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OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS

A Part of Genealogy Express
 

WELCOME to
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
  ABRAM EARLY

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 262

  DAVID EAST, of German township, Allen county, Ohio, is a son of ISAAC and Barbara (Burkholder) East, both deceased.  The father was born Aug. 7, 1819, in Pickaway county, Ohio, and when about thirteen years of age came to Allen county.  Nov. 28, 1839, he was married to Miss Barbara Burkholder, who was born in Pennsylvania, Jan. 12, 1819.  She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Burkholder, and of German origin.  After the marriage of Isaac East he settled in German township, Allen county, Ohio, on a tract of fifteen acres, the gift of his father.  Here he worked with his father, and aided in operating a tread-mill, where flour and meal were ground and lumber sawed.  In 1848, being the entire owner of the plant, and believing it behind the times, he purchased a steam outfit and applied it to his milling interests.  He operated this until 1853, when he erected a modern one, with four pairs of burrs.  He also added machinery for carding wool and attached it to the new plant.  He continued in this business until Aug. 23, 1863, when the mill was destroyed by fire, whereupon he went to Lima, purchased ground and erected a grist and carding-mill combined, which was carried on successfully until 1869, when this plant was destroyed in the same manner as the first.  Isaac East then turned his attention to farming and operating a saw-mill.  His death occurred Dec. 9, 1894, at the residence of his son David.  A volume of no mean size might be written with profit of this man, and the historian should redeem it from obscurity, which it nowise merits.
     David East, the eldest of the nine children was born to Isaac and Barbara East, was born Sept. 26, 1840, was reared on the farm and assisted in the mills, getting his education in the public schools of the county.  After the milling plant in Lima burned, in partnership with J. W. Ross, he erected a grist-mill on the site of the old one, and, after having operated this mill under various names, Mr. East, in 1876, was elected county treasurer, and had assumed his duties as such when the mill was again burned, making four fires which Mr. East had to contend with, sustaining heavy losses each time.  He filled the office of county treasurer four years.  His ruling passion was milling in its various departments, but in 1887 he made a departure and directed his entire attention to the dairying business, which Mrs. East had established in 1877 with one cow, and in 1887 the herd had increased to twenty-four.  They continued in the dairy business until 1895, when the enterprise was then disposed of.  In 1888 they moved to their present home, a farm of 103 acres in section No. 22, German township, where they are now engaged in farming.  Mr. East was married, in 1863, to Miss Sarah J. Curtice, daughter of Lewis Curtice, and was born in Fairfield county, Ohio, Jan. 9, 1841.  Five children were born to them: Ida F., Elmer A., Mary E. (deceased), Lillie M. and Clara B.  The family are members of the Disciples' church, Mr. East being a deacon in the same.
     The great-grandfather of our subject was Christopher East, who was born in Germany - a Hessian - and came to America under the banner of King George, of England, with a company of 1,200 soldiers, to participate in the war of the Rebellion.  He, with about ninety others, deserted King George and joined Washington's forces, fighting for freedom until the close of the war, after which he settled in Pennsylvania, near Carlisle.  He had a family of seven children.  John East the grandfather of our subject, was born Dec. 12, 1794, in Pennsylvania, where he learned the carpenter's trade when a young man, and came to Lancaster, Ohio, and worked at his vocation, and when his father came to Pickaway county, John joined him.  He married Miss Elizabeth Huffer, of Fairfield county, who was a native of Virginia and born in 1797.  In 1832, John and his family came to Allen county, Ohio, to a tract of land which he had before entered, and in time erected a tread-mill for grinding flour and meal, and a saw-mill in which he did the sawing for the neighborhood.  His children were, Mary, Isadore (deceased), Abraham, (deceased), Elizabeth and Samuel.  He was in religion a strong old-school Baptist and a man of broad and progressive views.
Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 264
  SAMUEL EAST, of German township, Allen county, is a native of Pickaway county, Ohio, and was born Dec. 2, 1830.  He was reared on the farm in that county, and was early initiated into the art of clearing land and in the performance of all the work incident to the preparation of a farm for successful tillage.  The old log school-house, was his academy, and in this academy he received all the instruction necessary for a successful agriculturist and useful citizen.  He remained at home with his father as long as that father lived, and continued to operate the farm until his mother died, which was in 1871, when he purchased a portion of his present farm, the amount then purchased consisting of 228 acres, located in sections Nos. 22 and 15, German township.  Upon this farm he has since resided and has long been known and recognized as one of the most solid and substantial men of the county.  He has always contributed his full share toward its progress and development and has been and is ready to aid any movement promising to promote its best interests.  Some time after the purchase of the original portion of his present farm, he purchased seventy-six acres just north of the home, in section No. 15, immediately adjoining the 228 acres, and later 160 acres in section No. 2, of which he sold eighty acres to his son, Monroe  He also has sold forty acres of that lying in section No. 15 to his son-in-law, Daniel Crider.  Of the 160 acres, which he owned in Jackson township, Van Wert county, he sold eighty acres to his son, Alfred.  Besides these several parcels of land he owns eighty acres in sections Nos. 15 and 16, German township, Allen county, and summing up the several portions, his present possessions consist of 504 acres of as fine farming lands as any man need wish to own.  Mr. East began life at the bottom of the ladder, and like many other citizens of this free land, so full of opportunities for the industries, has, by industry, persistent determination to overcome difficulties, and by honest dealing with all those with whom he has sustained business relations achieved success and is to-day one of the well-to-do citizens of Allen county.
     In politics Mr. East is a democrat, and while never seeking political preferment he has held the office of township trustee five years.  In religious belief he is a Baptist, and has always lived consistently with that faith.  Mr. East was married Dec. 29, 1854, to Miss Elizabeth Mumaw, a native of Knox county, Ohio, and a daughter of Frederick and Eleanora (Logan) Mumaw.  To this marriage there have been born nine children:  Marian, deceased; Monroe M., Alfred and Albert, twins, of whom Alfred is deceased; Melissa E., deceased wife of Daniel Crider of German township; Duly I., wife of Titus Crites of German township; Sarah P., wife of Harry Desinberg of German township, and Irene B. (dead).
     Monroe M. East is one of the most prosperous young farmers of German township, Allen county.  He was born in this township Mar. 13, 1858, and was reared on the old homestead, to which he has always been much attached.  His education was received in the public schools.  Remaining at home until his twentieth year, he then rented 160 acres of land of his father, in section No. 16, of German township, upon which, in 1886, he erected a frame residence, 14x28 feet in size, with an "L" 14x14 feet, all two stories in height.  Many other improvements were made, among them the erection of a wind-pump, for the purpose of raising water for his stock.  In 1891 he purchased eighty acres of land he had rented of his father, continuing to rent the remaining portion of the 160 acres.  In 1886 he purchased fourteen and one-half acres in section No. 21, which he still retains.  Mr. East follows general farming and stock raising, as does his father also, and beside has made a specialty of raising sheep, though of recent years he has not found his branch of farming as profitable as he could have wished.  For some years he gave considerable attention to market gardening, but this ranch of industry he engaged in bailing hay, operating one baler by gasoline power, and now also owns a steam thresher.
     Politically, like his father, he is a stanch democrat, and, as is also his wife, he is a member of the radical branch of the United Brethren church.  Mr. East was married Nov. 1, 1877, to iss Priscilla A. Crider, daughter of Isaac and Susan (Seerfast) Crider and a native of Auglaize county, Ohio, born in the town of Cridersville, Mar. 17, 1855.  Mr. and Mrs. East are the parents of six children: Susan E., deceased; Olive E.; Irene B.; Bessie M.; Samuel C. and Catherine G.  Mr. East is a young man of energy and industry, and is unusually progressive, fully abreast of the times; is ambitious and intelligent, and without doubt the future has in store for him great prosperity and happiness.
Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 263
  M. V. EATON

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 265

  ELIJAH EDMAN, retired farmer of Allen county, Ohio, is a son of Paul and Hannah (Harris) Edman.  Paul Edman was a son of Samuel Edman, who was born near Paterson, N. J. about the year 1760.  Samuel was one of the Revolutionary fathers, having been a soldier under Washington.  After the close of the war Mr. Edman engaged for some time in rafting timber down the Delaware river, and some time later he purchased a farm in Powhatan county, Va., upon which he lived for several years, or until 1814, in which year he purchased 206 acres in Burlington township, Licking county, Ohio.  Upon this farm he died at the great age of eighty-seven years.  When he went to Virginia he was without a dollar in the world, and he chopped 300 cords of wood to obtain the means with which to pay for his farm in that state.  His first wife was Miss Dolly Paul, who died some time in the thirties.  By her he had the following children, viz:  Thomas and Peter, both of whom died in Virginia; Samuel, who died in Licking county, Ohio; William, who served with Gen. Hull in the war of 1812, and was with him at the time of his surrender at Detroit, and died in Licking county, Ohio; John, who also died in Licking county; Paul, who died in Allen county; Catherine, who married John McKinley, and died in Licking county, and Mary, who married James Hardin, and died in Jackson county.  Mr. Edman married, for his second wife, Miss Sarah Chilcoat, by whom he had no children.
    
PAUL EDMAN, the father of Elijah, was born June 26, 1794, in Staunton, Va., in which state he learned the trade of shoemaker.  At the age of twenty-one he removed to Licking county, Ohio, where he worked at his trade for a year or two, and then purchased 106 acres of land in Burlington township, that county.  This land he improved and lived upon it until 1851, when he removed to Shawnee township, Allen county, where he purchased 176 acres in section No. 19.  This was for the most part timbered land, which he cleared off, burning much of it in order to get it out of the way, as was customary and indeed necessary in the olden time.  The remainder of his life was spent on this farm, and he died Mar. 20, 1873.  In religious faith he was a Methodist, and was one of the original members of the Shawnee Methodist Episcopal church.  Politically in early life he was a democrat, but later he became a supporter of the republican party, and he was one of the early trustees of Shawnee township.  His wife, Hannah Harris, was a daughter of William Harris, of Virginia.  She died Feb. 20, 1875, and both she and her husband lie at rest in the Shawnee Methodist Episcopal burying ground.  They were the parents of six children, as follows:  Thomas, of Calhoun county, Iowa; William H., of Hutchison, Kans.; Rebecca, wife of Samuel Dixson; Elijah, of Lima; Juliana, deceased; and Oliver P., of Michigan.
     Elijah Edman was born Nov. 7, 1826, in Licking county, Ohio, and was reared on the old homestead farm.  After being educated in the district school, and attaining to manhood's estate, he located on a farm, upon which he remained until 1852, when he removed to Allen county, where he united with his father and assisted him in clearing up and improving his Shawnee township farm.  In fact all the improvements on that farm were made by Elijah Edman.  After his father's death, he purchased the farm, and has added thereto, until now it contains 276 acres.  In 1889 Mr. Edman retired from active life, and located in Lima, permitting his sons, Wilson and Charles, to live on the operate the farm. 
     In May, 1863, Mr. Edman enlisted in company C, One Hundred and Fifty-first Ohio volunteer infantry, and served therein 100 days.  In 1864 he joined company C, One Hundred and Ninety-second Ohio volunteer infantry, and served with this regiment until the close of the war.  He is now a member of Mart. Armstrong post, No. 202, G. A. R.  In politics a seeker after office, has held the offices of township trustee and school director, beside several minor offices of trust.
     Mr. Edman was married Nov. 28, 1852, to Martha J., daughter of John Wagner, who settled in Licking county, Ohio, removing there from Lancaster county, Pa., and laying out the town of Chatham.  Mr. Edman and Martha J., his wife, became the parents of nine children, as follows.  Wilson, who married Miranda Blackburn, and now lives upon the old homestead; Marion, who married Miss Mary J. Bowser, and lives in Auglaize county; Charles, who married Miss Josie McCoy; Amos, who married Miss Ordella Arthur, who resides in Lima; Alzeda, deceased; Eva J., wife of Lewis Neff, of Lima; Martin F., of Lima, Grant and Ida.  All of these children, inheriting the good health and physical strength of their parents, are now living but one, as will be seen by the above record.
  Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 268
  GEORGE S. ENSLEN, a prominent and successful young man, was born in Sugar Creek township, Allen county, Ohio, July 30, 1868.  He is a son of John and Mary M. Enslen, and was reared by his parents on the farm, to all kinds of farm work.  His education was received in the common schools of his county, and so well did he improve the opportunities afforded him that he is well prepared and qualified to meet all the practical duties of life.  So well satisfied was he with his home and with farm life that it was not until 1893 that he determined upon an independent course of life for himself, and in September of that year he went to Allentown, where, in partnership with his brother, J. H. Enslen, he established himself in business, they together opening a general store, the only one in Allentown, in which they kept a complete stock of everything in the line of merchandise, dry goods, groceries, hardware, etc., that one would naturally expect to find in such a store.  They were in business more than two years, but in June, 1895, the business was disposed of to C. Nelson, and Mr. Enslen became connected with the Union Clothing house, of Lima.
     Politically George S. Enslen is a strong democrat, and is one of the leading men in his party, as well as one of the most popular, and in 1894 he was appointed postmaster of Allentown.  Mr. Enslen was married Oct. 25, 1893, to Miss Lydia Sereff, daughter of William and Sarah Sereff.  She was born in German township.  To this marriage of the subject there has been born one child - Erwin.  Both Mr. and Mrs. Enslen are members of the Methodist Episcopal church, and are highly esteemed members of general society.  Mr. Enslen is a class leader in his church, and takes great interest in the work of the Sunday-school.
     Thus it will be seen that for a man yet on the sunny side of the prime of life, Mr. Enslen has made a most creditable record, and certainly ahs in store for him greater successes than any he has yet achieved.  The young men of the county have thus before them an example worthy of all emulation, and it is doubtless true that many are already profiting thereby, either in their outward lives or in their private plans; for an example is often a more powerful teacher than any precept or collection of precepts that can be publicly or privately taught or presented.

  Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 274
  JOHN ENSLEN, one of the oldest settlers of Sugar Creek township, Allen county, Ohio, and a prominent farmer, descends from an old American colonial family of sturdy German origin, and more proximately from the state of Pennsylvania.
   
ABRAHAM ENSLEN, grandfather of our subject, came from Germany to America on a sailing vessel, which was sixteen weeks on the ocean.  He finally settled in Luzerne county, in the Keystone state, and cleared up a farm from the wilderness, became a substantial husbandman, lived to a good old age, and left four children - Jacob, Conrad, John and HenryJohn Enslen, son of Abraham and father of our subject, was born in Luzerne county, Pa., Feb. 3, 1780, was there reared to farming and married Catherine Transil, the union resulting in the birth of eleven children, of whom two died in infancy.  Mr. Enslen served in the war of 1812, and about 1813 came to Ohio and was one of the very early pioneers of Franklin county, where he cleared up a farm of forty acres, on which he resided until 1831, when he came to what is now Sugar Creek township, Allen county, and here cleared up from the woods the farm on which his son John, our subject, now resides - there being at the time of his coming but two other settlers in the township, a Mr. Jacobs and William Clevenger, and the township being then a part of Putnam county.  He at first entered eighty acres, but, being a man of great nerve, industry and thrift, he increased his possessions until he became owner of 240 acres in Putnam county - Allen not being then organized - and was the first man to pay taxes in Kalida.  Mr. Enslen was one of the organizers of Allen county, took part in the erection of Sugar Creek township, and was otherwise active and prominent in the early public affairs of his chosen place of residence, holding the position of an early township trustee and therefore being a factor in its elementary position as a constituent portion of the county.  In religion he was an old-school Presbyterian, and also one of the founders of the old-school Baptist church of his township, but prior to the organization of these societies and the erection of their church edifices, religious exercises of both congregations were held at his own residence.  He was an ardent friend of education and among the first to found subscription schools and to aid in the bringing about the present system of common schools.  The first school-house was where John E. Jones's brick blacksmith shop now stands, one mile east of Gomer, and was a round log structure, with split logs for seats, greased paper for window-panes, a fireplace as wide as a barn door, and otherwise primitively furnished.  The tuition term lasted for three months in the winter, with Elijah Lippencott as the first tutor, in 1839, and this school even Mr. Enslen attended, going and coming a mile and a half through the woods and swamps.  The children of John and Catherine Enslen were born in the following order: Abraham, Frederick, Mary, Betsey, Hiram, Sarah A., Catherine, Louis, Margaret, John and Lydia.  The father of this family lived until he reached the age of seventy-six years and died in 1856, one of the most respected pioneers of Allen county.
     Of the above enumerated children John Enslen, the subject proper of this biography, was born in Franklin County, Ohio, Feb. 3, 1831, and was an infant when brought to Allen county by his parents, the journey being made in a wagon through the woods and through which the father had to cut the greater part of the ay.  Here Mr. Enslen grew to manhood on the frontier farm of his father, which he assisted in a great measure to clear from the forest, and here was educated in one of the old fashioned log houses of that early day.  At the age of twenty-three years he married, in Delphos, Mar. 30, 1854, Miss Mary M. Shutt, who was born in Medina county, Ohio, in 1832, a daughter of Henry Shutt, who was a weaver by trade and came from Pennsylvania to Delphos, Ohio, about 1852.  Mr. Shutt was a member of the German Reform Church and died near Delphos, an aged man and the father of five children - John, Jacob, Daniel, Sarah, Mary M. and Elizabeth.
    
After his marriage, Mr. Enslen settled on the old homestead, where he has since made his home and on which he has made extensive improvements and placed under a high state of cultivation.  On the death of his father he was appointed executor of the estate and subsequently bought the rights of the other heirs, and now owns a splendid farm of 160 acres, on which, in 1852, he built a modern residence and all necessary farm structures.  To his marriage with Mary M. Shutt the following children have been born:  Edgar W., John H., Columbus E., Francis M., William M., Rosa B., George S. and Carrie D.
    
In politics Mr. Enslen has been a life-long democrat, and has filled the office of county infirmary director; for four consecutive years he served as township trustee, and also as trustee a single term, and has been a member of the school board a number of years, being especially interested in educational progress.  He has also been much interested in the roads of the township and has always been an ardent friend of good and solid pikes, and was one of the first to advocate their construction throughout the township.  In religion Mr. Enslen has for many years been a faithful adherent of the Methodist Episcopal church, in which he has for a long time officiated as class leader and steward, and in the support of which he has always assisted liberally from his means in the erection of church edifices and otherwise.  The death of Mrs. Mary M. (Shutt) Enslen took place Feb. 12, 1895.  She was a woman of many Christian virtues and died in the full profession of the faith of the Methodist church, of which she had, since almost childhood, been a devoted member, and in the faith of which she had reared her children to worthy manhood and womanhood.  Mr. Enslen still resides on the old homestead, an honored citizen and respected for his public spirit and the great service he ahs rendered his fellow-citizens in redeeming the county from its original wild and almost uninhabitable condition and in making it the center of a prosperous and civilized community, such as it is found to-day. 

  Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 270
  JOHN H. ENSLEN, the leading merchant of Elida, Allen county, Ohio, who forms the subject of this biography, has been engaged in business for the past twelve years.  His first entrance into the mercantile field was in company with G. R. Leist, who was one of the old and reliable merchants of this place; he however had a number of years of experience as a clerk and was not a novice in the trade.  When he entered partnership with Mr. Leist, his capital consisted of a few hundred dollars, but a fortune of pluck and courage.  That he succeeded even beyond his most sanguine ambition is evidenced by a look at his handsome store, with its well-filled shelves, of which he is now sole proprietor.  At present he carries about $8,000 in stock, and a sewing needle or a harvest-binder can be obtained here without advance notice.  The genial proprietor is enterprising and successful, and is one of the most popular men of the town, and altogether the one necessary man.  In 1892 he erected his handsome brick block - 20 x 80 of brick - the upper story being a hall.  Mr. Enslen is a native of Allen county, Sugar Creek township, and was born Mar. 20, 1859.  He was reared on a farm and educated in the district schools, and at twenty years of age began clerking in a dry-goods store.  On Dec. 6, 1883, he was married to Miss Ella Laumillerb, daughter of Andrew and Catherine Laumiller, of Marion township, both pioneers of the county.  Two children have born to Mr. Enslen and wife - Orlo C. and Critoria Mrs. Enslen is a member of the United Brethren church, in which she is an active and energetic worker.  Our subject is an Odd Fellow in his fraternal affiliations and an enthusiastic member of the order.
     Mr. Enslen was the second son and third-born child in a family of nine children which blessed the union of John and Mary M. (Shutt) Enslen, who were both natives of the Buckeye state, each of them coming to Allen county in childhood with their parents and here reared among the pioneer scenes of the northwest.  It is evident that the parents of Mr. Enslen were early taught the valuable lessons of industry and economy, which they have practiced through life and which have caused them to be numbered among the representative citizens of Allen county.  The father,
JOHN ENSLEN, has been identified throughout his life with agricultural interests, he being one of the progressive and practical men of his day as well as liberal in all public enterprises and encouraging every movement that had the welfare of the community in sight.  He was married on the 30th of March, 1854, to Miss Shutt, who was born in Medina county, Ohio, June 9, 1833, and in early childhood came to Allen county, where she was educated, and from 1849 up to the time of her marriage, in 1854, she was one of the prominent school-teachers of her county.  As previously stated, there were born nine children unto this marriage, named as follows: an infant deceased, unnamed; Edgar W., a farmer; John H., the subject of this sketch; Columbus E., and Francis M., (twins), both now employed as firemen on the P., F. W. & C. R. R.; William M., practicing physician of Fort Wayne, Ind.; Rosa B., at home; George S., who was of late in the employ of his older brother, John H., the merchant, and was located at Allentown, and Carrie D., at home.  John Enslen, the husband and father, is one of the representative men of Sugar Creek township, where he has resided since 1831, having been born in Franklin county, Ohio, on January 3, of the same year; he was the son of John Enslen, Sr., who was a native of Pennsylvania and one of the early pioneers of Franklin county.  Mrs. Enslen, after rearing her children to manhood and womanhood, was called to her long home on the 12th of February, 1895, she having been a true and faithful companion, a fond wife, and loving mother, and a lady of many good traits of character which endeared her to all those she came in contact with, and at her death she left a husband and eight children to mourn her loss.
  Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 271
  WILLIAM H. EULLER

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 273

  C. A. EVANS, M. D.

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 274

  THOMAS F. EVANS

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 274

  DANIEL EVERSOLL

Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 566

  FRANK EWING, M. D., of West Cairo, Allen County, Ohio, was born in Trumbull county, May 19, 1843, was taken by his parents to Hancock county, when six years old, and there grew to manhood on a farm.  In 1862 he entered the Union army as a private soldier in company D, Ninety-ninth Ohio volunteer infantry, and carried his gun during the war.  He was in many battles, the first being that of Stone River, and was in all the subsequent important battles in which his regiment was engaged.  Wounded in the knee at Kenesaw Mountain, he was disabled for two months.  He was honorably discharged at Salisbury, N. C., when the war had come to a close.  Having previous to the war secured a good education, upon his return home he taught school, but owing to impaired health, went north into the lumber regions, where he remained eight months.  Afterward he again taught school and read medicine, and graduated from the medical department of the university of Michigan in 1870.  Then he began the practice of his profession in West Cairo, where he has remained ever since.  In politics he is a democrat, and has filled several minor offices.
     Dr. Ewing is a son of John A. and Elizabeth (Clements) Ewing, who came from Pennsylvania to Ohio at an early day.  Mr. Ewing was a farmer during his entire life, and was for some time a local preacher in the Disciples’ church.  He was also for many years a justice of the peace, and died in 1890 John A. and wife were the parents of six children, viz:  Sarah J.; A. C.; Frank, the subject; T. Corwin, killed at Kenesaw Mountain; M. J.; and Eliza A.  The mother of these children died in 1860, and the father married the second time and had six children by the second wife.  In 1872 Dr. Frank Ewing married Miss Nancy B. Downing, a daughter of R. H. Downing, and by her has had four children, viz: Dolly, died at the age of two years; Addie, Bessie and Wava.  In politics he has always been a repuplican republican, is a Knight Templar, and a member of the Grand Army.  Mrs. Ewing is a member of the Lutheran church.
Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 565
  WILLIAM T. EXLINE, one of the prominent citizens of Delphos, and ex-auditor of Van Wert county, Ohio, is a native of Tuscarawas county, born Sept. 22, 1837.  His father was VALENTINE EXLINE, who was a native of Bedford county, Pa., born Apr. 4, 1809, the son of Bernard Exline, a Virginian by birth.  The Exline family was originally from Switzerland, and came to America before the Revolutionary War, settling in the Shenandoah valley in Virginia.  Adam Exline, the great-grandfather of our subject, had four sons.  He went to Bedford county, Pa., and bought each of his sons a farm and they all settled in the Keystone state.  A brother of his, John Exline, remained in Virginia, and his descendants, as they became American, Anglicized their name of that of Axline.  In 1825 Bernard Exline sold his farm in Pennsylvania and moved to Ohio, settling in Muskingum county on Muskingum river, and the land he purchased including the present site of Conesville, and here death occurred a short time afterward.  A short time following the death of Bernard Exline, his son Valentine was apprenticed by his brother and guardian to learn the cabinetmaker's and wheelwright trade at Carlisle, Ohio.  While there he was married to Evaline Thompson, who was a native of Coshocton county, born Aug. 31, 1814.  Valentine Exline returned to the old home from Carlisle and bought the interest of the other heirs in the home place, and for about three years made his home there.  He then sold out the place, and removed to Tuscarawas county.  In 1846 he came to Allen county, settling about three and a half miles south of Lima.  Previous to his settling in the county he traveled through this part of Ohio as a Minister of the Evangelical Lutheran church.  His death occurred Jan. 8, 1887, and his wife died July 8, 1894.  There were eleven children born to these parents, three sons and three daughters of whom are living.
     William T. Exline was in his ninth year when he came to Allen county.  He received his education in the common schools; in his eighteenth year he began teaching, and for five winters preceding the war he followed the vocation of Van Wert and Mercer counties, Ohio.  In 1852 the family removed to Van Wert county, in the south part of which Valentine Exline had entered 316 acres of land in 1837, of which he still owns 160 acres.  In July, 1862, our subject was commissioned by Gov. Tod as second lieutenant of company A, Ninety-ninth Ohio volunteer infantry.  The regiment left Camp Lima Sept. 1, 1862, and in the following November he was promoted to first lieutenant.  At Murfreesboro, Tenn., in 1863, where his captain was killed, he was commissioned captain of company A.  After the battle of Nashville, Tenn., in December, 1864, the Ninety-ninth and Fiftieth Ohio regiments were afterward known as the Fiftieth Ohio regiment, and of this Capt. Exline was captain of company A, until they were mustered out of service at Salisbury, N. C., June 26, 1865, but the regiment was not disbanded until the 17th of the following month.  At the storming of Lookout Mountain, Nov. 23, 1863, Capt. Exline was wounded in the right hip by a sharpshooter, and for a time was in the hospital at Bridgeport and Nashville.  He returned to Van Wert county, Ohio, Thursday, July 22, 1865, and the following Saturday was nominated by the republicans for auditor of Van Wert county, and was elected for the term of two years; leaving the office he removed to the farm.  In 1878 Capt. Exline was re-elected auditor of Van Wert county, for a three years' term, and was re-elected at the expiration of that term.  He returned to the farm in 1885, where he remained until the spring of 1894 when he removed to Delphos to take the position of general manager of the Ohio Wheel company.
     Capt. Exline was married, Dec. 21, 1865, to Esther Scott, of Putnam county, who was born in Warren county, Ohio, daughter of Richard and Margaret Scott.  To this union seven children have been born, two sons and five daughters, all living.  Capt. Exline is a member of the Royal Arcanum, and of the G. A. R., and is one of the most prominent men in the county, both socially and politically.  Following are the names of Capt. Exline's children, in order of birth: Eva May, wife of J. A. Foore, of Saint Mary's; Scott L., of the First National bank, Cleveland, Ohio; William Grant, book-keeper of the Enterprise Printing & Lithography company, of Cleveland, Ohio; Margaret G., assistant book-keeper of the Ohio Wheel company; Estella, Ethel and Georgia E., at home.
  Source:  A Portrait and biographical record of Allen & Van Wert Counties, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: A. W. Bowen & Co., 1896 - Page 277


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