OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS

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Van Wert County, Ohio
History & Genealogy

BIOGRAPHIES.

Source:
A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio
 containing biographical sketches of many prominent and representative citizens :
together with biographies and portraits of all the presidents of the United States, and biographies of the governors of Ohio.

Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 
1896

A B C D E F G H IJ K L M N OPQ R S T UV W XYZ

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  JOHN T. SCOTT, founder of the thriving little city in Van Wert county, Ohio, bearing his name, is a son of Richard and Margaret (Lynn) Scott, and was born in Warren county, Ohio, Mar. 25, 1851.  RICHARD, the father, was also a native of Warren county, and was born Mar. 31, 1816, a son of Thomas Scott, a native of New Jersey, who, in turn, was the son of Jonathan, also of New Jersey.  Thomas Scott, the grandfather of our subject, was the father of two children and of Scotch descent.
     RICHARD SCOTT
was reared a farmer, and about 1839 married Margaret Lynn, daughter of James and Esther (Thompson) Lynn, the union resulting in the birth of eleven children, as follows:  Mary, wife of Alonzo Crawford, of Columbus Grove; Esther, wife of William Exline, formerly for thirteen years auditor of Van Wert county, but now a farmer and general superintendent of the wheel company at Delphos, Ohio; Anna, wife of the Rev. Thomas J. Harbaugh, minister of the United Brethren church and residing on the old Scott homestead in Putnam county; Thomas, a farmer of Allen county; James, a deceased Methodist minister of Athens, Tenn.; Samuel, a Methodist minister of Jackson Center, Shelby county, Ohio; John T., the subject of this memoir; Richard, deceased; Henry, a farmer of Hardin county, Ohio; Margaret, deceased; and Charles, deceased.
     Sept. 10, 1859, Richard Scott, with his family, moved to Putnam county, Ohio, where he purchased a tract of 2,100 acres of land, on which he lived until 1875, when he purchased 160 acres near Athens, McMinn county, Tenn., where he passed the remainder of his life, dying at the age of seventy-eight years.  For six years he was a minister of the Methodist church, and afterward of the United Brethren church, was a pious, eloquent and faithful worker in the Lord’s vineyard, and his
loss was deeply deplored by a large circle of friends and admirers, whose grief at his loss was truly heartfelt.  Mrs. Margaret (Lynn) Scott was a native of Pennsylvania, was a daughter of James and Esther (Thompson) Lynn, and was but a child when brought to Ohio by her parents, who settled in Warren, then known as Preble county; she also became prominent in the Methodist Episcopal church, and later in the church of the United Brethren, while her parents were both devoted, sincere Presbyterians.
     John T. Scott, the subject of our sketch, was reared on the home farm and educated in the common schools of Warren and Putnam counties, and attended one term at Kalida.  Dec. 28, 1872, Mr. Scott married Miss Marvilla Uhrich, a native of Uhrichsville, Tuscarawas county, Ohio, born June 12, 1851, and a daughter of William and Catherine (Houston) Uhrich, and this marriage has been crowned by the birth of twelve children, namely: Mittie L., Richard S., Margaret C., William H., Sina M., Anna E., Jessie I. (deceased), Fannie F., Lizzie F., Ruth, Wreath, and an infant, deceased. The father of Mrs. Scott, William Uhrich, was also born at Uhrichsville about 1820, was there educated, and there learned the blacksmith’s trade.  About 1842 he married Catherine Houston, to which union were born four children, viz: Mrs. Jane Collins, of Steubenville, Ohio; Florenda, wife of John Buffington. a mechanic of Uhrichsville; Catherine, deceased wife of William McClusky, also of Uhrichsville, and Marvilla, wife of Mr. Scott, our subject.  When Mrs. Scott was quite small she lost her mother, and her father married, for his second wife, Susan Meyers, who became the mother of the following children: Dula Belle, wife of Alpha Exline, of Van Wert county; William, deceased; Adam, a farmer of Van Wert county; Scott F., of Tuscarawas county, and Edward, of Scott, Ohio.  Mr. Uhrich lived in Tuscarawas county until 1870, when he came to Van Wert county, where he passed away the remaining years of his life.  He was for more than a quarter of a century a steward and class leader in the Methodist Episcopal church, in which faith he died in 1882.
     After his marriage Mr. Scott located in Putnam county, and also bought a tract of land on the Van Wert county line, hired a surveyor and parceled the tract out in town lots, thus founding the city of Scott, and presenting to W. H. Drury, at the same time, two lots, on condition that the latter would build and engage in business.  Mr. Scott is altogether a man of enterprise, push and energy, and now operates the largest tile factory in the county, and is moreover a self-made man.  He is thoroughly upright in all his tranactions and moral to the core, having, ever since a boy of seventeen, been a steward in the Methodist Episcopal church, and he has been the means of having organized the Methodist church at Scott, of which he has been a leader three years, as well as trustee; of this denomination, also, Mrs. Scott has been a devout member ever since girlhood.  Miss Margaret Scott, daughter of the above, graduated Apr. 9, 1895, with honors, with the first graduating class from the Scott high school, and the entire family have more than a local reputation for native intelligence and amiability.  Certainly no one person has done more to advance the business, moral and educational advantages of both Van Wert and Putnam counties than John T. Scott.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 662
  WALTER L. SCOTT, manager of the Union Mills Flouring company, Van Wert, Ohio, was born Oct. 6, 1829, in the shire of Banff, Scotland, a son of James and  Jane (Findley) Scott.  The father, JAMES SCOTT, was born in Banffshire, in 1773, and was the son of James, a native of the same place, a farmer, and the father of five children, viz.: John, Alexander, James (father of our subject), Jane and Ellen, the majority of whom were members of the old Scotch Presbyterian church.  James Scott, a son of James and father of Walter L. Scott, at the age of sixteen years, was apprenticed by his parents to an architect and builder, for four years, and after having served his term of apprenticeship followed his profession throughout the south and north of Scotland all his life.  He married in Banffshire in1807, Jane Findley, who was born in 1763, and became the father of nine children, viz:  James and John, now deceased; Alexander, a builder in Banffshire, Scotland; Jane, in Ireland; Jessie, deceased; William a merchant tailor in Scotland; Walter L., subject of this sketch; George, who was a soldier in the Crimean war and is now a teacher of miitary tactics, at Woolwich arsenal, England; Ellen, deceased.  These parents lived to the good old age of ninety-three and eighty-three years, and died in the place of their nativity.
     Walter L. Scott, the subject of this sketch, at the age of fourteen, was apprenticed to a miller at a point about five miles from the place of his birth, served out his term and followed milling until he left Scotland in 1854.  He was united in marriage in January, 1854,with Miss Mary E. White; they immediately afterward came to America, and located near Toronto, Canada, where Mr. Scott was employed in milling until 1862.  They then came to Ohio, where Mr. Scott followed his vocation at Fremont for six years and then at San dusky from 1868 to 1871, when he came to Van Wert and purchased an interest in the People's Mill, of which he took general management.  He at once set about to overhaul the milling department and put it into repair to do fine custom work, and early in March, 1872, the mill began doing business, Mr. Scott acting as miller for three years' time, after which he assumed general management until 1879, at which he purchased an interest in the Union mills, which were owned by a stock company composed of the following-named gentlemen: D. R. Bonewitz, Samuel Swineford, O. D. Swartout, William Snashall, and Mr. Braham.  The capital stock at this time was $16,000, but which has been reduced by cancelation, so that the capital stock of the company is now $12,450, of which Mr. Scott owns about one-third.  Upon purchasing the interest in this mill he was chosen as general manager, which position he has held ever since, and, under his intelligent supervision, the enterprise has proven a success and is known as one of the leading industries in the city of Van Wert.  Mr. Scott also owned an interest in the Fire and Burglar Proof Safe business, with headquarters at No. 155 Dearborn street, Chicago, Ill., which he recently sold; he also was one of the promoters and was largely interested in the manufacture of furniture in Van Wert.
     In politics Mr. Scott is a republican, has served his fellow-citizens four years as council man, and has been president of the board of education for twelve years.  He is a knight templar Mason, and his high social standing is with the best people of Van Wert.  He is one of the conservative, safe business men of the city, affable, and interested in all benevolent and worthy enterprises, to which he contributes liberally of his means and time as well.  He and wife are members of the church of his forefathers - the Presbyterian - and the children of whom they are the parents were named
Edward J., and Mima J., deceased; Alfred, of Chicago; Minnie, wife of H. Kemper; and Walter H., in the hardware business at Greenfield, Ohio.  Mr. Scott owns a fine residence at No. 13 South Avenue, where his domestic life in passed in the companionship and friendship of a large circle of acquaintances.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 708
  CAPT. WILLIAM C. SCOTT, deceased, was born in Washington county, Pa., July 1, 1833, a son of WILLIAM and Rebecca (Hughes) Scott, both natives of the Keystone state, in which they were married and in which the father was a prosperous farmer, until his removal, with his family, to Richland county, Ohio, where he followed his vocation until the end of his days and where his wife also died.
     William C. Scott was the eldest in a family of eight children, and was a mere child when brought by his parents to Richland county, Ohio, where he was reared to manhood, and received a sound preparatory education, which was supplemented by a three years course in Haysville college (Dubois county), where he was prepared for school-teaching, which profession he followed in Richland county until 1853, when he came to Van Wert and taught until 1859, including two years in high school.  During this period he began reading law, in 1857, with his brother-in-law, Judge I. D. Clark, and was admitted to the bar in 1858, but never entered upon active practice.  In 1859 he bought the Van Wert American, but changed the name of the paper to that of the Van Wert Bulletin, which be edited until the spring of 1861, when he sold out and assisted in recruiting a company of infantry. with which he served as first lieutenant, in the late Civil war, until after the battle of Pittsburg Landing, when he resigned and came home, animated with a nobler, higher, and more patriotic ambition, and recruited company A, Ninety-ninth Ohio volunteer infantry, was elected and commissioned captain of the company, and was assigned to the army of the Cumberland, with which he marched and fought until the battle of Stone River, Jan. 2, 1863; here he was mortally wounded, surviving only two days after sustaining the fatal injury.  For meritorious conduct on the field and for other valuable service rendered, Capt. Scott had been brevetted major; the commission had been prepared and would have been presented to him, had he survived his wounds.
     Capt. Scott had married, in Van Wert county, Ohio, Aug. 25, 1856, Miss Missouri T. McConahay, who was born in Lewistown, Mifflin county, Pa., Oct. 10, 1833, a daughter of John and Margaret (Lovell) McConahay, who were also natives of the Keystone state.  To the union of the captain and Miss McConahay were born two children—Avery Wasson, now an engineer on the C., J. & M. R. R., and Jennie A., deceased.  The captain was mild in his disposition, was self-contained, and was a member of the Presbyterian church.  In politics he was a republican, had served as special school-examiner.  He left a comfortable home to his widow and orphaned children, and his untimely death was deeply deplored by a large circle of devoted friends.  The marriage of his widow to C. P. Richey has been duly recorded elsewhere.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 618
  JOHN SHAW, deceased, was born in Stark county, Ohio, on the seventeenth day of June, 1820, a son of GEORGE and Dorcas (Smith) ShawGeorge, the father, was born in Franklin county, Ohio, made his way to Stark county and there married Dorcas Smith, by whom he became the father of eleven children, of whom eight lived to maturity and were named as follows:  John (whose name opens this biography); George, Lewis, Thomas and Charles, all deceased; Mary; Elizabeth, now of Ottowa, Ohio, and Jane, of Hancock county.  George Shaw removed from Stark county to Hancock county, some time after marriage, and there made his home until his deceased in the faith of the Methodist Episcopal church, of which he and wife had been life long and honored members.  In politics Mr. Shaw was a stanch democrat, and his social standing was with the best and wealthiest agriculturists of his county.
     John Shaw, the subject proper of this sketch, was reared to manhood on the home farm in Hancock county, remaining with his parents until twenty-one years of age, when he began the study of law and civil engineering.  Oct. 26, 1843, in Findlay, Hancock county, Ohio, he married Miss Eleanor Day, and Jan. 1, 1844, came to Van Wert county, and for the first few years was employed in surveying; he was elected county auditor in 1853, filled the office for three consecutive terms, and then in 1856 and elected state representative from Van Wert county, and served one term, with great credit to himself; in 1857 he bought a farm in Tully township, Van Wert county, and engaged in buying and shipping live stock until 1881, when he returned to Van Wert city and assisted in the promotion of the construction of the Cincinnati, Jackson & Mackinaw railway, securing the right of way through means of township bonds; in 1883 he was appointed postmaster of Van Wert and served three years, when ill health compelled him to resign the office, after which he lived in retirement until May 29, 1893, when he passed away, mourned alike by his extensive family connection and the community at large.  Mr. Shaw was a gentleman possessed of considerable property at his demise, had always been an active and useful citizen, and had led a consistent christian life; in politics he was a democrat.  He was a Mason and Odd Fellow and Patron of Husbandry, and was interred with Masonic honors.
     Mrs. Eleanor (Day) Shaw
was born in Fairfield county, Ohio, Jan. 22, 1823, a daughter of Ezekiel P. and Margaret (Barr) Day.  Mr. and Mrs. Day were natives of New York and Pennsylvania respectively, but were married in Fairfield county, Ohio, where Mr. Day engaged in coppering and where he and family resided until 1832 and then moved to Hancock county, Ohio, where Mr. Day died in October, 1856, his widow surviving until Mar. 5, 1877.  Mr. and Mrs. Day were the parents of ten children, of whom Mrs. Eleanor Shaw is the eldest, and who is herself the mother, by her union with the late John Shaw, of seven children, as follows: James B., deceased; Frances, widow of William Engleright, and the mother of three children - Harry, a grocery merchant, Anna, wife of H. H. Hill, and Eleanor S. wife of G. H. Center; Melville D., ex-senator, a very prominent citizen and statesman, and now a residents of Wapakoneta; Elva, deceased; Emma J., the wife of John Redrup; Stephen A., a fruit merchant of Arkansas City, and John J., deceased.  Mrs. Shaw's years are filled with honor, and no one in the county is more highly respected as a lady and a christian like member of the Methodist Episcopal church.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 672
  JOHN F. SIDLE, ex-county treasurer of Van Wert County, Ohio, and at present a prominent business man of the city of Van Wert, is a son of JAMES and Elizabeth (Julien ) Sidle, and was born in Hocking County, Ohio, November 31, 1851. James Sidle was born in Maryland in 1826 and was a son of Daniel Sidle, a farmer who came from Maryland to Ohio and located in Fairfield county, where he resided until 1872, when he came to Van Wert county with his son, James, and here expired in 1875, the father of seven children, viz.:  Harriet, John, Eliza, Henry, Jane, Isabella, and James, who was the father of John F. Sidle, our subject and was reared on the home farm until eighteen years of age, when he began learning the carpenter's trade, which he followed until 1865, when he re-engaged in farming, settling in Van Wert county, where his decease occurred Sept. 19, 1885.  His wife, Elizabeth, was a native of Piqua, Ohio, a daughter of Richard Julien and bore her husband twelve children, as follows:  Caroline, Zelda Jane, John F., Catherine, Mary, G. W., Malinda, Jacob, Charles, Josephine, Lucy and Hattie.  The father of this family was a member of the Methodist Episcopal church and in politics was a democrat.  He died possessed of a very comfortable fortune, and was a highly respected gentleman.  The mother and companion was a member of the German Reform church.
     John F. Sidle passed his early years in the usual training for the life of a farmer.  He was educated in the district schools, and at the age of twenty-one years left the parental roof and for three terms taught school in Liberty township, Van Wert county; then married and engaged in farming in Pleasant township for a year on a lease of land in the woods given him by his father; then rented a tract known as the Johns Farm, which he occupied eight years; he next purchased eighty acres of timber land, which he cleared and cultivated, and on which he made his home until 1888, when he was elected by the democrats as treasurer of Van Wert County by a majority of 185, and so great was the satisfaction given by him in executing the duties of the office, that he was re-elected, in 1890, by a majority of 700 votes.  On the expiration of his second term as county treasurer, Mr. Sidle, in company with S. Balyeat, engaged in the furniture business at Van Wert under the firm of J. F. Sidle & Co., and  in his trade he has met with the most flattering success, the stock invoicing at about $7,000.  Mr. Sidle is also the secretary of the Van Wert Building & Savings company, one of the most prosperous in the state; he also owns 135 acres of finely improved land in Van Wert county, beside valuable city property, the result chiefly of his own industry and skillful management.  The marriage of Mr. Sidle took place Oct. 30, 1872, in Pleasant Township, Van Wert county, to Miss Sarah Edson, who was born in Portage county, Ohio, and who is a daughter of John and Sarah (Atwater) Edson, and by this marriage four children have been born and named Harry, Charles, Mabel, and Norma.  Mr. and Mrs. Sidle are members in the Presbyterian Church, and in his fraternity relations he is a knight of Pythias and a member of the National Union, and also of the Grange.  He is a genial and popular gentleman, is practically self-made, and is prominent in all his relations with his fellow-citizens.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 680
  DAVID SMITH, one of the pioneer farmers of Willshire township, Van Wert county, Ohio, was born in Washington county, Pa., June 5, 1826.  His grandfather, NICHOLAS SMITH, came from Holland when a boy, lived several years near Philadelphia, and then settled in Washington county, Pa., where his death occurred.  His son, John A. Smith was born in Washington county, Pa., Apr. 23, 1798, and was reared on his father's farm.  Apr. 19, 1818, he married Mary Zedeker, daughter of Lewis and Catherine (Smith) Zedeker, and by this marriage became the father of the following children:  Sarah A. Lewis (deceased), Margaret, David, John, Elizabeth and Catherine.  In 1838 the family came to Ohio and lived for some time in Franklin County, but later, about 1847, came to Van Wert county and settled on eighty acres in Willshire township.  Here the mother died, Oct. 29, 1854, and the father died Jan. 7, 1870, both in early life having been members of the Presbyterian church, but later becoming associated with the United Brethren.
     David Smith, subject of this sketch, was twenty-one years of age when he came to Van Wert county with his parents, and here he has since been identified with the agricultural interests of Willshire township, besides having rendered for some years his services as an educator.  In February, 1849, he married Mary Hartzog, daughter of Solomona and Catherine (King) Hartzog, originally from Pennsylvania, but later pioneers of Fairfield county, Ohio, and finally settlers of Van Wert county.  To David Smith and his wife were born the following children: Mrs. Mary L. Walters; John H., a minister of the Methodist Episcopal church; Wilbur P., deceased; Mrs. Eliza H. Harrod; Emma J., deceased; Mrs. Clara A. Johnson (her husband being an assistant professor in the Ann Arbor (Mich.) Law school, and also ex-representative in the Ohio legislature); Jesse M., deceased; and the remaining two are King B. and Barda M.   Soon after marriage our subject and wife settled on his present farm of 160 acres, which is now well improved, but which he wrenched from a state of wilderness.  Mr. Smith had the misfortune to lose his wife Aug. 15, 1876, and after his children, who felt disposed to do so, had married, Mr. Smith took for his second wife, Apr. 21, 1892, Mrs. Sarah A. Byer, widow of George Byer, and daughter of Peter Fisher.  In politics Mr. Smith is a republican, and for three terms has served as township trustee; for fifty years he has been a class leader in the Methodist church, in which he has been a class leader in the Methodist church, in which he has taken great interest since the days of his youth.  He is one of the oldest pioneers of Van Wert county, and stands very high in the estimation of his fellow citizens.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 685
  JAMES B. SMITH, organizer of, and the junior partner in, the Leeson Cooperage company of Van Wert, Ohio, was born in Saint Catherines, Canada, July 15, 1838, a son of JOHN and Ellen (McDermott) Smith.  The father, John Smith, was born in Ireland, came to America in 1832, and at Buffalo, N. Y., in 1835, met and married Ellen McDermott, also a native of Ireland and who also came to America in 1832.  Immediately after marriage they located in Lockport, N Y., where Mr. Smith followed his trade of cooper until 1837, when he moved to Canada, worked there until 1840, then returned to Lockport, N. Y., remained until 1850, and worked there until 1840, then returned to Lockport, N. Y., remained until 1850, and then moved to Jackson, Mich., and followed his trade until his death in 1860.  His widow then removed to Kalamazoo, Mich., where her death occurred in 1892.  They were the parents of five children, viz:  James B., or subject; George C., a cooper of Kalamazoo, and Stephen B., Marie and John C., all three deceased.  The parents were Protestants, and in politics the father was a democrat.
     James B. Smith, was educated in the schools of Jackson and Albion, Mich. and for four years was himself a school-teacher.  He lived with his mother until 1851, when he married, and Sept. 24, of that year, located in Hamlin, Mich., where he followed his trade of cooper for about a year, and in 1862 moved to Kalamazoo, Mich., where he worked until 1865; thence he went to Plainwell, Mich., followed his trade until 1868; and then went to Wayland, Mich., where, in company with W. P. Manly he engaged in hotel-keeping until 1871; he that year went to St. Louis, Mo., and until 1883 was superintendant of the cooperage establishment of Jaynes & Co.; he then came to Van Wert, Ohio, and was here employed as book-keeper and office man by George H. Marsh, and then, in the fall of 1887, organized the Leeson Cooperage company, of which he is at the presentthe secretary and manager - the firm now doing in business of $80,000 per annum.
     The date of the marriage of Mr. Smith was Sept. 21, 1861.  His bride, Eunice Whitcomb, was born in Eaton county, Mich., and is a daughter of Luther and Louisa (Pierson) Whitcomb, natives of New England.  This union has been blessed with three children, viz:  Ella L., at home; Byron J., superintendent of the Mill Shoals (Ill.) Cooperage company, and  Burton L.  In politics, Mr. Smith is a democrat, and fraternally he is a knight templar Mason; socially, the family enjoys the acquaintanceship of some of the best people in Van Wert.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 730
  JOHN A. SMITH, late a prominent resident of Liberty township, Van Wert county, Ohio, was a native of Germany and came to the United States after his father's death in 1832, in company with his mother and a brother, Adam Smith, all three of whom stopped for some time in Pennsylvania.  Within a short time, however, Mrs. Smith and her sons moved to Tuscarawas county, Ohio, which was their home for seventeen years, when she moved to the county of Richland.  From the latter county Mr. Smith came to the county of Van Wert, in 1848, and entered eighty acres in Liberty township, upon which he placed his mother.  Mr. Smith then went to Piqua, where he worked at his trade of blacksmith; then went to California, in 1849, where he spent four years in gold mining and other business, when he returned to Piqua and engaged in the blacksmith business.  In 1856 he settled upon his farm in Liberty township and engaged in blacksmithing, and added to his farm 160 acres.  He raised the first sorghum cane and made the first syrup in the county.  He purchased a saw mill in 1868, but was burnt out in 1871, and rebuilt in 1872.  He was one of the organizers and one of the principal stockholders and directors of the Clover Leaf railroad.  He was a justice of the peace from 1858 to 1867, and later was county infirmary director.  In politics he was a republican.  He died Aug. 9, 1890.
     John A. Smith was married Sept. 27, 1854, to Rebecca Hardenbrook, daughter of Peter and Mary (Wagner) Hardenbrook, and became the father of the following children:  Lucinda J., born in 1857; Cora L. born in 1860; Ralso L., born in 1865; Celia G., born in 1867; and Roscoe G., born in 1869, and died in infancy.  After their marriage Mr. and Mrs. Smith spent one year and a half in Piqua, Ohio, and settled on the present home farm, Liberty township, in the year 1856.  At that time the country was but sparsely settled, a few log cabins, at remote distances from each other, being the only residences in the neighborhood, and the country was covered with a dense forest grove, interspersed with swamps and quagmires.  To rid the ground of these incumbrances required patient and persistent toil, but in due time the task was accomplished, and a fine home of 240 acres developed.  This is one of the best places of the township, and contains a large two-story residence, and other improvements usually found on all first-class and well cared-for farms.
     Peter Hardenbrook, father of Mrs. Smith, was a native of New Jersey, but early moved to Hamilton county, Ohio, where he married Mary Wagner.  He then emigrated to Iroquois county, Ill., where his wife died; thence he returned to Ohio, settling in the county of Miami.  He was a successful farmer, a substantial citizen, and left to his family an untarnished reputation.  The following are the names of the brothers and sisters of Mrs. Smith:  John G., deceased; Phoebe, deceased, wife of a Mr. Kuhl; Mrs. Leah Buckles, deceased; Mrs. Mary A. Eisley deceased, and Laura Peter Hardenbrook, some time after the death of his first wife, married Susan Merit; he was a well known and highly respected man in Hamilton and Miami counties, and his life was one of great industry; he devoted himself to the interest of his family, and while not wealthy, always gave liberally of his means to worthy charities.  James Hardenbrook, father of Peter, was also a native of New Jersey, where he married Phoebe Smith; he was one of the first settlers of Hamilton county, Ohio, where he spent the greater part of his life in clearing up farms and following the pursuit of agriculture.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 729
  CAPT. TOM M. SMITH, of company D, Second Ohio state infantry, (Gilliland Guards), was born in Van Wert, Sept. 30, 1866, and is a son of Dr. William Smith, whose biography appears in close proximity to this sketch.  Tom M.. Smith was educated in his native city, in the high-school, and when but eighteen years of age, while yet a student, began his business life as a n assistant to A. W. Scott in the grocery trade during vacations, continuing in this employment until July, 1881.  Leaving school in 1884, he engaged as clerk with G. W. Sidle in the restaurant and grocery business, with whom he remained until July 14, 1886, and then clerked for S. K. Ream & Co., in the grocery line of trade, until 1888, when he entered the store of his brother-in-law, G. M. Hall, a dry-goods merchant.  July 22, 1884, Mr. Smith began the study of military tactics under Capt. D. M. Boreland of Van Wert.  In eight months after entering Boreland's company he was promoted from private to corporal; in 1886 he was elected second lieutenant, and as such served two terms, and on July 14, 1889, was elected captain.  He has proven to be an efficient disciplinarian as well as tactician, and is, withal, very popular with his company and in general military circles.  The marriage of  Capt. Smith took place Oct. 16, 1889, in Van Wert, to Miss Hannah Brenner, who was born in Willshire township, Van Wert county, Ohio, July 13, 1871, a daughter of John and Mary (Kreiselmeyer) Brenner, the fruit of the happy union being one son - Roy B.  Capt. Smith is a member of lodge No. 130, Knights of Pythias, also of the National Union, and with his wife, is a member of the German Lutheran church.  He has a large side interest in the poultry business, and resides in a pleasant residence on West Main street, where he and wife enjoy to the fullest extent the respect of their neighbors.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 684
  WILLIAM SMITH, M. D., of Van Wert, Ohio, and one of the oldest practitioners in the county, was born in Washington county, Pa., Feb. 28, 1822, and is the fifth of a family of twelve children born to WILLIAM and Mary (Lyle) Smith the former born Nov. 5, 1788, and the latter Feb. 1, 1794, and married in Washington county, Pa., June 23, 1814, where they resided until the summer or fall of 1822, when they came to Ohio and located in Richland county, near Mansfield, where the father was chiefly engaged in milling and farming until 1844, when he sold his farm of 120 acres and his mill and retired to Mansfield, where his death took place May 5, 1846, at the age of fifty-seven years and six moths; the widow continued her residence in Mansfield until 1856, after which she made her home alternately with our subject and her daughter, Mrs. Sarah Ann Clark, near Mansfield, dying at the home of the latter, Oct. 3, 1876, at the age of eighty-two years and eight months.  Her remains were interred beside those of her husband in Mansfield cemetery.  The seven sons and five daughters of the deceased were born in the following order: James, Feb. 7, 1815, married Ellen Hammer of Mansfield, emigrated to California in 1853, died in Sacramento Aug. 9, 1863, leaving a widow and one son- Charles Ray Smith; the widow subsequently married but is now deceased; Sarah Ann (deceased), born Apr. 1, 1816, married James Clark of Mansfield Nov. 14, 1850, and had two children - Allen E. and Anna M.; Robert Lytle, third child of William and Mary Smith, was born Apr. 1, 1816, married James Clark of Mansfield Nov. 14, 1850, and engaged in business with Weister & Co., of San Francisco, traveling most of the time on the Pacific coast; Mary Jane, born Mar. 4, 1826, died Aug. 29, 1828; Ebenezer, born Aug. 1, 1829, was a school-teacher and printer, emigrated to California in the spring of 1850, and died in San Francisco May 23, 1861; Robert Ray (deceased), born Oct. 9, 1831, emigrated to California with his brothers, David and Ebenezer, in 1850, his brothers, David and Ebenezer, in 1850, remained there until 1853, when he returned to Mansfield, Ohio, and cast his first vote, which was for John Sherman for congress.  Mar. 9, 1858, he married Esther Ann Grant, of Mansfield, who has borne four children, viz: George Ray, born Mar. 7, 1859, a blacksmith; May Elizabeth, born Nov. 3, 1861; Eleanor Eureka, born Nov. 29, 1865, and Robert Grant, born Sept. 1, 1877.  After the birth of his first child, Robert Ray Smith revisited California, returned to Mansfield, Ohio, Oct. 2, 1862, and followed his vocation of sign painter and stencil cutter until death.  Samuel Lyle (deceased), the eleventh child of William and Mary Smith was born Dec. 26, 1833, near Mansfield, came to Van Wert county in 1856 and engaged in milling until the breaking out of the Civil war in 1861, when he enlisted in the Sixth Ohio battery and served throughout the entire struggle, and on his return, in 1865, resume milling, which he followed until his death, Nov. 17, 1874; he had married, Nov. 12, 1860, Citney Ann Saltzgaber, who bore him four children, viz: Emma Gertrude, born Oct. 10, 1861 - died Apr. 25, 1878; Saphronia Grace, born Dec. 13, 1865 - died Feb. 10, 1877; Manona Lyle, born Feb. 1, 1868, and Samuel Saltzgaber, born Jan. 11, 1871.  The mother of this family died in Van Wert June 4, 1886.  Issabelle, the youngest child of William and Mary (Lyle) Smith was born May 18, 1836, and died Mar. 29, 1837.
     In May, 1846, on the first call for volunteers for the war with Mexico, our subject and his eldest brother, James, enlisted at Mansfield, Ohio, James being at that time engaged in the photograph business, and William, our subject, in the study of medicine and its practice with his preceptor, Dr. A. G. Miller of Mansfield, who gave him strong letters of recommendation to Gov. Bartley, of Ohio, and Gen. Curtis, for the position of assistant surgeon, but these letters were not used, as, on its organization, his company elected him their second lieutenant, and he stayed with them until mustered out at New Orleans, June 30, 1847; James acted as assistant in the commissary department.  The doctor and his youngest brother, Samuel L., both enlisted at the breaking out of the great rebellion in 1861, Samuel L. attaining the rank of sergeant in the Sixth Ohio battery, and the doctor entering with the rank of second lieutenant, and advancing to captain, major and lieutenant-colonel in the Forth-sixth Ohio volunteer infantry.  In this last war the doctor carried the same saber that he wielded at Buena Vista, and still has it in his possession.
     To revert to the medical career of this soldier-physician, it may be stated that, on his return from Mexico, he resumed his study of the science and attended lectures at Cleveland, Ohio, and after graduation located in the village of Ganges, Richland county, Ohio, where he practiced his profession from the first day of Apr., 1848, until April first, 1856, when he came to Van Wert.  While a resident of Ganges the doctor wedded Miss Almira Mulford, of New Haven, Huron county, Ohio, Dec. 5, 1848, died July 4, 1892, the result of this union being eight children, viz: Mary Eveline, born Dec. 14, 1849; she was married to George W. Clark, July 21, 1870, and their only child, Emma Georgianna, was born Dec. 27, 1872, and died Apr. 7, 1873.  Mr. Clark died Dec. 12, 1872, of pulmonary consumption; his widow then made her home with her parents until June 20, 1883, when he married Henry Butler a manufacturer of staves, at Van Wert.   Harriet Loretta the doctor's second daughter, was born Mar. 18, 1852, and married George Martin Hall, May 28, 1873; Mr. Hall is a dry-goods merchant of Van Wert and he and wife are parents of six children, viz: Eva Barbara, born Apr. 9, 1874; Jessie Lucille, born Sep. 29, 1878; Grace Mulford, born Mar. 8, 1883, and Mabel Loretta (deceased), born Jan. 17, 1885; Erma Joyce; Raymond Richards; Mira Bell, the doctor's third daughter, was born Nov. 18, 1854; she married, July 3, 1880, Aaron Lewis Doram, a stave manufacturer of Van Wert.  William Mulford, the doctor's eldest son, was born July 19, 1857, studied medicine, graduated in the spring of 1880, and on Nov. 18, 1880, married Harriet Lucretia Harnley; they have two children, Roxana Burt Smith, born Dec. 1, 1881, and Donald Harnley, born Jan. 4, 1891.  Wilbur Simpson Smith, the doctor's second son, was born May 5, 1859, and died of brain fever, May 3, 1860.  Ida May, the fourth daughter of the doctor, was born Nov. 26, 1864, and married Charles W. Webster, June 26, 1895.  Thomas Morton Smith, the third son, was born Sept. 30, 1866 - married Hannah Brenner, Oct. 16, 1889, and has one son, Roy Brenner, born Nov. 16, 1890.  Zora Lyle Smith, the fifth daughter and youngest child of the doctor, was born Feb. 14, 1871, and is still at home, unmarried.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 682
** DANIEL SNYDER, one of the prominent and influential farmers of Union township, Van Wert county, Ohio, was born in Perry county, Ohio, Jan. 30, 1834, a son of John and Catherine (Nunnamaker) Snyder, of whom the former was born in Westmoreland county, Pa., May 5, 1808.  The father of John Snyder was named Henry, who was also born in Pennsylvania, about the year of 1769, and was the son of colonel in the Revolutionary army of German birth.  Henry Snyder settled in Perry county, Ohio, in 1817, where he entered a tract of 160 acres, built a two story log house - an unusual feat for that day - and also a large barn of logs, and, being a mechanic, made most of his house-hold furniture; he also, beside clearing up his farm, planted a large orchard.  He died in 1852, an active member of the Presbyterian church.
     JOHN SNYDER, father of our subject, Daniel Snyder, was a mere lad when brought to Ohio by his parents, and was here reared in Perry county, where he was married, in 1828, to Catherine Nunnamaker who bore him ten children, five of whom are still living, viz.:  Susan A., wife of S. A. Shockey; Catherine, wife of Henry Good of Auglaize county; Eliza J., wife of William Hill, of Allen county; Harriet, wife of Jacob Brown of Allen county, and Daniel our subject.  The father of this family had early learned tanning in addition to farming, but after his marriage he devoted his entire attention to agriculture.  In 1852 he moved to Allen county and purchased a farm of exceeding fertility, which he converted into one of the finest in the state and on which he grew the largest tree in Ohio—a walnut—thirty-three feet, nine inches in circumference, and seventy-four feet in height from the ground to the first branch.  For many years Mr. Snyder was a lieutenant in the state militia; he was an active member of the United Brethren church, and was noted for his liberal contributions thereto; in politics he was a stanch democrat.  His death occurred June 28, 1890, and that of his wife Sept. 22, 1883.
     Daniel Snyder, whose name opens this biographical sketch, grew to manhood on his father's farm and received a sound common-school education in his native county.  May 31, 1855, he was united in marriage with Miss Mary A. Smith, daughter of John and Sarah (Miller) Smith, of Allen county, Ohio, and to this union have been born five children, viz:  William H., Howard M., deceased; Izilla A., wife of J. W. Willmore; Sarah L., deceased, and Minda A., wife of Jasper Collins.  In 1862 Mr. Snyder settled on his present home in Union township, Van Wert county, buying at that time eighty acres of swampy woodland, which he has cleared, underdrained and improved and added to, until he now owns as fine a farm of 220 acres as there is in the county.  In February, 1865, Mr. Snyder enlisted in company C, One Hundred and Ninety-second Ohio volunteer infantry, under Capt. James W. Titus, and served in Virginia until mustered out in September, 1865.  He is now a member of Van Wert post, No. 100, G. A. R., and in politics is independent, but was elected township trustee in 1866, and served one term.  He is highly thought of in Union township, and the social standing of himself and family is with the best in the county.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 739
  PETER SNYDER, one of the most substantial farmers of Jackson township, Van Wert county, Ohio, and an ex-soldier of the Civil war, is of sturdy German descent.
     JOHN M. SNYDER, father of Peter, was born in Hesse Darmstadt in 1808, and was taught shoemaking.  He came to America in 1829 or 1830, coming across the sea in the same vessel with his intended wife, Mary Ann Heist landed in Baltimore, where they married, at once went to Washington, Pa., and near the college there followed his trade until 1835 or 1836, when he came to Ohio and located in Mansfield, Richland county, where he followed his trade until 1853, when he moved to Morrow county and bought a farm of 300 acres near Mount Gilead, on which he died about the year 1887.  At Mansfield he formed the acquaintance of Senator John Sherman, who had then just begun the practice of law, and who was in the habit of discussing politics in the shop owned by Mr. Snyder, and was ever after a life-long friend.  The latter became a stanch republican, voted for John C. Fremont,  the first candidate of that party for the presidency of the United States, and during the Civil war was a warm friend of the Union cause, to which he gave the services of his two sons - Peter and George, the latter serving 100 days in an Ohio regiment and doing general duty at Washington, D. C.  John M. Snyder, with his wife, Mary Ann, was a member of the German Reformed church, in Mansfield, in which he was a leader and a member of the building committee, and was known throughout life as an honorable industrious and strictly moral gentleman.  To his marriage, with Mary Ann Heist, were born eight children, all of whom are still living, viz:  Peter, George, Elizabeth, Louis, Annie, Margaret A., John R. and John M.
     Peter Snyder
, the subject proper of this biography, was born in Washington, Pa., Aug. 30, 1832, was educated in the common schools, learned the trade of shoemaking from his father, and was also reared to farming - going with his father to Morrow county, and working on the home farm, and there marrying Miss Martha A. Imes, whose brothers and sisters were named Frank, Samuel, Matilda, Nancy, Mary and Thomas, of whom Samuel and Thomas were soldiers in the Union service during the late war, in the same regiment with our subject, and with him marched with Sherman to the sea.
    
After marriage Mr. Snyder remained on the home farm a short time, then for two years lived in Knox county, and then, in 1859, came to Van Wert county, where he had already purchased, from his father, 160 acres of the farm on which he now resides, and which the latter had entered from the government.  This land was all in woods, as was nearly all of Jackson township at that time, when there were but fifteen or sixteen settlers in the township, and the forest was the home of game of all descriptions.  Mr. Snyder set about the usual pioneer duties of erecting a log cabin and clearing up his place, and had made considerable progress when he responded to the call to arms and enlisted on the home farm in Morrow county, in company K, Eighty-first regiment, Ohio volunteer infantry, and was enrolled at Lima, Allen county, Aug. 21, 1862, to serve three years or during the war, and received an honorable discharge at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865, by reason of the termination of hostilities.  Among the other battles in which he took part may be mentioned Austinola River, Dallas. Rome, Kenesaw Mountain, Nickajack Creek, the general engagement at Atlanta, Ebenezer church, in the siege of Atlanta and Jonesboro.  After the fall of Atlanta he marched with Sherman through Georgia to the sea, taking part in numerous skirmishes; was in the battle of Columbus, Bentonville and Goldsboro, N. C., and on to Raleigh, and was present at the grand review at Washington, D. C.  Mr. Snyder was never wounded, nor taken prisoner, but was always on active duty, doing full, faithful and cheerful service through out the term of his enlistment, and participating in all the engagements, skirmishes and marches in which his regiment took a share.
     After his honorable discharge, Mr. Snyder returned to Morrow county, Ohio, where his two children, Clorilda A. and John M., borne him by his first wife, still lived.  The mother of these passed away in Morrow county, at her father's residence, Jan. 3, 1862, a few months before Mr. Snyder’s enlistment, and the latter remained on her father's farm until 1869, on February 28th of which year he married at Gallion, Ohio, Mrs. Amelia Elizabeth Spraw, who was born Jan. 4, 1835, a daughter of George A. and Mary (Patterson) SprawGeorge A. Spraw, of Crawford county, Ohio, was the father of the following named children: Amelia E., Sarah, Kate, Louis, William, Israel, Halmina and ElizabethMr. Spraw was a member of the German Reform church, and died at Gallion, in that faith, when seventy-six years of age, respected as among the representative agriculturists and citizens of the township in which he had lived so many years of his useful life.
     In 1869 Mr. and Mrs. Snyder came to the homestead in Jackson township, on which he had lived prior to his entering the army, and on which he had erected a cabin, and from which he had cleared three acres of the forest growth.  But he found on returning that his cabin had been destroyed by fire.  With indefatigable energy he immediately erected another dwelling and cleared up an excellent farm of 230 acres, that will now favorably compare with any other in the county.  To his second union there were born three children, of whom two are still living— George F. and Lola AMrs. Snyder, a woman of many christian virtues, died in the faith of the German Reform church Apr. 17, 1892—a true helpmate to her husband and a loving and affectionate mother.  Mr. Snyder, since his last bereavement, has continued to reside on the homestead, honored as a pioneer, as a defender of his country's flag, and as a true citizen and through industry, as a farmer, has accumulated a competence, enjoys that respect with which the efforts all men are met, who faithfully use the best efforts of life to make, through their individual efforts, an independence.  Possibly no gentleman of Jackson township stands to-day higher in the esteem of his fellow-men than Mr. Snyder, and certainly no man has done more, though a long and upright, useful and patriotic life, than he, to win the esteem in which he is universally held.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 731
  SERGT. JOSEPH C. SPRAY, of Washington township, Van Wert county, Ohio, is a veteran of the late Civil war who lost his good right arm in the service.  He came from an old North Carolina family of English-Irish extraction, and was born in Shelby county, seven miles south of Wapakoneta, in Auglaize county, Ohio, February 4, 1842.
     JAMES SPRAY, father of Sergt. Spray, was reared a farmer in Warren county, Ohio, his father having first emigrated from North Carolina to western Pennsylvania, and thence came to Ohio, being among the pioneers of Warren County.  James was still a young man when he went to Auglaize county, Ohio, and there married Nancy Lucas, daughter of Ebenezer Lucas, to which union were born five children, of whom two died young and three reached adult age - Ebenezer, Hester and Naomi.  Mrs. Spray died in Auglaize county, and Mr. Spray took for his second wife, in the same county, Jane Huey, daughter of John Huey, a native of Scotland, and this union was blessed with two children - James M., and Joseph C.  Mr. Spray was one of the original pioneers of Auglaize county, and settled four miles south of Wapakoneta, when the country thereabout was all a wilderness, and assisted the United States authorities to remove the Indians west.  He was an expert marksman and hunter, shot many a deer and wild turkey, and enjoyed life in the forest.  The United Brethren church was the first religious denomination in Auglaize county, and Mr. Spray was one of the earliest converts.  He ardently espoused its cause, eventually became an ordained minister, and for twenty-two years was an itinerant preacher of acknowledged eloquence and power.  The second wife of Mr. Spray was also called away by death, and his third marriage was with Harriet Givens, of Hardin county, Ohio, to this marriage were born four children - Jane, Mary, Nancy and Helen.
     Mr. Spray
gave three sons to the service of his country during the Civil war, who served as follows:  Ebenezer L., three years in company G, Seventy-first Ohio volunteer infantry, returned without wounds but with shattered heath, and died in November, 1876, as a result; James M., served four months and ten days in company K, Fifteenth Ohio volunteer infantry, and then three years in company G, Seventy-first regiment, then veteranized for three years, Feb. 1, 1864, and was honorably discharged in June, 1865; was shot through the right hip Dec. 16, 1864, and died July 3, 1883, near Wapakoneta, from the effect of the wound.  The father himself died Dec. 25, 1860, at the age of fifty-five years, on his farm, in politics a Jacksonian democrat and a greatly respected citizen.
     Sergt. Joseph C. Spray was educated in an old log cabin frontier school-house, learned to read, write, became quite thorough in arithmetic, and was reared on a farm.  At the age of about nineteen years he enlisted at Wapakoneta in company K, Fifteenth Ohio volunteer infantry, for three months, under Capt. George W. Andrews, served four months and ten days, and was honorably discharged Aug. 28, 1861; he re-enlisted at the same place Sept. 1, 1861 - this time in company G, Seventy-first Ohio infantry, under Capt. John W. Moody, for three years or during the war, filled out his term and was honorably discharged and mustered out at Gallatin, Tenn., Feb. 1, 1864, and veteranized the same day for three years longer, or during the war, and was finally again honorably discharged May 17, 1865, at Cincinnati, with the rank of duty sergeant.  During this long and faithful service, Sergt. Spray took part in the following principal engagements which list is not entirely completed: Red House, W. Va.; Columbus, Ky., 1862; Shiloh; Fort Donelson; Clarkesville, Waverly, Tenn.; several fights with Wheeler's cavalry; the second fight at Fort Donelson, 1863; Flin Lick, Hartsville, Tenn.; all through the Atlanta campaign, being nearly four months under fire; Dalton, Resaca, Big Shanty, Snake Creek Gap, Atlanta, Jonesboro, Lovejoy Station, on the march to Nashville with Gen. Thomas; at Columbia, Spring Hill, Franklin, Nov. 30, 1864, then for two weeks on a skirmish around Nashville, and then the siege, Dec. 15, and 16, 1864, and on the 16th was shot through the right arm while carrying the regimental colors as a volunteer, two of his comrades having already fallen while performing his duty, and, after our subject fell, his own brother, James M. Spray, fell shot through the hip, with the flag in his hands.  Sergt. Spray was confined in Cumberland hospital two weeks and in the hospital at Louisville, Ky., two and a half months, and here the arm was twice amputated before it would heal, the second amputation being made Jan. 22, 1865, close to the shoulder.
     The marriage of Sergt. Spray took place, while he was home on a furlough, Mar. 6, 1864, near Wapakoneta, to Miss Tamzon Catherine Shinn, who was born in Warren county, Ohio, Nov. 17, 1844, a daughter of Thomas and Rebecca (Roberts) Shinn.  The father was a farmer in Warren county, moved to Auglaize county, in 1848, and settled on 160 acres in the woods, and died June 19, 1855, aged abut thirty-seven years, the father of the following children:  Robert, Franklin, Tamzon C., Martha, Ruhamie, Adrew, and George.  Mrs. Shinn, the mother, lived to be over eighty years of age and died at the home of our subject.  The son, Franklin Shin, served in the Civil war in company G, Seventy-first Ohio volunteer infantry, and also in the Seventeenth Indiana volunteers  making a total of four years.  After the war Mr. and Mrs. Spray settled in Spaulding county, on thirty acres of land, all in the woods, resided there eleven years, the sergeant teaching school thirty-seven months of the time, and then came to Van Wert county, in August, 1879, and bought a home in Middlepoint and other valuable real estate in the town.
     The marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Spray has been blessed with seven children, now living, and named as follows:  Arthur A., Jane, Martha G., Emma, Laura, Joseph S., and Blaine.  Mr. and Mrs. Spray are conistant members of the United Brethren church, in which he is a trustee, and in politics he is a republican.  He is very popular with his party, and under its auspices has served as mayor two terms, and town marshal, six years as city councilman, and as president of the school board for six years; also as assessor two years, and is now a notary public.  He also served four years as postmaster of Middlepoint under the Harrison administration.  He was one of the charter members of the Zeller-Hamilton post, No. 260, G. A. R., has served as post commander two and one-half years, and is now filling the office of quartermaster.  As a citizen, the sergeant holds a most enviable position in the esteem of the community, and his military record shows that he was one of those grand soldiers never to shrink from duty in time of action, and his bravery at Nashville will make him for all time an honored man.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 733
  JOHN M. STEMEN, deceased, was an old pioneer of Washington township, Van Wert county, and was born in Fairfield county, Ohio, Aug. 13, 1825, a son of CHRISTIAN and Margaret (Moyer) Stemen, of Pennsylvania-Dutch descent.  At the age of about nine years he was taken to Allen county by his father, and was there educated in the district schools, as well as instructed in the mysteries of farming.  At about thirty years of age, Nov. 15, 1855, he married, in Allen county, Miss Lydia E. Myers, who was born in Fairfield county, Sept. 14, 1839, a daughter of LEVI and Rachael (Spitler) MYERS, the former of whom was a son of Daniel Myers, who was also of Pennsylvania-Dutch stock, a substantial farmer of Fairfield county, Ohio, and the father of Fifteen children, of whom fourteen lived to adult age and one to adolescence, and were named as follows:  Nancy, Fanny, Inda, Mary, Rebecca, Lee, Caroline, Elizabeth (died at fourteen), Reuben, Etta, Samuel, Levi, Daniel, Noah and Joseph.  The father of this family died in Fairfield county at an advanced age, a member of the German church.
     LEVI MYERS,
the father of Mrs. Lydia E. Stemen, married in Fairfield county, and had born to his union with Rachael Spitler seven children, viz.:  Aaron, Catherine, Lydia E., Alvina, Louis H., Noah and David Y., all born in Fairfield county, where the father owned a fertile farm of eighty acres.  In 1852 he moved to Allen county, Ohio, and settled on a farm of eighty acres in Sugar Creek township, which had been partly cleared, and which he afterward made into a good farm and cultivated until his death, at the comparatively early age of forty-one years, a member of the German Reform church.  Of his sons, Aaron served during the Civil war, about one year, in an Ohio regiment; Louis served three years in the Ninety-ninth Ohio infantry, and Noah, when a lad of eighteen, served about six months.
     John M. Stemen, after marriage, settled, Sept. 11, 1856, on the farm now occupied by his widow.  The tract comprised ninety-five acres of dense woodland, on which he built a log cabin, which is still standing.  But he was an industrious, hard-working man, and changed this primitively rude condition of things to one of comfort and beauty.  To himself and wife were born eight children, viz: David B., Mary A., Martha A. (who died at the age of twenty-one years), William E., Louis H. (who died when twenty-five years old), Benjamin F. and two that died in infancy.  The death of Mr. Stemen took place at the age of fifty years, on his farm, Oct. 9, 1875, in the faith of the Lutheran church, and in politics a democrat.  He was a kind and affectionate husband and father, a good farmer and obliging neighbor, and a patriotic and useful citizen, whose death was deeply deplored by his sorrowing family and a large circle of friends.
     After the death of her husband Mrs. Stemen managed the farm with care and prudence and reared her children to become respected members of society, giving them all good educations and thoroughly preparing them for the duties of life.  Mary A., now twenty-one years old, is an accomplished school-teacher; David B. is united in marriage with Mary E. Bressler, lives on the home farm, and is the father of six children; Mary A. is married to James Wallace, of Ridge township, Van Wert county, and is the mother of two children; William E. married Leah Stemen, is a farmer of Ridge township and is the father of one child.  Mrs. Stemen is a devout member of the Methodist church, and enjoys the esteem of a large circle of friends, who truly honor her for her many motherly, neighborly and christian virtues.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 742
  CHARLES F. STEWART, the popular liveryman of the city of Van Wert, was born in Van Wert county, Ohio, Mar. 28, 1855, and is a son of Ebzon and Elizabeth (Capper) Stewart, the former of whom is a native of Carroll county, Ohio, where he was engaged in farming, and where he was married.  On coming to Van Wert county he located in Harrison township, where he entered 160 acres of land, which he cultivated and made his home until 1869, when his wife was taken away.  His home being thus broken up he removed, in 1871, to Ridge township and bought 470 acres, where he resided until his death.  The children born to these parents were sixteen in number, of whom thirteen were named, Edward, Mary (deceased), Ellen, Jane (deceased), Charles F., Alonzo (deceased), Amanda (deceased), Milton, Newton, Emma and two twins, unnamed.  The parents were members of the Methodist Episcopal church, and in politics Mr. Stewart was a republican; he held the office of township assessor and trustee, was an organizer of grange No. 72 and died worth at least $20,000.
     Charles F. Stewart was reared and educated in Ridge township, and at the age of twenty-one years hired out for two years as a farm laborer; he then married and engaged in farming on the old homestead until 1880, when he bought ninety-five acres in Harrison township, but at the end of the year sold out and purchased seventy-eight acres in Ridge township, on which he lived until 1865, and then, in 1866, returned to the old home farm; shortly afterward he again bought a farm of small dimensions in Ridge township, on which he made his home until 1892, when he moved to Washington township, Paulding county, and purchased a farm on which he resided until 1894, when he came to Van Wert city, in which month of September, and bought his present livery stock and barn on North Market street, which he has successfully conducted to the present time.
     The marriage of Mr. Stewart took place in Ridge township, Van Wert county, May 22, 1877, to Miss Julia B. Hill, who was born in the same township May 11, 1824, a daughter of Harrison Hill, the result of this union being two children - Homer F. and Viola Pearl.   the parents are members of the Methodist Episcopal church, in politics he is a republican.  He is the owner of eighty-four acres of good land in Paulding county, and his livery and feed barn in Van Wert, which is the most popular establishment of the kind in the city.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 700
  DAVID STEWART, a prudent and sagacious farmer of Ridge township, was born in Van Wert county, Ohio, Feb. 25, 1849.  His father, Ebgon Stewart, was a native of Carroll county, born Mar. 6, 1818, and there married Elizabeth Capper, who was born in the same county in 1824, the union resulting in the birth of sixteen children, viz: Mary, who died at the age of forty-four years, the wife of H. H. Hudspeth; Edward, married to Adelaide Zimmerman and residing in Wisconsin; Martha, wife of John F. Leathers, of York township, Van Wert county, Ohio; Ellen, married to J. S. Baxter, also of York township; Jane, deceased wife of M. H. Mullen; David, subject of this sketch; Mahlon, who wedded Nettie Baxter, but who is now deceased; Amanda, deceased wife of William Knittle; John, who died in infancy; Charley, the husband of Belle Hill; Alonzo, who died in infancy; Milton, who married Ida Crates and now resides in Gas City, Ind.; Emma, wife of P. M. Ireland, of Lima, Ohio; Newton, of Putnam county, Ohio, and married to Mattie Hill; also there were born to this union twin daughters, who died unnamed.  In the fall of 1841 Mr. Stewart came to Van Wert county and located on land in Harrison township that had been entered by his wife's father,  Mr. Capper, and there Mrs. Stewart died in 1868; for his second wife Mr. Stewart married Harriet Boyer, and in 1870 removed to Ridge township and purchased a farm of 300 acres, on which he resided until his death, which occurred Jan. 28, 1887.  In religion Mr. Stewart was a Methodist, and in politics was a republican.
     David Stewart, the subject of this sketch, was reared on his father's farm, also received the full benefit of the local schools, and for a time attended the Van Wert high-school, becoming well qualified as a teacher, and for six terms followed that vocation.  In 1871 he wedded Miss Malissa Gilliland, the only living child of Hugh Gilliland, of whom an extended notice is given elsewhere in this volume.  To the marriage of David and Malissa Stewart have been born four children, viz: Nannie, wife of A. B. Osborn, a book-keeper of Van Wert; Hugh G., Oscar D. and Clyde M.  In 1882 Mr. Stewart purchased his present home of eighty acres in Ridge township, on which he has made many modern improvements and placed under a fine state of cultivation.  Mr. Stewart is a member of lodge No. 218, F. & A. M., of Van Wert, and in politics is a republican.  He is held in great esteem by his neighbors in Ridge township and by his friends in Van Wert, and is regarded as an enterprising farmer and useful citizen, who will in the near future stand forth as a leader among the residents of the county.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 741
  PHEBE STEWART, widow of Samuel P. Stewart, and daughter of John and Nancy (Spence) Boyd, was born in Hancock County, Ohio, on the present site of the city of Findlay, in the 1827.  Her father was born in Pennsylvania, near old Lancaster, in 1799, the son of David Boyd, who was a descendant of a well-known Scotch-Irish father of eminent respectability, which settled in the Keystone state at a very early period of its history.  David Boyd married Phebe Clark and became the father of four children, two sons and two daughters.  John, the eldest, received a good education in his native state, early learned the blacksmith trade, and in 1826 was united in marriage with Nancy Spence, above mentioned.  This marriage was blessed with the birth of three children: Phebe, whose name introduces this sketch; William, a resident of Kansas and Joseph of Lawrence county, Ohio.  The mother was born in 1794, grew to womanhood on the country home of her parents, was a consistent member of the Methodist Episcopal church, and died in 1830.  Subsequently Mr. Boyd married Mary Foglesong, of Richland county, Ohio, who bore him eight children, whose names are as follows:  Ruth, deceased; Mrs. Matilda J. Wilkins, deceased; David J., deceased; Mrs. Mary F. Wright; Mrs. Harriet A. Hughes; Sarah F.; Emma, and James E., who lives in Michigan.  The mother was born in Richland county, Ohio, in 1814, and is still living.
     In 1826 Mr. Boyd brought his young wife to Hancock county, Ohio, where he purchased a forty-acre tract of land, which he subsequently improved, and to which, from time to time, he made additions, in the meantime working at his trade.  About 1830 he moved to Richland county, thence several years later to Michigan, in which state he spent the remainder of his life, dying in April, 1881.  In religion he was a member of the Adventist church, and politically was first a democrat and later, on account of his intense opposition to slavery, became a republican, remaining a member of that party from its formation until his death.  He is remembered as quite a successful business man and upright and honorable citizen, highly esteemed by all with whom he came in contact.
     Phebe, eldest daughter of John Boyd, received a fair English education in the common schools, and in her twenty-third year was married, in Richland county, Ohio, to Samuel P. Stewart.  Five children were born of this union: Perry E., who died in infancy; George W., an artist of Montpelier, Ind.; William L., deceased; Edward E., killed in a railroad accident in March, 1890, and John L., who lives on the old home place.
     Samuel P. Stewart was a native of Ohio, born in the county of Richland, September 9, 1825, the son of Samuel and Hannah (Perry) Stewart.  In early life he learned the carpenter's trade, and after his marriage worked at the same very successfully for a period of seven years, or until his removal to the county of Van Wert, in 1857.  On coming to this county he located on a farm which he had previously purchased, and which, through his untiring industry, was cleared and brought to a successful state of cultivation.  At intervals he worked at his trade in the neighborhood, and in May, 1864, entered the army, as a member of company I, Twenty-ninth Ohio volunteer infantry, for the 100-day service.  He was sent to the army of the Potomac, and did guard duty until Aug. 19, 1864, at which time his death occurred.  Mr. Stewart was highly respected in the community where he resided, was a strict member of the Baptist church, and contributed liberally of his means toward the advancement of all moral and religious movements.  Politically he was a republican, but, while an earnest supporter of his party, never sought nor desired official preferment at the hands of his fellow-citizens.
     John L. Stewart, who resides on the home place in Pleasant township, was born Oct. 14, 1862, and received his education in the country schools of V an Wert county.  Like many other sons of Ohio, his early life was passed amid the uneventful scenes of the farm, and he grew to manhood possessed of a rugged vitality and sterling honesty, factors necessary to successful citizenship.  Early deprived of the father's care, he assumed the management of the farm, in which he displayed wise fore-thought, and soon became one of the intelligent and progressive agriculturists of the township.  He has given his whole attention to farming, believes in the nobility of his calling, and belongs to that large and intelligent class of people who, in a quiet way, have done so much toward developing and building up our great western country.  Mr. Stewart and Margaret E. Callendine, daughter of George and Samantha (Bodkin) Callendine, of Van Wert county, were united in marriage in the year 1889, and to them have been born the following children: Adessa, Verda, Royal P. and Ruth.  Mr. and Mrs. Stewart are members of the Baptist church, and take an active part in the work of their home congregation.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 699
  ZACHARIAH STEWART, a practical and progressive farmer of Washington township, Van Wert county, Ohio, is a native of the Buckeye state and was born in Fairfield county, Aug. 15, 1840.  His father, also named Zachariah, was born in Ireland, and came to America while still a young man.  He located first in Fairfield county, Ohio, and there married a lady of Pennsylvania-Dutch ancestry, and later came to Van Wert county and settled on the land in Washington township now occupied by his son Joseph, and here died at the age of about sixty years.
     Zachariah Stewart, whose name opens this sketch, was but a small boy when brought to Van Wert county by his father.  Reared on a pioneer farm he had but few opportunities for schooling, but by self-exertion attained sufficient knowledge for the prosecution of the ordinary business in life.  In 1862, at Lima, Ohio, he enlisted in company H, Fifteenth Ohio volunteer infantry, for three years  or during the war, but his actual service comprised but eighteen months - nine months under his enlistment, being them honorably discharged on account of sickness; later on he was drafted, and after another experience of nine months of army life, was again discharged for the same cause.  He took part, however, in the siege of Nashville, was in many skirmishes and did a great deal of hard marching.  He was confined in hospital at Louisville, Ky., with chronic diarrhoea, and was also stricken with measles during his service, and came very near death, and was so badly disabled by disease in doing his duty to his country that he has been granted a pension of $10 per month by the government.  Mr. Stewart is now the owner of a good farm of forty acres, which he has cleared up from the woods of Washington township, from which he is deriving a fair income and on which he makes his home.  He is an upright, hardworking man and is respected by all who know him, and in politics he is a democrat.
     A. J. Stewart, a brother of Zachariah, our subject, also enlisted in company H, Fifteenth Ohio volunteer infantry, for three years, then veteranized, and served until the close of the war- taking part in many battles and doing the full duty of a soldier.  He is now a prominent citizen of Jackson township, Van Wert county, and at one tie served as infirmary director.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 901
  GEORGE W. STRIPE, one of the most progressive and prosperous young farmers of Hoaglin township, Van Wert county, Ohio, is "native here and to the manor born,"  Oct. 11, 1860.  His grandfather Jacob Stripe, a native of Pennsylvania, was of English descent, and was an early settler of Fairfield county, Ohio, and, when married, all his earthly possessions could be carried in a common pocket handkerchief, but at his death in that county has landed possessions entitled him to the appellation of a substantial farmer and citizen.  His son, also named Jacob, the father of our subject, was born in Fairfield county, Ohio, May 17, 1811, was reared to farming, a vocation he always followed, and with success.  He married Elizabeth, daughter of William and Sarah Harvey, and had born to him the following children:  John, William H., Jacob L., and George W., all born in Van Wert county, where the parents were married.  The father of this family, Jacob Stripe, Jr., at his marriage was the owner of a farm of eighty acres, but later, in partnership with a brother, acquired 1,600 acres, of which at the time of his death, May 16, 1882, he bequeathed to his children eighty acres each.  He was a Jacksonian democrat and a strictly moral man.  His widow still resides on the homestead, respected and honored by all her neighbors.
     George W. Stripe, our subject, who has been thoroughly trained to farming and well educated in the district school, on January 21, 1885, married Miss Hermia A. Hattery, daughter of Nathaniel and Ellen (Atchison) Hattery, and a sister of Mrs. Addison A. Giffin, whose name will be found in the sketch of her husband on another page.  Three years after marriage, Mr. Stripe and wife located on their present farm of eighty acres of most fertile land, improved with modern farm residence, barn and other necessary buildings, and well stocked and highly cultivated.  The union of Mr. and Mrs. Stripe has been blessed by the birth of one child, Marie, now attending school, the parents being ardent advocates of popular instruction and admirers of educating the young under all circumstances.  Mr. Stripe is in politics a stanch democrat and is energetic in his aid to his party.  He was a member of grange No. 400, of which he has been assistant steward, and through his township stands high in the estimation of his neighbors, not only as a useful citizen but as a progressive farmer.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 709
  JOHN STRIPE, a substantial farmer, was born in Hoaglin township, Van Wert county, Ohio, Aug. 14, 1846, and Hoaglin township is still his home.  His descent will be found in detail in the biography of his younger brother, G. W. Stripe, which will be found below (herein), and the two sketches, in conjunction, make a complete family history.  John Stripe acquired a sound education in the first frame school-house erected in the township, was reared to the vocation of farming.  He first married, Aug. 4, 1870, Harriet Clem, daughter of Isaac and Rebecca. (Cro__) Clem, the father being then a farmer of Champaign county, Ohio, but now deceased.  To the marriage of Mr. Stripe were born four children, who were named, in order of birth, as follows:  Minnie A., Eleanor, Oma and _erry.  The mother of these children died Feb.11, 1880, and the second marriage of Mr. Stripe took place Apr. 20, 1882, to Miss Mattie C. Burgess, daughter of Lloyd and Mary Robinson) Burgess.  The father of this lady was born in Springfield, Ohio, Oct. 15, 1827, and the mother in Xenia, Ohio, Mar. 7, 1828, and were married in Xenia, June 27, 1845.  Until the outbreak of the Civil war Mr. Burgess was employed in the saddelry trade, and since the close has been engaged in carriage trimming.  He and wife have both been active members of hte Methodist church, and now reside in Warsaw, Ind., where Mr. Burgess votes with the republicans.  To the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Burgess have been born the following children: Emily (deceased), James A., Mattie C., Frank H., William G. (deceased), Emma J. (deceased), Fanny, Allie, Hattie J., Sallie, and Bertie (deceased).  To the second marriage of Mr. Stripe the following children have been born:  M. Herbert and M. Albert (twins), Delbert L., Carl V., Minnie (deceased) and George.  Mr. Stripe has an excellently well improved home farm of eighty-two acres, every rod of which shows the skill and care of the experienced agriculturist; he also owns ten acres of Ridge township, and a farm of twenty-one acres, composed of a portion of his father's old homestead, around which, in his youthful days, roamed numberless wolves and other wild beasts; and game, such as bear, deer and turkey, was as plentiful as could be desired even by an amateur huntsman, but he has seen all this changed to be occupied by the domestic poultry and cattle of the thrifty farmer, and the fruitful fields which have supplanted the wild woods.  Mr. Stripe is a stanch prohibitionist in his political affiliations, has had the nomination of his party for county treasurer, and is also a member of grange No. 400.  He and wife are consistent members of the Methodist church, and their social relations most agreeable, being highly respected, as they are, by the community.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 906
(SHARON WICK's Notes:  In 1870, Hoaglin, Van Wert, Co., OH, John Stripe lived with his children: Minnie, John E., and Oma; ALSO picture of John Stripe found at Ancestry.com; 1860 Census, Jackson, Van Wert, Ohio lived with wife, Elizabeth and children: John, William, & Jacob; He can be found with wife Harriet buried at Woodland Union Cemetery, Van Wert, Van Wert Co., OH; ALSO in 1850 Census, Dist. 147 Hoaglin Tp., Van Wert Co., OH John lived with Elisabeth, John, William H.; Andrew Hattery family listed on same page.)
  WILLIAM H. STRIPE, a native of Hoaglin township, Van Wert county, Ohio, and a most prosperous farmer, was born Nov. 14, 1847, and is a brother of John and George W. Stripe, the biography of the latter being in immediate juxtaposition with this sketch, and in which the genealogy of the family will be found in full.  William H. Stripe, our subject, was reared to practical farming, receiving, in his boyhood, a sound education.  Jan. 14, 1869, he was united in the bonds of matrimony with Miss Sarah D. Lamson, daughter of Alfred and Avaline (Scott) Lamson, who were, until 1850, residents of Geauga county, but who, since that date, have made their home in Van Wert county, the parents of two children, Sarah D. (Mrs.  Stripe) and Horace A.  To the union of William H. and Sarah D. Stripe, have been born a family of six children, named Frank E. (deceased), Charles S., Leola A.  After his marriage Mr. Stripe at once settled on part of the old homestead, of which he now owns fifty-five acres, improved with a good new modern house and other farm buildings, and under such a state of cultivation that no one, excepting an experienced farmer like himself, could have placed it.
     In his party affiliations William H. Stripe is a pronounced democrat, and has been honored by his party with election to several local offices, including those of township trustee, township clerk and township assessor, and under the old law he served as school director fifteen years.  Mrs. Stripe in religion adheres to the faith of the Seventh Day Adventists.  For twenty years Mr. Stripe has been a member of the Patrons of Husbandry, grange No. 400, of Hoaglin, and has filled all the offices - his wife being also a member of this organization.  Mr. Stripe is an intelligent and progressive agriculturists, and understands the needs of the farmer as well as he comprehends the needs of the soil.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 711

Elisha F. Sunderland


Mrs. Frances L. Sunderland

ELISHA F. SUNDERLAND, a substantial farmer of Union township,Van Wert county, Ohio, is a son of Daniel and Lucinda (Washburn) Sunderland, and was born in Allen county, Ohio, Aug. 14, 1835.  The father, Daniel Sunderland, was born near Dayton, Ohio.  June 4, 1805, and when a child was taken by his parents to Allen county, where he was reared to farming.  July 5, 1824, he married, in Allen county, Miss Washburn, a native of the county, born Mar. 2, 1806, and to this union were born five children, viz: Ruth, deceased; Lydia, wife of Jonathan Hamilton; Samuel, deceased; Ebenezer, a farmer of Allen county, and Elisha F.; our subject.  About the year 1837 Daniel Sunderland moved with his family to Michigan, where he lost his wife in 1838, when he soon returned to his old home in Allen county, Ohio, where he was laid to rest on Dec. 12, 1841.
     Elisha Franklin Sunderland, it will have been observed, was left an orphan at the early age of six years, and was reared by his grand father, Samuel Washburn, of Allen county, until fourteen years of age, acquiring in the meantime a good common-school education; he then worked on a farm in the northern part of the county for five years; in 1855 he went to Missouri, where he worked the following year on a farm, when he joined a company of emigrants and went overland to California, consuming three months' time on the trip, experiencing exciting adventures and having several skirmishes with the Indians.  Having arrived at his destination, he devoted his attention to gold digging the Sierras until 1861, when he went to Oregon and had further experience in the mines there for some time; then engaged in teaming goods from the Columbia river to the mining region of Idaho and Montana until 1869, when he retarned to his old home in Allen county, Ohio, and the following spring came to Van Wert county, and bought a farm in Ridge township.  Twelve years later he purchased his present farm of 157 acres in Union township, which he has cleared from the woods and underdrained, and on which he has built a neat, modern dwelling and excellent barns, and in connection with his agricultural pursuits is engaged in breeding Duroc Jersey swine, and is altogether an enterprising and progressive farmer.  The marriage of Mr. Sunderland took place Mar. 6, 1870, to Miss Francis Little, daughter of George W. and Fannie (Walters) Little—the father a native of Virginia and the mother of Pennsylvania.  Mrs. Sunderland was born in 1837, and is now the mother of three children, viz: Lucinda B., deceased, Mary F. and William E.  One of the daughters is now a teacher in the schools of Van Wert county, and the son is teaching in Paulding county.  Mrs. Sunderland is a consistent member of the Methodist Episcopal church, and with her husband enjoys the respect of the entire community.  In politics Mr. Sunderland is a stanch republican.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 722
  ORLANDO D. SWARTOUT, a popular young business man of Van Wert, Ohio, was born in Clifton Park, Saratoga, N.Y., Dec. 27, 1843, a son of DEPEW and Anna M. (Sherman) Swartout.  The father, Depew Swartout, also a native of Saratoga county, N. Y., was born Dec. 30, 1809, a son of John and Jemima (Rosencrans) Swartout, the former of whom was a son of an immigrant from Holland, who settled in Dutchess county, N.Y., as a farmer.  John Swartout was born in Dutchess county in 1781, was there reared, and in early manhood moved to Saratoga county, where, in 1802, he married, and had born to him ten children, viz:  Sarah, Henry, Depew, Caroline, John, Amanda, Benjamin, Amelia, William, and Richard - all deceased save Depew and Amelia, now of Washington, D. C.
     Orlando D. Swarthout, when a lad, changed the spelling of the family name from the original, Swartwout, to its present form, which has been adopted by the family ever since.  Depew was reared in Saratoga county, and was there married, in 1839, to Ann M. Sherman, who was born in Rensselaer county, N. Y., in July, 1816, a daughter of Zebullon and Mary (Phillips) Sherman , and to this marriage of Depew and Ann M. have been born three children - Sherman, of New York city, Orlando D., our subject, and Richard, a wholesale dealer in notions at Grand Rapids, Mich.  Depew Swartout and wife still reside in Saratoga county, where the former followed his calling of carpentering and building for many years, but is now retired; he is a republican in politics, and he and wife are highly respected members of the Baptist church.
     Orlando D. Swartout was educated in the common schools of Saratoga county, N.Y., and in addition attended, for eight months, the business college at Poughkeepsie; then for two years held a clerkship in the office of the inspector general, of New York state, and then, in 1867 came to Van Wert, Ohio, and accepted a position as deputy probate judge under Andrew McGavren, with whom he remained fifteen months; he next became bookkeeper in the Van Wert County bank, then became assistant cashier, and them cashier, his term of service running from 1869 until 1877; he next engaged in the insurance business in company with I. R. Beery for two years, since when he has carried on the business for his sole account; he has also enacted as secretary for the Building & Loan association, and as secretary of the Agricultural society of Van Wert county since 1880; was formerly secretary of the Citizens' Gas company and is the present secretary of the Van Wert Natural Gas company; he is also book-keeper for the Oil Well Supply company, limited, and is one of the park commissioners, all of which positions he has filled with marked ability and to the unbounded satisfaction of all concerned.  Mr. Swartout was married in Van Wert, Sept. 18, 1872, to Miss Mary A. Swineford, a native of Crawford County, Ohio, born in 1850, and a daughter of Simon Swineford, and this happy union has been crowned by the birth of three children - Alice M., Ella and Rachael.  Mr. Swartout is a thirty-second degree Mason, and is a knight templar, and at present is captain-general of Ivanhoe commandery, No. 54; also a member of the Royal Arcanum.  His military experience was varied and brilliant, as will be seen by the following narration.  He enlisted in July, 1862, in company H, One Hundred and Fifteenth New York volunteer infantry, for a period of three years, or during the war, and was sent direct to Harper's Ferry, where 10,000 men were taken prisoners, and was paroled, and soon after exchanged; then was sent to the South Carolina and Florida campaign and sea service in Olusta, Fla., and numerous other engagements; he was wounded at Olusta by a rifle-ball in the hip, and was sent to Buford hospital, in South Carolina, and was there confined from February 18, to May 10, when he again went to the front at Petersburg, Va., and was almost constantly in battle until wounded at Deep Run in the shoulder, and for four months was confined in the Hampton, Va., hospital.  Prior to this he was in front of Petersburg, and participated in that struggle and was present at the explosion of the mine.   After discharge from the Hampton hospital he was detached from his regiment and placed in charge of the discharge department in the general office at Hampton, Va., where he remained until the close of war.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 744

S. Swineford
  SIMEON SWINEFORD.—The record of a busy life, a successful life, must ever prove fecund in interest and profit as scanned by the student who would learn of the intrinsic essence of individuality, who would attempt an analysis of character and trace back to the fountain-head the widely diverging channels which mark the onward flow, the constantly augmentive process, if we may be permitted the phrase, of such individuality. All human achievements, all human weal or woe—in short, all things within the mental ken—are but mirrored back from the composite individuality of those who have lived. "The proper study of mankind is man," said Pope, and aside from this, in its broader sense, what base of study and information have we? In entering a memoir to one who has played well his part in life and who I has ended his earthly career with a full quota of honors and tangible rewards does biography exercise its. highest function, and in this connection we may well take satisfaction in adverting to the life history of this honored pioneer of the city of Van Wert.
The subject of this review was one of the best known and most prominent business men of Van Wert for a course of many years, having been intimately concerned in all that concerned the development and material prosperity of the community and having here con­ducted a mercantile enterprise which was representative in that line of industry. He was born in Snyder county, Pa., July 10, 1819, securing a common-school education, and in his youth being apprenticed to learn the trade of chair making, to which he devoted his attention for a number of years in his native state. In 1839 he removed to Ashland county, Ohio, and there engaged in the business of his trade, continuing in this line of enterprise, at this point, for five years. He then located at Ashland, in Crawford county, where he secured employment as a salesman in a dry-goods store, retaining this incumbency for seven years. The year-of 1852 represents the date of our subject's advent in Van Wert, and upon his arrival here he became associated with the industrial activities of the place by engaging in the chair and furniture business, in which he continued for some time, and then entered the employ of Judge A. W. Baker, with whom he remained, in a clerical capacity, until he formed a partnership with Alonzo Conant, in the mercantile business, which association continued for a number of years, after which Mr. Swineford engaged in business for himself. Locating at the corner of Main and Washington streets, he there engaged in the grocery business and continued this enterprise most successfully for a long period of years and until the time of his death, securing a representative patronage and retaining the confidence and good will of the entire community. He was a man of scrupulous honor and integrity, was careful and conservative in his business methods, and was animated by a broad spirit of humanity and charity. Distinctly individual and with strong and well defined convictions, he never swerved from the strict path of that which he considered his duty, but against him there has never been charged an unkindly deed or a disregard of the rights of others. When this honored pioneer was summoned into the life eternal, on November 30, 1874, the community mourned the loss of a valuable citizen, and an honest and noble man. To him came a full measure of success in the material affairs of life, and this none could be begrudging. He was one of the original stockholders of the First National bank of Van Wert, and for many years served as a member of its board of directors, and as vice-president.
In political adherency, Mr. Swineford was an uncompromising republican, but the extraction of his active business affairs rendered it inexpedient for him to aspire to political preferment, though it must be said that he ever manifested a signal reluctance to securing notoriety in any way, and had no desire to become a candidate for public office.
     December 22, 1840, was solemnized the marriage of the honored subject to Miss Rachael Clayburg, daughter of Isaac Clayburg, of Ashland, Ohio, he having been a native of York county, Pa. Mrs. Swineford was born in that county of the old Keystone state and accompanied her father on his emigration to Ashland county, Ohio, where Mr. Clayburg attained prestige as one of the pioneer settlers and most honored citizens of that section. Mr. and Mrs. Swineford became the parents of five children, viz: Benjamin C.; Lawrence R.; Mary A.; wife of Orlando D. Swartout, of Van Wert, and Charles M., whose death occurred in infancy, and Henry, deceased. Mrs. Swineford survives her husband and lives to hold in perpetual regard and honor the memory of the one whose name she bears and who represented in his domestic life the truest virtues and the utmost devotion to those who placed dependence upon him.  High upon the scroll of the honored pioneers of Van Wert will ever be inscribed the name of Simeon Swineford; Mary A.; wife of Orlando D. Swartout, of Van Wert, and Charles M., whose death occurred in infancy, and Henry, deceased. Mrs. Swineford survives her husband and lives to hold in perpetual regard and honor the memory of the one whose name she bears and who represented in his domestic life the truest virtues and the utmost devotion to those who placed dependence upon him. High upon the scroll of the honored pioneers of Van Wert will ever be inscribed the name of Simeon Swineford.
Source:  A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co. - 1896 - Page 8

NOTES:

 

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