greater merit than
Member
the preceding, and has reached the second edition, which is
having a large sale
Though
in
Europe
as well
as in America.
systematically devoted to his mercantile and real
of Congress, ex-United .States Minister
Resident to
Portugal, etc.,
county, Ohio,
December
was born
loth, 1817.
in
Clark
His
father,
Samuel Shellabarger, a farmer, was a native of Lycoming county, Pennsylvania. His mother, qualifications that render him an admirable companion, and an unassuming liberality has won for him fitting esteem. Bethany (McCurdy) Shellabarger, was born near New He was, in 1872, honored by a unanimous election to the Brunswick, New Jersey. His father’s family was of Gerestate interests,
and a
diligent student,
presidency of the congregation
at
the
he possesses social
Plum
.Street
Temple,
I
man-Swiss extraction.
Martin Shell.abargcr, the
founder
BIOGRAnilCAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA. of the family in America, to this country in
who emigrated from
75
and, while thus occiqned, began the study of medicine under
Switzerland
the early part of the eighteenth century,
-
—
was a descendant of Henry Shellabarger (German Schollenhergerj who lived in the Canton of Uii, at the date of
,
Dr. John Kittredge, a practitioner of the town. He afterward attended medical lectures in Boston, and in 1814 took at Cambridge the wished-for degree of M. D. He then en-
the battle at “ Rutli
tered on the practice of his profession at Andover, whence,
at
after a brief sojourn,
Meadow,” in 1307. Samuel graduated Miami University, with the class of 1S41, and subsequently studied law under the instruction of Hon. Samson Mason. Pie was admitted to the bar in 1846, and in 1847 entered on the practice of his profession in Miami county. In 1848, however, he returned to Springfield, where he has more
since resided,
1874.
l.abors u[) to
Washington, to the
the
or less regularly
Pie
District of
is
engaged
now engaged
in
rather delicate constitution, and, in in Marietta,
Salem.
Ifventually
he
November, 1815, arrived Heat once resumed the
Muskingum
the west side of the
and rapidly acquired an
river,
e.xtensive business.
In the
course of the ensuing year he entered zealously into the
Ohio Legislature on the Whig ticket, and served in Legislature under the present Constitution. In to the
Ohio, with his family.
practice of medicine on
professional
in his profession in
enterprise of establishing Sabbath schools, a
ing the
first
l86o he was elected, as a Republican,
to
thinking that a change of climate might be beneficial to his
In 1852 he was elected
Columbia.
he removed
decided to remove to the milder region of the Ohio valley,
young
in morality
and
religion then
mode of instructunknown in the
valley of the Ohio, and thenceforu'ard he filled constantly
Thirty-seventh
Congress; in 1864 was elected, as a Republican, to the
the role of spiritual teacher and guide.
Thirty-ninth Congress; and in 1866 was elected, as a Re-
the
In order to acquire
more fully and clearly some pulilican, to the P'ortieth Congress. In 1869 he was sent, of the obscurer passages of the Old Testament, he took up as United States Minister Resident, to Portugal, but resigned the study of Hebrew, being then forty years of age, and that position in the following December. In 1870 he was within a remarkably brief period was able to read in the elected to the Lorty-second Congress, ’and served through original tongue the worals of eternal life. In 1824 he was that Congress. In this Congress he was Chairman of the elected to the Legislature, from Washington county, Ohio, Committee on Commerce, and of the Select Committee on and, while serving with this body, labored loyally and effiSouthern .\ffairs, and reported from this committee the bill ciently for the interests of his constituents. In 1825 he was known as “the Ku-Klux Bill,” which, under his manage- elected by the Ohio Legislature an Associate Judge of the ment, became a law. During the Thirty-ninth and Lortieth Court of Common Pleas, to which position he was continuLor that Congresses, he was a member of the Elections Committee, ally reappointed until the period of his decease. and was author of and mover of important parts of the first station he was admir.ably qualified by his calm and wellReconstruction Act. In 1873 appointeil by the balanced mind, and by his sound judgment and thorough needed
ability to explain
J
President a
member
of “ the Civil Service Commission.”
knowledge of the
principles of law,
which he had studied
with great care, as also the statutes of the State by which he
OTTGN, JOHN, M.
II C
^c.
,
D., Judge,
mouth, Massachusetts, fath T,
in
was born
in
September, 1792.
was guided. The varied stores of classical and scientific knowledge garnered in his collegiate course and after life, Ply- were often spread before the public in the guise of lectures His delivered in the Marietta Lyceum, and also to the scholars
Rev. Josiah Cotton, was a graduate of Yale
the I'emale Seminary.
At the
incorporation
of the
Marietta College, in 1836, he was one of the original trus-
presiding temporarily over a church in Wareharn,
tees,
he abandoned the desk, and was appointed Clerk
board.
of the Courts in Plymouth
county, which post he
filled for
years. He was a descendant of Rev. John Cotton, one of the early ministers of Boston, whose name he bore,
many
whom
he inherited many intellectual and moral His mother, Rachel (Barnes) Cotton, was a daughter of Rev. ’David Barnes, of .Scituate. His boy-
and from
in
College, and was educated for the ministry. After
characteristics.
and
for several years
Among
was the presiding
officer of the
his other posts of distinction
was
Trustee of the Medical College of Ohio, located nati.
at
that of
Cincin-
Embracing with ardor whatever he deemed would community or country, he acted also as Chairman Whig Central Committee of Washington county, and
benefit the
of the
for several years
discharged with notable ability the duties of
that vexatious post.
As
a medical practitioner he stood de-
hood was passed in the town of Plymouth, Massachusetts, servedly high among his brethren, and was often called in where he attended the common schools. He was noted for his council in serious and peculiar cases, not only in Marietta, mild and gentle trisposition, his retiring habits, and a greater but also in adjacent towns, and was a skilful operator in fondness for study than for the rude sports which
occupy the time and thoughts of school boys. tions for college
were completed
commonly
His prepara-
academy
surgery, as well as a successful
simply medical treatment.
manager of
He was
cases requiring
married
in
August,
Sand-
1815, to Susan Buckminster, of fi'anningham, Massachusetts,
wich, and entering Cambridge College at the early age of
whose family was nearly related to Dr. Buckminster, of Portsmouth, and also to the gifted Joseph S. Buckminster, His death was sudden and unexpected, and ocof Bo.ston.
f)urteen, he graduated from that
at the
in
institution in 1810.
He
then became the preceptor of an academy in Larmingham,
BIOGRAnilCAL ENCYCLOr.EDIA.
76 currecl after a Ijrief illness
but the messenger found him
;
ready, “ watching for the coming of his Lord.”
April 2d, 1S47, aged
lie died
fifty-five years.
early
He
life.
determined to act
once upon
at
ance, and accordingly he engaged in
this assur-
attending a saw and
This engagement offered a double advantage.
grist-mill.
not only promised to bring back the departed health, but
It
would
manner
also reinforce in a very desirable
the finances
of the young student, and they were in need of reinforce-
JOHN,
ELCII,
judge of the Supreme Court of pre-eminently in
belongs I I
He
ranks of self-made men. ships of pioneer
born in Harrison county,
The
Ohio, on the 28th of October, 1805. to a great extent, a wiMerne.ss,
of the earliest pioneers it
and transforming
He was
a poor
himself.
matter
The
and productive land.
child of such a household
must manifestly work
prosperity,
certainly
It
how
the task of subduing
with a large family, consisting of seven
sons and four daughters.
who would have
region was then,
and John’s father was one
who undertook
into a cultivated
it
man
would not be
thrust
ardent the parental love or
how
rental wish to
have things better than they are
come
John Welch was one
after.
He
himself.
had early
set
that
father
presented
to
how
upon the family farm
until
for those
work out
to
for
and
his
discouraging the obwith his
he was eighteen years of district school
Country schools
great for scholastic attainments.
in
the
early days did not offer very high or very extended courses of
mill
work did not come
altogether as an inter-
studious mill-hand
stone while
it
would “
was running through the log.”
may, he continued his
And
mill work.
renewing
work and study
this as
it
new
health
and
money, he was also drawing
his store of needful
He
nearer to the object of his endeavors. to
Be
legal studies in connection with his
while he was gaining
so,
that the
is .said
it
saw and then read Black-
set the
and
until 1833,
in the
continued thus
meantime he had
taken a wife, marrying Martha Starr, daughter of Captain
James
Starr, formerly of Connecticut, but at this time a resi-
This marriage took place soon after he en-
dent of Ohio.
gaged
in the
milling business, and on the 3d of June, 1833,
of Athens, where he established his residence, and where he has ever since continued to reside. In the month of November of the same year he was admitted to the bar,
and
at
tice
grew
once began the practice of rapidly,
His prac-
his profession.
and he was soon established
as a pros-
perous lawyer, with import.ant and laborious work always
on
He
his hands.
brought
to the practice of his profe.ssion
same ability, diligence, energy and fidelity th.at had winter months.' The opportunities were not very marked his preparatory career, and they are qualities which
be acquired by attending the country
during the
The
ruption of the legal studies either, and
who town
results
age, and during that interval he acquired such education as
was
ment.
upon him, no when he gave up that business, his family consisted of a wife .strong the pa- and two children. With this family he removed to the
He worked
themselves.
out for
it
his heart on success,
purpose never faltered, no matter stacles
hard hand
finally out of the
He was
of poverty.
shared the hard-
struggled against ill-health
life,
and wrenched success
^
honorable
the
study; and withal, such offers as they did
make
did not
imply that very much of each year should be consumed study, for farm lalior tinues late.
commences
early in the year
Such opportunities
were made the most of
as
were
offered,
When
in this case.
in
the
win ready recognition and yield material immediate a
member
In his
of two years in that body.
however,
gress as the successor of his
In 1845 he was elected
circle of his profession.
of the St.ate Senate of Ohio, and served a term
and con-
he was eighteen
results.
case they were recognized and yielded results outside the
In 1850 he was elected to Con-
Hon. Samuel
term the Congressional
District
During
F. Vinton.
from which he was
years of age John was “ given his time” by his father, and
elected was changed, and in consequence of this fact he
then he began
failed of
in
very serious earnest to obtain the educa-
He
re-election
in
During
1852.
his sitting
in
the
made two important speeches, one that he might earn money, and then, the money earned, he on the Tariff, and the other on the Public Land Question. spent it in the prosecution of liberal studies under the best Both were able, thorough, and marked by the clear sagacity tion
he had early determined
He
auspices within his reach. lege, Oiiio,
and
for
to procure.
had entered Franklin Colby
five years,
taught school
this .system of alternate
teaching and attendance upon school, he maintained himself in
that institution,
and
September, 1828, he graduated
in
from the college with honors.
He had
law as his future profession, and
in
menced
his
legal
Athens, Ohio.
studies under
decided upon the
January, 1829, he com-
Hon. Joseph Dana, of
Excessive study and sedentary h
paired his health long before his course of
completed, and
for
a time
it
seemed
.stiuly
him
that the surest
im-
had been
that his cheiished ]Hir-
pose of becoming a lawyer must be abandoned. cian assured
abits
means of restoring
His his
physi,-
broken
health was to resume the active and laborious habits of his
National Legislature he
and the str.aightforward honesty that characterize the man. The speech on the Public I.and Question attained the honor ofa
jHiblication in full in the
columns of the A'aiional Jn-
telligcnrcr of
Washington.
yestr
1S52 he served as a
Delegate
the Baltimore Convention
which nominated
in
General Winfield Scott
and
in
which
1S56 he was a
that year
until
President of the United States,
member
Ohio
cast the vote of
he was called from the
Pleas.
for
In the
liar to
he was elected Judge of the Court of
He
sat U|)on the
February, 1865,
Supreme Court,
vice
College
of the Pllectoral
John C. Fremont. In 1862 the bench. In February of
for
bench
of the
Common
Common
Pleas Court
when he was appointed Judge Hon. Rufus
P.
of the
Ranney, resigned.
He
'H.
-
1
/
A J
liSRit
t!
.
Eng fly &E Per'®®
RIOGRAnilCAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA. has remained upon the Supreme bench ever since, having
been re-elected term will
e.xpire in
His present
the position three limes.
to
Soon
Eebruary, 1878.
after his election
To
works. ity
77
the nine cellars then constructed, with a capac-
of 9000 barrels, he has added four additional ones w hich,
with the main structure, give a total capacity of 150,000
The
Judge of the Supreme Court, his Alma Mater, Eranklin College, conferred upon him the honorary degree of LL. D.
barrels.
He
capacity of 1000 barrels each,
as
announces the purpose of retiring from public and
cial life at the expiration of his present if faithful labor, it
offi-
term as judge, and
well performed, earns the privilege of rest,
h:s surely earned
He
35.000 barrels.
and
barley,
his
making
a total
capacity of
has floor room for 125,000 bushels of
cooperage
is
He em-
done on the premises.
ploys constantly a force of from 80 to 100 men, while from
in his case.
it
is 225 feet by 1 10, and four stories 1872 ten other cellars were built, with a
building
In
in height.
35
to
50 horses are required to do the hauling for the estabIn 1864 he erected three large houses on the
lishment.
corner of Fifteenth and
(OERLEIN, CHRISTIAN,
Manufacturer of Lager
Beer, was born in Truppach, Bavaria, 1818, and
is
the son of
May
Conrad Moerlein.
13th,
After
attending the village school until he had attained his thirteenth year,
he learned the trade of black-
smithing, and engaged in firming with his father. His uncle being a brewer, he obtained a knowledge of the brewing business, which proved ultimately to be of great
two
Elm
streets,
cellars capable of storing about
From down
1866,
when
his sales
amounted
to the present time, his
The
under which he
built
3000 barrels of beer.
to
about 25,000 barrels,
annual increase has been about
amounted to over 40,000 amount to over 70,000 barrels. His extraordinary success is due mainly to inflexible integrity, unusual financial abilities, and a thorough 19.000 barrels.
barrels
sales of 1872
tbe sales of the current year
;
knowledge of all the details connected with his vast business. At eighteen years of age he began life on His superb mansion, 16S Mulberry street, Cincinnati, is one In 1873 he was elected his own resources as a bkacksmith, and during the succeed- of the noted ornaments of the city. July 4lh, 1873, ing five years worked in that capacity foi a Prussian dollar one of the Trustees of the Water Works. .service
to
per week. his father,
him.
Later, with a hundred guilders given him by he started on foot to Bremen, with his tools and
knapsack, and after travelling a distance of three hundred miles, reached his destination in safety. On St. John’s day the
ship “ Rebecca ”
was
in
port,
within three weeks for America.
and advertised While awaiting
to
sail
its
de-
the
building, insured as a malt house,
first
fell
from the
weight of grain, over 20,000 bushels of malt being stored
A new
there.
one was then immediately erected,
at a cost
He of over 880,000, with a capacity of loo,oco bushels. was manied in 1843 to Sophia Adam, formerly of Strausburg, France,
who
died during the cholera season of 1849, leaving
whom died in the same year, and worked at his tr.ide, and thus secured sufficient him to defray his passage expenses. After another in 1853. John Moerlein, the surviving child, is now He was again married, a journey of fifty-eight days, he arrived at Baltimore with a engaged in business with his father. three children, one of
parture he
money
to enable
c.ash capital
of twelve dollars, out of which
eight dollars for a passage
Pennsylvania.
by canal and
sum he paid
rail to
Pittsburgh,
But failing to secure work
in this place, he Wheeling, succeeding, however, in finding employment at Hendricksburg, Belmont county, Ohio,
started
on
foot for
in the fall of 1849, to
by
whom
living.
wife,
Barbara Ochalso, a native of Bavaria,
he has had nine children, seven of whom are now George Moerlein and Jacob Moerlein, by his second
and John, by
his first wife, are
now engaged
in busi-
ness with him.
seven dollars per month including board, which salary was increased afterward to fi.^teen dollars per month. He
at
landed
in Cincinnati in
1842, where he
was employed
^GGLESTON, HON. BENJAMIN,
first
Merchant, Leg-
and Newspaper Broprietor, was born at Corinth, Saratoga county. New York, January 3d,
in digging a cellar at fifty cents per day.
In the following October he commenced business for himself on Finley street, and in 1853 sold his blacksmith shop, and formed a co-
islator
partnership with .Vdam Dillman, in connection with
historic locality, but in
1816.
whom
He grew
up and was educated
in that
1831 his parents removed
Hocking county, Ohio, where he engaged in for some years with ensuing May, he conducted the business alone for one the business of the Ohio Canal, then the sole means of month, and then formed a partnership with Conrad W’in- transportation from the Ohio river to the great Lakes. He disch, a competent brewer. In 1855 the manufacture of removed to Cincinnati in 1845, and associated with James common beer was abandoned, and that of lager beer ini- Wilson, a leading merchant of that city. The firm of James he erected a small brewery. the partner.i sold their
tiated.
the
March
beer.
During the winter of
about 2000 barrels,
brewed.
first
while, in
ist
of the
same year
A. Dillman dying
this
in the
year the product was
1866, 26,500 barrel's were
In September of the latter year he purchased, for
sum of 8130,000,
the entire interests of his partner, and
two years afterward erected
the
main building of
his present
to
commercial pursuits, and was connected
Wilson & Co. continued their successful career until the death of James Wilson in 1867, when he was succeeded by his sons, and the style of the firm was changed to Wilson, Eggleston tion
it
&
Co., which
still
has so lom^ sustained.
holds the prestige and reputa-
He
has been identified
a\'ith
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOP.EDIA.
78
nearly every measure for the promotion of the public weal,
widows and orphans of those who had
during the twenty -five years of residence in the Queen City,
for the preservation
sacrificed their lives
He was
of the Union.
renominated
and has been the recipient of unusual marks of esteem from by the Republicans in 1868, and though his Democratic opAmong other positions of trust and ponent, Gen. Peter \V. Strader, bore off the palm of victory, his fellow-citizens. ^
honor, he has been Chairman of the Board of Public Im-
he did not cease
of Council, State Senator, and Representative in Congress. coal famine of 1857 occurred during his term as Chair-
The
his efforts for the iiromotion of the interests
|
of his former constituency, and by his influence at Wa.shing-
provements, Chairman of the Finance Committee, President
ton prevented the obstruction of navigation on the Ohio by ,
the erection of a low bridge, the j
m.rn of the Finance Committee, and with his usual humanity and energy he proceeded to secure an appropriation of
build
it
one hundred
feet
company being required to He was
above low water mark.
largely interested in the Cincinnati LIuonicle, previous to
its
^
$100,000
to relieve the distressed, whicli
purchase of the Cincinnati Times
he obtained despite
in 1872,
and consequently
became a heavy stockholder in the Times Company, of which he was elected President on its organization. He In 1863 there occurred a repetition of was re-elected to the Board of Councihnen in 1S75, and is cents per bushel. this circumstance, and again our subject became the cham- one of the most active members of the Chamber of Com]Mon of the oppressed, and secured a like appropriation, merce, being one of its representatives to the National Board Again during the of Trade. He is still engaged in active business, where his thus averting the threatened calamity. prostration of all branches of industry incident to the out- sterling worth and integrity have won for him the un(|ualithe most determined opposition of interested parties, and re-
duced the price of
;
twenty-five
coal from eighty cents to
'
!
j
break of the war of rebellion, when the families of
who had gone were
left
forth
in
response to their country’s
dependent upon those who remained their
impending
fieil
call
his
esteem of his business associates.
fellow-men
home, he manner
at
devoted himself assiduously to the succor of these
and hapless innocents from
men
women
and hav-
peril,
re.il
that leaves
feeling.;
M. Wagar,
no doubt
and motives.
leaving him two children.
was privileged to disburse to some 3700 families the means to preserve them from actual want until employment could During his official term in the Senate, a bill be obtained.
E., daughter of the late
was presented
in
January,
Opposition was made, and
in the
warm
Ohio
A.SE,
in the
efforts,
ceded
to Cincinnati that portion of the canal
Ohio
river,
extending from
and City Council appropriately
recognized this service by unanimously naming in
it
In
1864 his name was brought before the
Republican Convention of the
First District for the
sional nomination, as the competitor of the late
mon
P.
Eggleston
accordance with a suggestion coming from the
Legislature.
deceased
1S64,
in
John
11
.
Mary
Davis, of Cincinnati, and
Congres-
Hon.
Sal-
Chase, and, having been nominated, defeated his
Lawyer, ex-Judge, Jour-
Representative in the Sixtieth and Sixty-
General Assemblies of Ohio,
Ohio Department of
now Chief
State,
Clerk
was born
in
Hartford, Hartford county, Connecticut, Tunc 29th,
Legislature
too, that the
It
avenue,
first
the loyal press for his unflinching patriot-
ism.
to the
as to his
1837 to L.
In April, 1867, he married
HON. OAKLEY,
encomiums from
Broadway
who
in
vol-
discussion
nalist,
to his
married
union has been sealed by the birth of four children.
which followed he took a leading part, and urged its passage in his usual elociuent and forcible style, winning high was due
minds of any
1S62, levying a tax of three-
quarters of a mill for the relief of the families of unteers.
in the
He was
of Cleveland, Ohio,
ing secured an appropriation of $100,000 from Council, he
this
His intercourse with
characterized by that frank and generous
is
1824.
He is the .son of Amlrrose Case and He was educated preliminarily
(Chapman) Case.
common
Esther in the
schools of his native county; also, fora term, in the
Granville College and the Ohio University, parents having
removed with him
at
Athens,, his
to this State in 1840, set-
Hocking county. On the completion of his course employment in the printing-office of the Hocking Sentinel. In 1845 he became the owner by pur-
tling in
of studies, he found
Democratic opponent, Hon. George E. Pugh, by over 3000 chase of this journal, and during the following thirteen majority, though the district had been consiilered Demo- years was its publisher and editor. The Sentinel was conBeing unanimously renominated in 1866, he was ducted as a weekly paper, and was Democratic in its politics. cratic. triumphantly re elected over Hon. George 11
.
Pendleton.
Congress was characterized by the same
His career
in
less ability
which he had exhibited
in
fear-
the discharge of his
In i860 he was elected Probate Judge of
and served l
in
that capacity for six years,
Hocking county, two terms.
In
856 having read law while holding the Probate Judgeshi|>, ,
He drew and obtained the passage of he was admitted to the bar, and at once entered on the pracmaking Cincinnati a p n t of entry, and secured the tice of his jirofession in Hocking county. During 1868 and first national appropriation for the enlargement of the Louis1869 he officiated as Mayor of Logan, the county-seat, and During the impeachment of Andrew Johnson in 1871 was elected to the House on the Democratic ticket, ville Canal. he stood firmly by his conviction of right and justice, and and in 1873 re-elected to the same position. In the throughout his career was the arduous su|)porterof measures following year he resigned his seat in the House in order to to secure the back pay of soldiers and the pensions of the accept the office of Chief Clerk of the Ohio Department of other the
official duties.
bill
lUOGRAPIIICAL EN'CYCLOREDIA.
79
whose attendant duties he performs with unexception- low the usual average given to the Whig tickets. Under He was married, January 21st, 1S45, to Mar- similar circumstances he was nominated for the Ohio Asable ability. sembly, and in this smaller field his personal popularity garet A. James, of Hocking county, Ohio, by whom he has He is secured his election against overwhelming odds. living. now are whom of five children, eight had generally recognized as a man of liberal and progressive State,
ideas,
and
his influence
and support has been given to every Lor many
enterprise aiming to i.nprove the public welfare.
ORCHARD, HON. MATHEW,
Judge of the Su- years he was Chief Solicitor, and subsequently a Director, preme Court of Ohio, President Judge of the Court of the Atlantic & Great Western Railroad Company. In of Common Pleas of the Third Circuit under the 1867 he purchased the ITarm! Cons/i/ii/ion, jomnal whi.di a.
old Ohio Constitution, and Solicitor of the United States Treasury at
and of the General Land
Office
Washington, District of Columbia, was born
Peckct, Massachusetts, January
His parents
1804.
19th,
in
were Nathan and Mercy (.Ashley) Pirchard, and he was the The family is of seventh of ten children born to them. English extraction, the
founder of the line in America,
Birchard, having arrived in Boston from London,
Thomas
September 19th, 1635, with his wife and six children. His only son, John, became one of thirty-five proprietors of a tract of eighty-one
he has, in connection with his only son, since conducted. In 1S41 he married Jane Elizabeth Weaver, of I’rincc Williams
Lrank
the wife of
11
whom .
management of
the
survive
;
Jane, the daughter,
Mason, editor of the Ckvcland
William A., (he son,
Leader. in the
Seven children were
United States navy.
of the
born to them, only two of is
of Captain William A.
county, Virginia, daughter
Weaver
associated with his father
is
Warren
Constilutiim.
He
served
two years and a half as Master’s Mate anel Ensign United States navy under Admiral Porter.
in
the
square miles of Indian lands in Connect-
New London and the towns Norwich and Saybrook. Pie left a numerous progeny, through whom the name became widely extended. A large embracing the county of
icut,
of
of his descendants are
number
Birchard’s parents
and
removed
to the
settled in Portage county,
of the original proprietors of
Birchard was educated in the period, and
for
Warren.
He
discarded
it,
now
residents of Ohio.
Western Reserve
where
his father
in 1812,
and
at the
commenced
age of twenty
Roswell
to read
.Stone, of
He
October loth, 1834.
W.
Windham township. Judge common schools of that early
studied medicine for a short time, but finally
Lawyer, ex-Mayor of ki]dey,
G.,
Ohio, was born in Ripley, Brown county, Ohio,
became one
a few terms in academies at Boston and
ADAM
’^'^'OLLIN,
Judge
is
the son
Collin anti Sarah G. Collin.
of
Thomas
His grandfather,
Nathaniel Collin, was one of the earlier pioneers
and
who voted
His father was one of seven
settlers of Cfiiio.
the Abolition ticket in
and his house was
for
many
Brown county
in
i8qo,
years the principal depot of the
“ under-ground railway,” and once there the fugitive Was
in
There the lacerated and fealing slave was Warren. During this preparation for the bar he taught sheltered and nurtured and thence on a favorable occasion In 1828 he was admitted was transferred swiftly and silently to the Canadian border. school during the winter seasons. to the bar, and at once entered upon practice with David His mother was a daughter of Rev. James Gilliland, an early law under the direction of General
safe (.piarters.
;
Tod, afterwards Governor of the State, but at that time a young lawyer with distinction yet to be earned. In 1832 Mr. Birch.\rd was elevated
and
in
Common
to the
1836 received the appointment of
General Land Office of the United
and
Pleas bench,
.Solicitor for the
Washington,
.States at
for five years filled this responsible station.
latter portion of this
During the
term he was honored with the additional
appointment of Solicitor
for the
succeed Henry D. Gilpin.
United States Treasury,
In 1841
to
he returned to War-
ren and resumed the practice of his profession with his old |)aitner,
to the
Mr. Tod, but
in the
following winter he was elected
bench of the Supreme Court of
sessing qualities to adorn public
seldom been before the people from home
in
life.
f)hio.
Though
pos-
Judge Birchard has
While absent
for office.
and one of the first Presbyterian ministers, having Red Oak, Brown county, in 1805. His earlier education was obtained in the common schools located in
settler,
settled at
the vicinity of his
On
home.
the completion of his allotted
course of studies he was placed to learn the carpentering trade, but
after
working
at
it
for
several
years,
when
en-
deavoring to save a neighbor’s house while a prey to the flames,
fell
from
its
roof and received a severe sprain in the
back, which compelled him ultimately to turn his attention to another
avenue of
labor.
Being endowed naturally with
considerable oratorical jioAvers, his friends induced him to enter the political arena, and, after filling various minor
municipal
offices,
Deputy United
he received
States
Marshal
in 1861
the aiipointment of
for the
Southern District of
1856 he was nominated by his party as a can-
Ohio. The occupation of this position drew down tqion Though him the bitterest denunciations of the Democratic press, and life-long Demo- thus he was brought more prominently before the public,
didate for Congress against Jo.shua R. Giddings. defeated. Judge Birchard, crat,
succeeded
in a
strong
who had been a Whig district in
greatly reduc-
ing the majority of his popular and celebrated opponent be-
He
steadily
disloyalty
except
particularly in the Sixth Congressional District.
refrained
from
making any
arrests
for
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA.
8o
and on account ground placed Shaw on his riglU and Carr in the rear; and was finding the man needed at head-quarters, slapped him on often denounced by those who would not or could not recog- the back; forced him to give up his gun, and led him away nize the fact, that for any illegal arrest made he was liable to a prisoner, while his scores of friends looked on in silence, One arrest made, moreover, un- overpowered by the cool daring of the Marshal and his faithsuits for heavy damages. throu
tfc
Jrt*
>
'
•»
s
"T
:
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPEDIA. which have engaged the
attention of the local coiuts,
While upon
torney and pleader.
the bench his rulings
Miami county, and with John Eberle, of Cincinnati. Immediately after graduating from the Ohio Medical College in 1836, from which institution he took his degree of M. D., he entered upon practice in Piqua, and in a very short time, by his skill
and
has distinguished himself for his ability as a consulting
with Dr. John O’P’errall, of Piqua, Professor
at-
and
decisions confirmed popular opinion of his thorough legal training, and his wisdom in clear and conclusive interpreta-
models of lucid analyzation of tion city,
and application of the and
as a
and care
to
member
fact,
and
tained without interruption for
faultless interpreta-
authorities.
As Mayor
he
se-
patronag^, svliich he re-
more than twenty-five
years.
Although there were many inducements for his withdrawal for a time from his practice, he allowed none to influence
of the
of municipal depaitments, he excited
him
improve the material welfaie of his fellowcitizens. In all his labors, private and official, he has disintegiity, ]i!ayed signal tact and learning, and unquestionable community. entire the of respect the and is rewarded with every
in the discharge of his professional duties,
cured a very large and influential
court sitting in banc, have always been
or to the
juries
His arguments, whether addressed
laws.
tion of the
Ill
effort to
purpose of winning a standard reputation
in his steadfast
for ability.
His
political
cratic.
He became
casting
his
in
1836.
affiliations
were originally Lleino-
a disciple of the old Jeffersonian school,
Presidential vote for Martin
first
Van Buren
In 1848 he was an Elector on the Democratic
and supported General Cass for the Presidency. He was elected from the strong M’hig district, comprising Miami,
ticket,
^OR.SEY,
GODWIN VOLNEV,
M.
Darke and Shelby
D., President
was born
in
counties, a Senatorial delecate to the Con-
new Con.stitution of Ohio; Novem- and though acting and voting uniformly with the Democrats, James Max- he refused to allow himself to be drawn into the weakness vention of 1849, " hich formed the
of the Citizens National Bank, ex-State Treasurer,
Oxford, Batler county, Ohio,
ber 17th, 1812, being the only son of
The Darsey
well Darsey.
of endeavoring to incorporate
family originally settled
mere party
politics in
an
in-
strument which w'as to be the organic law of the whole
Maryland over two hundred years ago, and succeeding generations have continued their residence in that State up to the present time, not merely perpetuating in
State and of all
He
parties.
cessfully through that
introduced and carried suc-
body the present self-regulating ap-
the family name but rendering it one of the mo:^t reputable portionment scheme for State Senators and Representatives, known in that section of the country. The names of Major a scheme which gave general satisfaction to all parlies at that Edward Dorsey and John Dorsey, Esq., appear on the com- time, and which still satisfies them. Prior to the assembling
mission appointed in 1694 to lay out the town of Annapolis, called, “Anne Arundel’s Towne ; ” and it was then
of this Convention each decade witnessed in the State Legis-
shown by
of the most flagrant and indefensible plans for an apportion-
lature scenes of bitter partisan contests,
or, as
in locating the public buildings
records
still
it
was provided,
extant, that “ that part of the lands
as
which
lye
ment of the districts dominant party
on
ye creeke by Major Dorsey’s house, whereby his excellency,
the
G ivernor
Nicliolson,
the
buildings,
and
if
now
in case
any of the said Major’s
lives,
be set aside
ye same happens lottes,
to
to
and ihe introduction
favor and continue the success of
at the
time.
Dr. Dorsey proposed to
Committee on Apportionment the measure now embodied in the Constitution, as a remedy for this constantly-
for public
come within
recurring evil.
propose that land be given
Pie also drew up that clause of Ihe Consti-
him elsewhere for it.” One year afterwards the same gentle- tution, to be found in section vii. of article 13, in reference to men headed a committee which procured funds and built the investiture of associations with banking powers. In the From these memorable Know-Nothing contest of 1854 he was defeated the first Episcopal church in the new city. early Maryland families the name of Dorsey spread exten- for Congress, as was every Congressional candidate of his In 1856 he was a delegate to the Nasively through that State and into Pennsylvania, Virginia, party in the State. and even Kentucky and Dorsey, the father of
Mississippi.
Major James Maxwell
Godwin Volney Dorsey, removed
tional
Democratic Convention
the nomination of Mr.
to
at
Buchanan.
Cincinnati, and advocated
He
w'as again placed in
For one year he lived in the field for Congress, when Mr. Buchanan w’as the standardCincinnati, and then settled in Oxford township, Butler bearer of the Democratic party, and although he ran ahead county. This was in 1810. For many years succeeding he of that distinguished gentleman in his district, he sustained was connected with Miami University, having the care of another defeat. In 1857 he was the Democratic candidate
Ohio from Baltimore
the lands
in 1809.
and the charge of the work of erecting the college
He
for State Auditor,
upon the
ticket with
Hon. R.
P.
Ranney
became an ardent supporter of of Trustees. During the war of 1812 he commanded the -Senator Douglas for the Presidency, and differed with Mr. Odd Battalion, raised in Butler county, which afterwards Buchanan on the question of the Lecompton Constitution rendered valuable services on scouting expeditions in the for Kansas. He was one of the original anti-slavery Demwestern and northwestern parts of the State. It was at ocrats, having been a member of'the Committee on ResoluMiami University that Godwin Volney Dorsey was educated. tions in the Democratic Convention of 1848, which drew Upon leaving this venerable institution he studied medicine up the celebrated anti-slavery resolution of that year. buildings.
acted, in addition, as Treasurer of the
Board
for
1
Governor.
In i860 he
1
BIOGRArillCAL ENCYCLOP.EDIA.
12
When
the civil
war broke
and before Mr. Lincoln was taking the degree of A.
out,
inaugurated, Dr. Dorsey openly declared himself in favor
course, the degree of A.
of sustaining the administration, and from that time his
he started an academy
were
energies, his influence, his material aid
given in aid of the Union cause.
He
in
in
Upon
at
in
leaving this institution
Savannah, Athens county, which
soon attained a flourishing condition and took bigh rank as
generously
a school
wrote the celebrated
“Statesman Letter,” published originally Columbus, and afterwards
all
receiving subsequently,
B.,
M.
Having, however, previously
instruction.
for
registered for the bar, he disposed of this institution at the
that paper at
Law
end of a year and entered the Cincinnati
every paper in the State, ad-
which he graduated
vocating the formation of a Union party, and which did
During
in 1869.
School, from
this course of
study
more perhaps than any one thing in organizing that party he read law under the private supervision of Judge Stover, lie became a candidate in i86l for State of the Superior Court, and became thoroughly fitted for in the State. He at Treasurer on the Union ticket, and was elected by the memljership of the bar, to which he was admitted. largest majority of any
was again elected 1S65.
On
one on the State
to the
same
ticket.
once associated with
In 1863 he
which he resigned
office,
in
iii
the 8th of January, 1864, he delivered by request
Andrew Jackson
a Eulogy on General
Democratic
During the years 1863 and 1864 he was Chairman
prominently
In 1868
he was chosen by the Electoral College, on the Grant and Colfax
ticket, a Senatorial
Elector, to
till
vacant by the death of Governor D.avid Tod. as a
member
He
is still
a
member
of that
is
in
all
his entrance to
made oughly-read
the place
ticket to represent Cincinnati in the Sixty-first
Chairman of the Committee on Revision, and a member of the Committee on Finance. He is a clear and logical debater, an active worker, and has participated body.
Convention, and advocated the renomination of Mr. Linof the Republican Executive Committee of Ohio.
He
to the
In 1873 he was elected on the
General Assembly of the State, and
same
year was one of the Senatorial delegates to the Baltimore
coln.
F. Boyd, and entered into practice,
position of a leading lawyer.
before both Houses
of the General Assembly, at Columbus, and in the
W.
which he made rapid progress, attaining gradually
served
careful
and
of the Constitutional Convention of 1873, and
distinguished his service in that body by advocating the
it.
He
Assembly since
has the reputation of being
lawyer, familiar with
management
in the
faithful
the proceedings of the
to the interests
of
all
all
a.
thor-
branches of practice,
cases intru.sted to him,
of those
who
seek his
skill
and
confidence.
adoption of reform measures, which he ably and eloquently sustained.
For twenty years he was a member of the Board
OWE,
He was the first President Company, and is now President of The ability of Dr. the Citizens’ National Bank of Piqua. Dorsey, in the profession of medicine and in the field of politics, of education and of business enterprise, may be There are few, perhaps, fairly estimated from this record. who have so well merited the confidence and respect of their fellow-citizens as he, and few have discharged the varied and responsible duties imposed upon them with He was married, June, greater energy or greater fidelity. 1837, to N. M. McCorkle, daughter of Hon. John McCorkle, of Piqua. In 1S56 he was married to L. P. Morof Trustees of
Miami
University.
ANDREW
J.\CKSON,
Surgeon, was born
Paxton, Worcester county, Massachusetts, in
in
of the Piqua Hydraulic
1826.
He
His early years were passed on a farm.
receiv'ed a classical course at Leice.ster
emy, and graduated
During
this
at
Harvard College
in
Acad1853.
year and the following one he took
courses of lectures at the Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia,
and afterwards
hospital instruction in
After graduating at the Worcester Medical
New
York.
he was appointed Professor of Anatomy in his Alnta Mater. In 1S56 he accepted the same position in the Eclectic Medical
Institute, of Cincinnati.
Institution
In 1870 he brought out a
“Treatise on Fractures and Dislocations,” and was trans-
row, daughter of D. Tuttle, Esq., of Indianapolis.
In 1873 he wrote a ferred to the chair of Surgery. “ Manual of Eye Surgery,” and has in an advanced state of preparation a general work on the “ Principles and Prac-
IlOYCE,
HON. GEORGE
Legislature,
was born
in
\V.,
Member
of the
Columbiana county.
Ohio
tice of
May own
Boyce, both of
was
a
whom
were of
Irish descent.
The
subject of this sketch has exhibited in-
ventive talent in the construction of instruments, and in the
3d, 1840, being the son of Isaac and Jane (Brady)
father
Surgery,” designing most of the illustrations with his
pencil.
His execution of difficult operations. He has successfully performed most of the great operations in surgery, and many
lumber dealer and a farmer, and was
George W. of them repeatedly. He has frequently been called long highly esteemed by bis neighbors. had meagre advantages for culture in early life, but these distances as an expert witness in malpractice trials, and is He he improved in the highest degree possible. He was am- familiar with nice points in medical jurisprudence. bitious for liberal and substantial culture in the most prac- illustrates his lectures with striking diagrams of his own tical and popular branches, and to this end he entered the make and with crayon sketches rapidly drawn while speak'
University of Ohio,
at
Athens, after attaining his majority,
and sustained himself by teaching.
He
graduated
in 1867,
ing.
He
is
a constant contributor of surgical pajiers to the
Eclectic Medical Joztrual, ’and
an
occasional writer for
1
ENCYCLOP.EDIA.
BIOGRAPIIICAI. popular and
He
scientific periodicals.
distinction in comparative anatomy,
has also acquired
and
is
an active
I
mem-
officer, or
1
Master; and
the expiration of this term of office
at
He was
he was again re-elected.
Dr. Howe stands ber of the Society of Natural History. to-d.ay among the leading men and teachers in his school
appointed soon after his
connection with the order, by the national
officers, as
a
(
;
General Deputy, to organize subordinate granges in Ohio.
and ranks as one of the first surgeons of the I!y the ist of the following April he had organized over His scholarly attainments give him some advan- seventy granges. On the 9th day of April, 1873, ^he mastages over his brethren, being one of the finest speakers and ters of the various subordinate granges in the State (it then most successful teachers of the distinguished medical men being located in the following counties, viz. Stark, Portage, Dr. Howe has a large and valuable practice, Hocking, Montgomery, Clinton, Vinton, Clermont, Greene of the' day. in the ^Vest,
country.
:
and Warren) met at Lebanon, Warren county, and with the is yet in the prime of life, with a fine body and constitution, and with the prospect of a bright and useful career before assistance of Mr. T. A. Thompson, of Minnesota, Worthy Lecturer of the National Grange, organized the State him.
'to
0
'
ELIS,
f
S.
H.,
Worthy Master of
the State
of Ohio of Patrons of Husbandry,
Grange
Grange of Ohio.
Of
Mr.
chief officer, that of
Ellis to
election
was born near period,
Martinsville, Clinton county, Ohio, January 3d,
to
be
its
last
for
this organization
two
same
At the expiration of
years.
March, 1875,
in
his associates chose
Worthy Master,
the this
again nearly unanimously
1 ’*^
for another term of two was born in years. The granges in the State having increased up to Tennessee, and at the age of eighteen removed that time, under his efficient leadership, to over 1 too, with a with his father to Ohio, where, in young man- membership of over 50,000, his labors in this good work hood, he married Susan Lewis, who died in a few months have been incessant, and next to his family and the church Seth’s mother’s name was Anna Hackett, has lain nearest his heart. after marriage. His position as the chief officer who, in young womanhood, married James Moon, and in the State has led to the acquaintance of many of the
His
1830.
Robert
father,
re-elected
to the
position
Ellis,
j
]
from
Soon
after
in course of
time
marriage had one child, a daughter.
this
the birth of this child her husband died
;
men and women
best
in
Ohio, he having
formed acquaintance, more or
in this
capacity
intimate, with persons
less
j
Moon were
Robert Ellis and Anna Their
first
child,
united in marriage.
!
being a daughter, was named Susan Ellis;
in
every county in the State
;
and having the
office of State
Master places the resjionsible duty of representing the order j
their second, being a son,
and
thus preserving the
name
was named James M. Ellis, and the
ness,
Ohio in which
wife,
the
Robert
of
Ellis,
in |
March, 1874, at the age of seventy-nine years and six His widow, Anna, is still living. The early edit-
months.
cation of the .subject of this sketch
was confined
to
National Grange upon Mr. Ellis and his
position they
have first
Louisville,
Kentucky, the
in
filled
St.
at
three meetings of
Loui;, Missouri, the
Carolina, and
Charleston, .South
at
I
the death
the
National Grange, the
was one of unusual happi- second
years and
fifty
was terminated by
in
'
This union, which con-
wife of the other in the family. tinued more than
|
of the husband of one
the
third
at
commencing November
latter
'
At
meeting Mr. Ellis was chosen Chaplain Grange for the next three years. The the biography of Colonel William H. Hill will give the reader 17th, 1875.
this
'
of the National
usual three-months district school of each winter until he
an idea of the business transacted by
reached his seventeenth year, when he had the privilege of
of farmers.
this
noble association
attending for a year in succession the school in Springboro’,
under the instruction of an excellent
instructor, Charles
Kimble, who took great
advancement.
interest in his
RUHL, GUSTAVUS,
At
M.
D.,
was born. May
31st,
the close of this year’s schooling he received a certificate
1826, in the village of Herdorf, in the Prussian
from the Examiners of Warren county, Ohio, to teach
province of Rhenania, where his father was pro-
school, said certificate
good
obtained a certificate in
Rebecca
J.
afterwards
prietor of
who was
was united
in
mines and smelting furnaces.
ceived a classical
In August, 1851, just before
the latter school, he
Tressler,
He
years.
Montgomery county, on which he
taught school six months.
commencing
two
for
He
re-
education at the colleges of
and Treves, where he
Siegen, Muenster-Eiffel
graduated, then studied medicine, philosophy and history
marriage to
born and reared on a farm
at
and
the universities of Munich, Halle
Ilerlin,
and
after
now live, one and one-half having passed the required examinations he was honored From this union they have five with the degree of M. D. He was induced to come to
adjoining the one where they miles east of Springboro’. girls
and two boys, of
geline,
is
practical
whom
America
the eldest daughter, Evan-
married to A. M. Somers. farmer ever since he
himself, in the spring of 1852.
Mr.
Ellis has
commenced
been a
business
ful
in 1848, partly
by the
difficulty of finding success-
the fever of emigration, then at
for
and which was fanned
At the organization of
and
practice in a field already overstocked,
in
its
him by the
height
in
partly by Germany,
inviting letters sent
|
Grange No. 1st,
6, in
Ohio, of Patrons of Husbandry, October him by his uncle, John
1872, he was unanimously chosen to be '5
its
principal
[
Missouri.
Upon
his arrival
Gerlach
llriihl,
a
he started en route
resident
of
for Missouri,
.
BIOGRAPHICAL E \ CYC LO ICE
>4
hut on his
way down
passage was laid up
which he took
and, though not elected, his great popularity in the State
was shown by the heavy vote which he polled, and which was the highest on his ticket.
('oing on sliore he encountered a relative of his mother’s
who persuaded him
family,
lie
city,
opened an
by the exercise of profe.ssional
duties.
Physician of
St.
in a lucrative practice
performance of
in the
He
Mary’s Hospital.
HERMANN, was
’’CKEL,
lectured for a while
Miami Medical College on laryngoscopy and
in the
his
he was Acting
years
several
P’or
that
in
corner of Laurel and Linn
and care
skill
permanently
to settle
office at the
and soon established himself
streets,
A
Cincinnati on account of low water,
the Oliio the boat in
at
I ) I
diseases
father,
of the throat, but refused a chair of Obstetrics, offered him
gist
in
born,
March
27lh, 1826,
Rheinhessen, near Bingen.
in Woellstein,
His John Peter Eckel, was the county drugthis wealthy and beautifully situated little
summer of 1869 he town, and was widely known in the community accepted the editorship of the German Pioneer, a monthly as a gentleman of high professional attainments, magazine devoted to the “ History of the German Inhabi- liberal views and humane principles. His prominent trait tants of America,” for which he had furnished many im- was a tender love for his children, united with a peculiar by several medical colleges.
He
portant papers.
In the
resigned this position upon the con-
clusion of the second volume, in
1870, but continued to
contribute sketches from time to time on topics of interest
Among
these were articles
subjects,
and poems in the
to the readers of the magazine.
on
and
belles-lettres
German
scientific
He
language.
entitled “ Poesien des
issued a volume of
This volume was issued
being his noni de plnme.
York,
in
and are
to
The
being published
He
print.
results of his
work
in a
volker Alt- Americas,” the in
his
and de-
lectures on this topic before different literary
scien'.ific societies.
appeared
New
For years he has turned
the study of yVmerican archaeology,
many
now
latter
in
Several of his poems were published in Dornrosen ” and “ Ileimathgriisse,” anthologies
of German-American verse.
livered
verse,
1871.
Steiger’s “
attention
German
Urwalds von Kara Giorg,” the
first
investigations
entitled “
part of
Die Cultur-
which has already
one of the curators of the His-
is
and Philosophical Society of Ohio, a member of the
ability to
in
ful
impress them strongly with a sense of the beauti-
Hermann had no
Until his eleventh year
nature.
other schooling than that afforded by the country school of
In the spring of 1837 he was sent to Darmstadt, and there undertook the higher curriculum of the “ Realschule,” and afterwards that of “ Polytechnicum.”
his native village.
The
show that he At the desire of his
records of both these higher institutions
advanced and graduated with honors. parents he chose the fields of
He
the usual apprenticeship.
Knonberg, Nassau. of the Medical
pharmacy in which to serve was accordingly articled at
In 1844 he passed, before the Faculty
College of the Grand
Duchy
Hessc-
of
Darmstadt, the examination necessary to qualify him ns After serving in this capacity in
pharmaceutist’s assistant. different cities
he returned to Darmstadt in 1852 and com-
pleted his pharmaceutical course in the laboratory of the
Polytechnic School, under his former teacher and paternal
Moldenhauer. Here in the autumn of American Medical Association, of the Natural History 1852 he had become the dux in his class and the orator for Society and of the Literary Club of Cincinnati, and was one the chemical section at the public exhibition. This duty of the originators of the Peter Clavcr Society, in 1867, for he performed in a manner that elicited for him flattering the education of poor negro children. During the Franco- notice in the Dannsiadt Gazelle. In 1S53 he passed the German war, in 1870-71, he was President of the Sanitary “ Staats Examen,” an ordeal which qualified him to set up torical
.'\id
.Society of Cincinnati,
He was
and
jiresided at the
member
Peace Jubilee
friend. Professor F.
for
himself as a regularly licensed pharmaceutist or drug-
This same 3’ear, 1S53, he came to ,\merica. It was Hermann’s great love of freedom, probably, above everyiners of Public .Schools. Dr. Briihl is a man of scholarly thing else that induced him to come to this country. Soon He is a patient, after arriving in Cincinnati he began work in his profession, culture, both in the arts and sciences. though an enthusiastic, investigator, and his labors have and in a few years, with some of the customary thrift of his For thus far been highly beneficial to his profession, and countrymen, he was able to do business for himself. He has taken a nearly twenty years he has had his store where it now is. through this profession to the public. deep interest in the improvement of popular education, and He is one of the most scholarly and spirited of our German held
in that city.
Board of Cincinnati, and
lately a
is still
all
of his adopted
reforms. He population, and ranks among leading men of his country in and moral welfare Cincinnati. For ten years at least it is but fair to say that manner has earned the he has been the champion of German in the public schools.
many
steps for the material
city,
and
in
esteem of the community.
this
His
with the Democratic party, and
political
in a
German
affiliations
are
number of campaigns
he has been one of the most eloquent and
effective of
its
Mr. Plckel maintains that while English this
country, such a respectable
is
number
the language of of the
German
patrons of the school desire their children to speak and
While absent iir California, in 1871, his read the German that him with the nomination for State Treasurer, be thoroughh' taught,
speakers.
party honored
gist.
one of the Board of Ex.am-
has suggested and helped to carry out has supported
of the University
it
as
is
but just that the
any other branch,
German in
.should
the schools.
BIOGRArillCAL EN’CYCLOP.'EDIA.
>15
15
During the memorable crusade, one of the
first
1874, Mr. Eckel was
in
lS6l he was
In
right of the citizen.
was born
what
against interference by sumptuary enactments against
was termed the
RAH.\M, WILEI.YM
meeting of Germans,
to speak, at a public
and received
York
an intennission of one year he has been a member of that body ever since. Several times he has been favored by the
connected with
member
of the School Board of Cincinnati.
he went
IMr.
He
tion of a skilful druggist.
in
nothing in a half-
but devotes himself earnestly to anything he
latter
While
interest
the true state of the case,
is
it
also true that he has not accumulated wealth to such a
By
degree as most of his countn-men.
his
keen
New
In company with
David
& Graham,
in that place,
and the partnership was
when Mr. Maginnis
retired, leaving
the control of the business entirely to his partner until the
undertakes.
is
to
March, 1845, when
this establishment until
continued until 1850,
way manner,
this
Removing
his education.
city in
Zanesville, Ohio.
to
Maginnis
Eckel has won the reputa-
engages
York, Jan-
Maginnis he started a drug house, under the firm-name of
c.mse of the Gennans, doubtless, above everything else, this in his favor.
Druggist,
New
1839 he entered upon a clerkship in the drug house of Graham & Co., and remained
^
nominations from both political parties. His anti-Catholic and liberal educational views, and his bold advocacy of the
produce
Wholesale
uary 9th, 1821, where he spent his early years
^
first
With
elected a
A.,
Westchester county,
in
admitted Messrs. Willis Bailey and
Graham and
insight,
creased
Under
house.
the
in
associates
his
transactions,
its
J.
D. Porter
to
an
the able direction of Mr.
the establishment
largely in-
and earned the reputation of being
indomitable will and his great pluck, together with his
one of the best and most reliable drug houses in the State. knowledge of German pedagogics, he has probably more In 1847 Mr. Graham married Sarah V., daughter of Dr. than any other member of the .School Board been instru- John Hamm, an ex-State Senator of Ohio, and, under the mental
in eradicating
many supposed
and German methods of teaching.
errors in the English
Although he
administration of President Jackson, Minister of the United
in a
From the date of its organization, in 1864, States to Chili. German in the schools, he came he has been a large stockholder and a director of the Eiret the Germans as an element, but as a National Bank of Zanesville, and was.one of the most enis,
sense, the patron of the
Board not
into the
tion to
for
with a deep interest in the schools and a determina-
citizen,
do
he could
all
therefore, in the schools has
been as an American.
famous Bible question Mr. Eckel made one of efforts against the
On
many
In the
financial ability
continuance of the Bible in the schools.
of the Catholic Church he was one of
its
not a church
of nineteen
member
This position of course makes him a target for
word.
parties; yet the boldness, address as the ability
senior
to the
He
and good humor,
and earnestness of the man, insure
and the requirements of
efficient
executive
industrial works.
His ex-
perience has been a varied and valuable one, and as the
member
of one of the oldest wholesale drug houses
West he has become known to and esteemed by the business community of Ohio and neighboring States. He in the
is
any sense of the
or a Christian in
Ohio Iron Company, of which for He is a gentleman of un-
a director.
management of mercantile and
opponents,
bitterest
members of the Board residence of the archbishop he was the spokesman. visit
was
years he
usually brilliant business qualifications, possessing excellent
his greatest
the great question of the division of the fund in favor
and on the
A
ergetic promoters of the
His work,
highest good.
for their
has at
all
all
ment of
as well
times manifested great interest in the improve-
Zanesville,
street, as well
his success.
section,
year ago, realizing his insufficient provision against the
as
which
and erected a large warehouse on Main
one of the handsomest residences
his
family
now
in that
His' support to
occupies.
meritorious business as well as municipal enterprise has
changes of the future, he began to study modern alchemy,
always been willingly given, and in his entire career as a
and thinks he has
me, chant and private
pher’s stone.
He
from his
ling iron,
rewarded by finding the
bee.n
])hiIoso-
citizen
he has acted
in a
manner
to
now perfected a process for enamel- win and retain the respect of the community in which he own manipulation, without aid from any lives. He has amassed a large fortune, and is at the same
has
This he justly deems the greatest work time one of the most liberal as well as one of the most and thinks “ there is a tide in the affairs of men prominent citizens of Zanesville. leads to fortune,” and believes that a competency now
similar process.
of his that
life,
awaits him and his children. is
yet disposed
to the
Although not a Christian, he view that “ there is a Providence
1
j
that shapes our ends,
Eckel
is
rough hew them as
thoroughly republican, and
in
we may.”
'ale,
Mr.
benjamin
T.,
Farmer, of
Mill
creek
township, near Bondhill, Hamilton county, was
adventurous times |
would is
l)e
a leader of radical forms of right or thought
.scholarly
and has a strong
considerable and belongs alistic life
school of ideas.
itself,
and believes,
literaiy
among
He as
is
the
members of
as full of
he belongs to a family of
his service, with propriety, thirty ye.ars hence.
born
he
the ration-
hope and vigor
noted for their longevity, that his friends and country
demand
;
tendency; has written
as
men may
I
near
1805.
Lewistown,
He was
Delaware,
Ajiril
21st,
the fourth child in a family of
seven children, whose parents were Jacob Dale
and Charlotte (Truitt) Dale. followed through
life
tural pursuits, died in
20th, 1816,
His
father,
who
mercantile, mechanical and agricul-
Worcester county, Maryland, January
where he had
settled
at
an early day.
His
;
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.LDIA.
ii6
mother’s decease occurred also in Maryland, January 25th,
His boyhood was passed alternately
1823.
in labor
ami
in
study, the former occupying, however, the greater portion
was placed
of seventeen he
At the age
of the time.
to
learn the trade of plastering, in Worcester county, Maryland,
worked at Ohio, and
counties and in Virginia, he
in adjoining
where, and also
He
his trade until 1829.
settled in Cincinnati,
mountains on
wife
his
foot,
moved
subsequently
Ohio
sessor of $igo. at
on
Jones
&
W.
Co. was created, of which he was the principal,
same business so well established In July, 1869, he retired from
down
In the ensuing year he
own
account, carrying
for three years in connection with Julius
V. Thomason.
time the partnership was dissolved,
this
Co. until the dissolution of the latter
by the former copartners.
$1.25 per day, as journeyman.
At the expiration of
8;
house, in July, 1865, at which date the firm of George
for the prosecution of the
established himself in business on his it
of Jones Brothers
At
a six-horse wagon.
On his arrival he found himself the posHe then went at once to work at his trade,
river.
the
having journeyed over the
in
M'heeling they took deck passage on a boat running the
to
and in the following year became “buyer” for the firm of J. D. & C. Jones & Co., of which he was in 1848 made a partner, and continued as a prominent member of this active mercantile firm and that business, in August, 1S46,
business and devoted his attention to the control of his large farm,
located
Committee and Treasurer of the 1869, which
was
management and
Jones’s
He was Chairman
Butler county, Ohio.
Cincinnati in
at
Station, in
of the Executive
Exposition, held in
first
styled the “ Exposition of
The success then achieved in this comway in making the public acquainted with laid the foundation of home manufactories
Textile Fabrics.”
—
paratively small
—
and he sustained the business alone until the year 1852. the products His eldest son, James, then became his partner in business. for more enlarged plans for effecting far more satisfactory Their last important job was the plastering of the fine, large results, and now our industrial expositions have become St.ate House at Columbus, Ohio. He was a citizen of Cin- the well-recognized annual occasions for the exhibition of
when he
cinnati until 1857,
and
home
retired
and
from
his regular business
on
articles of
American
skill
and workmanship,
as well as for
his farm, in Mill
the influx of a large population to our metropolis, curious
Creek township, where he has since permanently resided, engaged in agricultural pursuits. He was Com-
and desirous of seeing and examining the products wrought
his
in the city
settled
principally
missioner of one of the Special
township, and for
In 1S51 he
and served
districts of IMill
years was a
five
Council of Cincinnati. I.egislature,
Road
for
member
was elected
two years.
of the City to the State
Since the expiration
of his term he has declined a renomination for the office.
and
he
Politically,
cast his
first
is
Creek
same
attached to the Democratic party,
vote in favor of General Jackson.
In the
by our skilled artisans, or beholding the progress matters of science.
ment obtained from Cincinnati the idea w hich w into the far-famed “ Centennial
and
the
community
in
which he has resided and the more speedy development of 1828, to
is
ill
develop
Exhibition at Philadelphia
official
candidate of the Independent party, and
position w'as instrumental in
the constitution
making any man
making
eligible to
membership
man
of energy and
President of the
Miami Valley
in recognition of his merits as a
influence he w’as elected
in this
the change in
was married, PJecember 25th,
Insurance Company, in July, 1871, under whose manage-
Deborah N. Millburn, a native of Accomac county, They were iilessed with ten children three of
ment this corporation has become one of the most successful companies of the kind in Ohio, if not in the country its present favorable condition being in no small degree
the interests of his State.
Virginia.
it
In 1S70 Mr. Jones was elected President of the in 1876.” Voting Men’s Mercantile Library Association of Cincin-
had
issue the welfare of
and
not an unreasonable deduction to suggest that our govern-
nati, as the
ultimate
made in made
nation have been
familiar with the realizations of our expositions,
educational, political and religious movements he has always manifested a zealous and generous interest, and has been a valued co-worker in many enterprises which have for
The whole
He
;
them are now
living,
and reside
in Cincinnati.
:
and judgment of its President. was Treasurer of the Cincinnati Board of Trade, and was delegated by the Chamber of Commerce to act as Commissioner of the Cincinnati Industrial Exposition for 1873; and being reappointed he was subsequently unanimously chosen as President of the Board of Commissioners attributable to the labors
In 1872 he
(':-(^ONES,
GEORGE
W.,
is
the eldest son of John
Davies and Elizabeth Jones,, and was born city of Cincinnati
He class
in the
on the 26th of October, 1826.
among the “honor-men” in his Kenyon College, at Gambler, Ohio, in
graduated at
1846, having while a student received the benefits
of the tuition of such esteemed
men
of learning as
for the
Exposition of 1874, and also acted as a
of the Executive ciation,
1849
held
in
Jo'ie'^
married Jane O. N. Tibbatts, daughter
Bishop McTlvaine, President Bronson, Professor Ross and
of Hon. John Tibbatts,
other reputable scholars connected with that institution, at
tucky,
which some of our
ablest jurists
and distinguished doctors
of divinity have received their diplomas. pletion of his collegiate course
After the com-
he entered the dry-goods
member
Committee of the Musical Festival AssoIn Cincinnati in May, 1873 and 1875.
ex-Member of Congress from Ken-
and granddaughter of General James Taylor (now' From the above brief outline deceased) of the same .State. of the positions held by the subject of this sketch, and of his active jiarticipatioii
in the
affairs
of
men, we discover
—
BIOGRAPHICAL EAXYCLOP.-EDIA. have commended
the character and qualifications which
him to the favorable consideration of the community which he still lives.
in
service only less valuable than the excellent service he
rendered
in the
New
ington county.
BENJAMIN,
Revolutionary
Captain,
was horn on the 17th of October, 1745, at LeiHe was of English decester, Massachusetts. grandfather, the
scent, his
settler
first
the
in
town of Hatfield, on the Connecticut river, having come to this country from England when a youth.
and
this
It
fighting stock from the earliest days,
was a
many
founder of the family was
times engaged in
the Indi.an wars that formed so large a part of the history
His son. Captain John
those days.
country in
of the
Brown, the father of Benjamin, served with credit in army during the Phench war, and was present
Colonial
the taking of Louisburg
He
and Cape Breton.
many
at
rendered
war and town of Lei-
years afterwards he represented the
Until he
cester in the Legislature of Massachusetts.
age he shared the usual
thirty years of
England
citizen, a life full of toil
of rugged enjoyment
775) "'hen he had and had a
little
and
rigid
life
reacheil his thirtieth year,
until the year 1817, to
Athens
In the
May
Here he continued
Ames he was one
month
—he participated
historic
in the battle of
was Lieutenant-Colonel, and William Hull,
Bun-
after-
in nearly all
of the battles preceding the surrender of General Burgoyne.
some of these engagements he
specially distinguished
himself by his gallantry and daring.
So highly were these
him appreciated that he wxs tendered the poAide-de-Camp on the staff of Baron De Kalb, who soon after fell at Camden. His self-confidence, however, qualities in
sition of
to his gallantry.
tional ([ualifications
He
distrusted his educa-
and knowledge of the
his residence in
holding various
early years and the successes of his later
and died
Athens
at
the year
in
life,
his
survived him,
1S40, at the ripe age of
eighty-six years.
ONES, JOHN
D., was born near Morgantown, in
cember, 1797, and was the son of John and Elizabeth Jones, being paternally of Welsh an-
of which Dr. John Brooks, afterwards Governor of Massa-
was not equal
During citizens,
had married
In the year 1777 he was commissioned a Captain in Colonel Michael Jackson’s regiment, Massachusetts line,
In
he went
Berks county, Pennsylvania, on the 9th of De-
— the
wards of bad fame, was Major, and took part
prominent
its
failed,
John Brown. October, 1821, when he
to reside until
of
having
son. General
and who had shared with him the struggles of
setts,
also
full
ker Hill.
chusetts,
his
was
following he received the commission of lieu-
of June, 1775
his health
offices
knowing what he had
month
when,
reside with
to
died, full of years and of honors.
cestry, as his
details of military
name would
indicate, with a mixtuie
of .Scotch-Irish blood, derived by maternal de-
done, had helped form the basis of the Revolutionary army. tenant and Commissary, and in the next
He
the spring of 1797, and settled there
in
company with Judge
family about him, he enlisted in a regiment
of Mi.iute-men, and, without fully
1796 he again emigrated,
1799 he removed to Ames township, in Cutler, and continued to reside there
In
temporarily.
remained there only a few
time in the Northwest Territory.
this
reached Marietta
He
in the fall of
February,
In
integrity.
home
seeking a
York.
and
New
of the
and hardship, but
had
About the
the battle field.
and contributing largely to the advancement of the the settlement. His wife, whom he had married in Massachu-
peaceful service also, and during the Revolutionary for
camp and on
year 1789 he removed with his family to Hartford, Wasliyears, however,
R(D\VN,
117
His great-grandfather, David Jones, came to this 1720, and settled in Berks
scent.
country from Wales in about county, whither a large grated,
now little
number
becoming inhabitants of
villages
most part of what
Conestoga valley, and
the beautiful
vicinity of that
of his native people emi-
for the
built
is
the pretty
Morgantown and Churchtown, in the hills known as the Welsh
imposing range of
Being Episcopalians by faith and education coming to this country as zealous members of the “ Church they gave the religious character to the loof England ” cality, which even to this day has not been removed or His father was a native and resident of the impaired. Keystone State, and died at the age of fifty-two years, on the 14th of January, 1816, at Reading P'orge, Chester mountains.
—
county, Pennsylvania, being at that time a farmer and a
member
House of
the
Assembly of
Pennsylvania, but died before taking his seat
in that legis-
recently elected
of the
and therefore declined the offered honor. Two years after receiving his commission as Captain, in 1779, he
lative body.
resigned his commission,
on the 13th of January, 1814, ten orphan children were
left
mourn the loss of parents held in high esteem community of which they had been members. The
the
science,
left the army and returned home, impelled to this step by rea.sons of a personal character.
Patriotism
made him
reluctant to yield his share in the
His wife having departed
this life previously,
in
to
subject
great struggle, and a just appreciation of his high qualities
of these remarks was one of the eldest of this family, and
m.ade his superior officers reluctant to lose his services
while quite young, prompted by ambition as well as neces-
his necessities could not be disregarded,
to provide
for
longer a fighter
means ceased
in
but
and he went home
the support of his family.
to
;
Although no
the field for the national cause, he by no
work
in its behalf,
and
at
home rendered
sity,
with self-reliance and a determination to engage
battle of life
on his
own
account, he
left
in the
the scenes of his
boyhood and went to Philadelphia to learn the mercantile business, and was employed by his maternal uncles, Thomas
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.EDIA.
ii8
and John K. Graham, East India merchants. In September, Jones has ever pursued a methodical and systematic course, 1819, with his older brother, George \V. Jones, he came to managing his business with close attention and upon strict Cincinnati, crossing the Allegheny mountains in the well- principles of integrity; and as a citizen has been associated
known Conestoga wagons,
of
whose
and usefulness
size
and action with the party of progress, being identimany enterprises and public movements which have facilitated the development of the commercial, bankin spirit
perhaps only the oldest inhabitants have a just appreciation, and came down the Ohio river in a flat-boat, bringing a
fied
stock of dry goods and other necessary parts of an outfit to
ing and railroad interests of his city of adoption.
with
of trade, the increased facilities of transacting business with
In 1834 Board of Directors of the Lafayette Bank, and with Josiah Lawrence, Judge David K. Este, lion. S.dmon P. Chase and others, continued in the management of that corporation for many years. He w'as also
those at a distance and the improved condition of afiairs in
a
establish a western
made
their
Thus
store.
young merchants
these
essay in a field of labor at that time of cir-
first
cumscribed dimensions, but which now, by the e.xpansion
the
country generally, has been
with the
enlarged
commensurate
science and capacity of those engaged in
skill,
On
mercantile pursuits.
the
1st
of December, 1820, at the
and partner died,
early age of twenty-four years, his brother
leaving the care and responsibility of a
new
business, in an
undeveloped and almost unsettled country, upon one Notwithstanding
and ine.xperienced.
untried
this
life
firm-name of John D. Jones
&
Co.
its
till
name
of
&
J. L).
his
became
and the business was conducted under the
partner,
&
Dayton Railroad, and took an active part
the construction of that important public benefit
in
also for
many
years Was associated wdth
his
firm-
C. Jones, which was pursued with a steady
Robert Buchanan and William Crossman
of
its
military
post
its
name, while her
P'actor
and Indian Agent.
Jones was engaged
in
and
Charles D. Jones, Lieutenant United States navy, a graduate of the
United States Naval Academy, died, December,
1865, w Idle in the service, having served during the rebellion
on the
frigate
“Hartford,”
wdiile floating the
Mr. Jones
alive
is still
pennant
and living
relieved from his accustomed business respon-
But, to return from this diver-
in business for the
and succeeded by the firms of
Co. and Jones Brothers
&
J.
&
D.
J.
D.
&
C. Jones
born
&
inci-
dent to the demands of an increasing and successful busi-
known
ness of a mercantile firm well and favor.ably out the East and West.
Mr. Jones retired from
p.irlicipation in business in July, 1865,
throughall
active
having been engaged
dry-goods trade uninterruptedly for almost' fifty years,
during which time,
in
addition to the close attention de-
in
own
men now numbered among
the prosperous
When
was
sixteen
was
6th, 1830.
State.
His
and limited
often interrupted,
His labor
he
left
his
school entirely and
entered upon farming as his future occupation, working in the fields in the daytime at
night.
on
until
and
This double labor
in his father’s in a
blacksmith shop
dual capacity he carried
he was twenty-two years of age, and then entered
upon a clerkship board.
are not a few
May
scope to such rudiments as w'ere usually
its
father’s farm.
mindful of his obligations and duties to others; and there
interests,
of Zanesville,
was required during the greater portion of the year on
Ninth
looking after his
Mayor
county, Ohio,
taught in the early country schools.’
he was not un-
in
C.,
Muskingum
early education
heirs, so to .speak, of the parent house, created
name
in
His parents were natives of the same
Co. successively, of which John
years before, and but the substantial changes in
CALVIN
tIBSON,
C.
period of twenty-one
Jones was the senior partner: these mercantile establish-
ments being
manded
19th, 1863;
familiarly
father,
sion to our historical connections, the firm of
in the
wounded
mortally
one of our western pioneers, was United States
as
I).
fell
Chickamauga, on September
the battle of
was born, September 22d, 1807, at sibilities, in the beautiful village of Glendale, one of the from which the city of P'ort Wayne, suburban settlements of Cincinnati.
known
years,
Infantry, a graduate of the
United States Military Academy,
.She
derived
Indiana,
once large family but four sons now
Ohio Volunteer
Jones, 36th
in quietness,
Colonel
continues to be identified as one
still
his
married to Elizabeth Johnston, daughter of the
the
Board of
and of those deceased Colonel William G.
living;
are
Of
managers.
of our gallant k'niragut.
late
in the
;
Trustees of the Cincinnati Orphan Asylum, an institution in
and constant development and attended with uniform prosperity. On the 22d of September, 1823, at Piqua, Miami county, Ohio, the subject of this biographical sketch was John Johnston,
and Henry Probasco,
with which his wife
dissolution, in
1827, at rvhich date his brother Caleb Jones
of the original Board of Directors of the Cincin-
Hamilton
which he has always been most earnestly interested, and
under the
his business
member
nati,
of the
disap-
had scarcely been formed, he with
Thomas Graham, continued
uncle,
member
as yet
pointment and bereavement, happening when his plans of promise and
he was a
Ward By
in
a country store at Putnam,
now
the
of Zanesville, at a salary of $250 a year and strict
economy he managed
from one hundred to one hundred and
by annually
to lay fifty
dollars as capi-
and prominent merchants of Cincinnati and the West who have received encouragement or substantial assistance as
tal
well as good counsel from him, which have keen of benefit
years Mr. Gibson went to Cincinnati and there took charge
to
them
in
their mercantile
career.
As
a merchant
Mr.
for future
business enterprises, w Inch were eventually
happily realized.
After remaining in this store for some
of a large stove warehouse,
which he retained
for
a tw'elve-
BIOGRAl’IIICAL ENCVCLOIAEDIA. month, and then returned appointed Deputy
In 1S63 he
to Zanesville.
was period of over eight years, one of
under Sheriff Wolf, and upon the
Sheriff'
119
ber, 1872, this institution settled
its its
Decem-
In
directors.
and was
affairs
closed,
company with other gentlemen, estabof the Zane House, and after serving a year in this capacity lished a private banking house, under the name of The remained in charge of the house for the same length of Union Bank, with a capital of $100,000, whose business time. Upon leaving this position he opened a general and management were controlled by a Board of Directors, He has occupied merchamlise store upon his own account, which he con- of whom Mr. Huston was President. tinued with prosperity until April 1st, 1875, " hen he was this responsible station, witbout interruption, until the presMr. Gibson ent time, and the bank, now second in size in Zanesville, elected to the office of Mayor of Zanesville. had all the qualities necessary for a successful mercantile has a continually and a rapidly increasing business, the career. He was enterprising and honorable in all his evidence of the growing confidence in its solidity and the Mr. Huston was married, transactions, and gained the confidence of his fellow- wisdom of its management. citizens. He has taken every proper measure, since his June 13th, 1S48, to Rachel A. Ream, a resident of expiration of his term in this office he
was selected
and Mr. Huston,
as clerk
Somerset, Ohio,
elevation to the mayoralty, to increase the material welfare
of the city of which he
and carried career
and
is
an
into
chief magistrate, and has proposed
daughter,
many improvements.
ilton,
is
effect
His entire
may
accomplish by energy.
In
who
died, June
to
25th,
1850, leaving one
subsequently became the wife of
On
of Newark, Ohio.
what a poor boy, with ambition married
illustration of
integrity of character,
who
in
J.
B.
Ham-
October 17th, 1854, he was
Maggie E. Stump, of Muskingum county, who On P'ebruary 7th, 1865, he was Amanda Holmes, of P'airfield county, Ohio, who
died June 12th, 1863.
October, 1862, he was married to Alice Green.
married
to
has had four children to him.
Mr. Huston’s varied ex-
perience has eminently qualified him for the position he at
He
present holds in the business community.
ARCHIBALD
;USTOX,
M., Banker, was born in
liberal ideas, enterprising yet
Perry county, Ohio, at Rehoboth, on April lotb,
who ^
emigrated
settled
^
possessed of a thorough apprehension of
His parents were both natives of Ireland,
1824.
to
permanently
this
country
in
that State.
in
1814 and
He
of an important monetary institution.
attended i
the
management of
details in the successful
Rehoboth common schools during the winter
of the State.
a
man
of
the essential
all
the financial
He
is
aff.iirs
quite largely
and Perry counties, and
interested in coal lands in Jackson
development of the mineral resources
in enterprises for the
seasons and assisted his father in the labor of cultivating a
is
prudent as an executive, and
During the
late
war he rendered material
I
farm during the remaining portions of the year.
His father assistance
in the
work
of organizing, equipping and sending
was a man of moderate circumstances, an industrious and troops to the field. His ability as a business man and the persevering agriculturalist, who had earned the esteem of his integrity of his character has given him a high place in the neighbors by the integrity of his character. M’hen twenty respect of his fellow-citizens, and his labors have rewarded j
Archibald taught school about four months
filled
for
a short time, and
then for
a clerkship in a country store.
November, 1844, associated with J. C. Whittaker, he opened a general merchandise store at New I.exington, which was prosperously conducted for eight years. Mr. Huston then gave up a mercantile career and purchased a farm
in
fully in
the vicinity, and for seven years raising,
In 1859 he .sold his farm and was exceedingly fortu-
to mercantile life,
nate in
management being characterized and prudence. He was elected in the fall of
i860 .Auditor of
Peri'y
expired in 1863. ville
office
Perryton, Licking
county, Ohio.
He
identified with the early history
of the country.
His grandfather was born near
New
dis-
again with his family to Ohio, settling in Licking county in
Purchasing then a
he recommenced stock-raising,
farming.
1836, at
comes of ancestry
during his term, which
County, and most acceptably this
Member
and was related to SenSamuel L. Southard of that State. He removed from New Jersey to Washington county, Pennsylvania, where was born the father of Milton, and eventually removed
his ventures, his
charged the duties of
L, Lawyer and
of Congress, was born on the 20th of October,
engaged success-
and returned by enterprise
fortune.
^I^OUTHARD, MILTON
buying and selling stock, his transactions
being on a very extensive scale.
all
him with a handsome
In
Trenton,
Jersey,
ator
fine
farm near Zanes-
1805. f)n the mother’s side Milton
in
connection with
from the Parnells of Baltimore.
1
.
He
Southard
is
descended
obtained the elements
From 1867 to 1869 he served as Assistant of his education at the common schools of Licking county, Muskingum County, and supervised the col- and when he had reached a proper age he entered the more
Treasurer of
lection of taxes.
For
five years
he acted as superintendent
of extensive coal mines at Lick Run, near Zanesville.
He
advanced
institutions of learning,
the course of study at
and
finally
passed through
Dennison University,
at
Granville,
was one of the originators of the .Second National Bank of Ohio. He graduated from this institution in the year 1861. Zanesville, and during the greater part of its existence, a Immediately after leaving college he commenced the study
—
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOILLDIA.
120
He
W. Aldmann, resided, and J. where she proposed to secure for her son a thorough ark, Ohio. In the year 1863 he finished his course of legal literary and medical education. After a residence of five study with the firm mentioned and was admitted a member years in that southern capital, however, she removed to He at once prepared to enter upon the practice Covington, Kentucky. Here he made uncommon progress of the bar. of his profession, and formed a professional partnership with in the neighboring schools, and at the age of seventeen be-
of law, wliicli profession he had decided to adopt.
cluded his reading in the
Wm.
Mr.
&
office of Follett
The new
H. Ingraham.
Follett,at
con-
firm established them-
selves in practice in Toledo, under the firm-name of South-
ard
&
They continued to member
Ingraham.
until 1866,
when
Zanesville,
the leading
practise there together
removed
of the firm
where he has ever since resided.
to
Shortly after
F'rank
Southard
&
under
.Southard,
II.
The
Southard.
firm
He
came
in political affairs,
having contracted a liking
dramatic
a
young people of
respectable
for stage life, oi'gan-
composed of many
club,
the town.
of
most
the
In an entertainment
continues, and
he
organized
the shape of the duties of public office.
in
has been active
that time,
ized
Cov-
free school established in
first
This position he held for three years, and during
given by his club, in 1854, he made his first appearance as Alonzo in “ Rollo, or the Death of I’izarro.” In 1855 he
has practised without interruption, except so far as interruption
principal of the
ington.
of
the
still
came
firm-name
locating in Zanesville he formed a law partnership with his brother,
Carolina, where her brother,
New-
and has always been
a
troupe
for
rendition of “ Uncle
the
Tom’s
Cabin,” then very popular throughout the North, and with it
towns of the West.
visited the principal
After meeting
with great success he returned from his tour in 1857, and,
Democratic party. In the year 1867 he abandoning entir-ely his earlier views and intentions, was elected Prosecuting Attorney of Muskingum County. adopted the stage as a profession. Subsequently, until In 1869 he was re-elected to the same position, and was re- after the outbreak of the Southeim rebellion, he played elected a second time in 1871. While serving his third juvenile and leading chai'acters in many of the large cities term in this position he was nominated by his party to of the United States and of the Canadas. He then conrepresent the Thirteenth District of Ohio in Congress. He ceived the idea of introducing “ hoi'se pieces ” in a novel was elected at the October election of 1872, and in March, and exciting manner, and in 1862, accordingly, opened an 1873, he resigned the office of Prosecuting Attorney to lake engagement in Boston with the celebrated horse “ Minneidentified with the
his seat in the national legislature.
and
He
served with ability
distinction in the Forty-third Congress.
pointed a
member
of the
He was
ap-
Committee on Mines and Mining,
and also of the Committee on Expenditures of the Treasury
He
Department.
took an active part in the House debates
In this line of business he afterward played “star
haha.”
engagements” Albany,
New
in
the chief cities of the country.
all
York, he
first
“ Mazeppa,” and was successful oil
In
Menken as management. The
brought out the in his
fever then attacking the entire
community he
also
em-
on the currency question, and in a speech made on that
barked
issue he reviewed the President’s veto of the Senate Cur-
year as Superintendent of the Ohio River Oil Works, in
He was
also active in opposition to the Civil
and
the measure that
in the
promising venture, and after spending over a
Vanceburg, Kentucky, concluded to return to his former was popularly known profession in order to retrieve his wasted fortunes. In as the Force bill. The course taken by him during his October, 1868, he purchased the lease of the National Congressional term was so satisfactory to his constituents Theatre, in Cincinnati, paying therefor an enormous sum that he was renominated for the Forty-fourth Congress, and a greater amount probably than was ever before paid in a
rency
bill.
Rights
bill,
at the election
to
of 1S74 he was triumphantly re-elected.
of the Committee on Territories, and also a
member
Committee on Revision of Laws of the United
man
In
Chairman
the Forty-fourth Congress he has been appointed
of the
States.
A
honor public seeking
life,
and
is
in
far to find.
fitted
not only to adorn but to
ROBERT EDGAR JACKSON,
ILES,
Comedian and Manager, was born Court
His
at
four years of age,
mercantile pursuits in Virginia. of his father, his mother,
present
lessee.
city,
leased
Wood’s
but eventually sold his lease to
His management of the National until 1870, when he decided to
Theatre was sustained
still
engage son’s
in the circus business.
New
Teacher,
ation.” This, one of the largest
world, was closed
House, Virginia, September 9th, 1834. Robert Edgar Miles, whom he lost
but
the
following year he
the
Culpeper
father,
when
In
Theatre, in the same
In 1873 he opened RobinOpera House, in Cincinnati, and in the ensuing these days such men are worth year opened the New Grand Opera House, in the same In 1874-75 city, of which he is now lessee and manager. he organized the National Hippodrome, Menagerie and Congres.s of Nations, known as “America’s Racing Associ-
of integrity as well as of ability, of strong will and of
honorable purposes, he
way.
similar
was engaged
in
After the death
young and a woman of high
mental and moral culture, removed to Charleston, South
to the
in
shows ever organized
June of the
management. On
latter year,
in the
with great loss
the whole, his checkered theatrical
career has been a very successful one; while, through his various enterprises, he has repeatedly
won and
lost
and
At the present time his labors are entirely behind the scenes, where, and also in the outer world, he is recognized as a fearless, popular and successful recovered princely fortunes.
LIOGRAI’IIICAL EAXVCLOIAEDIA.
He was
manager.
ex-member of
i860, to Emily L.
married, in
Dow,
Cooper Opera Troupe,” one of the
the “
English opera troupes that came to
first
this country.
later steps
21
the musical progress of the
in
He
taken under his influence. organization of a
number of
has a reputation
he has played
“
Kammer
;
the concerts for
city
among the most among the
still
efforts,
which the
churches, and his
in the
concerts,” while they are
interesting of his professional
have been
cit)
has been concerned in the
are also
NDRE, HENRY GEORGE,
Pianist, was born in most delightful of the musical experiences enjoyed by the Nancy, France, in the year 1838. Almost from people of Cincinnati. Of course, in his devotion to music All his energy has been directed to the the first he was destined for a musical career, and he is an enthusiast. his achievements in later life have abundantly establishment of a high art reputation, and the elevation of justified
the plans formed for
He
veloped childhood.
and
family,
at
him
in his unde-
springs from a musical
a very tender age he began taking lessons on
the piano, his father, a fine musical scholar and a skilled player, being his tion
was of the
the highest this
Happily
instructor.
first
and he was trained
best,
and purest standards of
early discipline has been
progress of his professional
his
in
home
instruc-
accordance with
The
taste.
result of
constantly apparent
life.
When
in the
he was fourteen
years of age he was sent to Paris to complete his musical
He
education.
remained
in that great art centre
fora period
of seven years, under the instruction of the best and most
At the end of
distinguished pianists. study, training
turned
and
artistic discipline,
to his native
He
1S60,
He
to the
Paris
and
commenced United
His original plan contemplated only a business
him. itely
friends in Cincinnati, to
Finding a congenial determined not
manently
to return
in Cincinnati
;
which
home to
and soon
men have
for the piano,
and some of them have attained a deserved popularity. Since the establishment of the Cincinnati Conservatory of
Music
— an
which the great
institution
pronounced one of the best of the kind has been director of
piano department
its
Tsubenstein
artist
in this
country
and here,
;
— he
as else-
He
plays only classical
music, and scarcely tolerates any other.
In short, standing
where, he has achieved success.
among
the
first
musicians of the West, he
is
pre-eminently
the pianist of the great city of musical festivals.
re-
to
ROWN, ARCHIBALD GREEN,
Lawyer,
is
a
native of Ohio, and has lived in that State since
States.
He
was born, on the l6th of April, Washington county, Ohio. When he was a year old his parents removed to Athens county, and at Athens he has continued his birth.
visit to
America, and that accomplished he proposed to return to France and resume his labors as a music teacher. Put he
made
the city of his adoption.
composed, but he has composed many pieces
continued thus occupied
when he came
taste in
not only a player of the music that other
is
long course of
left
town, where he at once
give instructions in music. until the year
this
he
the standard of musical
1798, near Waterford,
city his business took
He comes
New
England
defin-
to live ever since
that time.
P'rance, but to locate per-
stock, his father.
Captain Benjamin Brown, having been
after arriving at this con-
born in Leicester, Worcester county, Massachusetts, on the
there, at length
he
of
clusion he began his musical career in America, a career
17th of October, 1745, and served through five campaigns
been l.onorable alike to himself and to the city of his adoption. His first attempts in Cincinnati were devoted
m
to the holding of musical soirees or small concerts, held for
Archibald, attended the
that has
the purpose
masters the
of introducing the
soirees
Revolutionary army.
and died
in
He removed
Athens
to
Ohio
in the year 1821.
common
in the
The
son,
school during his boyhood,
but his early educational coiu'se was not confined to his and quartos, and school studies. On his father’s farm, where his youth was solos for which he has become so famed. passed, he worked hard and many hours each day, but in were the “ Kammer concerts ” of Germany, spile of hard work the studious boy found leisure for reading
— the classical
beautiful
These
the
6arly days,
compositions of the best
sonatas, duos, trios
which only invited guests appeared. In the meantime he and study. He had early formed the purpose of acquiring also began to give instruction to private pupils. His con- a liberal education, and this purpose was his constant inspiat
certs found great favor with the music-loving community, and the annual series came to be looked for with the utmost interest; and partly through their agency his private patronage became large and infiuential. Among the pupils who
ration.
He
had
in
view
all
the time, and, in the resting
work and in the days of attendance at the district school, he worked assiduously for the fulfilment of All this hard work had its result, and by the this object. were many time he had reached the proper age to enter college he was
gained their knowledge under his instructions who are now themselves popular performers and successful
spells
of farm
prepared to do so with credit and honor. He became, in and some who are now among due time, a student in the Ohio University at Athens, and, the most honored and the most successful artistes in the after prosecuting the regular course of study there, graduated country. ith the entire history and development of with honors in the year 1822. Two years later, after teachmusical taste and accomjrlishmcnt in Cincinnati he is ing an academy in Columbus one year, in 1824, he was identified, and very many of the earlier as well as of the made Preceptor in the academical department of the univerinstructors in Cincinnati,
16
BIOGRAPHICAL EXCVCLOP/EDIA.
122 a position which he
sity,
1825 he
left
filled
one year.
for
In the year
the teacher’s chair in the university to under-
take teaching on a larger scale from the editorial tripod. In that year he
commenced
Mirror, the
paper published in the county.
first
the publication of the Athens
For the
next five years he continued his connection with that paper as editor
and publisher, a good indication
that the
new
jour-
and within a brief period after taking his seat with body assumed a prominent position among its members.
ticket, this
He served on the Committee on Public Printing and on Reform Schools, and in various ways has signalized himself by his energy, fidelity and abilities. In addition to his many
other occupations, he has for interests in a
woollen factory,
in
years past held large
a flouring mill, and also in
was at least a fair success. In the year 1827 various agricultural ventures. He is a valued member also was elected to the office of Recorder of of the State Republican Central Committee; and in all Three matters touching the welfare of his State and party is a the county, an office which he held until 1833. He was maryears before the expiration of his term of office he had ceased skilful tactician and an efficient coworker. from his journalistic labors, and his leisure time was de- ried, in September, 1851, to Rebecca Swayne, daughter of voted to the reading of law, to which profession he had de- Thomas Swayne, who died in January, 1854, leaving one nalistic venture
the
young
editor
In the year 1836 he was again
cided to devote himself.
elected to the position of County Recorder, and held the
At the expiration of
office until 1841.
He was
son.
again
married,
Evans, of Spring Valley, by
in
whom
March, 1856,
to
Mary
he has had seven children.
second term he
his
same year he was elected a member of the Board of Trustees of the Unibegan the practice of law
in
Athens.
In the
LEONARD A., ex-Mayor of .Cinwas born, October nth, 1824, in Cincinnati, and received his education in the common schools. He embraced every opportunity opened to him for the improvement of his mind, and be-
ARRIS, HON.
versity of Ohio, a position he has continued to hold to the
In 1850 he was a delegate to the convention
present time.
cinnati,
which framed the present Constitution of Ohio, and for a term of two years, from 1850 to 1852, was President-Judge For many years he has engaged
of the Athens District.
in
came
the practice of his profession in Athens, and in the mean-
time has been identified with
many
of the interests and en-
velopment of a
by
in time
self application
talent naturally bright a
man
and by the deof culture, the
one of the
scope of whose learning comprehended more than the Eng-
& Cincinnati Railroad Comcompany; he held stock in the first telegraph line through the county and he was a stockholder in the Athens branch of the State Bank of Ohio, and afterwards in the National Bank of Athens. Judge Brown has been twice married. He was first married to Priscilla K. Crippen, on the 8th of January, 1824. She died on the 3d of June, 1858, and he married again, on the 22d of
lish branches of instruction. Upon the firing by the rebels on Sumter he raised a company of volunteers, of which he
March, 1866, Harriet B. Stewart.
served so commendably in the estimation of President Lin-
terprises in
his section
stockholders
pany
ifi
He was
of the State.
the Marietta
until the failure of the
;
became Captain, and tendered his services to the government. These were readily accepted, and the organization was attached
to the
2d Ohio Infantry.
early sent to the front,
Bull
Run.
and participated
Captain Harris
self for gallantry
first
battle of
the action distinguished him-
in
and coolness
The regiment was in the
in the face of the
enemy, and
coln that he was authorized by the Chief Executive to raise
He
a regiment in Ohio.
set
about this task with so
energy that within one month the
ARRETT,
HON. ISAAC
M., Merchant and
Manufacturer, Representative in
the
Sixty-first
General Assembly of Ohio from Greene county,
was born
in
Mahala
Saratoga county.
New
York,
May
His parents were George Barrett and
2d, 1827.
(Merritt)
Barrett.
His education was
acquired partly in the Ohio Wesleyan University, but he did
He engaged
not graduate from this institution. in
mercantile business
at
which he continued
at
subsequently
Spring Valley, Greene county, Ohio, for a period of
about
fifteen years.
ranks was ready for the
eastern
division of the
ville
In 1862 he
Abraham Lincoln Assessor
of Internal
and served
in that
had been driven out of and was assigned to Rousseau’s
the rebels
State,
Buell.
When
General
his forces to prevent the capture of Louis-
by General Bragg, Colonel Harris with the 33d Ohio
occupied Fort Fisher,
the
at
mouth of
Battle
creek, Ten-
nessee, the extreme outpost on Buell’s right flank. position until nearly
After an
attack
burned
all
which
Fie held
surrounded by Bragg’s forces.
lasted
all
day, he
evacuated the
the stores that could not be transported,
was appointed by and united with the army at Decherd, Tennessee, without Revenue for the the loss of a man taken iirisoner. General Buell was well capacity until 1866. satisfied with the conduct of Colonel Harris and his com-
highly remunerative nature.
District,
after
army under General
was massing
Buell
fort,
In 1873 he was elected to the
Kentucky
that portion of the
relations with these businesses are
Columbus
full
Colonel of the
2d Ohio Infantry, and made an honorable record up to the This regiment was withdrawn from
this
of an extended and
He became
field.
much
with
time of his disability.
Also during those years he became importantly identified with the grain trade and the pork-packing business, and his still
new command
House on
the Republican
mand.
Colonel Harris
commanded
the 9th Brigade in the
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCL 0 P.^:DIA. This brigade was
action at Perryville, October 8lh, 1S62.
re-elected to the Mayoralty by a largely increased majority,
and continued while
33d and 94tb Ohio, the 3 Stl' Indiana, lolh Wisconsin and Captain Simonson’s 5th InThat this was a bloody and stubbornlydiana Battery.
composed of the
2d, the
contested fight the casualties of the 9th Brigade will
commissioned commissioned
officers officers
killed,
show
which
field after
and recommended
The United
for the
pointed by the Court of cinnati Hospital,
He
Mayor.
Common
and continues
Pleas Trustee of the Cin-
President of the Cuvier Club, an organization having
is
its
its
members
he was placed in nomination for the Mayoralty of Cincin-
ology and the natural sciences generally.
in April, 1863,
was elected His
by about one thousand majority. officer
He
was soon apparent.
to that imiiortant office ability as
is
object not only the cultivation of sociability
now
in the
advancement of
but the
prime of
life,
amongst
pisciculture, ornith-
Colonel Harris
possessed of vigorous physical as
well as quick mental faculties, and gives promise of
an executive
took every step to see that
the laws governing the municipality
once tendered
at
to serve in that capacity.
for
and
Ohio
In 1873
would have been done had not his health compelled his resignation. L’pon his return home, the latter part of 1862, nati,
First
States Senate confirmed the appoint-
his resignation of the office of
and courage, promotion, which
and
his character
ment, which Colonel Harris accepted, and
the fight for his skill
in his official report for
deserve the high esteem
had formed of
In August, 1866, he was appointed by President
District.
The Colonel was complimented by General
Rousseau on the
office to
Johnson Collector of Internal Revenue
:
wounded, ten; nonkilled, one hundred and
twenty-four; wounded, four hundred and twelve; missing, forty-one.
in
fellow-citizens
his
ability.
four;
and privates
123
greater usefulness to the
still
community which has already so
were enforced; exerted greatly honored him.
every measure for the securing in a greater degree the peace
and
tranquillity of the citizens
by the speedy arrest and prose-
OHNSTON, COLONEL JOHN,
cution of criminals; and using every influence which he
could
command
to
1775, and
welfare of the community which had honored him with the highest gift within
its
prerogative.
the law for the enlistment of “ one
which Ohio sent over
He became also
thousand volunteers
He was
the Cincinnati
families, emigrated
He
at
March,
His
father,
brothers, each
Stephen
having large
from the north of Ireland
after
Trustee of
adopted every measure of
Scotland into-Ireland with the Protestant King William, and
the close of the
its
enlist-
being
precaution and authority to secure a fair expression of the
popular will
American
of
country with his parents
ten years of age.
Johnston, with his
to the field.
the term of
this jieriod, in addition.
Hospital.
to this
and settled in Shearman’s Valley, in the then county of Cumberland (now Perry county), Pennsylvania. His paternal ancestors came from
commanded during
during
came
when about
drafted
hundred day men,” under
Colonel of the 7th Regiment Ohio National
Guards, which he ment.
thirty
As Mayor he
was born near
Ballyshannon, Ireland, on the 25th
increase the m.aterial as well as moral
the polls, and this effort
officers w'ere
in the
was properly recog-
revolution,
rew'arded with estates near Enniskillen,
county of Fermanagh; and his maternal ancestors,
nized in the following resolutions, adopted at a meeting of
named Barnard, were
the leading citizens, held October 13th, 1803:
France
for
Huguenots,
who
fled
from
conscience sake and took refuge in Ireland.
His
of the
early years rvere spent at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, in the mer-
Resolved, That the perfect preservation of the peace of the by its civil authorities, through the most exciting political contest ever known in this community, is largely due to the
cantile
city
establishment of Judge John
Creigh
— that
place
being the rendezvous of troops enlisted for the war with the
Western Indians. In his seventeenth year he accompanied Samuel Creigh to the West, as an attache of the Quartermaster's department of General Wayne’s army, with a stock of goods for the troops, travelling the whole distance to insured public confidence in the management of his department on the day of the recent election in maintaining order Pittsburgh on foot, in company with wagons loaded with and (juiet, proved his capacity and integrity as a man and army supplies and private property. Pittsburgh at that time, official, and has the unreserved approbation of his fellow1792, was a small unimportant place, without a single brick citizens. building, and consisted of a string of log-houses along the Resolved, That a testimonial of our appreciation of the In January, 1793, he first credit which he has reflected upon the good name of the bank of the Monongahela river. city shall be presented him. came to Fort Washington, descending the Ohio river to impartiality .and
ability with which the Mayor, Colonel Leonard A. Harris, has discharged the duties of his office. Resolved, That his instructions to the police force, relating to their deportment in ])olilical affairs during the canv.ass,
Cincinnati
His messages
good
to the
were instruments of business-like manner. He
City Council
sense, presented in a clear,
husband,
and earnestly advocated the building of a workhouse and hospital, both of which have since been accom-
He
institutions,
They
In 1865 he was
whom
three
flatboat
loaded with
men, himself and one
at
Bourbon Court House (now
Kentucky, having an uncle
at th.at
time a resident of
While there he formed the acf|uaintance of Daniel Boone, who was at that time eng.ige{l in tracing u|)
that county. |
they found on their arrival at Gallipolis.
spent the winter 1794-95
Paris),
are conspicuous ornaments of the city, with
largely increa.sed capacity for doing good.
manned with
female passenger, a P'rench lady from Paris in quest of her
zealously engaged in promoting the interest of municipal
plished.
on a common Kentucky
merchandise,
BIOGRAFIIICAL ENCVCLOP.EDIA.
124 land-lines
and
titles,
and many years afterwards, upon the
Governor of Kentucky, he acted as
invitation of the
pall-
makes an his
him
allusion to the circumstances witnessed by
“ Notes on America.”
Colonel Johnston was
a.
in
firm
Whig, of the Federal cast of political sentiments, and an inwhich had been recently removed from Missouri. timate personal friend of General Harrison, Lewis Cass, Colonel Johnston also while at Bourbon Court House was Charles Hammond, Alfred Kelly, and other prominent men made a Mason in a lodge working under authority of the identified with the early development of the West. In 1844 bearer at the reinterment of the remains of Boone and his wife,
— the
Grand Lodge of Kentucky Soon after being made a Mason he returned to Philadelphia and was for some years in the employ of the government in the war office, of which General Henry Dearborn, United States army, was chief. He freGrand Lodge of Virginia
being not yet organized.
quently saw the father of his country, heard him deliver his last
address to
public
life
;
Congress previous
and was an
Church, and during
he adhered most fervently
He was
and
also
in the funeral solemnities
work.
in all
fifteen
With
beloved wife he established and
his
Sabbath-school
first
Miami county, Ohio, and
in
things endeavored to raise
children
in
the
cherished so dearly.
faith
up
their large family of
and hopes they themselves
Appreciating the inestimable benefits
Not long of a thorough education, he took an
in the winter of iSoo.
to the
one of the founders of the
Episcopal Church in Ohio, being early associated with the
;
and participated
Clay”
venerable pioneer, Bishop Chase, in that primitive and r-pos-
upon the occasion of the inauguration of John Adams and also as Secretary of a Masonic lodge in Philadelphia marched
Washington
of “ Harry
from
taught the
of
life
religion of his fathers.
tolic
memory
in the interest
Balti-
horse-
His ancestors were of the Episcopal
along the route.
of Washington’s retirement from the Presidency;
in
Whig Convention held in way from his home at Piqua on
to the
made speeches
back, and
delegated by the Governor of Pennsylvania on the occasion
in the jnocession
the
all
honor
to his retirement
officer of the military escort of
he was a delegate
more, riding
active interest in the
same year, the subject of this establishment of Kenyon College, at Gambler, Ohio, of sketch returned to the West, where he was employed under which he was one of the first Board of Trustees, and also General Harrison in the superintendency of Indian affairs, occupied a similar official position in connection with Miami He was President of the Hishaving been commissioned by President Madison as Agent; College, at Oxford, Ohio. and in this capacity was charged with the control and care torical and Philosophical Society of Ohio a member of afterwards, in or about the
;
Society of Wisconsin
of the Antiquarian'
of 10,000 Indians, including the Miamies, Delawares, .Shaw-
Society of Massachusetts, and identified with similar asso-
Historical
;
some Kickapoos, Saukees and Kaskaskias, among ciations in other States; and was, by appointment of James whom Bucking Chilas, Little Turtle, Black Hoof and John Buchanan, President, one of the Board of Visitors to West were the influential chiefs. Previous to coming West in Point in 1859. Two of his sons were distinguished officers Cajitain A. R. Johnston, a 1800, Colonel Johnston had received the chapter and en- in the United States service campment degrees in Masonry at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, graduate of the Military Academy, being killed in the battle and during life continued to take a prominent part as a of San Pasquales during the Mexican war, and St. Stephen member of that fraternal order. During the war of 1812 Johnston, having died soon after that war, and having served he was connected with the army under General William most honorably in our navy. Colonel Johnston was six feet H. H arrison, and afterwards remained on the frontier as two inches in height, erect in form, and with an aspect of United States Factor or Indian Agent for many years, and venerable dignity that commands respect, and with a kinddischarged all his public rluties to the satisfaction of the ness and gentleness of manner which win the regard of all. government and tribes under his charge, but was removed He died in Washington City on the 8th day of February, from office by that uncompromising Democratic hero, An- 1861, at the dawn of our great and memorable rebellion, in drew Jackson, upon his accession to the Presidency in 1829, the eighty-sixth year of his age, possessing his physical and ecas,
—
1
simply because of a difference in political predilections.
Phus ended the
tirit
period
denizens of the forest
in his official
authority over the
mental vigor
in a
remarkable degree
to
almost the day of-
his death.
but afterwards in 1841-42, by appointment of General Harrison, then President, he was in;
trusted with the negotiations for a treaty of cession
gration of the Wyandottes,
“the
last
and emi-
of the native tribes of
Ohio,”
for their removal beyond the Missi.ssippi and in the consummation of this important and responsible matter, which occurred at Upper Sandusky, in this State, he com-
IRBV,
my
TIMOTHY.
case that
in the
first
I
There
is
so
little
have a preference
jicrson, so
that
to
be said
to say
it
in
myself,
any inaccuracies
may
;
pleted the entire
arrangements so faithfully as
to
win the
rest
only upon myself.
I
was born
in
Middle-
town, Connecticut, November i6th, 1797, and left there in May, 1803, with my father and family,
commendation of not only our government but red men, and lived in Berkshire county, Massachusetts, until 1815, about to leave the hunting-grounds to which they except a few months in Springfield. About 1812 I went had become ardently attached. Charles Dickens, the cele- into the Hunt & Co. factory, below Stockbridge, with many brated English novelist, being present on this occasion, other farmer boys, to learn to make wool into cloth, at the
who were
—
BIOGRAPHICAL EXCYCLOIA-EDIA. my
pay of six dollars a month and
we worked up one
lect that ill
My
a British ship.
ticularly to acquire
me
cloth, led
had deserters a
in the processes.
recol-
I
my
business, as well as
his
in
ployes in his business in Ohio and Kentucky.
law
to the study of chemistry to a limited extent.
I
could, for several
I
had many older and more experienced em-
years, but he
trade generally, and par-
in that
and had made and spent a great deal of money.
aided him
coloring and finishing broad-
in
and other business
vast deal of surveying, locating
district,
cargo of Spanish wool captured
zeal for
skill
We
board.
from the British army to instruct us
125
I
studied
Joseph S. Benham, and was admitted by
in the office of
Supreme Court at the May term, 1827, Brown county, I was then trying the land suit of Anthony vs. Henry Avery, of Connectim.achine in the factory. Part of the night and leisure time Kirby, in which I succeeded. cut, was a friend of mine from the year 1S19; I was long his I devoted to reading books from a library to which I had Novels I did not read, because there were none to agent, and managed his affairs in his absence, and we had a access. I
copying out technical terms and definitions to
recollect
me
have before
speak of
day within
at that
and
my
I
employed
believing
near
In a Springfield factory
land partnership.
people residing
more
I
was
and earned money
Pittsfield,
Academy
In the early spring of 1816
I
put what
to a late
States
gave
Bank of the United Land Agent at their Cin-
In 1828 the
period.
me
the appointment of
which agency was
Jones from 1820
for
and about Philadelphia, extending on
when
W. Herman
charge of George
in
and then transferred
to 1830,
to
pay the ex-
Cope from 1830
to
the winter of 1815.
The agency grew
out of the old Cincinnati branch of 1817
to
my my
then considered
I
down
have done a great deal of business
I
in
cinnati agency,
to con-
could do better, was employed in
I
pense of attending the Lenox
big
Ohio, where
It
a month, was offered
at eight dollars
factories
the
a
me
This reading to
control.
to the sports of the boys.
crowds and entertainments. tinue, but
memory when running
to
was very agreehave always had a preference to keep out of
was preferable able,
commit
to
volume of chaptals, chemistry and geology,
in
1836,
to 1820, the assets of
which run
I
was
aiipointed Agent.
into real estate, wild lands,
judgments and mortgages, and which kept on growing by
the head of the Ohio river, accumulations and by further investments down to 1830. making some money by aiding After which the process of realizing and remitting went on the lumbermen, but finding no employment at my trade, until closed up under the subsequent trusts, and I being the which ought to have been in a great state of activity if Con- Manager from 1836 to the final close, with the full approbagress had stood by the factories., as should have been done tion of all the boards and officers I had to do with. I ought
knapsack, and went direct
and down
it
for
to Cincinnati,
I
j
j
at the close
But the policy of a vast
British war.
of the
to
have been
a geologist
import trade has prevailed ever since, cutting off working
as time permitted,
people from the manufacturing employments they are en-
less,
titled to in
in
my
small way, on that policy, as
ever since. that
every well-regulated country.
The import
cannot be shaken
trade off.
and
I
have made war,
had good
I
right to do,
an incubus upon the people
is
Hard times
thing else except the import trade.
matter because
I
will curtail every-
dwell a
I
little
regret the general prejudices of the people
ing no work at
my
taught a school
at
I
this
trade,
I
thing
the
to Cincinnati,
profited by his earnest
As
dead languages.
air,
surface.
and became a student
and learned attention
From
to us.
the Cincinnati College
In the
fall
I
His time
I
went
into
found more desiralde em-
of 1818, before
I
ended
my
minority,
General Lytle was one of the best of men, and
one of the half dozen deputy surveyors
principal surveyor that district, lying Little
be the
to
is,
first
during
all
past time,
making the
One who announced
earth habitable,
arrangement of the earth’s
for the present
Timotiiy Kiruy.
[Died 1874.]
and recorder of
Richard C. Anderson, entries
between the three
Miami. The
Gener.-'.l
for the military
and surveys
rivers,
in
Ohio, Scioto
had done, from 1790 down.
D., Physician,
Wilkersville, Meigs county, Ohio,
and
quite a boy,
where James McClure he reached manhood.
He
also of Ohio.
in
in
24lh, 1835.
to this
Slate
Meigs county,
lived with his parents until
His mother was a native
received a classical education at Ohio
University, in Athens,
came some
settled
was born
May
His father was a farmer, who came
when
in
Anthony and Kirby. Dr. to our little class, and we
lands in Ohio appointed by Colonel
and
that
cCLURE, JAMES, M.
said, find-
entered the service of General William Lytle as a land
w.vs
and
prog-
and parties I
principally devoted to large classes of students in the
a crowded private school until
I
claim,
and accounting
Eaton, Ohio, for three-quarters of a year.
went back
Slack was particularly attentive
surveyor.
I
much
this great science.
the theoiy of north and south currents in the water and in
went back into the country, and
Slack, in a class of three, Vance,
])loyment.
keeping up with
j
the Cincinnati College, under the tuition of the Rev. Elijah
was
in
interest in the science,
beginning, without
its
have so long been a zealot on the subject,
against a suitable diversity of employments.
Thence
on
however,
have taken
I
;
froiri
and upon
his leaving the college be-
a teacher in the public schools of Meigs county for time.
Being of a very studious turn of mind, and
having a great
taste for
reading with Dr. S.
medicine, he engaged in
Day
its
study,
of Harrisonvillc, and afterwards
attending a course of lectures during the winter of i860 and 1861.
He
then resumed and practised medicine in Albany,
Athens county, Ohio,
until
the
fall
of 1863,
when he
re-
turned to Starling Medical College and completed his course of study, and graduated in the S|)ring of 1864. 1864, he entered the
Ohio Volunteer
army
Infantry,
as Assistant
In
May,
Surgeon of the 23d
and was attached
to the
Army
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPH£DIA.
126 of
West
and participated
Virginia,
Cedar Creek,
He He
engagements. August, 1865.
and engaged
was mustered out with then returned to his
his regiment, in
death had, however, not been the direct result of the operation,
home
and though frowned upon
in
Albany
the practice of his profession, continuing
in
there until the
Opequan, unwarrantable on the part of a“ country surgeon,” while the and many other minor medical journals refused to report the case. The woman’s
in the fights of
Berryville, Fisher’s Hill,
fall
of 1871,
when he moved
Ma-
finally to
and practice
in his studies
in
many
quarters, he persevered
until a brilliant success dissipated
entirely the clouds of prejudice.
To-day, his reputation as
and there resumed practice, in which he is now en- an ovariotomist is co-extensive with the circulation of medgaged. He afterwards became associated in partnership ical literature, while his practice extends throughout the with Dr. Samuel Hart, and with him now enjoys a large central and western portion of the United States. Down to rietta,
and to
He
lucrative practice.
Sarah
was married
October, 1866,
in
Greene, of Newport, Washington county, Ohio.
J.
the present time he has performed nearly one hundred oper-
and has reported the subject ably and exhaustively.
ations,
In eighty per cent, of his cases, he has met with complete success
—a
may be awarded
higher estimate than
any
to
other American or European ovariotomist, with but a singl.e
'UNLAP, ALEX.ANDER, was born
in
He
1815.
Brown
Physician and Surgeon,
county, Ohio, January I2lh,
William Dunlap and
the son of
is
Mary (Shepherd) Dunlap, both
His father, a farmer, was one of the pio-
ginia.
moved with
neers of Ohio, having
Kentucky 1796 State
former State,
six years before
He
founders.
years of his
from
freshman and sophomore
the
at
life
in
admission as a
members were probably
its
passed the
college
its
His mother’s family came
Union.
into the
Shepherdstown, of which place the
his parents to
1782 or thereabout, and thence removed
in
to the
natives of Vir-
University of Ohio, in
He
exception.
has outlived denunciation, and in
He
then
He
Society.
Council for lately
the
has also been
made one
of the Judicial
American Medical Association.
been appointed
to
a professorship in
He
Medical College of Columbus, Ohio. natural proclivity for surgery,
the
He
has
Starling
has a strong
which early developed
itself,
and which has been cultivated by close reading and an extensive and varied practice. In “ Gross’s Svstem of ii., he is reported, under the heading “ Lithotomy,” as “ having successfully removed a stone weighing
Surgery,” vol.
twenty ounces,” at the Miami Unicommenced the study person. Also in
of medicine under the instructions of his brother at Green-
re-
pliment of an election to the Presidency of the Ohio Medical
Athens, and his junior and senior years versity, graduating in 1836.
1S68
ceived from the faculty of the State of Ohio the signal com-
the largest this
been very extensive.
ever removed from a living
branch of surgery
Among
his practice has
cases, he has removed the under-jaw, once ligated the comCincinnati Medical College, where he graduated in 1839. mon carotid artery, and once removed the clavicle. He Subsequently associating himself in practice with his bro- was married March 27th, 1839, to Maria Elizabeth Bell, of Highland county, Ohio, by whom he has had three chilther, he continued to reside in Greenfield until 1846, when he removed to Ripley, Brown county, where he was en- dren two sons, one of whom died in childhood the other, gaged in professional labors until 1856. Later he established Charles W. Dunlap, is now associated with him in his professional practice; and a daughter, Mary I-Ilizabeth Dunlap, his office in Springfield, where he still resides. In 1843 came into collision with the fraternity by venturing to remove who was married to William Hamilton, of Springfield.
Highland county, and attended lectures
field,
at the old
exceptional
three times
:
;
an
ov.rrian tumor.
formed,
in a
Although
operation had been per-
this
few cases, as early as 1809, with some success, by
E[)hraim M’Dowell, of Kentucky,
it
had been denounced by
^HACKER, JOHN
the profession and characterized as unjustifiable butchery, and
more than thirty years had been abandoned as an element of medical and surgical art. In the various publications there
was nothing but a brief notice of
the condemnation of the faculty.
performed the operation
summer
in the
tion,
he, not then
jiractitioners,
M’ Dowell’s patient,
finally
after Atlee’s opera-
having heard of the cases of those two traditional report of
apprised of the risk, to undertake the
Surrounded by a few country physicians, he
undertook
the
case,
forty-five
A
few weeks
and the operation was denounced
later the
as altogether
D., Editor of the Medi-
at a point
about twenty ist,
1S33.
John Thacker, was also a physician, whose father moved to Ohio from the State of His
New Vork
father,
at
an early date.
exists a family record
fathers
stances.
On
the paternal side there
which dates back
to 1750.
were highly respectable farmers
On
in
His
fore-
easy circum-
the maternal side the family history extends to
many years the revolt of the colonies, who came from England, and purchased
a period preceding for to a
Mr. Gardner,
and removed successfully a the island
pounds.
M.
Clermont county, Ohio,
and Atlee, of Philadelphia,
months
A.,
born in the village of Goshen,
miles distant from Cincinnati, January
and
case, ventured, at the earnest solicitation of the
tumor weighing patient died,
Two
failure,
Clay, of England, had
and following only the
who was
operation.
in 1842,
of 1843.
its
Nc 7vs, was
cal
for
Island.”
in
Long
Island Sound
known
as “ Gardner’s
His maternal grandmother, whose maiden name
was Lucretia
Willis,
was a cousin of the wife of General
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOILLDIA. In his earlier clays he
Greene,- of Revolutionary celebrity.
common
attended the
schools of his village, and also the
On
^Vittenberg College, of Springfield, Ohio.
the comple-
tion of his general literary education, he commenced the study of medicine under the preceplorship of a second cousin. Dr. Townsend Thacker, of Goshen, Ohio, and
March
number
College.
the reception of his diploma, he, with
The day succeeding a
Miami Medical
1856, graduated at the
1st,
was examined
of other competitors,
order to
an important position in the
for
ascertain his fitness
in
St.
John’s Hospital, of Cincinnati, now known as the Good Samaritan Hospital. On this occasion he was one of the
two
His stay
succe.ssful candidates.
in the hospital
was, how-
Anatomy
the Chair of
and
icine
127
Surgery,
his
In the
tastes.
same and
whose
in
months he resigned
his position in
on the practice of medicine in Cincinnati, where he has While engaged in the .Vsyluin, although since resided. nominally the assistant physician, the superintendence of the entire establishment
devolved on him, the nominal superin-
tendent not residing on the premises, and visiting the house but a few times per w'eek, his
from a half hour
averaging
of Medicine of Cincinnati, and prepared
He
publication in the medical journalsi
and has contributed extensively
W.
Hammond, M.
.A.
many
to
became Professor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine, vice Dr. B. .S. Lawson, resigned, and has since occupied
He
that chair.
has also devoted his attention closely and
persistently to microscopy,
and has probably the greatest
interesting
in
makers throughout the
He
the United States.
possesses also a very large and rich cabinet of microscopic objects,
and the Medical
News
contains a microscopic de-
partment (a need met by no other journal to
in the country),
which many of the most distinguished microscopists con-
tribute.
He
societies, in
is
an honorary
member
of several microscopic
Memphis, San Francisco,
and
etc.,
member
a
is
also of various medical societies.
duration
is
to
D., he
month,
AY, GILBERT OTIS,
Qiiartei'Iy
published in articles
at
its
columns
subjects
of
much
Deaf and Dumb Columbus, was born November 8th, 1834, at
Wadsworth, Medina county, Ohio. belonged
yoitrnal
the
to
His father
profession,
clerical
and,
as
well as his mother, descended from a long line
by Professor
on
Superintendent of the Ohio
Institution for the education of the
for
a ready writer,
New Yotk, edited
and valuable
Academy,
Several of those contributions attracted
Psychology.
lenses of eminent
of fine
both literary and medical
During the existence of the
of Psychological Medicine, of
expended much time and
cultivation he has
In 1871, upon a reorganization of the faculty, he
attention.
proceedings,
its
embodying lengthy discussions from month
journals.
in
the
in
to his taste,
During the early period of
for a time as Secretary of the
he acted
his practice
visits
an hour.
to
Mind
branch of science congenial
institution, a
world of any private individual
At the expiration of ten the a.syluin, and entered
Alpro-
its
was made
of 1867 he
fall
Professor of Psychology and Diseases of the
Physician to the Himilton County Lunatic Asylum, he to that institution.
two terms.
fessorship in consequence of the chair not being in accord-
ance with
number
once removed
through
though he taught anatomy acceptably, he resigned
ever, of limited duration, for, receiving the appointment of at
Med-
the Cincinnati College of
in
lecturing
of sturdy Massachusetts yeomanry.
They
left
that State at
the time of the early western emigration, and he soon
victim to the malarial diseases of a
new
State.
fell
The
a
care
and received highly eulogistic notices from the and training of Gilbert, his only son, devolved upon the of them afterward appearing in an English mother, and to his education she devoted her time and He has also been a contributor to the London energy, supporting herself and him by her own manual Quarterly. attention,
press
—one
Lancet; and
London,
in the
Monthly AFicroscopical yournal of
for .April, 1875, is a
lengthy article written by him,
copied from the journal which
Cincitmati Medical
Xe-uos,
he
at
present
the
edits,
rn the performance of micro-
labor,
and reserving
his
slender patrimony for future use.
The childhood and youth native village.
of Mr.
His attendance
at
Fay were spent
in
her
school was limited to
the winter sessions, but by application
and under the guid-
During the years 1861- ance of his mother, he managed to acquire a substantial 62, he edited the Cincinnati Medical and Surgical News, knowledge of the English branches of study with thoroughand in 1868 was made editor of the Medical Repertory, ness and rapidity. As he advanced to manhood, the w'ellwhich journal he continues to edit, its name having been husbanded patrimony and his mother’s self-denial secured scopic leases of various powers.
changed
to
the
Medical Ncsus.
His vigorous
him increased
editorial
to
down
education.
He
for obtaining a
facilities
comprehensive
Academy, monopoly of the Cincinnati Hospital by a Yale College, and Andover .Seminary, and obtained in this medical college, and was the cause, in a great meas- prolonged course of study a refined, classical, and yet a
writings contributed importantly to the
breaking
of
attended
successively
Phillips
the almost entire single
ure, of the establishment
by the trustees of the institution
of a rule by which college professors were rendered incapable of holding a position
was
the
regular
first
time
in
upon the hospital
And
the history of the hospital that
medical colleges enjoyed
on an equal
staff.
footing.
its
clinical
all
this
the
advantages
During the years 1863-64 he held
thoroughly practical culture. in the
much
institution
He became
success under his charge.
as superintendent,
and had the
The attendance
ith
so
In 1866 he was appointed satisfaction
the completion of the new’ building and
1868.
a teacher in 1862
which has since been conducted w
its
of witnessing
occupation in
in the school has increased
from one
—
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOIVEDIA.
I2S
and fifty to four hundred, and the most gratifying have been achieved by the methods of teaching
luintlred
graduated
results
entering that institution, the subject of the
adopted and carried out by Mr. Fay, self
has proven him-
eminently qualified for the exercise of his responsible
The
duties as superintendent.
public schools, while
and
rotaiy in
is
domestic
its
ized by comfort, health
use
intellectual life of the insti-
been drawn more nearly parallel with that of the
tution has
in
who
its
has been character-
and economy. The industrial system method, and is judiciously arranged Mr. Fay has earned a high
carried out.
efficiently
life
reputation for his skill in the exceedingly difficult as well as exceedingly delicate
youth
who
work of
instructing the unfortunate
are incapable of speech and
which he
hearing, and has
connected
to a lead-
ing position for success in teaching deaf mutes.
He was
raised the institution with
is
married to Adelia C. Allen, of Leominster, August 25th, 1S63, ried
who
Mary
died
in
On
1867.
April
14th
1868, he mar-
Jarvis, of Massillon, Ohio.
J.
American
in 1833,
with the degree of A. B.
Shortly after abolition of
which had been advocated by Lundy in a paper. The Genius of Emancipalioii, for a time published by him in Baltimore, and afterwards revived or continued slavery,
by Garrison
paper, Ihe Liberator, at Boston, in
in a small
1830 (and some numbers of which had been sent to the faculty), had been introduced into the college by the president of the college, Charles B. Storrs, and Professors Eliezer
Wright and Beriah Green, men of eminent
ability,
approv-
ing and advocating the immediate abolition of slavery. trustees
and other members of the
views, with most of the students.
The
earnestly approved.
The
faculty opposed these Sutliff
and a few others
opposition and prejudice by the
opponents to abolition, as then termed, on the part of the trustees of the
time, 1833,
college and the public generally, at that had become so intense that the president and
those professors resigned their places rather than compro-
mise their sentiments.
Lfpon the
commencement
occasion
few anti-slavery men then present formed an
of 1833, the
Anti-slavery Association, with the special object to dissemi-
UTI.IFF,
HON. MILTON, Lawyer
and ex-Chief-
nate intelligence, and enlist an interest in the anti-slavery
was born, October subject throughout the Reserve. Sutliff, who, by his knowlHe is a edge of law, and experience in discussing the question in Samuel and Ruth (Granger) Sut- debates with other students, had, for some time, been thus
Justice of the State of Ohio, i6th, 1806, in
son of the lifif,
Trumbull county, Ohio.
late
who removed
to
western
New York
from
Connecticut, and from thence to the Western Re1S04, and settled on a farm in Trumbull county.
serve in
His Other was a firmer of intelligence and limited education, but
understood surveying and had taught school.
His
mother was a cousin of Gideon Granger, Postmaster-General under Jefferson. tion
were very
memory and
Though
her early opportunities for educa-
limited, she
was a woman of remarkable Her character was marked
extensive reading.
by a devout piety and great resolution.
Her
father
fell
in
the war for independence, and her husband also had been a soldier in the
They had
same
cause,
when only a boy
six children, all sons, four of
of sixteen.
whom became
law-
regarded by the faculty and students as a
vei-y logical
and
able advocate, volunteered his services to disseminate intelligence by lectures and publications on the subject of slavery
throughout
all
the counties on the Reserve.
His
offer
was
gladly accepted by the Association, but they had no funds,
and
Sutlifif
He, however, borrowed money,
was then poor.
and proceeded
to
redeem
his pledge, without loss of time
a notable exception to the saying, “
any time
at
own
his
charges
?
”
Who The
goeth a warfare at
task undertaken re-
quired not only ability, with candor and courage, but a patient perseverance.
The
undertaking, supposed
but a few weeks, required very unexpectedly a its
During
completion.
time
that
Sutliff,
to require
full
year for
journeying on
and achieved distinction in their profession. The horseback, effected anti-slavery organizations throughout means of his parents being limited. Judge Sutlifif received every county on the Reserve, attended with other pioneers his early education in the district school, and by private in- at Philadelphia, in December, 1833, to form the National yers,
struction
from a clergyman
in
the vicinity, from
whom
he
Anti-slavery Society, and being appointed
liy
that society,
acquired some knowledge of mathematics and the classical
debated the relative merits of the Anti-slavery and Coloniz-
languages, paying for his tuition by manual labor. When he was seventeen years old, he taught a private school in
ation
Ohio, and after a few years went to the Southern States to
and lectured on the subject
Societies
with the
Anniversary held
late
Walter P'orward before the
at Pittsburgh, at
Pennsylvania,
in
May, 1834,
Cannonsburgh and Washing-
and teaching for a time in ^^lssissippi and ton Colleges, and discussed the merits of the subject for While teaching there, at his leisure hours he some days with the faculty of Washington College in that continued his reading law, which he had before commenced. State, the college exercises being suspended by the faculty His friends there offered favorable inducements to him for for that purpose. He, at an expense of a year’s time and a permanent residence in that sunny clime, but his northern $200 and up, and expenses, without asking or receiving Then he education and settled aversion to the institution of slavery, any remuneration, completed his undertaking. and a desire to perfect his education, induced him to re- obtained admittance to the bar, in 1834, and at once settled Upon his return he entered Western Reserve at Warren, and engaged in the practice of his profession. turn to Ohio. teach, remaining
Louisiana.
College in
1830, recited
in
two
classes the
first
year,
and
The
battle
for
freedom was afterwards continued, with
BIOGRAPHICAL E^’CVCLOIVEDIA. Chase and Giddings and Wade, and other contemporaries, of quired
The
Ohio, in the vanguard.
came
great triumph
at last, but
by the
to return
-9
home,
order to undergo an examination
in
War Department
with a view to entering the army.
this is not the place for its history.
This, however, he evaded by purchasing a substitute, re-
in the fight until victory
ceiving his exemption pajiers,
Judge Sutlifif continued crowned the gallant host, but the
press of a large professional business, and an indisposition
towards a
political life,
made
his
name
less
conspicuous than
He was
others towards the close of the struggle. to the
Ohio Legislature
in 1S49,
and the Free
elected
.Soil
party,
which party held the balance of power in the Assembly, secured the election of Salmon P. Chase to the United .States
Senate.
1850 he was
In
elected
the
to
upper
house of the Legislature, and the same potent balance of
power compassed the senatorship.
t.aking his seat in
during the
election of
Wade
to the
last
He
February, 1858.
United
served
of which he w.as Chief Justice.
resumed the practice of
and
his profession,
.States
Supreme Bench,
In 1S57 he was elected to the
five years,
In
1863 he
1S72 was
in
nomin.ated for Congress by the Liberal Repuldican party,
but with the Greeley ticket he was alike defeated.
He
now
good
in
health,
his
and
si.xty-ninth
year,
in
the enjoyment of
continues the practice of his profession.
still
is
which he followed the principal
for
Having more than
cities.
undergo
his
final
to
engaging
to his
on his own account. This examination was a and was conducted by a committee of five master-
workmen,
all
in business
practical tailors, duly appointed for that pur-
He
pose, to ascertain his proficiency in his calling.
required to take the
having been ascertained
own
to
hands, being
This process
make
to
the garments with
times under the care and guar-
at all
who
dianship of one of the committee
never
him
to
lost sight of
The
during the entire period of his ordeal. to the
suit
entire satisfaction of the committee,
In 1849
business.
was and
due form, which au-
certificate in
commence
was
complete
for a
be correct, he was required to
and subsequently
cut the cloth, his
measure of a man
full
of clothes, coat, vest, and pantaloons.
suit
larly
Manufacturer,
iji
the
fulfilled
rigid one,
completed
21st, 1821, in the Electorate
travel,
he returned home
examination preparatory
he thereupon received his
was born November
his pedestrian
eight years more, traveliing through
travelling requirements of the country,
thorized
ECK, WILLIAM, Merchant and
and being released from
then resumed
Bavaria, Switzerland, France, Italy and Austria, working all
He him
has acquired a competency, but has never married.
He
military dutie.s.
I's
was regu-
established as a merchant tailor, and he succeeded
beyond
his
most sanguine expectation, being recommended
and patronized by the gentry and
among
nobility,
these the
Germany, and is a son of Freid- celebrated Von Brombach and Baron Von Schwartzenburg, Carl and Mary Magdelene (Hooffman) Beck. beside other high State dignitaries. After conducting the busi-
of Hesse Cassel, rich
His ancestry belonged
the higher class of
to
ness very successfully for three years, he m.anifesled a desire
to try his fortunes in America; so he disposed of his stock, was but three gave his mother the house he owned, and with a little over years of age. His widow survived him forty-two years, and §500 in gold, together with a small stock of goods, bade died January 3d, 1866, at the advanced age of eighty-two adieu to the fatherland, September 15th, 1852, and fifteen
Germans.
His father was a
the age of thirty-four years,
when
printer,
and died
Willi.am
years, retaining her mental faculties 'unimpaired to the
of
life.
When
five
years of age, William
and was most constant
at
was sent
in his attendance until
end
to school,
he reached
the age of thirteen and a half years, during which period he
acquired an excellent
German
At the expiration
education.
of his school studies, his mother jilaced him, 1835, in a carpenter shop, to learn that trade, but on account of ill treat-
days thereafter arrived in
in Philadelphia,
He
one week, October 9th, 1852.
reaching Cincinnati
did not find his line
of business very brisk, the Israelites seeming to
monopoly of the clothing
unacquainted with the English language.
commenced making Fourth
street,
have a
and withal he was
trade,
totally
He, however,
cloaks for Mr. White and Mr. Lee, on
but as his pay was meagre, he concluded to
ment he remained there but two months, and thence re- try something else. Having purchased a lot of shoes, he turned home. He was then apprenticed to a tailor, with commenced the peddling business, but only succeeded in which employment he was well pleased, and he succeeded disposing of one pair. He next undertook to work on overin acquiring a thorough knowledge of the business during gaiters for one Koehler and others, but trade being in a stagthe stipulated three yearn, 1838, which formed his term of nant condition, he answered an advertisement for a gardener service. lie was now not quite eighteen years of age, but at Mount Washington, and undertook to fill that position. a master of his trade, though he could not,
.as
yet, enter into
According to the Gennan laws and immemorial custom, he was required to travel 3s a journeybusiness for himself.
man
tailor for a certain length of time.
out on foot, with his knapsack on
He
accordingly set
his back,
and travelled
through northern and eastern Germany from August 15th, 1838, to January, 1841, working diligently in various cities
and towns. •7
He
was, at the expiration of this period,
re-
The work, however, proved to the city,
too laborious, so he returned
where he became a
cutter in
fjrothers’ establishments until 1857, ne.ss,
on Central avenue,
masquerade costumes. Fifth street,
in
In
when he
Mr. Stadler
&
started in busi-
the line of boys’ clothing and
1858 he removed
where he continued
the
following year leased the adjoining
to
No. 266
same
business, and the
lot,
and erected the
house No. 264, where he carried on a very lucrative trade.
1
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA.
30 1865 he
In
made
a trip to Europe, in
and on
eldest son, August,
company with
Germany.
of his establishment with a view of returning to
About
that time,
however, the German war Irroke out, and
he abatidoned the idea. corner of
his
his return to Cincinnati, disposed
Plum and
In
i
865 he opened a
store at the
Fifth streets, remaining there one year,
a house on Vine street between Sixth and Seventh, where he opened a restaurant. In 1869 he sold out this establishment, and removed to No. 74 Fifth street, and two years later, on account of the houses being At this torn down, to Longworth and Central avenue.
when he purchased
however, his business did not prove so success-
Latter stand,
removed the same year to No. 264 Vine street, opposite the Public Library, and commenced the business of manufacturing regalia, masonic goods and masquerade ful
;
so he
costumes, which he has
Four years
successfully.
built for his business
Vine and .Seventh an addition
;
streets,
and he now where he ex-
close attention
to
life.
he has
business,
amassed a competency, and he appreciates and enjoys the
He
labors.
his
is
prominently identified with
many of the leading benevolent organizations of among which may be named the Red Men, Odd Knights of Pythias, the Masonic Order up plar, the .Seven
When
1852, he met in
whose
I'uchs,
He was
to
on his way
to the
Elizabeth was on her
sister
So
to
name
in
of
America.
asked to take charge of her, and see that she was
faithful
was he
in
attentions
whom
are
now twenty-two
August,
with him since he
left
to
her comfort, that they
They were
since.
riage February 14th, 1853, and this union, all of
five
now
united
The
mar-
oldest son,
years old, has been in
LDWELL, JOHN DAV,
in
children have Itlessed
living.
the school.
so well
known through-
Ohio, December 28th, 1816.
the year 1814, his mother, Harriet
by the
famous “ his
own
goods
with Professor Thompson, chemist,
at
he was also clerk
;
the
same
place,
and
aided him in experiments that resulted in the discovery of the composition of Blackwell’s matches, facture, about
made until
the year
1832, of the
the
and
first
in the
friction
manu-
matches
in this country. In 1835 he came to Cincinnati, and 1843 eng.aged as clerk on board of steamboats running rivers. After this he was Miami Railroad Company,
chosen Secretary of the Cincinnati, Hamilton
first
&
D.ayton Railroad Comp.any, again entered the service of the Little
Miami Railroad Company, and was then
Greene’s Express, the pioneer organization
clerk in
at
Cincinnati.
Later he became the sole proprietor of the Atlas
and Chron-
icle
This was
newspaper.
the
in
Scott
campaign, and
Murat Halstead, now of the Cincinnati Commercial, then received his first engagement as a writer for a daily paper
He
that
in
paper
subsequently sold out to the Cin-
connection with Judge John C. Wright,
in
Crafts J. Wright, William Schouler, and Luther B. Bruen. On disposing of his interest in the Gazette he served for two
years as Clerk of the School Board of Cincinnati,
when he
resigned on being chosen by the Ohio State Teachers’ Association
yonrnal of Education, which he Subsequently he was Clerk of the City Improvements of Cincinnati, and during two the war Reporting Clerk of the Ohio House of their
to edit
conducted for one year.
Board of years of
In 1850 he acted as Assistant Secretary
Representatives.
In
Wesley Day,
to the
the United States. interes's of the
Since 1856 he has been devoted to the
Pioneer Association of Cincinnati, of which
he remains the secretary.
at
Bay of Baltimore, was captured and placed a prisoner on board of the com-
is
an assiduous student and
accumulated manuscript. He was one period Secretary and Librarian of the Ohio Histori-
a few tracts only of his
ding party
in the
He
collector of the local history of the city, but has published
of Harford county, Maryland, while on a wed-
British,
modore’s
visiting Zanesville with auction
Grand Lodge of Masons of Ohio, and has continued, business by successive elections each year since. Grand .Secretary P'or nine years also of three other Grand Masonic bodies. he was Grand Recorder and Grand Secretary of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar of the United States, and also of the General Grand Chapter Royal Arch Masons of
out Ohio as the “ Universal Secretary,” was born in Zanesville,
—
—
cinnati Gazette, and became a stockholder and local editor
United States,
way
for nearly
While yet a boy he was employed in the establishment of Mr. Peabody brother of the great banker and philanthropist who was College.
with Mr. Caldwell.
properly cared for during her long and hazardous journey.
have been continued ever
Kenyon
Fellows,
Knights Tem-
Liverpool a gentleman by the
original publisher
the city,
Wise Men, Good Fellows, and the United
Working Men.
three years a student at
was the
Mr. Caldwell was
of Martyrs.”
on the Ohio and the Mississippi
pects to remain during the continuance of his business
reward of
stated that he
is
it
Book
transportation agent of the Little
possesses one of the finest stores in the city,
By perseverance and
of Fox’s “
finding these premises loo
after,
three-story house on the corner of
which he
tombstone
his
conducted very extensively and
circumscribed for his rapidly extended business, he leased a
to
and millwrights of New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Virginia. John Day, whose name he bears, was the pioneer printer and book publisher of London in the fifteenth century. On
cal
Society,
and
first
Librarian of the Free Public Libraiy
Thomas Scott Key wrote the of Cincinnati, which was organized in his office when he Star-Spangled Banner.” Key gave her a copy in was clerk of the public schools. On the outbreak of the vessel, at the
handwriting.
Scotch-Irish lineage. Scotch-Irish
time
His
father,
James Caldwell, was of
The Caldwells were
who became
of the stock of
the pioneer preachers, educators
rebellion, rally,
on the
first
day of news of need
he headed the movement
organizer of the “
Home
for a
in Cincinnati,
popular
and was the
Guard,” and became Chairman of
—
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.EDIA. more
the
Committee of Safety
w as
effected for the defence of the city.
until a
For three months
he was Volunteer Adjutant General on
Burbank
staff of
By
secretary.
its
organ-
To
Louisiana.
like
avoid arrest he then fled to
December, 1848, landed in New Orleans, ensuing spring, he found himself in
in
In the
Ohio, in very straitened circumstances, and,
ac-
its
and the insurgent forces were scattered
burst,
chaff before the' winds.
America, and
General
He
in charge of the military of the city.
ized the Sanitary Fair, and was
then
perfect organization
131
during that
worked as a farm laborer in Miami county. His He organized the misery was then increased by an attack of ague, and he dethe treasury of the Sanitary Commission. Soldiers’ Family Fund, the Refugee Relief Association, cided to remove to Dayton, where he served a regular and was the active Secretary of the National Union Asso- apprenticeship at the trade of cabinet-making, and afterwards ciation, which was so effective in pubiic meetings and by worked at pattern-making, and made the patterns for the tivity
over a quarter of a million of dollars was placed in
All these services were
loyal publications.
year,
freely volun-
first
His labors were
teered for the public good without charge.
unremitting, his zeal unquenchable, and his services most
Mr. Caldwell was married
efficient.
daughter of Captain William
Their only child died
of the
))resent proprietor
No. 233 Fourth
Mr.
Caldwell
is
in
in
United Brethren printing establish-
Dayton, while engaging
study of law.
the
at
same time
of an attorney, while working assiduously at his mechanical
however,
tinued,
at
work
to
trade until
his
at
County Clerk’s
He was
office.
engaged
afterw'ards
bookkeejier in Dayton until his election in office of
to the
I
Probate Court of
Founder of the
who
Benevolent Union, was born
in
the
position
him peculiarly
parish of
followed the vocation of farming.
and from
his
While
—a
On
all
and graceful address.
subjects his opinions are his convictions, and while
he firmly upholds them, he has the utmost respect for the opinions of those with
thir-
whom
he
may
He
Catholic
Irish
is
endowed
and harmonize large which Inought him prominently be-
when he organized at Dayton the Benevolent Union, an association whose
fore the public in
subsequently went
gift
He
differ.
numbers, a natural
and mathematical education, with some
knowledge of Latin and German.
ardent
varied experience, ex-
located in the vicinity of his home, and there acquired a
1869,
mechan- ramifications now extend over nearly every State in the With him he Union, and into Canada, embracing among its members trade of clock and watch making, and at the many thousands of the most active and intelligent Irish
Clonmell to
ical
1872, and, be-
genial temper, an
wisdom of
tensive general reading, and an easy
in his tenth
seventh until his
for public life
also with the executive ability to control
to
w'as re-elected
in
four years as a
teenth year of age, he attended an excellent national school
substantial English
as a
1866 to the
He
1869, and again
in
nature balanced by the
His parents were Cornelius Dwyer and
lost his father,
con-
member of the Board of Montgomery county, Ohio, and Education in Dayton, introducing many improvements into Order of the Irish Catholic the public schools. He possesses many qualities which fit
Bridget (Burns) Dwyer, people in moderate circumstances,
year he
Probate Judge of the county.
same
sides, served for
Lawyer, Judge of the
P'ethard county, Tipperary, Ireland, February 2d,
1830.
He
1S60, from
w'hich time until 1863 he acted as Recording Clerk in the
Masonic Supply establishment.
street, Cincinnati.
WVER, HON. DENNIS,
in the
Pursuing his legal studies under the direction
occupation, he was admitted to the bar in 1857.
Templeton, of Cincinnati.
infancy.
in
Margaret,
1S45
in
steam-engine used
ment
live
man
with an uncle, a
of notable
genius and unusual scientific attainments.
learned the
same time improved
his education
destitution
and horrible
He enjoyed the friendship and conHon. C. L. Vallandigham, and w’as associated with him in the management of the Dayton Herald and Empire, from 1868 to 1870. In politics he has always
his
naturally re-
been
by attending school and
also through his acquaintance with a circle of scientific
scholastic disputants
who were
often guests at the house of
Having witnessed the
his relative.
suffering attendant
Catholics in America.
fidence of the late
and
on the famine,
s]:)irit
attached
to
the Democratic
party,
and frequently
volted against that tyrannous system of repression of Irish
has acted as Chairman of the Democratic Committees, and
commerce and
been also the representative of his party
Irish manufactures,
which was,
responsible for the calamitous visitation.
member
of the O'Connell Petitioning
and looked
to a
Law
calm and steady policy
in
a measure,
His uncle was a and Order Party,
for a final
ventions.
At the present time he
at the
officiates as
the National Board of Immigration of the
Benevolent Union.
redress
He was
married
May
various con-
President of
Irish
Catholic
9th,
1855, to
of grievances.
He, however, was le.ss circumspect. Fired with an enthusiastic patriotism more creditable to his heart than his judgment, he broke away from the restraining in-
A. Childs, daughter of John Childs and Mary fBingham) Childs, formerly of Richmond, Virginia. She died October i8lh, 1870, leaving issue of five children
fluence of his uncle, and fled to Slievenamon Mountain, to join O’Brien, Meagher, Dahoney, and the army of “Young
three sons and two daughters;
.^nnie
Icelanders ” gathered on the
pikes and clubs.
two other children having
Judge Dwyer is now in the meridian of manhood, and with his acknowledged energy, ability
died in infancy.
mountain, and armed with his Opposed by the strong power of the and
government, the bubble of rebellion shone for a few days,
popularity,
future. j
we
bespeak
for
him
a
distingui.shcd
EXC VCLOP.EDI A.
B lOGR API I ICAL
132 '
‘'/STE,
DAVID
K., Judge of the First Ohio Judicial regarded as a public loss. His career is closely identified wdth aud the oldest representative of the Cin- the growth and prosperity of Cincinnati. He was zealous
District,
cinnati bar,
Ann
son of Moses and
is tlie
New
Este,
make
secure public improvements, and to
in his efforts to
and was born Octo- the city attractive, not alone as a jilace of residence, but as Captain Este, his father, was a good field for capitalists, in tlie way of increasing mercanber 2 1st, 1785. The first building erected by severely wounded at the battle of Monmouth, and tile and commercial traffic. would have died from exposure but for the personal atten- him w'as his own residence on Main street. Subsequently tions of Colonel Hamilton, aide to General Washington, wlio he erected fourteen structures on the same thoroughfare and found him among the dead and dying, and provided him Ninth street, three on .Sycamore street, and one on Fourth He was subsequently street. In 1858 he reared the handsome stone residence on with food and medical assistance. of Morristown,
Jersey,
Revenue under President Adams, and died at West Fourth street, which he now occupies. In the fall David K., his son, received his of 1819 he was married to Lucy Ann, daughter of General She died in April, 1826, having elementary education in his native town, and entered William Henry Harrison. Princeton College, where he pursued the full course of been the mother of four children, three of whom died when In April, quite young. The surviving daughter became the wife of studies, and graduated with distinction in 1803. 1804, he commenced to read law in the office of Gabriel Joseph Reynolds, of Baltimore, and died in 1S69 at the age In May, Ford, Esc]., at Morristown, and after thorough preparation, of forty-seven years, leaving seven children. was admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court at Trenton, 1829, Mr. Este married Louisa Miller, daughter of Judge Collector of
the age of eighty-four.
in
He commenced
May, iSoS.
practice in Morristown at
once, and after continuing there one year as a lawyer, he
removed
making
Ohio
Cincinnati,
to
but
;
with the intention of
his practice a very general
one, covering
all
the
courts in that judicial district, including the United .States
Wiliiam Miller, by at the
and
whom
he had .seven children, four living
Judge Este
present time.
now
is
ninety ye.ars of age,
takes a great interest in the course of public affairs.
still
For many years he has been Senior Warden of Christ Church, of
which he
a leading member.
is
and Circuit Courts at Chillicothe, and subsequently Columbus, he opened an office in Hamilton in order to
District at
In the spring of 1814 he located in
be centrally located.
AWREXCE, DANIEL,
and established himself at the corner of Main streets, and by careful attention to his business
Cincinnati,
and Fifth
and the exercise of
rare
legal
1821.
ship continued until
Haines
and
an interest
to
In 1830
in his large
this partnership existed until
family of seven
lie
admitted Ezekiel
Mr. Este was made Presi-
rence, both natives of
from the early
settlers
who was engaged
dent Judge of Hamilton county, and after the organization
county, Ohio, in
of the Superior Court, in 1837, he was appointed
now known
Upon
its
judge.
the expiration of his term in the spring of 1S45, he
and professional
retired from public
life.
His career
at the
profoundly read
in
civil
and criminal law,
his
of the science being constantly improved by continuous research.
He
and gave
to all
He was
attention.
rare
power
sent
it
plain
for the
especially forcible as a pleader,
clearly to the jury
and
and had
analyzation of evidence in order to pre-
and the
court,
forming from
it
a
easily understood exposition of the continuity of
circumstances involved in the case. interpretation of
He was
the law, and logical
in
which were models of rhetorical expression.
skilful in the
his
arguments,
Plis decisions
from the bench were accepted as authority, and were characterized by an entire absence of personal bias.
He was
at all
times firm in his support of the integrity of the law.
These
qualities
won
community, and
for
him
the sincere respect of the entire
his retirement
from professional duties was
whose parents were
New Jersey,
and descended
Commonwealth.
chiefly in farming,
moved
His to
father,
Hamilton
1S17, and settled primarily in the place
He
died in this county, October
His mother’s decease occurred
in
May, 1845.
His early education was obtained in the log school-houses of the frontier settlements, which he attended when not
throe,
was as indefatigable a worker as a student, of the business intrusted to his care his close
of that
Glendale.
.as
22d, 1832.
He was knowledge busied
bar and on the bench was a distinguished one.
children,
Jonathan Lawrence and Tamzon (Massey) Law-
this business relation-
and increasing business,
Manufacturer,
Retired
Cumberland county. New Jersey, 1809, and was the eldest child in a
in
April 7th,
In 1S17 he formed a
Bellamy Stowi>i and
]rartnership with
he soon secured a
talent,
very large and influential clientage.
was born
his
in
farm and incidental labor.
At
the age of twenty-
he took the place of his deceased father as the head home, and for several years managed by incessant
industry to maintain the family in comfortable circumstances.
He was
then engaged continuously in farming until the
spring of 1836,
when he moved
to
Reading and established
himself in the tanning business, which he followed
same jdace
until
1871.
terest in the business
in
the
In this year he disposed of his in-
and invested
his
money
in real estate.
Since then he has not been actively employed in any enterprise of a mercantile character.
successively a
Whig
Politically,
and' a Republican, ami
he has been c.ast
his
first
Adams. Religiously, his feelthe Swedenborgian Church, al-
vote in f.xvor of John (luincy ings
incline
though
his
him
tow'ard
views are not circumscribed by the doctrines of
any particular denomination.
He
was married, November
BIOGRAPHICAL EXCVCLOREDIA. 3d, 1840, to Laura
1.
Fosler, a native of
whose parents were among the
Hamilton county,
earliest settlers of this sec-
one of the
tion of the State, her father being
first
Judges of
vising
33
work secured him the reputation of
and large contracts were placed
in
a ma.ster builder,
hands.
his
In
the
period from 1852 to 1863 he found time fur the study of
He was theology, and often preached. He is a fluent and eloquent Mary P'. (Cortelyon) speaker, and his sermons from the pulpit were very efWoodruff, a native of Plamilton county, whose parents were fective. With an excellent knowledge of the law, he pracBy this mar- tised for some time with success, and for five years acted as also among the first settlei-s of that county. Mary Elizabeth, born October Justice of the Peace. In 1862 he became identified with riage he has two children nth, 1868, and Daniel Lawrence, born January 18th, 1873. the 83d Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and served the Territorial Court; she died in April, 1865.
again married
March, 1866,
in
to
:
command
with that
He
capacity of soldier and
dual
the
in
chaplain for one year.
is
member
a
of the
Cumberland
Presbyterian Church, and has been an active and consci-
ARTHUR CARR,
iITTER,
I’
Mechanic, Farmer
manner
Abraham and Mary Ann (Nicholas)
great and varied one, his
Ritter.
The
former was a native of Hagerstown, Maryland,
who
succe.ssively settled
and
counties,
until
remainder of
in
Somerset and Westmoreland
he reached the age of
lowed the avocation of his life
a joiner
forty-five
and carpenter.
he was engaged
he
fol-
During the In 1816
in farming.
he went to Cincinnati, making the journey on the Ohio river
on a
hold
effects.
went on
flat-boat,
his
where he
churchman since 1846.
entious
and Lawyer, was born, Februaiy 24th, iSlo, in Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, being the sixth of thirteen children, whose parents were
He farm
lived
which carried
his family
and
his house-
resided two years in Cincinnati, and then
lican, his
He
a gentleman of great sociability, and to
activity,
who approach
all
life
him.
is
a
Andrew
Repub-
Jackson.
courteous in
is
His experience
while his knowledge, gathered
not
alone from
books, though 'he has always been a close student,
prehensive in
He was
scope.
its
com-
is
married, July 29th, 1830,
daughter of Samuel Thompson,
to .Sarah,
a
is
being a record of ceaseless
who descended
from Price Thompson, a soldier of the Revolution and one of the original pioneers of Hamilton as early as
1
790
county, Ohio, having
Sycamore township, on a section
settled in
of land belonging to the celebrated purchase.
Sycamore township, Hamilton county, until his death, August 17th, 1828. He in
served as captain of a
rifle
company
in the
second war with
ORBERT, JAMES
Great Britain, and proved a true marksman and a gallant
commander.
is
In politics he
vote having been cast for
first
Prior to his departure to
Ohio he served
Justice of the Peace, filling that office for eight years.
was unusually well read
of this position with energy' and intelligence.
He
in
Ohio
He
received
and came
1818 and taught for some years
in
academy
left, at
Bucks county,
at
Lebanon, Warren
in
to
an
having
county,
under his instruction several who have since bemarked characteristics of their parents, of which longevity was one. come men of great distinction in various walks of life, The members of both the Ritter and Nicholas families usually among them the great astronomer. General O. M. Mitchell, attained a ripe age, and were all substantial citizens of the who founded the Observatory at Cincinnati. He cairre to communities in which they resided. Mrs. Ritter was a Springfield in the autumn of 1824, and for several years his death, thirteen children,
n.itive
who
was born
his education at Princeton College,
Pie
and performed the duties
in law,
I>.,
Pennsylvania, February 25th, 1796.
as
inherited the
all
of Kings county, Virginia,
who
emigrated with her
was engaged
in
teaching the languages, and afterwards,
to the bar, was associated with GenSampson Mason in the practice of law. He succeeded May 2d, 1872, at Sharonville, Ohio. The educational fa- Joseph R. Swan as Judge of the Court of Common Pleas cilities enjoyed by Arthur Carr Ritter in early life were very for the Twelfth Judicial Circuit of Ohio, and was also Profew, but this lacking was made up by his close application bate Judge for Clark county for several years. He was a
parents to Somerset county, Pennsylvania, and was there
married,
when
sixteen years of age, to
to substantial text-books at
laborer
when
a youth, and
home.
when
Abraham.
He was
She died,
an industrious
eighteen began the trade
of a carpenter and joiner, which he assiduously followed for thirty-five
years in
Sycamore township, Hamilton county.
having been admitted eral
man
of amiable disposition, deep religious convictions and
of the purest integrity of character.
His scholastic
ments were of the highest order, and
his literary taste
very
fine.
He was
a
trran
attain-
was
of the most retiring and unob-
In 1864 he turned his attention wholly to wagon-making trusive irrodesty, yet firnr and immovable by love and and general mechanical efforts, and closely applied himself popular favor, or fear of man, in his devotion to u hat he to this business until 1872, when he renounced the cares regarded as the right and truth. He lifted up his voice of active life and retired to enjoy the competency amassed and wielded his pen at an early date against op]rressiotr,
by his enterprise, energy and economy. He had not long pursued the trade of carpentering before his enterprise and mathematical accuracy in making estimates and in super-
when no
small amount of cour-age was requisite to maintairr
his views, but
which have
sirrce
Sampson Mason, who was
a
become popular.
man
rrever
General
superlative
of
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA.
134
spoke of him
praise,
convened one
whom
denly,
a meeting of the Springfield bar,
at
sympathy and
to pass resolutions of
no mode of praise could
May
15th, 1859,
New
He
died sud-
on the steamer “ Tecumseh,” on the
New
Mississippi river, near
sage up from
flatter.
respect, as
Madrid, Missouri, on the pas-
Orleans, where he had gone \tdth his
wife to bring liome their eldest son,
He was
a long time in that city.
who had been
sick for
He
C. Winans, of Lebanon,
Hannah
C., daughter of Dr.
John
He
machines.
quite an inventor, and has
is
made
several
important improvements in reapers and threshing-machines,
among which may be named a combined reaper and vester, which may be used as a side-delivery reaper harvester,
upon which the binders ride
able reel for harvesters
mark and an
buried with every
of affection and esteem from the bar and community. married, July 31st, 1821,
extensive and flourishing business in reapers and threshing-
;
haror a
to
bind; an adjust-
an improvement
in horse-powers,
While
adjustable side-rest for threshing-machines.
'holding the office of Auditor he studied law, and after
tending a course of lectures received his diploma
at
at-
the
Warren county, Ohio, and with her Cincinnati Law College. Subsequently, while editing the whom survive him, two sons and Chronicle, he practised his profession for a time, meeting
liad eight children, five of
three daughters.
with
fair
success as a lawyer, until he concluded to turn his
more
attention to a business
the present time he
Si OORMAN, CHRISTIAN
in
harmony with
member
his tastes.
At
of the City Council of
L., Secretary, Treasurer
Bellaire.
His more prominent characteristics are energy,
integrity
and a comprehensive knowledge of the require-
also
His parents
were natives of Pennsylvania.
He
was a carpenter. native State until
1834,
attended
when he moved with
ments of business and public 1st,
and resided there for a brief period
school
night-school
in
his
leisure
hours.
in
Wheeling, where he worked until 1850.
He
as a
1846 he settled
ROWN, WILLIAM
journeyman
at
cabinet-
Ohio, and labored as a builder and house carpenter until
expiration of his term.
1842.
In
1861
he
of the
office
by
(Scott)
On
Brown and
son of John
a grandson
is
the paternal side he
is
Scott, of
a grand-
Elizabeth Hutchins, of Norfolk,
His parents were William Ballard Brown, an
agriculturist of
this
the maternal side he
numerous descendants of the Rev. James
Virginia.
filled
On
Prince W’illiam county.
of the Peace, he
the
partner of the firm
of John Cail Scott, of Alexandiia, Virginia, one
re-elected
at
P., senior
Brown Brothers, Abstractors of Titles and General Land and Loan Agents, was born in Circleville, Pickaway county, Ohio, March 25th, of
at
then removed to Belmont county,
1858, when, after having served as Justice was elected Auditor of the county, and
Virginia.
his
McGrew, and working In
married, April
West
his parents to
journeyman, while attending a
also as
He was
His father
1846, during that time learning the
until
trade of cabinetmaker under John
life.
1846, to Martha Ebberl, of Wellsburg,
Columbiana county, Ohio, where he again attended school until 183S. He then removed to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
making
a
and General Manager of the Bellaire Manufacturing Company, was born in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, October 2Sth, 1825.
gD
is
Brown.
Pickaway and Franklin counties, and Jane in the I lis earlier education was obtained
common schools located near his home, and at eighteen 43d Regiment of Ohio Volunteers, for which years of age he graduated from the High School of Columbody he had recruited a company. He remained in active bus, and devoted the two succeeding years to teaching F'rom 1S62 to 1866 he served in the capacity of service until July, 1862, when he was detailed on recruiting school. service. Subsequently he was appointed Lieutenant-Colonel Assistant Engineer for the city of Columbus, and at the of the 98 h Regiment of Ohio Volunteers, and with that expiration of that time was elected Surveyor of Franklin deputy and entered the army of the United States as Captain
in
the
body look part in the battle of Perryville, in October, 1S62, county. This office he held for a period of six years, while in which engagement Colonel Webster was killed and he his thorough performance of the duties attached to the surwas promoted to the rank of Colonel in the same regiment, veyorship gave a lasting direction to his aims and energies, and remained in active service with it until the command and was also instrumental in fitting him for the profession was reduced to 180 men, when, in the fall of 1863, he in which he was afterward engaged. Being joined by his He then returned to his home and brother, in 1S69, they established the business in which he resigned his position. took a prominent part in the political campaign of 1863. is stiil an active worker, under the firm-style of Brown I.ater,
he installed himself
in
the editorial
chair of the
Be.'mont Chronicle, which he had purchased in 1861, and controlled
its
sold, in 1870.
ized
the
affairs
1873.
publication from the
He
Bellaire
finally
removed
Manufacturing
fall
to
of 1863 until Bellaire,
it
was and
and organ-
this date
Beginning
their business career
nation
of old
he has acted as Secretary, Treasurer specialty, and
and General Manager of the company, which controls an
States, East
on a compara-
by steady application
their dealings, established
integrity in all
connections of any
othc house
land
claims
capital.
they have
in this line their relations
and West.
the largest
of the kind in the State,
Company, over whose requiring an extensive investment of
he presided as President and Superintendent until Since
Brothers.
tively limited basis, the brothers have,
The exami-
attended to as a
extend into
many
In connection with their business
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOIVEDIA. of abstracting they have introduced the negotiation of loans
on
and by
their extensive acquaint-
and persons, and
their very conservative
mortgage
first
security,
ance with
titles
manner of
business, are building
agency
He was
up the most extensive loan
trust
funds in central Ohio.
married, April 30th, 1S73,
Louisa IL, a grand-
investment of
for the
Hess,
daughter of Balser
one of the State;
He
was married
1834
in
Hannah
to
Hill, a
Hamilton county, and daughter of Samuel
native of
earlier pioneers
and
Hill,
settlers of this section of the
she died in 1S43, leaving issue of three children.
was again married
1847 to Jemima Hunt, a native
in
of Plamilton county, Ohio, with
whom
he
is
now
living.
pioneer
respected
highly
the
He
deacon.
135
family of Clinton township, Franklin county, Ohio.
ILLIAMSON, DAVID, Edge
ROWX, JAMES FINLEY, of
Brown
partner of the firm county,
New
stock, his father, P.
He
mon
was educated
at the
schools of Columbus, and subsequently, from
com-
1867
Hunterdon
in
of Revolutionary
John Williamson, having served
under Generals Greene and Washington,
Brown, the senior partner before mentioned, was born in Circleville, Pickaway county, Ohio, Feb-
He comes
Jersey.
Brothers, Abstractors of Titles and
Commissioners of Deeds, brother of William
ruary 4th, 1848.
Tool Maker, was
born on the 6th of June, 1808,
Revolutionary army and participated
On
of Trenton.
from the
David was descended
the father's side
earliest settlers of
in the
in the battle
Manhattan Island, and on the
to
mother’s side was of English descent. When the boy was was a .student in the Yirginia Military Institute. In three years old his father emigrated to what was then the 1869 he became associated with his brother in the business far West, and with his family settled in Colerain township, 1869,
which, since sustained by them,
now
is
of such a vast
extent.
The
Hamilton county, Ohio. Trees were
felled,
the pioneer
efforts of
first
were directed towards developing a farm stumps uprooted and
all
in
the
the toil
forest.
incident
to a new settlement in those days undertaken and gone M. D., the oldest of nine through with and the result was a pleasant and comfortchildren whose parents were Robert Fuse and able home evoked from the wilderness in a very short time. Mary (Jones) Luse, was born in Butler county, The pioneer’s sons were all stalwart, muscular boys, and with
USE,
ALEXANDER
B.,
;
Ohio, I'ebruary 4th, 1809. of
New
through
life
county’, Pennsylvania,
and
near that
removing
after
he remained there
city,
on the
Miami
I.ittle
to Butler county, Ohio,
Reily, in that county, tant, into
pursuits
Washington
to
for several years,
and
in
and
career
his
connected with public
Later, he re-
on a farm near
1814 moved seven miles
he was more or affairs,
and
dis-
for
a
less extensively
number
of years
His mother, also a native
officiated as Justice of the Peace.
New
river.
settled
Indiana, where he remained until his decease.
Throughout
of
father, a native
agricultural
1806 came to Cincinnati, Ohio, settling ultimately
in
moved
;
His
followed
Jersey,
Jersey, died in Franklin county, Indiana, in 1866.
His early education was limited, and received
their aid the father
accomplished
results that at
first
thought
would seem impossible. In the midst of such experiences and surroundings young David grew up. So far as school opportunities were concerned his educational advantages
limited; but of the education that self-reliance, contact with nature
had
his
share,
full
and
profited
were comes with hard work,
and with natural men, he by it to the utmost. In
1825, in accordance with his
own
ticed to the trade of edge-tool
making
desire,
he was appren-
in Cincinnati.
He
learned his trade, and, as might be expected, he learned
thoroughly, becoming a most
now among
the old settlers
may be found many
He
old axe bearing his stamp.
it
Even
mechanic.
finished
a favorite
has never, in the course of
age of seventeen, on the death of his father,
com- his life, held any public office, but was always active and At the prominent in the ranks of the old Whig party, and still he began life ranks himself as a Henry Clay Whig. When he was
on his own resources as a farm laborer.
While
mon
schools located in the vicinity of his
at
the
home.
in
his
twentieth year he began the reading of medicine, under the
William McGill, M. D., a well-known pracof Hamilton county, with whom he continued his
twenty-five years old he married Elizabeth Huston, daughter of
Paul Huston, an early settler and thriving farmer of
Of
marriage four children, two
instruction of
Hamilton county.
titioner
sons and two daughters, were the result.
medical studies for a period of three years. During this time he attended lectures at the Ohio Medical College of Cincinnati, fession at
and
in
Mount
cessfully engaged.
in
1858.
in the life
where he has since been sucPolitically, he is attached to the Repub-
tirely
is
which he has been
a
member
for
of the Christian
twenty years a zealous
notable event
In that year he started with an emigrant train for
California, going over the plains
Pleasant,
A
of the eldest son, Paul IL, in the year
1832 entered on the practice of his pro-
lican party, and, religiously,
Church,
occurred
this
unexplored route.
The
and mountains by an en-
train
was attacked by the
Indians and most of the party were massacred.
Williamson escaped and returned entire trip
on
foot,
and arriving
to the States,
safely at
home.
Young
making the
He
is
now
;
BIOGRAnilCAL EN'CVCLOIVEDIA.
136
Recorder of Hamilton County. has been quite prominent
now
first
Deputy
The youngest
son, Albert,
and
in the real estate business,
is
and valuable.
prosperity he
in his brother’s office.
became extensome changes and a continued
dealings with his customers, his trade soon sive
After
finally
admitted
his
son, Patterson, with a
partnership interest, under the firm-name of Samuel
mings Machinist, was born
November
Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia,
in
i6th,
His father was an Irish Protestant and
1809.
His mother
one of the pioneers of the country.
of
Eor the
Son.
first
Cum-
twenty years the busine.ss of
house was mainly in brass work and in the building
this
^UMMINGS, SAMUEL,
&
fire
engines and light machinery.
wholly engaged
It
the manufacture of
in
machinery and stop-valves the most safely conducted
is
now
almost
hydrants, light
fire
for water-works, and is one of and reputable establishments of
New Jersey, and was of its kind in the country. In 1850 he purchased property in At the age of seven young Newport, Kentucky, and has since been a resident of that Cummings left home and commenced life for himself. State. He soon became interested in the civil affairs of Much of the journey afoot, and with no ordinary hard- Newport. He was elected President of the City Council ships, he made his way from his home in Philadelphia to of Newport in 1S69. In 1871 he was re-elected, serving was born
Trenton,
at
English origin.
Pittsburgh.
After trying several things unsuccessfully until
four years.
in all
During
his last term
he inaugurated the
movement for the construction of the Newport Water-works. regularly indentured to James Patterson to learn the lock To him, more than any man, are the people of Newport, and whitesmithing trade. His father had now been some doubtless, indebted for their fine water-works and the time dead, and his mother had removed to Pittsburgh. rejection of the Holly experiment. Since retiring from his M’ith some exciting adventures he managed to move position in the city government, in 1873, interested smoothly on, and, by the time he was twenty years of age, himself in the affairs of his own home and business. In went over
his fourteenth year, he
had learned discharged
And
$200.
first
Mr.
he man-
year’s labor
and
the nucleus of his fortune,
Now,
at
is
that this really
no time
after
he returned
Patterson,
to
foundry of John Tatem.
In
after
married
is
of Mar-
a remark-
certainly ranks pre-eminently as a self-made
is
to-day a fine specimen of a well-preserved
commenced work
business of the
city,
fell
he returned to Pittsburgh; but
He now commenced for himself, & Alexander. He soon
Parker
in
connection with Messrs.
found
partnership and
this
a son of
to his
Pleas,
and Harriet
liri
merly of that section.
was born, June and
by occupation both
in
(Philliiis) Tuttle, for-
His father was a farmer Connecticut and
in
Ohio.
George enjoyed the advantages of being educated in the excellent New England common schools, and also attended the academy, but, the means of his parents being limited, he had to forego the collegiate course, and he owes the
main part of become an employe and studious it
advantage
This was the old brass foundiy and
same house.
is
a
in the
M., I.awyer and Judge
Common
19th, 1S15, in Litchfield county, Connecticut,
to
the lirass
in
1S32 his young wife
GEORGE
of the Court of
his
of the same year he again began business in Cincinnati.
withdraw from
ffUTTLE, HON.
work
to
discouraged, and the terrible malady having prostr.ated the
the
Mr. Cummings’ career
man, with an ample fortune, the work of his own hands, and a reputation of which he may justly be proud.
After this great misfortune, being
victim to the cholera.
in
died of con-
widow
He
He
man.
who
a trip
marriage he removed
after his
Cincinnati, and immediately
to
maduke Doddsworlh. able one.
Eliza Mason,
to
In 1S72 he married the
in 1867.
after did
making
Pittsburgh and resumed
and was soon
Soon
daughter, Sarah.
fall
1838 he was married sumption
parts of the country, with a view to bettering
his condition, for
He
which he kept up
a notable fact
ever have less than the $200.
to different
former employer,
for his
rigid self-culture,
La the course of the
to save
became lie
journeyman
as a
began a course of
aged
and
He now
the obligations of his indenture.
day, which was fine wages for the times.
at a dollar a
for years.
Pirminghani and was
trade, obtained a passable education
his
all
commenced work also
to
in the
own
persevering exertions
He commenced
the study of the law
his education to his
habits.
spring of 1837, in the office of Governor William S.
machine shop of W. G. Berry. The manufacture of locks Hollibird, at Winsted, Connecticut, and in 1841, having meanwhile been admitted to the bar, commenced the pracwas now becoming a more important interest in the West and having become acquainted with a valuable new lock, tice of his profession in Ashtabula county, Ohio, his father manufactured in Cincinnati, he went to Pittsburgh, where \\ith his family having removed to that .State two years he remained several years and established in
the manufacture of this lock.
manently P'ront
to Cincinnati
street
shop,
Alexander soon to
him.
By
returned per-
and commenced business
with
Mr. Alexander
after dying, the business
careful,
his father-in-law
He now
judicious
as
was
in the old
his
partner.
left
entirely
management and honest
previously.
1844,
He
continued there until
when he removed
to
Warren.
the beginning of
In
elected President Judge of the Court of
1866 he was
Common
Pleas,
which position he most ably filled and for which he was most eminently qualified he here gained an enviable repu;
tation with the bar of Ohio.
In order, however, to devote
PuA>.
C9
lUOGRArillCAL LNCVCLOr.LDIA. himself exclusively lo the ]iractice of his profession, he
signed his
office,
January
has been appointed by the mayor of the city to
thus
Ohio, over which the present Chief-Justice of the United States
Supreme Court was then the presiding
convention was composed of the leading
and many of the
best
life,
has been an actively busy one, characterized by
far,
earned.
of the State,
minds of Ohio took part
his
energy, industry, labor well directed and prosperity well
This
officer.
men
tem-
fill
Altogether
Judge.
Police
porarily the office of
Convention of
to represent his district in the Constitutional
Several limes he
of Cincinnati for a term of three years.
re-
In 1S73 he was chosen
1872.
I'-t,
137
in the pro-
Judge Tuttle acted on several of the most important committees, and was prominent in all its councils ceedings.
during
He
and a day.
entire session of a year
its
ANFORD, HON. LORENZO, Member gress,
is still
was born
of Con-
Belmont county, Ohio, on
in
in the vigor of
October l8th, 1829, his father coming from the
crative practice.
same
manhood, and enjoys an extensive and luHe was married in 1852 to Julia, daughter of Jeremiah Sullivan, of Warren, Trumbull county, where
mother
from
Chester
The former was
a promi-
'
MOSES FLEMING, loih of September,
1839, in
common
Lorenzo attended the education
Lawyer, was born
fidelity.
and llnished
schools,
When
Waynesburg, Pennsylvania.
at
the
trust,
which he discharged with intelligence and
duties of
on the
his
nent farmer, and held several offices of
he has since resided.
ILSOX,
and
county,
county, Pennsylvania.
his
twenty-
three years of age he began lo read law at St. Clairsville,
Franklin,
Warren county, Ohio. He is of Irish descent, under Carlo C. Carroll, and was admitted to the bar in In 1856 he entered the political arena as a Whig, 1854. his ancestors having come to this country from county Antrim, Ireland. His maternal grand- and suiiported P'illmore for the Presidency, and was upon ,
Colonel
father,
Bigger, was
John
city,
and
that city,
in
from which in
institution
he graduated
in
'
in
that occupation until
He
enlisted as a jirivate
.August
He
He
following.
company
raising a
i860.
W'as
promoted
ill
Miami University, where he remained another year. In month of August, 1862, he entered the land office of Taft & Perry, and in the month of October following he
his support of
Lincoln
the
He
Law
menced
May
that
School of the Cincinnati College.
State
to
in in
Infantry,
In
1862 he
He
health.
was active and
1864,
ist,
influential in
i860 and 1864, and was one of
in
Ohio which gave the vote of
Mr. Lincoln.
In
1872, he
October,
was
elected on the Republican ticket to the Forty-third Congress from the Sixteenth
he was admitted to the bar, and com-
the practice of law in Cincinnati.
Ohio Volunteer
15th
the electoral delegation from
graduated EL. B. in April, 1864, and in the succeed-
ing month of
assisted
position of Cajitain, w hich he resigned, August
on account of
matriculated at the
home and
First-Lieutenancy, and then to the
to the
After a year passed at Princeton he entered the
In-
and was mustered out
returned
the
for
Ohio Volunteer
17th
the
in
of wdiich he was elected Second-Lieutenant.
In that year he entered the freshman class in Princeton College.
1859, vacating the office in
in
fantry, for three months’ service,
teaching in the Twelfth District School in
and continued
County, and was re-elected
In
it.
Belmont
Prosecuting Attorney for
1861, prior to the exjiiration of his term, to join the army.
.School, of
1857.
he was elected
1857
schools of the
due lime entered the Hughes High
then engaged Cincinnati,
common
the
at
with the
affiliated
Republican party, and has ever since acted with
Warren county, Ohio, while his paternal ancestors settled in Dauphin county, Pennsylvania. His father removed from Pennsylvania to Warren county in In 184.7, "’hen Moses was eight years old, he re1830. moved with his parents to Cincinnati. Here he went earliest settlers of
through the course of study
Afterwards he
the Stale electoral ticket.
one of the
Ohio
who
been C. L. Poorman,
opponent having
District, his
ran as a
Liberal
Republican.
1866, he was appointed Assistant Prosecuting Attorney for
1874 he was re-elected, his opponent having been on Mr. Danford is the successor of this occasion H. Boyle.
Hamilton County, which position he held until January, In the month of April in that year he was a candi1869.
constituency and
In November,
In
Hon. John A. Bingham, and has served the
date on the Independent ticket for the position of Prose-
cuting .Attorney of the Police Court. the contest,
and achieved the
position,
He was
successful in
which he held
He
large
skill,
and
as
an orator his speeches
bench, evince an ability
by few men.
accorded him
He
is
for
for his successful
career, as
of Jefferson county, Ohio,
who
held the position for two years.
On October
was married
elected one of the
18
June, 1873,
Board of .Managers of the Public Library
the
trenchant argument possessed
On
In
in
deserving of the credit and esteem
Dodds, under the firm-name of Dodds & Wilson. In the month of .April, 1872, he was elected a member of the Board of Education from the Twentieth Ward, and J.
interests of his
with distinguished
of Representatives, as well as his addresses to the
,
I
at
has a wdde reputation as a lawyer of great
learning and
House
until
April, 1871. After leaving the office he devoted his whole lime and attention to his private practice. On the 1st of November, 1871, he associated in partnership with Hon.
Ozra
ability. *
people
the
it
is
the result
of constantly exercised energy directed by noble purposes.
of
October 7th, 1858, he was married 27th, 1870, he
St. Clairsville,
Ohio.
to
Annie
died, October lo
If.
Cook,
24tli,
1867,
Mary M. Adams,
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOICKDIA.
'38
ENNEDV, JAMES CHARLES, in
M.
D.,
was boin
Butler county, Pennsylvania, P'ebruary iitb,
He was
1S09.
the fourth chihl in a family of
whose parents were Robert Kennedy and Margaret (White) Kennedy. His father, a native of Westmoreland county, Penneight children,
sylvania, followed through life agricultural
Ohio in 181 1 and settled in Brown county, on a He was noted as an intelligent farm near Georgetown. and public-spirited citizen, and fur a number of years held
moved
to
His decease occurred
the office of Magistrate.
in
1849.
His mother, also a native of Westmoreland county, Penn-
was a daughter of Thomas White, a captain
sylvania,
in the
His ancestors on both sides of the
Revolutionary army.
house were likewise identified with the cause of the
patriots.
Until he had attained his majority he assisted his father in the farm labors, having in the
meantime secured
a limited
by attending, through the winter months, the
education
In
sessions of a country school.
1829 he began the study
of medicine under the preceptorship of Dr. Ivdward ton, at Felicity,
Clermont county, and pursued
assiduously until
In this
1832.
his studies
year he entered on the
of his profession, and, with the exception of two
winters,
was subsequently occupied by professional labors
Felicity until
During the winters of 1837-38,
1854.
however, he attended a course of lectures
the Medical
at
College of Ohio, graduating from that institution.
he settled
in Batavia,
and
in the control of a practice at
He in
In 1S54
since resided there, engaged
h.as
once extensive and lucrative.
has uniformly avoided offices of apolitical nature, but
1847 was elected a
served with
body
this
member for
of the
one term.
Ohio Legislature, and He was also one of
with the insurgent patriots. winter-quarters at Trenton,
in
Washington, they made a
prior to their capture by General
descent on his property, and appropriated to their his cattle
He
and other valuable possessions.
terdon county.
New
own
New
Jersey and
daughter of Rodger Larrison, an active participant
She died
Revolutionary war.
was
cation
and received
limited,
His
1823.
in
the
at
went
whom
Jersey, with
about three years, during
He
years as an apprentice under
Trenton,
New
Jersey, at the
Lambertville,
at
the ensuing year.
Jersey and
in
New York
Up
city,
Hamilton county.
He
;
of
tiade, afterward
New
Jersey,
where
he remained
there
New
1811 he worked in
to
where, July 3d, iSii, he settled ship,
Luke Hebdon,
shoemaking
harness-making
in
he remained
subsequently worked
for three
he engaged also
in his
time attending school for
this
a term of three months or more.
opening a .shoe-shop
schools
While
with Judge John Corryell, of
to live
New
Hunterdon county. for
the
in
earlier edu-
common
located in the neighborhood of his home. twelfth year he
uses
Hun-
died in
Jersey, in 1814, at the age of seventy-
His mother was a native of
years.
New- through
(iractice
in
While the Hessians were
He two
pursuits.
common
took an active part in
removing finally in
later
to
Ohio,
Colcrain town-
travelled west on foot through
to Pittsburgh, and thence on a flat-boat to where he landed July 2d. The battle of Tippecanoe, in the second war with England, had been fought, and becoming imbued with the prevaletit popular excite-
Pennsylvania
Cincinnati,
ment he entered the volunteer service in 1812, under the command of General Hull, and was taken prisoner at the At the expiratime of that officer’s surrender at Detroit. tion of a few weeks he was released on parole, and returned to his home in Hamilton county, where he has since re-
Ohio Legislature to escort sided, occupied mostly in agricultural pursuits. In 1821-22 Hamer, who died of disease he served as constable and assessor of chattel property, and Mexico. He has always mani- in 1823 was elected Justice of the Peace, which office he
the committee appointed by the the remains of General T. L.
contracted on the field in
and
fested a generous
intelligent interest in educational
and
held for nine
years.
He
also
held
at various
times the
Township Clerk and Assessor of Real In 1824 journals many articles, several of which have elicited Estate for Colerain and Springfield Townships. special attention from the leading men of the medical pro- he was elected Treasurer of the .School and Ministerial fession. Politically, he is an inflexible Democrat of the Funds of his township, which office he held for twentyIn 1838 he was elected a director in the ColeJackson school. He was baptized in the Methodist Church, five years. but his present views are not circumscribed by the doctrines rain, Oxford & Brookville Turnpike Company, whose road was then in the course of construction. In 1840 he was of any particular church. elected Treasurer of said company, which position he held, with the exception of a year or two, until November, 1865. public enterprises, and has contributed to various medical
offices
Upon
cGILL,
STEWART,
of trustee.
retiring from said position the
committee (consisting
of the president, secretary and one other director) appointed
was born near Trenton, New Jersey, February iSth, 17S8, and was the oldest of eight children, whose parents
satisfaction that in “ accounts
were
nearly a quarter of a century, and amounting to several
Neill
McGill.
McGill
The
Agriculturist,
and
Elizabeth
(Larrison)
former, a native of county Antrim,
near Belfast, Ireland, was engaged through in school-teaching
man emigrated
to
and surveying, and while America.
He
still
life
a young
sympathized with the
colonies in their resistance to the rule of Great Britain, and
to settle his
accounts passed a resolution expressing their
hundred thousand
dollars,
extending over a period of
no discrepancy had ever ap-
peared, nor had a single dime ever been unaccounted for.”
He
h.as
also settled the estates of
than any other
he
is
man
more deceased persons
in his part of the county.
Politically,
attached to the Republican party; he cast his
first
*•
3P
r
i •I*
f.
;
1
i
/
i
\
•"
-If
E
s
-
.
k.* I
J
BIOGRAPHICAL EXCVCLOP.EDIA. In 1824 he voted
vote for President for James Monroe.
John Quincy Adams. In 1826 or strong Jackson man and took a leading
he became a
’27
for
part in organizing
the Jackson or Democratic party in Colerain township, and was a delegate to the first convention held by that party in
He
Hamilton countv.
and again
voted for Oeneial Jackson
approving the course
in 1833, not
But
in 1832.
1828,
in
General Jackson had taken, he left the Democratic and joined the Whig party, to which he adhered until it died, In his younger days after which he became a Republican.
he took an active part
belongs the credit of having introduced and maintained noble character of building lor which Cincinnati
that
celebrated and of which
is
it
The
justly proud.
is
buildings
erected by Mr. Wilson are too numerous to be here mentioned in detail ; we give only the following The Ohio Life 8; Trust Company Bank, the Hamilton county Court :
House, the Cincinnati Post-Office, the Jewish Temple, the of Mr. George K. Shoenberger, the Dexter Chapel and entrance to .Spring Grove Cemetery, etc., etc.
villa
although he never sought
in politics,
1833 he was nominated as a candidate lor County Commissioner, but was defeated by a fevv^ votes. In 1836 the Whigs nominated him for the Legislature, but In
office.
He was
he was not elected. afterwards for the same
office,
1824.
was
in
moved from Maryland
He was
tober 5th, 1823, to Sarah Johnson,
widow
Johnson and daughter of Elias Hedges, an early settler from Morris county. New Jersey, who settled at Dunlap’s on the Big Miami
whom
living, a
river,
Hamilton county,
he has had three children, two of
He
son and daughter.
whom
his wife
lost
in 1805,
are
in
still
April,
his son, Amzi McGill, 1854, and has never married again has been twice elected a member of the House of Repre-
into
and has served one term as County
Commi.ssioner of Hamilton County, Ohio, and
has held
He
various other tiusts of greater or less importance.
man
always been a veiy industrious and temperate respects,
and now
at
has
in all
the age of nearly eighty-eight years
earlier education
His in
father, Isaac
was obtained
his native county.
life.
the schools located
in
At the age of seventeen he entered
Washington College, where he completed his studies. Upon leaving school he was engaged in teaching until 1S46,
the
when he
as a volunteer in a
enlisted
from Steubenville, and was assigned
While connected with the
General Taylor and participated
moras
to
Buena
company that went 3d Ohio Regicapacity he was dis-
to the
After serving one year in this
ment.
charged.
.army he served under
in the
march from Mata-
After his return he resumed his
Vista.
avocation of teaching, and in the spring of 1850
moved
to
Harrison county, Ohio, where he taught school and studied
law
enjoys good health and sound mental faculties.
His
Richardson, was engaged in farming throughout his
;
sentatives of Ohio,
Pennsylvania and
settled opposite Steubenville.
married, Ocof Alexander
Law-
Washington county, Pennsylvania, May 25th, His ancestors, four generations removed,
in
at
but as his party
P.,
yer and ex-Attorney-General of Ohio, was born
nominated several times
the minority he never was elected.
•Station,
ICHARDSON, GENERAL WILLIAM
sometimes accepting and
others declining to be a candidate;
by
139
at the
same time
until
Llpon finishing
August, 1852.
Turner he was admitted to the spring of 1853 removed to ^Yoodsfield,
his legal studies with Allen C.
the bar, and in
Monroe county, where he
ILSON, J.AMES cinnati,
1828.
K., .Architect,
is
a native of Cin-
the following year the
filled until
position of Principal of the Woodsfield .Seminary.
Later,
where he was born on the nth of April,
he entered on the practice of his profession, and
Early exhibiting a
was elected Prosecuting Attorney for Monroe county, and was re-elected to the same [losition in 1S57, and again in
decided talent for
drawing, his father (then a merchant of Philadelphia) was induced to remove him from Dr.
1S59, holding the office until
1S61,
Crawford’s school and to place him with Mr.
service of the United States.
Also,
in
when he entered at
1855
the
the outbreak of the
war of the rebellion, he was a Brigadier-General in the Ohio With Mr. Mountain, and subsequently with militia. Immediately after the attack on Fort Sumter he •Mr. Martin E. Thompson, of New York, and with Mr. succeeded in raising two companies, but before he could James Renwick, also of New York, he continued till 1S47, secure their acceptance Ohio’s quota was filled. The when a year’s residence in Europe completed his profes- troops, however, changed the term of their enlistment from Charles H. Mountain, then a prominent architect of the
Quaker
City.
sional studies.
Returning from Europe in the spring of
1848 he immediately sought out his native tablished himself in an excellent practice,
married to Yirginia Keys, of Cincinnati. visited
actively
and
in
Ohio
1852 was
June
once
In 1858 he again
Europe, and from that to the present time has been
and steadily engaged.
profession called
upon
to select
most worthy representative of architecture one would be Mr. Wilson, for
to
nelcy.
months
to three years,
Infantry, of
and with
loth, 1862,
that
ment.
May
right
shoulder
West,
that
casualty deprived
in the
to all others
then
freed
he was
rank proceeded
he was promoted
and
him more than
and were assigned
which regiment
to the 25th
made
Major.
1861, he was promoted to a Lieutenant-Colo-
loth,
as the best
Undoubtedly, were the
some one
three
es-
city, at
2d, at
1863, he the
of
until
May
the field.
was wounded severely
battle
him of the use of
from duty
to
Colonelcy of his regi-
to the
Chancellorsville, his right
January,
1864,
arm.
in
the
which
He was
when he was
;
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP/EDIA.
140
Camp Chase. failure. The failure did not befall, and after a while the was placed in command youthful firm came to be recognized as one of the best in post, and remained there until the end of August, the city in the extent of its business and its commercial In a steady, safe, sound way, business was good In the fall of the preceding year he was elected standing. President of a court-martial at
detailed as
On
the ensuing February iith he
of that 1865.
Attorney-General of the State of Ohio, and was prevented
with the firm from the
from leaving the army only through the pressing instances of Governor Brough. In December, 1864, he was brevetted
the fact that strict integrity, close application and piudent
command district,
September,
In
Brigadier-General.
he joined
in
command
at
Columbia.
Subsequently he
District of
of the
being mustered out of the service,
after
was appointed
Collector
East South
for
As
his
services
made five
a
in
detached
positions
the sulject of favorable
;
He
brought against him.
Bates,
w ho had
The
part-
nership between Joseph and Charles Reakirt continued- for tw'enty-one years, and in
men
In August,
1865 they sold out.
1874, just thirty years after the establishment of the original
house, Charles Reakirt,
Hale
while, during his
&
Co.
(J.
the head of the firm of Reakirt,
at
Reakirt having died in
the business anew, and
was ever
years of service, no charge of any nature
J.
the active business of his house, and in effect-
all
of inventorying the stock and affixing the prices.
have frequently been
comment
established themselves on the corner of
ing the sale, Caleb intrusted to Charles Reakirt the task
the
commanding
he possessed the confidence and esteem of his
officer
In
and Reynolds streets. Charles Reakirt conducted negotiations on behalf of his firm with Caleb Bates,
transacted
Collectorship and resumed the practice of the law, in which
he has since been successfully engaged.
Bates, and
the
In 1869 he resigned the
Fifteenth Congressional District.
&;
the surviving partner of the other firm,
June, 1866, he
Revenue
Internal
of
in
ihfi
J.
basis of all pro.sperity.
bought out and became the successors of C.
1847 Pearl
Immediately
Carolina, with head-quarters at Darlington.
affording another illustration of
enterprise form the sure, safe
his
South Carolina, and was placed over a sub-
in
with head-quarters
was placed
1865,
first,
is still at
its
1870), ])urchnsed
head, the firm
cupying a commodious building. No. 99 Walnut
has been connected professionally
now
oc-
street.
with various enterprises, and was a director of the Marietta,
&
Pittsburgh
Cleveland
Railroad.
He was
married
in
184S to Sarah E. Smith, of Brooke county, Virginia.
|;RINKERHOFF, JACOB,
EAKIRT, CHARLES the
13th
of April,
C., Druggist,
1821, in
Clermont county, Ohio.
Welsh-German
was born on
New Richmond,
Remotely, he
is
ex-Judge of the Su-
preme Court of the .St.ate of Ohio, w'as born in the town of Niles, Cayuga county. State of New York, on August 31st, 1810. His father, Henry 1
Brinkerhoff,
.
was a farmer,
sylvania, having
of
Penn-
a native of
born near the town of
His mother, nee Rachel Bevier, came from
Gettysburg.
origin, although both his parents
been
His father was a New York State. After a thorough English education, obPhiladelphian, and a cabinetmaker by trade. tained in public schools and at the academy at Prattsburg, Charles received his education at New Richmond, and in Steuben county. New' York, Jacob entered the law ffice county, in 1837 went to Philadelphia to learn the drug business. of Messrs. Howell & Brother, in Bath, Steuben Here he served his apprenticeship and thoroughly mastered 1834. Here he vigorously prosecuted his studies for two
were natives of Pennsylvania.
i
the business he had chosen.
on
own
his
New
At
account.
first
he determined
and
finally Cincinnati
place in which to establish himself.
company with his was begun. The young
therefore, in prise
speak
to locate in
was determined upon
of,
and
torily
to
starting in business implied getting into debt.
So they got into Joseph remained
debt, but in
were not long
in
getting out.
The
place selected was on Third street, opposite
the Henrie House, and
and there
it
there the business w-as established
prospered greatly.
The members
of the firm
elected
Congress on
to
celebrated '
in that office, in
member
bill
party,
known
the
the
of this body he
as “
fall
Democratic
and drew up
of his Congressional career
At the expiraof 1843, he ticket.
elevated
to a scat
became affiliated with David Wilniot the
Wilmot’s Proviso.” At the close
he resumed
his legal practice in until
on the Supreme bench, his
commencing January
and there were not wanting those w ho predicted
position he
was
\\hile
for
Mansfield, in w hich he successfully labored
were young, the place chosen was not a very favorable one a speedy
1836 removed to Mansfield,
for a period of four years.
term
done and arrange other preliminary the Free-soil
while Charles went to Cincinnati to select a proper
location.
performed
tion of his
serving as a
Philadelphia to secure the necessary
stock, have the printing details,
In the spring of 1844,
money
the spring of
on the practice of his profession. He soon acquired reputation as a lawyer of more than average ability, and in the course of a year or two was elected Prosecuting Attorney for Richland County, the duties of which office he satisfac-
as the
brother, Joseph, the enter-
partners had no
in
Ohio, where, in May, 1S37, he was admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court of that State, and immediately entered
Orleans, but the uncle’s advice led to the changing of
this plan,
and
years,
In his twenty-fourth year, by
the advice of his uncle, he determined to start in business
qih, 1856.
he was
first
term
In this highly honorable
was retained by the people
for three
successive
LIOU R APli IC AL EN’C VCLOP. EDI A. terms, cos’ering a period of fifteen years;
Judge
to the
to
mention
that a fourth
many
but justice
Reports”
State
of his opinions, delivered during his terms on
Since retiring from the bench he has
Supreme bench.
the
is
it
The “Ohio
but he declined a renomination. contain
and
term was offered him,
law practice, although not as actively as in former years. As a judge he commanded the high esteem of all brought into professional contact with him, and his
resumed
his
integrity
is
He was
without a blemish.
married, October
4th, 1S37, to Caroline Campbell, of Lodi,
Seneca county.
New
on a
who
York,
vember
died
whom
of Detroit,
place, while
that
at
visit,
No-
His present wife was Marion Titus,
l8th, 1839.
four years, when, tired of river
he engaged
life,
in partner-
ship with Mr. Chambers, under the firm-name of Chambers,
&
Stevens
Co., to conduct a dry-goods business at Aurora,
Indiana, the present place of residence of the senior partner.
This house,
we may
having been
and in
Wyman
In 1847
were admitted
1857 the branch house was opened
in
when
doing an extensive business,
is
over thirty years.
in operation
Stevens and Francis
in existence, and, like its
state, is still
counterpart in Cincinnati,
moved
the subject of our sketch
^
1
-
to partneishiji,
Cincinnati,
in
to that
city to assist
conducting the new wholesale establishment, which has
now been
in existence
Thus the old
he married January 6th, 1841.
141
on Fearl
reliable firm of
street over eighteen years.
&
Chambers, Stevens
Co.
h.ns
steadily prospered through the long period of thirty years
by acting on the policy of limiting
TEVEN.S, LEVI Stevens
&
E., of the
of Chambers,
firm
was born in York, August 23d,
Co., dry-goods merchants,
Oneida county, western 1814, and
is
His parents,
of Irish extraction.
Nova
natives of
New
.Scotia,
moved from New York and
State to the western frontier in 1819, in
Dearborn county, Indiana, near what
Moore's
Here,
Hill.
in the
settled
now known
as
backwoods, he became inured
and danger, and acquired habits of self-reliance
to hardship
which have since formed
The
is
a
marked
trait
of his character.
educational advantages afforded by the State at that
early period of
were quite limited and of
history
its
rudimentary character,
strictly
of about
consisting
Of
months’ schooling during the winter season. future merchant availed
three
these the
himself to the fullest extent
by determined perseverance and the assistance of his
;
and
father,
an intelligent farmer, he accjuired a degree of proficiency the English branches and a fund of general
passed current
at that
knowledge
engaged as clerk
in the store of
Glenn, of the firm of William
and the
Rev.
late
J.
in
that
At the
time for a liberal education.
age of twenty, preferring business pursuits
a
to farming,
he
Indiana, in 1839, by
named William
son
engaged
actively
Maria Miller, of Dearborn county,
to
whom
he has had
tw’o daughters,
Mrs.
young man of promise who
A., a
in the
A man
Cincinnati house.
is
now
of de-
cided convictions in matters relating to church and politics,
commands the respect, confidence and esteem who know him. His charily is broad and liberal, as
L. E. Stevens
of
all
evinced by his hearty support of and active co-operation the
management for
the
He
of the Cincinnati Union Bethel.
his estimable lady are also identified
tions
alleviation
the
of
He
elevation of the masses.
with other organiza-
suffering
poor and
also in complete
is
in
and the
sympathy
movements of business men for the extension of commerce and manufactures, and is a director in one
the
w'ith
trade,
He
of the city banking houses.
abstainer from
all
has been
intoxicating liquors,
all his life
a total
and has never used
tobacco in any form, to which be attributes tbe enjoyment of a clear and vigorous intellect and a robustness of health
We
possessed by few of his age.
& M’atson (William more Glenn & Sons, Vine street, who was
L. E.
Charles S. Weatherby and Mrs. M. H. Richardson, and a
Glenn
V. Watson,
was married
.Stevens
one
to the
capital
its
legitimate business, that of dealing in dry goods.
predict
for
him many
years of prosperity and useful activity.
subsequently the
distinguished editor of the A^ort/nuestem Christian Ath'ocate, of
Chicago),
in the village of
of twelve dollars per month at the
many months, however, charge of the
before the
store.
Two
young
It
clerk
was not
and continued
his interest,
a faithful
more
trial
active
years afterward one of the
in the business
till
After
1842.
of merchandising he abandoned
it
for the
and lucrative business of steamboating.
company, of which he and
A
his jrresent partner, Mr. Josiah Chambers, were members, jiurchased the steamer “ Fashion,” for a Cincinnati and Madison Indiana) packet, of which he (
was chosen
clerk.
1845. (I
In this business he continued for
at the
from
legal profession ton,
in
New
that
were William and Anna
After a preparatory course of
seminary
in
Allentown, Tennsyl vania,
institution
city,
with
office of
whom
studies for about eighteen months. that
he
Yoik, and
Selecting the
E.
W.
Stough-
prosecuted
l.is
At the expiration of
time he removed to Ohio, and completed his legal
course of training at
New
1867.
in
he entered the law
York
Washington,
parents
he entered Union College, .Schenectady, graduated
in
Jersey, on Septcndier 28tb,
lance) Shields.
study
born
v\’as
New
Warren county,
had almost
partners. Rev. J. V. Watson, desirous of resuming bis vocation in the ministry, L. E. Stevens purchased, on credit,
Brosecuting Attorney elect
S.,
of Stark County, Ohio,
so large
time that his employers reserved the right to termi-
nate the engagement at the end of any month.
full
HIELDS, ROBERT
Hillsborough, at a salary
— a salary considered
in
the office of his uncle, Joseph
New’ Philadelphia, and was admitted
some Cadiz
in
1870.
Locating himself
in
to
tie
Hance, bar
at
Canton he has there
BIOGRAPHICAL EXCYCLOP.EDIA.
142 successfully followed his profession.
he was honored by election
to the
In the spring of 1871
Mayoralty of Canton,
Reichart, lives at the
Democratic
the finest residences
In October, 1875, he was elected by the
same party Prosecuting Attorney
The
term of two years. upon, January
county, for a
mother
He was
married in 1871 to Clara
A., daughter of Marlin Wikidall, an old
and successful
J!^^ 0 DMANN, CHARLES,
merchant of Canton. I
Bodmann &
li
descent, and
_
o/^^^ODM.\N^N, FERDINAND,
late
Merchant of Cin His
Frankfort-on-the-Main.
near
opportunities for education were above the ordi-
nary grade, and
he
fully
He
improved them.
graduated from B.imborg College
in
1S17, and
then entered a large banking-house, where he was fully fitted for
His
a business career.
father,
Davis C. Bodmann,
February
^
German
cinnati, wa.s born, July l6th, 1801, in a
a Republican
Tobacco Merchant,
the
founder of the extensive tobacco firm of Charles ^
Princip.rlity
with her.
lives
duties of this office he entered
1876.
ist,
for Stark
Brussels, Belgium.
in
daughter, Lauretta Louisa, the
being chosen to occupy that position for four years, on the ticket.
The surviving widow of the late Joseph homestead at Mount Auburn, one of in that section of the country. Her
merchant
successful
Co. of Cincinnati, was of
was born
i8th,
in
1827.
Bodmann, was horn
a
Ferdinand
father,
Llis
in
German
Hagerstown, Maryland,
German
Principality
near Frankfort, on July i6th, 1801, and in 1817 graduated with honor from
Bamborg
College.
He
subsequently re-
ceived a commercial education in a large banking-house in
French correspond-
Frankfort, in which he conducted the
In 1822 he emigrated to this country with his father,
ence.
settling at
moved
Hagerstown, Maryland, but shortly thereafter
re-
where he remained until his death, in s irrow the devastating effect of the Napoleonic wars, deHe left a wife and three children, a daughter July, 1874. termined upon emigrating to the more tranquil Western and two sons, of whom Charles was the oldest. As he grew world, and reached America in 1822 with three sons. His up he was liberally and thoroughly educated, and very wife died
wdio view'ed with repugnance and
in principle,
eleven
years
prior to this event.
Hagerstown, Maryland, he engaged
in
until the
death of his father, about six years
removed
to
promise of
its
He
future greatness.
in
little
erected a large tobacco
on July 29th, he acquired not only
until his death,
close attention to his affairs
a large and profitable trade but a fine reputation as an energetic
and honorable business man.
quickly gave evidence of brilliant business as well as ary qualities.
when he and
between Sixth and Seventh, and
street,
conducted a thriving business
By
after,
Cincinnati, Ohio, then a small town with
warehouse on Main 1874.
Settling
mercantile pursuits
At the time of
his de-
to Cincinnati,
his
He
house grew very rapidly
By diligence and by
and
to
the principal cities line, in
on both
he soon secured
the West,
and raised
wholesale and
sides of
his
house
has been occupied by Charles
He
ness houses and residences.
retail
1852 on a modest scale.
tobacco trade
establishment to pre-eminence
Mr. Bodmann was deeply interested
in
Mason and Dixon's
for Cincinnati the largest
as a
fine busi-
supply them with the utmost
despatch, employing energetic agents and correspondents in
known warehouse on Front
number of
in its line in the M’est.
careful attention, watchful to anticipate
the wants of the trade
those of any other establishment west of the Alleghenies. in the material welfare
one of the
in reputation as
most enterprising and trustworthy
cease the transactions of his house far exceeded in value
of his adopted city, and erected quite a
liter-
established himself in the tobacco trade,
It
The
in that market.
street,
which
for so
well-
long a time
Bodmann & Go., was started witnesses now annual trans-
contributed liberally to the’ actions to the value of over eighteen hundred thousand dol-
and its busine.-.s is still increasing. Mr. Bodmann, who was never married, found recreation from the cares of this W'hen he set out in his mercantile career he acted upon the growing trade in yearly trips to foreign lands. He became sound advice given him by his father, to deal entirely upon an enthusiastic traveller, and his cultivated as well as varied construction and support of public works,
to the charitable
and deserving
a cash basis, and
in this
notes,
and
way
He made no
difficulties.
w’as
and was generous
finding immunity from financial
purchases on credit, issued no
never compelled to request a creditor to
a second time for the
lars,
institutions of Cincinnati.
amount of
his claim.
call
During the
re-
bellion he gave the
tastes
and acquirements enabled him to and unusual incidents which
rare scenes
Asiatic lours presented to him. carried
him
It is
fully appreciate the
European and
his
said that his travels
to nearly every country of the globe,
and being
government a practical support, and did much to encourage enlistments and to relieve the distress of the sick and wounded of the army. He was married,
as clever a descriptive writer as a mercantile correspondent,
December
“A
whom
14th,
he had six childien, of wdiom but two, a son and a
daughter, are
May
1825, to Kate Poplem, of Baltimore, by
loth,
now
living.
1875.
His eldest son, Charles, died on
Bodmann was
leaf tobacco trade of Cincinnati,
sume
great proportions.
The
the founder of the
and he lived
to see
it
surviving son, George,
asis
a
he very often gave through
nati
letters
his experiences to the people of Cincin-
published in their daily papers, signed,
Cincinnatian.” These letters were dated from Jerusalem,
Constantinople, various
cities
in Australia
and
in the great
Polynesian archipelago, and were written in an easy, graceful
and instructive. During his absence was conducted by his partner, 11 H. Hoffman, many years had been associated with Mr. Bodmann,
style, gossipy, sensible
the business
who
for
.
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOIVLDI A. and who completed a partnership relation which was better known to the mercantile world as “ Charles Bodmann &
New York
from
143
any young man
to Cincinnati that almost
money might have been expected
without
to accept.
On
May, 1S75, at June 7th, 1841, on the steamer “ Pilot,” he arrived in CinThe first night in the Queen City the residence of his mother, his entire business was left to cinnati from Pittsburgh. the exclusive control and management of Mr. Hoffman, he spent at Colts’ Temperance Hotel, on Sycamore street. who now conducts it in the same manner and with the same In the early days of Cincinnati this house and its sign were The latter during his landmarks. Of the seven who started from England young spirit as during Mr. Bodmann’s life. mercantile career gained the esteem of the community, not Luke Marvin and himself came to Cincinnati the others
Upon
Co.”
the death of Mr.
Bodmann,
in
;
only as an enterprising and honorable business
He
a liberal and public-spirited citizen. fortune, the benefits of
now
brother George,
man
but as
amassed a large
which he generously disbursed.
in
His
business in Brussels, Belgium,
is
a
gentleman of wealth and social influence, and his mother
and
who
sister,
reside at
Mount Auburn, have ample means.
who succeeds to the entire Bodmann & Co., was born
Mr. Hoffman,
house of Charles
November schools.
control of the in
Cincinnati,
23d, 1845, and received his education in the city
When
eighteen years of age he was engaged by
Mr. Bodmann as assistant bookkeeper, becoming head book-
were dispersed according capital,
one
summed up
five
fancies.
Their joint
in their quarters at Colts,
read: Marvin,
dollar gold piece
to
their
William F. Thorne, one
;
Marvin designing
franc piece.
five-
Danville in the
to start for
morning should have
just five dollars for his fare. Without two suppers and two lodgings would take Marvin paid his stage fare, Mr. Thorne’s five-franc piece.
breakfast, their
Mr. Thorne their Temperance House into the street
bill
they bade each
;
stage,
Mr. Thorne turned
moneyless and friendless.
Opposite the old
other God-speed
;
Marvin took the
National Theatre he found Able Doughty, one of the most
He proposed to work in the establish- energetic shoemakers of his time. was admitted to a part- for Mr. Doughty for his board and lodging. This offer was nership interest, and the firm became that as styled above. accepted. In a few minutes, having removed his trunk to This relation was maintained until the death of Mr. Bod- the .shop and eaten his breakfast, he began his first work in mann. The will of the latter, upon its admission to probate, America. In a short time he had worked out his board for gave evidence of the appreciation in which he held his part- the week. Not wishing to be idle, he worked the rest of ner. Under its provisions, after liberal bequests were made the week for dry goods. To money this was the nearest apto many charitable institutions and individuals, the residuary proach he could then make with Mr. Doughty. At the end estate, amounting to between four and five hundred thousand of the first week, having kept the Sabbath according to the dollars, was devised to Mr. Hoffman. The latter is a gentle- custom of his fathers and his home in Old England, attendman substantially educated, of thorough business acquire- ing Sunday-school and all the services at Wesley Chapel, ments, and in every way fitted to carry out the designs for he made an engagement with Mr. Doughty for six months the extension of the relations of the house prepared by its to take charge of his sales and general business, Mr. Doughty seeing that a young man of such habits was the person to founder keeper within six months of his entrance
ment.
On September
ist,
1870, he
fill
r-'A
'1
the most responsible place in any business.
piration of this time
HORNE, WILLIAM
1 '.,
Wholesale .Shoe Mer-
ford Easton to
work
live in liis family.
land,
November
24th, 1S22.
He was
born and
reared to the shoe trade, his father being a shoe-
maker and dealer before him.
When
he was
thirteen years of age his father died, leaving
the eldest son of a family of seven children. father’s death
he went to Claybrook
trade with his uncle, a
shoemaker of
After his
to finish learning his
that place.
Afterwards
and findings
store
and
to start business
himself on Lower_ Market, with a capital of less than
$500.
Mr. Easton very kindly gave him
he needed
in
all
the assistance
supplying his shop with leather;
Abraham Taylor gave him a Boston, Massachusetts.
modation he needed
letter to
William
This afforded him
in Eastern markets.
and
Mr.
&
Co.,
Claflin all
the accom-
In this shop the
and kip boots were made and sold by the dozen in Mr. Thorne has always been an advocate of ing this time, having read many letters and other favorable thorough, energetic business advertising, which he did accounts from America, he, with six other young men, de- largely at that time, chiefly using the Cincinnati Commerciai, returning to
Higham he worked
him
in his leather
After remaining two years, and having
saved most of his earnings, he concluded for
At the ex-
he made an engagement with Mr. Shad-
at his trade in the
shop of
Mr. Luke Marvin, remaining with him a year or two.
termined to try fortune in the United States. obtaining his mother’s consent, on April
Dur-
Accordingly,
7th, 1841,
he em-
barked on the ship “ Rochester” for America, the Eldorado of his hopes. City of the
first
calf
Cincinnati.
then a small and not very powerful sheet, as the medium.
Thus he soon got
the
name
of the enterprising shoe
and did the business of the town.
His
man
fortunate circum-
that if Cincinnati were the Queen stances now justifying it, on September loth, 1845, he was would be the place for him, he decided married to Sarah E. Collins, member of Wesley Chapel and She proved to be in every city, and nothing could turn him from his daughter of Henry E. Collins.
Thinking
West
to locate in that
it
purpose, although he had two fine offers through the country
sense of the
word a helpmeet.
He now
found
it
necessary
BIOC'.RAPIIICAL
144
new impetus
ENCVCLOP.EDIA.
Binghams of Somerset, England, who in Norman period received knighthood and were Notwithstanding that his business has always been settled for many generations on an estate in the west of in 1851. what is termed legitimate jobbing custom, yet by using great England. The family is of Saxon origin, and therefore had energy in every honorable way he has increased his sales to existence in England before the Conquest. Thomas Bingham enormous proportions, some years reaching $1,000,000. had eleven children his second son, Abel, married Maiy Although he is now ranked among the wealthy men of Cin- Odell, and had a family of ten children. Abel’s eighth .son cinnati, and his career has been one of remarkable suc- was Jonathan, who marrieil Sarah N. Newton, and one of cesses, reverses have not been unknown in his experience. his sons, Jonathan, married Betsy Warner, and his son, He has at least learned that “riches have wings.” Cincin- Elisha Warner Bingham, who was the second son of a family nati has passed through three great monetary panics since of ten, married Miss Perry. Warner Bingham, son of the he began his business career in it, but while many were sorely last-named and father of the subject of this sketch, was born pressed or failed entirely he came through unscathed, with in Cornish, New Ilamp.diire, 1789; his father moved with
to take a larger store, thus giving a
to his busi-
which developed into an exclusively wholesale trade
ness,
family back to the the early
;
a solid business, and consequently a credit sounder, sible,
became an American,
since he
who
visit his
old mother,
trips his
brother Joseph
has
now become
&
Thorne
if
pos-
lie has crossed the ocean thirteen times
than before.
On
living.
came with him
man
the active
and
chiefly for his health
is still
the
first
to
of these
to this country,
of the house of
and
W.
F.
Mr. Thorne has recently brought into the
Co.
W.
business his son,
II.
man
Thorne, a young
of the
full
and business vigor of his father, who is training him by his side that he may, as he has every reason to hope, more than fill his father’s place in business, church and enterprise
Like most mercantile
society.
men
of his times,
always been a
politician, but has
earnest advocate
He
country.
is
of the
its
Sunday-school
Female College;
is
is
;
and an
interests of the
officer in St. Paul’s
Methodist
one of the Directors of Wesleyan
New
eldest,
Hampshire
;
George A. Bingham, a prominent lawyer of the same .State; his sixth son. Judge Edward Franklin Bingham. Judge Warner Bingham was a man of great energy; he led a life of much usefulness to his State, and was held in high
Ed-
repute for integrity of character and purity of motive.
ward
I'ranklin
;
and
successfully,
under able tutorship, prosecuted In 1846, visiting Ohio, he
Always a
consistent, active
temperance man, he was one of the warriors
romantic
in the
temperance movement of 1848, and one of the most ent workers in the recent crusade.
A man
After spending a short time
State.
his studies
became
and
his
whose
persist-
practice
has never varied from his principles, whose motto in busi-
own
brother, Harry, in
when he was admitted at
1st, at
to the bar
so de-
Marietta College he
at
read law under Hon. Joseph Miller,
Young Men’s Ohio,
;
earnest workers of his church.
Harry Bingham, the
lighted with the country that he determined to settle in the
in principle
Vice-President of the
Association
:
Whig
and was one of the earliest supporters of the old Methodist Bethel, having been its SuperHe is now one of the stirring, intendent for nine years. Christian
survive
a leading lawyer, politician. Democrat, of
for three years.
has been eleven years Superintendent
;
now
three of his sons
has been too busy to be a
Republican
best
member and
a
Episcopal Church of
He
fortune.
to
married Lucy, daughter of Captain John Wheeler.
Bingham received his early education at the in his fourteenth year he enpublic schools of Vermont Mr. Thorne tered Caledonia county grammar school, where he zealously
has found most of his education in the school of the world
on the highway
Warner Bingham Only
the family to Concord, Vermont, 1796.
at
New
Chillicothe, Ohio,
Hampshire,
till
1850,
by the Supreme Court of
Georgetown, and commenced practice of law, June
McArthur, Vinton county, Ohio.
the Court of
Common
torney of Vinton county
was elected
to
the
In October, 1850,
him Prosecuting Atin 1851 and 1853, he
Pleas appointed ;
same
after this, office.
At the expiration
of that
time, in 1855, being elected as Representative (Democratic) for
the counties of Vinton and Jackson, he sat in the Legis-
lature during the sessions of 1856
and 1857.
He now
de-
ness has ever been honor, and the key to his success work,
termined to devote himself exclusively to the duties of his profession, and, notwithstanding he belonged to the political
Mr. Thorne has made
party
his
having lived
in
his
mark, and the world
is
better for
which was
in the minority in his district, was, in 1858,
barely defeated in
it.
his
candidacy
for the
Judgeship of the
His party has frequently desired him to put himself forward in politics, but the Judge has rather
Common
I
INCH AM,
HON.
EDWARD FRANKLIN,
Lawyer, and Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, Columbus, Ohio, was born, August 1,4th, 1828, at
West Concord, Vermont. ancient,
and
in
its
family
is
veiw
many Thomas
different branches has
eminent representatives
in this country.
America he emigrated from England, and settled in Norwich, Connecticut, in
Bingham was Sheffield,
The
its
founder
in
;
1663, being then twenty-one years of age.
He
traces his
Pleas.
sought distinction
He was of
Ohio
in his profession
than political preferment.
a delegate from the Eleventh Congressional District in
1S60
to the
National Democratic Convention at
Wishing a more extended field he removed to Columbus in 1861, and has since been engaged in law. In May, 1873, he was elected to the bench as Judge of the Court of Common Pleas. From 1867 to 1871 he was, by election. Solicitor Charleston and Baltimore.
for the prosecution of his profession
of the city of Columbus.
The Judge
has ever .shown great
BIOGRAPHICAL ENX'YCLOILEDIA. and
interest in educational matters,
for
many
years
was mem-
In 1868 he was Chairman
ber of the Board of Education.
He
of the Democratic State E.xecutive Committee of Ohio.
was married, November
21st, 1850, to
Susanah P. Gunning,
of Fayette county, Ohio, and has two sons and two daughters.
The
Bingham
distinguished career of Judge
due
entirely
is
indomitable industry and perseverance, coupled
own
to his
•45
At this time he and purchase of real estate, and commenced the draying business, which he followed
sued
for five years.
this joint enterprise
interested himself in the sale
In 1845 he invested largely in fifth Ward of Cincin-
with profit for six years.
now comprising
property,
the Twenty-
and in 1S47 “Pi "’hh but one exception (that of Ephraim Knowlton’s), the first building. From that until
nati,
the present time he has been a continuous resident of
with unflinching integrity of character.
minsville,
Cum-
largest property- owners.
and has become one of the
The fine hotel on the corner of Spring Grove avenue and Dormann street is a monument of his industry, and has been k^ORM.\NN, FREDERICK, is a native of the State his home for years. A few years ago the cheery helpmate, of Hanover, Germany, where he was born, August who had for so long been a tender companion and wise I
'V
He was
6th, 1820.
I
the second of three children.
counsellor,
left his
side
and
on the mysterious jour-
started
George Dormann and Fredericka ney that leads we know not where, but he hopes with the Hilka, both natives of Hanover, where the former remainder of his family that when the trials and cares of followed through life the occupation of baker. this world are over to meet her on that happy shore where At the time of the death of his father Frederick was in his sorrows are unknown. Twelve children were born to them, infancy. His early education was limited to such studies as eight daughters of whom are still living, while the remainder, were pursued in the common schools of his country. At three sons and one daughter, have departed this life and gone his parents being
X
the age of sixteen he was thrown upon his
own
resources for
a livelihood, and commenced at once an active life in the In 1836, as from pursuit which his father had engaged in.
boyhood and the fatherland he wandered, and eight weeks
he
at
and one day
in the
after sailing
staunch ship “Alexander,’'
length reached Baltimore, landing a stranger in a
strange land, with no friends save the two willing hands
inured to
a country where bread comes but with labor,
toil in
and no words of cheer save those whispered to a brave soul by a dauntless heart, young Frederick found himself penniIn 1838 he went to less, and consequently found work. ^Vheeling, Virginia, remaining there until
when he
1842,
took up his residence in Cincinnati, which has been his
Three years
abiding place ever since.
American shore
his guiding star
a light-haired, blue-eyed fraulein, seas in the
same
vessel, but
for all those
into a
woman when
had been
lost
across the
both to sight and
Frederick gave her his honest heart and
who was
the late Fredericka Brodfuchrer, also a
native of Germany, rolled on,
and a lady of most amiable
qualities.
some home
that they
might truly
nation to have
as
was twenty years ago.
it
some
spot,
her smiles, but
is
what was then an Row and Everett
insignificant street the
Queen
down
City.
the
Ohio
his.
On Western
bake shop again coined
into the capacious pockets of the
home
but a few acres besides.
To
pation as a baker he soon joined that of a grocer,
19
elastic
is
has given him some
has failed to warp his kindly nature or
There
are
few whose
His was a struggle against poverty from the
a struggle intensified but never stopped
Industrious perseverance
merited it.
He
won
at
have
lives
outset,
him health
left
has often been solicited to accept public
has invariably declined, wishing rather than often doubtful honor, the
and
by adverse fortune.
length what he so richly
— a fortune, and, moreover,
its
to enjoy
but
office,
cares,
and
untrammelled enjoyment of his
family circle and the society of a few intimate friends. his political
views he
from the time of his
In
Democratic, and always has been
is
manhood
He
until the present day.
one of the old German pioneers, and belongs
is
to several of
His children have
the different societies of Cincinnati.
all
experienced the Protestant baptism, and his religious opinions are circumscribed by the tenets
and creeds of the Protestant
churches.
MITH,
silver
good
frau
his occu-
and pur-
R.
I’.,
Pennsylvania
Assistant General
Company
for the
burgh Railroad, was born icut,
June 20th, 1830.
of the
&
Pitts-
M'indham, Connect-
in
His
Manager
Cleveland
father,
one of the pioneer merchants of the
to
they rested until enough were garnered to buy not only the
long-coveted
The world
been more actively spent or more honorably employed than
but one master, was
babes and good health, they drifted
and deep
it
harden his generous heart.
strong in these two, and in 1842, with the goods and chat-
pieces,
fire
hard knocks, has often given him frowns when he wooed
no matter how small, a house, be
ever so tiny, over which there
tels,
But Mr. Dormann’s blue eyes of youth, and his step
twinkle with the
call their
This inborn feeling of the German over every other
own.
where the angels dwell.
still
and by-and-by babies came, and with them
the desire to find
it
who had come
In 1840 he was married in Wheeling to this
empty hand.
Time
landing on the
long months, and the maiden had grown
mind
maiden,
after
brought him to the feet of
to
Edwin
.Smith,
city of Cleve-
was a well-known produce dealer and an He was educated in the city schools contiguous to his home, and, after the completion of the allotted course of studies, entered a hardware store as clerk in Newland,
esteemed
citizen.
ark, Ohio.
Returning
tered his father’s store,
at the expiration of
where he served
one year he en-
in a similar capacity.
BIOGRAl'IIICAL ENCYCLOr.KDIA.
146
Tiiere hs remained for a period of two years or more, until
he had attained
employment
majority, then found
his
in a
dry-goods house, where he was occupied during the ensuing In 1855 he entered the service of the Cleve-
four years.
&
land
Pittsburgh Railroad, primarily in the capacity of
burgh, and from last
this point
by a
twenty-five years of his
The
flatboat to Cincinnati.
life
were passed on
farm
his'
near Mount Airy, Hamilton county, Ohio, where he died, January 2d, 1848, at the age of seventy-si.x years. His mother’s decease occurred at the same place in July, 1835.
He was educated at the common schools of the frontier became Vice-President. At the present time he settlements. In 1812 he went to live with John Martin, a the Manager of the road, and is also Director of the Ash- merchant of Cincinnati, and, while serving him as clerk, He was a member of his family for a period of over twenty-one tabula, Youngstown & Pittsburgh Railroad Company. years. In 1831 he became the owner, by purchase, of his lias persistently avoided the turmoil and e.xcitements of political life, and devoted his time and energies entirely to the employer’s interests in the establishment, and continued the Paymaster, subsequently was promoted to an Auditorship,
and,
later,
i-)
conduct of his business in religious
He
aff.rirs.
a liberal co-worker
is
and benevolent matters, and
First Presbyterian
an elder in the
is
He was
Church of Cleveland.
married
and dry goods
business of notions
business,
and
1839 engaged
in
and doors,
During the
until 1837.
succeeding two years, he was interested
the wire-work
in
manufacture of sashes,
in the
which he was occupied
He
Rebecca E.
Peters, of Colchester, Connecticut,
blinds,
and by her has had four
children, three at present surviving.
then, in connection with his brother, purchased a saw-mill
in
1S56
to
in
near Cumminsville, and conducted
twelve years.
^ORBERT, JAME.S L and Hannah
,
Jr.,
(Winans)
son of Judge James L.
was
Torbert,
born
in
He
re-
Springfield, Ohio, .September 27th, 1831.
ceived his education at Wittenberg College, grad-
lS5l,in the
uating in
.Soon after he
went
to
class of that
first
.
New
school.
Orleans, where for a
few years he taught as Principal of the High School.
Hav-
ing meanwhile pursued the study of law, he was admitted to the bar
w.as
and began
practice.
But
undermined by the yellow
in a
fever,
few years his health
from which he had
hardly recovered before he was prostrated with
He was
fever.
of 1S59, his father,
manufacture of Idinds, sashes, doors and frames, while tending also to contract work and building enterprises. mill,
one of the most favorably known concerns of
in this section of the State, is
cally
he
attached to the Republican party.
He was
Church.
kind
Politi-
For over
been a member of the Methodist
married, September 12th, 1833, to Mar-
garet Finkbine, a native of Philadelphia,
and a daughter
of Frederic Finkbine, prominent as an early pioneer and settler of
Hamilton county, Ohio.
typhoid
He
trip.
liut
never
ENN, JULIUS AUGUSTUS,
fully
for
He was a ripe scholar, and an able He was married, November 1st, 1S64, Cincinnati, but had no family. He died
Penn and Philenia (Walriren) Penn.
cD
of /lingering consumption, October 15th, 1S71.
ife
agricultural pursuits,
trips to
Kentucky, removed
was
born
m
Worcester county, Maryland, March 23d, 1806,
and was
tM
fifth
child in a family of nine chil-
dren, whose' parents were
Obadiah Lingo and
Elijah
His
T.
father,
and
1811
in
settled in
Washington Township, Clermont county, Ohio, where he has since resided. He was a soldier in the war of i8t2,
Walriven, in
New
Orleans in a
in
when she
1798 to Ohio with her
w.as but
one year
Franklin township, Clermont county.
James
member
.Sargent, a
tion of Ohio,
and
flatboat, return-
His mother, a native of Mason county,
ing thence on foot.
Manufacturer,
13th,
a native of Frederick county, Maryland, followed
through
and made three
YINGO, CALEB,
May
the oldest child in a family of
eleven children, whose parents were
States Commissioner.
Barr, of
He was
1S18.
several years held the office of United
and upright lawyer.
Attorney-at-Law, was
born in Neville, Clermont county, Ohio,
as soon as he
was able began the practice of law in his native city. In 1S61 he was appointed Mayor of the city, to fill a vacancy,
Mary
is
thirty-three years he has
its
run entirely by steam.
at-
His
having gofie for him; his honored
however, dying on the return
recovered from these successive shocks,
to
Cum-
there, pursuing the
then brought home, which was in the spring
parents
and afterwards
successfully for
its affairs
In 1859 he engaged in business in
and has constantly resided
minsville,
until 1844.
of the
fur several
first
father,
Samuel
old, finding a
Her
home
grandfather,
Constitutional Conven-
years a
member
of the Legis-
same township. On His father, wdio followed agricultural pur- both sides of the house his ancestors were among the pioland. suits through life, removed with his family in 1810 to Ohio, neer settlers of this section of the State, and his forefathers, settling at Cincinnati, where he remained during the winter, on the maternal side, were active participants in the RevoluHis early education w.as liberal, and was and, in the ensuing spring, drew nearer to Carthage, and tionary struggle. He moved to Ohio by the following received at the common schools and high school of his eng.aged in farming. Until he had attained his m.ajority, he asroute by boat to Baltimore, thence with a team to Pitts- native county.
Mary
:
('I'ilghman)
Lingo, both natives of Mary-
lature,
also, in
1798, settled in the
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA. sisted his father in laboring
the paternal acres,
on the farm.
and began
In 1839 he left on his own resources, as
life
a school teacher in Felicity in Clermont county, where he
147
His mother, whose decease occurred
tion.
English-German descent.
employed
as an assistant
Lffitil fifteen
1831, was of
in
was was placed
years of age he
on the farm, and
later
was eng.aged in educational labors during the ensuing two to learn the saddlery trade in Jefferson county, Virginia, While occupied as a teacher, he applied himself which he pursued for about six years. His early education also to the study of law, and in 1 842 was admitted to the was limited, and was obtained at common schools, and by
years.
whereupon he entered on the practice of his profession attentive reading during the leisure hours of his service as a Clermont county. After his admission, in order saddler. In 1835 he moved to Augusta, Kentucky, and to secure the means to embrace more comfortably profes- entered the primary department of Augusta College, the Since then first Methodist institution of the kind established in the sional life, he drove an ox-team for one month. bar,
in Batavia,
he has resided permanently in guarding the interests of outset,
in Batavia, constantly
an extensive practice.
he was associated for about two years
to
shall.
In 1S66-67 he acted for one year as
Ohio
With
District.
has never sought or held public the
But owing
duty,
as a volunteer,
operations.
field of
from a broken
to disability resulting
sequence of a
exception he
At the outbreak of
office.
regiment for the
his
be-
Revenue Col-
this
war with Mexico, he entered the army
and started with
who
which produced Chief-Justice Mar-
longed
lector for the Sixth
At the
in partnership
with Martin Marshall, a distinguished attorney, the family
occupied
leg, the con-
from his horse, he was incapacitated for
fall
and having advanced only
thence to his home.
to
returned
Cincinnati,
In 1861 he accompanied to the
field
Its president was then Dr. Joseph S. TomThere he passed through a thorough curriculum
United States. linson.
During
of literary study, graduating in 1839.
became very
proficient
this
time he
both pure and
mathematics,
in
mixed, a branch of study for which he had early displayed a notable aptitude and meantime by working
He
talent. five
supported himself in the
hours per day
at his trade.
In
days he had proposed to apply his attention to
his youthful
the study of medicine, an intention
whose
origin
is
attribut-
able probably to the fact that in the ranks of the medical profession several
quired
distinction.
members of his family had already acWhile pursuing a collegiate course,
however, he abandoned
this design,
and resolved
to
apply
himself to the study of law, deeming the legal profession
as Captain one more in harmony with his tastes and mathematical company furnished by Clermont abilities. In 1839, accordingly, under the guidance of county to assist in suppressing the rebellion. He was Martin Marshall, an accomplished scholar and legal practishortly after promoted to the rank of Major, and remained tioner of Kentucky, and a member of the family that pro-
the 22d
Regiment of Ohio Volunteeer Infantry,
of
Company E,
in
service with his regiment
the
first
Virginia for
in
months, participating during that time
mishes and minor engagements.
and
to the Republican party,
Harrison.
He
is
widely
the temperance cause,
is
about
five
number of
skir-
first
is
attached
vote for General
as a zealous advocate of
in favor of prohibition,
public and in private orations has earnestly evils attendant
he
Politically
cast his
known
in a
and both
in
denounced the
on intemperance, and originated measures
duced Chief-Juslice Marshall, he began
and in 1840 established his office in Batavia, Clermont county, where he has since resided, engaged in the From control of a diversified and an extensive business. 1845 to 1849 he acted as Prosecuting Attorney of Clermont twice elected to this office. In the
county, having been latter
year he was elected to the Senate of Ohio, and served
for
Also, in 1873, he canvassed Clermont county as a temper-
Democratic
Religiously he
is
He
a Methodist.
was
married December 2d, 1846, to Elisa C. Minor, a native of Clermont county, from whom he was divorced in 1855.
He was
again married, M.ay 2d, i860, to
Mary
1
.
Brock, a
native of Crawford county, Indiana.
to prepare himself
qualified, himself for -ad-
mission,
designed to eradicate the baneful influence of strong drink.
ance advocate.
Within one year he
for the bar.
one term.
In 1858 he was elected to Congress on the
ticket.
Also, in 1866, he
was
a candidate for
Congress, but owing to the increasing power of the Republican element in
The
his district, failed
district referred to
mont, Brown, Highland, district
to
secure an election.
then embraced the counties of ClerFayette and Clinton, while the
from which he had
been
counties of Clermont, Brown, military matters also he has
comprised
the
Highland and Adams.
In
elected
been prominently before the
In 1847 he accompanied to the scene of operations Mexico, the 2d Ohio Regiment of Infantry, and, as
public.
'^'^OWARD, COLONEL WILLIAM,
Attorney-at-
in
Law, ex-Member of Congress, was born in Jefferson county, Virginia, December 31st, 1817. He
body
wxs the
eventful days he
.Second Lieutenant of until
Company
C, served actively with this
the termination of the* conflict.
TJuring those
was employed on the line, under General whose parents were Thomas Howard and Re- Winfield .Scott, from Vera Cruz to Puebla. In September, becca (Likins) Howard, also natives of Jefferson 1861, he accompanied the 59th Regiment of Ohio Volunteer county, Virginia. His father followed through life agricul- Infantry to the field as Major, and remained in service for tural pursuits, and after his removal to Wheeling, Virginia, about eighteen months. In 1862 he was promoted to a died there in 1853. He was originally of English extrac- Lieutenant-Colonelcy. He was with his regiment in Kenthird child in a family of seven children,
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA.
148
lucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Georgia, and Alabama, and
and remained
engaged in the battles of Shiloh, Corinth, Perryville, Crab Orchard, and Stone River, and also in
mustered out
many
ant Postmaster at Columbus, and served until 1869, when he was elected to the Wardenship of the Ohio Penitentiary, an
was
actively
skirmishes and other minor engagements.
he resigned his position
come
In 1863
seriously impaired through the trials attending extraor-
dinary
office
remaining volunteer
last
In the ensuing
him
retained by
fall
officer in the ser-
he was appointed Assist-
until the spring of 1874.
He
subse-
quently returned to Delaware and there engaged in the hard-
by fatiguing marches and exciting
efforts necessitated
ware and agricultural implements business,
lie has always been intimately identi-
service in the field. fied
vice from Ohio.
army, his health having be-
in the
November, l866, when hew.as
in service until
— the
with the Democratic party, and has worked efficiently
continues. In April, 1875,
w.as again
in
which he
still
appointed Assistant
I
to secure
its
welfare and develop
its
His
best interests.
vote was cast in favor of James K. Polk.
He
warm and far-seeing interest in educational and has been instrumental in .advancing many pub-
L. Runyan.
enterprises calculated to benefit the people of his county.
lic
Religiously he a
Columbus, and has since performed the duties He was married, January 5th, 1843, to Eliza
at
of that office. 1
manifested a matters,
Postmaster
first
has ever
man
is
life,
an enterprising
He
and a lawyer of scholarly attainments. January 29th, 1852, Oswego, New York. intelligence,
mind and
and mother or private
in Colchester, Connecticut,
and Christian char-
in her
own household; and whether
in public
she was her husband’s confidential adviser.
life,
She died July 13th, 1875, greatly regretted by the community in which she lived.
was born
January 14th, 1S13.
His parents were James Randall and Joanna (Pemberton) Randall, both natives of Connecti-
was a woman of superior natural and possessed a highly cultivated and refined .She
her a favorite in society, and the idolized wife
D. D., Baptist
Minister, I.ccturer, Editor, Author, etc.,
was married,
extensive information, which, combined with her
made
NDALL, DAVID AUSTIN,
is
citizen,
Amaryllis C. Botsford, a native of
to
amiability of manner, kind disposition, acter,
He
attached to the Methodist church.
of varied experience in
His mother was a direct descendant of
cut.
Rev. Ebenezer Pemberton, D. D., of the old South Church,
When
Boston, Massachusetts. parents
moved with him was instrumental
father
Church of
but two years of age, his
Auburn,
to
New
York, where his
establishing the
in
First
Baptist
removed from Auburn and settled on the west shore of the Canandaigua Lake, about four miles from the village of the same name. In in
this
1821
In
jilace.
th.at
the family
region, dividing his time between school
beautiful
winter and work upon the farm in summer, he passed the
The only periodicals which then reached home were the village newspaper, published at
days of his youth. j
jRR,
RAYMOND, Assistant
bus, Ohio, Dealer in
Hardware and
Implements, was born April
His
father,
as a surveyor
successively in
He
in
Meredith,
New
attended school
in
York,
although constantly engaged
and engineer, was occupied
merchandising and agricultural
year was reached,
also
pursuits.
his native place until his eighteenth
when he moved
taught school for about one year.
to Virginia,
He
and there
then removed to
Mount Vernon, Ohio, where he again assumed educator, and
Agricidtural
His parents were natives of Con-
1821.
2(1,
necticut.
Postmaster of Colum-
the role of
imparted instruction during the winter of
his
secluded
the county-seat,
and the Baftist Register, of Utica,
New
His converse therefore was more with nature than
York.
with books, and those affections
to his
turn to his
and
’early association.s
gave a lasting bias
and a sedate and contemplative
ideas,
mind and musings.
Being naturally of a
reflect-
and inquisitive nature, much of the time devoted by his young companions to fishing, hunting, and the usual sports ive
of youth, was spent by
among
him
either in
reading, wandering
rocks and glens, or in experimenting in his father’s
blacksmith .shop in the rudiments of philosophy and chemistry.
An
interest
in
the
tov\n
library brought into
the
During the ensuing year he remained in connec- f.nnily a quarterly instalment of books, which were always At tion with a jeweler, and in 1842 established himself in gladly welcomed, and read with eagerness and profit. business on his own account at Delaware, Ohio, conducting the age of fourteen he made a public profession of religion, 1840-41.
In 1852 he was elected and December 24th, 1826, became a communicant was repeatedly re-elected, serving Baptist church. In his religious experience, even several terms with marked ability. In 1S59 he was elected early age, a new and powerful impulse was given it
until
Mayor
the opening of the war.
of Delaware, and
Legislature,
and served with
body until 1861. In the spring of this year he was employed as clerk in the Commissary Department at Columbus, and in the spring of 1862 was commissioned by President Lincoln as Assistant
to the
He was
that
spiritual life.
in the at to
this
his
Religion then shed her radiant influence over
his existence,
and the Bible and religious books monopo-
lized his time
and thoughts.
Prompted by
a desire to pre-
pare himself for greater usefulness, the plow was exchanged
then placed in charge at the for the grammar, and he progressed rajridly in his studies. was assigned to duty as Chief Quarter- While in his eighteenth year he took charge of a country master of the depot at Columbus, with the rank of Colonel, school, and profitably to himself and to his pupils sustained (Quartermaster.
Capitol, and in 1864
BK-fr_7T2'^3
CC.CmCAAO.
»
'
.
,
>
.,u.
’
*1
'
.•
U.I .ch of whose life, etc., appears elsewhere,
ill
P)
Vl
^
and the most
New
common
mark.
attractive
After
and
school
jT^.I^^/ONES,
academic education in his native and neighboring villages in his own county, he prosecuted and completed his profes-
S
sional education under the careful instruction of Ur. Peter-
^(1
who
those early times ranked high as an eminent
in
New
county.
The second war with Great
Hampshire.
Britain broke out about the time of the completion of his
Devotedly zealous
professional studies.
his support of
in
the cause of his country, he at once tendered to her his ser-
He was
vices.
his commission,
Railway Company, was born
^11
^
Pennsylvania,
In her
first
cruise she un-
fortunately encountered a British man-of-war of
on both
sides, she
to Halifax,
many
times
After a gallant defence and
was captured, and with
all
where, after the usual delays, her
and men were exchanged or sent home on parole.
Surgeon Trevitt was soon transferred his services
were greatly needed.
to the
He was
a',
surgeon were
expert
frontier expeditions
he removed with
his thirteenth year, lyn,
where he remained
until
On
the death of
to
Philadelphia,
moved
his
mother
in
In
While
in active
where
his
in
many
and laborious
service.
in his
of
Indeed, from the
to the time of his death,
Andrew Jackson
to
i860 he removed
New
to
clerking until
1856.
Kentucky, where he was
engaged
Louisville,
Ludlow,
to
business on his
in
He
he
accom-
famous Cherokee
the
in
own
same
State,
New
York.
account, as a bookseller,
In 1861 he raised the nucleus of a
and accompanied
company
it
to “
Camp Dick
Robinson,” where he
to duty as drill master.
of the companies, he I,
messenger
as a special
General Thomas
was assigned on the
to
At Crab Orchard he was detailed important despatches from
to carry
General Sherman, and on his return Division Quartermaster,
to duty as Assistant
staff of
General Thomas,
in
which capacity he served
meanwhile
participated in the
until 1873.
as volunteer
aide in the engagement at Mill Spring, and in several other
He
actions.
continued on the
until after the battle at Pittsburgh
staff
of General
Thomas
Landing, then returned to
of the surgeons selected to be present in attendance
Deputy Sheriff of Campbell County, Kentucky.
upon
in,
Co.,
At the consolidation was commissioned First Lieutenant of of the 4th Kentucky Volunteers, which took
was assigned
Upon
the fatal duel fought at Bladensburg between
&
of volunteers, in Covington, Kentucky, and also in Ludlow,
and other campaigns, and was a favorite of that distinguished whom he was devotedly attached. He was one
general, to
In
and here
partnership with the general agent of Johnson, Fry of
in
Brook-
to
when he went
1852,
Orleans, and was there engaged
Company
highly appreciated.
and Indian wars.
war with England
was constantly
moved
his elementary education.
the field in Kentucky.
After the establishment of peace, he was retained in the
panied General
he received
the battle of
peace establishment and accompanied the army
close of the
Louis
Pennsylvania, while he was in his infancy. that city
army, where
Plattsburg and in other important engagements, services as an
26th, 1837.
mother
St.
Later he
her strength and capacity.
officers
May
^'(3
&
Chester county,
in
appointed Freight Agent of the Star Express Company.
on board one of
to duty
commissioned and adopted into the service of the
losses
General Southwestern Passen-
and was assigned
United Slates as a ship of war.
on board sent
B.,
without delay appointed a surgeon, received
those ships that had been extemporized from the merchant service,
SIDNEY
ger Agent of the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati
J
surgeon and physician in the town of Boscawen, Merrimac
its
a victim
fell,
the best, the bright-
first,
Mont Vernon,
the family residence at
at
Hampshire, P'ebruary 26th, 1790.
having acquired a good
heavy
where he
at the post
to that remorseless foe, that strikes est
to
I
was born
son,
where he had been assigned
His death occurred on the iSth of August, lS2i,and
duty.
Newport, Kentucky, a step prompted by his failing health. resigning his military commission, he was appointed
Commodores sequent period be was
At a sub-
elected Lieutenant-Colonel of the
Decatur and Barron, on the 22d of March, 1820, and upon the sad duty of assisting in bearing the former
42d Regiment of Kentucky Volunteers, and later was promoted to the Colonelcy by Governor Thomas E. Bramblette,
from the
and placed
him devolved the
fatal
moment
field,
and attending him professionally up
of his death.
to
Faithful in the discharge of every
duty to his country, his noble profession, and to his fellows, alike
upon the ocean, upon the
service against the best drilled
the
tangled
fastnesses,
adroitly
battle-field, in the regular
army
in
the world, and in
selected
warrior for purposes of ambusc.'ide, upon
by the
savage
the pestilential
of the Twenty-third Military District
In the latter part
the position of General In this capacity he
of 1864 he resigned his
to Louisville,
Agent of the
was employed
Kentucky,
Little
until
to accept
Miami Railroad.
1868, at which date
he was appointed General Passenger Agent of the Louisville
&
The duties of that office he perwhen he accepted the position of General
Cincinnati Shore Line.
was suddenly brought
formed
an end, falling a victim while
the faithful discharge
Passenger
in
command
commission, and removed
frontier, his brief but eventful career to
in
of Kentucky.
until 1871, .A.gent
for
the Baltimore
& Ohio
Railroad.
In
BIOC'.RAPHICAL EXCVCLOP.EDIA.
158
during the progress of which he
the latter part of 1874 he accepted the appointment to his
in this place,
present position, General Southwestern Passenger Agent for
through consideration for his country’s honor
with head-quarters
N.
in 1856, to
of
&
Pittsburgh, Cincinnati
the
New
Louis Railway Company,
St.
He was
Ohio.
at Cincinnati,
married
Bennett, daughter of a prominent merchant
J.
compelled
to
pursue a
course of policy which destroyed the friendly relations pre-
him and
viously existing between
own government
sought from his
mark of approval of
takable
Orleans, Louisiana.
felt
the Chilian authorities, he
As an unmis-
a removal.
his line of
conduct under the
circumstances, he was subsequently advanced to the consulship of Callao,
While sojourning
Peru.
there,
United States Minister, on account of various
^^^TREVITT, william. e)
ill
'
iV||
and Surgeon, with the Peruvian government, retired from his post, thus was born at leaving him, in 1S61, in sole charge of affairs. Shortly Mount Vernon, Hillsborough county. New Hamp- after this, the United .States government, at his own request, (For details of the relieved him of his arduous duties, and he returned to shire, February 7lh, 1809. family see sketch of Henry Trevitt.) He was the Columbus, where he has since lived in comparative secluPhysician
ex-Secretary of Stale for Ohio,
»
etc.,
He
youngest of seven sons and two daughters.
sion, following his
of
and Francestown, and completed his literary and profesHe pursued sional courses at Hanover, New Hampshire.
culture of favorite literary pursuits,
town under the instruction of Daniel Adams, M. D., an eminent physician of Mount Vernon, New Hampshire, and at the New Hampshire Medical Institution, at Dartmouth College, where he
ernor
his professional studies in his native
graduated
in 1830,
and subsetpiently he attended the
classes
of the medical department of the University of Pennsylvania.
commenced
In the year 1830 he
the practice of his profes-
sion in Baltimore, Fairfield county, Ohio, whence, after the lapse of two years, he
removed
Ohio, where he was engaged 1840.
During
to Thornville, Perry county,
the practice of medicine
in
his residence at Thornville he repre-
sented his county in the State Legislature for three successive terms,
member of age when
and throughout
time was
that
of his private business
body, having been but twenty-five years of
first
returned.
Crisis, a journal
at that
In the
while conducting
Siiitiiuy till
ils
the
become assured.
and
.State.
Butler, of
and
He was
married
his eldest son,
consists of his wife
for
Ohio, he found
LANDY, HENRY,
it
remove
to
Columbus, where,
&
H.
this
date
down
to the practice
to
1846 he held
England,
field in
During
its
charge of General Moyan’s
regiment, and later was assigned by General Taylor to the head-quarters, thus
Wool.
In 1849, peace being established,
to the civil
practice of medicine in Columbus.
new
Constitution by his
by which the Secretaryship of State became elective, first
to receive the election to that office,
and
in
In 1857 he was 1853 was honored by a re-election. appointed by President Buchanan, Consul to Valparaiso, the chief mercantile port of Chili.
A
revolution breaking out
member
of the firm of
Saw
and
Mill Works, at Zanes-
October
26th,
in the city of
1810.
His
and could point with natural pride
On
became involved
in
to
the death of his grandfather litigation,
and eaused the
His father reared and
liberally
educated his eleven children, and throughout his life was a He accumulated and tender guide and protector to them.
becoming a brought
primarily of General Taylor, anil after-
In 1851, on the adoption of the
he was the
His present family
paternal ancestors were people of distinction in
financial ruin of the family.
State,
still
1839 to Lucinda
and Newark, Ohio, was born
the estate
of General
is
has buried two daughters
senior
Stationary Engine and
after
post he occupied until the close of the conflict.
he returned
management
F. Blandy, Proprietors of the Portable
appointed by President Polk, Surgeon of the army, which
ward
its
publication
and three sons.
an honorable coat of arms.
his
He
John Noble Trevitt.
their native country,
at
in
in the fall of
Columbus, Ohio.
Subsequently, on the outlireak of the Mexican war, he was
staffs,
Its
continued as one of the permanent enterprises of the city
the appointment of Physician to the Penitentiary of Ohio.
of the
Crisis,
Morning News, and continued
success had
Bristol,
of Surgeon
time had a larger circulation
he established
1S67,
ville,
post
the
After the decease of ex-Gov-
affairs.
which
permanently and devote himself exclusively
member
in
management
than that of any other pajier at the capital of Ohio.
the expiration of his term of service, he proposed to reside
progress he served in the
in the
Medary, from 1865 to 1S71 he became the sole proprietor, and assumed the exclusive management of the
necessary, for the proper performance of the duties attached
From
and
In the spring of 1840, having
been appointed Secretary of State
of his profession.
limited circle
physician,
the youngest
this
to his important office, to
consulting
occasionally as
friends,
among a
profession only
received his earlier and preparatory education at Amherst
until
Mr. Clay, difficulties
to this
country considerable means, and upon arriv-
ing here in the spring of 1832, was in easy and comfortable
In the ensuing
circumstances. in the city of
the
New
York, and
Orange Spring mansion
fall
his family rejoined
him
all
rested during the winter at
in
New
Jersey.
Leaving his
parents he returned to England, and spent the winter in travelling, as a
commercial man
in the cut glass business.
In the -spring of 1833 he rejoined his father, and they settled He finally in Zanesville, Ohio, where he has since resided.
urated with a borrowed capital of but five thousand dollars.
he won distinction as a leader, and became pro-
Finally, through persevering industry, inflexible integrity,
of Bedminster,
Bidstol,
attendance was from eighty to one hundred scholars. that school
IS 9
Greek and mathematics. To his instructor and careful management, the enterprising partners grasped Now, the products of their shops two in the last-named branch of study, John Lewton, now of a glorious success. Paulton, near Bristol, England, he became devotedly at- of which take rank as the largest and most perfectly ficient in Latin,
tached.
This
—
tutor, a scholar of varied abilities,
though a
equipped establishments of the kind
in
the country
— are
American continent, and are to be “At this time their as a linguist, historian, and theologist, and also for his many seen also in many parts of Europe. When quite a young business partakes of the common malady; they have done admirable personal characteristics. man, so great was his affection for his preceptor, he was in but little, comparatively, since the panic of 1S73, and until the hal)it of walking fifteen miles, on Saturday evenings, in the financial policy of our government is changed, they do coal-heaver’s son, was noted for his intellectual attainments
order to spend with him the Sabbath hours.
After his set-
tlement in this country, the two friends corresponded with
each other
In 1866,
for thirty-three years.
had smiled upon
his persevering labors,
when
prosperity
he again crossed
the Atlantic, influenced almost solely by his ardent desire to
scattered throughout the
not expect their business, or the business of the Slates in general, to be very prosperous.”
career with
political
the
.
.
He
.
entered on his
memorable Whig camjiaign of
1840, and steadfastly supported his party until tion.
He
its
disintegra-
then united with the Republican parly, and from
renew the tender personal associations which in bygone the day of its organization labored earnestly to promote its “ To welfare, and spent his means freely to secure the victorious years had been of such inestimable value to him. grasp the hand, ... to converse with one of the purest and establishment of its principles, and the accomplishment of “ But now, at last convinced that the to whom he has ever felt so its noble purposes. best men that ever lived greatly indebted for the implanting and nourishing in his political principles and policies of the Republican party are young mind those great principles which have been the based on error ruinous to the interests of the mass of the guide of his life, his stay and support through its trying people I have placed myself utterly against it on all vital ;
—
—
He
vicissitudes.
still
lives at the
age of seventy-six years.”
In the spring of 1834 he married Mary Amanda, the second
daughter of Judge Blocksom, of Zanesville, by whom he had seven children, Jennie B., Anna B., Benjamin A., and Harry B. three died in childhood. At that time he formed a partnership with Judge Blocksom in connection with J. T. ;
issues.”
He
stands on the
is now a member of the Greenback party, and same ground with Peter Cooper, Hon. W'. D.
Kelley, Hon. A. Campbell, and other experienced financiers
and statesmen.
His religious
faith
is
based on the Uni-
tarian-Universalist doctrines, as set forth in 1872 or 1873 by
Dr. Bellows, of
New
York,
in the
Liberal Christian.
He
Fracker and Lloyd Dillon, for the prosecution of the furnace
was reared
and John T. Fracker heing continuously engaged in the foundry business of Blocksom & Fracker, the furnace and
with an ever-present
forge department encountered disastrous failure and fruit-
Later, unable to subscribe conscientiously to the doctrine
bosom of the Church of England, and at and forge and mercantile businesses, the firm-style being the age of fifteen years was swayed by deep religious feelDillon, Blandy & Co. Aided by his brother and present ing, painful and distressing in the extreme. The thought partner, Fred. J. L. Blandy, he undertook the management that “endless woe” should exist for so great a part of “ Time and of the mercantile department, and made a success of it. humanity filled him with fear and horror. But Judge Blocksom becoming Postmaster of Zanesville, active physical labor brought some relief, but being endowed dreadful
in the
doctrine
consciousness of responsibility, this
hung
like a
dark
pall
over
my
life.”
absorbed a large amount of capital. The partnership of the Trinity, he left the Church of England. The belief was then dissolved, and he found himself not only penniless of “ endless misery” did not leave him, however, until the but hampered with debts. He subsequently entered again winter of 1S42, when he heard a discussion between Rev. into the mercantile business, possessing no capital of his G. T. Flanders, a Universalist minister, and Rev. Mr. own, and during the three ensuing years prosecuted it very Kellog, a Methodist minister, by which he was led to a very lessly
At the expiration of
successfully.
that time
he engaged in
the foundry business in conjunction with Judge
and
his
two
sons,
Blocksom
careful, earnest
Finally,
and exhaustive examination of the
he became
subject.
satisfied of the truth of the doctrine that
George W’. Blocksom and A. P. Blocksom, ultima'ely, by the infinite wisdom and beneficence of God, being Blocksom & Sons. Subse- good will trium]5h over evil, and that all will be purified,
the firm-style adopted
quent financial embarrassments eventually caused the dissolution also of this partnership,
hanging upon
and he was
left
with a debt
his shoulders of over five thousand dollars. In the spring of 1840 he connected himself with his brother in the foundry business once more, and at a later day added
and in the end brought into the kingdom of heaven. He was married in June, i860, at the residence of Andrew L. Grimes, of Mansfield, Ohio, to Amelia Adeline Douglas, of Lowell, Massachusetts.
By her he had
three children,
Amy
and Douglas Chajmian. Her to it the machine business in many varieties. That venture, decease occurred, December ist, 1867, at St. Paul, Minneincluding the manufacture of locomotives, portable and sta- sota, where she was sojourning for the purpose of strengthLouise,
Nellie
Frances,
BIOGRArillCAL ENCYCLOr.EDI A.
i6o
In the following year he
eiiing her enfeebled health.
again married to his deceased wife’s
by
whom
was
Nellie B. Douglas,
sister,
he has had one child, Roswell Douglas.
interests
have won
munity.
He was
for
him
com-
the esteem of the general
March
married,
who
Langlands, of Cumminsville,
loth,
Sarah
1841, to
died without issue, Feb-
October 15th, 1846, to Mary Goodnow, also of Cumminsville, by whom he has had ten ruary 4th, 1843;
children, six of
«
.AKEMAN, JOSEPH
whom
are
now
living, three sons
and three
daughters.
Ipswich, Massachusetts, September 19th, 1812,
in
,
now Merchant, was born
F.,
agttin,
and was the second son of Captain Daniel Lakeman and Susannah Lakeman. His father was a
>
AMES, ELIAS WILLIAM,
prominent sea captain. From his thirteenth to his fifteenth year he was placed out to live, and
born
Salem,
in
in the s.ame State, in his
Union,
living, are natives also of
followed through
twenty-
Attorney-at-Law, was
Coshocton
county, Ohio,
His parents, who are
February nth, 1837.
subsequently was apprenticed to learn the trade of wagonmaking at Hamilton, M.rssachusetts. He finished his term
of apprenticeship
East
in
still
His father has
Ohio.
His
pursuits.
life .agricultural
preliminary education was obtained in a
common
year, and afterward worked as a journeyman in Boston school located in the vicinity of his home. He then purand Lynn, Massachusetts. H.aving imbibed in early life a sued a higher course of study in the following educational strong desire to make the West his home, he started in May, institutions; the academy, at West Bedford, one year; the first
1837, from Boston with Cincinnati as an objective point, then possessing neither friend nor relative west of his native
He
State.
arrived at Cincinnati, June nth, 1837, with a
of tools, various articles of
chest
dollar broken
bank
of
bill
clothing,
and a
three-
Upon coming
Michigan.
to
Cumminsville he formed the acquaintance of E. Knowlton, who assisted him greatly in his business relations, and was
college, at Oberlin, Ohio, one year; after
the Spring to
Mountain Academy
institution
he
left in
;
and then went
at
Meadville, Pennsylvania, which
1859.
Until he had attained his seven-
Allegheny College,
teenth year he
which he attended
(for a time)
was engaged
in
At the termina-
farm labor.
he returned
tion of his sojourn in the last-named place
to
home, and found employment in teaching in the High instrumental in aiding him to erect a wagon shop, the only School, West Carlisle, Coshocton county, for a term of nine one then in existence at this place, on what is now the north- months, after which he applied himself to the study of law At under the guidance of Nicholas & Williams, well-known east corner of Spring Grove avenue and Ludlow street. In August, 1861, he enthe opening in 1851 of the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton practitioners of his native county. Railroad he was appointed Agent of Cumminsville station, tered the Union service as a private in Company K of the and about the same time During
that time
he held the
Road
minsville Special
and
later
was
when he resigned
office also
January, 1862, was appointed by the Governor to a Second
Lieutenancy, and in the course of the s.rme year was pro-
office
made him
also Clerk of the
School Board, and schools.
In
for
He
establishment
schools,
and he was a prime mover
insure
the
1852 a special school
one year each,
firmary,
successful
district,
and served
for a
having established
period of eighteen years.
he was
Hamilton County
In In-
also Clerk of the Board. office,
In 1869 he
which he occupied during the ensuing three is
and served
was elected
engaged
in
years.
At the
the paint and wall-paper
business in Cumminsville, where his integrity of character
and generous
Army
Corps,
at
Vicksburg, and held
this
interest in the local religious
and educational
until
office
regiment returned to the North and was reorganized, division.
He
served three
his enlistment, and- then re-
signed only on account of the sickness of two died shortly after he reached
home
sisters,
in the fall of 1864.
of western Virginia, under Fremont, including Cross
inter-
of the incorporated village of Cumminsville, a position
time he
and winter
serving successively as Di-
for a further period of three years.
present
of
fall
participated in the following battles and engagements
a Director of the
six years;
During the
rank of C.aptain.
in
in
In 1872 he w.as again elected to the same
Mayor
there
Clerk and Treasurer, with but two
1863 he was elected
17th his
to the
1863 he acted as Judge Advocate of the 3d Division,
Township acting with General Leggett’s its months longer than the term of
Mill Creek
days great energy and activity were
those
to
vals of
Latter
moted of
then appointed Orderly Sergeant; in
two years he was Supervisor of
needed
rector, President,
The
years.
term of
Cum-
Clerk in the same body.
in this capacity for ten
for the
two years,
;
and served
He was
three years.
was also elected Trustee of Mill Creek township, serving two years and later was elected Clerk of the same township,
32d Regiment of Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
both.
of Trustee of
District for a period of
six years
for
Postmaster, which
officiated as
positions he held for thirteen years,
his
of the Vicksburg campaign,
vance on Atlanta and
at
in
He those
:
Keys
when he was engaged
time on staff duty; and of Sherman’s campaign,
who
;
for a
the ad-
the actions before that place.
After
army and returned to Coshocton, Ohio, where he resumed the He was admitted study of law under his former preceptors. the capture of Atlanta he resigned his position in the
to the bar in Carrollton,
law course
at
class of 1867. City, Missouri,
the
Ohio,
in 1867, after
having taken a
Michigan University, 'graduating
He
first
in the
located in his profession at Kansas
where he resided about four months,
expiration of which time he returned to Coshocton,
at the
and
in
BIOGRAPHICAL ENX’VCLOP.LDIA. connection with John D. Nicholas entered upon the active
His present honorable position
practice of his profession.
as a leadiii!^ legal practitioner
the legitimate result of his
is
untiring diligence and perseverance, since, defraying in a
i6i
worked efficiently to increase the and happiness. He was married
store of general welfare
1855 to Caroline A.
in
Totten, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and has
now
a family
consisting of six children.
great measure the expenses attending his early training by his
own
exert.ons, he
for success
in
was compelled to rely upon himself alone He was married. May 26lh, 1870, to
whom
Cornelia A. Denver, of Wilmington, Ohio, by
had one
ELL,
life.
JOHN EDWIN,
was born
he has
moved
^V
WILLIAM
ELLIS, M.
Pedricktown, Salem county.
Hunt and Sarah
Thomas Ewing, in
D
New Jersey,
in Steubenville, Ohio, in
and
M. A.
Pennsyh’ania, in
graduated also
at
is
of
He
State.
lyih,
decease oc-
father’s
1838,
New
at
Orleans,
Louisiana, he then being engaged trading between Cincinnati
New Orleans. His mother died in Cincinnati, July He received his early education in the public
and
23d, 1875.
schools of Cincinnati, and, at the completion of an allotted
and Hon.
course of .study, was placed to learn the trade of pattern-
educated
Cannonsburg, Pennsylvania, and
at the Jefferson
His
nth, 1832.
March
curred,
akin to Rev. C.
He was
Ohio.
is
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
in
same
in .\llegheny City of the
of B. A. and
He
D., of .Steubenville, Ohio,
late of Lanca.ster,
Pedricktown,
Jersey, P'eb-
Hunt.
(Ellis)
Scotch-Irish extraction, C. Beatty,
New
was born
His parents were Dr. William
ruary 24th, 1833. F.
A.,
Bell,
to Cincinnati, Ohio, arriving in that city
P'ebruary
T)
v.'lf^UNT, REV. in
His parents, Walter and Jane
26lh, 1831.
child.
Operator in Real-Estate,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, August
in
took the degrees
College, Cannonsburg,
In the Latter year he 1853 and 1856. the Western Theological Seminary, Al-
making, which calling he followed he secured employment ilton county,
In this year
until 1853.
in the office
Ham-
of the Auditor of
Ohio, and in the capacity of Clerk and Deputy
remained there
until
March
He
bth, 1863.
then assumed
the duties as Auditor of the county, having been elected to that position at the preceding
At the ex-
October election.
piration of his term he gradually
withdrew from the scenes
In 1848 he had united with the Second Presbyterian Church of Steubenville. He was soon thereafter engaged for a year in clerking in a store, and al.so
of the political arena and
for a brief period in 1851 acted in the capacity of clerk
on
important trusts both of a public and private nature, in the
was licensed by the
conduct and management of which he has evinced invariably
legheny City, Pennsylvania.
In 1855 he
a Ohio river steamboat.
Presbytery of Steubenville, and in 1857 ordained by the
Presbytery of Coshocton
(now
Ohio.
Zanesville),
that date he has continued uninterruptedly in
church
that place.
at
He
Since
charge of the
superintended the erection of a
very handsome village church and parsonage here, and in
its affairs,
official
and engaged
During
ness of operations in real estate.
in the busi-
career as an
his
and public man he has been the recipient of many
the possession of entire capacity and sound integrity. is
a P'reemason of high standing, having attained
all
He
the de-
grees of the several grades, also that of Honorary Inspector-
General of the thirty-third degree A. A. Scottish the Independent Order of
Odd
rite.
In
Fellows he has exhibited a
He
various ways has been importantly instrumental in advanc-
notable zeal and activity.
ing the interests of his church in the region where he lives
several positions of trust in the State, including that of
Grand
and
Master, and at this time
to the
labors.
ability
and
and
zeal
He
Examiner. tion,
In addition to other work, he
h.as
served with
Councilman, and County School
as City
has been a Director of a banking associa-
also a Director of the
Coshocton
G.as
Company,
having been chiefly instrumental in the establishment of that
and of a number of others admirably calculated promote the general prosperity and welfare. He was a
enterprise, to
member of the was a member
Presbyterian General Assembly in 1861 also of the
;
the
Grand I-odge of the United among the number of leading
Hon. Representative
States.
He
is
a valuable
man
and has been importantly instrumental, either as prime mover or as auxiliary, in benefit the
citizens of Cincinnati,
pushing to completion enterprises calculated to
community
in general.
and
Presbyterian Union Convention
of 1867, both of which were held in Philarlel]3hia, Pennsyl-
vania; was elected a
is
has fdled with credit the
member
EART, JOSEPH member
Operator
E.,
Olden
&
Real-Estate,
in
Assembly of 1874, but
His
the fathers of both having died before their births.
was limited
early education
seven-months’ term
to a
at
W'hile
log school-houses of frontier settlements.
Ripley, Ohio, and after a pupilage of eighteen
Teetor, in
The months, during which he made some progress in all its branches, he commenced its practice, and has continued in 797
to
it
up
profession he remained in
his
moved
in
eighteenth year he began the learning of the blacksmith
During
sources and
he remained
for
about six years.
Ohio, where he was engaged
He
Dur-
at his trade until 1863.
ing his residence there he was intimately identified, in various positions, with the welfare of the Carthage schools,
three years acted as a
P'irst
of the
and
for
Township Board
of
In 1863 he entered the Provost Marshal’s office
Education. of the
member
Congressional Ohio District, and remained there,
department,
in the enrolling
for
a period of about sixteen
at this place until
re-
1858.
he did something to increase the
this period facilities
moved developed, and
subsequently
Carthage, Hamilton county,
to
Ripley one year, and then
Xenia, Ohio, residing
to
trade at Mercersburg, Franklin county, Pennsylvania, where
with his wife and parents
In the pursuit of this favorite
to the present time.
the
re-
of the profession, then but imperfectly
1848 entered the Ohio College of Dental
in
Surgery, and, after completing two courses, graduated in
1850 from that
In 1854 he was appointed as
institution.
Professor of “ Operative Dentistry” in this college, and has
now completed
his twenty-first year in this chair,
and has
taught longer without interruption in this capacity than per-
haps any one else
now
For the greater part of
living.
this
Dean of the Faculty of this institution, member of the Ohio Dental College Asso-
period he has been
and has been a
was appointed Deputy Sheriff under ciation since its organization in February, 1852, having been Richard Calvin, and held that position for two years. I'rom for twenty years its Secretary. In October, 1856, in co1861 to 1865 he was elected four times successively to the partnership with Dr. George Watt, he became part proprietor From 1866 to of the Dental Register of the IVest, and one of its editors office of Trustee of Mill Creek township. 1869 he acted as one of the Directors of the County Infirm- and publishers, and in a few years became its sole proIn 1865 he
months.
remaining
position ever since, with the ex-
ary; and from
1867 to 1869 officiated as Chief Deputy under Henry Schlotiman. From 1869 to 1871 he vvas Chief Deputy under Colonel Daniel Weber. In 1871
prietor,
Sheriff
ception of a short period.
he was elected Sheriff of Hamilton county, Ohio, and served
devoted more than twenty years of unceasing
two years.
in this capacity for real estate business.
Politically
\Vhig and Republican
May
November
1851, at Carthage, leaving
20th,
He
children.
Ann
married,
first
for
organ of the profession
who
of two
Sarah
to
ITiyden, a native of Hamilton county, Ohio.
for
in
when
it
oil ‘’)W|
'
born, September
county, Ohio. '''‘S
1
D. D.
mained
Dental Surgeon, was
7th, 1820, in Russelville,
Adams
ten years.
moved
to the
in
mountainous
county, Ohio, where they re-
His
father,
who emigrated
Lyman
Taft,
was
the
became
a monthly.
quarterly
until
has been issued
It
In
was changed to the Dental Register. In 1857 Dr. Taft removed to Cincinnati, his connection with the college and this journal having much to do with this change, though for two years prior to this removal he had practised
Xenia.
Brown had
After a residence of two years
place the family
regions of
S.,
effort to
which has been the recognized
twenty years without the failure of a single number.
1866 the
title
his profession
JON.\THAN,
he has
and has
Ohio, and to some extent through
in
Cincinnati, having a business connection
with Drs. George Watt and .Vh'T,
control,
This publication was issued
West.
the
July, i860,
2d, 1847,
was again married, July 26th, 1855,
ICir the past eight years
management and
to the
General
issue
entire editorial
interests of this publication,
he has been attached
and voted
its
this
in the
Krebs, of Washington county, Maryland,
Catherine died
parties,
He was
Winfield Scott.
engaged
In 1875
held
in
J.
Hamill
Previous to his editorial
written a
fession, but
number of
in
both that city and
work on
the Register he
articles in the interests of his pro-
the bulk of this labor
was greatly
inferior to
what he has subsequently accomplished. He kept an accurate record of experiments and modes of practice, which be-
came
of invaluable service to
him
in his
subsequent literary
fourteen he enjoyed but meagre advantages for education,
During the winter of 1858-59 he wrote a treatise on “Operative Dentistry,” which was received so well that has been it was adopted as a text-book in the colleges, and relied on as an authority wherever the science is known.
and
It
a native of Massachusetts,
and
his
England
to
Ohio
in
1818,
mother was a native of Ohio. Both were of New stock, and of Puritan ancestry. Lip to the age of
at that
time entered an academy where he studied two
work.
has been translated into
German and
other languages.
some knowledge of Greek and Latin and of The second edition, revised and greatly enlarged, was issued mathematics. The succeeding two years were devoted to in 1868, and obtained a very large sale. During the last farm labor, and at eighteen he engaged as teacher in a com- twenty years Dr. Taft has devoted his attention and most mon school, continuing in this capacity about four years. earnest efforts towards the organization and support of dental
years, gaining
He commenced and pursued
in this
period the study of natural sciences,
his researches with industry
spring of 1841
and
spirit.
In the
he studied dentistry under Dr. George D.
them as of incalculable benefit for and progress of the profession. He was
associations, regarding
the development
a
member
of the
American Society of Dental Surgeons
in
.
BIOGRAPHICAL E N' C V C 0 P -E D A 1
1S52; became a member oT the American Dental Conits second meeting in 1856; was chosen its Presi-
vention at
dent in 1863, and continued
attendance
in his
at
in 1859,
and was
until 186S,
has been a
Secretary from the date of
its
when he was chosen as its member of the Mississippi and
for tw'enty-seven years,
ha.s
;
Association inception
He
presiding officer.
\ alley Dental Society
not been absent from
its
an-
nual meetings, with perhaps one exception, during that time.
mained there
outbreak of the war,
until the
when he
re-
raised
Comiiany D of the 26th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry, of which he became Captain. He was sent with his command to Virginia, where he was attached to the i ilh Army Corps.
twenty-four
its
He
City Engineer, holding the office for several years. j
these annual
many years. He was one of the gentlemen who organized the American Dental
gatherings for
I
.
.
'
In the
autumn
of 1862 he
was detailed upon the
staff of
General Carl Schurz as Chief of Topographical Engineers.
He
participated in the battles of Eredericksburg, Chancel-
Gettysburg, Wauhatchie, Missionary Ridge, and
lorsville,
in
many
other important engagements and skirmishes.
In
His labors have been conspicuous in over fifty different pro- the fall of 1864 he resigned on account of ill health and fessional associations, and has during the past twelve years settled in Cincinnati, where his family had been for some He became the local editor of the Cinciuua/i been in attendance at from fifteen to thirty societies an- time living. In 1S67-68 he was engaged with some of his pro-
nually.
fessional brethren in obtaining the passage of a late the practice of dentistry in the State of
enacted
May 8th,
1868, and
it
law
to regu-
Ohio, which was
has proven, as was anticipated,
of the highest benefit to the public and the profession. act created a
he was
Board of Examiners,
once appointed, and
at
honor ever
since,
to a
membership
this post
he has
in
This
which
filled
with
occupying during the entire period of the
existence of the Board the chair of presiding officer.
In
was appointed Professor of the “ Principles
July, 1875, he
and Practice of Operative Dentistry”
in the
Dental College
of the University of Michigan, where he devotes part of the
time
in
He
professional teaching.
vestigator into the science of dentistiy,
has been a patient in-
and has accomplished
the most beneficial results in his study of the best methods
of treatment.
He
1S65, and
Volkshlatt in
and enterprising new's
He
remained
and
as a graceful writer.
capacity until elected City Treasurer
this
in
himself as a skilful
distinguished
collector
Democratic
Cincinnati, in April, 1S75,
of
Mr. Ligowsky
is
of great natural ability for the discharge of
His
ticket.
a gentleman of scholarly attainments, and
c.ireer as a civil
duties.
official
engineer and journalist was distin-
guished by a thorough comprehension of the character of the to
work committed
perform
to
him, and by thorough competency
His record as a soldier
it.
and he was, while
in the
army, held
a meritorious one,
is
highest estima-
in the
Since entering upon the City
tion by his brother officers.
Treasurership he has given ample evidence of his ability to discharge to
duties,
its
and of
his intention to allow
occur on the integrity of his
no blemish
official c.areer.
has been an earnest advocate of the right
of w’omen to study and pursue
this profession,
and has w'on
the esteem of his fellow'-citizens for his candor, his industry, his public spirit
ten years has been connected with
He
HORNHILL, FRENCH
and profound learning. For seventeen years
he has been connected with the Cincinnati Bethel, and its
Board of Directors.
having been born
hxs aKvays been as conscientious a churchman as an
investigator in the
Hannah living,
domain of science.
Collins, of Ripley, Ohio,
one of
whom
is
Slate,
In 1842 he married
and has three
in
is
a Virginian by birth,
Culpepper county,
on the 21st of September, 1804.
in
He
both native Viiginians.
was received
at
He ;
attended school
then he
left
school
and began the reading of law with Colonel Hall. pursuing
IGO\\SK\ AUGUST, ,
Civil Engineer, Journalist,
'I'reasurer of Cincinnati,
of
His general education
Harrisonburg, Virginia.
was sixteen years of age
there until he
i
that is
Irish-English descent, although his parents were
cl.ildren
Dr. William Taft, dentist.
W., Judge of the Probate
Court, in Coshocton, Ohio,
for
this
After
course of reading for a time he abandoned the
law temporarily and commenced the study of medicine.
This profession seems not to have found favor with him, for Germany, November 22d, 1826, and was when he was seventeen years of age he gave it up and went educated in the German High Schools. Upon to learn the gunsmith’s trade with McGilvary, of Buckingthe close of his school career he studied civil en- ham. He remained with him, working at this trade, for a Chio, was born
in
West-
phalia,
gineering.
one
In 1846 he entered the army, serving
])eriod of ten
years.
Then,
in
the year
1830, he went to
year, the required term for students,
and then assumed Coshocton county, Ohio, and there engaged with his brother his professional duties and received his diploma. This occupied him for about In 1848 in the manufacture of brick. he entered the German navy and served for some years. In two years, when ill health interfered with his business. For August, 1853, he arrived in Philadelphia, and engaged with Percival Smith, map publisher, as the surveyor of Clinton
and Lewis counties.
New
Vork.
Finishing the duties
re-
several years his health remained in an impaired condition.
When West
it
permitted him to resume business he removed to
Carlisle,
Coshocton county, and there engaged
quired of him in this connection in 1855 he went to Madison,
cantile pursuits; from
M isconsin,
and thence
where he became Dejiuly County Surveyor and
to
East Union.
removed
in
mer-
West Bedford, For over thirty years he was
there he
to
—
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.EDIA.
164
engaged
At length explored field. Accordingly, after the expiration of his May, 1875, he was ap- apprenticeship, September 9th, 1820, he applied for admis-
mercantile business in these places.
in
he removed
Coshocton, and
to
in
pointed by the Governor to the position of Probate Judge.
In the to
of that year he was elected, without opposition,
fall
Judicial honors
the office for a term of three years.
fill
followed magisterial honors
his case
in
betore taking
for,
;
sion to the Cornwall
school for the purpose of preparing
This institution was under American Board, and was established
himself for missionary work. the patronage of the for the
education of heathen youth, the children of mission-
and those who had a missionary
his seat on the bench,
aries
of the Peace for
lamented Obookiah was
Democrat, and
money
he had held the position of Justice Politically, he is a over twenty years.
he
belongs
He
” school.
distinctively
the
“ Hard .State
In 1836 he was elected to
Legislature at various times.
the
to
has represented his party in the
of Representatives for Coshocton and Holmes,
House
In the year 1844 he was
and served through one term.
elected to the State Senate for Coshocton
and Guernsey,
He
the school.
at
life
The
in view.
one of the inmates of
that time
devoted himself assiduously to his studies,
own efforts, and in November, 1825, offered himself to the Board for missionary service. Of the obstacles intervening between him and defraying
all
his original
attendant expenses by his
He
there exists no visible record.
intention
was licensed
gospel by the A.ssociation of
to preach the
He was again Hartford, north, P'ebruary 7th, 1826. On the isl of the that body two sessions. House of Representatives in 1863, and con- succeeding September he sailed from Bridgeport for BosIn 1868 he was ton, on his w:y to Nova Scotia, the home of his paternal tinued to sit in the House until 1870. Having supplied himself with a quantity of elected Speaker pro tempore of the House by the unani- ancestors. and served
in
elected to the
mous
On
vote of the members.
He
has been twice married.
November, 1828, he married Sarah WolfenShe died in barger, of Pocahontas county, Virginia. In November, 1844, he married for his August, 1844. second wife Mrs. Ellen Wright, daughter of William Renthe 22d of
frew, an early settler of Coshocton,
who
/s still
tracts for distribution,
and arrived
quent passage of a week,
him
to
for Halifax,
in a
vicinity,
and declining
in
September 14th,
A
passage of two days.
subse-
small fishing vessel, brought
Greysborough, the residence of his
spending a month there relatives,
living.
he sailed
in port after a
relatives.
After
pleasant intercourse with those
to take
charge of a parish in the
he returned to Connecticut.
In
the spring
1827, on the suspension of the Cornwall
school, he
invited to take charge of twelve Indian boys
of
was
and conduct
V.iTr^UBBELL, HORATIO NELSON, Founder and for them to the Miami University, at Oxford, Ohio, where they many years successful conductor of the Ohio In- were to complete their education. The journey was perstitution for the Deaf and Dumb, was born in formed by way of the Erie canal, and two weeks were Trumbull, Fairfield county, Connecticut, Sep- consumed in reaching Cleveland. The facilities for travel From a sketch of his life, at that lime were so imperfect and uncertain that, after a tember 9th, 1799. written by Rev. Collins Stone, taken substantially
from the “Annals,” are culled the following
facts
He
:
company
left
course through the woods,
first
delay of several days, the straight
on to
foot,
was the eighth child in a family of eighteen children whose father, Nathan Hubbell, removed from the province of Nova Scotia to Connecticut in 1793. At the age of sixteen
thence, passing through Columbus, to Oxford.
he was bound
months previous
as
an apprentice
to learn the hatter’s trade in
the neighboring town of Brookfield.
About
this
time he
experienced a change of heart, and consecrated himself to a
life
seems
of benevolence in to
the servicr of
His mind
God.
have turned almost immediately to the Christian
taking a
Massillon,
and
After con-
ducting his charge safely to the appointed destination, he returned to Columbus and engaged in teaching. to his arriKal a
struction of the deaf and
community results
An
—an
chiefly
dumb had
interest excited
by the
efforts
A
few
w'arm interest in the in-
been awakened
and matured
of Dr.
in the
into practical
lloge, of Columbus.
act incorporating an institution for this
purpose had just
work as coveted fields of useful- passed the General Assembly and a Board of Trustees been These desires were warmly cherished until Provi- organized, of which' Governor Trimble was {cx-ojjpcio') ness. dence opened plainly before him another sphere of labor President and Dr. Hoge Secretary. It was soon perceived one nearly allied to that on which his thoughts were that its successful operation depended upon the finding a
ministry and missionary
centred.
It
is
related as an evidence of his conscientious-
ness that, although the father
was
distasteful
employment selected to
for
him by
his
him, he yet resolutely and even
cheerfully fulfilled his indentures. tation of missionaries to the
Among
Sandwich
who
should be fully qualified
structor to the deaf mutes.
He
to act as
was then selected
to
fill
in-
that
responsible post, and in March, 1828, went to Hartford to
He
remained
first
depu-
prepare himself for the allotted task.
which
sailed
of the institutions there for about eighteen months, wdtness-
the
Islands,
suitable person
in
one
was Rev. Samuel Ruggles, of Brookfield. From ing with profit the daily processes of school-room instrucman he became deeply in- tion and receiving lessons in signs. On returning to terested in the enterprise, and became filled with an ardent Columbus he opened his .School for the Instruction of Deaf The act incorporating the desire to qualify himself for labor in that new and then un- Mutes, October i6lh, 1829. in
1820,
intercourse with this excellent
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.EDIA. was passed
institution
dumb
mind with regard
to the
papers of the
leading
the
m
insti-
Circulars were
Yet, at
State.
and of these
the close of the
had increased
to
number
pupils that
it
was found necessary
and permanent structure
larger
actual inmates.
spent a few weeks
the appointment, but
declined
that
in
Although not engaged
organizing the school.
It
is
Before
he never ceased
labors designed
to
warm
manifest a
to
relieve
in
conducting such an
est.ablishment
community
in
the enterprise, to gain confidence
pecuniary management,
:
and
last
insti-
by a wise
buildings, to pro-
to erect 'suitable
a comp.iny of
fifty
young persons avho had
or sixty
know’ia not a lesson of restraint before
—
this
all
resulted
He
cure and prepare competent instructors, to maintain order
all
During the
also
in legislative action
engaged with
year of his
life
securing the desired object.
work
zeal in the
was spent
the hour of
its
The
extremity.
which he was led
course of investigation to
collecting material
in
for
“ was a source of great satisfaction to his doubtless contributed
much
him
to prepare
On
death.
the
for his peaceful
be an actor
to
and
a Saturday he completed
which he had followed so many
was himself called
volume
own mind,” and
the misfortune of the deaf mute had up to that time excited
Doubts were entertained respecting the possi-
a
Dying Words of Eminent Persons.” Its design was to present, in marked contrast with every other principle, the power of Christian faith to sustain the soul in
demanded and triumphant
circle of the afflicted in-
jrress
entitled “
work
arranged his manuscript, and on the succeeding
beyond the family
The
of colportage.
preparing for the
in
no small amount of judgment, prudence, energy and skill. Also, aside from the sympathy of a few benevolent persons,
dividual.
in
interest
the unfortunate.
1854 he presented to the General
session of
legislative
a
to erect
to enlist the good-will of the
its
attention
active
tion,
upon the care
not necessary to dwell
and wearisome labor involved
little
city in
in
of pupils
applicants
the
for
tution after
among
He
ware, Wisconsin, then about to be opened.
the
purposes became so crow'ded with the constantly increasing
number of
autumn of 1853 he received the appointment of Superintendent of the Institution for the Deaf and Dumb at Dela-
Assembly a memorial urging the establishment of an institen, and in the course of the second year tution for the education and training of the idiot population Eventually the house rented for school of Ohio, thus taking the incipient steps which have since year, however, the
first
to twenty-two.
were of unsound mind.
tw'o
and was ever ready to aid the pastor and his by counsel and by active co-operation. In the
service, after the close of his connection with the institu-
opening, but three pupils from the vicinity of Columbus arrived,
trustee,
brethren
in-
and explanatory advertisements
extensively distributed in
of
pro-
feasibility of the enterprise
the result of the experiment
shown by
tutions already established in the country.
serted
to
people, their pitiable condition while un-
educated and the entire jected, as
interval
made number
organization efforts were
its
enlighten the public
deaf and
During the
in April, 1827.
wliich elapsed before
165
in
Monday
the scenes through
On
others.
the morning
of January 19th, 1857, he suffered with severe paroxysms
His disease, an
of palpitation and distress.
affection of the
not easily persuaded to commit their children to the care
He called his family was approaching a climax. around him and took leave of each member; he sent mes-
of strangers where the prospect of their receiving benefit
sages to the absent, to his former pastor and to the church,
bility
of his education, while parents and guardians were
was so problematical.
In January, 1851, he resigned his
position as Superintendent of the institution, but at the retpiest of the trustees
continued to perform
its
duties
till
the
During many of the twenty-two years connection with the institution he had discharged the
heart,
for
which he expressed
his
unabated
He
affection.
of his love for his family, of his faith
in
sjioke
Christ, of his
readiness to depart and of the blessed society he should
succeeding October.
soon
of his
was
While being removed from
join.
reclining, to his bed,
he ceased
a sofa, to
on which he
At
breathe.
his
combined duties of superintendent, steward and treasurer. funeral a discourse was delivered by his former pastor. Rev. Within this time 462 deaf and dumb children had, for Henry I.. Hitchcock, D. 1 ).. from Revelations xiv. 13. On periods varying in duration, enjoyed the privileges of in-
The
struction.
institution,
sane pupil and two
idiots,
from the small beginning of one
had grown
the country, and had blessed with
to
men
forth
sonville,
Knoxville and
sprung the
si.ster
to
found schools
at
It
had educated
Indianapolis, Jack-
Louisiana, and
schools of
in
beneficence nearly a
its
generation of the deaf mutes of the State.
and sent
be the fourth
from these had
Iowa and Wisconsin.
But his
and usefulness were not confined to the institution under his charge. He was one of thirty-one persons who, influence
in
1839, united to form the
of Columbus. interest,
Second
I’resbvterian
Church
In that enterprise he took a deep and active
and, as primnrily
it
labored under
many
embarrass-
ments, contributed liberally of his means to advance welfare.
Eor many years he held the
offices of elder
its
and
a subsequent
acter
and
Sabbath a discourse, portraying
labors,
was delivered
his life, char-
language
in the sign
in the
chapel of the institution, by the superintendent, to a deeply interested
and
xxxvii. 37.
affected assembly
of pupils, from
ably energy, combined with Christian
him
stacles only stimulated
of his
life
needed than
and warm bears
No
the
other
and earnest purpose
on missionary ground, and
its
Ob-
and more
po.sses.sed a heart
benevolence
testimony.
his early
])rob-
benevolence.
to greater exertions
That he
determined perseverance. disinterested
Psalms
His most prominent characteristic was
entire
proof of this to
of
current
spend his
actual devotion to the
is
life
diffi-
and self-denying labor of relieving a class of unfortunates upon which has fallen a pall more dreadful than cult
heathenism
itself.
His
efforts
for the relief of idiots, for
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP/EDIA.
i66
church and
(lie
neglected and ignorant in his imme-
for the
neighhorhootl,
diate
confirm
also
monument which he
has
the
of his labors for the deaf
left
mutes of Ohio and the great West will long remain reflect
honor upon
among
jilace
memory and
his
to
to attest his title to a
On
the real benefactors of mankind.
called
to
Portland, Maine, at
The church members
testimony.
the day
church of the denomination. nently successful
and and build up another In this work he was emithe desire of pastors
there, to organize
and
;
after a pastorate there of ten years
he was again compelled, on account of the health of his family, to remove. He came West, and after sojourning in
Pittsburgh for a year and a half, and finding the climate Deaf and Dumb, January 23d, 1857, a West beneficial, he accepted the call of the Vine Street series of resolutions were adopted which adverted in glow- Congregational Church, in Cincinnati, Ohio, in the year ing terms to his career as a Christian and philanthropist, 1867. In 1873, being very much reduced in strength, and and expressed also the profound regret of all at his un- health very precarious, he removed to a prairie city, and as
of his funeral, at a meeting of the Instructors of the Ohio Institution for the
expected and unwished-for demise.
pastor of the Congregational
he labored,
HENRY
4th,
for a
year and a half,
returned to Cincinnati, which is now his Early in 1875 November permanent home. Mr. Moore quite early developed literary Pennsylvania. By tastes, and for several years indulged literary habits and
D., was born,
Philadelphia,
1822, in
in Springfield, Illinois,
work,
time his health was completely restored.
during which
OORE, REV.
Church
in a sort of invalid
reason of constitutional weakness, and frequently
pursuits to the extremity of health-prostration.
recurring sicknesses during childhood and youth,
of fourteen years he
his
was interrupted
education
from school and sojourns
by withdrawals
country places with
in
was
At the age
a poetic contributor to the Satur-
day Evening Post and Saturday Courier, of Philadelphia. In Allibone’s “ Dictionary of American Authors,” his name
He, however, notwithstanding these occurs in connection with a variety of literary work of imin the excellent academy of James portant character and extended usefulness. As a preacher Goodfellow, in Philadelphia, for a collegiate course of he has always been favored with a large share of the symstudy, and at the early age of fifteen years was ready to be pathy and attention of the communities where he has lived. friends of his family.
drawbacks, was prepared
entered in the University of Pennsylvania, for which dis-
He was
tinguished school his parents had designed him.
Though
liberal
doctrine, even
in
Orthodoxy, so that sometimes
to
the very verge of
his friends
have expressed
compelled, however, to pursue his further studies privately,
solicitude concerning his soundness in the faith, yet he has
which he did with some degree of thoroughness under the direction of the celebrated clergyman, Rev. Samuel B.
maintained a true evangelical charity and given utterance
Wylie,
1 ).
D., at that time Emeritus Professor of
the University,
in
and
Languages
Teacher of Theology
also
to
such
graduates of the University as sought to pursue the Divine
Under
study.
his collegiate
Wylie’s culture Mr. Moore prosecuted
Ptr.
and
divinity studies,
and
at
the age of twenty
At the
years he was a licentiate in the gospel ministry.
to
thank him
for his
will
sympathy with the wandering and
is
weary is
large,
and
his
chi'ldren of the
Father will impress any listener
hearing him, even for the
large,
and he
straints
is
time.
first
and prudencies which would separate the minister
from the “ publicans and sinners.”
Any
would be welcome to him if he could, by such or any means, reach the ears and hearts of men with the message
remarked: “Mr. Moore, your son Henry
of truth and of
redeeming
love.
These
warm genial bearing made Mr. Moore extremely popular
quent earnestness of address and a
towards the people, have
at
and learned preacher.
that
time the most distinguished
Mr. Moore entered the active mindenomination, after
having
served for one year as assistant pastor to the Rev.
Thomas
H. Stockton,
Congregational
at that
in his
work
and" beloved by thousands of admiring friends.
time pastor of the Independent Church,
corner of Eleventh and the year 1853 he
characteristics of
Christian and ministerial character, together with an elo-
which Dr. Wylie was the
pulpit or platform,
kindness and care of his son’s educa-
be a good preacher, but he will make a very poor
in
is
impatient of those churchly rules and re-
Covenanter,’’ that being the denomination of Christians of
istry
who
His charity
Christian church of any name, or synagogue of the Jews,
In the course of the interview the venerable and
facetious doctor
ministry throughout.
men
Wylie
close of his studies Mr. Moore’s father called on Dr.
tion.
His love of
to a true evangelical
Wood
was pastor
streets, Philadelphia.
of the
Church (Congregational), Philadelphia. left
Philadelphia, on account of
for
climatory change, and
North Church, Portsmouth, pastorate there, during
ill
In that year he
health and the necessity
accepted the
New
Until
Second Independent
call
Hampshire.
of the
Old
After a short
which time the present elegant and
spacious house of worship of that church was built, he was
ONFORT, HENRY
A.,
House of Refuge of at
Fishkill
August
6th,
Plains,
Superintendent of
Cincinnati, Ohio,
Dutchess county.
1835, and
vi'as
the
was born
New
York,
the oldest of seven
children whose parents were Albert H. Monfort and Elsie (Wiltsie) Monfort, both earnest memHis father, a native bers of the Dutch Reformed Church. of New York, has been engaged through life in agricultural
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCL 0 P.L;DIA. and now
pursuits,
resides
on Long
native of Dutchess county, also
His mother, a
Isla’nd.
is still
living.
His
clays of
home
New
Pelham,
in
167
Hampshire, with
young wife
his
while Cleveland was a small village, and lived and labored
boyhood we.e passed alternately in working on a farm in there and elsewhere in northern Ohio, for the glory of God the summer months and attending school during the winter. and the welfare of his fellow-men, till his early death, in While in his eighteenth year he became engaged in teach- 1837, among those who knew and loved him best. His ing school, an avocation which he followed during the widow, one of the Dana descendants, survived him but one ensuing two years.
The
next two years were devoted to
year.
and
Intelligent
beautiful,
the business of photograph itig, at the expiration of which
Christian grace can bestow, she
time he engaged for a period of four years in merchandis-
of her family and friends
In 1857 he
ing.
moved
to the
West and
Mil-
settled at
loving husband
in
with
all
labors
and
that
affection
and the worthy companion his
all
endowed
was the centre of
of her
and their
trials,
waukee, Wisconsin, where he found occupation in teaching memory is fresh in the hearts of the Lake Erie pioneers, In 1858 he removed to Cincinnati, among whom in the Cleveland Cemetery they have long for about one year.
and upon
his arrival there
became connected as an employe rested. The three children were separated by this bereave& Co., where he remained ment, and PIdward was reared in the family of Alexander He then moved to Poughkeepsie, Garton, a farmer near Oberlin, tilt he was sixteen years
with the house of John Route until the winter of 1861.
New
York, where he devoted
his attention for
mercantile pursuits, afterward leasing Laurel
one year
to
Bank Semi-
old, all
when he determined to obtain a liberal commenced to attend the
hazards, and
education Filyria
at
High
Delaware county, New York, an establishment School, then a prominent institution in northern Ohio. which was conducted by him during the following two Here he fitted himself for college, working his way as best years. In April, 1864, after removing to Cincinnati, he he could, his inheritance being but little more than an unnary, in
was appointed Assistant Superintendent of the Cincinnati sullied and beloved name. Leaving there with the higliest House of Refuge, and in May, 1866, was appointed Super- honors, he, in 1849, entered Western Reserve College, intendent and .Secretary of the same institution. That founded by his father, and pushed his way on till a quarrel office he has since continuously filled, a convincing proof among the professors, followed liy many of them resigning, of the efficiency of his management and of the esteem in induced him and others to go elsewhere, and he chose old which he is held by the able board that controls the work- Yale, entering the same grade class which he left, after the ings of the establishment. During his years of control of usual severe examination. He graduated in 1853. Rethe House of Refuge 2744 children have passed under his turning West he taught the academy in Talmadge, Ohio, supervision, and of this number, the majority being of the for a year, and then went to Cincinnati in 1854 and comcriminal classes, it is estimated, on accepted data, that at menced reading law with the firm of Ferguson & Long, lea-st 2000 have been thoroughly reformed and led to conteaching in the daytime in the public schools and studying duct themselves with honesty and industry; while the at night. He was admitted to the bar in 1856. After various arrangements and the general management of this several months’ attention to office practice with his precepinstitution of Cincinnati are scarcely equalled in similar tors, he commenced, in 1857, as partner of Henry Snow, establishments in any part of the United States.
member
of the Congregational Church.
He
Politically,
is
he
a is
not attached blindly to any party, always votes for those
upon
whom
he can place reliance as loyal and energetic and has never yet attended a public political
citizens,
He w.as married in February, i860, to Ophelia Hunting, a native of Cincinnati, and daughter of the late Richard G. Hunting. meeting. S.
Esq.,
which firm continued successfully
when Mr. for
Bradstreet
his future
removed
to
of
Vicksburg,
1867, lamented by
all
who knew
proper attempts
I
I
over two years,
Joseph, Missouri,
who her.
died
The
in
August,
certainty of
coming war induced his return to Cincinnati, late in i860, where he has since resided, practising his profession. A leading object of his life has been to aid and promote all to
advance
religion,
general welfare of his fellow-men.
fxAD.STREET, ED\\,\RD P.AYSON, was
for
In i860 he was married to Mrs.
home.
Fraisse,
Dolabella
St.
morality
Early
in
and
the
his residence
he was an active member of the Young Men’s and one of the founders and early Ohio. He is a lineal descendant in the seventh presidents of the Cincinnati Gymnasium. In 1866 he was generation from Simon Bradstreet, one of the elected a member of the Board of Piducation, and aided in colonial governors of Massachusetts, who came the plans and movements for establishing the jiresent public June
5th,
over with
born,
1830, at Vermillion, near .Sandusky,
in Cincinnati Chri.stian
Association,
wife, the noted poetess, Anne library. In 1867-68 he was a member of an association of England in the “Arabella Stuart.” gentlemen whose object was to create a public sentiment in sketch was the second son of the late favor of enforcing law and order on Sunday, and with his his
Bradstreet, in 1630, from
The
subject of this
Rev. Stejrhen
1 Bradstreet, the pioneer clergyman of Cleveland, the founder and long minister of the First Pres-
byterian
Church
.
in
that city,
who removed
there from his
associates devoted
much
time and labor to the cause
quiet way, with excellent results.
was one of
the trustees of the
in
a
P'rom 1869 to 1871 he
Homoeopathic
P'ree
Dis-
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOP.EDIA.
i6S
1S71-72 be was President of the Ohio De-
In
pensary.
partment of the National Capital Life Insurance Company, till
was merged
it
Penn Mutual Company.
in the
same year he was chairman of a was
object
to unite all
candidates for city
been
good
offices,
whose
a teacher in the
He
Young Men’s
has
Bible Society
1865 he was appointed .Superintendent
In
one term,
as teacher
;
lege (1821-22).
citizens to vote for the best
for years a director of the
of Cincinnati.
fifteen
and one year spent
In the
private organization
regardless of politics.
age of
A
at
home
age of seventeen,
at the
in preparation
for
Yale Col-
specially favoring Providence gave
common
and surveying, so
algebra, trigonometry
him
school able to introduce him into
one he had the opportunity there
that
in a class
make
to
of
himself ac-
advance of the usual district These facilities, coupled with the township library, which was pretty thoroughly explored, constituted mainly the intellectual nutriment and stimulus of his youth.
(juainted with these sciences in
school course.
Church Sunday-school, and has rearound him a corps of remarkable teachers, till the school has become celebrated The opportunities for college culture were eagerly emfor successful efficiency. During the same period he was braced and richly enjoyed from 1822 to 1826, when he elected anil served as vestryman, but declined re-election. graduated at Yale, after which he was a member of the In 1870 he was one of the founders of the Church Guild Theological .Seminaiy of Yale University two years; was of Cincinnati, and continued one of its foremost members then ordained as a home missionary, July, 1828, and came of
Paul’s Episcopal
St.
mained so ever
and
since, gathering
mission work, during
especially in
officers,
In 1872 he was
years of successful existence. first
of
its
three the
Society for Pre-
to aid in establishing the Cincinnati
vention
its
among
Cruelty to Animals, and has ever since been one
£)f
officers,
gratuitously.
to
Ohio
in
Having
September ensuing.
-spent about
dusky City, and
years
five
Austinburg, he accepted
a
as
p.astor
as
call
church of
of the
Professor
Oberlin
to
devoting his time and professional services
College, where he has resided since September, 1835.
He
has
has been for years one of the trustees of
two
years in missionary labor, chiefly in Ashtabula and San-
been ardently devoted
his
to
chosen
vocation, but
Arch Masons. In nevertheless he has found some time and abundant energy From 1851 to 1872 he was again elected Director of the Gymnasium, and to devote to other objects of public interest. since 1874 has been its President, and has aided in making 1854 he was a director of the Cleveland, Norwalk & Toledo the famous Kilwinning Chapter of Royal
it
now
and best
the largest
prominent features of the
country and one of the
in the
During the yellow fever
city.
Memphis he devised and superintended
plague
in
cinnati
and
incited in
New York
and other
in Cin-
cities the
“ Bal-
In
Railroad.
the
he edited the
of literary labor
line
Oberlin Evangelist eighteen years, and wrote for larly
during the other
he has written ten volumes
regu-
it
Since 1S63
six years of its existence. in exposition of the
Scriptures,
lot-box charities ” on election day, by which about $20,000
embracing the entire Old Testament, except Job, and also
was
the entire writings of the Apostle
and
realized for the orphans
also a large
sum
Southern flood.
In
To
Yale Club.
rest except
in
and afterwards
elected
1875
President of the
attend to these various interests, in addition
demands of
to the
sufferers,
Cincinnati for the victims of the great
in
a large practice, has left
summer
little
time for
In politics, his party has
vacations.
until lately offered small inducem.ents to seek for personal
preferment, but in
seemed about tional
when
1874,
the
new Ohio
Constitution
be adopted, he was a prominent condi-
to
candidate for
Common
Pleas Judge, and no doubt
would have been nominated and elected had the constitubeen adopted. There are few harder or more success-
tion ful
workers
at
the bar, and he finds in rotation of outside
duties the recreation that too
many
seek only in the foibles
of fashion and the dissipations of city
ment. part.
John
in
Of
course, being a
New-Englander by
by vocation, he
was a devoted
warmly advocated
Whig
anti-slavery
the principles of his
party
On
has been twice married.
married Alice Welch, of Norfolk, Connecticut.
1844, he married his present wife,
who was
was born
at
retired
Gallipolis, Ohio,
he
business world.
until
1822.
time spent in the
district
Connecticut, where
As soon in
as
he was old
farm labor, except the
winter school
:
acted
He
She died
Mrs. Minerva
as pupil
till
the
Steamboat-man,
February 2d, 1820.
His father dying when he was a child he had valuable part of his schooling
work he was occupied
He
on the 14th of October, 1843, leaving him six children, of whom only two are now living. On the 21st of March,
re-
resided to
Norfolk, Litchfield
he was about one year old the family in
man, and
the 27th of July, 1830, he
When
Colbrook,
faith.
since then he has labored in the ranks of that body.
early to shift
to
and
till
county, Connecticut, on the 24th of April, 1803.
moved enough
at
birth
D. Penfield.
life.
Professor in Oberlin Theologi-
Seminary, was born
Testa-
1840; then with the anti-slavery party until the Republican party was organized, and ever with the
,
cal
New
education, an Ohioan by adoption and an Oberlin Professor
523 ONN.XLI.Y, AUGUSTUS, HENRY,
fOWLE.S,
the
In politics as politics he has not taken an active
for
himself, so obtained
Until he
the most
among men
in the
was eighteen years of
age he worked on a farm and otherwise for the support of his mother’s family. his condition
Now
thinking that he could better
by some river occupation, the Ohio river then
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.LDIA. being the great trade channel
surrounding country,
for the
he commenced his eventful career as deck-hand on the steamer “ Tribune,” working two years in this position. Being temperate, industrious ana trustworthy, at the end of
he
hard service
this
was made watchman on the
169
Speaker of the House of Representatives of Ohio from 1S18 to
to
1822. During his early childhood his parents removed Columbiana county, Ohio, w’here, when quite a youth,
he entered the
Dr. Benjamin Stanton, of Salem,
office of
In
Ohio, as a student.
1835,
when he
w’as
less
than
worked along twenty-one years of age-, he graduated with credit at the from the various steamboat ranks until, in 1842, he became University of Pennsylvania. In May of that year he went commander of the “ Win. Phillips.” When a mere boy to Cleveland and at once entered upon a successful prache had formed the determination to be a captain of one of tice. In 1837 he was appointed Resident Physician to the the beautiful floating palaces on the Ohio; at this his good Philadelphia Hospital, where he remained but a few mother laughed, thinking it a boy’s dream, yet the good months, when he resumed his practice at Cleveland. In The October, 1S38, he was married to Elizabeth S. Maule, of lajdy lived long after he had gained the desired goal. “Win. Phillips” he ran for two seasons on the Wabash Philadelphia, formerly of Richmond, Virginia. In 1843 and Kanawha rivers, owning a small interest in her through was attacked with a pulmonary disease, which threatened Selling his interest in this permanent loss of health and compelled him to abandon the the instrumentality of friends. He settled in Cinboat, he immediately purchased another, building, equip- lake region for a more genial climate. His health was impaired, ping and running, in all, on the Ohio, Mississippi and their cinnati in October of that year. tributaries, nineteen boats, over a space of twenty-two years. he was among strangers, but by a strong energy and the In 1863 he went to Pittsburgh and built the “ Paragon,” at help of his devoted wife his circumstances, at first discour-
From
“ Tribune.”
this
time he gradually
This boat he
a cost of S66,ooo.
once put, without
at
in-
surance, into the Missouri river trade, running from St.
Louis
Fort Leavenworth, chiefly in private business.
to
In
1864, having had a fortunate season, he sold the “ Paragon,”
enough
Now
handsomely on her.
realizing
to satisfy
having accumulated
a reasonable man, and risks being very
great on available steamers, the captain determined to retire
from river business fine
accordingly he purchased his present
;
This
farm near Morrow, Ohio.
farm in Warren county.
Having
is
said to be the finest
farm in the most
his
desirable condition, and having gathered every convenience
and comfort around a himself
quiet
and happy home, he found
the expiration of ten years yearning for a
at
little
of the old excitement and fascination of the river; accordtng'Xi
1874, he bought the “
ttt
Donnally thinks
hard
that
Mary
Miller.”
work, correct
Captain
habits,
strict
economy, with the exercise of a few grains of common
He
aging, soon brightened. in the
associated himself with others
conduct of the City Dispensary, a charitable medical
institution,
cians.
with no compensation to the attending physi-
They
also organized a
summer
school of medicine,
which was carried on successfully for years; and in 1852 The prevalence of organized the Miami Medical College. cholera from 1849 to 1852 entailed upon him very great labor, but
he
only a single day from sickness.
lost
Ail
through the twenty years dating from that time he labored unremittingly as a practitioner, as a medical teacher and as “ Mendenhall’s Vade
a contributor to medical journals.
Mecum
”
was one of the most
ever published. of the his
successful books of the class
In the year 1870 he was elected President
American Medical Association, and shortly before
decease had conferred upon him the high honor of a
fellowship in the Obstetrical Society of London.
His repu-
an obstetrician was indeed world-wide.
During was President of the Cincinnati branch than lucky stars or so-called strokes of fortune. His was of the Union .Sanitary Commission. Dr. Mendenhall fell not an even plain road to fortune twice he lost all that he a victim to overwork. He was stricken down with an athad gathered in years of toil, and his history is that of few tack of apoplexy in the year 1872, from which he never other men of his trade although some have made fortunes, fully rallied. He subsequently visited Europe for his sense, have
more
to
do with the accumulation of wealth
tation as
the rebellion he
;
;
few have served apprenticeships
He
this craft.
and has
in all
the hard grades of
married Elizabeth Smith, of Marietta, Ohio,
six children living.
health,
and died
sixty-first
after his
year of his age.
He was
promptitude, and despised one
unsparing of himself, and
June 4th, 1874,
return,
who
man
a
in
the
of indomitable
was ever was so systematic
shirked duty
in his practice
;
and continuous that the amount of labor he accomplished was the astonishment of his profe.ssional brethren. His
% ENDENHALL, GEORGE, I I
at
1814, his parents being
-
Quaker
May
5th,
Aaron and I.ydia Men-
His descent runs down from the early
denhall. “
Physician, was born
Sharon, Beaver county, Pennsylvania,
settlers of
Pennsylvania, one of his pater-
nal ancestors having taken a prominent part with
William Penn
in the
His mother was a 22
“
Elm Tree Treaty”
sister of the
with the Indians.
Hon. Joseph Richardson,
love for his profession was such passion.
that
His greatest happiness was
in
amounted
it
its
practice.
to
a
He
never used tobacco nor alcoholic stimulants, nor would he,
from conscientious motives, prescribe the patients, excepting
in
latter
for
treme reluctance, from fear of the formation of an habit.
He was
firm as a rock
modest and kindly
his
very rare cases, and then with ex-
as
a
for
woman
;
the right; free
from
evil
but gentle, all
vanity.
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.LDIA.
170
hating pretence, with an exceeding love of truth, a warm,
A
loving heart and the most delicate sense of honor. fessional brother said of him, he “ never
knowing a man whose
of
commanded
virtues
and
pro-
had the privilege
talents so
strongly
in
1838 was re-elected. for
filled
presidential vote
was a
In 1S40 he was elected to and
one term a seat
Vv'hig
up
was
State Senate. His John Quincy Adams.
in the
cast for
to the formation of the
first
He
Republican party,
with which he has been prominently connected ever since.
his regard.”
His familiarity with accounts has led to his appointment as an Examiner,
AN, JAIMES fjjll
V
ex-State
Auditor, was born, October 19th, 1808, in Berk-
to visit the various counties of the State to
look over the books of their auditors and treasurers. a profoundly read lawyer, a careful
and
He
is
imp.artial official
county, Virginia, and moved with his parents and an enterprising and energetic citizen, and is generally Ohio in 1812, settling in P'airfield county. respected officially as well as professionally. Here he remained until 1818, when he went to S’ Franklin county, where he obtained his education UPPER, BENJAMIN, was born in Stoughton, the common schools. Deciding upon following the pro-
Ov in
Lawyer and
II.,
to
when
fession of law,
Massachusetts, in 1738.
eighteen years of age he selected as
the
Judge O. Parish, of Columbus, witli whom he In 1828 he was admitted to the bar, having passed
his preceptor
read.
a very meritorious examination.
he was married in that place,
Anna
more
rapidly than
professional calling until 1850,
&
dent of the Bell'efontaine
and administered office
is
large and remunerative.
General.
the
Settling
and entered upon
office
his
living in
Ohio Land Company.
Its affairs
he managed,
Marietta from 1788, in which year he assisted to
hold the
He
pointed Judge, he presided until his death in June, 1792.
continued
when he was
in
his
first
Civil Court in the
Northwest Territory.
Ap-
elected Presi-
for six years the duties of this important
Goodman was
news reached Marion for
1785 he was appointed to survey
usually the case, be-
ability.
He
then
re-
RIGHT, ROBERT,
signed the presidency of the road and resumed practice.
that
In
Indiana Railroad Company,
with care and rare executive
Colonel
served throughout
lands northwest of the Ohio, and helped to form
of that year
Davis, of Marion, Ohio.
he opened an
practice, which,
came both
to
November
In
He
Revolutionary war, and became Brigadier-
trying a case in
that Fort
court
when
the
^4 III
Sumter had been taken and
President Lincoln had called
for troops.
He
i
p^ii'ents I
his
asked
and was granted a continuance of the cause, and en-
Portage
'
county,
Manufacturer, was born
Ohio,
June
2d,
1809.
in
His
were residents of Pennsylvania, whence
father, a farmer,
removed
to
Ohio
in
1800.
His early education was received at the county school, in Hocking county, whose winter sessions
Ohio Regiment. He set about had its ranks full, he attended until he had reached his eighteenth year. and was appointed its Captain. He went with his com- During the summer months of those years he was engaged mand to Camp Jackson, where he was elected Major of the in farm labor. Later, he also taught school for two or He was thus employed regiment, which was shortly after ordered into Western three terms in the winter season. Virginia, where it formed part of McClellan’s army. Mr. as a farm hand until 1835, but during the latter years of Goodman participated in the battle of Rich Mountain, and that time was engaged in agricultural pursuits on his own From 1835 until 1842 he was interested in the within a few weeks was commissioned as Lieutenant-Col- account. listed as a private in the 4th
raising a
company, and
onel, being
in
a few days
advanced eventually
to the position of Colonel.
construction of the
Hocking Valley Canal, having secured a
Romney, Winchester, contract to finish five miles of this enterprise, partly in Court House and Fredericksburg. Athens and partly in Hocking county. From 1842 until Charles City Blue Gaps, agricultural pursuits, and In the latter he was wounded in three different portions of 1835 he was employed entirely in larger portion of the Hockthe purchased year latter in the physical on account of his the body, and in July, 1863,
He
served gallantly in the battles of
of the property in injuries, was honorably dis- ing Falls Mills, securing the balance Governor Worthington, of by built was mill This 1862. Brigadier-General war brevetted charged. After the he was During 1863 he Ohio, about the year 1818, and remained in the possession for distinguished services on the field. was nominated, without his consent, and elected as Auditor of his family until 1855. Since its sale the present owner disability,
resulting from his
upon the expiration of his first has continued to conduct its affairs, and in connection with position he conscientiously it is extensively interested in farming and stock-raising. was re-elected. In this term and ably discharged the duties devolving upon him, and The farm operated by him at the present time has been in earned the esteem of the entire citizenship of the State his possession since 1829. In 1844 he was elected a Jusof the State of Ohio, and
His
political
career
without regard to party
affiliations.
commenced early in life. Whigs to the Legislature,
In 1835 he was elected by the serving in the lower House, and
He also Peace, but resigned this office in 1846. served two terms of three years each as County CommisIn 1850 he was appointed by the Legislature sioner. tice of the
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOP.EDIA. Associate Judge of the Court of
lature
Common
Pleas,
and served
In 1852 he was appointed also by the Legis-
three years.
one of the trustees of the Ohio University,
Ohio, a position which he
at
Athens,
for several
Slate of
1866 he has been a director in the
Since
National
He was
holds.
Logan Branch Bank of the
years a director in the
Ohio.
still
P'irst
was elected a member of
the Ohio State Senate, being the Republican elected from that district, and served in that body during one term. In the year 1859, after his fir.st
return from Minnesota, he
was elected Lieutenant-Governor
He
of the State, on the ticket with Governor Dennison.
served for two years.
In 1862 he received from President
Bank of Logan, and is a stockholder in the Lincoln the appointment of Minister to the Argentine Re& Hocking Valley Railroad. He is interested public. During his official residence at Buenos Ayres he the building development of the town and in its was successful in settling all the old claims due American
Columbus also in
His present residence, the hand-
several improvements.
somest place of
Logan, was completed in 1873. October, 1840, to Elmira Hamblin, by
kind
its
He was married in whom he has had four Of
in
and one
children, three boys
girl.
sent from
he held In
ROBERT
Buenos Ayres
Thirteenth Ohio District, was born on the
for the
26th of February, 1821, at
Mount
Pleasant, Jeffer-
son county, Ohio.
Both
of Pennsylvania.
His father was a Quaker, a
his parents
hatter by trade, but eventually
were natives
gave up that occu-
pation for that of a farmer, and died in 1838. is still
the age of eighty.
living, at
boyhood, attended
having obtained the
came
full
His mother
Robert, in his early
school in his native place, and
district
benefit of their resources
commenced
in
Mount
Pleasant.
This position
resigned and returned to Ohio.
he was reappointed by President Grant to the
position, but resigned again in 1871, returning
home
In February, 1875, ^6 received from
January, 1872.
President Grant the appointment of Collector of Internal
Revenue of the Thirteenth Ohio and
he
that position
Mount Vernon,
District, at
He
holds.
still
an earnest stump-
is
speaker, and does effective
work in political campaigns. December, 1843, to Fleanor Hogg, daughter of John Hogg and niece of old William Hogg, of Brownsville, Pennsylvania.
He was
married on the
l
ith of
and
the study of
HFNRV,
FVIS,
medicine under the instruction of Dr. William Hamilton, at
when he
he be-
a student in Franklin College, at Athens, Ohio,
shortly after leaving college he
Mr. Bellows, President of the
to
Mr. Kirk’s residence there.
until 1866,
1869
Revenue same
C., Collector of Internal
in 1814 and were abandoned by Over nineteen thousand dollars were
our former ministers.
soldiers, during
*IRK,
over four hundred thousand dollars;
to
United Stales Sanitary Commission, for the benefit of our
two are lawyers and the third a farmer.
the former,
amounting
citizens,
these claims originated
was born
Architect,
of Wight,
Isle
After a time spent thus in preliminary
in
Newport,
November
England, on
loth,
study he entered the old University at Philadelphia, where
1834, and
he attended lectures
place, acquiring by industry a substantial educa-
Then he
left
he was twenty years of age.
until
the University
and
at
once removed
to
county, Illinois, where he began professional practice. practised there for a short time, in the fall of 1843,
profession pursuits in
T.
and
when he abandoned
to
He Ohi
the practice of his
1844 engaged in mercantile He formed a partnership with
in the spring of
Mount Vernon.
W. Rogers
when he returned
the dry-goods business, but the associa-
in
ended by the death of Mr. Rogers. When it terminated he formed a partnership in the same business with John Hogg, his father-in-law, and this continued until the tion
year 1853,
when
the firm sold out
and he left that branch In 1857 he went to Winona, Minne-
of trade permanently. sota,
and was associated with
estate, business interests
State causing
mained
him
there
ever
a
cpiestions, left
the
when
since
He
member
disagreeing with
and the associations
to return to
positions abroad.
and was
his brother as dealers in real
Ohio
except
in
his native
when holding
official
has always been active in politics,
of the Democratic party
his
in
1858, and has re-
party on
the Missouri
the
till
1854, but,
currency and
slavery
father’s
Democratic party.
In
1856 he
in
these schools until four-
when he removed with
family to Toronto, Canada,
From
years.
this
was apprenticed
schools of his native
the
remained
teen years of age,
his
where he resided two
place he went to Hamilton, Canada, and
to learn the trade of a builder
and
mill-
wright, and in this occupation continued three years and a half.
came
In 1858 he
making
until
Illinois,
and
to Cincinnati,
When
1861. enlisted,
the
and followed pattern-
war broke out he was
under the
first
private in the 41st Illinois Volunteers.
lime appointed
to
call
in
arms, as a
He was
in a short
Orderly Sergeant, and subsequently pro-
which position he served
moted
to a First-Lieutenancy, in
fifteen
months, and then was compelled to resign on ac-
Upon
count of failing health. to Clinton,
De
as a carpenter
Witt county,
and builder
until
time.
he
where he was engaged
1866.
He
resumed
then removed
pattern-making,
when he commenced
archi-
and has continued thus engaged up
to the
which he followed tectural drafting,
leaving the army he returned
Illinois,
back to Cincinnati, where
Compromise was repealed he present
Democratic ranks, and has ever since been an
earnest opponent of the
He
tion.
Fulton
attended
He
until
is
1868,
a skilful and rapid designer, his plans
displaying originality and fine taste in their arrangement
and adornment.
He
is
a member,
in
excellent standing,
BIOGRAPIIIC;\L ENCYCLOP.EDIA.
1/2
of the Architectural Chapter of Cincinnati, and
is
patronized by the builders and capitalists of that
city.
place of business
No. 163 Central avenue.
at
is
liberally
lie
He
fessional circles,
as a
public
is
then returned to Ripley and pursued a
course of professional studies under his father,
was
dentist,
married, July 4th, 1862, to Kate, daughter of Patrick Develiii, Esq., of Dublin.
He
of Cincinnati.
Ilis
highly esteemed in social and pro-
gentleman of energy, culture, and
spirit.
who was
and whose profession the son had decided
In 1861 he entered upon his
From
Ohio Dental College. with the degree of D. D.
Immediately
S., in
course of lectures at the
first
he graduated,
this institution
the
a
to adopt.
month
of February, 1864.
graduation he entered the army, and
after his
continued in the volunteer service until the close of the war
born
THO.MA.S
M.
II.,
D., of Canton, was
Cannonsburg, Washington county, Penn-
in
sylvania,
March
on
were John
parents
Ilis
1839.
W. and Nancy (Hanson)
Having acquired education
25th,
its
Phillips.
rudiments, he finished his
at Jefferson Literary
College, located in
Selecting the medical profession, he en-
his native town.
tered the office of Dr.
George H. Cook,
in
Cannonsburg,
in
After leaving the
1865.
in
IIILLIP.S,
army he returned again
to
Ripley, and engaged in the practice of his profession in con-
This association continued until
nection with his father.
There he reto Vernon. and then he removed to CinThere he has ever since remained, engaged in a
when he removed
about 1867,
mained practising cinnati.
grew rapidly
practice that
member
until 1871,
to
He
large proportions.
is
a
of the Mississippi Valley Dental Association, and
of the society of the class of 1864 of his
Alma
Male/-
1859, where he pursued his studies until the winter of 186263, when he matriculated at Jefferson Medical College,
Philadelphia, from which he graduated in the spring of
li^ICHMOND, JOHN
Previous to graduating, however, and during the
1864.
summer
of 1863, he entered the United States service for
At the expiration
nine months as an Assistant Surgeon. his term of service
he completed his course
receiving his degree, again joined the
at Jeffer.son,
army
the 13th of
He
of
He
been natives of Ayrshire, Scotland. at
then located himself
at
successfully practised there until his removal to Canton in
During
his residence in Pennsylvania,
he became a member of the State Medical Society, and since locating in Canton has connected himself with the Although but lately settled in District Medical Association. Canton, Dr. Phillips’ professional ability has been duly recognew abode, and he has acquired a good share
nized in his
of patronage, and ranks in that town.
While
among
is
after
Seminary
cal
at Princeton,
New
New
and
Jersey,
he was licensed by the Presbytery of
in April, 1871,
New
Brunswick,
at
In the year 1872 he was called to
Jersey.
the charge of the congregation of
Hope Church, Columbus,
Ohio, and was ordained and installed on the l8th of April, 1872.
He
fulfils all
to
occupies the position of pastor there, and
still
the duties of his sacred office in such a
win the confidence, esteem and love of
nth
married on the Princeton,
New
of
May, 1871,
all.
manner as He was
to Julia E. Phillips, of
Jersey.
a general
women.
is
He
February, 1868, to Irene Lindsay, of
in
studied
and
the ablest of the profession
his practice necessarily
one, his special aim
was married
He
the University of Toronto, Canada,
leaving that institution, he entered the Theologi-
West Middletown, Washington county, Pennsylvania, and Trenton, the spring of 1869.
Ayr, Ontario, Canada.
As-
Surgeon of the 79th Pennsylvania Volunteers. In capacity he rendered valuable service until he was mus-
tered out in September, 1865.
in
of Scotch descent, both his parents having
is
and
in 1864, as
sistant this
M., Clergyman, was born on
May, 1848,
the treatment of diseases of
LENNERHASSETT, HON. HARMAN, born
West Middletown, Pennsylvania.
in
Hampshire, England,
in
1767.
was
He was
descended from a noble Irish family, and his parents were in England on a visit at the time of his birth. He was thoroughly educated, and grew
up an accomplished and scholarly gentleman.
C'YjMOODWARD, WILLIAM HENRY, I I
II
New
England
nativity,
Dentist,
having been born
at
is
of
Nor-
wich, Connecticut, on the 12th of January, 1843.
At the death of
his father
he inherited a large
estate,
but
he became politically involved in the troubles of Ireland,
and disposed of
it, taking up his residence in England. Here he married into a family of distinction, his wife being ward, were both descended from the old Revolu- Margaret Agnew, daughter of the Lieutenant-Governor of tionary stock of Connecticut, his mother belonging the Isle of Man. Being too free in the expression of his the same family as that from which General Winfield republican views, he found it advisable to leave England.
His parents, Caleb and Amanda (Scott) Wood-
to
Scott
was descended.
moved
to Ripley, Ohio,
In the
year 1850 his parents
and there he received
education in the schools of the place.
In
re-
his general
He
1858 he went stay
through a course of special studies with General
arrived in
social position
Ammen, and
in
New York
in
brought him
at
New York
arrived in the
was
1797, where his wealth and
once into prominence.
brief, as
same year.
His
he departed for Marietta,
He
soon after purchased a
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP-EDIA. Ohio
plnntation on an '^lantl in the
“ Blennerhasselt’s
Upon
Llancl.”
considerable sums
river, since
famous
improvements, and lived a
in
the old law, and during the late
as
at
he spent
island
this
Camp
Dennison.
war was Hospital .Surgeon was
O.i the 12th of October, 1S75, he
elected as a Republican to the State Legislature of Ohio.
of
life
173
and a fine He has at all times been closely identified with educational a very hospitable neighbor, and kind matters, and has been a faithful advocate for the cause of the unfortunate. The splendors of his temperance, having at no period of his life imbibed liquor
He was He was
elegance.
musician.
a
man
and charitable to home and the delightful he was the
of literary
of which
as a beverage.
in prose
profession has not impaired either his physical or mental energies.
In 1805 Aaron Burr visited the island and
and
verse.
first
met the owner.
Thirty-nine years of incessant labor at his
life,
have been celebrated
features of the social
centre,
brilliant
tastes,
During
opened
his
successful physicians of
dazzling southwestern scheme, and from that
moment
the
his
the
Rachel
He became
was doomed.
proprietor
great
involved
in
supervision.
McGee
some of the
his practice
intriguer
The
and most
ablest
Hamilton county have studied under
He was
Wilson,
who
married January 3d,
1833, to
died June 29th, 1839.
He
af-
home was invaded by terwards married Catherine V. Cosbey, in November, armed men, and his family subjected to insult. The 1840, who died May 3d, 1859. On April loth, 1S60, he property was much damaged. The owner was tried for was married to Sarepta Robinson, widow of Samuel Slaback. “ Burr Conspiracy,”
beautiful
his
This was only the beginning In 1S75, having sold their property in the town of Montmisfortune followed upon gomery, Sycamore township, Hamilton county, Ohio, they
was acquitted.
treason, but
of a long succession of troubles
and
misfortune,
he died
;
poveity,
in
the
in
island
purchased a comfortable residence in the town of Madeira,
of
His accomplished wife survived him Columbia township, where they hope eleven years, dying iii New York, in 1842. Not a vestige der of their lives. Guernsey,
in
to
1831.
spend the remain-
remains of their once happy home.
^LOWERS, JOAB .LYLOR,
JOHN
E.,
M.
D.,
was born February
R.,
M.
D., was born in
Lisbon, Ohio, July 25th, 1836.
15th,
nally a Methodist preacher,
lSo 3 in Bourbon county, Kentucky, near Cynthi,
Of
ana.
a family of ten
He was
eighth.
children he was the
gaged
in
Nancy of Cumberland
Perry
county, Ohio.
the son of Ralph and
(Stewart) Naylor, both
natives
years in that county, emigrated to Kentucky,
His father being a man of strong
mother died.
came
to
Ohio and
settled in
at
the
Delaware, Ohio,
and commenced the study of medicine under the guidance In 1855 he attended a course of lechis father in 1853.
tures in the Starling
anti-
Medical College, and subsequently en-
tered the office of Professor
slavery opinions, and opplosed to raising his family in a slave State,
in
medicine in
educated
where of ^
his
He was
New
father, origi-
in later years en-
the practice of allopathic
Ohio Wesleyan University,
county, Pennsylvania, who, after a residence of
many
was
His
J.
W.
Hamilton, in order to
In August, 1857, he was appointed Apothe-
study surgery.
Clermont county, where
cary of the Central Ohio Lunatic Asylum, which office he was passed at hard work retained until, in 1859, he received the appointment of Ason his father’s farm, and his education was obtained at in- sistant Physician to the Ohio Penitentiary, under Dr. J. WIn the following year. Dr. D. R. Kinsell, a tervals in attending the ordinary country schools in the Hamilton. vicinity. At the age of seventeen he began learning the homoeopathic physician, was appointed successor to Dr. trade of tanner at New Richmond, Ohio, which he diligently Hamilton, while he was retained and placed in charge of He then availed himself of the pursued till he was twenty-one years of age, when, on ac- the surgical department.
he
lived until his death,
The
early
life
which occurred August 25th, 1827.
of John E. Naylor
;
j
I
]
!
^
count of impaired health, he was obliged to abandon
He now
devoted himself to study, and succeeding
fying himself, he beg.in, in
1831,
in quali-
teaching school,
favorable opportunity thus presenting itself for the thorough
it.
and
\
'
investigation of the its
new
during the intervals of his labor attended a course of study
He
Lane Seminary, preparatory to the reading of medicine, which he had selected as a profession. Soon after he en-
In 1861 he graduated
at
tered the
Ohio Medical College,
anrl
graduated from that
;
!
system, and was soon convinced of
great superiority over the allo])athic practice of medicine.
remained
at
the hospital with Dr. Kinsell for two years.
in Cleveland, Ohio,
at
and
the Western Homoeopathic College, in
the following February entered
on the general practice of his profession in conjunction with
Two years later he was professionally engaged Dr. Kinsell. Montgomery, Hamilton county, alone. In 1872 he foioned a partnership with Dr. A. O. Ohio. In the fall of the same year. Dr. Duncan having Blair, a well-known western pioneer of the Hahnemann been elected to Congress, transferred his practice to Dr. school. He served one week during the war of the rebelNaylor, who has continued the duties of his profession in lion. At the present lime he is a member of the City Montgomery and the adjoining counties, up to the present Council of Columbus, was elected President of the Homneoinstitution in 1836,
practice with Dr.
lime.
and the following summer commenced
Duncan,
at
For several years he was Surgeon of
Militia,
under
pathic Slate
Medical Society
in
1875,
nominated
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA.
174
by the Republican party of well as Secretary of the National Association of Superin-
for the office of State Legislator
Franklin
county in
married
1875.
in
l86j
to
Louisa R. Conners, the daughter of an old-school physician.
Mr. Stevenson
tendents. ail
is
man
a
of rare culture, and has
the qualifications necessary to take rank as a leading
For twenty years he has devoted his attention improvement of the systems for popular instruction,
educator. to the
in that time has accomplished reforms
and
•TEWART, GILBERT HOLLAND, born
Boston, Massachusetts, on the
at
He
March, 1847. well as of
New England
New birth,
15th of
England stock as both his father and
His father was engaged
Maine.
and
of
is
mother having been natives of the State of
his
pursuits,
Lawyer, was
in
mercantile
1851 removed with his family to East
in
Cam-
was four years old, and shortly afterwards he commenced going to Putnam When he was thirteen years of age he entered the school. Cambridge High School. His course of study there occupied four years, and at the end of that time he left the High School and entered Harvard College in the class of 1868. At
bridge, Massachusetts.
He
that time Gilbert
Law
Harvard
Leaving school now, he went
Gallon, Ohio, where he arrived on the 19th of
and hegan the study of law
in the office of
May
studied with Mr. Carhart until
was admitted remained
as a at
member
Gabon,
of the bar
H.
[tily,
have been placed ally, or as parts
mentioned.
Since his ad-
in a flourishing condition,
and individu-
of a general system, they receive the highest
commendation of
all
who
take a deep interest in the cause
Mr. Stevenson
of popular instruction.
is
well and honora-
known to all the leaders in this cause, not only in his own State, but through the country at large, and his voice is bly
potential in the important proceedings of the State Teachers’
In
as well as the National Superintendents’ Associations.
1856 he was married
to
Rebecca McConnell.
Then he removed
continues.
still
P.
In politics he
was born
in
IL, Merchant, of Cincin-
Youngsville,
Warren county,
Pennsylvania, January 14th, 1840, being the son of Dr.
and then
Columbus, and there formed a partnershi|r with R.
Woodruff, which partnership
nati,
Columbus, Ohio.
the practice of his profession,
in
NDREWS, WILLIAM
to
1867,
C. Carhart.
5th, 1869, at
until .Ypril 15th, 1873, practising alone.
to
is
vent to the superintendency of schools at Columbus, they
School, and was a student there for
a period of six months.
He
name
the public wherever his
and developed
merit the esteem of
utility as to
studied at the college until the year 1867, and then en-
tered the
He
methods of such practical
at
J.
Andrews, who settled in Pennsylvania William H. left his home at the
an early age.
age of fourteen years, and went to Jamestown, York, where he obtained a clerkship in the dry-goods store of Will & Stevens, where he remained until 1861. He then returned to Pennsylvania, and engaged on his own
New
Clara L. Ogden, daughter of Professor John Ogden, of
account in the same line of business, and soon after opened In 1865 he sold his intera branch store at Akron, Ohio.
AVorthington, Ohio.
ests in
is
a
He was
Republican.
married, June 22d,
1875, to
Ohio, and concentrated them in the oil region of Pennsylvania, and there did a very large and lucrative busi-
TEVENSON, ROBERT
W., Superintendent of Public Schools of Columbus, Ohio, was born near
same
Zanesville in the
State, July 1st, 1S33, de-
ness; and in 1870 he opened a wholesale and retail drygoods house in Titusville, the metropolis of the oil country. About the same time that Mr. Andrews commenced business in Titusville, the oil excitement was running high,
by occupation a farmer, and his mother was the
which caused the emigration to the place of first-class and his success was far beyond his expectation.
daughter of a Reformed Presbyterian clergyman.
mained there
His father was
scending from Scotch ancestry.
until 1S73,
when
the
oil interests
citizens,
He
re-
of the place
for him to remain, and in the removed to Cincinnati, Ohio, and purchased in 1854, after pursuing a very thorough and comprehensive the business and stock of Messrs. Johnson & Co., Nos. 76 course of study. Upon leaving this institution he com- and 78 West P'ourth street. Prior to the time that Mr. menced the study of law, engaging at the same time in Andrews took charge of the' house it had not been very teaching school. In 1855, before he had completed his law prosperous, but is now the leading dry-goods house in the course, he was appointed Superintendent of Public Schools city, and doing, with perhaps one or two exceptions, the hlr. Andrews’ of Dresden, and continued in this position until 1S60, when largest business west of the Alleghenies,
He
was prepared
for college
by
his grandfather,
and gradu-
ated with distinction from Madison College, Antrim, Ohio,
he was appointed
which he held
for
to
the
same
eleven years.
office
at
Norwalk, Ohio,
In July, 1871, he
was
ten-
dered the position of Superintendent of Public .Schools the State capital, accepted duties, which he still fulfils. and President of the Ohio
it,
and entered
at
once upon
at its
were no longer an inducement fall
of 1S73 he
store
is
salesrooms on 75 feet wide by 150 in depth, with and the services of 150 hands are required to
three floors,
run the house.
Although
customers from top
He
has been both Treasurer
none are suffered
.State
Teachers’ Association, as
mony being one
to
to
this
house
is
literally alive
bottom and from morning
go away
dissatisfied,
with
until night,
peace and har-
of the supports of the institution.
Besides
1
^ctXaxyPid> Qj PhiLad‘^
r.IOGRAPIIICAL ENCVCLOP.EDIA. this
Mr. Andrews has a branch house
store,
50S and Fourth
10 Vine
5
which
street,
at
Nos. 506,
almost as large as his
one requires the services of
This
street house.
is
Mr. Andrews was thrown upon
seventy-five hands.
his
own
Possibly the trials of youth de-
resources at an early age.
17s
esteemed for his man.y sterling characteristics. he
is
though he
is
known
county
—
1824 cast his vote
in
Politically
Al-
for Cl.ay.
as a Democrat, he nevertheless enjoys
Republicans of Hocking
of the leading
confidence
the
and
a Democrat,
in fact, of the entire
Congressional District
at large,
At all events his as a reliable and well-meaning public gentleman. He was business capacity was soon made known. While he has married in March, 1823,10 Sarah Friend, w'ho died October been unremitting in his attention to business, and quick to 4th, 1S64. He was again married, December ayih, 1864, veloped the character of the future man.
perceive the wants of the public, he has always maintained
a quiet demeanor.
Ilis private character is
in point of business
integrity the record
of none
Mrs. Sarah Payne.
stands
Mr. Andrews was married, October 2d, 1S62,
higher.
to
exemplary, and
EMANN, JOSEPH ANTHONY,
to
Banker,
Jrmes IE Eddy, Esq., of Warren, Warren county, Pennsylvania, by whom three children have
merly prominent Gennan-American
been born,
Osnabriick, in the late
Rose,
daughter of
W'as born in the
'
all living.
cember T'
town of Oesede, near the
13th, 1816.
church, he
made
(for-
Publisher,) city of
kingdom of Hanover, De-
Destined by his parents for the
his studies at the “ Gynnnasiitta
EDWARD,
ING,
Lawyer, was born e city Carolintim," founded by Charlemagne, in the year 808, in of New' York, in March, 1795, '"id w-as the fourth the city of Osnabriick one of the most celebrated colleges son of Rufus King, the distinguished statesman of Germany where he acquired a thorough knowledge of
—
—
and Senator.
In the year 1815 he settled him- the Latin, Greek, French, and English languages, mathe-
self at Chillicothe, in the practice of his profession, matics,
and was noted in
He
politics.
was
for his
for
many
eloquence years in
at the
the
and
and church).
history (both secular
The young
bar and student, however, did not relish the idea of finishing
Senate and theological studies, and notified
his
liis
parents accordingly.
House of Representatives of Ohio, and Speaker of the Having read American history, he became thoroughly imbody. In 1831 he removed to Cincinnati, where he bued w'ith a love for freedom and republican institutions.
latter
“
died February 6th, 1836.
We
Germans,” said he
July 4th, 1844, only to obey.
We
in
the land of our fathers
had no pow'er to decide our own good, For the love of freedom we left the land
our own w elfare. Pioneer and Farmer, was of our birth, friends, relatives, all that was dear to us, to county, Ohio, January loth, 1803. gather here, in a strange country, the fruits of liberty, so
ALEXANDER,
y'TfM
Cl
afterw'ards, in an oration delivered
“have learned
I I
His
/Ill
father, a native of Virginia,
Ohio
tied in
and a farmer,
set-
His mother was a member
in 1802.
magnanimously
offered to the oppressed of all the world.
make ourselves acquainted with the a language, the law's and the institutions of this our selfHis early education, of a very chosen new home.” This desire for freedom, coupled with very early day. limited kind, was obtained in a country school, and during romantic ideas of the adventurous life of the early pioneers (-
of a family w'hich found a
While
quite
krbor of the farm, and for
many
winter evenings.
home
in
young he
Kentucky
assisted in the
years was thus constantly
Through the winters of 1837-3S-39-40 he was
engaged
a flour mill, and in the latter year
Logan, Ohio.
Here he
w'as
our special duty to
at
employed. in
It is
moved
to
elected Justice of the Peace,
of America, the imagination of which
is
generally
more
brightly colored than the reality afterwards proves to be, left
him no
rest at
home, and he made
his parents
acquainted
with his intention to emigrate across the Atlantic.
They,
however, tried to persuade their son to remain with them,
and served for three years. In 1843 he w'as elected County and choose some other vocation, but his mind was fixed, and Auditor, and performed the duties of that office for five con- he carried his inclinations into effect by severing the ties
Through these years he which bound him to the land of his ancestors. On May 1st, In 1851 1837, he embarked at the harbor of Bremer-Haven and Board of Equalization, and was sailed for fair Columbia’s shores. After a tedious and stormy
secutive terms, of two years each.
retained also his position as Justice of the Peace.
he was elected to the
.State
same
In 1852 voyage the ship “P'avorite” entered the Chesapeake Bay office in 1858 and in 1869. he purchased a farm near I.ogan, and has since continued to early in July of the same year, and on the 3d of that month In 1873 dropped anchor in the harbor of Baltimore, where she had to reside on it, and to superintend its management. he was elected to serve on the Constitutional Convention. lay for quarantine duties until July 5th. On board the sliip re-elected to the
One of the oldest inhabitants of memory is a perfect storehouse
the
of interesting and valuable
tion of the birthday of this republic,
German emigrants witnessed
for the first
and
time the celebra-
their hearts
throbbed
and development, and through- when they beheld the decorated and illuminated city in the town and the environing region he is revered and distance, which they w'ere not allowed to enter and share in
data concerning out his
this section of the State, his
its
history
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA.
176
The
the joyful proceedings.
Mr.
next day they landed.
Professor Beleke, paid a visit to him,
when
who endeavored
to squelch the efficiency of the
the professor
tem, he resigned
in July,
advised him to go to Cincinnati, where he might complete his studies at the “Athenreum,” the Catholic seminary of the diocese
— now the
St.
Having, how-
Xavier College.
no further means, Mr. Hemann had to work a month on the canal, near Hagerstown, Maryland, to earn sufficient ever,
money
enable him to
to
period he
joined
wagons, and
make
in their
company
traveled on the National
mountain-
large
crossed the Alleghanies, and
Being the
Ro.ad to Wheeling.
who
only one in the company
After that
the journey.
an emigrant-train of
could speak the English lan-
Hemann had to act as interpreter for the rest, and buy the provisions for them, for which he was held in After a prolonged high estimation by his companions. voyage, which to the young tr.aveller was highly interesting, as he was enabled to study the romantic scenery and the people of the country through which they travelled, he
guage, Mr.
landed safely
in the port of the “
Queen
City of the West,”
on the 7th of October, 1837, buoyant with bright
spirit,
and
Provided with
a good, cheerful outlook for the future.
credence which Professor Beleke had given him to
letters of
Dr. Joshua Young, afterwards Bishop of Erie, then prefect
Athenaeum, he was welcomed
at the
he continued Ferdinand
his studies
at the
withdrew
Athenaeum), as teacher of the Catholic p.arochial school
other,
were
to
modify their system, and adopt that of comparative
went back again
which period he several of the
were then
class
citizens of Cincinnati,
He
others,
then became
schoolmaster’s “ bacillus,” and opened a drystreet,
removed
opposite Twelfth street, which,
corner of Linn and Laurel Here he made the acquaintance of a prominent
1848, he
gentleman,
his talents in a
the
to
who animated Mr. Hemann
not to bury
dry-goods shelf, but to go into the literary
and while on a journey
new city,
which
John H. Koehnken, and
Siefert,
goods store on Main
He
Rising-Sun”
now most prominent
sitting to study their English.
tired of the
during
for five or six years,
also kept an evening school, in
such as Uncle Joe
Mary’s
the principalship of the St.
to
Here he remained
school.
in
tui-
Mr. Hemann, however, quit the public schools, and
tion.
pursuit,
in the large hall of the then “
upon a system of com-
insisted
the next year,
summer
Catholic school in the upper portion of the
and of the school-trustees on the
Germans
the
The Germans kept up their own schools until when they induced the majority of the trustees
structions.
in
which he opened
the one part, :
education, whilst the board wanted separate in-
parative
half.
German
from the public schools, and organown, and Mr. Hemann was appointed The differences between Mr. Hemann and the
Principal.
Canton, Ohio, where he remained about a year and a then returned to Cincinnati and took charge of the
commoThe Germans
city.
their children
Germans on
literary
the
at
sys-
the celebrated Germ.an-
ized schools of their
of the Rev.
call
when
the then quiet annals of the
in
streets.
Kuehr (whose acquaintance he made
1841,
trustees,
whole
English school struggle ensued, which caused great tion
seminary, where
he followed a
till
however, from the majority of the school
Differing,
to
Ilemann, who brought with him prominent credentials
to his native country in the
of 1850, subject to his instruction by
Wahrheitsfreund, the the United States,
home and
first
German
was purchased
for
letter,
the
Catholic newspaper in
him.
He
then hastened
took the publishing of the paper in his
own hand
;
Main and Thirteenth streets. This and on the 12th of October, 1850, he began the publication school became the nucleus of the second German Catholic of the Cincinnati Daily Volksfireund, one of the principal congregation of Cincinnati, which in the next year founded German daily newspapers of the country. Originally neutral the .St. Mary’s Church, at the corner of Thirteenth and Clay in politics, it afterwards, when the Demokratisches Togetavern, on the corner of
streets.
In Cincinnati, at that time, the question of intro-
blatt,
ducing the German lg,nguage as a regular branch of instruction in the public schools was agitated with great vehemence,
party,
Ohio passed a
Ohio.
and
after a severe struggle the Legislature of
exist,
one of the organs of the Democratic party, ceased to and when the Volksblatt went over to the Republican
became the leading German Democratic paper of Mr.
Hemann
was, however, veiy conservative in his
common
views, and when, in 1863, the waves of political agitation
schools of Cincinnati to have that language taught in the
ran high, which towered in the nomination of Clement L.
law, making
the duty of the trustees of the
it
schools under their care.
Accordingly an examination
among
teachership was advertised, and
also
Mr.
Hemann.
Frederick Gei-stsecker, time, and
had
it
‘‘Rast' ich, so rost' ich
have
lost
celebrated his
certificates,
German
was
traveller,
examination at the same
not been for his inherent impulse, which
drove him from place
and
The made
the several candi-
and received
dates that passed successfully,
for
to
!"
place, according to his motto, (If I rest, I will rust
1
),
he might
himself in the school-room of a Cincinnati school,
Vallandigham, then an exile
in
Canada,
for
governor of
Ohio, he declined to advocate Vallandigham’s election in his
paper.
This caused a
spirit
of opposition
among
his
which led Mr. Hemann to dispose of his inthe Volksfireund, and to retire from a long and
subscribers, terest
in
eventful literary career, in successful.
Being yet
which he had been prominently
in the
prime of his
life,'he
did not
withdraw from business altogether, and therefore, in lS 65 embarked in the life of a banker, in which he is at Mr. Hemann has also present still successfully engaged. want
to
,
would now be minus
the world
able writings.
Mr.
Hemann
his
numerous and valu-
shortly afterwards received his
appointment, and accordingly began the organization of the first public
German- English
school
in
America
— 1840.
been very active
in the fostering of charitable
tional institutions in Cincinnati.
books were very scarce
In 1840,
in this city,
and educa-
when German
he was the
first
mover
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOP/EDIA. the organization of a library society, the “ Schul
for
Lese Verein,” which was years,
in successful operation for
many
laid the foundation for
and has
The founding
cated citizens.
und
many
of our best edu-
of the Catholic Institute, in
—
which magnificent building one of the chief ornaments of our city is the “ Grand Opera House,” and the “ Mozart Concert-Hall,” was prominently the work of Mr. Hemann.
—
He was
one of the
also
Pioneer Society,” of
first
this city,
projectors of the
and
the
first
man
German
‘‘
to urge the
ing,
and sought
177
and obtained a position There he rose
after
in the office
of the United States Marshal. tion of Chief
mained shal’s
Deputy Marshal, and At and entered the
Hamilton county ing year, and
the mar-
Auditor of
there in the follow-
left
In
California.
to
left
of the
office
He
as a deputy.
went
he
that time
until the year 1863.
office,
to the posi-
position he re-
in that
January of the
following year he returned from the Pacific coast, and went
He
to Philadelphia.
obtained a clerkship there, and con-
and then he went again There he entered the office of the Clerk of first volume. He was married at Canton, Stark county, the United States Court, and remained there until the l6th At that time he w'as elected to the position Ohio, on the 28th of January, 1839, to Ann Margaret, of April, 1S74. daughter of John B. Deville, who emigrated from Hachy, of City Clerk, for a term of two years. In all the posiTheir happy union tions he has held, he has devoted his entire energies to the Province Luxembourg, Belgium, 1831.
publication of the historic monthly magazine, the Deutsche
tinued to
Pionier, published by this society, of which he edited the
to Cincinnati.
was
with
blessed
eleven
children
—
six
and
sons
five
fulfil its
duties until 1S67,
proper performance of his duties, and has
won
his
way
thus
daughters, and seventeen grandchildren, five of the children
far in life
by the sheer force of his energy and
being married
severance.
He was married, on the toth of May, 1859, to Brinkmann, of Cincinnati, a woman of strong
at the present time,
January, 1S76.
Mary
B.
who
energy,
has, by her
warm and
faithful per-
judicious support of her
husband’s enterprises, aided in no small degree in his advancement.
PROAT, COLONEL EBENEZER, was
born in
Middleborough, Massachusetts, in 1752; received a good education, including a knowledge of surveying, and, after service
lESER, FREDERIC,
the revolutionary
in
war, was appointed Surveyor for
Rhode
Island,
He
northwest of the Ohio. From the Indians he received the name of “ Hetout,” or “ Big Buckin the territory
is
the son of John Jacob Fieser and Augusta Pie received his education at the Wolfen-
Fieser.
schools
biittel
in token
eye,” figure.
This
is
admiration
of their
of his
said to have given rise to the
commanding name “ Buck-
By Governor
eye,” as applied to nativ'es of Ohio. first
Sheriff of
quite young, his
St. Clair
Washington county.
Dur-
and Brunswick College,
in
his
His mother dying when he was home possessed no longer its former attrac-
native place.
tions,
he was appointed
Editor and Banker, w^as born
Brunswick, October 15th, 1S17.
in Wolfenbiittel,
and
in
1836, while in his nineteenth year, he emi-
grated to America, landing in Baltimore, Maryland.
There he remained about one year, engaged during that time in militia. He married In later life he followed farming. In 1839 he moved to the West, and the sale of pianos. Catherine, daughter of Commodore Abraham Whipple. desiring to hold a situation where his natural talents and He died very suddenly in February, 1805. attainments would find a proper sphere for exercise and deing the Indian troubles he was conspicuous in organizing
velopment, attached himself to the Oh/e Eagle, a
newspaper, published in Lancaster, Ohio.
was moved
journal Cl
||^jot>MER, RICH.\RD C., City Clerk of Cincinnati, was born in Philadelphia, on the 6lh of April,
f
1838.
He is
of Swiss descent, his parents having
been natives of Switzerland, this country,
and
year 1832.
He
who
emigrated
to
settled in Philadelphia in the
received his
education in the
from
retiring blatl,
its
to
Columbus, and
editorship, he
in
Columbus the
politics, the
bookkeeper
in
a leading boot
and shoe house.
tinued in that position until June,
He
con-
857 wh.en he gave up the quiet of the counting-house for the excitement of “ railroading.” The panic came, and Western railroad enterprises
felt it
23
heavily.
He
i
>
thereupon gave up his new
call-
editor of the Volks-
among
the
many
investment of
its
its
its
also a
by
German
its
in
honesty of pur-
varied information, and through
matter, in securing a foremost jilace
journals of this section, and, as a iirofitable
kind during an extended period of time in
the State capital, stands confessedly alone.
A
pajrer that has
enjoyed a prosperous career of thirty-two years ficiently,
])aper,
Independent
career.
IVestbote has succeeded,
the excellence of
that city. Two years later, in 1856, he removed from Philadelphia to Cincinnati, and there became salesman and
IVestbote,
which has had a highly successful pose, by the reliability of
in
became
that
following year,
In September, 1843, in conjunction with Mr. Reinliard, he started
public schools of Philadelphia, and in
1854 he left school salesman and bookkeeper in a grocery store
in the
German
1841
a paper of great influence, published in Cincinnati.
and engaged
as
In
testifies suf-
without the need of other testimony, to the business
capacity of
its
conductor.
In 1868 he became a
the banking-firm of Reinhard
&
Co.
He
member of
has been so com-
BIOGRArillCAL ENCYCLOr^DIA.
178
member, has deservedly secured a high and hor.or.able position in professional and in social circles as well. Fully performance of puldic duties. For nine years, however, he awake to the importance of obtaining worthy men in office, has been a member of the City School Board, and for six he watches with keen interest the events of the hour, and pletely engrossed in his journalistic labors that he has been
able to give, comparatively speaking, but
years, from 1865, held
by election
its
time to the
little
He
presidency.
is
a
stockholder in several of the manufacturing enterprises of
Columbus, and,
ways,
in various
to
is
He was
ness interests of the city.
identified with the busi-
married, June 25th, 1845,
Louisa Schode, a resident of Dayton, Ohio,
who had
emi-
Neuwied, Germany, to this country. family consists of one son and one daughter.
He was
December
married,
4th,
Anna
1873, to
of Cincinnati, Ohio.
UTCHINS, ROBERT GROSVENOR, the
^?^^AFT, HON. CHARI.es BHELPS,
Academy, Andover, Massachusetts, and also the Woodward High School. He and at Williams College, while his professional course was then became a student in Yale College, and grad- divided between Union and Andover Theological Seminauated
from
that
whence he graduated in was admitted to the bar
at
Columbia College,
May he
In the following
1866.
and
Cincinnati, Ohio,
in
Subse-
1864.
in
institution
at
once
entered on the practice of his profession, in which he was until
Berlin, Prussia,
He
October of the same year.
pursued an additional course of studies
at
Phillips
and from
at
afterward
the University of
this institution passed, in
March,
He commenced
ries.
lyn,
New
Here he remained
York.
spending the ensuing year
Paris, P'rance,
in
he made the
tour of Italy, and finally returned to Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1869.
He was
then successively associated
in
Murray C. .Shoemaker and Hon. Edward P'. Noyes. In the fall of 1871 he was elected by the Republicans to the State Legislature for two years, and served as Chairman of the Committee on Common Schools. While acting with that body, he rendered valuable service in the codification and enactment of partnership, for the practice of law, with
the existing system of the school laws of Ohio.
of 1872 he was nominated to
fill
In the
an election.
He
Mr. Hutchins has been very suc-
and
still
Fortunate in having secured not
subsequent training
at
home and
wise and profitable use of his
abroad, he has
abilities
by rendering them subservient
to his
made
a
and attainments, and
own
welfare and the
improvement of the community amid which he
is
a valued
as well as
a pulpit orator.
divine.
He
has
won
the
by his sincere regard
temporal welfare, and by his
Few men
in the clerical profession
Ohio stand higher in public estimation than does Rev. Mr. Hutchins. He was married on November 27th, 1862,
in
to Harriet P.
James, of West Killingly, Connecticut.
ARROWS, REV. ELIJAH PORTER, of
Hebrew Language and
Professor
Literature in Oberlin
Theological Seminary, Ohio, was born, Januaiy 5th, 1805, in
Mansfield, Connecticut, his parents
having been Nathan and Sophia (Hanks) Bar-
in lanuary,
only a thorough elementary education, but also an excellent
and eloquent
affection of his congregation
for their spiritual gifts as
He was
rows.
of the
of influence and merit.
seven years, and
work, and has established his repu-
fall
same year, formed a copartnership with his father, Hon. Alphonso Taft, widely known as an eminent jurist, and since that date has remained an active member of the law-firm of A. Taft & Sons. He was one of the originators of the Zoological Garden of Cincinnati, and is now one of its directors. In March, 1875, became one of the proprietors of The Cincitinati Volksblatt, a German newspajrer
for
occupies.
the vacancy in Congress
had previously,
assumed
cessful in his ministerial
caused by the resignation of Hon. Aaron F. Perry, but failed to secure
year,
Congregational Church of Columbus, Ohio, the position
P'irst
which he
love
After
more than a
then (October 27th, 1872) entered upon the pastorate of the
tation as a learned
U. D.
little
the pastorate of the Bedford Congregational Church, Brook-
1867, to the Heidelberg University, Germany, where, in the J.
his ministerial labors at Fitchburg,
Massachusetts, but after a
following December, he took the degree of
October,
His preliminary studies were pursued
ancestry.
city,
quently he attended the law school
engaged
Pastor of
Congregational Church of Columbus,
First
Ohio, was born, April 25th, 1838, at West Killingly, Connecticut, descending from English and Scotch
Lawyer, wa
born in Cincinnati, Ohio, December 21st, 1843 He attended the common schools in his native
V
Sinton,
daughter of David Sinton, an influential and honored citizen
His
grated from jjresent
denounces or supports in accordance with the knowledge and views which he brings to bear upon men and measures.
prepared
for
a collegiate course
of study in Baltimore, and entered Y’ale, from which he Upon leaving college he went to Hartgraduated in 1826. ford, Connecticut,
Grammar
where he became Principal of the Hartford
School, and in that capacity employed himself
from 1826 to 1831. He was ordained to the ministry in June, 1832, and during the years 1835-6 was Pastor of the In 1837 First Free Presbyterian Church of New' York city.
he was elected
to
the Chair of Sacred Literature in the
Western Reserve College, and 1852.
He became
Literature in
remained
filled this
Professor of
professorship until
Hebrew Language and
Andover Theological Seminary
as such until 1866.
in
1853, and
In 1872 he w'as chosen to
fill
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA. the
same professorship in this capacity
and
in Oberlin Theological
Seminary,
connected with that
institution.
is still
179
vacating this position returned to private practice.
In
October, 1855, he was admitted to the local Federal Courts,
Mr. Barrows -takes rank among the eminent theological and is without a superior in the
and
professors of the day,
each tribunal his very marked ability and refined deport-
knowledge and interpretation of the Hebrew language.
ment won bar. His
in
1868 to the Supreme Court of the United States.
In
him the admiration and esteem of bench and extensive. is varied and As a great literature and the anti(|uities of those lands which were the criminal lawyer he has achieved renown and success, not It is in scenes of the events spoken of in the Old and New Testa- only in Ohio, but in most of the Western States. In addition to being a graceful writer upon theo- this class of cases that his astonishing power as a jury lawments. His varied talents, broad learning, logical and historical subjects, he is an effective speaker, yer is best displayed. with the rare power of holding the attention of those whom keen perceptions and scope of eloquence render him almost
He
is
learned in
all
that relates to sacred geography, sacred
He
he may be addressing.
completed the “ Commentary”
for
practice
irresistible as
an advocate
and there are but
;
fe\v causes
American Tract Society, New York, which, by the celebre tried in the West wherein he is not retained. He death of Dr. Justin Edwards, was left unfinished, and is devotes himself chiefly, however, to important civil questhe author of a “ Companion to the Bible,” a work on tions, the law of corporations and of insurance receiving of the
” Sacred Geography and Antiquities,” a “
Memoir
He
Everton Judson,” and some smaller works.
members of the
the most influential and learned
of Oberlin College, and has the affection of
he has the admiration and esteem of
Two of his rebellion,
of Rev.
is
sons served in the Union
one remaining four years
all
its
sistent
faculty
tion
students as
who know
him.
army during the recent
Army of the PotoArmy of the Cumber-
in the
mac, and the other three years in the
Mr. Logan was an early and per-
his greatest attention.
one of
advocate of codification
has been
in
Ohio, and since
closely identified with
He
secure thorough and lasting legal reforms. ocrat in politics,
and
in all strongly contested
services are invariably
of oratory
make him
demanded by as
adop-
is
to
to
Dem-
a
campaigns his His
his party.
gifts
popular on the stump as he
and prove him
effective in court,
its
movements
all
be an invaluable
is
ally.
He was married March 9th, 1829, to Sarah Maria Lee, He has been offered the nomination of his party for Conwhom he had ten children, all gress, or as one of the Judges of the Superior Court, but
land.
of Hartford, Connecticut, by but one surviving.
has declined any political preferment, believing that he has
abandon the important interests which his Being in the prime of to his care. i-JS: Ip/^OG.VN, THOMAS A., Attorney-at-Law, was born life, in the front rank of American lawyers, known at home in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, January 25th, and abroad, and admired wherever known, hisTriends inr yJI G His father was C. A. Logan, an actor dulge the most exalted expectations of his future. 1829. cDr no right
(3
clients
to
have committed
ia
who
(n,
hip of that body,
returned to that city to enter
to
a physician
was prepared for college at Buir Seminary, in Manchester, Vermont, and that done, he entered as a student at Middlebury College. He graduated at Middlebury in After leaving college he W'as employed for a period 1850. Island.
He
is
is
schools, he
was induced by Mr. Louis Ballenberg, Manager of the Cinthen newly organized.
to
district schools
and
companied by physical training
favorite pupil of the celebrated Carl
Rufus
Consul
Slates
His early education was mainly ob-
He
which he became the
His father was
themselves prominence and distinction, he
was a farmer’s son, and was born
in
during
United
Cleveland, Ohio; and another brother
of the art.
five years,
Eng-
Mead, Professor of Hebrew Literature in Andover Theological Seminary. Like so many of the New England men who
would have
an organization led by so competent a master
New
six brothers,
Nicaragua; another, Martin L. Mead, M. D.,
in
about
in a
born in Cornwall, Ver-
of his
gladly accepted, seeing in this acceptance the advantages he
filled this )iosiLion
prime of
Rhetoric, in
a
is
mont, on the loth of May, 1827.
After
York, where he believed he could secure a more rapid
advance
in the
Piofessor of .Sacred
Oberlin Theological .Seminary,
garden con-
certs,
in
is
excellent
and
facility
performed principally
playing a number of years
He
exponents.
age of six
developed, thus early, an
and very readily acquired
taste,
New
in
its
manhood, and labors still with unabated enthusiasm field which has already covered him with distinction.
Miclxiel took his
January ilth, 1849.
instruction
years.
Conductor of tne
Grand Orchestra, was born
Cincinnati
first
Violoncellist,
At the end of that time,
Middlebury College, holding
longer.
Then,
in the
in 1852,
Long
he became a tutor
that position for
two years
year 1854, he entered as a student
Andover 'rheological Seminary, and graduated there
at
in
BIOGRAnilCAL EXCYCLOP.EDI A.
212
of that year he was elected a Representative to Con-
In September, 1858, the year after his graduation
at
the
Andover, he became pastor of the Congregational Church
at
gress from the Twelfth
the
counties of Coshocton,
1857.
He
South Hadley, Massachusetts. pulpit of this church until
continued to
November, 1867,
holding the positions of Secretary and
same time
at the
member
fill
of the Board
Mount Holyoke Eemale Seminary. December, 1867, he was installed as pastor
of Trustees of
month of
Ohio District, then composed of the Knox, Hoimes and Tuscarawas, and 1834 was re-elected to the same position. He was a
Whig
in his
political principles, but
although his
district
In the
was overwhelmingly
of the
such was his popularity that he was elected each time by a
New Hamp-
Olive Street Congregational Church in Nashua,
in
fall
hands of
in the
During
triumphant majority.
his political opponents,
his first
term of service in
church
Congress, and at the January term, 1834, of the Supreme
October, 1869, w’hen he entered upon his duties as Professor of Sacred Rhetoric in Oberlin Theological Semi-
Court of the United States, Chief-Justice Marshall presiding,
He
shire.
continued his service as pastor
that
of
until
nary, a department of Oberlin College,
In
dbntinues to occupy.
D. to
assume the presidency of that
he declined. lin
still
he received the degree of
1871
from Middlebury College, and
1 ).
position he
which in
1S74 he was invited
institution,
an honor which
In addition to his duties as Professor in Ober-
Theological Seminary, he has acted for six years as
associate pastor of the
He was
Oberlin.
Second Congregational Church
married on the 5th of August, 1S58,
he was admitted as an attorney and counsellor of that court.
About the same time he argued
orally before the
cause.
In 1S44, the M’hig party being then largely in the as-
cendant
in the
.State,
he was unanimously nominated by a
State convention of that party for the office of
Preferring the quiet of domestic
Ohio.
of superintending the education of his two sons, and tired of the turmoil and excitement of the political arena, he respectfully but firmly declined the flattering distinction of-
him by
He was
his fellow-citizens.
architect of his
own
Sharpsburg, Mary-
December, 1796. He was the eldest son of Christian Spangler and Annie land, on the 24th of
Spangler,
Episcopal
this great
He
his self-directed
that early day,
Ohio.
in
was favored with
and he was not slow
limited as they were.
Tiring
to profit
In early
clerking in
life
Zanesville,
lilieral
primary education, to which the subject of
the business of
this
by
means of
sketch had
his ojiportuni-
he was engaged
in
father’s dry-goods store.
his
length of the monotony of a shopkeeper’s
at
life,
about the year 1S21, wdien twenty-five years of age, he entered
upon the study of the law under the direction of Hon.
Alexander Harper, long a distinguished Judge of the Common Pleas Court and subsequently a member of Congress.
At the term of the Supreme Court held
at
Cleveland
chancery
ical
in this State.
In 1S30 he
friends for a seat
was put in the
in
nomination by his
at
success.
that period,
all
the important cases of his time in
cu])ied never failed to elicit the
when professionally warm commendation of
who
witnessed his unassailable deportment.
ried
December
whom applied themselves He died at Coshocton on
whom
he had two sons, Elher-
to the
study and practice of law.
the afternoon of Saturday, Octo-
ber i8th, 1856.
C^^LIPPART, JOHN HANCOCK, .State
Muskingum
he came within a very few votes of
removed to Coshocton, Ohio, was thenceforward until the day of his death his permanent residence. Professional business poured in upon him from the start, and veiy soon after he settled in Coshoc-
Secretary of the
Board of Agriculture, was born near Canton,
.Stark county,
Ohio, his parents being Henry and
Eve (Henning)
polit-
In 1S32 an eligible opening offering for increase
Klippart, on
July 26th,
His paternal grandfather came Lafayette, and at the war married a Virginia lady and
18S6 he moved
to Stark county,
He was
settled in
brother to Marshal
spicuous in the battles fought by Napoleon.
take a leading part in politics. In
Maryland.
to
first
to
Flanders and afterwards
escape persecution.
They
In
Klcber, so con-
Mr. Klippart’s
maternal great-great-grandfather was a Huguenot, family fled,
1823.
America with
Ohio, with his family of six
children.
to
to
close of the revolutionary
wdiich
he was called u]5on
alt
was mar-
ington T. Spangler, and Alexander H. Spangler, both of
of professional business, he
ton,
He
oc-
3d, 1828, to Elizabeth Grafton Etherington,
of Baltimore, Maryland, by
Legislature, and though the in
eng.aged in
the locality in which he lived, and
After his admission to
opposing party was strongly in the ascendant county
His strong phys-
manners, and his joyous humor.
for his wit, genial
the bar he at once entered on the practice of the law at Zanesville.
by
in
1S24, Mr. Spangler rvas admitted as an attorney-at-law and solicitor in
He became
after years.
a good 6 el/es Ictlres scholar, a pro-
found lawyer, and an eloquent advocate.
He was
ties,
college.
members of the Methodist ical constitution harmonized admirably with his clear and Church. In November, 1872, the vigorous mind, and in social life he was esteemed and admired
free access,
efforts
at
his energy,
zealous
then a frontier and important town at
was never
want was more than made up by
industry and perseverance in
family removed from Maryland and settled at Zanesville,
even
emphatically the
In his youth he had not the
fortune.
advantages possessed by many.
f-^^CILER, DAVID, ex-Memberof Congress and But at
Governor of
and desirous
to
fered
Attorney-at-Law, w'as born
life,
in
Elizabeth Storrs Billings, of Andover, Massachusetts.
G
same emi-
nent jurist a case on appeal from Ohio, and gained his client’s
to
whose
Pennsylvania,
settled in the vicinity of
Har-
BIOGR API ICAL EAX'VCLOP. EDI A.
21
I
risburg, the capital of that State, in the cemeteries of
the family
name
Henning
of
which
frequently to be met with.
is
Until his ninth year Mr. Klippart attended
the
common
“subscription” schools, taught by Irish schoolmasters.
was sent
his tenth year he
engaged
in
making and
to
the two succeeding years he
and
weaver “
tilling
&
Kuntze,
was employed
in
wool-carding, in the store of
Stark county, remaining
Louisville,
in
During
quills.”
1836 he was placed as an errand-boy
in
Gorgas
In
with an aunt, and was
live
He was then engaged by a whom he stayed only a short establishment of Sala & Kline, of Canton,
with them only a few months. brother-in-law of
time, entering the to learn the
Zerbe, with
I.
Erom drug business, and to “ read ” medicine. he acted as clerk in drug and dry-
until the fall of 1847
1S40
goods stores
in Massillon
and Mount
E.aton,
Wayne
county.
His report, which is and very important, was printed in the “Ohio Agricultural Report,” for 1859. During the war he disease then prevailing in that State.
quite voluminous
was frequently despatched by Governors Tod and Brough, with important messages for the armies from Ohio, to Nashville,
Cold Harbor, and elsewhere.
of Agriculture at Washington, to
report of his lour of observation, printed in the “
meantime
in the
&
as a subcontractor
Pennsylvania Railroad,
Wayne & Chicago
Fort
on the
now known
Railroad.
line of the
Ohio
as the Pittsburgh,
In this connection
all
the profits of his entire mercantile career tvere swallowed
ractised in
His Ohio Agri-
cultural Report,” for 1865, contributed largely,
was not
if it
the sole cause, to the introduction of the Percheron horse
More than two hundred thousand
fronr France.
was assigned
In
1
Great Britain and the countries of continental Europe.
1849 he was appointed Postmaster of Osnalwg, Stark county, having been engaged until 1852.
in-
and practical agriculture,
as well as to observe the systems of agriculture
worth of these horses are now
engaged
examine the European
stitutions for teaching theoretical
In 1847 he married Emeline Kahn, of Canton, and entered the dry-goods trade on his own account. In this line he was profitably
1865 he was de-
In
puted by the State Board of Agriculture and the Department
Hayes appointed him
his term,
and he
as Assistant State Geologist,
This
to the agricultural portion of the survey.
appointment he held with distinction
tion, in
dollars’
In 1869 Governor
Ohio.
in
when
until the expiration of
the corps was continued under a reorganiza-
which the agricultural department was omitted, the
Legislature being
more
and promot-
interested in developing
ing the interests of the mineral than of the agricultural re-
company with Daniel Gotschall, and after- sources of the State. In 1873 Governor Noyes appointed M. Webb, he edited and published the Mr. Klippart as one of three Commissioners of Fisheries, Democratic Transcript, at Canton. In the following year he assigning to him the duty of ascertaining the feasibility of removed to Cleveland and edited the American Liberal, a replenishing the streams of Ohio and Lake Erie with fish Upon of species adapted to these waters. His report made such an journal whose existence covered only a few months. impression on the Legislature that an act was passed authorits demise he was associated with Thomas Brown, editor In 1853,
up.
in
tvards wdth John
and publisher of the Ohio Farmer, and sustained
this rela-
December, 1856, when he was elated Corresponding Secretary of the Ohio State Board of Agriculture, an office which he has occupied uninterruptedly up to tionship until
At the same time Hon. Salmon
the present time.
then Governor of Ohio, tendered Librarian, attention
many
him
the position of State
which he declined, preferring to the
years he
wider
field
P. Chase,
to give his entire
of agricultural science.
was a constant contributor
For
to the agricultural
and many of his essays on agricultural and translations from German and French agricul-
izing the appointment of a commission, with an appropriation of 810,000, to build hatching-houses
Governor Allen selected him
as
and conduct them.
one of the commissioners.
Although poverty and the lack of proper school deprived him in early
life
facilities
of the advantages of a systematic
education, his persistent effort in devoting
all
his leisure
time to study secured him a knowledge especially of scientific
matters,
in politics
which
is
comprehensive and thorough.
he has never been a partisan
While
in the strict interpre-
word, he has always allied himself
press of the country,
tation of the
topics,
ganization which protected American labor, fostered and
tural writers, are to
be found scattered throughout the several
annual volumes of his reports to the Legislature of Ohio. In l86o he published an exhaustive treatise on the “ Wheat Plant,”
which was the
tematize the
known
first
attempt in this country to
facts in relation to this
.sys-
important cereal,
and of which three large editions followed each other rapid succession. practical treatise
in
Two years later he published a very on the “ Theory and Practice of Farm
Drainage,” two large editions of which have been issued by
Robert Clarke the
&
last-named work
industries,
and developed American
His religious views are
to
no special creed,
to
be governed by any tenet or
church, and that,
his belief
if
it
is
being
true
stantly apparent in daily acts. scientific agriculture,
and
is
liberal, th.at
true religion
many
is
set of tenets established
and
sincere,
He
is
it
will
not
by a
be con-
a devoted student of
recognized as an authority in the
settlement of disputed questions relating to are quoted in
re-
and he conforms
influential
European
it.
His wiitings
publications, that
and among on the wheat plant having been wholly reprinted abroad. This He has been honored by his election as a member of the text-book on drainage in the Ohio Central Acclimatization Society of Prussia, and of the ImIn 1S60 Governor Dennison ap- perial Agricultural Society of France. The California
Co., of Cincinnati, the largest
most substantial book-publishers
Agricultural
promoted American sources.
to that or-
is
the
College.
in the
West.
pointed Mr. Klippart as one of the Commissioners to
visit
Massachusetts, and examine into and rcixrrt upon the cattle
Natural History Society elected him a corresponding ber,
and the same courtesy and acknowledgment of
mem-
his
in-
1
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.-EDIA.
214
valuable services was extended by the Cincinnati Natural
In 1856 he was Secretary of the Cleve-
istory Society.
1
ings; the unearthing of thousands of
warm, incubating sands
the
‘
blue racers’
eggs in
’
of the old bluff ; the periodical
land Academy of Science, and subsequently was enrolled a shaking with fever ’n ager all are as events of member of the American Association for the Advancement day.” Toledo was then the market centre, and for ‘
’
:
of Science, and
the meeting of this organization, in 1874,
at
he contributed a paper on
Flatygonus Couipressus."
lie
is
Vice-President of the Natural History Society of Columbus.
The
have been so important
labors of Mr. Klippart
domain of
been extended
him by American and
to
have not been undeserved.
In
in the
which have
agricultural science, that the honors
foreign societies
the important offices to
all
which he has been appointed, he has discharged the
duties
devolving upon him not only with the highest degree of skill,
esteemed by the entire public in
justly
is
He
but with the greatest fidelity and intelligent care.
who know
those elsewhere
wagon with two pairs of oxen, loaded with wheat, to Raymond’s mill, spending four days in the trip, and receiving for the grain from fifty to less regularly, in driving a
my
for scribbling,
of school compositions on the horse, the sheep, the use of
tobacco, intemperance,
applied
less
to
the
Operator
Real Estate, Farmer, Author, was born j!| '
in
Cana-
me
earliest rec-
Hemlock Lake,
among
of water lying
the “ Ball
and dales
a romantic sheet
and the barren,
Hills,”
stony peaks of the surrounding elevations, were to him
And
miliar and beloved sights.
Honeoye, with
His mother died a few months
of Connecticut. birthday,
cupied the position nine years of his
to
New
Ohio
his
for the
York.
in a
after his
father in
Lake Shore
settlement was
In
who
&
in the
moved
township of Chesterfield, near
new and abounded
hunting
The
hardships and pleasures incident to a frontier
home
in the
West, and the transforming of a quarter-section “ .My recollections
of wild land into a well-cultivated farm.
of that farm are vivid.
it
to ‘
The
driving of two, and sometimes
break up the virgin
;
by
tlesnake
;
‘
poems, the
was
first
in
entitled
residts of his
his
farming opera-
possessions there and pur-
chased another farm of one hundred and sixty acres near the city of
Toledo, which step, as shown by after events, was a
wise and profitable venture.
In the succeeding winter of
1851-52, having “finished his schooling,” which embraced
But persisting steadily
to his health.
in his tactics to secure
the desired end, he ultimately
“at the case,” about one-half the time, the remaining half
soil
;
the cutting
his
on business of the
in travelling
ing ” for the payier
;
and also
for
It
a time he copied telegraph
despatches from the reading of the operator. in this capacity
office.
apprenticeship that he began “ paragraph-
he wrote out the
last
While acting
annual message of
President Fillmore, a task which occupied the greater portion
of a
cold night in
December.
fellow-workers in the Republican
Browne (“Artemas Ward
His associates and
office
were Charles F.
”), Charles R. Dennett, since
an
and poling editor of considerable note, and James A. Boyd (“ Sandy”), the high ground for his foreman, an accomplished job-printer. Before the ex-
razor’ gr.ass on the prairies,
through water, half knee deep, to
bitten
his
In the spring of 1851 his father,
Chesterfield, sold
was during
;
toils,
stacking
The Western Wilds.” in
Of
Star.
becoming discouraged over the tions
In the
Sunset,” a prose sketch of about half a
the Toledo Republican, and
in
game
usual
and
came out
wild
therefore the ordinary pastime, often a profession.
in
ensuing ten years spent there were accompanied with the
’
at
an undertak-
printed literary composition ap-
first
Penysburg
in the
being employed
was
blue joint
print
“A Golden
Fulton county.
country was
‘
column,
now
The
of
in so great
the term had the honor of writing the valedictory.
“
bud.
became an entered apprentice Michigan Southern Railroad was not to Myers & Riley, in the office of the Toledo Republican. probably even under contemplation. From early in 1852 until the spring of 1853 he worked there
made
oxen
not be
in the
thenceforward oc-
February, 1842, the family
the western boundary of Lucas county,
three, pairs of
would
the following year
canvas-covered wagon drawn by four horses,
then in existence, or
A
favorite
cost
was only a moderate knowledge of the common branches of education, he began to cherish the design of becoming a printer. of female head of the family. The first That intention was, however, opposed by his father, from a fear that the confinement of office life would be detrimental life were passed in Lima, Livingston
and
again married to an estimable lady,
county.
his
tradition, traced their
to
and were natives of the State
origin to the Pilgrim Fathers,
fourth
the course of the winding
shaded banks, was one of
its
His parents, according
fa-
that the
embark
to
I
During the winter of 1850-51 he attended a school
peared,
His
purpose
this
Fairbanks, publishers of
Sylvania, conducted by A. B. West, and at the close of
at
New
York, October 13th, 1833.
thought seriously
For
resources were not sufficiently extensive
financial
following spring his
of the Genesee.
haunts.
in
I
This nipped the enterprise
dice, Livingston county, in the western part of
ollections are associated with the hills
&
Messrs. Scott
than ten dollars.
ing.”
RANSOM ERASTUS,
and which
etc.,
time of having printed in a book.
for a
and by the Blade, who informed me
this State,
of him.
had an early penchant
I
manuscript collection being a series
first
that time to enable
iICHARDS,
”
cents per bushel.
.seventy-five
My
G)
on the farm, he was engao-ed,
years, in addition to his labors
more or
yester-
several
becoming impaired, he was and a change of clithe spring of 1S53, George G. Lyon, one
the constant fear, during haying time, of being
piration of the year, his health
mas.saugers,’ a species of short, dark-colored rat-
advised to seek another
the contending against annual fires on the open-
mate.
Early
in
field of labor
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP-LDIA. of the editors of the
ment on the
staff
Toledo Blade, offered him an engage-
the
of that paper, as Local and Commercial
meantime
ried,
215
—
mar-
Maryette Bush, eldest daugh-
13th, 1855,
week eight to ter of Dr. B. H. Bush, one of week being then first-class wages for “ profes- Toledo and Lucas county, Ohio. He was then released from the articles of his
Reporter, with the salary of five dollars per
He was
credit of authorship.”
lost all
December
the pioneer physicians of
ten dollars per sionals.”
apprenticeship bond with Mr. Riley, and accepted the situ-
on the Blade.
ation
new
After a
months on the
of two
trial
theatre of action, however, his health continuing poor,
he was compelled
summer and
AYS,
Proceed-
to quit the business altogether.
ing northward, he spent the
received
the island of Mackinac, finding occupation while there in a
With
conducted by P'redeiick Hoitt.
grocery store,
health
him he returned to Toledo, and passed the winter in the employ of Joseph R. Williams, soliciting subscriptions for the Blade, in which he met with ordinary success. In December, 1854, he again secured a position on the Blade as Local and Commercial Editor, with J. R. Williams, restored to
afterward
President of
the
He
held
connection with any paper, except as an occa-
and correspondent.
edited and published the
first
near the
He
resided.
and on
that
of
life
engaged
He
as a
served as a clerk in the Treas-
Montgomery county, Ohio, during
the years
In 1873 he was elected Auditor
Co., Dayton, Ohio.
the Democratic ticket.
1855, he
In January,
ALL, FLAMEN,
connected himself with the Masonic order influential position
among
task of organizing the Northwestern
one of
Since
its
was born
six sons, the others
in
to Clifton,
institution at the
Ohio Masonic
'
menced
in Cincinnati,
end of
his
Ohio,
the only surviving
having died
where he attended the
Kenyon
In 1854 he entered
his
is
in infancy
In 1843 his parents removed
or early childhood.
village school.
College, but
left
that
second collegiate year and com-
the study of law in the office of Chase
&
Ball.
At
the age of twenty-one he received the degree of Bachelor
Relief Association of Toledo, for the insuring of lives on the co-opeiative plan.
Jr.,
February lith, 1837, and
Subsequently
In the spring of 1871 he Iiecaine an active worker
brethren.
education.
clerk in a country store, remaining thus
Montgomery County on
on a farm of forty acres homestead has since permanently
1858, and rapidly gained an
in the
man &
in agricultural pursuits
city,
in
He When
1870 and 1871, and during the succeeding two years was engaged as bookkeeper for the banking house of Harsh-
business directory of Toledo,
Ohio, printed in the columns of the Blade.
he engaged
school
was born
7th, 1842.
over a year, since which time he has had
little
no
sional writer
common
a
three years.
this
post for a direct
A., County Auditor,
eighteen years old he started in active
urer’s office of
Michigan State Agricultural
College, as proprietor and editor-in-chief.
WTLLIAM
Montgomery county, Ohio, June
part of the fall on
organization he has served as
of
and Treasurer of this institution, has received and disbursed over $25,000, and has been instrumental in securing a membership of 1700. For ten years he was Master of a Lodge, and at the present time officiates as Grand Lecturer of the Grand Lodge of Ohio, for the Third District. Secretary
Laws from
the law department of the Cincinnati College,
and was admitted
to the bar in
thespringof 1858.
In i860
he formed a copartnership with his father, under the name of Ball
&
Ball,
which
firm existed until the war,
when, de-
siring to respond to President Lincoln’s call for volunteers,
he gave notice to his partner of his intention to enter the army; but before leaving for the field, the firm’s practice of a monument to the memory of deceased Masons buried being large, and his senior partner unable to attend to it unin Forest Cemeteiy, Toledo, and thus far has met with entire aided, he recommended his friend, Isaac M. Jordan, Esq., success. He has an extensive acquaintance among Masons as his successor, with whom a copartnership was formed In 1871 he set on foot a plan to raise means for the erection
throughout the State, and is widely and favorably known as an energetic and useful coworker and associate. During
1870 he wrote and published Early Masonry in
“An
Jordan
— Flamen,
one-third interest in the business.
Mr. Ball
under the name of Ball
Historical Sketch of
pense raised a
Northwestern Ohio,” a pamphlet of
elected Captain.
full
&
company
I'ailing to
of infantry, of
Jr.,
retaining a
at his
own
ex-
which he was
procure the acceptance of his
company by Governor Dennison, Ohio’s quota being full, years he has been a regular contributor to the Masonic Re- and knowing that Kentucky’s quota had been refused the viei.K), published at Cincinnati, Ohio. Since December, 1867, government by Governor McGalfin, Captain Ball marched he has devoted the greater portion of his time to the busi- his company from Cumminsville, where he recruited it, to sixty-four pages,
ness of buying
which had a good
and
Also of
late
selling real estate, with an office at
No.
local sale.
Colerain township, where he took possession of the Meth^
19 Campbell Block, Toledo, Ohio.
The
'
follow ing
once an amusing and an instructive reminiscence of his ary career
;
“
One
literary effort in particular
ber, written several press,
and
finally
do
I
is
at
liter-
remem-
years ago, that went the rounds of the
returned to the starting point, having in
odist
camp-meeting grounds, and whither he induced
six
other companies to encamp, promising to procure their ac-
ceptance by President Lincoln, to be credited to Kentucky A committee was despatched to
as a part of her quota.
Washington, and through the influence of Secretary Chase
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOIAEDIA.
2i6 and Captain
Ball’s
father,
who was
company and
those
the President,
who
Camp
vrhere
at
Captain Ball
Clay was established, and the
ist
Captain Ball was offered a
and 2d Kenfully organ-
staff position of
whichever
a Republican.
is
1872 he took a promi-
In
nent part in organizing the Liberal Republican party, and
encamped with him were accepted by was chosen ordered them to proceed to Columbia,
tucky Regiments were speedily recruited and ized.
United
that time
Southern Ohio, Captain Ball’s
District Attorney for
States
Presidential
Ohio, on the Greeley
elector for the
First
now
is
for
and thriving
the past six years in Avondale, a beautiful
suburb of Cincinnati, and
District of
Captain Ball has resided
ticket.
actively eng.aged in the
practice of his profession in his native city.
of those regiments he might desire, but declined promotion, preferring to remain with the
whom had
not a few of
men whom he had
recruited,
enlisted with the understanding that
ORGAN, GEORGE
he would command them. Captain Ball elected to serve in the 2d Regiment, of which Colonel William E. Woodruff,
W., Eawyer and ex-Member at Washington, Washing-
of Congress, was born
of Louisville, an experienced officer, was chosen to com-
ton county, Pennsylvania, on the 20lh of Septem-
mand.
ber, 1S20.
These regiments were assigned
Kanawha
valley.
campaign
in
to active duty in the
West
After serving through the
education
'Virginia
Brigadier-General Cox’s brigade, the
1st
2d Kentucky Regiments established a reputation lantry which was maintained to the end of the war.
These
common
schools of the neighbor-
hood he entered the Washington College. Before
and
for gal-
After obtaining the rudiments of his at the
he had entered on his sixteenth
year he
commenced a
became a
brilliant and memorable one. His brother had organized a company to when Captain Ball, being physically disabled from the ef- assist Texas in securing her independence, and in this fects of typhoid fever to keep up with his regiment, and not company George Morgan enlisted as a private soldier. In
military career, which, in later
life,
regiments, in January, 1862, were ordered into Kentucky,
he made a
desiring to be under pay without rendering to the govern-
this
ment a quid pro quo, resigned 1S62, and before fully restored
grades of Sergeant, Second and First I.ieutenant,
his
commission.
May,
he was appointed
to health,
by Mr. Lincoln an additional aide-de-camp General John E. Wool, and assigned
to duty
Major-General Irvine McDowell, with
whom
staff of
Major-
turning again to
on the
staff of
he served
until
was relieved from command of the 3d Corps, Army of the Potomac. Cincinnati at that time was threatened by General Kirby .Smith, who had successfully raided
Kentucky.
through
Secretary
Stanton
sent
for
and asked Captain Ball if he would like to assist in defending his fireside, and on receiving an affirmative reply wrote with his own hand an order to the AdjutantGeneral
to
absence,
who
tendered then in
Captain
give
his
services
command
Ijim as aide
Ball
thereupon
on
a
Lew
Major-General
to
leave
Cincinnati
to
of
and
Wallace,
of that city; General Wallace appointed
and with
his staff,
whom
the expiration of his leave of absence.
made him
days’
fifteen
jtroceeded
the bearer of his
official
he served
until
General Wallace
report
of the siege
fine
record, passing through the until, at
the age of eighteen, he reached the rank of Captain,
commanded
gallant officer
th.at
service
United
in the
army, with the rank of Captain, on the
.States
In
the military post on civil
life
he went
Galveston island. to
and Re-
Ohio, and in the year
He had de1843 settled at Mount Vernon, in that State. termined on adopting the legal profession, and now commenced course,
in
earnest the study of the law, completed
was admitted
his preceptor.
to the
his
bar and became the partner of
In 1846, however, he
left
the conflicts of the
room to participate again in those of the battle field. He went out to take part in the Mexican war as commander of the 2d Regiment Ohio Volunteers. He served under General Taylor until the time of his regiment had expired. In the winter of 1846-47 he was appointed Colonel of the new 15th Infantry, which he commanded under General For the gallantry of his Scott until the close of the war. services at the battles of Contreras and Cherubusco, in the latter of which he was severely wounded, he was brevetted Brigadier-General in the regular army at the age of twentyseven. The war ended he returned home and resumed court
and immedi.ately upon Captain Ball’s the practice of his profession; but another interruption arrival in Washington he was appointed by General Ilal- came, in a shape which attested the high esteem which his In 1855 leck a member of the commission to investigate the abilities and accomplishments had won for him. surrender of Harper’s Ferry. Captain Ball accompanied he was appointed Consul at Marseilles, which position he of
Cincinnati,
General McDowell sent
to
investigate
to
.St.
the
Louis, whither that officer was
cotton
frauds.
While awaiting
orders he served as Judge- Advocate on the staff of Major-
General Cox, then in
and subsequently,
until
command
of the
District of Ohio,
the close of the war, as Assistant
Judge- Advocate of the Department of the Cumberland, on the staff of Major-General George the
of
war Captain Hon. Oran
Ball married Follett,
Kate
H. Thomas. Follett,
of Sandusky, Ohio.
During
youngest child In politics.
filled
most creditably and
satisfactorily.
In
1858 he was
transferred from the consular to the diplomatic service, as
Minister Resident at Lisbon.
went again broke out,
General
of
to in
at
field.
From
When
the
1861, he entered Jhe
volunteers.
Division of the
Sherman
the
Army
Vicksburg.
of the 1st Corps of the
He
diplomatic service he
war of the rebellion army as a Brigadier-
had command
of the 7th
was with General was promoted to the command
of the Ohio, and
He Army
of the Mississippi, and was in
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.EDIA. command
of ihe
Hindman,
he resigned, he
politics,
wing of the army
left
army and returned
the
left is
at the
taking of Fort
In 1863, on account of
Arkansas.
in
healtli,
ill
home.
to his
In
1865 he was candidate
a Democrat, and in
He was Governor of Ohio, but was unsuccessful. on the Democratic ticket, to the P’ortieth Congress, and his seat was contested by Hon. C. Delano. He was re-elected to the Forty-first and again to the Forty-second
were devoted year
“ Bedford,”
March
various vessels
and
abilities
Mount Vernon, where he has
the successful practice of his profession.
in
on the 7th of October, 1851,
ried
good
After leaving Congress he re-
strict integrity.
turned again to
a record of
to
since resided
He was
mar-
Sarah H. Hall, of
business,
ing to
was born, March
i' c.
it,
and has ever since carried it on successfully, addit had run some years, a lumber department.
after
In 1865 he purchased his partner’s interest, and
^ a time
means and an extended reputation
German
He was
origin.
edu-
settlements were forming,
and when
the facilities for anything beyond rudimentary instruction
were not obtainable
when
the days
in the
Western Reserve.
These were
the course of study, usually pursued in a
backwoods school, was covered by “ Dellworth’s ArithHe metic,” “ Webster’s Speller” and the “Testament.” left
Aurora when a young man and went
to
Kentucky,
where he worked in various capacities, hut mainly as an employe in a tobacco factory. In 1832 he went to Cincinnati, and was engaged in a tobacco factory at the corner of where “
F'ourth
and Main
of the
Times, was his companion.
second cook dollare a
streets,
Up
month.
and also
capacity,
to
as
He
year.
In
cabin
1834 he became at a salary of five
boy on various boats.
own account occurred
bought three gallons of whiskey
giving the colored steward,
and backer
in
who
more, perhaps, by the
his
own
tance.
business to the boat “
His
life.
wife $10,000. in the
management
always pursued
life
He
he
1847
when he suffered but now is amply
insurance
is
;
1^15,000,
and that of
his
upon his own judgment and believes that if he had
relies entirely
of his affairs,
this course
He
measure of success.
he would have enjoyed a greater is
now
fifty-five
years of age and
the possession of a strong and vigorous constitution.
in
He
is
nati,
now
the only steamboat-joimJr in business in Cincin-
and looks out
for a happier termination of his active
career than that of the builders and joiners
rounded him.
He
is
a substantial
who once
sur-
in
his
won
the
citizen, liberal
opinions and generous in his impulses, and has
He was married in 1842 afterwards marDunn, who died in 1849. ried Fannie A. Perdum, who died in i860. In 1865 he was again married, his wife being Harriet L. Dumont, daughter of John J. Dumont. respect of the entire community. to
Mary
J.
ATHEWS, REV. JOSEPH McDOWELL,
safely did after
land county, Ohio, was born
Mathews,
rowing the
boat
entire dis-
D. D.,
President of Hillsborough Female College, High-
The
He
Renown,”
years,
he carried no insurance
Virginia,
accompanied the proprietor of the Rising Sun, where they got out the timber for
factor)'.
rise of the river in
During eighteen
the
for thirty-
In the spring of 1836 he was employed in a blind
and sash
fire,
acted as abettor
to this enterprise, eleven dollars.
which he
Cincinnati,
he
thirty years
His
went eighty miles up the Ohio and laid up for the winter, and Mr. Ehler was obliged to buy a skiff in order to reach .
During the
on he has been burned out seven times; and
it
did by the flames.
cents
lars, after
His
as a boat-builder.
business has been interrupted by misfortunes, which, how-
and opened a bar on the steamer “ Lady Byron,” and netted on these three gallons twenty-six dol-
seven
sole
1835 he served in this culinary
venture in business on his
same
Invisible Green,” latterly
steamer “ Champlain,”
in the
now
him ample
mainly from
cated in the district schools of his native State, at
when pioneer
is
covered with policies on his establishment as well as upon
beth Annawald, of Pennsylvania, and both his parents were of
company with Mr.
1820, at Aurora, Dear-
.J
(.
This
His mother was Eliza-
loth,
born county, Indiana.
O) G-
1849, when, in
until
proprietor of an enterprise which has secured to
lost
Steamboat-joiner,
per month.
the Missouri river on
in
Horsley, he started in the carpenter and steamboat-joiner
has carried
HLER, ELIAS ANXAWALD,
on the
Mr. Ehler worked as carpenter on
20th, 1840.
ever, he gallantly surmounted.
Zanesville.
In the
as a carpenter
at a salary of forty-five dollars
was unfortunate, sinking
vessel
elected,
made was
providing comforts for his mother.
to
mentioned he was employed
last
for
Congress, where the record he
217
December
also a native of
ginia, followed
pursuits;
he moved
to
in
8th, 1804.
through
Kentucky
\’ir-
mainly agricultural
1814 and settled
Fayette county, where he resided until his demise,
ber i8th, 1814.
John
father,
Augusta county,
life
in
Augusta county,
His
in
Decem-
His mother, Sarah (McDowell) Mathews,
Burke county. North Carolina, was a daughter of Major Joseph McDowell, who served valiantly and efficiently as an officer in the Revolutionary army, was a a native of
work and brought During the yellow fever member of Congress during the Presidencies of Adams and epidemic, in the same year, he made a trip to New Orleans Jefferson, and was general of the old-time militia of North on the “ Renown,” and upon his return to Cincinnati he Carolina; he died in Iturke county. North Carolina, in worked as an apprentice in carpentering, at which he con- 1801. The oldest child in a family of four children, his finished the joiner
the vessel to Cincinnati in 1837.
tinued until 1839.
28
His surplus earnings during these years
earlier years,
up
to the
age of eighteen, were passed
alter-
LIOGRAPIIICAL ENCVCLOIVEDI A. iiately in fair
working on a farm and
elementary education.
acquiring at school a
in
In 1822, his literary attainments
and varied store of learning, he asand found employment in teaching a subscription school at Pisgah, Woodford county, Kentucky. At the expiration of one year, spent in imparting instruction, he became a student in the academy of Dr. Louis Marshall, located near Pisgah, and in the three years
the boundaries of the Methodist Episcopal Church,
he joined while
His
in his eighteenth year.
life
which
has been
constituting a useful
one of great usefulness as a Christian counsellor and as an
sumed
educator, while his career in public and in private circles
the role of educator,
has been a centre from which has radi.ated in all sea.sons
and
directly
times and
at all
an amount of good whose beneficial influence, indirectly,
is
Swayed
of incalculable value.
by quick and generous sensibilities, he has
won
the esteem,
love and confidence of all who have been brought into conThe following tact with him; in social life he is pleasant and courteous; and mathematical studies. season was consumed in visiting friends in Virginia, his conduct, viewed from a political standpoint, has ever whither he travelled with a view to strengthen a rather im- been based upon a jiure and disinterested love of his In 1827 he settled in Hillsbor- country and an inflexible determination to resist the atpaired condition of health. ough, Highland county, Ohio, and took charge of the Hills- tenqrls of all to undermine the unity of the republic. He borough Academy, an institution founded by Governor was married in 1828 to Elizabeth A. Barry, daughter of
passed in this establishment pursued an exhaustive course of
classical
Allen Trimble, General citizens.
Through
extended
to
McDowell and
other prominent
the acceptance of the invitation then
him, accordingly, he became the
tendent of the academy.
Until
1831
first
Superin-
he was assiduously
Andrew
Clermont county, Ohio, and a of Batavia, Ohio,
who
sister of
He
then joined
of Dublin,
in
Kentucky.
fruits
of his second marriage
He
had no
he had been stationed, and performed ministerial duties
the benefit of the
as
an itinerant clergyman, he was removed to Cincinnati, Ohio, where he remained
for
one year.
In 1834, his health
being in a very precarious condition, he settled on a farm
lished
child.
;
By
stopping there.
his
two children were the
;
After remaining for two years in Chillicothe, Ohio, where
Ireland, a
she was born in Ireland
the
cured favorable attention as a local preacher
Judge Philip Strong,
died in 1858; and again, in 1869, to
the discharge of the onerous duties of that
in
position.
died in 1S52; and
1854, to Mrs. Martha P. .Sanders, a native of
Mrs. Mary B. Harmar, a native Ohio Conference of the daughter of a British army officer; During several preceding while her family was temporarily Methodist Episcopal Church. years he had preached more or less regularly, and had se- first marriage he had one child
engaged
who
Barry, a native of Virginia,
again, in
by his third marriage he has
was the author of two small works
young: “ Letters
to
for
School Girls,” pub-
by the Methodist Book Concern
in
Cincinnati, in
1853; “Sermons to .School Girls,” published by the Methodist Book Concern in New York, in 1867.
near Hillsborough, and there rested, for the purpose of regaining his
lost
energies, until
started, as a private enterprise, the
In this year he
1839.
Oakland Female Semi-
and succeeded in ol)taining a charter With the labors incident to the superschool he was intimately identified until
OMERENE, JULIUS
nary, at Hillsborough, for the institution.
intendency of 1857.
He
this
afterward took charge of Hillsborough T'emale
College, an institution established by the influence of influential
and public-spirited
citizens of the town.
i860,
relinquished the superinlendency, and, re-
turning to Kentucky, took charge of the Jessamine Female College, at
Nicollettsville,
Of
Kentucky.
that institution
he had charge until 1863, when, the events of the affecting its status,
civil
he returned to Hillsborough, Ohio.
in Salt
C.,
Attorney-at-Law, was
Creek township. Holmes county, Ohio,
June 27lh, 1835. His parents were natives of Pennsylvania, and his father was a farmer in com-
^
fortable circumstances.
the
In the
numerous and highly important duties atposition there he was steadily occupied until
when he
^
many
discharge of the
tached to his
t
born
name
erica, his paternal
His
is
the only family of
that has emigrated from
grandfather having
come
France to this
to
Am-
country
with General Lafayette, and at the close of the war settled He attended a district Lancaster county, Pennsylvania.
in
school in his native place until he was seventeen years of age, in the meantime working on a farm during the summer
war months. In two terms
He in
then pursued a course of higher studies for College, employing himself in
Mount Union
same year he took charge of a private the intermediate terms by teaching school. After passing .a Hayesville he taught for instruction for a subsequent term in the academy at Holmes county. In the meantime, after a second in- two years in a select school in Middletown, period of nine years. study of law in the commenced he summer of In the 1857 of Hillsborough Female vitation, he accepted the Presidency Millersburg, under College, and of this celebrated institution of learning has the office of Hoagland & Reed, in the course of the
boarding-school, and there administered
since ably acted as chief and head.
of A.
M. was conferred on him by
Kentucky;
his degree of
The honorary degree whose
the Augusta College, of
preceptorship he remained for one year.
attended the Ohio State and Union
Law
He
then
College, at Cleve-
D. D. was conferred on him subRe-
land, where, at the expiration of one year, he graduated in In the following November he entered on the June, 1859.
atmosphere within
active practice of his profession in Coshocton, with Colonel
sequently by the Ohio University, at Athens, Ohio. ligiously, his sentiments find a congenial
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA. whom
Josiah Given, \vilh
He
1S61.
he was connected
which date he associated himself with B.
him continued
when
May,
until
then practised alone until September, 1862,
professional
his
labors
He
Lee, and with
S.
May, 1868, him and E. T.
until
the present Law firm, consisting of
Spangler, was formed.
at
has a leading practice
November and December.
March
13th, 1865, for gallant
and meritorious conduct, he was promoted from the Colonelcy of the 183d Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry to
He was
the rank of Brigadier-General by brevet.
mustered
out of the service in July, 1865, and subsequently resumed
and practises his profession in Columbus and in the United States He was married, the Northern District of Ohio.
the practice of the law in connection with his father-in-law,
Supreme Court
Court for
Franklin and Nashville, or Brentwood Hills, Tennessee, in
in the
courts of Coshocton county,
the
219
at
April 8th, 1S62, to Irene Perky, daughter of Dr. John F.
Hancock
Perky, of Findlay,
whom he was associated until December 22d, 1S67. When in partnership with General B. R. Cowen, now with
Secretary
Assistant
of
the
he
Interior,
established
in
bank with which he is still connected. of the house is Hoge, Sheets & Co., and
Bellaire the private
county.
The
present style
& Cowen,
was formerly Hoge
new
to the addition of
former name, owing
the
partners, having been adopted July
>OGE, GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON,
1st, 1869. He is also President of the Belmont Glass was born near Belmont, Belmont county, Ohio, Works and of the Bellaire Street Railroad Company, an February 22d, 1832. His parents, Asa Hoge enterprise projected and put into operation in a great and Asenath Ann (Mead) Hoge, were natives measure through his efforts. He is Register in Bankruptcy of Loudon county, Virginia. His grandfathers for the Sixteenth Congressional District, having been apwere Isaac Hoge and Samuel Mead. His father, pointed to this position by Salmon P. Chase, Chief-Justice.
yet living, has resided in the State from territorial times.
His
earlier years
his father
sparsely
had
were passed on the prternal farm where
settled
settled
when
the surrounding country
wilderness.
He
attended
schools located in the neighborhood of his
was a
common
the
home, and was
Pie
has also been
several, times
member
a
of the City
and of the Board of Education, and has held
Council
He
various other public offices.
is
interested in the build-
ing and real estate development of his town, and was an
coworker
efficient
in
the
establishment of
He
the
Bellaire
also educated partly in a private school at Barnesville, Bel-
Manufacturing Company.
mont county.
National Glass Manufacturing Company, and was instru-
schools in
>§54 he taught the counties of Guernsey and Belmont.
commenced
In 1852, 1853
the study of law in the office of
in public
He
then
mental
Hon. Benjamin
works.
He was
until January,
1862,
when he
the
in
Water-
December loih, 1857, to Mary Hon. Benjamin R. Cowen.
married,
Cowen, St. Clairsville, and was admitted to the bar, T. Cowen, daughter of December 3d, 1855. He was then professionally occupied Belmont county
also
in securing the establishment of the Bellaire
S.
in
interested
is
w.is ap-
pointed Chief Clerk of the Secretary of the State of Ohio,
where he remained
until his enlistment in the
He
1862.
July 8th,
entered
the service
Company
B, in August, 1862, he
and mustered
moted
to
the
On
Regiment of Ohio Volunteer Infantry. ant,
Union army,
in
was elected
of the 6th
Army
Corps.
He commanded
his regiment in
and was three times wounded, while upon two other occasions his clothes were pierced with
several engagements
On
the evening of the 5th and the
evening of the 6th of
May
at
;
was
at
Cold Harbor, June
ist
Peter>burg; participated in the
May
19th, at
Winchester; and, September 21st and Hill.
9th to the
and 3d, and on the 22d
movement
July 9th; was present, September
action at I'isher’s
morning and
he was engaged in the battles
of the Wilderness; served at .Spottsylvania, 2th
in the
First Lieuten-
22(1,
On October
at
Monocacy,
Opequam,
took part
or
in the
19th he served at
Cedar Run, and was a participant also
at
the battles of
the Cincinnati
1840, at
22(1,
His father was concerned
German Revolution
of 1848, and
when
the
persecutions were instituted he was compelled to
June 25th, 1863, he was proa Captaincy, and served in Virginia and Mainland
Corps, and subsequently was attached to the 3d Division
I.OUIS, Manager of Grand Orchestra, was born, July Frankfort-on-tbe-Main.
as such.
November, 1864, to the command of the 183d Regiment of Ohio Volunteer Infantry. From July, 1S63, until March, 1864, he was with the 3d Army
1
ALLENBERG,
organizing
until transferred, in
bullets.
I
126th
seek an asylum
commenced
his musical
direction of his father, efforts
1852, he spent
Cincinnati, in
Mr.
M.
J.
leader in the city ability as a
band.
skill
United
Louis
States.
a musician, and his
flute.
tliree
first
Upon
his arrival in
years
in
mercantile
Strobel, the most ])rominent orchestral
at that time,
discovered Mr. Ballenberg’s
musician and induced him to take a place
He
first
came
the place of the chief
and
the
who was
were on the piano and
service.
his
in
education in Europe, under the
on the
flute.
flutist,
being a player of unusual
In 1863 Henry
leadership of the orchestra at
Hahn assumed
Pike’s ffpera
under him Mr. Ballenberg commenced
engagement.
He
in
into requisition as a substitute in
remained with
burning of the opera house,
in
this
1866.
his
taste
the
House, and first
regular
company until the During this period,
however, he made a number of tours through the country in
connection with Grail’s Italian Cfpera Troupe.
He was
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOIAEDIA.
220 for
some time engaged
He
of Mr. Colville.
manage and supply
OiJ Drury, was under the management
witli the orchestra at the
when
or National Theatre,
it
then arranged with R. E.
his orchestras, a position
Miles
J.
to
which he has
for him the management of Grand Opera House. He has, how-
and which secured
since held
the orchestra at the
many engagements
ever, during this arrangement fdled
other
llute soloist in
Opera Troupe
After
is
home
visits
talent,
He
out this idea.
to
new
director of the
and
and took immediate steps
UGGLES,
I-ION. BENJAMIN, United .Stales Senand second President Judge of the Third Circuit of Ohio, was born at Woodstock, Wind-
ator
now
now who intended
to the
property.
He became
its first
series of concerts.
The
this first venture.
took every step which in his judgment
numerical strength of the orchestra, the con-
tion,
is
now
held by Michael
fine discrimination
made
Ballenberg has
and has the
company
many dismaying
this orchestra
classic
The
are filled by gentlemen
His
music.
efforts
it
gains in
leading positions
who have
a high
Mr. Ballenberg has a large stock of
music and musical
self with creditable
obstacles Mr.
an established institu-
satisfaction of noting that
reputation as soloists.
Brand, a
and unquestioned musical
public esteem and confidence daily. in the
be educated for the
1872 the Cincinnati Orchestra, with
After eneountering
genius.
sons should
his
This intention was thwarted by the
gave
ductorship of which
gentleman of
that
literature,
enthusiasm
to the elevation of orchestral
have secured
admiration of the lovers of the
and has devoted him-
him the respect and
for
art in Cincinnati.
in
means were
when Benjamin was
Brooklyn Academy, and
all
He
swept aw.iy.
eight years old, leaving his family
Benjamin studied
circumstances.
straitened
loss of his
surety for a neighbor, and by the
default of the latter his
died
His
moderate circumstances,
in
ministry.
would increase the artistic ability of the organization. Today it takes rank as the leading orchestra of the West, and is doing great service in developing and improving musical taste and culture in Cincinnati. Mr. Ballenberg is yearly adding
was a farmer
father
a large body of in-
once enlisted by the splendid success of
Mr. Ballenberg
county, Connecticut, February 21st, 1783.
This town was originally named Roxburry.
violinist, as
favor and support of the patrons of music in that city were at
ham
to carry
Mr. Ballenberg had
organization.
thirty-six performers,
in 1S61
as
engaged a number of superior musicians,
in
influential
was married
Pennsylvania.
leaving the support of his
difficult art of controlling
strumentalists,
He
Sarah R. Campbell, of Plain Grove, Lawrence county,
of the Thomas’ Orchestra to
and secured Mr. George Brand, the talented mastered the
of the Board of Health of Youngs-
one of the more prominent and
is
citizens of that flourishing town.
Cincinnati he conceived the idea of organizing a first-class orchestra of
member
a valued
town, and
During a tour with the English
cities.
his father died,
family to him.
he
the
at
graduation from this in-
after his
stitution
he read law wdlh Judge Peters, of Hartford, Con-
necticut,
and was admitted
he moved
to the
bar of that
In 1807
city.
Ohio, settling in Marietta, Washington county,
to
where he pursued with great success the practice of his His profound learning, his skill and care as a
profession.
power
counsellor, his
argument,
at
public attention, and he carved his
rank of the
and conclusive
for rapid analyzation
once commanded not only professional hut
wmy quickly
to the front
In 1810 he was elected by
jurists of the day.
the Republicans in the Legislature to succeed Calvin Peas
Judge of the Third Circuit, and was the second incumbent of that judicial office. Shortly after he moved
as President
from Marietta to
went
St. Clairsville,
to Connecticut,
She died
his wife to Ohio.
He
again married. to
make
in
open court as
and
in the
year 1S12 he
where he was married, and brought 1817, and in 1825 he
in
lacked the
gifts
was
of an orator, and failed
that impression of substantial ability as successfully in
chambers.
He was
not distinguished as
an advocate, but as a consulting attorney he had, perhaps, few superiors
In 1815 he was elected by
in the country.
the legislature to the United Slates Senate, and resigned
’^UNNINGHAM, JOHN geon, was born
in
S.,
Physician
and Sur-
Beaver county, Pennsylvania,
to enter
upon
his
new
duties.
February 4th, 1833. He is of Scotch extraction, and received his elementary education in the
large constituency in Ohio, he
common
he rendered valuable,
if
State and the nation.
He was
schools located
in
the vicinity of his
home, and also in the Poland Academy, Ohio, and the Allegheny College, in Meadville, Pennsylvania.
He commenced and graduated sylvania.
the office of Judge, after having ably filled
the study of medicine at Cleveland, Ohio,
at the Jefferson College, Philadelphia,
Since 1862 he has been engaged
in
Penn-
iirofessional
Youngstown, Ohio, where, and also throughout the surrounding country, he is esteemed as At the present time an able and reliable practitioner.
and successful labors
in
it
was twice re-elected
United States Senate, and during his career
in
Washington
that
his
to the
in that
body
not brilliant, services both to his
president of the caucus held
nominated William H. Crawford, of
when
Georgia, for the Presidency, at the time
and Jackson were
for five years,
Being very popular with
in the field.
Buren and Judge Ruggles were
Clay,
Adams
At that period Martin Van political friends,
and quite
an extensive correspondence was carried on between them during the campaign.
Chairman of
llie
The Judge was
Cuinmiltee of Claims
in
for
a
long time
the United States
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOP.EDIA. Senate, and was favorably spoken of in 1S40 for the Vice-
Presidency, being strongly sup|iorted
When
throughout the country.
and gave
fifty
by several journals
years of age he retired
political
more
especially to the cultivation of fruit.
mental
life
of
was
instru-
at times writes with ability for her
husband’s newspaper.
P'or a time, after the expiration
term as Senator, he was President of the Bank
last
He
Clair.sville.
St.
He
and zeal. He was married, December 28th, 1871, to Martha Craig, of that city, who is a graduate of Ohio Wesleyan Female College, of Delaware, taught the Cambridge High School, and the duties of that office with intelligence
introducing to the growers of that section some
in
of the choicest varieties. of his
and
his attention to his farm,
from
221
died, aher a
brief illness, at
residence in that place, on September 2d, 1S57.
his
^i^^AVLOR,
BYRON,
J.
Lawyer and
born, April 26th, 1835,
Judge
^
Ruggles enjoyed
Guernsey county, Ohio, upon
the Senate,
reared.
in an eminent degree the confidence of and was greatly respected in his professional and private career. He was a firm believer in the great truths of Christianity, and exerted wherever he went, or
wherever he was known, an excellent moral influence. He was liberal in his views and generous in his impulses,
and contributed ments
the
in
When
citizens.
advancement of
to the
he died
all
worihy move-
well-being of
the
of
interest
the
Slate
fellow-
his
man
an able
lost
intelligence that he
While teaching he
training,
was
Politician,
24th, 1842, being one of nine sons
whose parents
were natives of Virginia, but were raised
Ohio.
in
His father was a farmer in moderate circum-
who during
stances,
engaged quite successfully
the latter portion of his
common and
received his education in the
and
When
in a
newspaper
office,
and
fession for
as
a private, serving with
Upon
now
leaving this institution he read law
Law
School
in 1866,
in that city.
and practised
at
his pro-
In the spring of 1S75
Cambridge, where he became one of the
to
jjroprietors of the
and influence
Guernsey Times, contributing
as a writer,
and
fine business tpiali-
a manager, to secure the great prosperity that journal
He was
enjoys.
E. C. Ceilings, of
married on the 8th of May, 1S73, to
Camden,
New
Jersey.
W.
85111
that
He
four months, the term of his enlistment.
turned to Cambridge and re-entered the newspaper
cELROY, ZENAS COLLINS,
re-
1866
he
became
associate
the
Physician,
horn
in
father’s side
he
having come
to this countiy
is
a
Belmont
On
county on the 2d of September, 1815.
office,
of
editor
native of Ohio, having been
I
his
of Irish extraction, his father
is
from Ireland
in the
year 1790, and settled in 1803 in Ohio, where he
teaching in the winters in some of the county and village In
and
his skill ties as
Allegheny College, Meadville,
afterwards
some years
he returned editors
steadily labored for a collegiate
D. Taylor, of Cambridge, Ohio, and graduated
J.
where he remained a few months,
Ohio Volunteer Infantry
schools.
to teach,
eighteen years old he became an apprentice
and, the rebellion having just begun, then joined the
command
and
assiduity
was very soon able
select schools,
taught by General George
for a time at a school
Hoge.
life
David
the practice of law.
in
was
he
school educa-
and attended during portions of each year Madison
the Cincinnati D., Editor and
which
common so much
liamsburg, Ohio, of which he was superintendent for several years.
with
born near Fairview, Guernsey county, Ohio, July
Fairview,
and when twenty commenced life as a tutor, conducting village schools, and subsequently the Union school, of Wil-
Pennsylvania.
^AVLOR, DAVID
received a
and studied with
tion,
College,
and society a beloved member.
He
was
Editor,
'''sar
at
first
engaged
in farming,
and subsequently entered the
Guernsey Times, a journal started by Mr. John Aiken in In 1868 he obtained a partnership interest in this 1824.
ministry and labored for over thirty years in the Methodist
paper, and held
of Maiyland.
it
until
January
1st,
time that journal steadily advanced
the duties of this office for a term of three
In January, 1874, he re-purchased his former in-
schools of the region, and those opportunities were by no
its
Examiner,
terest
in
graceful affairs, in
circulation.
filling
the
and
He was
Guernsey Times.
in influence
and greatly
ajipointed County School
Mr. Taylor
is
an easy,
forcible writer, thoroughly versed in political
the discussion of which he has been,
great issues l>rising
The mother of Dr. McElrcry was a native The time of his youth was not a favorable
Episcopal Church.
in the region where that was compelled to content himself with such opportunities as were afforded by the district
increa.sed
years.
1872, during which
were
at stake, very
prominent.
newspaper man, thoroughly alive
influential journal,
and has
He
to the
is
for acquiring
means them
brilliant.
until
whenever was jdaced an enler-
needs of an
in this professional labor
a high as well as extended reputation.
one
youth was passed.
earned
In .May, 1875, he
of this
an education
He
Such
as they
were he made the most of
he had reached the age of sixteen, and then he in a store
position
in the capacity of clerk.
he continued
twenty-seven years of age,
all
system of self-culture, and then
to
the
perform
The
until
duties
he was
time pursuing a rigid
commenced
the study of
medicine with Drs. Boerstler and Edwards, of Lancaster,
was appointed Postmaster of Cambiidgc, and discharged Ohio.
Afterwards he entered the medical department of
BIOGRArillCAL E.NXYCLOr.EDIA.
222
the University of Pennsylvania, and graduated there in the
He
year 1845. tlie
Newark, Ohio, and
settled in
He
practice of his profession.
Zanesville,
remained
and then,
for a period of five years,
in
grew
until
became very
it
in
Newark
removed to and where his
1850,
where he has ever since resided,
practice rapidly
there began
His repu-
large.
tation, not only as a practitioner, but as a contributor to the
was the
Muskingum County Medical which body he has read many of his papers
President of the
first
Society, before
He
previous to their imblication.
C Jiresponding is
also Physician to the
He was
is now Academy
Secretary of the
married
Home
a Fellow and the
of Medicine, and
of the Friendless,
etc., etc.
year 1846 to Elizabeth Alice Block-
in the
som, daughter of Hon. William Blocksom, of Zanesville.
medical journals of the day, has extended to Europe, where his name and known to the
his contributions
been an industrious writer the
London medical
to
medical literature are
For the
profession.
for the
ten years he has
last
American
The purpose
press.
papers has been to explain the phenomena of
and
disease,
on a purely physical basis;
bring physiology, pathology and
domain of physical or exact
life, in
He
is
wasted
tissues, as they are
among
the
and
;
that
the separation from the general debris oi the in functional duty, of the special
Merchant, Iron
12th,
1821, in Gallipolis,
Ohio, his parents being of French descent, and the
ceived a
claims to have
discovered the function of the lymphatic system that function
was born, September
health
therapeutics within
science.
J.,
Master, Steamboat Proprietor, and Hotel Keeper,
other words, to
in
FRANK
AXES, CAPTAIN
as well as for
of his published
place,
first
He
of that town.
settlers
re-
education in the schools of his native
fair
and when thirteen years old went to Portsmouth, started in life by becoming a clerk in the store of
where he
Charles A. M. Damarin, one of the most honorable and
He served him faithmanhood, some eleven years alwith the ingoing stream of together. In 1846 he became associated with his former and place. And that, seemingly, the only proper place employer in conducting a wholesale grocery business, and and time in a living human body is jirst where it actually continued in the same very successfully for about ten years, occurs, to wit: just before entering the right auricle, on and retired v/ith a competency. He was subsequently inits path to the lungs. The lymph, as it is called, he duced to embark in a rolling mill and other iron interests, claims, is the exact analogue of a vegetable seed, animal and while so engaged built two of the first stone-coal fureggs, or other germ, and fulfils all the ends actually accom- naces in southern Ohio, and manufactured the first stonematerial in which each organic structure stores up the force for
own
its
new material, and its union new material at a proper time
reproduction from
plished by either, or
all
of them, in the preservation, per-
petuation and multiplication of their special forms, or types, in
organic
life,
every requisite
animal
or vegetable;
condition
for
and exactly
assimilation
the
fulfils
know
is
during
actually occurring in our
And
life.
identity through
own
life,
bodies
is at
;
is
it
the
while the physical
once a necessity and guarantee of
and hence of immortality and a future
Dr. McElroy finds
all
the time
all
with changing material, which
undisputed possession of each individual
individuality,
which we
satisfactorily accounts for that personal
it
death of the parents
lives,
from boyhood
state.
impossible to reconcile the entity, or
to
coal iron in that section.
business he I^ad
much
Being the pioneer
to learn
;
the undertaking, leaving
and reap where he had sown. interested
in
steamboating,
in this line of
and he found
did not, by any means, prove remunerative.
new abandoned
of
materials to the types and forms of structure of the bodies
of living beings during their natural
upright citizens in the community.
fully
it
his enterprise
He,
therefore,
to others to prosecute
In 1859 he became actively as clerk on the “ Grey
first
Eagle,” Captain G. Donnally, the pioneer boat in the trade
between Pomeroy and Cincinnati
;
and subsequently
a similar position on other crafts.
“ Imperial,”
and three
In
commanding and running her
years.
He
finally sold her,
less,”
which he ran
for
Cairo.
She made
trips
filled
1862 he built the
and
for
between two “ Peer-
built the
a few years until she was
lost
on the Gulf, and was the
near
first
to
Alabama river for a He afterwards commanded different garded and insisted upon in and out of the profession, with part of the season. now known facts of the unity of materials and forces run- boats in various places until 1867, when he built and comning througlf all organic life. So-called disease, or diseased manded the “Alaska” in the Cincinnati and New Orleans action in living bodies, cannot be anything else than modi- trade, continuing therein until 1871, when he concluded to fications of processes natural in health. Acute disease, so- leave the river. He then became interested in the Crawcalled, being for tbe most part in the interest of continued ford House, where he remained until the autumn of 1873, life, by removing, by combustion, or peroxidation, structure when he resumed command of the “Alaska” in the same almost personality identity of so-called disease, as
which has
lost
its
physiological
dynamic
now
capacities;
re-
and
enter
rade,
Montgomery, continuing on
until
Mi.ssissippi
modifications of the structural arrangement of the m.aterials
n
composing
living
tissues,
her loss by sinking near Tiptonville on the
This ended his steamboat career, and, May, 1874, he again became proprietor of the Crawford as demonstrated by House, where he is now engaged in operating it as a firstTo Captain Oakes is undoubtedly due the conservative tendency, class hotel.
chronic diseases, so-called, depending for the most part on
actually
the
changed or lost functions, has also a and are not, as generally regarded, enemies
to
life.
He
credit of
river.
having been the originator of the Jackson county
»
t;'.'
¥
f
y
>
r
L/*
-
kJ^
»
» !«
>
t_*.-
BIOGRArillCAL ENCYCLOI’/EDIA. Mone-coal iron business; be being the
first
to
223
|
the feasibility of
making
M ells &
demonstrate entered the wholesale grocery house of Bishop, Co., in which his father
He
iron with this variety of coal.
For many
was the senior partner.
exacting daughter subsequent years he was constantly occupied by for the firm. salesman head as acting business duties, of Charles Oscar Tracy, one of the most prominent citizens When the new house, R. M. Bishop & Co., came into exand lawyers of that section. istence, in 1855, he was admitted as a partner, and since ^
was married
in
Portsmouth, Ohio, to Frances
II.,
j
that date has
devoted his time and energies, with
ULLEX, THOMAS,
and excellent administrative Contracting Builder, of Cin-
county Monaghan,
Ohio, was born in
cinnati,
His family,
Ireland, July 22d, 1839.
who were
of Scotch descent, were of the agricultural class in the
He
north of Ireland.
of his native country
until
attended the schools 1854,
when he went
alone to Toronto, Canada, where he continued his studies for a time.
In
trade
penter’s faithfully
at
1855 he apprenticed himself to the carM'ardsville, Canada West, and served
through his
full
term.
After
became a
1858, he removed to Cincinnati, where he
neyman
at his trade,
and so continued
through
having served
he enlisted that
until the
jour-
outbreak
Promptly on the
of the war of the rebellion, in 1861. for volunteers, in April,
expiration, in
its
for three
term enlisted
call
months, and the
in
54th
Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry, in September, for three war; and, having re-enlisted, served until the muster out of his regiment, September 15th, 1865. He participated in every engagement in which his regiment took part, and was with General W, T. Sherman in all his memorable campaigns. After the war he returned to Cincinnati and engaged in business on his own account, and soon became one of the most reliable, active and skilful builders of that city. His career has been one of uninterrupted prosperity, and he has contributed much to the improvement of the city by the erection of substantial and
years, or during the
public
elegant
buildings,
The commodious
stores
and private residences.
building erected for the City Infirmary,
various model public school buildings, and dwellings of the
leading and opulent citizens attest his
skill
has never aspired to nor accepted a political
and
He
taste.
office.
mirably for the responsible position in which he
placed.
is
trade of this house, under able and systematic
The
agement, has within the past few years increased extent that are
him ad-
qualifying
abilities
tireless
keen perception
interests of his firm, his
assiduity, to the
its
man-
such an
present business relations and connections
unsurpassed
amount of
to
value in
for
western country, the
the
having aggregated about
sales
tliree
millions of
In April, 1871, he was elected, as a Democrat, to the Board of Aldermen from the Eighteenth Ward, by a dollars.
ward constituted the strongest So notable and efficient body that in 1873 he was again
large majority, although that
Republican section of the
were
his services in this
urged
city.
After reluctantly consent-
renomination.
to accept a
ing to meet the desires of his fellow-townsmen, he was reelected
He was
by a handsome majority.
then
elected
President of the Board, and bore himself so excellently
while acting in
this
mously re-elected
At the expiration of
absolutely declined
1875, he
term, in
1874 he was unani-
capacity that in
to the chair.
a re-election.
his
In.,
same year he was elected President of the Board of Trade, of which he had been a member for some time, and which is composed of the leading merchants and He was also appointed by manufacturers of Cincinnati.
March of
the
W.
lion. G.
missioners.
1875, one of the Park Comnot a brilliant reasoncr, he possesses
C. Johnston, in
Though
that intuitive perception of right
one
an instant
to grasp in
subject,
and draw
all
a conclusion
and
justice
which enables
the essential
which
is
points of a
seldom erroneous.
Prompt, far-seeing and active as a business man, nothing escapes his observation, while his merits as an administrator are certainly
second
to those of but
few men.
Though
he has not yet reached the meridian of life, his enterprise and energy have secured for him that recognition which places the
himjn
Queen
the foremost ranks of the self-made
men
of
City.
AVIS,
SAMUEL,
member nati,
LSIIOP,
WILLIAM
of the
retired
Chamber
was born, P'ebruary
Massachusetts, and
T., Merchant, ex-President of
is
Merchant and of
Commerce
1st,
senior
of Cincin-
1802, in Brighton,
a son of the late
Samuel
I
Board of Aldermen and President of the Board of Trade, of Cincinnati, Ohio, was born in Elizaville,
Fleming
He
county,
Kentucky,
April
The latter energetic man of
Davis, a resident of Quincy, Illinois.
the
was during business,
who
took a
life
a high-toned,
warm and
leading
interest
in
all
Hon. R. M. public measures which tended to develop the resources of Bishop, whose sketch appears in this volume. the country; he had removed to the West as early as 1835, His father moved to Cincinnati, March 1st, 1848. He was whither he was shortly followed by nearly all his children. educated in the common schools of this city and also in the His son, Samuel, embarked in the provision business in Woodward College. While in his seventeenth year he Boston when only twenty years of age, which he pursued 29th, 1835.
is
the oldest son of
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA.
224
successfully in that city for fifteen years, meanwhile, in 1835,
bate Judge for Washington county for a period of one year,
opening a branch house
and then resigned the position
After conducting
Cincinnati.
in
both establishments for about two years, he discontinued his
removed to Cincinbecame a permanent resident. In ad-
business in Boston, and with his family nati,
and
thereafter
dition to his extensive mercantile pursuits, he devoted a
many
member
From
now
devotes himself exclusively to his
his earliest years
he has been an ardent lover
of music, and at the .age of thirteen was a constant attendant at
King’s Chapel, Boston, prior
formed by
was
that organization,
elected a
member
” in
Handel and Haydn Society
the rehearsals of the “
ever per-
to the first oratorio
He
on Christmas night, 1815.
of that society in 1825, and became
subsequently connected with other musical societies both
Boston and Cincinnati. cially
Throughout
during those seasons
when
entire
his
life,
in
Whig
years the Chairman of the
also interested for over twenty years,
office.
order to take up the prac-
In politics he was originally a Whig, and he was for
sion.
On
relinquished, and
in
has continued to reside in Mari-
etta ever since, in the uninterrupted practice of his profes-
large portion of his time to agriculture, in
which he was but which he has since
He
tice of his profession.
Committee.
Centr.al
the organization of the Republican party he
He
of that organization, and
still
has been counsel for the Marietta, Pittsburgh
Company
land Railroad
since
its
became a
remains a Republican.
He
formation.
& is
Clevea stock-
holder in the Marietta Chair Company, and also in the
He
Marietta Union Bank.
was one of the organizers of the
He
Noble County National Bank.
has been twice married.
who
In 1838 he married Grace Dana, of Newport,
died in
1854; in 1855 he married his present wife, Jerusha Gear, daughter of Rev. Mr. Gear, of Marietta.
espe-
mo-
the cares of business
nopolized his time and attention during the long hours de-
voted to
it,
he has ever resorted
the concord of sweet
to
sounds, both vocal and instrumental, as a means of relaxation life,
and he
and even now,
relief;
still
at his
continues his musical studies, and takes delight
He was
both as a performer or an auditor. to
advanced period of
Martha Glover,
married
in
1824
Some time after her decease, he was married Mary A. Davis, a native of Boston.
in
1856
in
He
27th, 1S45.
Attorney-at-Law, was born
Adams
Jacksonville,
county,
was the
of eight children,
Ohio, January
sixth child in a family
whose parents were Francis His father, a
Shinn and Sarah (Moore) Shinn.
native of Culpepper, Virginia, followed through life
He moved
the occupation of tanner.
principally
to
to
Ohio about the year 1825, and settled at Hillsborough, whence he removed to Jacksonville in 1840, or thereabout; he settled in West Union in January, 1846, and there resided He was for four years an until his decease in June, 1851. Auditor of Adams county, and was .widely known and .\RT, THOMAS W., Lawyer, was born on the esteemed as an upright and useful citizen. His mother, a 27th of February, 1816, at Grandview, Washing- native of Adams county, Ohio, died in May, 1869. He was ton county, Ohio. His mother, Mary Cochran, engaged more or less regularly in farming occupations until was a native of Virginia, and his father, a Penn- his majority was attained, while his early education, which
e
sylvanian by birth, though of Irish parentage, re-
was comparatively thorough, was obtained by
moved
tions
century, settled
was married
in
Ohio in the early part of the present on some land beside the Ohio river, and to
the
year following his arrival.
Thomas
Evart received such early education as he obtained in the
common
#
granddaughter of Dr. Phineas Holden,
a
of Dorchester, Massachusetts, a stern revolutionaiy patriot. ,
HINN, JOSEPH W.,
When
schools of Washington county.
teen years of age he in the office of the
remained
until
left
he was
six-
school and entered as an assistant
County Clerk,
Marietta, where he
at
he was twenty-one years of age.
He was
appointed Clerk of the courts of Washington county in De-
He
cember, 1836.
continued to hold this
office until 1851.
versity,
his
own
exer-
In 1866 he attended Miami' Uni-
and perseverance.
and during the ensuing eighteen months pursued a
regular course of classical study. this institution
In January, 1868, he
and entered the Ohio University,
at
left
Athens,
where he remained as a student for about four months. Subsequently, on account of illness, he was compelled to In the summer of 1868 he was nomireturn to his home. nated by a Democratic Convention as Clerk of the Court of to
Common fill
Pleas,
that office.
and
At
in
this
the succeeding
fall
was elected
time he was the youngest of five
a member candidates put forward for the desired place. He was rewas held in 1850. elected in 1871, and, after retaining the cleikship six years, On the expiration of his term of office as County Clerk, he vacated the office in February, 1875. During the years inwas elected Probate Judge of Washington county. In the tervening between election and vacation he applied himself
While he was
still
County Clerk he was elected
of the Constitutional Convention, which
meantime, while
had been
in the
prosecution of his
official
duties, he
diligently pursuing a rigid course of legal study,
reading law under Judge Nye, and, while attending the Constitutional
Convention
at
Cincinnati
practise in the courts of Ohio.
He
in
1851,
was
.admitted to
held the office of Pro-
to the to
study of law, and in September, 1874, was admitted In February, 1875, contract for
the bar.
building the
new Adams County Court House,
structure, the cost of the erection of
a magnificent
which was defrayed
mainly by the individual subscriptions of the people of the
BIOGRAPHICAL ENXVCLOIVEDIA. This he did, no other person offering to take the was limited by law to an ex-
county.
contract, because the county
The
penditure of $10,000.
down
energies
greater portion of his time and
he commenced the study of law with his father,
!
in
Politically,
its
mean
support talents ot no
His religious views and sentiments are in harmony with the He was married, Presbyterian Church.
March
E. Wright, a native of
8th, 1870, to Sallie
county, Ohio, whose demise occurred
November
He was
15th,
1856, the date of the
was afterward engaged
and then practised alone
in professional
May, 1868.
until
At
two years, he
that date
associated himself in partnership with Julius Pomerene, the firm thus constituted
fession
Court !
Brown
at
and also
and
has an extensive
practises his pro-
environing region, and before the Supreme
Columbus. In the year i860, on motion of Hon.
lid-
win M. Stanton, he was admitted an attorney and counsellor of the
iSlh, 1871.
the
in
He
exists.
still
practice in Coshocton county,
order.
teachings of the
le
En-
j
he sustains the creed of the Democratic party, to
1
Coshoc-
he remained
his jjrofession
connection with his father until decease.
at
to the bar in 1853.
labors in conjunction with his brother for about
through the opposition of Hamilton and Cuyahoga counties.
and has brought
was admitted
in this city
upon the active practice of
latter’s
^
Con1874 he was a candidate before the State Democratic vention for Clerk of the Supreme Court, but was defeated
and
tering
:
In
general practice of his profession.
in the
ton,
'
voted to the supervising of the construction of this monument to the county's enterprise, while he has been constantly
engaged also
Subsequently
there until 1851, the date of his graduation.
’
the present time has therefore been de-
to
225
Supreme Court of the United
District of
He was
Columbia.
States at
May
married.
Washington,
25th, 1868, to
j
again marrierl, September
Adams
Swearingen, a native of
county, in the
LARK, REV. RUFUS
G°-
1874, to Laura
W.,
same
State.
May
ffl
R.
W.
He was setts,
class of 1865,
at
and graduated from that
Upon
full
New
General Theological Seminary of 1868, and during minister in Calvary Church,
he graduated sistant
New
in the
St.
Hampshire, moving
York, from which
that year officiated as as-
in
186S to 1871 he was Rector of
mouth,
same
city.
From
John’s Church, Ports-
in the latter
year to Co-
lumbus, Ohio, where he immediately entered upon the rectorship of Trinity Church,
which he
still fills.
Dr. Clark
is
an
eloquent divine, and has labored with great success in his various positions. in a successful
He
combines two very essential
worker and organizer, as well as an earnest piety,
and
education
He
Virginia.
the
in
in
Belmont
5th, 1816, his father
common
being
mother of
his
received his early
schools of Belmont
county, which he attended during those portions of the year
when
his assistance
was not required
When
vation of his father’s farm.
followed the bent of his ambition, and
law with Nathan Plvans,
at
in the culti-
nineteen years of age he
commenced
to read
Camliridge, and for two years
assiduously, under the capable direction of this gentleman,
pursued his studies.
When
twenty-one years of age he was
admitted to the bar, and removed
he entered upon the practice of failing
at
once
to
Toledo, where
His health
his profession.
him, in 1838 he returned
to
Cambridge, where he
practised with his brother for about one year, and then settled in
From 1840
McConnelsville, Morgan county, Ohio.
until
December, 1S58, he was professionally engaged in that place. He practised mainly alone, having been for a few years asso-
and impresand ciated respectively with Isaac Parrish and with Judge Wood. regarded with the warmest affection by In 1858 he went to Zanesville, where he has ever since been
He
is
qualities
being an excellent parish
mini.stry, that of
sive pulpit orator.
Loudon county,
institution in the
leaving college he entered the
Lawyer, was born
March
a native of Pennsylvania and
Walton Clark.
and thorough course of
E.,
county, Ohio,
Williams 'College, Massachu-
having pursued a
collegiate training.
ANS, EZRA
New
29th, 1S44, being the son of
Clark, D. D., and Eliza
educated
\
Rector of Trinity
Jr.,
Church, Columbus, was born in Portsmouth,
Hampshire, on
Helen King, daughter of a distinguished lawyer of Newark, Licking county, Ohio.
is
a
man
attractive
of the most sincere
pursuing his professional calling.
his parishioners.
when he resigned of Morgan county.
1853, bate
^ PANGLER, ETHERINGTON Law, was born
in Zinesvillc,
T.,
Attorney-at-
Muskingum
county,
the Court of
kingum
Common
counties,
and
P'rom the
fall
of 1851 until
he was the Judge of ProIn 1861 he was elected Judge of
that office,
Pleas for Morgan, Noble and
Mus-
ret.ained this office until his resignation
26th, 1831. His parents were of its duties in 1866. On October 31st, 1S43, I'c was marDavid Spangler, cx-member of Congress and ried to Mary Lawrence, who was born in Pennsylvania, lawyer, and Elizabeth Grafton (Etherington) but rearerl in Ohio. During the late civil war Judge Evans
Ohio, January
Spangler,
When
a
native
of
Baltimore,
Maryland.
took an active part on the side of the Federal government,
moved to Coshocton, Ohio, and rendered material aid in raising and equipping volunteers, common schools until he had at- and in organizing the fizd, 78th, 97th and I22d regiments
a year old his parents
where he attended the
tained his sixteenth year.
higher studies ia
29
Kenyon
He
then pursued a course of
College, at Gambler, remaining
from Ohio, as well as the 159th Ohio Regiment, and was cliosen
r'irst
Lieutenant of
Company B
in the
last-named
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.EDIA.
226
was a sound lawyer, and an honest man at the politics. He has always been an anti-slavery man, and since and on the bench, and a firm believer in the precepts the organization of the Republican party he has voted with that party. He was married in the year 1862 to Minerva and principles of tlie Christian religion. E. Tenney.
legimeiit
;
bar
JOHN MILLOT,
'LLIS,
Professor of Mental Phi-
losophy in Oberlin College, was born, of
England parentage,
Jaffrey,
at
New
New
NDERSON, THOMAS
'yj'f
born
Hampshire,
on the 27th of Marcli, 1831. He continued to live there until he was nine years of age, and
removed
then
Among
with
his
parents
when he
life were the habits of same which are developed not so much as habits talent
the earliest habits of his
thrifty industry,
nature of the children of
as a part of the
New
England,
He
was industrious with his hands, but he hail a brain which would not be idle; meanwhile manual labor by no means knowledge he filled the measure of his desire or his capacity
him while a student in this coland gave him an exfoundation upon which to build his reputation in
still
This
only a boy he entered Oberlin College as a student.
went through the
creditable manner,
1851.
He
then
course of study there in the most
full
and graduated from the
commenced
institution in
a course of theological study,
which he prosecuted, with continued interruptions in the way of teaching and other forms of work, until 1857, when During six months he graduated in that department also. of this time he was engaged as a teacher at Lapeer, Michi-
gan, and then he took the position of Professor of Ancient
Languages
Mississippi
in
College,
of Mississippi.
labors
were of the most complete and most His attainments were solid and varied
and he possessed
a high order,
to Oberlin
back
two years and on the 12th day of June, 1871, was admitted to the bar at Mount Vernon, Ohio, and on the 22d day of the same month entered into partnership with his former legal preceptor. Colonel Taylor, and ever since has been engaged in practice with him. Mr. Anderson is a young application for
that rare
fill
He came
the chair of Greek.
to
occupy.
his profession, a large
reputation as an attorney. tastes,
in all its
;
he has
places. ligent
Beyond such
back as an
citizen,
a gentleman of cultivated
is
law
universally esteemed,
and
manifold branches; he
is
a gentleman of integrity and excellent moral character.
^jORDON, W.
Subsequently he was
for the past ten years
Painesville,
been
and other
he has taken no part
in
J.
M., Chemist, was born on the 25th
of December, 1825,111 Somerset county, Maryland.
When
very young he removed to Baltimore, and
there obtained his education, general and scientific.
to his
in-
part as belongs to the earnest, intel-
and conscientious
He
to study with zeal the science of
his talents of
In connection with his duties as Pro-
fessor in Oberlin College,
and care in
faculty, without
teaching from the profes-
preaching in Olrerlin, Cleveland,
and continues
his learning, skill
and lucrative prattice, and an enviable
satisfactory na-
sor’s chair, he has been largely engaged in teaching from
the preacher’s desk.
usual talent in the profession he has chosen,
and has already secured by
his
In 1866 he was ordained as a
minister, and since then, besides
;
man of more than
This
and
transferred to the chair of Mental .Science, and that position
he continues
On
the
College, where he had graduated
seven years before as a student. structor, to
High
School department of the Cambridge Lbiion .Schools.
which the most exalted talents and the rarest accomplishments are of little worth in the teacher’s possession, the faculty of imparting successfully and happily to others what In 1858 he was he had himself come in possession of. c.illed
After leaving college he
before studied, concluding his labors as teacher in the
is
position he continued to occupy for three years,
ture.
an attorney.
as
der whose directions he pursued his reading with intelligent
course of collegiate study.
full
plan was early formed, and early carried into execution, and
He
years
taught school for two years in the counties in which he had
gaining everything for himself that the
after
beginning with a
while
to
could afford, he set to work to supplement
must have, and that,
secured
22d day of June, 1S69, he became a student at law in the office of Colonel J. D. Taylor, of Cambridge, Ohio, un-
;
district schools
until 1865,
College, in the
lege a thorough English education,
a carpenter, and his
penter-shop, learning and prosecuting his father’s trade.
Mount Union
entered
His application, and the possession of apt
State.
for study,
who are not born to wealth. His father was cellent own earlier years were passed in the car- coming
especially those
in -Sewellsville,
Belmont and Guernsey county schools
Oberlin.
to
IL, Attorney-at-Law, was
Belmont county, Ohio, June 6th, 1847. His father was a native of Pennsylvania and his mother of Ohio. He attended the
(5/A')
,nd
His education was conducted with a view a practical chemist and druggist,
becoming
he studied chemistry under Professor W'illiam E. Aiken,
the University of Maryland, the oldest medical college in In the year 1848 he removed to Cincinnati, and he State. if
pct'itili.itipd
t
this
1i
imspi f
i
11
th e
drup’
business there, and
he carried on successfully and with but
tion for a period of
of the time
it
twenty years
was conducted
in
;
little
interrup-
although during a portion connection with chemical
manufacturing, having established a laboratory for the production of chemicals and pharmaceutical preparations generally.
Gradually
this
br.anch of his business
grew
into
—
BIOGRAnilCAL EXCVCLOP.EDIA. proportions of great magnitude and importance, and
he some time ago added another, supplied with
al-
and most improved appliances.
his business as apothecary, his business
though he continued
as manufacturing chemist
became
latest
and most important developments
in
the latest
all
Besides these, he has in
operation numerous mills and engines for grinding drugs,
the one most wddely iden-
with his name, and the one from which the most imHe has always kept well up portant results have followed.
etc.
tified
with the
227
For many years he was President of the Cincinnati
College of Pharmacy
chemical
lishing the
was one of those engaged American Pharmaceutical Association ;
in estab-
was
;
for
and has always, in the production of new and valu- five years Recording Secretary; for one year Vice-President, able articles, been in advance of most other manufacturers and in 1S64 President of the association; and has always He was the first iri the United States to been in the largest sense identified with the most advanced in the country. produce glycerine as a commercial article, and it is said that scientific and literary interests of his profession. At one science
;
he has been longer engaged in the manufacture of it and has produced more than any other manufacturer in the world
time he edited a pharmaceutical paper in Cincinnati.
and the glycerine which he makes
the city of active
is
;
is
universally acknowl-
one of the most comprehensively
men, and
men
activ.e
finds time to
He
in Cincinnati,
participate intelli-
German or French production, gently and effectively in matters of public interest. He is a and only equalled by one made in London. He has taken prominent member and an active worker in the church, and, the first premium in every instance when exhibited in com- in short, occupies a higli place in society, as a Christian, a edged
to
be superior
petition with
to either
production of other manufacturers.
the
A
business
man and
a citizen.
number of years ago he abandoned the general drug trade, and devoted himself exclusively to the chemical manufacturing business, and ever since then the productions of his labora-
and
tory
its
branches have occupied his attention and his
energy almost exclusively, except so of foreign drugs was concerned.
ammonia from
Gas Works, and he gaged
in
article is
is
is
man in the West who is The material from which
the only
one which had always been held
to
He
This remarkable
traction.
is
of P'rench ex-
man was
reared in the
country, in the poorest circumstances, and abso-
en-
While
lutely without training or education.
the
be
Inventor and Manufacturer, was born
L’ Assumption, forty-five miles from Montreal,
Canada, April 15th, 1812.
manufacture of
to the
the waste liquor at the Cincinnati
such manufacture.
produced
at
Within the past few years
he has devoted himself quite largely sulphate of
AN, JOHN,
far as the importation
his seventh year
he was placed under a farmer, with
in
whom
I
it
was arranged
that
he should remain
until the attainment
j
In the manufacture of glycerine he
waste and worthless.
!
also utilizes material
which was before held
to
be worthless;
of his majority.
In course of time, however,
having subjected him
to
this
master
treatment of an unwarrantably
[
this is the
waste material from .stearine candle factories, and
brutal
nature, the surrounding neighbors interfered in his
j
he now pays large sums not a cent to any one. prise,
he
is
now
for
With
what a few years ago yielded his
customary
restless
enter-
introducing an article of lampblack pro-
duced from natural gas, whicli
is
said to be superior to all
others in the manufacture of ink for engravers, lithographers,
and
all
tracts
others
who
require especially fine inks.
and sugar-coated
pills
P'luid ex-
have been favorite productions
behalf and ])laced him under the charge of the Sisters of Charity of Montreal.
managed for the
to secure
some
an amount of earnings
support of his father’s family.
for five years at a salary of
of
vhich he
sufficiently
ample
At the age of sixteen
he entered into an engagement with a tinner
employ
him
W'hile there the Sisters guided
in the pursuit of various occupations, in
to labor in his
one dollar per month
was wdth this sum he was required to clothe himself. He subwas used sequently began the performance of extra work, the proas an explosive. He made it in small quantities, under the ceeds of w'hich, together wdth the earnings of his wife, were name of “glonoine,” to meet the demands of the honiceo- from time to time put away safely in an iron Irox. At the pathic practitioners, by whom it was employed as a remedy termination of his apprenticeship he, assisted by his em-
with him
;
and among
his other enterprises, years ago,
the manufacture of nitro-glycerine long before
for the
headache.
it
His large manufacturing business, con-
ducted with consummate shrewdness, caution, prise
had
and
integrity, has
obstacles,
been greatly successful
;
but he has
some of them of no small magnitude,
counter and overcome.
to en-
ployer,
fires
occurred in his labora-
resulting in each case in disastrous losses, far exceed-
ing the amount of the insurance.
These
in
no way em-
embarked
in
tbe tin trade in
Montreal, Canada.
Being endowed with great natural mechanical ability, his entry into life, if not made under very auspicious circumstances, w'as at least characterized
For four successive years, beginning dustry.
with the year 1868, destructive lor)',
skill, enter-
His
first
venture
for
by
ho]->eful
energy and
himself was, however,
unsuccessful by the cholera scourge of 1832. failure
he resumed
his
in-
made
After this
former subordinate position, and was
thus engaged as an active employ^ until
1835,
when by
the
barrassed or hindered his progress, however, and in eacli
death of his uncle he
case he immediately rebuilt
and went on with his work. grew, one laboratory, although a very large
on the outbreak of the Canadian rebellion or patriot war, he
As
connected himself with the fortunes of the insurgents.
one, was insufficient for the requirements of his trade, and
the battle of St. Charles he disbursed ten thousand dollars
his business
fell
heir to a large fortune.
In 1837,
At
;
;
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.LDIA.
228
money
of his
at
1838, forces,
St.
and
in obtaining supplies for the patriots;
in
Eustace, was captured by the governmental
and subsequently sentenced
Three
be hanged.
to
jail at
misfortune overtaking him
new imOnce more,
second patent.
result of a
was again compelled
partnership associati^/U, he
in his
carve out for himself a
to
Montreal, and, after
arrived in
.ship,
proved range,” the
new avenue many days of incredible hard- in commercial life. Then was inaugurated one of the mo.-.t New York State. Upon his arrival in Troy, remarkable periods of an uncommon and peculiarly active
days before the appointed time of execution he escaped from the
City he began with an attempt to introduce the “
New York,
he learned that a reward of four hundred pounds had been offered by the Canadian authorities for his capture, dead or alive. Ilis large estate was then confiscated, and still remains in the hands of the government of Canada. The “ patriots ” were pardoned in 18.47, since which ti^ie he has made several visits to Canada and secured extensive trade arrangements with
business community.
its
Shortly
the face of the greatest opposition to sheet-iron
in
life;
ranges, stoves
and heating apparatus, he began
to invent
range and stove fixtures of every kind, patented them, and introduced them everywhere into the Union army.
During
those days of continuous activity, until the close of the war, lie
invented and patented twenty or more ranges and heat-
ing and cooking appliances, and did over a million and a
“ Wherever the Union army was found, there was also found an iimumer-. worked at his trade until 1842, when he was induced, under able quantity of Van’s army ranges, heating stoves, campfavorable circumstances, to remove to Cincinnati, Ohio. fixtures, and galley and naval stoves.” Notwithstanding 'I'here his superior skill placed him in a very advantageous the great successes then and there encountered, and the jiositiou as compared with the ordinary workman, and he vast amount of business done with the United Stales forces, after the fi.isco
which had resulted
ment, he brought his family
in his
Troy,
to
temporary banish-
New
obtained a desirable position as foreman of the
lie
remained
He
until 1846.
for sheet-iron
and
ac-
con-
filling of large
His success within the
work.
tin
own
then initiated on his
count and responsibility the taking and tracts
stove and
tin,
Lockwood & Burton, where
steamboat-furnishing works of
year in this department of business was so great that he was
enabled
to
purchase the entire interests and establishment
That business he prosecuted
of his former employer.
until
1S49, the date of his removal to St. Louis, where he con-
Mormons
tracted to supply the
at Salt I.ake
needed by them from the Gentiles. after
making
he had
this contract
with
warehouses with
— of these three were consumed
goods
for that trade
in the
memoralile conflagration which occurred
on the following
goods
all
Within seventeen days
filled four
May
fund of resource, that has, apparently, yet
however, placed him on
liy fire
in St.
Louis
His unflagging energy and vast
lyih.
his feet again
hours he had contracted for
new
;
to desert
him, soon,
within twenty-four
and within an
liuildings,
incredibly brief space of time hS’d his large trade again un-
der
full
way.
In 1851, during another cholera epidemic,
he was forced by the errors or dishonesty of his partner
make
to
Some
an assignment for the benefit of his creditors.
of these creditors were Cincinnati men, and they, having (like all others with
dence start
in his
whom
integrity
he had dealt) unlimited
and business
afresh in Cincinnati, in
roofing business.
ability, assisted
1852, in
the
Here again misfortune
again by the hands of others.
tin,
partner.
Once more a
similar causes interposed
confi-
him
visited him,
In 1853, after
to
stove and
making
strong efforts to better his condition, he returned to
and made a new venture, with
and
several
St.
Louis
his former head-clerk as a
repetition
occurs of past events
between him and success.
After
a short career, replete with incident, in Chicago, Illinois, and
other ]ilaces, he again settled in Cincinnati, Ohio. at
r.ange,
and
in
opening business
in the
he was again constrained
During the course of
men
those
first
whom
with
in
initiate a fresh departure.
1864 to
that year
he purchased the interests of
he had been connected during the
progress of the rebellion, and founded a business under the firm-style of
Van &
During the ensuing two years,
Sons.
which held several heavy
losses,
occasioned by one of his
employes, various changes occurred in the house, and in
j868
it
conduct
assumed the its affairs
style,
simply, of John Van, under
whose
have since been most successfully prose-
His sheet-iron range,
cuted.
and
widely' as a fraud,
is
now
at
one time cried down
bitterly
sold in vast quantities through-
Maine
out the entire civilized world, and from
to California
countless imitations of his inventions are daily sold and used.
He
is
the inventor not only of the sheet-iron range, in
forms and with
all
its
vaiied appliances,
also of
b.it
all its
many
other valuable and useful articles connected with the kitchen
and culinary department.
hundred pounds
much he
as seven
His ranges weigh from a few
to six tons each,
thousand dollars.
and It
cost in
may
some
cases as
truly be said that
one of the most remarkable business men of the time
is
unable to read or write a single word, he has, as his checkered history indicates, often been the prey of designing
and vet
at
the present time, having valiantly
couragement amid
his misfortunes,
all
startling reverses that
Few men have
spirits
life
afforded
him
tion of even merely a versatile talents
him
as
far
more than
in
the front
of Cincinnati,
Had
but his
favoralrle opportunity for the acquisi-
thorough elementary education, his
would more than probably have secured
fer
high a position in any professional line as he has as a
man
of business.
He
has more than an ordi-
nary share of the mercurial versatility of the Gaul, and a
Queen share
;
been endowed with such excellent
executive ability or such inventive genius. early
men
off dis-
and triumphed over
men, he stands to-day
rank of the more influential leading Ohio.
warded
would have beaten down
the majority of business
While attained
Muscatine, Iowa, he had invented and patented his
wrought-iron
half dollars’ worth of business in them.
York, and there
also of the national
politeness
and
full
sociability cf the
Xnljraved ly J C Buitie
£IKlA§E.,®o®it Telegraph, the Baptist paper for the
and published
in
the denomination,
B.
lisher,
October
i,
it,
at
making 1835.
Brandon, under the patronage of his
first
Among
issue as editor
and pub-
leading objects in this
undertaking were, the moralizing and humanizing of the
June,
Christian church and world, as in relation to slavery, human There he entered into a law partnership with F. H. Hurd. slaughter, rum, tobacco and licentiousness. He had been He has remained at Toledo ever since, and his partnership among the first, if not the first, publicly to advocate total
with Mr. Scribner,
the firm separated,
and he removed
to
Toledo,
Hurd still continues, the style of the firm being Hurd & Scribner. His success in his profession
has been great, and he
is
recognized as one of the leading
abstinence from 1
in
health,
all
alcoholic liquors as beverages for peojrle
and especially
in
the spring of
life.
This was
done through the Castleton Statesman and Vermont
Tele-
During the twenty-seven years since he graph, previously to his purchase of the latter. He afterentered the profession, he has been engaged in some of the ward became convinced, and taught, that bad eating is as notable legal Cases that have come before the courts in great an evil as bad drinking and exemplified his doctrine lawyers of Toledo.
;
which he has cally
a
he
is
member
prising
While mittee.
a
practised, in
Ohio
by several years of
October, lS67,he was elected
mal food Sylvester
in
Holmes, Wayne, Knox in the
Politi-
State Senate from the district com--
Democrat, and
of the
Toledo and elsewhere.
and
Morrow
counties.
Commember of
Senate he was Chairman of the Judiciary
In the spring of 1S73 he was elected a
change 1
le
—
in
faithful practice, in refraining
accordance with the views of Epicurus and
Graham but became convinced
in
;
this
regard could
was the procurer of
lature, of the
from ani-
first
that
any desirable
only be effected gradually.
the passage, by the
Vermont Legis-
resolution by a State Legislature, instruct-
He was also nominated for ing Senators and requesting Representatives in Congress, to Supreme Judge on the same ticket with Governor Allen, use their endeavors for the abolition of slavery and the trade and was defeated by only a small majority. The practice in the District of Columbia, and the suppression of the the Constitutional Convention.
He assisted, as the only delegate from all his strength and energy. inter-State traffic. Toledo Mutual Life Insurance Vermont, in the formation of the American Anti-Slavery Soattorney at Toledo for the Cincinnati, ciety, in Philadelphia, in December, 1833; and in the
of his profession does not absorb
He
is
also Director of the
Company, and
is
.
—
—
R
—
BIOGRAPHICAL EXCVCLOP.LHIA. spring
following
He
McDowal,
with John R.
away with
State
first
endeavors
morality
expose and do
to
and
prostitution in general,
human
and
wars
persecutions,
'
sympathized and co-operated
in his
and
libertinism
Vermont, the
in
org:inized,
Society auxiliary thereto.
233
applied good will;
is
and salvation.
:
— whereas is
and enlargement, elevation
charity, peace, enlightenment
in the
destruction
practiced humanity;
is
That, possessing brains, practicing mu-scular
^
church
At the end of
in particular.
and
six years publishing of
intellectual
and
activity
the voice of a that a man ; ”
listening to
—
j
the
Telegraph as a religious paper, he parted with his
man
morally cultivated conscience, “ a
re-
is
want of agreement in faith and practice these qualifications and actions constitute true manhood and That evidence is in the use of means for human enlargement and general positive, genuine, needed usefulness. improvement. He published the Telegraph two years more and better than authority that the true teaching is by ligious brethren, for
—
j
:
longer in the interests of morality
— of humanity.
When
Horace Greeley, Albert Brisbane, George Ripley, \\ illiam Henry Channing, and others were advocating fourierism, he gave in his adhesion to what seemed to him the more beneficent philosophy advocated and practiced by Robert
Owen.
January
l,
1844, he started
weekly journal, at 29 Ann Ignorance the Evil motto
street,
Regenerator, a
the
New
York, under the
That
the presentation of evidence.
erned by authority
is
be led and
to
be taught and gov-
to
stumble
to
in
darkness
:
|
while to be taught and governed by evidence,
and
to
walk
That
in light.
fear
is
to
be led
a bad, vitiating motive;
is
a brutal restraint, necessitated only by ignorance; and that its
exercise tends to the augmentation and -perpetuation of In regard to creative, controlling, governing
the ignorance.
—
—
— Knowledge the Remedy
At power ruling, regulating force he holds and teaches that that creators the end of six months, he removed to Ohio, and published where the power is there the responsibility is that in a log-cabin, on Fruit-Hills farm, in Warren county, till are to be held accountable for their works of creation March, 1856. He was prevented continuance in publishing, parents are to be held accountable for, and to, their children by the death of his oldest son, Carlos, who had just arrived that the controllers of human interests the orderers, the are to be held at maturity; whose assistance as a practical printer, as a regulators, the disposers of human destinies sympathizer in his father’s advance-views and as a useful accountable for their use of power. He derives the highest and promising writer, was indispensable to success, against motives for human improvement from the purest, most unthe odds he had to contend with in surrounding and attend- adulterated materialism the idea being that as the organizaDuring all these twenty years tion is, so the manifestation must be that the purity, the ing adverse circumstances. of publishing, except the six months in the city of New excellence, the goodness, of the propagated, depends on :
;
;
—
—
—
:
York, he clung
to the soil,
to obtain his bread
— that
much
from which, as
as possible,
he might the better maintain his
rectitude, his fidelity to his convictions, as a public teacher
During the
and exemplar. friend
was
past
Mr. Murray’s position as
in
to define, or designate,
relation to existing religions.
His inquiring friend was permitted
to apply to his case, if
he pleased, the term. Radical Protestant
— his
that to define any religion
for
pose;
—just
is
to destroy
M. D. Conway
as
it
belief being
any good pur-
declared, in one of his late
lectures in Cincinnati, that to define a
god
is
to destroy
and taught much longer and plainer than has Mr. Conway. Mr. Murray accepts, takes and carries to its legitimate conclusions, the old-time pulpit-preaching
—
imical, antagonistical
that the
:
— not
yet altogether
and morality are
that religion
in-
works of the moralist are
preventive of the works of the religionist
equal-^;?«/ tnaterially, then morally and intellectually
confusion
—
—and so the works
purify
to
:
poisoned
demonstrate these distinctions
:
that religion, in ac-
is
by purifying the poisoned
waters which flow from them
teaching and practice
is
curative processes
—
all
deavor, fatal
human
sacrifice;
subsists
prevention
That here
are throughout their entire ;
while more or
circumstances.
30
causes
strifes,
law
;
these respects
—
— on :
will be futile en-
this
that all
for
for
woman
materialistic
human
many years been an man before the
law-making sex.
— the equal virtue
and attainments
His views
writing for the consideration of the late
in-
years, fcr the impairment, the vitiation, the
ill
will
jealousies,
in
in this regard
on human ignorance;
hates,
beings
with
intellectuality, of talents
in
this materialistic
that without this,
less they are also the creators of
— regardless of
were presented
and
existences, the creatures of cir-
Mr. Murray has
and of equal virtue
and
;
religious or other
illusion.
poisonous trees by
That
re-
flames pa.ssions, excites prejudices, creates
neighborhood;
to purify
it
:
quires
—
the
basis— is the only ground of charity cumstances
work of undertaking
that such
Against the Ohio Constitutional Convention. movement, which has been going on during the
in the
is
fountains
of morality
to
absurdity,
to think of purify-
—
their manifestations
paths, separated by an impassable gulf; into adverse ways, to opposite results: that it is important to hold up to view,
:
is
it
—
ing bodies by attempting to purify “ minds,” “ souls,” “ spirits,” purifying organizations by attempting to purify
advocate of the equality of
cordance with the etymological meaning of the word, heathen original, ties, tethers, binds, enslaves that
That
putting darkness for light
is
of the religionist must be preventive of the works of the moralist that religion and morality lead into parting-off
and
that as are the parents
:
attending circumstances being
-all
purifying the fruits borne by them.
it
a belief which Mr. Murray has, in substance, entertained
given up by religionists
—
autumn, (1875,) a visiting first by creation, then by culture.
know how
inquisitive to
these qualities in the propagators so will be the children
religious
past
ten
corruption, of
and bad
our National and State Constitutions and
enmities,
from time to time addressed protests and remonstrances to
statutes,
he has
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOP.LDIA.
234
Congress, the Ohio Legislature, and the State Constitutional
Mr. Murray
Convention.
effective writer
;
In person, he
is
is
an original thinker; a vigorous,
a dear, forcible, demonstrative reasoner. tali,
Now
sinewy and energetic.
in his
seventieth year, he manifests no abatement of interest in en-
human improvement
terprises for
ory
no impairment of mem-
;
no lack of intellectual force. In 1827, Mr. Murray married Catherine Maria Higgins, of the Baptist Society, ;
where they both had grown
in Orwell,
gether thirty-three years,
woman
till
of sterling qualities
They
up.
lived to-
She was a
her death in i860.
— of inherited and cultivated exSix — (Carlos Orson, children.
Fremont was in command. Early in 1862 the regiment was under General Tope in the capture of New Madrid ami Island
Number Ten.
on the
staff of that
After
he was for a brief period In October, 1862, Noyes was commissioned Colonel and took command of his regiment, tliis
officer.
left the service. He took an active luka and Corinth under General Rosecrans, and under General G. M. Dodge in the operations
his
superiors having
pal t in the battles of
against Forrest
and other
rebel generals in the
Tuscumbia
The regiment was under Sherman in the famous Atlanta campaign. On the 4th of July, 1864, while most valley.
They had nine
cellencies.
gallantly leading an assault upon the enemy’s works at Marsena Messer, Charles Burleigh, Rachel Robinson, Rose- Ruffs Mills, Mcojack Creek, Georgia, he was severely linda Bascom and Ichabod Higgins) grew to maturity. wounded, and suffered the amputation of a limb upon the All these, except Carlos, have married and are raising fam- field. Five weeks later he endured a second amputation at ilies of children. In 1865, Mr. Murray married lanthe Cincinnati, which would have ended his career but for a Poor, whose sympathies with his tastes and teachings, and vigorous constitution and a frame hardened by healthy labor whose personal, practical loving-kindnesses he recognizes and temperate habits. In October, while still on crutches, and appreciates as protractive of his days of enjoyment, he reported for duty and was assigned
—
to the
and helpful
in
any remaining usefulness.
Camp on
Dennison.
his part, elected
By
the
EDWARD FOLLENSBEE,
ernor of Ohio from
1872
to
Haverhill, Massachusetts, on
Gov-
was born
1874,
at
October 3d, 1832,
and is the son of Theodore and Hannah Noyes. At three years of age he was left an orphan and was then taken charge of by his grandparents at East Kingston, New Hampshire. At twelve years of age, on the death of his grandfather, he was taken into the
when he
recommenda-
General Sherman and others he had been brevetted
Brigadier-General, to take date from July 4th.
fOYES, HON.
of
solicitation
City Solicitor for Cincinnati,
resigned his commission in the army. tion of
command
While there he was, without
In 1868 he
was elected Probate Judge of Hamilton county, then a highly lucrative office. In the fall of 1871 he resumed the practice of the law in Cincinnati, the nomination for
and the next year received
Governor by the Republican
made
canvassed the State, and
party.
He
a most brilliant campaign,
and was elected by over 20,000 majority. He is a natural orator of a poetical temperament, overflowing with humor, gifted with the power of pathos, and with a clear, ringing, musical voice. These qualities told with great effect during
Hoyt, of Newton, New At thirteen the youth took care of twenty head the canvass. Fourteen years previously he had come into of cattle, worked on the farm in summer, and in winter made the State a stranger, a young man without means but he a daily pilgrimage of four miles and daily cut and piled his soon made hosts of friends by his sunshiny, happy disposiAt fourteen years of age he tion, his kindly, courteous manners, and generous, enthusihalf-cord of swamp maples. was apprenticed as a printer in the office of the Morning astic ardor in all good things, and now he had attained the Star, published at Dover, New Hampshire, where he re- highest honor within the gift of the people of the great Comfamily of his guardian, Joseph
Hampshire.
;
mained four years and then, desiring a liberal education, prepared for and entered Dartmouth College, where he graduated high in his class in 1857. At this period he began the study of law of Stickney years a
at
& Tuck;
member
Exeter,
New
the latter,
Hamphire,
for
Accidentally visiting
speeches by the
main, where he continued the study of law in the
demanded
of his
profession
ciously,
tocsin of
Curwen. in
and the way war sounding
of the Union.
On
office of
In 1858 he began the practice
Cincinnati. to success in 1861,
Business opened auspi-
seemed
short,
he volunteered
when
the
in the service
the 20th of August the 39th
Ohio
In-
to
spirit
civil
and
Major.
opponents and his
He
was among the same time
at the
political rights for the colored race.
for
Governor
He, however, received
Republicans
On
Governor Noyes was
his
advocate a general amnesty, while he
was again a candidate feated.
of
of conciliation.
the
in
in the Legislature for the
son Proctor, of Kingston,
New
He de-
1873,
unanimous vote of the United States
February 15th, 1S63, he was married
to
Hampshire.
.Senate.
Margaret Wil-
He
is
now
en-
John Croeslieck as Colonel, A. W. gaged in the practice of law in Cincinnati, and, enjoying a Lieutenant-Colonel, and Edward F. Noyes as high reputation as a lawyer and a man, commands a large
fintry took the field witli
Gilbert as
was defeated by Governor
half a million. The administration many marked by generous treatment of
first
&
years later he was again nominated for
Allen in a majority of but a few hundred in a vote of nearly
Cincinnati in the winter of 1857-58 he was induced to re-
Tilden, Rairden
Two
the office by acclamation, but
in the office
Amos Tuck, was
of Congress of note.
monwealth.
This regiment was sent
to Missouri,
where General
and
influential clientelage.
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BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.LDIA. ^OLLIMS, CHARLES
t
Mason
Maysville,
I
He was
1S34..
in
in
the sixth child in a family of
were Richard ColHis and Mary A. (Armstrong) Collins.
eight children v.’hose parents lins
New
father, a native of life
IL, Lawyer, was born
county, Kentucky, April 15th,
235
His con-
considerable reputation as a writer for the press. tributions both in prose
numerous, and he
and poetry have been varied and
a standard
is
among
his fellow-citizens
in matters of literary criticism.
Jersey, followed through
the profession of law, and also for a time was engaged
In iSoi
mercantile pursuits.
Clermont county, Ohio, with
Richard Collins moved
to
whence,
in
his father’s family,
AITE, HON.
he removed to Hillsborough, Highland county, in the same State ; subsequently he settled in Maysville, Kentucky, where, and also in the former place, he became well
known
as a successful
and
first
President of the Maysville
decease occurred
at his
C.
Ohio, in 1855.
H.
&
Lexington Railroad
his education at
Collins’
mother, a native of Mays-
His paternal grandfather, John settler of Cler-
maternal grandfather died in 1851.
education was liberal, and received at the
Maysville Academy, where he graduated in 1850, at the youthful age of sixteen.
bookkeeper
in the
After his graduation he became
house of John
W.
merchants, of Cincinnati, Ohio.
Ellis
&
Co., dry-goods
At the expiration of one
year, spent in this establishment, he
began the reading of
under the supervision of Thomas J. Gallagher, a prominent attorney of the Queen City. During the followlaw,
ing four years he devoted himself sedulously to of his text-books, and in
the course of the ensuing year he
at
Batavia, Ohio.
a period of two years. settling in Lexington,
labors until
1864.
In
was elected Prosecuting
Attorney of Clermont County, and served In 1858 he
in that office for
moved
where he was engaged
Morrison
Yale College, graduating there-
from in the class of 1837, among whose members were
Hon. Edwards Pierrepont and William M. Evarts. Immeupon the study of the law with his father, and remained there until October, 1838, when he removed to Maumee county, Ohio, continuing his studies in the office of Samuel M. Young, a promidiately after leaving college he entered
He
nent attorney of that section. of Ohio in October, 1839;
was admitted to the bar which date, however,
prior to
he had formed a business connection with his preceptor,
under the firm-name of Young lasted until 1852.
He
&
W'aite,
represented the
which
parlner.ship
Maumee
district
in
the lower branch of the Legislature during the years 1849
and 1850, and after the expiration of his term, in the latter he removed to Toledo, where he has ever since rethe study sided. In 1858 he associated Richard Waite with him,
1855, after passing the required
examination, was admitted to the bar
he died,
Chief-Justice;
completed
was an early and widely esteemed
Jlis preliminary
he was
1857
old homestead, in Clermont county,
county; she died in 1838.
his
year until
14th, 1869, in his eighty-third year.
Kentucky, was a daughter of John Armstrong, a prominent merchant and one of the pioneer settlers of that
mont county, Ohio;
latter
December
ville,
Collins,
Waite; the former was a Judge of the Supreme 1834 to 1854, and from the
Court of Connecticut from
his
;
LL. D.,
Supreme Court of the United States, was born, November 29th, 1S16, at Lyme, Connecticut, and is a son of the late Henry Matson and Maria
brilliant legal practitioner;
he became also a general of militia, served in the Ohio I.egislature through three terms, was a member of the Kentucky Legislature also through three terms, and was the
MORRISON RENNICK,
Lawyer, and the present Chief-Justice of the
after life,
to Missouri,
in professional
In January of this year he returned to
year,
under the name and
style of
continued until 1874.
M. R.
pendent conservative Republican, sional
regular
District
&
R. \Vaite, which firm
In the year 1862 he ran as an inde-
of Ohio,
against
in the Tenth CongresJames M. Ashley, the
Republican nominee, and also against a regular The election, however, resulted in
Democratic opponent.
Ashley’s being chosen by a plurality of 1127 votes over
Ohio and established his office at Hillsborough, Highland Waite, although in an actual minority of 4105. On each county, where he has since resided, the fortunate possessor subsequent election Ashley lost ground through the active of a highly remunerative legal business and the respect and and repeated oratorical assaults of Judge Waite, who threw esteem of the bar and the general community. In 1866 he the whole weight of his influence against him until he was was the Democratic candidate for the position of Common finally defeated. In November, 1871, Judge W’aite was Pleas Judge for Highland, Ross and P'ayette counties. selected by President Grant as one of the three counsel to Politically,
he
is
a supporter of Democratic principles and
represent the United .States before the Tribunal of Arbitra-
measures, while his religious convictions are embodied in the
tion, at
formula of the Methodist Church.
William M. Evarts and Caleb Cushing.
His
integrity of character
Geneva, Switzerland,
his
associates
being Hons.
In this position
demeanor is pleasant and affable, he acquitted himself admirably. He returned from this and professional attainments are of a high duty in November, 1872. During this same year his Alma order of merit. He was married in 1857 to Mary E. Tice, of Mater conferred upon him the honorary degree of Doctor Bethel, Clermont county, Ohio, a daughter of C. C. Tice, of Laws. During the following year he was elected a an early pioneer of that section of the .State. C. H. Collins, member of the Convention to Revise the Constitution of the in addition to his high standing at the bar, has acquired State of Ohio, and on its organization was elected President is
unassailable; his social
and
his literary
BIOGRAPHICAL EAXVCLOP.LDIA.
236
On
of that body.
January 19th, 1873, on motion of Caleb at law
Cushing, he was admitted to practise as a counsellor in the
Supreme Court of the United
States;
and precisely
one year thereafter he was nominated by President Grant as
and having been con-
Chief-Justice of that august tribunal,
firmed by the Senate he took the oath of
Outside of his profession he
1874.
office,
March
4lh,
regarded as a close
is
student, and consequently of considerable attainments, being
Me was
especially versed in constitutional law.
September
21st, 1S40, to
married,
Amelia C. Warner.
home, and with
his father’s
left
which time proved
abilities,
have been well founded,
Mount Vernon, where
started on foot for
resided, determined
to
his elder brother
the battle of
fight
own
confidence in his
full
to
Here he
life.
arrived on April 2Sth, 1817, and entered the town with but
With
twenty-five cents in his pockets.
sistance he soon gained a situation
his brother’s as-
the office of the
in
County Clerk of the Court, and by close application duties of his
Deputy Clerk, and had to
to the
soon secured the appointment of
position
work of the
also the
devolve upon him.
His
official
clerk chiefly
him
duties brought
in
contact with all the prominent lawyers of that day in this
and by
part of the State,
'URTIS,
HENRY BARNES,
and Attor-
Capitalist
ney-at-Law, Mount Vernon, Ohio, was born near
New
the village of Champlain,
His
ber 28lh, 1799.
in
York, on Novem-
father, Z.irah
Curtis, son
and
himself
their
youthful
mind being
later,
study of the law.
an early age entered the Conti-
at
nental army, under the
command
of his father, and also
fired
and
as a student,
a]iplied himself diligently to the
On December
was appointed
for-
corder,
While
which he retained
for
Hosmers, among the oldest families of Connecticut, and
and
who
lucrative practice, the proceeds of
brother,
Keokuk, Iowa,
in
Hon. Hosmer
the
Henry VlII.
the age of eighty-five.
1S74, at
younger brother. General Samuel R. Curtis,
manded
at the battle of
Council
Bluffs,
years.
His
Pea Ridge
December, 1S66,
parents
Charlotte, Vermont,
His
who com-
the age of sixty-one
moved from Connecticut
first
at
in the late war, died at
at
and afterwards
on a farm on the waters of
died
Curtis,
to
Champlain, settling
to
that lake, near the village of the
vantages and from which all
first
settled
there,
the family
and the opportunities of receiving an
education were very limited
but with that energy and
;
in-
domitable perseverance which have since characterized his pursuits in the struggles of to his studies,
life
he applied himself diligently
and was thereby enabled
tion superior to that generally obtained
period, and
during the
Vernon.
this first
an educa-
by the youth of that
was further perfected by private
year of his subsequent residence
While pursuing
sible assistance
to gain
his studies
to his father in
continued until he arrived
at
his
at
he rendered
farm work.
the age of seventeen,
how
well he ac-
many
Supreme and United
counties of the .States
admitted to the United
h.alf
Courts
at
Supreme Court
.States
and
after
besides the
.State,
He was
Columbus. at
Washing-
having served
for one-
a century in his profession he formally retired from
the practice of law in
December, 1872.
July 2d, 1823, he
to his present wife, then Elizabeth
Durham
county, England, but
at
Mount
is
a Republican of the
at that
Pleasant, Jefferson county, Ohio.
in
Whig
While always
Hogg,
for-
time residing In politics, he
and was an active organized the Republican
school,
the convention that
party in Ohio.
identified with the party,
he
has ever preserved his independence and avoided the character of a partisan
private citizen the politician
and and
;
preferring the reputation of a
solid business
man
good
rather than that of
office-seeker, the arena for which,
often solicited to enter, he always declined.
though
In the session
of the winter of 1840-41 he represented his county in the
Board of Eiiualization, and for over twelve years, was a trustee of the Central Ohio Lunatic
State
Mount
lately past,
pos-
to derive
extending over
tuition
all
him
to
the ad-
His reputation soon gained him a practice
who knew worker
all
for
lawyers of that day, and the result shows
merly of
when
knew
quitted himself.
same county, where the family resided when Henry left home. His father afterwards moved to a farm in W'ashinghis ton township, same county, where he died in 1849, but a small hamlet
position,
which enabled him
was necessary
it
was married
Newark was
him
possible benefit, to be able to successfully cope with the
years later to a small farm on the waters of South P'ork, in
eighty-eighth year, respected and beloved by
to
procure a fine law librarv, of which he well
ton on January 9th, 1863,
liini.
once gave
at
admission to the bar he soon acquired a large and
after
same name. In 1S09, when Henry was in his tenth year, the family removed to Newark, Licking county, Ohio, occupying two and a half months in the removal, and some the
it
This was
over seven years.
of material aid to him, as
traced their ancestry beyond the reign of
he
yet a law student
the responsible position of County Re-
to
merly Phalley Yale, was a descendant of the Yales and
His, elder
of the .Supreme
Court, and, having passed with credit to himself, was ad-
Colonel Sheldon’s regiment of dragoons, and remained
His mother,
he was ex-
9th, 1822,
amined by Judges Peas and Hitchcock, mitted as a practising lawyer.
the service until the close of the war.
for
and his with the glory and honor of
served as a warrant officer in Captain Webb’s company, of in
won
the profession, he entered his brother’s office a few years
war, was born in Litchfield county, Connecticut,
and
and prompt
business,
in
esteem and confidence;
friendly
of Jothan Curds, a captain in the Revolutionaiy
the year 1762,
his readiness to please,
and accuracy
attention to
strict
Asylum, acting
for a greater portion of the
This was
dent of the Board, and for the
when he
that
institution
last six
time as Presi-
years the reports of
have been written by him.
To him
the
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCVCLOP.-EDIA. credit
stands
for the selection of the beautiful site
due
is
he gave
all
whereon
College, towards the construction of which
Kenyon
would perWhile a member of
the material aid his circumstances
mit, in addition to his personal work.
the Board of Trustees of that learned institution he intro-
some opposition, carried through the resolution recommending a survey of the surplus lands, w’hereby they were brought into the market and were made producduced and,
income
In 1848 he organ-
to the college.
and was appointed President of the Knox County Bank, of Mount Vernon, with a capital of ;^loo,ooo. This establishment was a branch of the State Bank of Ohio, and ized
its
He
tality.
elegance and hos]u-
one son, Mr. Henry
Lambton
is
Curtis, of the
two daughters, Mrs.
J.
noted for
law firm of Devin
During
existence, a period of nearly twenty years.
JOSEPH DANIEL,
'ORD,
a A~ ^
of Toledo, Ohio,
of the State Board of Control, which was created organic law of the
and
.State
Bank
of Ohio
financial learning,
quence displayed mentary laws organized the
and
Huron
and
C. Devin,
the
the
in
for the abilities
strictest
proceedings.
Knox County
and
elo-
legislative in
observance of ParliaIn
1865
Mr. Curtis
National Bank, of Mount Ver-
non, one of the foremost institutions of the
with a
city,
youngest son of Daniel
kJ
was a farmer by occupation, and an
a position he has continued
to
fill
effort, in
State
and of
liberal,
and
Ann his
Arbor.
practice in every-day
&
life,
Hampshire, at the
His instruction was
culture in
sciences, as well as in those branches
New
Winona, and
at
literature
and the
which are called into
was thorough and comprehensive.
leaving school he entered the office of Messrs. Baker
Collins, attorneys, Toledo, as a law student, in the spring
assistance, both
organizing and equip-
ably conducted ever since, with the exception of one year,
present time.
to the
war he gave great aid and
pecuniarily and by personal
broad and
at
early
received his education in the
Normal School of Minnesota,
Michigan University
Upon
and Betsy H.
.
cestors resided,
at the
B.
who was a native of New Hampshire, where for many generations his anHis father,
P’ord.
He remained with them until 1S67, when he was admitted to the bar, and immediately commenced practice, which has been most profitable and most honor-
and was unanimously chosen President,
capital of 8150,000,
late
for its
25th, 1841, in
county, near Bellevue, in that State, being
member emigrant to Ohio. Mr. Ford under the common schools of his native
— a body noted
which were
at its meetings,
form and conducted with the
During the
Curtis, J.
Prosecuting Attorney
was born, June
organization he was an active and influential
talent
&
C. Plimpton, and Mrs.
wife of his son’s partner.
he continued to hold the presidency during the entire term of
its
has, residing in the city,
elevated ground and
after
tive of a large
its
237
of 1865.
Union army, and in maintaining when he travelled in the Northwest for the benefit of his public sentiment in support of the war. Holding the office health, during 1869. In January, 1S71, he became Prosof United States Commissioner for the Northern District of ecuting Attorney for Lucas County, Ohio, and has ever the United States Courts, his judicial functions were often since filled that high and responsible station. In that called into requisition in support of the same cause. In the capacity, single-handed, he has conducted examinations and ping companies
for
the
appointed by the' President a
spring of 1873
of the Board of Visitors at
West
work.
He
able assistance in
its
member arguments,
and rendered valuhas ever been one of the
Point,
foremost citizens in giving encouragement and substantial aid to
all
projects having in
of his adopted city to
;
view the material advancement
not only in helping to build railroads,
increase the business of the city, but especially in the
cause of education and in making permanent improvements
in the
most important criminal
trials,
against the
members of one of the ablest bars of the State, embracing some of the most talented attorneys who have ever various
appeared before any bench in
this
country.
In a great
majority of the cases he has tried, he has secured convictions, against the
most ingenious defences and against the Mr.'p'ord, in addition to
most powerful array of counsel.
and argumentative ability, is remarkably skilful in the shape of private residences, warehouses and public as an examiner and as an analyzer of testimony. His buildings, all of which are noticeable not only for their political affiliations are with the Republican party, of which solidity, but also for their elegance of design and architec- he is an active and influential member. In 1867 he was tural beauty,
many
he himself having made architecture one of
tury in active
his
After having spent three-quarters of a cen-
studies.
life,
the marks of
which bear
lightly
upon
him; and having won the well-earned confidence, esteem and friendship of his fellow-citizens, both poor and rich, he still
continues to devote a large proportion of his time to
business,
which
Personally, he
is is
rendered necessary by his large wealth.
a genial, social gentleman; kind of heart
and easy of approach from all numerous friends he is enjoying
;
that ease
him, after his valuable services,
“Round
Hill,” near
and surrounded by at
his
his
and comfort due beautiful
Mount Vernon, which
is
his forensic
elected City Solicitor of South Toledo, and was re-electcd in
1870.
tially,
his duties,
and so impar-
without fear or favor, that the people honored him
with a re-election in 1873, and another in 1875.
He
is
generally esteemed for his eminent talent as a lawyer and for his faithful
services,
and
it
is
(piite
very large constituency destine him for sible public trusts.
He was
first
probable that his still
more respon-
married to Sarah E., eldest
daughter of Lorenzo L. Morehouse, of Waterville, Ohio, on
home, June
situated on
In 1871 he was chosen Prosecuting Attorney,
and so ably had he administered
I2th, 1865.
This lady did not long survive, having
been in very delicate health prior to her marriage.
He was
BIOGRAPHICAL EXCYCLOP.LDIA.
238
again married, October I2lh, 1870, to Grace Greenwood
not accepted, while, as a substitute, he was granted leave
Moore, daughter of John A. Moore, a leading dry-goods
of absence by General Sherman.
merchant of Toledo.
his
home on
Thereupon he started for whose captain,
the steamer “ Continental,”
John McClay, who had noticed with concern
his serious
exerted himself to the utmost to aid in re-establish-
illness,
MAJOR JAMES SHARON,
ISIc,
of
line
&
Wise
Parker,
of the firm of ing his health, and through his humane efforts probably Manager of the Memphis saved him from death. After passing through a sickness of was born in Mercersburg, two months, and being discharged from his office in the
Co.,
steamers,
Franklin
February
Pennsylvania,
county,
8th,
army, and also receiving highly honorable mention from
boyhood he moved with his General .Sherman, he began to look around again for a new who are now living at Westwood, near place in the business world. Five months after the battle parents Shortly after settlement of Arkansas Post he found himself commander of the Cincinn.ati to Cokunlnis, Oliio.
While
11^30.
in his
—
—
there, necessity compelling tions
tion
him
upon
to rely
his
own
exer-
and resources for a livelihood, he obtained the posiof Messenger in the Ohio State Senate. That jiosition,
secured through the influence of Hon. David Barnett, he
two
for
filled
James
years.
J.
Faran, of the Cincinnati
Inquirer, was then Speaker of the House.
when
At
a.subsequent
steamer “ Eclipse,” a position obtained through the friendly of James
offices
W.
Gaff,
Thomas
and William E.
Gaff,
In this new river venture he was very successful. Under him th'e “ Eclipse ” entered the Government service •
Gibson.
but within a brief period took
fire
and was shattered by
explosion, at Johnstonville, on the Tennessee river.
While
years of age, he resolved to seek his
he was in Washington, District of Columbia, attending to
fortune in Cincinnati, and after travelling on foot to this
the settlement of the claims of the “ Eclipse ” with the
period,
citv,
halted
canal.
at
fifteen
the
Old Mansion, or
There he met a
who induced Henry
House, on the
friend in the jrroprietor, Mr. Kelsey,
Valett to secure for him a place in his
hat store, where
brother’s
Hummel
he was soon
inst.alled
as
an
Government, an
was made by a host of
effort
and others
friends
to
his
army
induce the Government to appoint
him Postmaster of Cincinnati, Ohio. In that step, however, success was not achieved, as, owing to divers reasons,
At the present time he is at two dollars and fifty cents per week and his he could not accept the position. While thus employed he obtained, through the in- a member of the firm of Parker, Wise & Co., and is ManI'or the past four fluence of an old friend of his family Colonel Latham, ager of the Memphis line of steamers. ex-United .States Senator from California the agency for years he has occupied a place in the City Council, and re-
employe board.
— —
Company, which, was an important position. The
the Great Western Stage
in those
stages,
little
building, formerly standing near the
used as the
office.
five years, until
his behalf,
W. of
tion
office
position,
Gibson House, was
crats
of his
This position he held for a period of
and secured
for
him a place under General
At the
for ten years.
his disposal,
and afterward
filled
many
offers
placed
various offices in the
steamboat business until the breaking out of the
He
expira-
of that time, having been offered* favorable terms in
the river service, he accepted one of the at
P.
Railroad Ticket Agent, the duties
he performed
civil
war.
then received a Lieutenant’s commission in the loth
Regiment of Ohio Dennison.
Volunteer
Infantry,
from Governor
Sixty days after the receipt of his commission
he was appointed by the same
Regiment Ohio Volunteer
official
Infantry.
cently vvas renominated by the Republican party for the
same
Colonel Latham again interested himself in
Strader, as General
which
days of
old frame
Major of the 4Sth
On
the
day that
and was flatteringly endorsed by the Demoward without opposition. He ran on the
Republican ticket in the
fall
of 1875 for County Treasurer,
against a Democratic m.ajority of 7000,
a majority of 1483, which
may be
cation of the high estimation in
He
has
filled, also,
First Vice-President
merce, and a valued the Tennessee.
and was elected by
taken as a sufficient indi-
which he
is
generally held.
several corporation offices, and
of the Cincinnati
member
Chamber
of the Society of the
His private and also
is
of
now Com-
Army
of
his public career has
been made notable by various remarkable exhibitions of friendship on the part of strangers
whom
and
friends.
All with
he has been brought into contact have apparently
sought, often wdth
aims and
zealous
perseverance, to advance his
to further his interests.
C. D. Millar, of the Cincinnati
Through
the influence of
Commercial, and William
marching orders were given he was offered one-third of the Porter, foreman of the same journal, two of his brothers, entire ownership in a steamboat, the offer being based on who had moved to the city in hopes of bettering their forhis desired resignation of his position in the army. After tunes, obtained desir.able places in the printing department
One of these brothers. Captain Robert now commander of the steamer “ James D. Parker,”
rejecting those proposals,
he accompanied his regiment to and was connected with the Army of the Tennessee until the occurrence of the battle of Arkansas Post. There, on account of sickness, he offered his resignation,
of the Commercial.
the
Wise,
desiring to return home.
an admirably liberal view of the opinions and failings of his
field,
Colonel Cockerill, father of John
and
is
is
one of the most popular and successful captains on
the river.
Warm-hearted and generous
to a fault,
he takes
A. Cockerill, one of the editors of the Cincinnati Inquirer, fellow'-beings, and is widely and affectionately esteemed for his brigade commander. But his resignation was his loyalty in friendship and his genial manners and dis-
was then
1
BIOGRAPlilCAL ENCYCLOl’.EDIA. Ile.possesses excellent business qualifications,
course. in his
he has conducted, has uniformly secured the end
to time, in
and years
administration of the various affairs which, from time
view and had
He was
his labors
crowned with gratifying
married June 7th, 1S51,
to
success.
Jane E. Voids.
239
became impaired, and he was com-
that his health
pelled to bid a brief farewell to his pen and voice and seek relaxation, but only to seek another
and
less exciting field
This he found in the capacity of an explorer, becoming one of a party who visited the extreme head-waters
of labor.
and
of the Mississippi
St.
Louis
rivers.
Returning home,
he entered vigorously into the discussion of the issues before the country, and witnessed with pride the success of his
1
EID,
W
1
IITEL.A.W,
Journalist, Author,
and Lec-
Resolving to
cause.
try his fortunes
as a legislative cor-
was born in Xenia, Ohio, in October, 1837. respondent, he visited the capital of Ohio. He had written 1 is parents were Robert Charlton Reid and a series of letters upon his Northwestern trip for the CincinMarian Whitelaw (Ronalds) Reid. The father nati Gazette. Finally he effected an engagement with the of the former was a native of .Scotland, who emi- Cincinnati Times, at five dollars a week, to furnish a daily turer,
grated to this country toward the close of the
and
century,
settled in
Some
Kentucky.
last
years later, about
letter
—a
Soon an
considerable fraction less than a dollar a day
came from
offer
!
Herald for the furdollars a week and then
the Cleveland
hundred acres of land upon the nishing of a daily letter at fifteen and removed thither with Ids another from the Cincinnati Gazette, with a proffer of eighteen dollars. Here he displayed his remarkable facility as family. It is related of him that being a stern old Covenanter, and a condition existing in tbe deed to his property a correspondent, and he underwent a dry but severe literary which required him to ferry the Ohio river once every day, discipline that amounted almost to drudgery. At the close he disposed of his interests there sooner than violate the of the se.ssion he was given the post of City Editor cf the iSoo, he bought several
present
site
;
of Cincinnati,
Sabbath, and removed to Greene county, where he became
Gazette.
one of the founders of the town of Xenia.
his
This removal,
from one point of view, was not very fortunate for him or
Whitelaw was
his descendants.
fitted for
Hugh
college under the
This position he held
famous campaign
upon
until
West
in
war correspondent.
his career as a
when he His
entered
letters to the
“Agate,” have passed into
Gazette, over the signature of
The
McClellan commenced
Virginia,
Aide to General Morris, and with the rank of Captain, was given him. Having had a stern principles. The tutor was a trustee of Miami Uni- taste of active service in this campaign, he returned to Cinversity and Principal of the academy at Xenia. Under his cinnati and wrote leaders for the Gazette for a time. .Soon discipline the pupil was well drilled in all that was neces- he resumed bis position of war correspondent, this time tutorship of an uncle, the
Scotch Covenanter, and a
Rev.
man
M'Millan, also a
history.
position of Volunteer
of scholarly attainments
sary for his entrance into a collegiate course of studies.
He upon
Rosecrans, and bearing his old rank.
the staff of
Miami University at the age. of fifteen, and in his Being now fairly established as a great journalist and most knowledge of Latin ranked with those in the higher classes. successful war correspondent, but brief allusion will be He was graduated with honors in 1856, and soon after was made to his subsequent connection with the Western press. made Principal of the graded schools at South Charleston, His correspondence was copied in every paper throughout He was chairman of Ohio, his immediate pupils being generally young men the length and breadth of the land. older than himself. The fruits of his labors here confirmed a committee of correspondents that interviewed General entered
grade of scholarship.
his claim to a high
He
saved enough
from his salary to repay his father the expense of his senior In the year 1857 he bought the Xenia
year at college.
and
two years led the life of a country editor. Before this date he had identified himself with the Republican party, and had stumped for Fremont for the A’ettis,
in the next
Presidency.
He was now
thoroughly inspired wdth tbe
love of journalism, and was rapidly fitting himself for a greater field of labor.
a subscriber of' the
rank among the lation
He was
an admirer of Greeley and
The
Tribune.
Nei.vs took a fi)remost
political journals of the State,
doubled under the new management.
friend of
Salmon
paper outside of
Abraham
P. Chase, his Illinois that
Lincoln, and
of a Lincoln
its
was
the
first
and
its
Although a
Western news-
advocated the nomination of
influence caused the nomination
delegate to the Chicago Convention.
afterwards became
a firm
circu-
friend
of the President.
He He
entered so warmly into the exciting political events of those
Halleck when the
men
had a
latter
difficulty
with the “-gentle-
of the press,” which ended in their withdrawal from
In the spring of 1862 he visited Wash-
the military lines.
ington, and while there
leading
St.
offered the
gave him an
Learning
management of a this,
the proprie-
sooner than lose his valuable services,
tors of the Gazette,
foundation
was
Louis newspaper.
interest in their establishment.
prosperity.
financial
of his
Washington correspondent of the
This laid the
He became
Gazette,
appointed Librarian to the House of Representatives. latter
he resigned
intimacy of the
in
rriost
1866.
He
eminent men
Washington, and became tion of the battle of
war correspondence.
his
in the national councils.
7 ribii/ie branch
warm
friend.
His
Gettysburg was his grandest In
The
enjoyed the friendship and
Horace Greeley began to admire his genius, and Failing in prevail upon him to go to New York. asked him to take charge of the
the
and was also
tried to this,
he
office in
descrijreffort
in
1865 he went South with Mr.
BIOGRArinCAL ENTYCLOlMiDIA.
240
Chase on a tour of observation, and on
War;
a book, entitled “After the
his return published
a Southern Tour.”
It
critics,
reflex of the condition
of the South at that time.
he was seized with the notion to become a cotton end in view, in the .spring of 1866 he
planter, and, with this
leased
plantations
three
Concordia
in
Natchez, with General Francis .speculation
the
Herron
J.
promised great success
destructive
Editor-in-chief was enabled by the generous
capitalists to obtain
ofl'trs
of
Many
complete control of the paper.
and was considered a fair thinking men predicted failure, and many of the best friends During of the young editor had their misgivings. The political
was well received by this tour
The
;
Parish,
opposite
The
as a partner.
but about picking time
and
literary world watched and but few now withhold
Personally the editor
versatile
is
with lively interest,
man.
their admiration of the
most courteous, gallant
is
and a welcome guest
ing,
a writer he
his course
in the
in his bear-
As
most refined society.
and vigorous.
His private character
army worm made its appearance. One- is above reproach, and aside from the attacks made upon was saved, but even this him in his profession, nothing harsh is ever said of him.
fourth only of the promised crop
brought them out without it
Not discouraged, he
loss.
tried
Alabama, and again failed even worse During this experience he had not relin-
again, this time in
than before.
His spare moments were devoted
(piished literary work.
“Ohio
to compiling
the
in
WGr.”
This work, comprised
His scholarly attainments are
far above those of the average and he has frequently addressed, by urgent re-
journalist,
His lecture upon “Journalism”
quest, learned societies.
In 1872 he
has been delivered before various associations.
prepared an address,
at the request of the
Regents of Dart-
two octavo volumes of over one thousand pages each, mouth College, entitled “ Scliools of Journalism.” In 1873 much statistical and biographical information. he delivered the “Scholar in Politics” before a college
in
contains
Much of
its
of the contents
may
authorship was a
be classed as history.
record of no other State approaches is
not a
are
compendium of dry
depicted,
many
The
task
society.
heavy one, and the written war completeness.
in
it
statistics,
correspondence
interesting
away
valuable details laid
It
war scenes reviewed, and
captain ROBERT
but vivid
for the
future historian.
g' r
4 If |l
In 1868 the unsuccessful cotton planter resumed his position as
leader writer for
the
During
Gazette.
wrote up the great impeachment
trial
this
time he
I Jjl
O c
of President Johnson.
Soon Mr. Greeley successfully renewed his offer to the young journalist to enter the staff of the Tribiiae. His salary was only exceeded by that of the founder, and he
live,
was subordinate only to his patron. In 1869 he was installed as Managing Editor, and immediately commenced
until
tled
Commander,
and
was
W., Steamboat Owner
born
Mercersburg,
in
Pennsylvania, September 13th, 1839, and
when
young moved with his father, William Wise, to Columbus, Ohio, where he remained four years. He then went to Dayton, in the same State, to quite
and remained there five years. on a farm near Bloomington,
assisted in
cultivation
its
he reached
His father then Illinois,
and attended the
He
his thirteenth year.
set-
and Robert
district
at that
gaged with Charles Merriman, of Bloomington,
schools
age en-
to learn the
and worked with him four years, when obtained. The columns of the Tribune., always teeming he went to Peoria, Illinois, and was there four years occuwith the progressiveness of civilization, were now freshened pied as a journeyman printer. In 1853 he came to Cincinwith the advanced thoughts of a little army of literary men nati and found employment on the Cincinnati Commercial, and women captained by the new Manager. The origin- holding his connection with that journal until the breaking to strengthen his staff with the best journalistic talent to
ality of it
thought and the versatility of the contributors
The pen
a magazine as well as a newspaper.
statesman, the poet, the
artist,
be
made
of the
the political economist, the
preacher
—
were contribut-
printing business,
He
out of the rebellion.
enlisted as a private in the 6th
Ohio Volunteer Infantry, serving and three months.
The
in the
army
three years
business of railroading claimed his
two succeeding years after his return and upon the expiration of this period he w.as no longer sunk in the individuality of Mr. Greeley. became Second Clerk on the steamer “ Lady Franklin,” It was no longer a partisan journal, full of the caustic utter- and acted in that capacity one year, when he accepted the essayist, the agriculturist, the
ing articles of
moment
ances of the founder.
Men
creed read the 7 'ribune, and
Founded and
all
to the entire country.
of every political and religious it
commands
attention during the
The Tribune from
the respect of
all.
the field,
position of First Clerk on the “ Rebecca,” and held
two
years.
the “
Emma
The ensuing two
years he
was
First
it
for
Clerk on
and during a corresponding period was Captain of that boat. He then built defeat and death of its founder, who was nominated for the the splendid steamer “James D. Parker,” of which he is Presidency. The young journalist had new honors waiting still part owner and Captain. There is no vessel engaged for him. Of course the idea of a thoroughly independent on the Western rivers which is more complete in its accomjournal did not meet the views of all who were interested modations or more elegantly fitted up than this one, and Reid.
in the
The
built
radical
by Greeley,
change
it
has been modernized by
in the
Tribune dates from the
Tribune, and a struggle took place which attracted
the attention of the intelligent people of the whole country. It
ended
in
a decisive victory for the
new management.
immediately
certainly
P'loyd,”
after
none commanded by a more
tlemanly officer than Captain Wise. line
making regular
trips
efficient or
His boat
from Cincinnati
to
more genis
one of a
Memphis.
He
LIOGRAPIIICAL EXCVCLOr.EDIA.
241
has had a thorough experience of river life, and is one of wealth and honor, add lustre to local history and honor to the best known of the Cincinnati boat owners and com- the wider annals of national prosperity.
On
manders.
January
daughter of Charles
had four children,
21st, 1865,
Tempk,
all
he was married to Sarah,
of that city, by
whom
he has
surviving.
ANNOTTA, SIGNOR
A., Composer,
and Director
of the Western Conservatory of Music, was born
Capua,
in
(^y>’ALL, JOHN born
Manufacturer of Furniture, was
C.,
England
in
commenced
In 1821 he emigrated
in 1816.
with his father to America, and settled in Cin-
Ohio, where, after obtaining a
cinnati,
fair
edu-
cation in the schools of the city, he learned the
In 1837 he upholstering and bedding business. purchased the establishment in which he had learned his Since this period he has been constantly engaged
trade.
in the prosecution of his business,
He
and merited success.
great
with him,
No. iS East Fourth
at
Within the past
ability.
])loyed in
street,
James
S. Grisard,
Italy.
troduced to the American jjeople,
house has been em-
homes
men
etc.,
at
the hour of rest a
are readily
and
easily
use of in one
For a period covering
all
that time has never
own
ac-
been connected with
a case at law in which he has acted either as plaintiff or defendant.
He
thinks
that “reasonable
men should
be
He
in
by that instrument
left
Naples, with several friends, to
men
“honest
process of law
will ;
meet
their obligations,
dishonest
men
he
able, without
when
attacked by
all
During the war of the rebellion
several heavy contracts in his department, entered
filled
into
that
can, in the majority of cases,
avoid payment of their just dues, even the powers of the court.”
if
asserts
with the
government, supplying
the
navy on
the
western rivers and shipping vast quantities of bedding to
There
he became Director of the London Italian Society of Music,
and made
his debiit in the musical world as a composer, producing, on two days’ notice, a “ Funeral March,” which
was received with warm commendations. In 1S63, when the great Italian general and republican. Garibaldi, came to London and was received with such wide spread demonstrations of favor, he composed for his reception “ The one of
Exile,”
Subsequently,
most favorably received productions.
his
the Garibaldi receptions in London, he
at all
“
Exile ” was dedicated to his
The
Grace the Duke of .Sutherland,
he
range of combina-
to the conception of the
attend the famous World’s Exposition in London.
supplied the music.
morality,
in-
In 1861 he graduated as a composer, and
the following year
lawyers, or application to court,” and, illustrating his view
one phase of commercial
first
never became a great piano
able to settle their differences without the intervention of
of
was
Boston, by Gilmore,
to his pupils, preferring to leave the vast
unaided mind.
about forty years he has transacted business on his count, and in
and musician.
at
a
performer, Mercadante having refused the use of the piano
of his invention may-
when made
another.
the leader
a performer on this instrument he
tions suggested
guise, they conceal the characteristic points belonging to in
As
of lim-
of
metamorphosed, and are accordingly valuable, inasmuch as
them when serving
only of his entire family possessed
fine business
day becomes
they answer two ends, while,
He
he was one of the
maestro composer, Qaverio
young man of
five years the
comfortable bed; his lounge,
was decided.
Naples, and there
at
that time
Grisard, and
the lounge, book-case, wardrobe, sec-
retary, or chair of the
During
.
of the great
pupils
favorite
Ammaella,
Pietro
St.
remained eight years.
&
The whole philosophy :
Conservatory
life
eleventh year, accordingly, he entered the
his
in
Mercadante.
in the expensive habits of life in the
means.
composition, whereupon his profession for
While
and two years
notable work in musical
first
marked talent for music. During his second year at Naples he became one of the most skilful French-horn soloists in
invented with the design of bringing about a radical change
ited
the study of music,
has recently associated
manufacturing “ Hall’s Patent Folding Furniture,”
be thus described
His early education At the age of eight he
meeting uniformly with
of Indiana, under the firm-style of Hall thus secured as a coworker a
in Naples.
produced his
later
1841.
Italy, in
was acquired
for the hospitable reception
as a
mark of appreciation
given by that nobleman to the In 1865 he was induced, by
distinguished Italian leader.
come to York he engaged vocal pupils, and in iSfifi
the success of several of his friends in America, to this country. in
the
After his arrival in
instruction
of private
New
where he became connected, as a vocal teacher, with the New England Conservatory of Music. About this time he introIn 1868 he visited Cincinnati. duced to the lovers of music of the city the great concerts
moved
to Boston,
He is a zealous and steadfast and an earnest worker in his church. At the age a la Julien organization, with fifty musicians. This venof twenty-one years he made a compact with himself never ture was projected and inaugurated prior to the attcinjits to drink intoxicating liquor, swear, or use tobacco in any made by various maestri and to the first visits of Theodore the Brooklyn Navy-yard. Christian
form, and has yet to reproach liimself for having broken any
To
one of
its
Queen
City justifiably point
agreements.
such
men
with an
the citizens of the
honest pride;
the
record of their lives, beginning in obscurity and ending in 31
Thom.as. to sustain
tory,
But, failing to meet with the success necessary
such a venture and the success of his conserva-
he returned to Boston
peared
first
in
1869, and
in his true role as the
in
this
city ap-
composer of “ The Peace
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOIAEDIA.
242
grand march, inlroduced by Gilmore
P'estival,” a
third concert of the great Jubilee.
This, the
first
the
at
original
and together have since conducted the business, building stationary, steamboat and portable engines, saw-mills, mill
composition produced on that occasion by Gilmore, was
machinery and general foundry work.
received with marked favor by the vast concourse of as-
Portable Engine, invented by Mr. Griffith’s partner,
sembled
patented, and a decided increase in business
and admirers of music, and
critics
commendations
siastic
“ a complete
as
elicited enthu-
and magnificent and here
production.”
Later, he returned to Cincinnati,
succeeded
establishing
in
now
Music, over which he
the Western
Conservatory of
The
presides as director.
finest
voices and musical talent which this city has produced have
New
shops were
new
built,
A
there
horizontal, the engine vertical,
is is
no
strain
;
was
result.
short description of the
Engine may not be out of
Vertical Portable boiler
was the
purchased, increasing
tools
the manufacturing facilities.
In 1S70 the Vertical
place.
and so placed
The that
and
the wearing parts are cast steel, light
come from under his tuition, and the adoption of the true durable; the points gained are strength, simplicity, safety Italian method there is due entirely to his efforts. Mr. Griffith was married. May 20th, 1S38, Before and durability. the appearance of Thomas he met the need of the general to Eliza Lee, a native of Baltimore, Maryland, who died in community, and introduced the Symphony concerts, lie 1872. He was again married, December 27th, 1873, to also
Gn
gave
first
Kammer
Con-
“ Soirees,”
etc.
people of that city the “
to the
“ Musicales
the
certs,”
Reunions,”
the opening of the
the
Cincinnati Exposition he ap-
first
peared with “ The Exposition March,” prepared for the occasion.
he
met with an enthusiastic reception.
It
appeared
Cincinnati
in
with
In 1875
pupils
his
opera
in
“Alidor,” an original composition by him, which placed his reputation as a is
a
musician on a solid pedestal. dealing with
opera,
historical
the
“Alidor”
personages and
doings of England under the reign of George
1
He
.
has
composed many songs, marches, masses, etc., all are characterized by a commendable degree of cellence and originality. Several of his musical works
also
which
now
vogue
in
production
testify to the
esteem
connoisseurs of the old world.
has served
is
is
to
Brown Manufacturing Company,
is
Director of the
The honorable
diffi-
have brought
now County Commis-
is
looked up to as a leading
county.
whatever he un-
years as Trustee of the Water-
works;
position he
business, but also in society,
is
man in the city and now holds, not only in
due
to unflinching deter-
mination to do and have done what was right.
of exare
ICKMAN, FR.'\NKLIN
which he is held by the He is a worthy pupil of the
Petersburg, Virginia.
in
whose only
a musical enthusiast of the highest stamp,
ambition
fifteen
and
is
in
business
to
He
him the success deserved. sioner;
be honored by his work.
J.,
Lawyer, was born
He was
fitted
in
for college
Petersburg Classical School, under the
at the
in-
struction of Rev. Fh D. Saunders, late of Phila-
great Mercadante, wholly devoted to his noble profession,
and
in earnest
close observer, perseverance under
and a
and constant attention
culties
Europe, and by the frequency of their
in
Thoroughly
Ella Cochran. dertakes,
and in the same class with General Roger A. Pryor. At the age of sixteen he entered the junior class of Brown’s University, Rhode Island, delphia,
among his classC6x and ex-Lieutenant-Governor
graduating with the salutatory honors;
mates were the Hon.
THOMAS,
ijaRIFEITll,
November
Manufacturer, was
At the age of seven he removed with to
One year
Oswestry.
dence with an uncle
in
born,
Warwickshire, England.
7th, 1817, in
after this
Manchester,
his family
he took
who
resi-
in 1827
emigrated to America, taking his nephew with
him,
first
and then
to Philadelphia
three years he was sent to school. ing,
which was the groundwork
cation,
he was
Sinclair
He moved as
self-taught.
& Moone,
Ebert
&
in
Outside of
where
for
this school-
for his future business
edu-
In 1830 he was apprenticed to
manufacturers of agricultural machinery.
to Zanesville,
journeyman
to Baltimore,
Ohio, in December, 1838; worked
Dillon’s edge-tool
factory;
then with
Whittaker, machinists, on Sixth near Main
being there employed
street,
building machinery for their
in
new
shop, on South Fifth street, which was started by him on
Christmas day,
1S40.
He worked
as
foreman for two
vears, then as junior partner about eighteen months,
March, 1858, he and Mr.
Wedge
and
in
purchased the property.
S. S.
He
read law in the
Hon. Charles S. Bradley, late Rhode Island, and was there admitted.
Chief-Justice of
Francis Wayland, of Connecticut. office
of
the candidate of
th-
Attorney-General.
for
of the
In 1857 he was Democratic party of Rhode Island In 1858 he
Board of Visitors
at the
was appointed a member
West Point
emy, and was also appointed Secretary, and was the author of the report of the Board 1858 he came
to
Military Acadin that
capacity
that year.
In
Cleveland and engaged in his profession.
In 1861 he was sent to the Legislature, and in that body was Chairman of the Committee on Railroads. At the close of his legislative term he formed a partnership with the
Hon. R.
P. Spaulding,
and resumed the practice of
his
1867 he was appointed District Attorney for Northern Ohio, but resigned in 1869, in order to devote
profession.
In
himself exclusively to private practice. of
well-known
literary tastes,
He
attainments, which only serves to extend a the law.
is
a gentleman
extended reading and
classical
knowledge of
This, taken in connection with exemplary habits
t
;
BIOGRAPHICAL EAXVCLOP.EniA. and high moral character,
all
resting
religious basis, gives promise of the
upon an
alike eventful
intelligent
most honorable
was
results.
the
at
and
243
His
creditable.
residence
of an
first
rest
by the wayside
Henry Hoffman,
uncle,
in
was married to Annie E., only Dutchess county, near Ithaca, New York. Here, to his daughter of Robert Neil, of Columbus, Ohio, and has three amazement, he was solicited to take charge of the district school, and although having had but limited educational children now living. In December,
1862, he
I
advantages himself, he, with characteiistic self-confidence, accepted the situation, and during two quarters sustained the
ALLMADGE, DARIUS,
Banker, and one of the
in
1S25, in
was born
far
West, as
New
in
est child in
He was
the young-
a family of fourteen children, and
an orphan
left
Schaghticoke, Rensselaer county.
York, June 30th, 1800.
when
He
but ten years of age.
a direct descendant of one of four brothers
was was
He subsequently returned to farming, and company with a friend, started on foot for the Ohio and Kentucky in those distant days were
role of educator.
founders of the “ Western Stage Coach Company,”
On
denominated. ellers this
who emigrated was
purchased a
reaching the Allegheny river, the travskiff,
and continued
stream until they arrived
at
down
taken on a keel boat
their
down
journey
where passage M.aysville, Ken-
Pittsburgh,
the river.
and who are supposed to be the tucky, was reached April ist, 1825. Here he at once enprogenitors of all the Tallmadges in the United States. One gaged in driving horses to the New Orleans market, but the of these brothers settled in New Jersey, there striking from emoluments of several trips proving meagre and insignifithe family patronymic one / and the d. From this branch cant, he relinquished that business without having in any from Wales
to this country,
sprang the popular Brooklyn minister. Rev. T.
Among
Talmage.
the
names of
De
Witt
the original rrantees, or
perceptible
way
bettered his fortunes.
He
then, through the
generosity of a Kentuckian, Mr. Blanchard, was enabled to
New Haven, in purchase a horse and dray, with which he labored for six James Tallmadge. The months; at the expiration of that time he removed to Tarlhistory of the latter is unknown, but several of the descend- ton, Ohio, and began the business of buying and driving ants of Robert have resided in New Haven, in unbroken horses to New Orleans. In Clinton, at a later period, he succession, from that time to the present day, a period of came in contact with William Neil, of the Ohio St.age Comnearly two centuries and a half, while many have I'emoved pany, and after brief negotiation, was employed as agent to various portions of the Union, and filled places of honor of the company at a salary of four hundred dollars per and trust in the civil and military service of the country. annum. His tireless industry, unswerving fidelity and purchasers of town
lots at the
settlement of
1639, were those of Robert and
The descendants
many
have removed from the old home of their ancestors are
who now
numerously represented among the respected citizens of
New
of
of the collateral branches
York, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Wisconsin, Ohio and Michigan the two latter .States having towns named in their
—
honor,
viz.
:
Tallmadge, Ottawa county, Michigan, and Tall-
madge, Summit county, Ohio.
many
It
is
a source of pride that
habitual promptitude soon produced their legitimate result his salary was increased to twelve hundred dollars per annum, and his field expanded so as to cover half the State.
After serving as agent for a period of six years, he took an interest in the company', and also became sole proprietor of what the company deemed its “ poor contracts” in Southern
Ohio, and from which by unremitting Labor and attention he
William Neil, who had inhonor and responsibility under both State and national vested but three hundred dollars in this enterprise, was for governments, not one has ever betr.ayed his trust, or brought ten years his silent partner, and ultimately retired with a while
of the family have been called to fdl places of
reproach upon the name.
remarkable
The
longevity also of this family
reaped a munificent harvest.
share amounting to twenty-five thousand dollars, in addition
not a single head of family, in the lineal suc-
to the
cession which has been traced, has died at a less age than
while.
seventy years; and the aggregate age of the five generations
vant,
is
is
three
:
hundred and ninety-six
years, or an average of over
seventy-nine years for each person.
ment was
Darius’
first
employ-
that of a teamster, hauling bricks during the con-
heavy dividends which he had received
“Mr. Tallmadge, D.
W.
in connection with
Dcshler, and
in the
W.
mean-
S. Sulli-
Peter Campbell, of Columbus,
Peter and John Yoorhes, of Dayton,
J.
S. Alvoid, of Indi-
and K. Porter, of Wooster, Ohio, inaugurated the Western Stage Company. Their operations were
anapolis, Indiana,
struction of the great cotton factory df Schaghticoke,
and at first entirely confined to the State of Indiana, but the wagoning goods advancing tide of civilization, with its railroads and other from Troy to M hitehall, a distance of one hundred miles. improved modes of Irav'el and transportation, crowded the His next venture made him a tiller of the soil, on the farm company successively into Iowa, Missouri, and Kansas, of an elder brother, but quickly discovering the incongruity enjoying, however, in each Stale, a period of success and of this vocation, and “ quite tired of farming, and restless, prosperity. This company was truly regarded as the most anxious to get away, and see if something would not pre- influential and powerful corporation in the Western States,
when
sent
but twelve years of age he engaged in
itself that
faster,”
would enable him
to
make money
he disregarded the w,nrnings of
a
liitle
his brother, and,
bidding farewell to the old farmstead, began a pilgrimage
holding a monopoly in those sparsely settled regions equal to
that
country.
of any railroad
The
enterprise
now running through was very remunerative
the to
its
same pro-
BIOGRAFIIICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA.
244 jectors,
having
‘
paid for
itself’
without a dollar being
in-
vested by the owners of the stock, and was closed with princely returns
Init
years since, their property for dis-
five
being very valuable, consisting as
tribution
Des Moines, Sioux
Indianapolis,
estate
in
Bluffs,
and other places along the route of
began
to
murmur
did of real
City,
Council
their early opera-
When
which they had invested.”
tions, in
it
staging in Ohio
collapse as a remunerative business, the initial
of the
the country,
coming California gold
and
fever spread through
he, ever ready to take advantage of the
opening of any new and lucrative enterprise, immediately sent one hundred horses across the plains,
around the Cape
and
fifty
to the land of fabulous treasures.
to
He was a valued member of the Masonic and through life was noted-for his punctilious
enemies.”
organization,
devotion to
more_ important requirements
its
and was a
;
prominent feature of the assemblage gathered together on the occasion of the laying of the corner-stone,
new
therhood, of the
In February, 1873, three months subsequent
Ohio,. first
by the bro-
Central Lunatic Asylum, at Columbus,
own
attack of pneumonia, at his
sick-bed, he
to the
request, while on his
was baptized by Rev. T. R. Taylor, of the He was married at the age
Methodist Episcopal Church. of twenty-one, to Sarah A.
stages
who
These
amiable
resided near Ithaca,
Wood, daughter
New
woman, and
Christian
member
a
of Jonas
She died
York.
Wood,
in 1S49,
an
of the Methodist
About eighteen months afterward he
horses, sent to California for the purpose of establishing a
Episcopal Church.
stage route there, were taken across the plains by his young-
w.as again married, to Elizabeth
Creed, of Lancaster.
He
James .Vugustus Talhnadge, who never returned, had two sons, one of whom, as before stated, died in South but went to South America, and died in Valparaiso, Chili, America; the other, Theodore Tallmadge, is now a resident in the twenty-fourth year of his age. In 183J he removed of Columbus, Ohio, and well known and respected in Lanest son,
and there in 1847 projected a branch of caster, and throughout the State of Ohio. He died at his Bank of Ohio, of which he served as President, rooms in the Tallmadge House, Lancaster, Ohio, on March and also during the existence of the charter of the .State 27th, 1874. Numerous obituaries, sketches, editorials, etc., Bank, served as a member of its .State Board of Control. were published, concerning his life, works, and eventful By his nicety of management in monetary matters while career, after his demise. The obsequies were of the most to Lancaster, Oliio,
the
.State
thus employed, he acquired the reputation of being one of
impressive nature, while the
the most accurate financiers in the
attracted
In the course of
.State.
time and events he passed through
sever.al
periods of per-
sonal pecuniary embarrassment, “ any one of which alone
would have crushed an ordinary man.” ever, he
surmounted
own financial money and Labor
not only recovered his
Toremost public
willi
both
enterprises
for
the
through his individual
benefit
instigation
Ultimately, how-
and
adversities,
all
in his later years
prosperity, but in carrying
town.
of his
and exertion
out
was al]
It
was
that
the
were primarily developed, and he was ever
parts of the
;
Episcopal Church
and
at
At
pathetic.
Lancaster, Ohio, was forcible, eloquent
the grave the
Masonic
ritual
was con-
ducted by Judge Virgil Shaw, Past Master of the Lancaster
Commandery.
JOHN ELLIOTT,
l^UNT, HON.
General of the Ohio
in the front
rank, with voice, hand, and money, in the maturing of
Toledo, Ohio,
projects destined to contribute to the safety
diana
“ For
all
and the surrounding region .and the discourse preached by Rev. J. R. Boyd, March 29th, 1S74, in the Methodist city
magnificent mineral resources of Hocking and Perry counties
solemn funeral ceremonies
a large concourse of people from
and welfare of
— within
etc.,
was born
the
fort
Pioneer, Major-
ex-Postmaster of
militia, in
— April
P'ort
llth,
Wayne, 1798.
In-
He
was the seventh child in a family of eleven chilwhose parents were Thomas Hunt and attention and labor to its material advancement, or employ- Eunice (Wellington) Hunt, of Watertown, near Boston. ment to more men needing it because of their impecuniosity.” His father was an active participant in the first battle of the Again, “ Much of the prevailing taste exhibited here, much Revolution, at Lexington, and was wounded in the action He was also one that is beautiful and healthful in artificial additions to the at Bunker Hill, Boston, Massachusetts. natural advantages of the city, have resulted from the exam- of the foTlorn hope under General Wayne at the storming ples and the labors of Mr. Talhnadge in being really the of Stony Point, on the Hudson, and was there wounded by his fellow-citizens.
more than
truly said, Lancaster never
had a
pioneer in these matters.
He was
especially in middle
His private
life.
it may be who gave more
forty years,
citizen
exceedingly benevolent, charities
were boun-
Churches and benevolent societies ever found him
tiful.
liberal.
Want
ot
education alone interfered with a demon-
dren,
conduct,
and
afterward
his
was ordered with
notable natural capacities only in the practical pursuits of
take possession of
would have been great life.
A man
in
any sphere, hut could show
of strong prejudices, firm convictions, intense
purpose, large heart, strong will, and unimpeachable integrity,
he was kind and true to
his friends,
while unrelenting
was
and meritorious commissioned
successively
Lieutenant-Colonel and Colonel of the old Continental hirst Infantry Regiment, by
most remarkable natural power of mind.
then commissioned
M.ajor by General Washington, for gallant
He
stration of a
He was
a bayonet in the calf of his leg.
from 1803 miles
named
it
St.
this
Jefferson.
Subsequently he
Detroit, Michigan, to
Louis, .Missouri, where he
to 1807.
from
Thomas
his regiment from
city,
Dn
commanded
the banks of the Missouri, fifteen
he constructed a cantonment, and
Bellcfontaine.
In
.St.
Louis, also, he died, his
^
7
BIOGRAnilCAL ENCVCLOr.EDIA. him
faithful wife following
to the
demise; they both
after his
grave about three months In later
Bellefontaine.
lie in
years a cemetery was laid out about eight miles back of St. They left a family Louis, and is known as Bellefontaine.
The
of eleven children.
eldest,
Henry
J.
Hunt, who
at that
time was nineteen years of age, went with three h renchmen in a pirogue from Detroit, Michigan, to St. Louis, Missouri, leaving the subject of this sketch and the
rest of the
children
with various relatives scattered from Fort Wayne, Indiana, In 1812,
to Boston, Massachusetts.
when
his brother-in-law.
and smoke-stacks, recesses buffalo
245
and
forests
whose gloomy cat and the all this and
in
prairies
and rank grass the wolf, the wild were, now the sites of teeming cities
:
more, do those simple words evoke from the historic past,
and give food
for grave,
He was
sweet thought,
May
to the patriot
of
Mary Sophia Spencer, sister of Mrs. General Cass, wife of General Governor Cass, of Michigan, at whose house the marriage cere-
to-day.
mony
married.
took place
Justice Waite,
she
;
now on
29th, 1822, to
a second cousin, also, of Chief-
is
the bench.
Dr. Abraham Edwards, of D.ryton, Ohio, was appointed Surgeon-General to the army of General Hull, John Elliott
Henry J. Hunt, in Detroit, HuH’s surrender to the British army under General Brock. He was present also at the retaking of Detroit, Michigan, by General Harrison. While went
to live with his brother,
in
his
the children, sent least
him
Sandwich, Canada,
to
His student
Michigan.
life in
He
was the
first
beholder
of the landing of the celebrated travellers, Lewis and Clark,
from
the Pacific
their three years tour to
Maumee
In 1816 he settled in
Wood
Ocean
City, then
in 1S06.
the capital of
Miami of the Lake, and there, same State, has since permanently resided. His first vote was cast at the Presidential election in which Hem-y Clay figured, and was given in favor of that and
county, Ohio, on the
Toledo,
in
the
in
was born, March, 1755, in Fauquier county, His father emigrated from Ireland, and
Virginia. his
mother was of Scottish descent, her ancestors
having been among the
in ex-
was embraced
the schooling ever received by him,
all
within the limits of one year.
lution,
to secure at
Canada, as well
one of the Pioneers
of the valley of the Ohio, and a soldier of the Revo-
as a father to
an elementary education, no schools being then
istence in as
who was
fourteenth year, his brother,
GENERAL SIMON,
^ ENTON,
Michigan, and witnessed
first
settlers of Virginia.
His parents being in middling circumstances, he was employed
till
the age of sixteen years in the cultivation of corn that period an incident occurred
At
and tobacco.
changed the destiny of
his future
A
life.
which
neighbor’s son
had married a lady to whom he was attached, and with him young Kenton had a series of personal rencontres which terminated in the complete discomfiture of his adversary,
who
no signs of
exhibited
combat, determined him to
life
flee
at
the close of the last
from home without even
He
seeing or consulting his parents or friends.
crossed the
views concerning the proper policy of the American nation
^1 Ise’s Ford Allegheny mountains, April 6 th, 177G changed his name to Simon Butler. Having met three men who were preparing to descend the Ohio river, he joined
are expressed in the code and principles of the Jeffersonian
them, being possessed of a good
eminent statesman
;
Presidential election
he subsequently voted in
Democratic element.
ensuing
at the
favor of General Jackson,
He was
and
his
twice elected to the Senate
and with them proceeded
rifle,
the fruit of hard labor,
as far as Fort Pitt,
now
Pittsburgh.
of Ohio, and was elected a Senatorial Delegate to form the
Here he formed a friendship with the notorious Simon Girly, Constitutional Convention in 1849-50. For a period of who was the means, at a future period, of his rescue from eight years he held the office of Postmaster of Toledo, Ohio, the Indians, when doomed to the stake. Accompanied by and was elected Major-General of the Ohio militia, by the a single companion, he descended the Ohio as far as the I.egislature in 1S37, since
which time he has lived
in retire-
mouth of
the Great
Kanawha
ment, secluded from the ceaseless whir and turmod which
river, they built a
characterize the rapid and marvellous development
selling their peltries to a
of a
people and interests whose incoming he has seen, whose
growth he has noted with an licitude.
Thus he expresses
intelligent
and unflagging
himself, white with the
so-
snows
this
river,
and ascend!. ig the Elk
camp, and passed the winter
French
point until the spring of
Indians, the party
became
trader.
in trapping,
They remained
at
1773, when, attacked by the
separated.
Kenton with a com-
panion, both being wounded, reached the mouth of the Great
their
wounds.
where they met another party who dressed Here they entered the employ of Mr. Bris-
But a few simple words, yet they hold to a reflective mind, the varied incidents and circumstances of his career and life being passed in swift review, a wondrous kaleidoscope where are seen vivid pictures of adventurous pioneers
coe,
who was
then endeavoring to form a settlement on the
and
hostile Indians, British assailants
ers,
log school-houses
learning in marble and in everlasting granite, great states-
In I 774 > joining a trapping party, proceeded to the Ohio. an Indian war being imminent, he with others repaired to Lord Dunmore, Governor of Virginia, having Fort Pitt.
men of the olden time, lonely rivers whose very courses were almost unknown which are now crowded with sails
ployed as a
of
many
at the
years, loved, esteemed,
head of
this river,
I
and revered
shall
:
“
I
was born
ere long be buried at
its
foot.”
now
and American defend-
replaced by stately institutes of
Kanawha
river,
Kanawha, contemporaneously with the lounding of Wheeling, Grave Creek, and Long Reach. Kenton, with his first earnings, procured a good rifle, and immediately flreat
raised an
army .s])y
to chastise the aggressors,
to
Kenton was em-
precede the troops and report the condition
BIOGRAPHICAL EXCYCLOP.L;r)IA.
246
After the enemy had been chastised, a treaty but finding the fort in a quiescent state, he returned. Durwas made with them, but no sooner had the troops with- ing the invasion of Kentucky by the British and Indians in drawn than the treaty was brohen. Colonel Lewis was now 1779, he was appointed a Captain, and, commanding an sent to chastise the enemy, Kenton being again employed as active and numerous company of volunteers, he distinguished On his discharge from this service he resumed his himself in that campaign. After this company was disbanded a scout. old pursuits of trapping, in the course of which his party, he remained in the employ of the several stations till 1782. with the aid only of their tomahawks, cleared a small piece At this period he heard, for the first time, of his longof ground, which they planted with corn, and which yielded abandoned parents, and of his former opponent, who had
of the country.
them a supply of
This spot, called Kenton’s
edible.
thi.s
recovered from the
He
mutual encounter.
effects of their
was about one mile from the present town of Wash- now assumed his own name, and, after commanding another He passed the winter successful expedition against marauding Indians on the ington, in Mason county, Kentucky. Station,
named
Stoner, about forty-five miles south
with a
settler
of his
former locality, and
the
in
spring,
the American
revolution being in progress, and the natives stimulated by
men
the British to destroy the infant settlements, the white
Great Miami, he concluded to
A
spot on Salt river.
houses,
cleared
make
a settlement on a fertile
few families joined him, reared block-
ground and planted corn, which being
gathered, he concluded to
visit
His glowing
his parents.
Kenton joined Major (afterwards descriptions of the fertility of Kentucky induced his parents General) George Rogers Clark, sent out by Virginia to pro- to accompany him on his return, but his father died ere the Kenton again accepted the position of spy journey was accomplished. He remained at Salt river till tect the settlers. or scout, and by his faithful discharge of his arduous duties 17S4, and thence removed to near Maysville, where he proved himself worthy of the confidence reposed in him; he formed the first permanent station on the northeast side rf were obliged
to flee.
was always successful meditated attack, and
in
giving the fort timely notice of a
to assist in
He
preparing fir defence.
Many
the Licking river.
spot; and the
emigrants were attracted to the
Indians were kept
at b.ay
by the
activity
and
Okaw, intelligence of the master-spirit of Kenton, who was ever His opponent was someor Kaskaskia, where they surprised the French commander foremost when danger threatened. and took possession of the fort. He was then despatched to times the celebrated chief Tecumseh, whose tact and innext accompanied Major Clark on an expedition to
ascertain the strength of the fort at Vincennes,
accomplished, after three days’ lurking
he sent one of
hfs
in the
which having neighborhood,
companions with the intelligence
while he and another repaired to Harrodsburg.
to Clark,
He
next
he was sometimes powerless to conquer. In 1793 Major Kenton joined the army under General Wayne, which was variously employed. Emigration now set in, as the Intrepidity
dian wars had ceased, and large numbers settled on the
joined several expeditions under Daniel Boone, and signal-
banks of the Ohio.
ized his courage to the. entire satisfaction of that celebrated
estate
pioneer.
In
1778 he was one of the company with Alex-
ander Montgomery and George Clark
in
an expedition
to
Ohio, with the avowed purpose of obtaining horses from the Indians.
Proceeding cautiously to Chillicothe they
with a drove of horses, captured seven and
made
fell
in
for the
But the Indians soon overtook them, killing Montgomery and capturing Kenton Clark escaped. After unheard of tortures, he was doomed to the stake, from which fate he was rescued by Simon Girty, previo'usly mentioned, who persuaded the Indians to carry him to Smdusky. On river.
;
his
way
thither,
the compassion of the celebrated
Logan, was excited
in
his behalf,
Canadian Frenchman appeared dusky,
who succeeded
in
and
at
chief,
his instigation a
at the council of
Upper San-
having him taken to Detroit and
war to the British. Here he was lodged in the -fort, where his health was soon restored, and where he earned some money through dint of hard delivered up as a prisoner of
as
Kenton was regarded
he was ignorant of the law and
ests.
as a large real-
owner, yet his land-claims failed one
how
after another,
to protect his inter-
In the year 1800 he abandoned the
had rendered tenantable by settled
on
Mad
General of
river,
militia.
Ohio.
his
In 1805 he was
In 1813,
soil
which he
courage and endurance, and
when
his old
made
Brigadier-
companion. Gov-
came to Urbana at the head of the Kentucky Kenton could no longer remain inactive, but became
ernor Shelby, troops,
a
member
of the Governor’s military family.
He
crossed
accompanied General Harrison and Governor Malden, and thence to the Thames; was present
the lake and
Shelby to
and played his part with his usual intrepidity. Here ended the military career of General Simon Kenton,
in the b.attle,
a
man who
probably passed through as great a variety of
border adventures as any of our most renowned Western pioneers. length,
This condensed narrative, were
would form a volume not
most marvellous
fiction.
Before
it
prepared
at
less
interesting than the
his
death the govern-
ment granted him a meagre pension, which secured him His hospitality he grew restless, and forming a plan of escape, in company from absolute want in his declining years. with two companions, effected his object, being assisted was always commensurate with his means; during his prosthereto by a lady of the neighborhood, the wife of an Indian perity his house was ever open to the wealthy emigrant He was a member of the trader. After a journey of thirty-three days they reached the or the benighted traveller. work.
falls
Passing the winter of 1778-79 mostly in inactivity,
of the Ohio, July, 1779.
foot to
Vincennes
Kenton thence proceeded on
to join his old
comjranion. General Clark,
He died in Methodist Church, which he joined in 1810. Aprii 3CI, 1836, aged about eighty-two.
Logan county, Ohio,
BIOGRAnilCAL ENCVCLOr.EDIA. MICHAEL,
Manufacturer, was born at Top, Stark county, Ohio, January iSlh, 1821, being the son of Abraham and Elizabelli (Kr)'der) Halm. Mis means and opportunities for Plain
days having been
school
passed
in
for Ulysses
since recognized as his
ing in his studies
and the
S.,
He
name.
shown
marked
a
has been ever
latter
graduated
hav-
in 1843^
mathe-
jiroficiency in
his
matics. He ranked twenty-first in a class of thirty-nine, and was made a brevet Second Lieutenant of infantry, being
Bucyrus,
attached very soon after as supernumerary Lieutenant to the
education were very limited,
obtaining an
was made out
247
Crawford county, Ohio. When he attained his majority he 4th Regiment, stationed at that time in Missouri. In the went to Columbus. This was in March, 1842, and he there summer of 1845 he accompanied this command to Texas, commenced his apprenticeship to the cabinet-making trade. where it joined General Taylor’s army, and on September
On
January
has
ev'er
1844, he started in business for himself, and
1st,
since continued
While he has had
it.
encounter
to
made
30th was field
a
full
His
Lieutenant.
May
of battle was at Palo Alto,
service on the
first
and subse-
8th, 1S46,
and has been the victim of some mis- quently he participated in the engagements at Resaca de la In fortunes, his career as a manufacturer may on the whole be Palma and Monterey, and at the siege of Vera Cruz. lie started in busi- .\pril, 1847, he was appointed Quartermaster of his regicharacterized as a very successful one.
many
trying obstacles,
no
ness with
having
in
and energy. He secured them entirely within three
capital but skill to repay
years,
and he sustained a
conspicuous gallantry
for
at the battle of
his losses
del
were largely above
at
his insurances.
City of
Molino
First Lieufor his
con-
Chapultepec, to date from that engagement, which
thousand dollars. occurred September 13th, 1S47.
loss of thirteen
In 1861 his establishment was a second time burned out,
and
ment, and
In 1856 his factory was destroyed by duct
comfortable home. lire,
loans,
Ray, September 8th, 1847, he was made a the meantime secured to himself and family a tenant on the field. He was brevetted Captain
and was able
After the capture of the
Mexico he returned with
his regiment.
In 1848
Since he married Julia T. Dent, sister of one of his classmates.
then he has prospered by a
strict attention to business and In 1852 he accompanied his regiment to California and win patronage by turning out a Oregon, and while at Fort Vancouver, August 5th, 1853, During the rebellion he served was commissioned full Captain. On July 31st, 1854, he resuperior quality of goods. in the Union army for eight, months. He has held few signed and removed to St. Louis, cultivating a farm near places of public trust and responsibility, but where he has that city and engaging in business as a real estate agent. served in an official capacity, he has discharged his duties In 1859 he was emplo.yed by his father in the leather trade
through a studious
effort to
with intelligence and
He
fidelity.
is
quite largely interested
and President, in a number of prosperous business corporations, and is an enterprising and public-spirited citizen. He was married on March 14th, 1844, to Mai-y A. Markley, and has two married daughters as a stockholder. Director
and one single
;
He became
dren.
religious in early
and
life,
five
and
grandchil-
attributes all
temperance, religion, and devotion to God.
his successes to
He
also three single sons,
has given for charities and benevolent purposes thou-
at
Galena,
he took the
Illinois.
command
Upon the breaking out of the Rebellion of a company of volunteers, with whom
he marched to Springfield,
an aid
to
being there retained as
Illinois,
Governor Yates, and acted
of Illinois volunteers until he
as mustering officer
became Colonel of the
21st
Regiment, his commi.ssion dating from June 17th, 1861. He joined his regiment at Mattoon, organized and drilled it
at
Caseyville, and then
crossed into Missouri, where
it
formed part of the guard of the Hannibal and Hudson Rail-
sands of dollars, and has thereby, while helping others, en-
road.
riched himself with a consciousness of having
at
He was on
command
July 31st placed in
of the troops
could for the amelioration of the condition of his fellows.
Mexico, forming part of General Pope’s force, and on August 23d was promoted Brigadier-General of Volunteers,
He
the commission dating back to
has been an
chairs to
its
Odd Fellow
and received
all
its
for
many
honors, and
done what he
years, passed all is
its
sincerely devoted
principles of “ visiting the sick, relieving the distressed,
inforced shortly after by
On September
burying the dead, and educating the orphan.”
land, on the 25th.
ducah announced
ULYSSES
United Point
States,
S.,
eighteenth President of the
was born, Apiil 27lh, 1822,
Pleasant, Ohio, descending
ancestry.
He
at
from Scotch
passed his boyhood in the village
17th,
and assumed
at
mouth of
the
His proclamation that he
General
He Jeff
accomplished
at re-
General McClernand’s brigade.
had nothing
mouth of the the Cumber-
to the people of Pato
do
but should deal only with armed rebellion, abetters.
who were
Cairo,
at
6th he seized Paducah, at the
Tennessee, and .Smithland,
vjR.ANT,
May
once the command of the troops
\\
ith
opinions,
and checked the advance of the Confederate
Thompson on October at
the
battle
aiders
its
21st, 1861
;
of Fredericktown,
this
being
Missouri.
of Georgetown, Ohio, whither his parents
removed and by the appointment of Hon. Thomas L. Harmer, Congressman, entered the Military Academy at
When
in 1823,
Missouri in the following December, Grant was assigned to
Mest Point
the largest districts in the West.
in
1839.
His name originally was Hiram
Ulysses but the certificate of appointment to the academy
Halleck assumed
command
of the Department of
the control of the District of Cairo, which
the
head of 15,000 men, he
started
was then one of
In February of 1862, at
on
his
memorable march
mOGRAPlIICAL ENCYCLOP/EDIA.
r48
Henry and Donelson.the former of enemy in the actions of Raymond, Jackson, Champion’s river, and the latter the Hill and Big Black, and preventing the junction of the Con-
for the capture of Forts
which commanded the Tennessee
Cumberland. The gun-boats of Commodore P'oote, assisted by Grant’s army, compelled the surrender of Fort Henry on Fort Donelson was only captured after a
P'ebruary 6th.
severe engagement on
February 15th,
•
forces
which the land
in
The
under Grant distinguished themselves.
title
of
“ Unconditional Surrender Grant,” which he bore through-
His terms of capitula-
out the war, dates from this event.
General Butler being, “
tion to the rebel
No
other than an
unconditional and immediate surrender can be accepted. I
The
move immediately upon your works.”
propose to
capture of this stronghold, and a very large portion of defenders,
may
be regarded as the
Grant became the hero of the day,
of the Federal arms.
and the admiration of
triumph
substantial
first
its
his martial skill
was no
less
general
than the admiration for the terse and pointed manner in
which he couched the terms cf
missioned Major-General of Volunteers
rendered
in these
He was
capitulation.
com-
for his great services
engagements, the commission dating from
I'ebruary l6th, 1862, and in a very few days an
army of
40,000 men, which had been sent up the Tennessee by
General Halleck, was jilaced under his command.
memorable
battle of Pittsburg
Landing commenced
at
On May
burg.
on July 4th
it
1
oners of war.
he
8th, 1863,
laid siege to that city,
and
into his hands, together with 27,000 pris-
fell
I'or that strategic action
he was promoted
to
the rank of Major-General in the regular army, and in the
succeeding October assumed the
command
of the Military
Division of the Mississippi, which then comprised the de-
partments
commanded by Sherman, Thomas, Burnside and
Hooker.
His reinforcement of Sherman on the Big Black
enabled that General
river
to drive the
Confederate forces
under Johnston out of Jackson, Mississippi.
Chattanooga
being threatened by Bragg, Grant concentrated his forces for
its
defence, carrying by assault the Confederate positions
on Missionary Ridge and Lookout Mountain, respectively,
Upon
on November 24th and 25th. forces
was
Grant sent
relief to
closely invested
by Longstreet, who was quickly com-
Congress
pelled to retreat.
in
its
Grant
honor of
in
his
thanks to him and his army.
day-
similar measures.
1863-64 passed medal be struck for Gen-
sess,ion of
a resolution providing that a gold eral
the retreat of Bragg’s
Burnside, then at Knoxville, which
The
break on April 6th, 1862, when Grant’s army which was preparing for an attack on Corinth was
federate Johnston’s forces with those of Pemberton at Vicks-
achievements, and returning
New York and Ohio passed On March 1st, 1864, Congress revived
the grade of I.ieutenant-General, and President Lincoln at
surprised by an
once nominated General Grant for the position, the Senate overwhelming force under General A. S. Johnston and confirming the nomination on the following day. On his routed from its camp with heavy loss. Grant did not arrive arrival in Washington March 9th, 1864, Grant received his on the field until 8 A. M., when he succeeded in re-forming commission from the President, and on the 17th issued his itself
the lines, and having been reinforced during the remainder
first
of the day by General Buell, renewed the battle himself on
mand
the following morning, completely defeating the
enemy
at
general order announcing that he had assumed comof the armies of the United
States, with his
head-
quarters in the field, and until further orders with the
Army
every point and recovering the prisoners and stores which
of the Potomac.
had been
lion that
lost
on the previous day.
In a few days he began
This was the
first
one General commanded
time during the Rebelthe national troops;
all
had and with nearly 700,000 men at his disposal. Grant planned retreated after the battle, and in the latter part of May, 1862, two campaigns which were to be directed simultaneously succeeded in driving them from that stronghold. By the against vital points of the Confederacy. One of these camrecall of Halleck to Washington on July nth Grant became paigns was to be under General Meade, with orders to commander of the Department of Tennessee, with his head- operate against Richmond, then defended by Lee; the other quarters at Corinth, and on September 17th he ordered an to be under General Sherman, and to be directed against advance from thttt place to intercept General Price, who Atlanta, defended by General Johnston. At midnight on had concentrated a large force at luka. Here on Septem- May 3d, 1864, the advance was made towards Richmond, ber 19th a hot battle was fought, and a complete victory for and the army under Grant of 140,000 men pushed into the the siege of Corinth, to which the Confederate troops
the Federal arms gained. to
obstruct General
crans in
command
Grant pushed
to the
Ohio
river
Bragg’s force, leaving General Roseof Corinth, where he was attacked by
Wilderness and commenced that series of
ments which are better known
Lee was apprised of
this
terrible
engage-
Seven Days’ Fight,
as the
movement on
the 4th, and boldly
the Confederates, Price and Vandorn, and succeeded in re-
taking the offensive tried to strike the Federal forces on
pulsing them with heavy
their
tion of Grant’s
October 8th, and routed
and compelled
General Buell with a por-
loss.
command his
Bragg
intercepted
command
in a hot
his retreat to Fast Tennessee.
1862 was devoted by Grant to
at
Perryville
engagement,
The
fall
of
the reduction of
efforts for
Vicksburg, the Gibraltar of the Mississippi, which were unsuccessful.
In
December he moved
east side of the river, defeating
his
in the
army down
the
ensuing April the
march.
The immediate
which temporarily
foiled
result
army between Lee and Richmond. vance by the vania,
and
left flank,
was a bloody
battle,
Grant’s attempt to interpose his
He made
being again met by Lee
after a terrible struggle,
a second adat
Spottsyl-
which was only a
partial
he repeated the movement and was again confronted by Lee on the North Anna river. A fourth advance
success,
brought him before the impregnable
rifle-pits
of Cold Plarbor,
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOIAEDIA. anil
an unsuccessful assault on these, he once more
after
crossing the James river, sending a despatch to the Government at Washington, “ I
moved
his
army by the
left flank,
249
government, and the people.
Although
was
their report
favorable to annexation, the Senate refused to confirm the
During 1872, the
treaty.
last
year of his
first
term as Presi-
summer.”
dent, the Court of Arbitration, which, with the approval of
His losses in the campaign from the Rapidan to the James, covering the period from May 3d to June 15th, amounted to 54,551 in killed, wounded and missing, while
the English Government, had been appointed to decide the
propose to
fight
out on this line
it
takes all
if it
When
Lee's losses were about 32,000.
Grant made his
advance towards Richmond, he announced that fact by despatch to General Sherman, who then opened his camfirst
Alabama claims, concluded their labors at Geneva on Se])tember 14th, awarding the gross sum of $15,500,000, to be paid by the British Government to the United States for damages fitted
American commerce by Confederate
to
The
out in British ports.
cruisers
treaty with Great Britain
his historic “ March providing for this international arbitration was negotiated movements being foiled, with by the cabinet appointed by President Grant. The President Lee still in the open field before Richmond, with which he enforced the provisions of the 14th amendment to the Conhad con.stant communication, the problem of the war in stitution, and on October 17th, 1871, suspended the writ of Grant’s estimation was narrowed down to the siege of Peters- habeas corpus in the northern counties of South Carolina, While this siege was in pro- which had been the scene of what are called the Ku-klux burg, which he now began. In the same year he appointed a Commission on gress there were other diversions of the campaign in Mary- outrages.
commenced
paign against Atlanta, and
Grant’s flanking
to the Sea.”
Service Reform, which devised a plan for rendering
land and Virginia, in which Sheridan figured prominently.
Civil
Johnston in Georgia was unable to check the advance of
the civil service of the
Government more
efficient; this, after
command. General Hood, trial, has been abandoned. On June 5th, 1872, the National was compelled to evacuate Atlanta and lost his army before Republican Convention, at Philadelphia, renominated PresiNashville. The siege of Petersburg ended after the Federal dent Grant by acclamation, Henry Wilson, of Massachuvictory at Five Forks. In April, 1865, Richmond was setts, being selected as nominee for Vice-President. Horace evacuated by the Confederates, and I.ee retreated westward Greeley and B. Gratz Brown were the candidates of the toward Danville closely pressed by Grant, who finally com- Liberal Republicans and Democrats. The result of the pelled his surrender at Appomattox Court House on April election was a popular majority for Grant of 762,991 over 9th, Sherman forcing Johnston’s surrender only a few days Greeley. The Forty-second Congress doubled the President’s before. These unconditional surrenders of the only two salary, making it $50,000 per annum, increasing the salaries Sherman, and
Confederate
his successor in
organized
then
forces
On
closed the war.
sioned General of the United States
the
field
virtually
War ad
interim,
12th, 1867,
when
suspended Secretary Stanton from
of the Vice-President, Speaker of the House, Justices of the
Supreme Court and Heads of Departments 25 per
office,
sanction the removal of Mr. Stanton.
he acted
President Johnson
tion until January 14th, 186S, the Senate
rjlLI.MORE, ELISHA E., Wholesale and Retail Li Hardware Merchant, was born in Clinton county,
holding the posi-
having refused
to
I
New
President Johnson
York,
May
desired Grant to retain the office notwithstanding the action
of Connecticut,
of the Senate, but the General clo,sed a tangled correspond-
1793.
ence relating to the
announcing his
May
vention on ballot, the
affair
refusal.
in a terse
and very plain
Chicago, made, on the
unanimous choice of General Grant as
for President of the
fax as his associate
vote was as follows
its
first
nominee
United States, selecting Schuyler Col-
on the
ticket.
The
result of the electoral
Grant and Colfax, 214; Seymour and President Grant after his inaugural commenced
Blair, 80.
;
to carry out the policy of reconstruction of the lately rebel-
23d, 1812.
His parents, natives
moved thence
to
His father was a farmer
cumstances.
letter
The National Republican Con- naiy
21st, 1868, at
cent.
Army, Congress having
On August
created the rank for him. as Secretary of
i}i
July 25th, 1866, Grant was commis-
He was
the
in
New
York
moderate
in cir-
recipient of the ordi-
education obtainable in the country schools of his day,
and pursued
his studies
during the winter, while
in the
mer_ months he assisted in the labor of the farm. attaining his fifteenth year he
“ Black Rock,”
now
went
to
sum-
Upon
what was then called
a portion of Buffalo,
New
York, where
he found employment as a clerk in a store with the firm of
McPherson
&
At the expiration of seven years spent he was offered a position as bookkeeper and
Bird.
in this capacity,
which Congress had mapped out. In 1871 he salesman in the hardware store of Patterson Brothers, in urged the annexation of Santo Domingo, and secured to the Buffalo, which he accepted and occupied for about one United States a lease of the Peninsula and Bay of Samana year. At this time, 1835, the firm opened a branch house lious .States
for fifty years, but
cerning Santo vote of
its
it
being claimed that the treaties con-
Domingo had
not been confirmed by a popular
people. President Grant, in conformity with a re-
in Zanesville,
Ohio, and he was intrusted with
ment, the firm then consisting of Patterson Fillmore, .'nd John
B.
Graham, of
solution of Congress, appointed a commission to visit .Santo style of Fillmore, Pattersons
Domingo and 32
report
&
its
man.age-
Brothers, E. E.
New
Co.
upon the condition of the country, two years Mr. Graham purchased the
York, under the At the expiration of interest of Patterson
,
BIOGRAPHICAL ENX’YCLOP.EDIA.
250
was continued under the name of quished for the business of the lawyer. He was successful Three years later he became the owner, in the practice of his profession, and grew rapidly into the by purchase, of Ids partner’s interest, and sustained the busi- favor of a large and influential class of patrons, so that in a ness alone until 1863, when he associated with him his son, comparatively short time he was in the enjoyment of an exWilliam A. I'illmore, and his nephew, William A. Cassel, tended and lucrative practice. He continued his residence adopting the firm-name of E. E. Fillmore & Co., by which in Miami county, and was several times called upon to fulfil Brothers, and
&
P'illniore
the firm
Co.
the house has since been
For eight consecutive
known.
years he was a Director of public schools, and in 1859
To
elected County Commissioner.
was re-elected
in
He was
vacating the office finally in 1869.
been one of
the latter position he
1866 was again re-elected,
1863, and in
Rank
organizing the First National
instrumental in
of Zanesvdle,
down
In 1857, in connection with other co-
to the present time.
workers, he assisted in reorganizing, under the
name
of the
Ohio Iron Company, an iron works which had previously Of that company he was
been projected and established.
and ultimately he was selected
elected a Director,
Presidential chair, an office
stiil
held by him.
Its
the
many terms during which he held
formed
all its
duties in the ablest
to
fill
the
dollars,
has over a half million of dollars invested in
its
and
and throughout
and most
all
he per-
that office
satisfactory
man-
In 1854 he was elected Sheriff of the county, and held
ner.
the position until
In i860 he was elected Probate
1858.
During
to the position in 1S63.
the six years that he served in that capacity his official acts
were such
as to
Judicial honors
win the highest commendation of
were accompanied by
all parties.
and he rose
military,
He was
to the
rank of Colonel
in the
year 1838 to Maria Ludlow, of Cincinnati
in the State militia.
;
married five chil-
dren, four sons and one daughter, resulted from the union.
The company The daughter
started with a capital of seventy-five thousand
now
the duties of Justice of the Peace there,
and has Judge, and was re-elected
Directors from the date of organization
its
"'‘is
died in childhood, but the sons
Hon. Joseph E. Pearson being the
all
survive,
third.
works.
products find a market throughout the entire Western
country. He is also a stockholder in the Cincinnati & Muskingum Valley Railroad, of which he was a Director from
1870
He
to 1873.
house on Main
ments of the
.street,
city,
He
in the State.
interests of his
AJOR, FR.VNCIS W.,
has recently completed a very large wareZanesville,
and
which
is
county, KenGeorge Major, was a native of Virginia, and removed with his father to Ken-
one of the orna-
as a mercantile building unsurpassed
in
years at the Frankfort bar.
He was
man
minister of Zanesville.
in his
are
him
now
By her he has had
five children,
living; of these, one son
as a business partner; another
house as a clerk; the third
is
is
is
asso-
employed
studied
1790,
origin,
Of
family
and of very ancient lineage, tracing
his
four
is
of Nor-
its
ancestry
Archbishop Major (pronounced Manger), of Rouen, the uncle of William the Conqueror. The Archto
bishop, on account of Papal despotisms, abdicated his sec,
and removed
of Guernsey, where he met with
to the island
and formed an attachment
a daughter.
The
children Francis was the only son.
back directly
ciated with
law, and practised for
tucky
many
of Rev. William Arthur, a prominent and able Presbyterian
whom
father,
town, and owns a very handsome country
married, August 30th, 1836, to Margaret Arthur, daughter
of
His
tucky.
intimately identified with the real-estate
is
residence, situated on the outskirts of the city.
thi'ee
Physician and Surgeon, was
born, April 2d, 1814, in ITanklin
who was
for a lady
renowned
by the name of Guilte,
and accomplishand without the sanction of the church they were married and raised a large family of children, some of whom
ments
|j^
E.VRSON, JOSEPH, Lawyer and ex-Judge
of Pro-
greatly
for her beauty
;
accompanied the Conqueror
to
England, where they
re-
Miami County, Ohio, was born, in 180S, mained. From one of the family sprang Sir Mathias Major, at Carlisle, Cumberland county, Pennsylvania. who obtained a grant of arms (see “ Patronymica BritanHis early education was obtained at the common nica ” ), and was lineal ancestor of Richard Major, Esq., of schools of his native place, and when he had ar- Hurdsley, Hampshire county, England, whose daughter, bate for
{'0
rived at the proper age he was apprenticed there to learn the trade of saddler.
When
he was nineteen years
old he removed to Ohio and settled at Troy, in Miami
county; there he worked industriously at his just-acquired trade, but
he was equally industrious aside from
chanical calling.
All his leisure lime
was occupied
his
me-
in
add-
ing to the limited education he had heretofore been able to secure.
After a while he began to read law in the hours
when he was
not working at his trade.
thorough and the bar.
The
he was admitted to making saddles was then relin-
effective that eventually
business of
His reading was so
Dorethy Margaret, married Richard, afterwards Lord Protector
Cromwell.
After
Richard Major migrated
the to
restoration
America and
town, Virginia, in the year 1660.
of Charles settled in
Francis, the
fifth
scent from the American founder of the family, and
name heads
this article, after
institution
Paris,
in
1834.
He
nerative practice until 1847,
same
State
;
in
de-
whose
and graduated from
soon afterwards located
Kentucky, where he enjoyed a very
ton, in the
.
completing his education en-
tered the Transylvania Medical College, that
11
York-
select
when he removed
in that city
in
and remuto
Coving-
he remained in the prac-
BIOGRAPHICAL encvclop.l;dia. In that year he removed
tice of his profession until 1861.
251
Mack &
immediately entered the house of
wards Mack, Stradler
&
In 1S64 he was banished from the State of Kentucky on account of his sympathy with the cause of the rebellion, al-
mained
salesman until 1870.
though he had committed no overt
greatest inconveniences
to
Lexington, and remained there for a period of three years.
He
ment.
against the govern-
act
then took up his residence at Hamilton, Ohio,
as a travelling
Co.
among Western merchants he soon their youths’
and boys’
— the
Brothers, after-
In this establishment he re-
In travelling
discovered one of their
necessity of going East
Then
clothing.
for
was only one
there
and speedily gained an extensive professional practice, and house in Cincinnati doing but a small business in that line At Hamilton he has continued to none in St. Louis, and, in fact, little of the trade was supa wide circle of friends. He occupies a high and enviable position plied anywhere in the West. This induced him to plan the reside ever since. establishment of a manufactory of youths’ and boys’ clothing is a man of cultivation and learning, and in his profession ;
;
eiijoys the confidence
and respect of the
Ann
In 1840 he married
died in 1847, leaving him two sons. his present wife, Ellen
community.
entire
F. Smi.h, of Paris,
Kentucky; she
In 1854 he married
C. Dudley, of Cincinnati, and the
of this marriage has been two children, a son and a
fruit
on a scale suited to the demands of the West.
in Cincinnati
During
salesman in 1865 he became acquainted with and married Sarah Wolff, of Mount Vernon, Ohio.
his
travels as a
'Ihe following year this
good lady
L. Katzenberger, of Cincinnati.
daughter.
approved by his
OLDSHITH, ALBERT,
Wholesale Clothing Mer-
chant, was born in the city of Hanover,
Germany.
In 1SG8
died.
he was again married to Carrie Katzenberger, daughter of
own
capital,
was formed.
His business plans were
who
joined him and the house of Katzenberger
his father-in-law,
Their capacity
at
&
once with
Goldsmith
supply the want long
to
felt
goods soon became known, and in a few trade sprang up far beyond their expectations,
in this line of
His father, Moses Goldsmith, was a successful months their Hanoverian merchant twenty years ago, after which induced them in 1871 to add to their firm Mr. L. putting his estate and business interests in the Loeb, a merchant of large experience and considerable hands of his children, he retired from active life. means. After the success of this house was seen to be as;
This
The
is
a practice largely in vogue in parts of Germany.
parent gives up his entire estate to his children, secur-
ing a sufficient amount against uncertain changes, on which a certain annuity port.
is
A similar
be paid by the children for his sup-
to
many
plan might in
The
in this country.
instances be followed
subject of this sketch
is
the youngest
of a family of six children, and until the age of fifteen most
of his time was spent in school.
was put
in
Leaving
he
his studies
a mercantile house to learn business.
For
this
business education and learning his father paid a regular fee,
which practice yet
and other
exists to a very great extent in that
Germany and Europe
parts of
At the
generally.
age of eighteen he entered a dry-goods jobbing house
Hanover
which position he occuBefore Prussia extended her authority
as a travelling salesman,
pied for six years.
over the kingdom of Hanover
man
in
starting in
any business
it
was customary
regularly authorized board. ried out in
and
for the
remarkable
Mr. Goldsmith now began
thrift
to
sider the propriety of emigrating to the United States.
make
cities, first
but this establishment has
house of the kind of any im-
portance west of the Alleghenies.
The manufacture
of
and boys’ clothing has become one of the large business interests of Cincinnati, and in it this house takes the youths’
They now give employment to five or hundred men, women and children, and extend their
position of pioneer. six
trade over the greater part of the Territories and Western
and .Southern
in
Mr. Goldsmith
States.
social associations,
is
a
the societies of the church of which he
ber.
Few men,
certainly fewer
member
of
many
and has held many prominent positions is
an active
hardly yet passed into the prime of
commencing
such a late date
at
mem-
life,
in
and this
country, can present such a career of business success, or position in business
and
social circles.
fitness before a
This wise regulation was car-
and doubtless largely accounts
opportunities to
position as
its
by travel and work, and
to his ability
and although a slow process, it proreliable and skilful race of business men,
American Germans.
and other Western
maintained
young occupy so enviable a
all pursuits,
duced a superior,
nati
to serve a regular apprentice-
ship, perfect himself in his trade
undergo an examination as
for a
sured, other establishments of the kind started up in Cincin-
of
IGELOW, LORIN, M.
D., was born in Vermont,
He
February 12th, 1792. tion.
His father was a
a larmer.
is
of English extrac-
])reacher, a
mechanic and
His early educational advantages were
con-
few, but at the age of eighteen he attended the
The
Chesterfield
great fortunes in the dominions of
King William are few and far between. The man of moderate means seldom, and the poor man never, rises there. Through the urgent demands of a brother who had jireceded him and his own ambition, he at length determined In 1864 he landed at Cincinnati, and to come to America.
Academy,
in
New
Hampshire, where
he became acquainted with the languages. for the profession of
Having
a love
medicine, he resolved to enter upon a
course of study. Having accomplished his purpose, he commenced to practise in Westmoreland county, Tennsylvania. Twelve years of his early life were passed in Pennsylvania, but he had formerly resided in Ohio. He returned to Ohio,
BIOGRAPHICAL EA’CVCLOP.EDIA.
252
and
on the same farm
settled
Palmyra, Portage county,
at
where he now resides with a son. 1814 to Amy H. Oldham, a native of
He was married in New Hampshire, and wdrom
six children blessed the union, only three of
sons
— survive.
and
is
now one
In politics he
and
’51
He
all
practised at Palmyra with great success,
of the most venerable of
he represented
its
retired citizens.
During the years 1849-50
a Democrat.
is
—
his
fellow'-citizens
the
in
State
Legislature, and assisted in the adoption of the revised State
He was
Constitution.
and
as a
part
in
member
quite prominent
in
local politics,
of the Legislature performed an important
the regulation of the school
law, an
which was the subject of much agitation
loaded with iron and ready
the freight for that
made much
river.
He
took
;
The
to
descend to Louisville.
to
have him continue on the boat, and offered him a
captain desired very
clerkship; so he continued on to the port aforesaid, and,
“keeping boat” a few weeks, was discharged. Thus his keel-boating; and now, in the year 1876, he con-
after
ended
himself to be the
fidently believes
strong, hardy, daring race of
merce of
the
Ohio
valley in
last
men who
survivor of that
carried on the com-
keel-boats, propelled
against
the current by long poles, with heavy iron sockets on the
He
lower end, and a round smoothed knob, turned from the
at the time.
root of the laurel, to
the
of 1818,
fall
Orleans
Ohio
descend the
hand arriving at Cincinnati port was discharged and preparations
instrument
was twice married.
OUDON, JAMES,
to
a situation on the boat as a
Farmer, Major-General of the
fit
the shoulder, on the top end.
and also
trips to
In
New
what were then designated broad horse-boats,
in
On
afterwards called fialboats.
work
he made
in 1819,
both these occasions he had
his
way home on
in
the printing of a newspaper at the
and Henry county, Kentucky, October 2ist, two savage nations of Indians. He made many other trips 1796, and was the oldest of three children whose to that southern centre in the same class of boats, and was parents were John Loudon and Dorcas (Master- always lucky enough to find a steamboat to return in. In son) Loudon. His father, a native of Washing- 1820 he associated himself with William Butt and David born
State
Militia
and ex-State Senator, was
foot through the wilderness
in
ton county, Pennsylvania, follow'ed through pursuits,
to
and was a
the battle of Fallen Timbers.
Kentucky, where he had
life
agricultural
under General Wayne,
participant,
He
settled
died in Henry county, in
grandfather w'as actively engaged
in
1794.
His paternal
in association
patriots during the Revolutionary struggle.
with the
His maternal
Ammen in
July of that year the Benefactor
sold his interest to one of his partners,
of General Washington, and was intimately identified with
tinued for
His mother was a native of
efforts.
made
its
appearance.
His
connection with the paper continued one year; he then
removed
and
village
This was the pioneer newspaper of Brown county.
grandfather, John Masterson, w'as one of the body-guards
colonial measures
little
of Levana, two miles below Ripley, on the Ohio river, and
to
Georgetown, where
many
its
Although
years.
been excessively limited
in
and the paper was
publication was con-
had
his early education
both degree and kind, his read-
Washington county, and one of a family whose male mem-
ing and .study and one year’s drilling with the composing-
bers w'ere prominent
stick at the type-case, together with
throughout the troublous period of
In 1806 he
uprising.
moved
with his mother to
Brown
vation, counterbalanced
to a
keen powers of obser-
considerable degree the lack
1822 he taught a country school,
county, Ohio, settling at a point distant about six miles east
of primary training.
from Georgetown, on the farm of Neil Washburn, whence,
with more satisfaction to his employers than to himself.
at the expiration of four years,
to Arnheini,
Brown
he and the family removed
county, where a farm was rented and a
residence maintained for a period of about two years.
His
the
fall
In
In
of this year his friends elected him to the office of
In 1824 he was re-elected to the 1826 he was elected Sheriff of Brown
Coroner of the county.
same
office.
In
County, and re-elected to the same position in 1828, thus whereupon the family serving his county as Coroner and Sheriff eight years. He moved to River Hill, on the Ohio river, a short distance was married, July nth, 1826, to Elizabeth Chaj-man, a below Ripley. Here he made his home during the ensuing native of Brown county, Ohio, a daughter of Henry Chapfourteen years, employed in laboring on the farm, and man, one of the early pioneers of the country, who came during the summer months of five or six of those years in from Kentucky in 1800. He was a native of Pennsylvania In 1831 he clerking in dry-goods stores, while river occupations con- and an active participant in the war of 1812. sumed his time through the winters. His first boating was was employed in a dry-goods store in Georgetown. In the
mother was then again married
to
Joshua Jordan, one of the
earlier pioneer settlers of the country,
on the Ohio, he made a next
fall
in the
old keel-boat line.
trip to the salt
he made a
trip
In the
fall
of 1813
works on the Kanawha river; the from Cincinnati to Pittsburgh, and
attempted to go to the head of navigation on the Allegheny river,
but after getting up about sixty miles found there was
not water enough to allow the boat to pass over the shoals; so the boat had to wait for a rise in the river, and the
went back
to
Pittsburgh.
Here he found
his
men
old boat
spring of 1832 he
about four miles
left
agriculture, taking a to the business.
finally
1835
hand himself
many of lower House
In 1S34
be a candidate for the
he
Georgetown and settled on his farm, and engaged in general
.south of this place,
consented to stand a
he was re-elected
to
the
in
any branch incident
him to Ohio Legislature;
his friends urged
of the
poll,
and was elected.
same
place.
In
This year
trouble arose between the authorities of the State of
Ohio
BIOGRAPHICAL EXCVCLOILEDIA.
253
and those of the Territory of Michigan, in regard to the A long and threatening cor-
General Grant, which event terminated the war.
northern boundary of Ohio.
retirement
respondence was kept up between Governor Lucas and the Governor Lucas Department of State at Washington.
tranquil
which
called an extra session of the Legislature of Ohio,
met
General Loudon
at this session
|une of that year;
in
took a very active part in support of the claim of Ohio, and He was greatly indorsed the course of her Governor.
from
last-mentioned
the
and secluded
home
life in his
Since his
he has led a Georgetown. He
office at
a firm believer in the Christian religion, but never at-
is
tached himself to any particular denomination.
From 1S24
i860 he was a “ hard-money Jackson Democrat.”
to
Since
the outbreak of the rebellion he favors the Republicans.
pleased to see in the course of a year Michigan Territory
changed and admitted into the Union agreeing of course to the boundary
as
one of the States, as
lines
WiVlEATMAN, HON. THOMAS
claimed by
This forever settled that vexed question, leaving Ohio in possession of the mouth of the Maumee bay and
I ;
L
was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, July Sth, 1S05. was the only son of Griffin Yeatman and His father, one of the early Jane Yeatman.
He
the ground on which the beautiful city of Toledo stands.
In 1836 he was again elected to the lower
General Assembly.
At
this session
and probably did more than any one William Allen,
House
of the
he took an active
March
United States Senate.
pioneers
part,
else, in electing his
Ohio, was born
of
March
county, Virginia,
8th,
1770;
what
2d, 1837, having been previously elected by the Legislature,
June 27th, 1793, Queen City of the West,
he was formally commissioned Major-General, by Governor
of a few thousand inhabitants; he
friend,
Vance, and given
to the
command
of the
In 1S42 he was elected to
Militia.
8th fill
Division
Ohio
a vacancy in the
Banker and
H.,
Bresident of the Cincinnati Pioneer Association,
Ohio.
arrival,
initiated in Cincinnati,
in it
is
in
at
now
Westmoreland
the
time of his
justly entitled the
was scarcely more than a village was the first Free Mason
Ohio, and remained an active
ber of the Masonic organization until
mem-
the day of his de-
Ohio Senate, occasioned by the resignation of Senator cease, March 4th, 1849; he held various offices of trust in P'oose, of Clinton county. In 1843 he was re-elected to the city, and for twenty-seven years served as Recorder of the same position and served two terms, during 1843-44-45 Hamilton County. His son, Thomas H. Yeatman, received and ’45. In 1849 he was elected a delegate from Brown his education under the tuition of Rev. Joshua H. Wilson, county
man
Convention was made ChairCommittee of Finance and Taxation, and suc-
to the Constitutional
of the
cessfully carried through the
;
Twelfth Article, and
He
a part of the Constitution. every township in his
district,
it
became
addressed the people
and urged them
When
the adoption of the Constitution.
in
to vote for
his labors termi-
Edmund
Caleb Kemper and
Seminary;
at
dent Elijah Slack, his
Harrison, of the Lancasterian
the age of sixteen he graduated, under Presiat the
Cincinnati College.
He
then
left
home, and through the assistance of General William
Henry Harrison, afterward President of the United States, the appointment of Midshipman in the United
received
nated with that deliberative body he returned to his farm,
States navy.
intending never again to mingle in the arena of politics;
sea at once, he received orders to report to Captain R. T.
nor would he,
Spence, of
if
it
had not been
for the terrible rebellion
Subsequently, at his expressed desire to go to
New
York,
in
command
of the corvette “
Cyane,”
news a vessel captured with the “ Levant ” from the British by that Fort Sumter was fired upon, and that the wicked war the United States frigate “Constitution,” off the coast of had begun, he declared his ardent love for the “old star- Africa, in 1815. The “Cyane” was then on the point of spangled banner,” and, like his political godfather, “ Old sailing, and, wasting no time, he reported himself as Hickory,” swore “ By the Eternal, the Constitution must ordered, and within thirty days from the time of leaving that
came upon
the country.
From
be preserved.”
that time
denunciations of the rebel in
his
power
country.
to
On
spirit.
the arrival of the
he was outspoken
in
South or North, doing
Cincinnati
travelled alone over the mountains
all
horseback
the
encourage the patriotic sentiment of the
In 1863 the Republicans and Union
men
of his
Senatorial district held a convention to select a candidate for State Senator,
and
vote for that position.
—having — was on
his
West Indies and
on
high seas journeying toward the
the African coast, where the ship
was
eventually detained, in the suppression of the slave trade, for
more than a
year.
On
his return to the
United States
in his
absence gave him a unanimous
he was again ordered to the port of South Africa and
On
being notified of the action of
West
Indies, in
1822 or 1823,011 the frigate “ Constella-
and took early tion.” He then accompanied the United States Minister, steps for a vigorous canvass. Although he had to encounter the celebrated Joel R. Poinsett, of South Carolina, to Vera a Democratic majority of some 1500 votes, he was elected. Cruz, en route to Mexico, and w’as for two years in active He took his seat in January after the election, and for two service under Commodore David Porter, the hero of the years gave his best efforts to the cause of the country. He “ Essex,” at Valparaiso, who had charge of the “ Moscpiito was the sitting member of his district in the Ohio Senate fleet” in the West Indies; was shipwrecked on the United the convention, he accepted the nomination
when
the
news was received that General Lee, of the Con- States schooner “ Terrier,” off Wilmington, North Carolina. had surrendered himself and command to On his return to the United States, having served over five
federate army,
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA.
254
years in the navy and narrowdy escaping a watery grave, he
township. Perry county, Ohio, for the perioa of a year.
again took up his residence in Cincinnati, Ohio
the conclusion of this term of teaching he began to turn his
from the naval service and entered into business broker, on Third street, in
retired
;
as a
life
He was
1828 or thereabout.
the initial introducer into this street of the hanking busi-
whose
ness,
Wall
vast
street of the
He
West.
was
&
Voorhes
branches of
Many
him,
of the works erected by
In iSjl he purchased the
for the past
in
still
site
remained there
faithfully in his
removed been
profession.
many
one
In
Here,
in
Tennessee, he served
United
as
States
in
Assistant
home
Ohio, and
in
in
1868 was elected President of the
Cincinnati Pioneer Association.
In the
of 1869 he w-as
fall
elected State Senator from Hamilton county, Ohio. ginally a
member
of the old
Whig
Ori-
school, in politics, he
has of late years pursued an independent course, and on the
Independent
ticket
of 2500 votes.
was elected
He was
to the
Examining Surgeon
Whig
to the State capital.
He
at
has always taken an active
His early allegiance was given
to the
and ever since the breaking out of the war of the rebellion he has been a steadfast member of the Repub-
He
party.
lican trict
party,
was chosen Elector of the Twelfth Dis-
of Ohio in the year 1868,
when General Grant was
In 1847 he married Susan E. Shaeffer, daughter of F. A. Shaeffer, of Lancaster, Ohio.
elected to the Presidency.
The marriage has been blessed by twelve Lodge whom survive.
Senate by a majority
initiated in the Lafayette
fair to
Lancaster, and continued to hold that position until he re-
interest in politics.
After the close of the rebellion he returned to his
Columbus.
In the year 1862 he w'as
Pension
States
moved
Vicks-
to
of labor, he bids
field
Lancaster.
at
appointment of Government Purchasing Agent burg.
For
establish very soon a professional reputation equal to that
Treasury Agent for that place, and afterwards received the at
removed
later they
a more extended
appointed United
phis,
year 1854, he
in the
1870 he formed a professional partnership with Dr.
Kinsman, and four years
which he enjoyed
twm years
his residence of nearly
Then,
ing successfully, and securing a very extensive patronage.
Mem-
During
practice.
years the scene of his father’s work.
from Washington, District of Columbia, to North Bend, Ohio.
commenced
a period of eight years, laboring
Lancaster, Fairfield county, Ohio, which had
to
for so
for
of his pres-
on the way
in Cincinnati, w'hen
He
twenty years he continued there, laboring hard and labor-
He was
forty-four years.
Perry county, Ohio, and there
erset,
it
of the marshals wdio received the remains of President
William Henry Harrison
to
versity of Maryland. Here he graduated in March, 1847, and immediately after his graduation he returned to Som-
ent residence, just below the city, which he improved and
has resided on
Then he went
Ohio.
Shield, and
use in the city and are a recognized source of wealth to
and the county.
Lancaster,
at
period con-
conjunction with other business men, are
in
Boerstler,
&
tributed in a highly important measure to the commercial
prosperity of Cincinnati.
Dr.
at a later
which eventually con-
industry
For a time he studied under the direction of
followed.
Baltimore and entered the medical department of the Uni-
it
Co., in the manufacture of steam engines, sugar-
etc.,
which he has since successfully
attention to the profession
the
nected with the firm of Yeatman, Wilson
mills,
made
extent, since acquired, has
At
children, nine of
of Free Masons, in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1829 or thereabout,
He was
and has taken the council degrees. 1S27
to Elizabeth Hartzell, of Cincinnati,
to celebrate their golden
and
married
in
hojies to live
^‘ONELSON, REV.
wedding, which takes place Feb-
was
ruary 8th, 1S77.
born
April
in
17th, 1825,
graduated
PARK SHATTUCK,
P'ranklin
and
is
of Scotch origin.
the University of
at
M., Physician and
geon, was born on the Carroll
Carrollton,
1st
county,
Columbiana county, Ohio. John Wagenhals, came
in
His
at
was then
wdiat
father, the
to this country
Rev.
from Wit-
temberg when he was eighteen years of age, and soon afterwards began a long and honorable career as minister
of a Lutheran Church.
people,
much
ministrations.
connected w sylvania. literary
ith
On
still
among
lives
his
the mother’s side
Dr. Wagenhals
is
the family of Governor Snyder, of Penn-
In his early
education
at
life
the
he received a sound German institution
Capitol University of Columbus.
was
He
beloved, and assisting occasionally in pulpit
intrusted with
which
is
At the age of
the charge of a school
in
now
the
fifteen
he
Hopewell
Auburn,
New
York, became a minister of the Methodist Epis-
Sur-
of March, 1825,
He
Michigan, and,
after taking a theological course in
AGENHALS, PHILIP
D. D..
Massachusetts,
county,
His
copal Church. of Michitran.
order to assume
first
station w'as at Lansing, the capital
1856 he moved
In
the
to
Delaware, Ohio, in
Presidency of the Ohio Wesleyan
Female College, where he officiated with notable success a period embracing more than seventeen years, graduating in that time eighteen classes, numbering in all over for
three years,
hundred students. under
attendance
at
During the major portion of these
admirable and thorough management, the the college was larger than that of any similar
his
Through his labors in this field he won an enduring reputation as an excellent instructor, and to-day is widely known and recognized as one of the leadinstitution
in Ohio.
In 1873 he resigned the presiing educators in the State. dency of the college and accepted the position of pastor of
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA. St.
He
Paul’s Methodist Episcopal Church, of Toledo, Ohio. is
now
Presiding Elder of the Toledo District, which
25s
cupies, and, in addition to the careful conduct of an extensive
and lucrative private practice, presides also over the
management of a private hospital for the treatment of distwenty-five charges and pastors, seven of which are located eases of women. He is a member of the American Medical His degree of D. D. he received from Indiana Association of the Ohio State Medical Society, of which in the city. Asbury University, and is noticeable as being the first hon- he was formerly President, and of the Cincinnati Academy He is also a corresponding member of the orary degree conferred upon any alumnus of Michigan of Medicine. University. He is favorably known as a facile writer, an Zanesville Academy of Medicine, and a corresponding and able divine and a ready speaker and preacher; and, while member of the Northwestern Medical Association his charges and sermons bear convincing evidence of close corresponding member of the Van Wert Medical Society. Their study, careful arrangement and conscientious research, he He was married in 1853 to .Sarah A. Chappelear. embraces a large part of northwestern Ohio, including
;
;
dispenses entirely with manuscripts while in the pulpit, pre-
more
ferring, as a
and touch
effective
means
his listeners, to deliver
He
discourse.
wa^
a
member
to gain the
them
end
in
view
late
Judge
daughter of Samuel she
is
He
Dexter,
Dexter,
Michigan, and
of Boston,
EID, REV. ALEXANDER M’CANDLESS,
the
Pn. D., Proprietor and Principal of the Steu-
grand-
P'emale Seminary, Ohio, was born in Beaver county, Pennsylvania, April 20th, 1827.
benville
Massachusetts;
Hon. Nicholas Dexter, of Chicago, and possesses powers of mind scarcely inferior
to those of that
noted
the wdfe of Dr. G. S. Mitchell, of Cincinnati,
in the guise of a
also to
sister
Illinois,
is
of the General Conference
in 1868, and took a prominent part in its deliberations. was married in 1S51 to Katharine Dexter, daughter of
Dexter, of
only child
Ohio.
His
father,
Henry Reid,
as
also of
mother, Jane piety,
was so
(M’Candless) sorely
well
Reid, a
woman
Obstetrics
of
and
A., A. M., Clinical
M.
D., Professor
Midwifery
the
in
Medical College of Ohio, a distinguished physician of Cincinnati, Ohio,
was born
county, Virginia, April 28th, 1829.
in
Erederick
His
father,
Jacob A. Reamy, a native of Virginia, was of Erench extraction; his mother, Mary W. (Bonifield) Reamy, also a native of Virginia,
While
quite
was of Scotch-English
young he moved with his parents where his mother still
to
origin.
Ohio and and
of notable
with rheumatism that for
afflicted
twenty years she was unable to walk or
THADDEUS
f^jEAMY,
Beaver county,
and favorably known a Presbyterian elder of unimpeachable rectitude; his Pennsylvania, was
citizen.
to
move from her
He
was educated at Cannonsburg, in the Jefferson College, and at the Allegheny Theological Seminary.
chair.
Upon
relinquishing school
he engaged
life
in teaching at
Sewickley Academy, Pennsylvania, associated with Rev.
Joseph
S. Travelle,
and there remained
for several years.
In 1855 he went to Europe for the purpose of extending his
sphere
of
foreign travel. of
knowledge and
He was
married
finding in
Mercer county, Pennsylvania.
improvement
in
1855 to Sarah Lambert, In October, 1856, he
became associated with Rev. Dr. Charles C. Beatty in the where his father’s decease occurred, at the age of eighty- management of the Steubenville Female Seminary, an intwo years, in 1872. In the spring of 1854, at the com- stitution over which he has presided as proprietor and pletion of the usual course of studies, he graduated at principal for several years past. During the nineteen years settled near Zanesville,
Starling
resides
Medical College, in Columbus, Ohio.
Subse-
quently he received from the Ohio Wesleyan University the
hundred and
degree of Master of Arts.
of boarding pupils about ninety;
sor of Materia
pupils that have attended here
In 1857 he was elected ProfesMedica and Therapeutics in the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery, which position he occupied for two years. In 1861 he was elected a member
number of numbei whole number of
of his connection with the seminary the average pupils has been about one
is
the
fifty;
the
over four thousand.
He
received his degree of Doctor rf Philosophy (Ph. D.) from
Washington and
Jefferson College.
In 1875 he went as a
from Muskingum county, and delegate to the Pan-Presbyterian Assembly at London, during the same year was appointed Surgeon of the I22d representing the Northern Presbyterian Church. After the Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry. In 1865 he was close of his labors with that body he made an extensive of the
State
Legislature
elected Professor of the Diseases of in Starling
him
Medical College.
until, after
his return
Women
and Children tour of the continent, visiting P' ranee, Switzerland, Germany, and Holland, after having journeyed through England and While abroad, in 1855, he was the European corthe spring of Wales.
This position was held by
from Europe,
in
1870, he removed to Cincinnati, where he was immediately
respondent for two newspapers, and for
elected Professor of Obstetrics and Clinical Midwife
written
Hospital.
more or
less regularly for the
many
years has
general press.
Of
his
and Gynaecologist for the many brilliant sermons several have been published, and in These positions he now oc- a printed form elicited warm encomiums from many cpiar-
the Medical College of Ohio,
Good Samaritan
,
in
BIOGRAnilCAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA.
256 ti
The
rs.
following condensation of facts is gathered from “ Nineteen years ago Rev. A. M.
various reliable sources
Reid, Ph. D., and
number
:
who had been
wife,
teaching
for
a
became con-
of years in Sewickley, Pennsylvania,
nected with the institution (Steubenville P'emale Seminary),
and
number of
for a
To
hands.
in their
was not easy
years
its
management has been
active
take the place of Dr. and Mrs. Beatty
but Dr. and Mrs. Reid have demonstrated
;
and responsible situation by
their entire fitness for this high
marked success in government, struction, and in making the seminary a
and
discipline
the most
home
real
in-
for its
In the curriculum of study, in the method of
pupils.”
teaching and
acknowledged improvements they have
in all
m.aintained their position with unvarying energy, and kept the seminary in
its
original
which has been one of
religious influence, tures,
its
notable fea-
has been maintained without the slightest abatement.
“ Providence brought
Mont
Switzerland, on
spoke
and leading position; while the
together two
stranger
tourists,
in
Dr. Comingo, on his return,
Blanc.
Dr. Beatty of the pleasant meeting he had with
to
Mr. Reid, and
Mr. Reid, with his
this led to the relation.
and earnest devotion
standard of scholarship up to
to his
Death has made few
a serious case of sickness.
and
Pestilence
worthy also for
known
of
visits.
is
note-
women,
sensible, intelligent
character;
ready for emergencies; occupying
abreast of the limes; positions
as
mind and symmetry of
of
breatllh
The seminary
it.”
average of scholarship and character.
its
graduates are
Its
showing
have spared
fire
and
responsibility
usefulness
country, as wives, as mothers, as teachers.
over
all
the
Its religious in-
fluence has been wielded in a manner, and with results
and
direct
after revival
indirect,
from usual or common
far
has swept
it
with beneficent
effect
;
:
revival
ingathering
has recalled the careless and the unthink-
after ingathering
ing; twenty per cent, of the pupils have yearly been brought
within the sheltering portal of the church, while, in
been scrupulously freed from or ecstatic
tion
and
The
character.
nature of the pupil spirit
all
means used and blessed have ever
these awakenings, the
is
devices of an emotional
all
education of
the
spiritual
here inevitable, from the constitu-
The prominence
of the school.
given to
Bible instruction, the family prayers, the half hours for
work, has kept the
devotion, the weekly prayer meeting, the prayer meeting
demands of the
the
calamity
and rare aptness
fine literary taste, ripe scholarship, love of
for teaching
remarkable for the exemption from disease, death and it has enjoyed. Long years have passed without
is
age.
dawn
the
at
of the
new
motto
year, the
for
the year,
Gifted with the faculty of examining a case from different
the serious word, the gentle reminder, the frequent visits
standpoints; uniting gentleness with firmness, the family
of the pastor, the Sabbath services
type originally impressed upon the school has been pre-
to
served.”
estimable wife has in countless ways and
Ills
guises assisted importantly in the arduous yet pleasant
home and
of preserving and developing the
by her plans
and
for social
aesthetical
work
family feeling;
culture, in the
way
of frequent opportunities for social intercourse, the monthly
observance of family and school oc-
birthday fetes, the
speeches, the
anniversaries, post-prandial
casions, special
cultivation of plants
and flowers, and the love of nature,
fostered by frequent rambles in the lovely glens around
and on the health-giving
Steubenville across
the
river.
Together Dr. and
guides of the seminary, have,
acknowledged, ever kept stitution
:
to give solid
in
mind
now moulding
the
the high aim of the in-
culture, refined
Christian character to those under
of Virginia,
everywhere cheerfully
is
it
hills
Mrs. Reid, as
its
the third generation,
This .seminary,
is
remarkable on ac-
have been found
all
history
and
excellent prin-
Its
an ardent lover of pure, strong
cipal,
literature, poetiy,
essays, finds, perhaps, his greatest pleasure
in
teaching Latin, Greek, astronomy and literature, branches to
which he devotes
work.
and
his
his special attention in his class-room
personal
But, perhaps, his
influence
work accomplished by
best
is
most
lectures
his
to
felt
the
whole school on a great range of subjects of importance These are such subjects to all well-informed people. as the “ Current news of the world, culture, manners,
men and women a
powerful
of note,
influence
art,
in
and well-informed, and so society.
And
besides
manners and true subjects connected with
roof.
—
be means of grace greatly blessed.
the
fitting
them
these
culture
— have
girls
to
earnest
his
spiritual
exalted Christian character
These exert
science,” etc.
making
thoughtful
be forces
in
addresses
on
— the
need of an
a moulding power the
measure of which eternity alone can
reveal.
count of the widespread and plainly discernible influence
which
it
has so beneficially exercised throughout a long
array of years
— an
influence
which has controlled with ad-
mirable results not only individuals, but also institutions,
New
England,
homes and churches,
in
Southern and Western
.States, in
lands and in the the river, the
isles
of the sea.
canal-boat and
in
the
Middle,
the Territories, in foreign
In
the
its
earlier days,
when
lumbering stage-coach
^TANTON,
IION.
EDWIN
M., LL. D., Lawyer,
Attorney-General and Secretary of War, was born at Steubenville,
Ohio, in 1S14.
lie
was of Quaker
descent, his grandparents having been prominent
and widely respected residents of New England, and noted for their anti-slavery opinions. Ilis have advanced so wondrously, the Atlantic, the Pacific, the early education was acquired chiefly at Kenyon College, Gulf and the lakes meet here in their representatives. “ It which he left in 1832, when advanced in his junior year.
were the only means of afar;”
transit, “ its
while to-day, even when
daughters came from
facilities
for education
,
•
V
’
.
Il*-
}
tji'
I
I i
/ 0
11 *
i L
.'
>
I
Sii^%
KKh t
'!«
BIOGRArillCAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA. lie then pureued a course of legal studies, and, upon
completion, became a resident of
member
parations for the active campaign of 1862 he pressed vigo-
its
of the Ohio bar, and later a
very
through
often
of the State
Union, and proffering needed and shrewd officials with whom he was brought
Throughout the
into contact.
self to the cause of the
selfishness
entire war he devoted himUnion with an earnestness and un-
only equalled by his masterly ability, untiring
energy, never-failing resource, undaunted courage and grand
Federal Government had the power, and that
should Grant secure a victory
it
was
When
confidence in the triumph of right. pressed to several
was well
exigencies
civil
counsel to the various
by Buchanan before the meeting of Congress, he advised him to incorporate into his message the doctrine that the It
was
night,
entire
sending important telegraph communication
;
to all parts of the
and decided measures; wdien consulted
duty to coerce seceding States.
the
occupied in attending to the military and
Buchanan he secured, by the able exercise of talents natural and acquired, a wide and honorable reputation as a scholarly, enterprising and energetic citizen and practitioner; in i860, under the above-mentioned administration, he was appointed Attorney-General of the United States. At the outbreak of the Rebellion he advised the Government to institute without delay prompt
and,
rously,
Prior to the administration of
Pennsylvania.
257
its
members
officer to negotiate
for the country
Lincoln ex-
of the Cabinet his intention, at
Richmond,
to
permit that
terms of peace with the Confederate
momentous period, he held the Attorney-Gene- Generals, he steadfastly opposed such a measure, declaring and fearless patriot was greatly needed bluntly that no one had the right to attend to such matters Government at that time. After taking the oath of but the President; from this resulted the order to Grant inhe said to a friend “ I have t.aken the oath to sup- structing him to hold no conferences with Lee except on
that, at this
ralship, for a true in the office,
:
my
port the Constitution of
country
;
that oath
intend to
I
Ably did he keep
questions of a purely military nature.
Subsequent
to the
his
surrender of Richmond, Lincoln was about to permit the
pledge amid the en ruing treasons and perils that environed
assembling of the rebel Legislature of Virginia by General Weitzel Stanton, however, apprehending peril, opposed it
keep both the
in letter
and
in spirit.”
Union; unveiling treacherous
with his stern rebukes earn.estly
he blasted them
;
Cabinet he constantly and
in the
;
officials,
earnestly,
advocated swift and decisive action, denouncing
propriations were
the unwise temporising spirit manifested by several high officers fearing to
commit themselves too openly; was General Seott;
closeted in council with
members of
the
Peace Congress;
with the Republicans
in
regarding Toucey, Secretary of the
Navy, was inspired by
who
E.
M.
endeavoring to subvert the Government.
for
loyal
purposes, and, on
daring
to
cause
When
conduct of Colonel Anderson
at I-’orts
tendered his resignation the great
Montgomery
Office until the
was E. M.
Blair,
Finally, the quarter
to
at
Lincoln, saying that
and he consented
to
disbandment of the army.
its ulti-
When
the
M'ashington he
President, however, induced
his determination,
Stanton that rose and with fierce loyalty abashearties, and probably on the same formed a part of the force under the command of GenAfter be had received the amount of eral Pope which drove the enemy out of New Madrid, extortionate terms. five
dollars
for
service
this
!
anticipated about that time, a large
sixty-five dollars,
he started
for
Toledo, and after his arrival
there eng.aged in the lumber forwarding business, assisted
by
P.
M. Dinger of
New
Vork, and others, and by means
of Philadel[)hia, Boston and Albany houses, established an extensive trade.
He
built at this city sever.al vessels,
being the schooner" Benson,” and sent her the
first
to sea;
vessel leaving the lakes, loaded with grain,
direct to Europe.
He
also built the schooner
one
she was
bound
“A. L. An-
and which, Island oners.
in April, crossed
Number Ten,
He
the Mississippi and captured
together with several thousand pris-
remained under General Pope
evacuation of Corinth by Beauregard.
until after the
In July, 1862, he
]ilaced in command of the Ohio Brigade, which soon became among the most famous in the Western army. This brigade was composed of the 27th (Fuller’s), 39th (Governor Noyes), 43d (General Wager Swayne), and the 63d (Gen-
was
BIOGRAPHICAL EXCYCLOICL DIA. At luka
Sprague).
eral
only to see
brigade came to the
this
close, but at the battle of Corinth
its
it
fight
played
Fuller was specially
so conspicuous a part, that Colonel
teaching school
295
the
in
same county, and
and Ross
in that
county found steady occupation as an educator, for a period of lour years.
In
the
year of his experience as a
final
commenced the reading of law, under the superMcDowell and Collins, of Hillsborough, and in
mentioned by Generals Hanley and Rosecrans, and he was
teacher, he
afterwards promoted to the rank of Brigadier-General, for
vision of
command
1845 attended a course of lectures at the law school of
fought Forrest at Parker’s Cross Roads, Tennessee, driving
On the 25th of December, 1845, he passed the required examination, and was admitted to the
In December, 1862, his
services at this battle.
across the Tennessee river, capturing seven pieces of
him
and three hundred and
artillery
In March,
sixty prisoners.
Cincinnati, Ohio.
He
bar.
then opened a law office in Hillsborough, and
1864, he crossed the Tennessee river with his forces by
entered upon the practice of his profession, ])rimarily, for
night and captured Decatur, Al.abama, at daylight, which
In the Atlanta campaign his
one year, as a member of the law firm with which he had begun his studies, afterward alone until March, 1873, '"’hen
Kenesaw
he took into partnership with him his present law partner,
place they strongly
fortified.
brigade was conspicuous at Resaca, Dallas and
Mountain.
Early
he was assigned
in July
Army Corps. command bore
and
for his services in this battle
an important
part,
he was subsequently made
He marched
M.ajor-General by brevet.
command
In the battle of
of the 4th Division, l6th Atlanta, on July 22d, his
at
to the
with Sherman to
the sea, then from Savannah, Georgia, to Raleigh, North
war
Carolina, where Johnston surrendered, and the
After being honorably discharged
from
the
closed.
service,
he
returned to Toledo, where he resumed the mercantile busi-
and
ness,
He
is
the
now one of the leading merchants of that city. senior member of the firm of Fuller, Childs & Co.,
is
one of the largest boot and shoe houses
He
Customs
also Collector of
is
in the
for the Port
Northwest.
and
District
of Toledo, having been aitpointed to that position by Presi-
dent Grant.
In politics he
was married
in
1853 to
is
a staunch Republican.
Anna
B. Rathbun, of Utica,
He New
Henry M. Huggins,
promising young lawyer of Hills-
a
borough, under the firm-name of Matthews Since his entry into professional
life
&
Huggins.
he has resided ])erma-
nently in Hillsborough, and there conducts the affairs of
a very extensive clientage,
Mayor
two years he
h'or
of the town, and served
To
Judge, his election dating from 1854. he was re-elected
He
years. fied
in
officiated
as
years as Probate
three
the latter office
i860, for a further period of three
has always been more or
less intimately identi-
with the educational ami public interests of his native
county, and
is,
and has been, uniformly a valuable and
zealous co-laborer in
all
measures and enterprises designed
with a view toward develojiing fruitfully the more impor-
and county. His political views and sentiments harmonize with the formula of the Demotant resources of his .State
cratic parly,
and he
cast his
first
Presidential vote in favor
Van Buren, in 1S40. P'or fifteen years he has Deacon in the Presbyterian Church, and in it is
of Martin
York.
been a
warmly esteemed
ATTHE\Y.S, HON. ex-Mayor,
‘’"414’
ALBERT
G.,
Lawyer, ex,
Hillsborough,
of
Highland
i
for his
moral and upright course of
life.
January Slh, 1846, he was married to Margaret J. McDowell, daughter of his old preceptor, Joseph J. McDowell.
county, Ohio, was born near the aforesaid town,
March
31st, 1819.
He
was the sixth child in a whose parents were
family of twelve children,
His life
)jOHNSTON,
John Matthews and Mary (Hussey) Matthews. North Carolina, followed through
Mayor
father, a native of
mainly agricultural pursuits;
June, 1805, he
in
moved
August
His name
17th, 1848.
the annals of the early growth and
Highland county; he was
for fourteen
also Justice of the
prominent
number of
years
Peace and County Commissioner.
His mother, a native of Tennessee, a daughter of Chris, Hussey, one of the adventurous pioneers of Greene county, Ohio, died April 22d, 1866. his days
Until he had attained his majority,
were passed alternately
in
laboring on his father’s
farm during the summer season, and through the winter months. literary
study
county, Ohio.
at
He
Hillsborough
in attending school
also passed
Academy,
one term in
in
Highland
In December, 1840, his store of scholarly
attainments having assumed
fair
and
in
years one of the
Associate Judges of that county; and for a
was
is
cestry originally
dimensions, he engaged in
C.,
Merchant and
eleventh
came from
His an-
the north of Ireland,
settled in Cincinnati at an early date; in fact,
they were
development of
initial
W.
of Ohio, was born in that city, in 1829.
to
Ohio, settling in Highland county, where he resided until his demise,
G.
of Cincinnati, under the present constitution
among
its
pioneers.
After having en-
joyed the advantages afforded by the public schools of the day, he learned the trade of a house and sign painter, and
own account, conwhen he became en-
then embarked in the business on his tinuing to follow his trade until 1850,
gaged
in
mercantile pursuits.
In
1856 he changed the
character of his business into a dealer of fire-wood, and
subsequently added coal, and this avocation he has ever since followed, uninterrupted by official
duties.
He
has
always been attached to the principles of the Democratic party.
At an early period he served
it
as a
member
of the
Executive Committee, of which body he was several times
Chairman.
In
1859 he was elected a
member
of the City
BIOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOP.EDIA.
206 Council from what
is
he was chosen
l86i
now known as tlie Eiglith Ward. In time. In 1833 he purchased the Ohio Eagle, at Lancaster, member of the .School Board, and which he edited for five years, spending his winters at the While
served for four years.
in the
Board he was nomi-
nated as the Democratic candidate for City Auditor, but failed to
be elected, the entire ticket being defeated.
he was elected, by a City Council which was
1871
member
to him, a
cally
opposed
The
following
of the Board of Health.
he was chosen
year
to
the
responsible
position, by a vote of the people, of trustee of the
works
for the
term of three years
in April, 1873, w.is selected
Mayor of
for
and while
;
Water-
in that office,
Democratic candidate
as the
He was
Cincinnati.
In
politi-
returned by a majority
of upwards of sixteen hundred over an able and popular competitor,
had
previously been m.ayor.
No Democrat
that office for the period of ten years.
filled
In 1872
was the chairman of the Hamilton county delegation
lie
to
who had
Democratic State Convention-
the
and the Presidential
electors.
Cleveland, which
Presidential Conven-
selected the delegates to the National tion
at
In 1875, his term as
mayor expiring, he was unanimously nominated by Democracy for re election. This was the first time
the in
twenty years that the party had nominated a candidate for re-election.
It
was
r.atified
by the unusually large majority
State capital,
where he was Clerk of the upper House of It was here that he began to exhibit the
the Legislature.
ability that distinguisheil him in after life. He was a member of the lower House in 1838-39, being elected to represent the counties of Fairfield and Hocking, and was an outspoken and vigorous legislator, e.specially upon financial questions. He was afterwards elected State
financial
Auditor, in recognition of his services, although he was
He
held the
office for six years,
term thoroughly reorganized
and the
at the
office
of his party.
beginning of his in
business
its
and introduced many excellent reforms of an en-
details,
He made
during character. acts,
official
and
his annual
an enviable reputation by his
keen scent
in detecting corruption,
dodging tax-payers.
In this
sented claims against
among
reports are
valuable historical papers of the State. a
men
opposed by some of the leading
bitterly
the most
Especially had he
and
in
hunting after
way he discovered and
pre-
300,000 acres of canal lands, the
owners of which had successfully eluded the tax-collector
He
for years. in
way
earnestly set about to reform the loose
which the public money was handled, and
to introduce
a
would hold the State officers to strict accountability in receipts and expenditures. Opposition ceived. Wdiile he has been thus active in political life, he met him at every point, but it became weaker and weaker, has been a very industrious business man, taking much in- until his efforts met with success. As one result of this terest in everything of a commercial character that is de- reform, 1,020,000 acres of land were added to the taxable list. The .State was finally freed from pecuniary embarrasssigned to forward the interests of Cincinnati. of 6397 votes over a most worthy competitor, this majority being nearly fourfold as great as he had previously re-