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OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS

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ALLEN COUNTY, OHIO
HISTORY & GENEALOGY


 


BIOGRAPHIES

Source: 
A Portrait and Biographical Record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio
Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co.
1896

A B C D E F G H I J K L M
N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

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  BERNARD W. DALK, one of the well-known citizens of Delphos, Ohio, and proprietor of one of the largest blacksmith establishments in the city, was born in Cleveland, Ohio, May 24, 1857.  His parents are JOSEPH and Anna (Simons) Dalk.  The father was born in Westphalia, Germany, in 1828, and the mother was born in the city of Cleveland, Ohio, she being the daughter of Nicholas Simons, one of the early citizens of that city.  The parents were married in Cleveland, where the mother died in 1858, when our subject was but eleven months old.  The father learned the carpenter and cabinetmaker's trade, but he has followed railroading most of his life, and for twenty years was in the employ of the Lake Shore railroad at Cleveland as a car builder.  He left Cleveland in 1880 and located at Fostoria, Ohio, and two years later came to Delphos, and went to work in the Clover Leaf shops at this place.  He is a member of St. John's Roman Catholic church.
     B. W. Dalk was the only child born of his parents' marriage.  He was reared in Cleveland, his grandmother Simons taking him as an infant at his mother's death and rearing him until his fourth year, when his father, having married again, took charge of his son.  The latter received his schooling in the German Catholic school in Cleveland, receiving a good German and English education.  After leaving school he entered the Lake Shore railroad shops with the intention of learning the machinist's trade, at which he worked for a year and a half, and then began work in the blacksmith shop of James Cullen, in Cleveland, where he worked for about six months, starting there to learn the trade, but finishing up at Delphos.  In 1873, being on his way to Fort Wayne, Ind., he stopped off at Delphos to visit a friend, and concluded to locate here, and in 1874 he began an apprentice shop of three years with August C. Grothaus, a blacksmith.  After finishing his apprenticeship he continued to work for Mr. Grothaus until September 19, 1891, when he left his shop, and the next week began getting timber on the ground, preparing to build a shop, and beginning blacksmithing for himself.  On the 10th day of October, the same year, he had his shop up and was ready for business.  He was not long in building up a trade, as he was always well liked and had a reputation as a first-class workman, and from year to year his trade has grown until he now has one of the leading shops of the city.  He contemplates erecting a large brick shop in the near future on his lot, on the corner of First and West Canal streets, where he will run a complete carriage and wagon manufactory.  His present place of business is on teh corner of West First street and the canal, where he employs two men besides himself.  He does a general blacksmithing and repair business, but makes a specialty of fine horse-shoeing, his shop being the only one in the city that turns out a hand-made iron or steel shoe.  Mr. Dalk also owns a handsome cottage residence, a story and a half, on the corner of Cleveland avenue and Pierce street and also owns well improved residence property on the corner of Pierce and Jackson streets.
     Mr. Dalk was married August 28, 1883, to Miss Anna Schwartzengraber, who was born in Delphos, her father having been the first brewer in the city.  Mr. and Mrs. Dalk are members of Saint John's Roman Catholic church of Delphos, and he is a member of the Royal Arcanum.  He is a democrat in politics when it comes to voting for a president or a governor, but when it comes to minor office he votes for the best man.  Mr. Dalk has met with deserved success in his business.  He is full of energy and enterprise, ambitious to improve his business and himself, and is considered one of the leading and active citizens of Delphos.  He has many warm friends and is universally respected by all who know him.
Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 247
  CHARLES L. DAVIS

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 249

  FRANCIS Y. DAVIS

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 248

  FRANK L. DAVIS

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 250

  REV. WILLIAM MEIRION DAVIS

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 349

  AMAZIAH DAVISSON (deceased) was one of the oldest and most substantial farmers of Auglaize township, Allen county, Ohio, was of Scotch-Irish descent, and was born in Harrison county, Va., Sept. 21, 1822, and there passed his entire life in farming pursuits.  His grandfather, Joseph Davisson, a farmer of much repute, lived and died in Harrison county and born in 1778, there married Charity Critchfield, a lady of many accomplishments, who became the mother of the following children:  Pattie, Joseph, Mary, Elizabeth, John, Arthur, Amaziah, all deceased, and David.
     John Davisson, father of this family, left Harrison county, Va. (now West Virginia), in 1832, and came to Ohio and settled among the early pioneers of Champaign county.  He had been an old line whig and had been represented his county in the state legislature, after coming to Ohio, as a republican, although his county was strongly democratic - this fact showing that he was not only a very po9pular man but a very good politician, who well understood the issues of his day.  He died in Champaign county, Ohio, in May, 1839, and soon afterward his widow, with her family, came to Allen county, where she died a year after her arrival.
     Amzaiah Davisson was educated in a select school and was well prepared for the business of life.  April 8, 1852, he married, in Allen county, Miss Eliza J. Nye, daughter of George and Sarah (Pascal) Nye both natives of Pennsylvania.  Eliza J. Nye was born in Fairfield county, Ohio, May 25, 1829.  Her parents, however, were married in Berkeley county, Va., and the father, who was a blacksmith by trade, later settled in Pickaway county, Ohio, fought in the war of 1812, and ended his days in Pickaway county, Ohio, a member of the Lutheran church, April 20, 1835.  His widow survived until June 1881, and died in the Presbyterian faith.  The children of these parents were born in the following order: Kate, Maggie, William, Elizabeth, Hetty, James, Mary, Phebe, Eliza J., Sallie and Bell, of whom the only daughters still surviving are Eliza J. and Phebe.  The children born to Amaziah Davisson and wife are named in order of birth as follows:  Monroe, a physician, of whom mention is made in full further on; John, Albert, Bell, wife of J. A. McCartney, postal clerk on the C., H. & D. railroad line and resident of Lima, Ohio.  Amaziah Davisson was a self-made man and was the owner of 200 acres of fine farming land.  He was free in his financial aid to religious denominations and a friend to educational progression; was a master Mason of lodge No. 105, at Lima, and was one of the old pioneers, well known and highly respected throughout the township.  He died, much lamented, Nov. 24, 1895.
     Monroe Davisson, M. D., son of Amaziah Davisson, was born in Auglaize township, Allen county, Ohio, Dec. 12, 1855, and was reared on the home farm.  He attended the normal school at Ada, Ohio, several years and later taught twelve terms.  He then read medicine with Dr. H. Thomas, at West Newton, Ohio, and  when fully prepared entered the medical department of the university at Ann Arbor, Mich., studied one year, then entered the Eclectic Medical college at Cincinnati, Ohio, from which he graduated in 1882; he also tended a regular course in 1891 - being thus a graduate from diverse schools of medicine.  The doctor has a fine library of medical works and also subscribes for the leading medical periodicals of American and keeps well abreast of the progress made in the science of medicine.  For the first two years after graduating, Dr. Davisson practiced in Uniopolis, Auglaize county, Ohio, where he at once established a solid reputation for professional skill; since leaning Uniopolis  he has been in the active practice of his profession in his native village of West Newton - the Crucial test for all young practitioners being in their native town - and here his reputation, like is practice, has increased from day to day. "A prophet is not without honor, and save his own country' but here the doctor has won both honor and recompenense.
     The marriage of Dr. Davisson took place, in 1884, to Miss Evanna Blank, who was born in Union township, Auglaize county, Ohio, Jan. 1, 1865, a daughter of George A. Blank, a retired farmer, now residing in Uniopolis - a democrat in politics, and, with his wife, a member of the Lutheran church.  The doctor is a member of the Northwest Ohio Eclectic Medical association, standing very high with his professional brethren; is a member of Sager lodge, No. 513, F. & A. M.,  of LaFayette, Ohio, and is a non-affiliating Odd Fellow.  His social standing is with the best people of the township and county, and as a physician he stands, as has been intimated, at the head of the profession.
Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 251
  HIRAM T. DeLONG

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 253

David W. Ditto


Mrs. Florence B. Ditto

DAVID W. DITTO

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 256

  WILLIAM THOMAS DOLBEY

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 255

  JOHN DOLT

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 259

  JULIAN DORIOT

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 260

  JOHN R. DRAY

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 261

 

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