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OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS

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ADAMS COUNTY, OHIO
HISTORY & GENEALOGY
 


 


BIOGRAPHIES

Source: 
History of Adams County, Ohio
from its Earliest Settlement to the Present Time
by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers
West Union, Ohio
Published by E. B. Stivers
1900


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are errors with corrections next to them.

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  THE WAMSLEY FAMILY

 

Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page 653

  ISAAC WAMSLEY born in Germany, settled first in N. Y., then Horsehead, N. J.  To this county 1796; married Leah STOUT and had 5 children.
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page
  REV. WILLIAM FINLEY WAMSLEY, (deceased,) was born May 21, 1839, on Turkey Creek, Adams County, Ohio.  He was a son of Rev. Jesse Wamsley, and Mary McCormickRev. Jesse Wamsley was a minister in the Methodist Church for thirty years, but when dissensions arose over questions growing out of the Civil War, he joined the Christian Union, and served as a minister in that church for over thirty years.
     Our subject was reared on a farm and also worked at the tanning business when a young man.  He also taught school, and at the age of twenty-one years went into the general merchandising business, which he carried on at Wamsleyville until his death,  May 5, 1889.
     Oct 19, 1865, he was united in marriage to Miss Jane Collins, daughter of D. S. and Maria Moore Collins.  This union was a very happy one, and there were born to them two daughters, Mary Maria, who died Mar. 8, 1868, and Julia Ellen, who married Hiram V. Jones.
     Mr. Wamsley
became a wealthy and prominent citizen of Adams County.  He was a minister in the Christian Union Church, and a Justice of the Peace for years in Jefferson Township.  He was one of the most prominent Democrats of the region in which he resided.
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page 905
WILLIAM M. WAMSLEY - Portrait|
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page 543a
  WILLIAM MARION WAMSLEY, the founder and original proprietor of the village of Wamsleyville, was born Aug. 3, 1843, on the site of the village, the son of William Wamsley and Elizabeth Bolton, his wife, both natives of Athens County.  His grandfather, William Wamsley, was a great hunter and loved that calling better than any other, though he was both a farmer and a tanner.  He was one of three brothers, the original settlers of Scioto Brush Creek, and came from the State of Pennsylvania.  The Indians were frequent visitors to the new home of William Wamsley, the first in the wilderness.  From them he learned that what is now Jefferson Township, had been a favorite hunting ground with them and that the site of Wamsleyville was one of their camping grounds.  William Wamsley, the first, was a lover of nature and there was much to attract him to his location on Scioto Brush Creek.  He was a successful hunter of bear and deer all his life, and the vicinity of his home was the last habitat of those animals in Adams County.  He might have selected a fertile savannah or prairie and made his descendants rich, but the pleasures of the chase governed his selection.  The original ancestor of the Wamsley family in this country came from Germany and the industry, energy, honesty and thrift of the German has displayed itself in each generation.  Our subject left his father's home at the age of fourteen and set up in business for himself.  He bought and sold stock from the age of fourteen, till the age of twenty, when he bought three hundred acres of land, including the town site of Wamsleyville.  In that same year he built a grist mill and sawmill and soon after laid out the town.  Mr. Wamsley is not and never was a practical miller, but he has conducted the milling business since 1863.  He has added to his possession until now he owns five hundred acres of land at and in the vicinity of Wamsleyville.  While Mr. Wamsley does not profess to be a salamander, he has had a remarkable experience in the way of fires.  Since originally erected, his mill has been destroyed by fire, but Phoenix-like, has risen from its ashes.  He has had fine dwellings on the real estate owned by him, consumed by the flames, and yet notwithstanding all these losses, he has prospered and its prosperous.
     Mr. Wamsley was married May 27, 1867, to his full cousin, Sarah W. Wamsley.  They have one child, Milton Bina, born May 19, 1870.  He resides in the town of Wamsleyville.  He married Miss Amanda Thompson in 1896 and has two sons, William Klise and Butler Flack.  He assists his father in his extensive business.
     Mr. Wamsley, our subject, is six feet tall, broad-shouldered and of a heavy frame.  He weighs two hundred pounds.  He has black piercing eyes and wears a full beard, now turned gray.  He is a pleasant and agreeable man to meet and enjoys the society of his friends.  Like his father and grandfather, he is a Democrat.  He has been a member of the Christian Union Church for twenty-two yeas.  He is a local minister in that church and as such exerts a great influence for good.  He is a sucessful farmer and miller and would succeed in anything he would undertake.  His energy and force of character so predominate his village, that it is better known as "Bill Town" than the proper name of Wamsleyville.  He impresses all who meet him as a true man, and a more intimate acquaintance confirms the impression.  He has been and is a power for good among his people, and his life has been a great benefit to  those about him and dependent on him.  Nature gave him the stamp of true manhood, and time and experience have improved those elements of character which are the jewels of American citizenship.
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page 903
  DANIEL PUTMAN WILKINS one of the members of the bar of Adams County in its early history, was born at Amherst, New Hampshire, in 1707, and died at West Union, July 11, 1835, one of the victims of Asiatic cholera.  He was the son of Andrew Wilkins and Lucy Lowell Blanchard, his wife.  His grandfather, Rev. Daniel Wilkins, entered the ministry of the Congregational Church at Amherst, New Hampshire, in 1740, and died there at the age of eighty-five.  Of him the record is preserved that "The people of Amherst paid the highest respect to his memory and erected over his remains a monument of respectable proportions commemorating his memorable acts and intrinsic merits."
     Daniel P. Wilkins came from a family eminent for services as statesmen and soldiers.  Among them are named Daniel Wilkins, Major in the Revolutionary War, who died of small pox at Crown Point; Hon. William Wilkins, of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, United States Senator and Secretary of War, 1841-1846; General John A. Dix, governor of New York and minister to France; General Thomas Wilkins, of Amherst, New Hampshire; George Wilkins Kendall, editor of the New Orleans Picayune, and James McKean Williams, lawyer and lieutenant governor of New Hampshire.
     Daniel P. Wilkins was a brilliant, scholarly lawyer; keen, bright and pungent in his manner.  It is said he made the following statement in court in regard to a pleading of an opponent, "May it please the Court.  In the beginning the earth was without form and void, and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters and there was light.  So, too, may it please the Court, this pleading is without form and void, but it lies in the power of no spirit to move upon its face and give it form or light."
     He married Susan A. Wood, a pioneer school teacher from Massachusetts, and they had four children - Susan and Clara, who are now deceased and who were married successively to Daniel Barker, of Red Oak Junction, Iowa; Anna I., now deceased, married to John Eyler, of West Union, and Mary, married to Charles B. Rustin, now living at Omaha, Nebraska.  Our subject's acquaintance with Miss Wood, whom he married, was romantic.  She had studied law and appeared in some cases in the minor courts.  Mr. Wilkins was called before a trial justice and there he found Miss Wood as counsel for the opposite party, and this was the first time he had met her.  She conducted the trial for her client and won the case.  Her management of defense so impressed young Wilkins that he courted and married her.
     He located as a young lawyer in West Union, Adams County, in 1820.  On the fifth of October, 1822, he was appointed prosecuting attorney of Adams County and served as such until June 12, 1826, when he was succeeded by George Collings.  On the fourth of July, 1825, he delivered an oration at West Union, of which an account is given in the Village Register.  He was also a land agent and advertised lands sales in that paper.  There was a public library in West Union in 1825, and he was a librarian.  In 1826, he was aid-de-camp in the militia and brigadier general of the district.  The children of his daughter, Anna A. Eylar, are Joseph W. Eylar, editor of the News Democrat, of Georgetown; Oliver A. Eyler, of the Dallas Herald, of Dallas, Texas; John A. Eylar, a lawyer at Waverly; Albert A. Eylar, lawyer at El Paso, Texas, Louella B. Eylar, a school teacher at West Union.  Henry Rustin, a lawyer at Omaha, Nebraska, is a son of his daughter,
Mary.
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page 200 - Chapter XV
  ORVILLE C. WILLS proprietor of the Place Hotel, at Bentonville, was born Mar. 8, 1863, on Eagle Creek in Brown County, Ohio.  He is a son of Richard and Nancy (Edwards) Wills.  Thomas Edwards, grandfather of our subject, came from Scotland to Virginia, where he married Sarah Jacobs in 1786.  He soon afterwards removed to Ohio.  He purchased a thousand acres of land where Aberdeen now stands.  His second son, James, grandfather of our subject, was born in Jan. 1800.  In 1806, he removed with his parents to Byrd Township, on Eagle Creek, and settled on the farm now known as the William Edwards farm.  In August 1821, he married Nancy Jacobs, and they reared a family of thirteen children, all of whom grew to maturity and married.  James Edwards as a Justice of the Peace for a number of years.  His wife died Feb. 26, 1848, and in the Spring of 1850, he sold his farm and removd to Russellville, where he engaged in tanning for fifteen years.  On Dec. 1, 1859, he was married to Rachel Linton.  Nancy A., a daughter by the first marriage, was born Jan. 1, 1837, and married Richard Wills.  She died Mar. 26, 1898.
     Our subject received but a limited education in the Public schools.  He chose the occupation of blacksmith and served for three years in the S. P. Tucker shops at Manchester, at the expiration of which time he engaged in the same business for himself.
     On January 15, 1885, he was married to Florence Myrtle Roush, daughter of Michael Roush, of this county.  They have two children, Flossie, aged nine years, and Dean.  Mr. and Mrs. Wills are members of the Union Church at Bentonville.  Mr. Wills moved to Bentonville in 1896 and opened a livery and feed stable in addition to his blacksmith shop, and in 1898 opened the Palace Hotel.
     By industry and strict attention to business, he has built up quite a large hotel and livery business at Bentonville.  He is a very excellent citizen and a good business man, enterprising, and an important factor in the community.
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page 898
  JERUSHA ADALINE WILLSON.     It is seldom we have biographies of woman in works of this character.  It is certainly not because they are not deserving of them, as what is said of them is usually said in sketches of their husbands, but the subject of this sketch is deserving of an entire volume, and had her recollections of Adams County been written down, they would make a more interesting volume than this.
     She was born Dec. 20, 1820.  Her father died when she was but seven years of age and she was taken by Gen. Joseph Darlinton, of West Union, Ohio, her great-uncle, and was reared by him.  Her home was with the General and his family from her seventh year until her marriage.  The General, whose sketch and portrait appear elsewhere in this book, was a most devout Presbyterian, and as our subject was expressed it herself, she was reared on the Bible and the Missionary Herald.  If her life is to be deemed a success, she attributed it to the careful training she received in her uncle's home.  From her seventh to her ninth year, she listened to the Gospel expounded by the Rev. Dyer Burgess in the stone church at West Union.  From her ninth year until she left West Union, in 1851, she was taught in the same church by the Rev. J. P. Vandyke.  As his great efforts were always in preaching doctrines, she was well grounded in the Presbyterian faith.
     The General's house in West Union was the visiting place of all prominent persons who visited the village.  In this way she met and associated with the best people of her time.  When she was a girl, educational advantages were limited, but she had wonderful natural ability, and she took advantage of all opportunities for information and intellectual improvement.  On Oct. 28, 1840, she was married in her uncle's home to William b. Willson, a young physician, who, in the May before, had located in West Union, and there she went to housekeeping, and resided till the fall of 1851, when she removed to Ironton, Ohio.  In West Union, she was the center of a delightful circle of friends of her own sex, who in their old-fashioned way, took turn in spending the day at each other's houses.  She read much, traveled much, and she was delighted in visiting the most noted historical places in our own country and never tired of telling of them.  She had a fine conversational powers, and that, with her wonderful memory, made her a most desirable companion or guest.
     In the church was her great and chosen work, and she took great interest in the Women's Missionary Societies.  In 1897, she wrote a fine paper for the Presbyterian Society, giving an account of the organization of the Women's Board of Foreign Missions, which she attended in 1870 at Philadelphia, and of five subsequent meetings at which she was present.  She often dwelt on the advantages the young people had in the present day.  In her day, she said it was just a privilege for the young to live; that then the young people had nothing to do but to look on and listen to their elders; that in her youth, nothing but obedience and industry was expected of the young.
     This tribute is from the pen of Editor Willson of the Ironton Register: Mrs. Willson was a woman of strong character.  Her mind was bright and aggressive.  She studied the thoughts of today and kept informed on those subjects which are of real progress.  She was a great reader and appreciated the best literature.  Her interests lay deeply in religious themes, and on them she was entertaining and instructive.  Her great delight was in the deep and solid orthodoxy of the Presbyterian Church, whose great doctrines were a part of her life and thought.  This gave her a serenity that was always beautiful and a seriousness that was always helpful, but through it all,her joys shone like an evening star through the twilight."
     In the last five years of her life, she was afflicted, but not a great sufferer.  July 29, 1897, she had a stroke of paralysis which thereafter confined her to her bed.  She survived till Feb. 11, 1898, when the end came.  In all her sickness, she exemplified her religious belief and died with all its comforts sustaining her soul.
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page 648
  DR. WILLIAM B. WILLSON.     Dr. Willson was born in Rockbridge County, Virginia, in 1789.  He studied medicine there and received his diploma from Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia.  He located at West Union in the summer of 1816, and the same year he was married to Ann Newton, daughter of Rev. William Williamson.  It must have been a case of love at first sight, as he was married soon after locating at West Union.  He continued to practice medicine at West Union until his death, July 21, 1840.  Dr. Willson was an old-fashioned Virginia gentleman in every sense of the term.  He stood high in his profession and as a citizen, and was a devout and faithful member of the Presbyterian Church.  His home in West Union was on the lot now occupied by the miller, Plummer.  As a man, Dr. Willson was inclined to take the world easy.  He did not trouble people with his opinions and did not desire to be inflicted with theirs.  He was conscientious and worked hard.  There were no drug stores in his day, and he compounded all of his medicines and consequently had to keep a stock of those on hand.  He was the only practicing physician in West Union a short time.  He would go at the call of a patient the coldest night in the year and would often ride eighteen or twenty miles in the most inclement weather, and it was to this exposure that he owed his early death.  He usually had several young men students at his home, and among them were Dr. William F. Willson, his nephew, who has a separate sketch herein; Dr. Thomas Smith Williamson, also sketch herein; Dr. Hamilton; Dr. David McConaghy, and Dr. Henry Loughridge.  His son was also a student with him.  When he was out on professional business, his wife could compound a prescription as well as he.  He after boarded a number of students in order to have them under his direct care.  In that day, people did not send for a physician for every little ache and pain.  They made it a rule not to send for one unless desperately sick, and then the physician was expected to ride furiously to reach the patient and to give him heroic treatment when he did reach him.
     During the cholera epidemic in 1835, Dr. Willson was called away to attend a cholera case at some distance.  A brother of the patient had come for him and was waiting to accompany the doctor.  While waiting, the brother was attacked by the dread disease.  It became a question what to do.  In the dilemma, the Doctor consulted his wife.  She at once proposed that she should take care of the case of the messenger, and would carry out the Doctor's directions, while he should visit the brother.  This was done and her patient recovered.
     Mrs. Ann Newton Willson, wife of Dr. William B. Willson, was born in South Carolina in 1793.  Her father, already mentioned, is sketched elsewhere.  After her husband's death, in 1840, she resided in West union until 1851, when she took up her residence in Catlettsburg, and later, with her daughter, Mrs. Hugh Means, at Ashland, Kentucky, with whom she resided until her death.  She had three full sisters and one half sister.  Her full sisters were Mrs. Esther Kirker, Mrs. Robinson Baird and Mrs. James Ellison.  Her half sister was Jane Williamson, who has a sketch herein.  Mrs. Willson had much more will power than any of her full sisters.  Her step-sister, Jane, was more like her than her full sisters in respect to will power.  She might be said to have been an imperious woman, yet she had her own way without creating great antagonisms.  Her great force of character she derived from her mother, who was a woman of the strongest convictions and great will power.  Her mother's convictions on the subject of teaching the Bible to her slaves caused her to defy the laws of South Carolina against teaching slaves to read, and when she could do it no longer, to take those slaves through the wilderness, eight hundred miles and locate in another wilderness where she would be free to carry out what she believed to be right.  The same spirit animated her daughter, Mrs. Willson, and she would stop at nothing to carry out what she deemed to be right.  No sacrifice would be considered for a moment in deterring her from any course she deemed to be right and duty.  She had unflinching nerve, great self-reliance and most excellent judgment.  These qualities stood her in good use in aiding her husband in the practice of medicine.  In the cholera scourge of 1835, she went from house to house, caring for the sick with untiring energy.  She had no fear of the disease, and her great will thrice armed her against it, but unlike the Rev. Burgess, she did not defy the dietary of Cholera times.  In assisting her husband, she acquired an unusual knowledge of remedies, and never hesitated to apply or use them in emergencies when her husband was absent.
     She was an ardent Abolitionist, outspoken on all occasions.  Her earliest impressions of the institution of slavery set her against it.  She was a born reformer and had she lived in the days of the martyrs, she undoubtedly would have been one of the principal ones among them.  While she was chiefly self-educated, she was always an earnest, eager learner an desired to impart to others those truths so dear to her and the contemplation of which filled her soul.  It was her delight to share with others whatever she possessed of material or spiritual good.  She had no pride or vanity.  She was free from self-consciousness and was never troubled for an instant as to what the world thought of her opinions.  she was guided by her own conscience and reason, enlightened by her strong religious faith.  She was aggressive at all times for what she believed was right.  Her stern faith took the practical form.  She was always desirous of doing good for others.  As old age came on, the strong-willed woman became the indulgent grandmother.  The old earnestness and zeal never abated but they were tempered by a large tolerance, a wider sympathy and a gender spirit.  She was always ambitious to be doing good herself, and wanted to see her friends about her, and particularly her young friends, doing something in the service of religion.  That spirit within her never abated with her years, but continued until her demise.  The writer, as a child, knew her as an aged woman, but he always felt that she carried sunshine with her and had that feeling whenever in her presence, and she made this same strong impression on others which she made on children.  Of all women who have lived in Adams County, there are none who have done more good or have been more useful in their day and generation.
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page 642
  WILLIAM F. WILLSON, M. D.     William F. Willson, M. D., was a citizen of Adams County from 1836 to 1851.  He was born near Fairfield, Rockbridge County, Virginia, Sept. 9, 1815, of staunch Presbyterian, Scotch-Irish stock.  His father was James A. Willson and his mother, Tirzah Humphreys.  He was educated in the schools of his native county.  When he was twelve years of age, an event took place which determined the whole course of his life.  About twenty-five or thirty years prior to this, a farmer named Steele in Rockbridge County had died leaving a few negroes and a large sum of debts.  By an agreement between the Widow Steele and her husband's creditors, they agreed to wait until the increase of the negroes would pay their debts.  Among the Steele negroes at the time of his death was a likely young woman.  She contracted a slave marriage with a negro, Harry Moore, the property of a neighbor, and had given birth to sixteen children before the time came for the sale required by the creditors of Steele.  The wife of Harry Moore and his sixteen children from a babe in arms to grown youths were put on the block, with twenty-three other negroes, and sold.  Harry Moore was compelled by his master to be present and to hold his small children in his arms while they were roughly handled by the brutal traders and to see the persons of his daughters, women grown, indecently exposed on the block.  Young Willson knew all of Harry Moore's children and had played with them many a time.  He was a great friend of Harry's as a boy is often friendly to his inferiors.  Young Willson came to the scene first as Harry was holding in his arms a four year old child, which was being auctioned off.  The great tears were steaming down Harry's cheeks, and the child seeming to understand the situation, was weeping also.  Willson looked on the scene and the flood gate of his tears was opened.  He being free to go where he chose returned and hid himself to conceal his sympathy and grief.  As soon as he cold dry his tears, he came back to the scene, but could not contain himself and wept afresh.  He had been brought up to believe slavery was a divine institution ordained of God and sanctioned by Holy Writ, but he then and there resolved it as a wicked and cruel institution and that he would never live in a state which tolerated it, after he was free from his father's dominion.  He so informed the latter, and though the father tried to dissuade him and persuade him to remain in Virginia as the support of his old age, he would not give up his resolution.  It was strengthened by a subsequent private interview with his friend, Harry, who told him God would bottle up his tears against his old mistress who sold his wife and children away, William Williamson at that time became an Abolitionist and anti-slavery and remained such till his views were carried out in the midst of the civil War.  He had an uncle who had located in West Union, Ohio, in 1816, and to him he determined to go as soon as he was of age.
     In December, 1836, he started for Ohio, traveling to Charleston, West Virginia, by stage; thence down the Kanawha and Ohio Rivers by boat to Manchester, where he landed Jan. 3, 1837.  He walked from Manchester to West Union by the old road up Isaac's Creek, and over Gift Ridge.  At the Nixon place, he sought refuge from a heavy rain, but ran into the small-pox and retreated in an undignified manner, the only time in all his life he did anything unbecoming the dignity of a Virginia gentleman.  At West Union, he was welcomed at the house of his uncle, Dr. William B. Willson, who had married Ann Newton, a daughter of the Rev. William Williamson.  Here he found sympathy with his views on the institution of slavery, for both his uncle and aunt were pronounced in their anti-slavery sentiments.  He taught school in West Union in the old stone schoolhouse, which stood where John Knox now resides, for twenty-two dollars per month.  He read medicine with his uncle who was then the only physician in the place and who resided in a dwelling formerly standing on the site of the present residence of Jacob Plummer.  In May, 1839, he located in Russellville, Brown County, to practice medicine, but in July, 1839, he witnessed a brutal fight on the streets, which the bystanders seemed to enjoy, and he concluded that that was no place for him and left.  In August, 1839, he located at Rockville, Ohio, and remained there until August, 1840, and some of the most pleasant hours of his life were spent there.  He enjoyed the society of James and John Loughry.  James McMasters, Judge Moses Baird, Rev. Chester and their families.  At that time, Rockville was more prosperous than it ever was before or has been since, because at that time there was a great deal of boat building going on there and the stone business was flourishing.  In May, 1840, his uncle, Dr. William B. Willson, of West Union, was suffering from quick consumption and was compelled to give up his practice.  At his request, Dr. William F. Willson came to West Union and located to take up his practice.  His uncle died July 21, 1840, in the fifty-first year of his age.  When he came to West Union, Dr. Willson brought with him his letter from the Presbyterian Church at New Providence, in Rockbridge County, Va., and lodged it with the church in West Union, where he attended regularly.  Among the worshipers was a niece of Gen. Joseph Darlinton, Adaline Willson, with black hair and black eyes and very comely to look upon.  The Doctor fell in love with the young lady and on the twenty-eighth day of October, 1840, he was married at the residence of General Darlinton by the Rev. John P. Vandyke, then the minister of the Presbyterian Church at West Union.  There were present at this marriage Gen. Joseph Darlinton, his sister, Mrs. Margaret Edwards, Mrs. Ann Willson, the Doctor's aunt, and her daughters, Eliza McCullogh and husband, Addison McCullogh, Miss Amanda Willson (since Mrs. Hugh Means), Miss Sophronia Willson, Davis Darlinton and wife, Newton Darlinton, Doddridge Darlinton and wife and Mrs. Salatiel Sparks, then a widow, and directly after the wife of Gen. James Pilson.  Of that company but one survives, Mrs. Hugh Means, of Ashland, Ky.
     In 1845, Dr. Willson and his wife, Mrs. Ann Willson, his aunt, Addison McCullogh and wife and Mrs. Noble Grimes withdrew from the Presbyterian Church at West Union and joined the New School.  A church was organized at West Union and Doctor Willson and Addison McCullogh were made elders.  From December, 1848, until April, 1849, Dr. Willson conducted a drug business at Pomeroy, Ohio, but with the exception of that period from May, 1840, until April, 1851, he was associated with Dr. David Coleman in the practice, under the name of Willson and Coleman.  In the spring of 1851, the Doctor's health broke down, and he retired to Grimes' Well to recuperate, and was there during the cholera epidemic of 1851 in West Union.
     In the fall of 1851, he located at Ironton, Ohio, where he continued to reside the remainder of his life.  In Ironton, he connected with the Presbyterian Church in 1852, and the same year was made an elder which office he held until his death.  He represented his Presbytery in four different synods.  He attended four general assemblies as a delegate and four more as a visitor.
     While Doctor Willson would not live in Virginia and while he and his people there differed about slavery, yet he loved to visit his old home in that state.  In April, 1843, he took his wife there and they remained till June.  They traveled the whole way in a carriage.
     In 1846, he and his wife again visited his childhood home in Virginia, traveling the entire distance upon horseback.
     In 1853, he was called to Virginia by the sickness of his brother, traveling by river to Guyandotte and thence by stage the remainder of the way.  He had hoped to see his mother alive, but when he reachd there she was dead and buried.  There were a number of young negroes about the place and the Doctor asked that one be given him and he selected a boy of nine named Same and took him with him to Ohio, solely for the purpose of giving him his freedom.  Sam was as full of fun and glee as a young healthy animal and had a natural genius for cookery.  Notwithstanding the Doctor's abhorrence of slavery, he consented to be a slaveholder for a week in order to get Sam out of Virginia.  He kept Sam for seven years and taught him to read and write and cipher and gave him such further instruction as he could.  In 1860, he sent him to Cincinnati to learn the carpenter's trade.  Sam could sew and do any housework as well as any woman.  He always kept himself neat, clean and well dressed.  Whenever the Doctor visited Cincinnati, Sam would buy a number of things for "Miss Adaline," as he called Mrs. Willson.  Those articles were usually ladies' clothing or apparel and he could always select them with consummate taste and anticipate Mrs. Willson's wants.  Sam always took good care of himself.  He never married and is now living in New Orleans.
     The Doctor, on the occasion of the last visit to his father in Virginia prior to the Civil War, had a great argument with his father, who was strongly pro slavery in his views and in favor of the Rebellion of the South.  In this discussion, the Doctor predicted the Civil War and all its dire consequences to the South, including the abolition of slavery, but his father could not be convinced.  They separated never to meet on earth, as James Willson died in 1864, but the Doctor lived to see all his predictions verified,  During the war he was very kind to his Southern male relatives who, with the exception of his father, were all in the Confederate army and several of them prisoners at Camp Chase.  To those who were prisoners, he sent money, clothing and necessaries, but at the same time no one was more loyal or devoted to the Union cause than he.
     After the war he practiced his profession in Ironton until the infirmities of age compelled him to desist.
     The Doctor and his wife were loved by the entire community, but especially was their church devoted to them.  On the twenty-eighth of October, 1890, the fiftieth anniversary of their marriage was celebrated by the congregation of the First Presbyterian Church in Ironton, and it was a most notable occasion which would require an article as long as this.  Of those present at their marriage, all had passed away except Mrs. Hugh Means, Miss Sophronia Willson and Rev. Newton Darlinton.  The two former were present on the fiftieth anniversary.
     From 1890 until 1898, the health of the Doctor gradually failed.  He was subject to vertigo and was liable to fall at any time and he had to give up his profession, but all the time he was the same cheerful, agreeable person he ever had been.  He always welcomd his friends and made them fell refreshed and rejoiced that they had called.  He loved to speak of those dear friends who had gone before, but never repined.  On the eleventh of February, 18oi,his wife passed away and he survived until the twenty-ninth of May, when he, too, received the final summons and answered it.  After the death of his wife, an invalid in bed most of his time, unable to walk or stand alone, requiring an attendant all the time, he never complained.  He often spoke of the great change which he felt was coming, but to him it was but passing from one room to another.  He was ready at the Master's call and it came silently and gently.  He passed from sleep to its twin, Death, and the chapter of his life was closed.  He was a fine example of the old-fashioned Virginia gentleman, kind and courteous to everyone and quick to appreciate what would please those about him and gratify them.  In Ironton, when the good men of the city were named, Dr. Willson's name was always first.  Everyone felt that he was a sincere and fine Christian gentleman.  The world is better that he lived.  His life was a most excellent sermon, preached every day, and felt by those with whom he associated.
     His old friends in Adams County have all passed over to the majority, but his memory among the younger is like a blessed halo, pictured about the Saints, of which he is undoubtedly one.
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page 644
  JOHN ORLANDO WILSON was born in Cincinnati, Sept. 22, 1842, the son of Joseph Allen and Harriet Lafferty Wilson.  He was an only son.  His father, at the time of his birth, was Deputy Clerk of the Courts of Hamilton County, and resided in Cincinnati until 1844.  His father died Dec. 16, 1848, of consumption.  His mother died Aug. 12, 1850.  He was then taken by his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Dr. William F. Willson, and resided with them in West Union until 1851, when they removed to Ironton, Ohio and took him with them.  He attended the Public schools in Ironton till about 1861, when he went to Illinois, he enlisted in Company G, of the 86th Illinois Regiment and served until June 6, 1865, when he was discharged.  He returned at once to Ironton, and from there went to West Union, Ohio, where he became a law student under the late Edward P. Evans.  He remained here during the Summer and Fall and in the Winter attended the Cincinnati Law School.  He was admitted to the bar at Portsmouth, Ohio, Apr. 23, 1866.  He then went to Cincinnati, where, on Oct. 9, 1866, he was married to Pauline H. Weber, daughter of Prof. John Weber.  There were two sons of this marriage, William F., born Sept. 13, 1867, and Charles O., born May 26, 1873.  They reside with their mother at Cincinnati.  John O. Wilson first located at Elizabethtown, Illinois, as a lawyer and remained there one year.  He then returned to Cincinnati and engaged in the drug business for eighteen months.  He then located at Greensburg, Ind., but remained only a few months.  He then went to St. Louis, Mo., where he took up the practice of law with Judge Powers.  He resided at St. Louis during the remainder of his life.  In August, 1878, he went to Memphis, Tenn., on legal business.  It was during the prevalence of yellow fever.  His business required him to remain in Memphis some time.  After he had been there eight days, he was attacked with yellow fever.  He was sick some five or six days, when he died, alone, among strangers, and without the presence of a single friend.  He was buried in the common grave with numerous other victims.  His life was a sad one in the loss of his parents and in his own tragic death at the early age of thirty-0six.  His widow removed to Cincinnati, where she has since resided.  Her sons are excellent young men with good positions and are doing their best for themselves and for her.
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page
  JOHN T. WILSON   The words of Miss Edna Dean Proctor's poem are ringing in my cars.  She inquires if the heroes are all dead; if they only lived in the times of Homer and if none of the race survive in these times?  The refrain of the poem is; "Mother Earth, are the heroes dead?"  And then she proceeds to answer it in her own way, and she answers it thus:
" Gone? In a grander form they rise..
   Dead? We may clasp their hands in ours awe."
                *    *    *    *    *
"Whenever a noble deed is done
   'Tis the pulse of a hero's heart is stirred."

     Then comparing our modern heroes with those of Homeric days, Jason, Orpheus, Hercules, Priam, Achilles, Hector, Theseus and Nestor, she continues:

"Their armor rings on a fairer field
  Than the Greek and the Trojan fiercely trod;
  For freedom's sword is the blade they wield,
  And the light above is the smile of God."

     We have heroes in these, our days, who will compare more than favorably with those of the Homeric, or any subsequent times; but having known them as neighbors and friends, and having associated with them from day to day, we do not appreciate them till death has sealed their characters, and then as we study them it begins to dawn on us that they have done things to be canonized as heroes.
     Till since his death, we believe the public has not fully appreciated the character of the Hon. John T. Wilson, a former congressman of the tenth (Ohio) district, though it is his record as a patriot, and not as a congressman, we propose especially to discuss
     He was a hero of native growth.  He was born Apr. 16, 1811, in Highland County, Ohio, and lived the most of his life and died within ten miles of his birthplace.  His span of life extended until the sixth of October, 1891, eighty-five years, five months and twenty days, and in that time, his manner of life was known to his neighbors like an open book.
     In that time, living as a country store keeper and a farmer, and resisting all temptation to be swallowed up in city life, if such temptation ever came to him. he accumulated a fortune of about half a million of dollars, which, before and at his death, was devoted principally to charitable uses.
     To attempt to sum up his life in the fewest words, it consisted in trying to do the duty nearest him.  He was never a resident of a city, except when attending to public official duties, and to expect a hero to come from the remote country region about Tranquility in Adams County, Ohio, was as preposterous as looking for a prophet from the region of Nazareth in the year one; yet the unexpected happened in this instance.
     Till the age of fifty, he had been a quiet unobtrusive citizen of his remote country home, seeking only to follow his vocation as a country merchant and to do his duty as a citizen; but it was when the war broke out that the soul which was in him was disclosed to the world.  He showed himself an ardent patriot.  When government bonds were first offered, there were great doubts as to whether the war would be successful, and whether the government would ever pay them.
     No doubt occurred to Mr. Wilson.  He invested every dollar he had in them, and advised his neighbors to do the same.  He said if the country went down, his property would go with it, and he did not care to survive it; and if the war was successful, the bonds would be all right.  As fast as he had any money to spare, he continued to invest it in government securities.  In the summer of 1861, he heard that Capt. E. M. DeBruin, now of Hillsboro, Ohio, was organizing a company for the Thirty-third Ohio Infantry Regiment, and he went over to Winchester and arranged with the Rev. I. H. DeRruin, now of Hillsboro, Ohio, that his only son and child.  Spencer H. Wilson, then nineteen years of age, should enlist in the company, which he did, and was made its first sergeant, and died in the service at Louisville, Ky., Mar. 4, 1862.
     In the summer of 1861, Mr. Wilson determined that Adams County should raise a regiment for the service.  He did not want to undertake it himself, but he believed that Col. Cockerill, of West Union, Ohio, would lead the movement; it could be done and he sent Dr. John Campbell, now of Delhi. Ohio, to secure the co-operation of Col. Cockerill.  That was not difficult to do, as Col. Cockerill felt about it as Mr. Wilson.  It was determined to ask Brown County to co-operate, and Col. D. W. C. Loudon, of Brown, was taken into the plan, and the Seventieth Ohio Infantry was organized in the fall of 1861.  Mr. Wilson undertook to raise a company for the regiment and did so, and it was mustered in as Company E.
     The captain, the Hon. John T. Wilson, was then fifty years of age, and he had in the company three privates, each of the same age, and one of the age of fifty-five, so that the ages of five members of that company aggregated 225 years.  Hugh J. McSurely was the private who was past fifty-five years of age when he enlisted in Capt. Wilson's Company.  He is the father of the Rev. Wm. J. McSurely, D. D., pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Hillsboro, Ohio, and has a separate sketch herein.
     Capt. Wilson's company was much like the Cromwell's troop of Ironsides.  It was made up of staid old Scotch and Scotch-Irish Presbyterians, who went in from a sense of duty.  col. Loudon, of the Seventieth O. V. I. says that Capt. Wilson did more to raise and organize the Seventieth Ohio Infantry than anyone else.  At the time he went into the service, he was physically unfit, and could not have passed medical examination as an enlisted man.  He had an injury to his leg form the kick of a horse years before, that greatly disabled him, but he wanted to go and felt he owed it to his friends and his country to go.  He would not consider his own physical unfitness.
     He led his company into the sanguinary battle of Shiloh.  His personal coolness and self-possession inspired his company, and he held it together during the entire two days' battle.
     During the march to Corinth, after Shiloh, he was taken down with the fever, and by order of the surgeon was sent north.  At Ripley, Ohio, he was taken much worse, and lay there for weeks, delirious and unconscious, hovering between life and death.  Owing to the most careful nursing, he recovered.  He was not able to rejoin his regiment until September, 1862, at Memphis, Tenn.
     Col. Cockerill was then in command of the brigade, and made him brigade quartermaster, so he would not have to walk; but it was apparent that he was unfit for service; and was imperiling his life for naught.  Col. Cockerill and Lieut. Col. Loudon both told him he cold serve his country better at home than in the army, and insisted on his resigning and going home.  He resigned Nov. 27, 1862.  Col. Loudon says his record was without a stain, and none were more loyal than he.
     Capt. Wilson was married in 1841 to Miss Hadassah G. Drysden.  There was one son of this marriage, Spencer H. Wilson, born Sept. 13, 1842, and whom he gave to his country, as before sated.  Capt. Wilson's wife died Mar. 23, 1849, and he never remarried.
     Capt. Wilson not only invested his fortune in the war securities and sent his only son and child to the war, but went himself, and served as long as he could.  Could any one have done more?
     In the summer of 1863, he was nominated by the Republicans of the seventh senatorial district of Ohio, to the state senate without being a candidate, and without his knowledge or consent he was elected.  In 1865 he was renominated and re-elected to the same office, and served his community with great credit and satisfaction.  In 1866, he was nominated by the Republicans of the Eleventh Ohio District for a member of congress, and was renominated and re-elected in 1868 and in 1870; though just before his congressional service, and just after it, the district was carried by the democracy.
     When Mr. Wilson was first nominated for congress, it was not supposed that he was a speaker, or that he cold canvass the district, but he made appointments for speaking all over the district, and filled them to the satisfaction of every one.  He made a most effective speaker, and moreover, the farms all over the district believed what he said, and were justified in doing it.  He was never presant at a convention which nominated or renominated him for office, and never i the slightest way solicited a nomination or renomination.
     He was the most satisfactory congressman ever sent from his district. Every constituent who ever wrote him, got an answer in Mr. Wilson's own handwriting, which was as uniform and as plain as copperplate.  The letter told the constituent just what he wanted to know, and was a model of perspicuity and brevity.  Those letters are now precious relics to anyone who has one of them, and they are models of what letters should be.
     If a constituent wrote for an office, he was sure to get an answer which would tell him whether he could get an office or not, and if Mr. Wilson told him he could get an office, and that he would assist him, he was sure of it.  Mr. Wilson had the confidence of the President and of all the appointing officers, and if he asked for an office inside of the district, he usually obtained it, because he made it a rule never to ask for an office unless he thought he was entitled to it, and that it would be granted him.
     If a constituent wrote for an office, he was sure to get an answer which would tell him whether he could get an office or not, and if Mr. Wilson told him he could get an office, and that he would assist him, he was sure of it.  Mr. Wilson had the confidence of the President and of all the appointing officers, and if he asked for an office inside of the district, he usually obtained it, because he made it a rule never to ask for an office unless he thought he was entitled to it, and that it would be granted him.
     On Mar. 6, 1882, he gave Adams County, Ohio, $46,667.03 towards the erection of a Children's Home.  The gift was really $50,000, but was subject to certain reductions, which netted it at the sum first named.  As the county built the Home, he issued his own checks in payment for it, until the entire gift was made.  That Home is now one of the best and finest built institutions of the kind in this state.  By his last will and testament, he gave to the Children's Home an endowment of $35,000 and $15,000 in farming lands.  He also gave $5,000 towards the erection of a soldier's monument to the memory of the Adams County soldiers who had died or been killed during the Civil War.  This monument has been erected in the grounds of the Wilson Children's Home, and occupies a site overlooking the surrounding country.
     Mr. Wilson made many private bequests in his will, which it is not within the scope of this article to mention; but to show his kindly disposition we mention that he gave $1,000 to a church in which he was reared and held his membership, and $1,000 to the church at Tranquility, where he resided.  His housekeeper, a faithful woman, he made independent for life.  As a residuary bequest, he gave to the commissioners of Adams County, $150,000 to be expended in the support of the worthy poor.
     It is to the interest of the state that every citizen should be law abiding; that he shall faithfully follow some occupation and support himself and those dependent upon him; that he shall accumulate and hold property to guarantee his own independence and that of his family, and that he shall be able to contribute to the needs of the state.
     It is also to the interest of the state that, in case of war, its citizens shall place their entire property and their personal services fully at its disposal.  A citizen who performs all these obligations is said to be patriotic, and the virtues of patriotism are more admired than any other, because what is given in that direction is given for the common good of al the people of the country.
     One may take the entire list of patriots, from Leonidas, the Spartan, down to Lincoln, the great war president, or in our country, from Gen. Warren down to the last man who fell at Appomattox, and none can be found who did more work for his own country than the Hon. John T. Wilson.
     He periled his entire fortune; he gave the life of his only son, and he freely offered his own.  What more could he have done?
     Patriotism is and must be measured by the station in life which a man occupies when his opportunity comes.
     If each man does all he can, and offers or gives all he can, he is as great a patriot as any one can be.  Measured by this standard, Capt. John T. Wilson filled the full measure of patriotism.
     When he came to the last of earth, he not only remembered those upon whom the lw would have cast his estate, but he devoted the greater part of it to public benefactions and especially to the relief of the innocent unfortunates who were not responsible for their own misfortunes.
     In his public duties as captain in the line, as brigade quartermaster, and as a representative in congress, he performed every duty apparent to him honestly and conscientiously, and in the very best manner in which it could be done.   His entire life consisted in the performance of each and every duty as he saw it at the time.  He never did anything for effect, or for show, or to be spoken of and praised by his fellow men. 
     In size, he was like Saul, head and shoulders above his fellows, over six feet high, but with a most kindly disposition.  His features were attractive and commanding.  He was willing to meet every man, to estimate him according to his manhood, and to bid him God-speed, if he deserved it.
     He never tried to do anything great, but his punctuality to every duty before him, from day to day, made him known of all men.  He simply tried to do right, and, this simple devotion to duty in war and peace, in public office and as a private citizen, cause his memory to be revered as a perfect patriot so long as his good deeds shall be remembered.
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page 318

NOTE:  CORRECTIONS - p. 318.  The last line of the first couplet quoted should read:  Dead? we may clasp their hands in awe."

  JOSEPH ALLEN WILSON was born Sept. 16, 1816, in Logan County, Ohio.  His father, John Wilson, was born Dec. 17, 1786, in Kentucky, and died Oct. 5, 1824, in Logan County.  His wife, Margaret Darlinton, was born in Winchester, Virginia.  She was married to John Wilson in Adams County, Aug. 6, 1810, by Rev. William Williamson.  She survived until Mar. 8, 1869.  Her father was born Mar. 24, 1754, and died May 20,1814, at Newark, Ohio.  Her mother was born Apr. 10, 1700, and died Dec. 14, 1832.  John Wilson, grandfather of our subject, moved to Maysville, Kentucky, about 1781, and bought land on the Kentucky side of the river for twelve or fifteen miles.  This land is all divided up, and a part of it opposite Manchester is known as Wilson's bottoms.
     The father of our subject had fifteen children, all of whom lived to maturity, married and had children.  Our subject went to reside with his uncle, General Joseph Darlinton, in Adams County in 1823.  He was brought up in the Presbyterian church and had such education as the local schools afforded.  At the age of sixteen, in 1832, he became an assistant to his uncle in the clerk's office of the court of common pleas and Supreme Court.  In 1837, when he had attained his majority, he started out for himself, with a certificate from J. Winston Price, presiding judge of the common pleas that he was of correct and most unexceptionable moral character and habits.  Gen. Darlinton also gave him a certificate that he was perfectly honest and of strict integrity; that he was familiar with the duties of the clerk's office, that he had had some experience in retailing goods from behind the counter and in the Ohio Legislature at its annual sessions.  In September, 1838, he was employed in the county clerk office at Greeup County, Kentucky.  In November, 1838, he obtained a certificate form Peter Hitchcock, Frederick Grimke, Ebenezer Lane, Supreme Judges, that he was well qualified to discharge the duties of clerk of the court of common pleas of Adams County, or any other court of equal dignity in the State.   In November, 1840, he obtained employment in the office of
Daniel Bano, clerk of the courts of Hamilton County, as an assistant for four years at $380 per year.  He was married to Harriet Lafferty, sister of Joseph West Lafferty, of West Union, Apr. 14, 1839, by Rev. Dyer Burgess.  He formed a great friendship with Nelson Barrere, a young lawyer who had located in West Union in 1834 and several of Barrere's letters to him are in existence.  To Barrere, he disclosed his inmost soul as to a father confessor and Barrere held the trust most sacredly.  He seems also to have had the friendship of Samuel Brush, an eminent lawyer of that time, who practiced in Adams County.  In 1846, he was an applicant for the clerkship of the Adams Court of Common Pleas, when Gen. Darlinton resigned the office.  He was recommended by George Collings, Nelson Barrere, William M. Meek, Chambers Baird, John A. Smith, James H. Thompson and Hanson J. Penn, but Joseph Randolph Cockerill was appointed.  However, on Sept. 18, 1846, he entered into a written contract with Joseph R. Cockerill, the clerk, to work in the office at $30 per month until the next spring, and in that period, to be deputy clerk.  In April, 1848, he was admitted to the bar at a term of the Supreme Court held in Adams County, but it is not now known that he ever practiced.  He always had a delicate constitution and died of pulmonary consumption Dec. 16, 1848.  His wife died Aug. 12, 1850.  They had two children, a daughter, who died in infancy, and a son, John O., who has a sketch herein.
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page 204
  ROBERT S. WILSON was born in Virginia, Nov. 20, 1788.  He removed to Adams County in 1811.  He was a farmer.  He first resided near North Liberty, afterward near West Union.  He had a good common school education.  He was married in the fall of 1810 to Hester Keyes Wasson, an aunt of Thomas Campbell Wasson.
    Robert Wilson died in West Union July 4, 1849, in the Naylor House, opposite the brick schoolhouse, of the Asiatic cholera.  His wife died in 1867 of paralysis, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Crawford, near West Union.  Their children were Nathaniel, born July 12, 1812; John H., born Nov. 22, 1813; Robert A., born Aug. 17, 1816; Aquilla Jane, born Nov. 22, 1821; Thomas W., born July 12, 1818; Hetty Ann, born Sept. 22, 1822; Patton, born July 23, 1828; David Finley, born June 5, 1827.  He learned to be a shoemaker under Abraham Lafferty and afterwards taught school.  He married Eva Campbell, Oct. 19, 1854; William McVey, born Oct. 10, 1823; Nathaniel Steele, who was married three times, first to Margaret Chipps, second to Miss Mary Smith and third, to Miss Bromfield.  No children by either marriage.  John H. Wilson married Rebecca Bayless; Robert A. married Margaret Markland; Thomas Wasson married Margaret Schultz; Aquilla Jane married Harper Crawford; Hettie Ann married Edward Lawler; William McVey married Rebecca Lovejoy; Patton, married Susannah Newman; David Finley married Eva Campbell.
     Robert Wilson
belonged to the United Brethren Church and his wife to the Methodist.  Both are buried in the old cemetery at West Union.  He was taken violently ill about nine o'clock in the morning and died at eight in the evening.  He suffered intensely and was conscious throughout.  He had attended the funeral of Adam McCormick and it was thought he got the disease from that.  In politics he was an old time Whig.
Source: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900 - Page 651

NOTES:

 

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