OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS

A Part of Genealogy Express

 

Welcome to
Ashland County, Ohio

History & Genealogy

BIOGRAPHIES
(Transcribed by Sharon Wick)

Source:
History of Ashland County, Ohio
with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches,
by George William Hill, M.D. -
Published by Williams Bros.
-1880 -

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N OP Q R S T U V W XYZ

< CLICK HERE TO RETURN TO 1880 BIOGRAPHICAL INDEX >
< CLICK HERE GO TO lLIST OF BIOGRAPHICAL INDEXES >

  MEIGS S. CAMPBELL was born June 8, 1825, in Danville, Knox county, Ohio.  His father, Silas Campbell, was a native of Virginia (now West Virginia), and his mother was born in Maryland.  They raised four children - Meigs S., Thornton W., James M., and D. R.  Meigs S. Campbell, the subject of this sketch, learned the hatter's trade, at Coshocton and Mt. Vernon, living in the latter place from 1846 to 1851, when he removed to Ashland.  While living in Ashland he has been engaged in the livery business and the hat and cap trade, the most of his time being devoted to the latter, in which he is still engaged.  December 25, 1850, he was married to Clara Hall, of Mt. Vernon, Ohio, by whom he has had three children, as follows:  W. Fletcher, born in 1851, married and living in Laramie City, Wyoming territory; Mary B., born about 1853, married Maurice Vallant, and lives in Cleveland; Clara, born about 1856, married Harry Stevens, and lives in Ashland.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. - Page 396
  CHARLES CAREY, son of George Carey, was born in Ashland county in 1853, and in 1874 married Sarah E. Stull. He is engaged in farming, and lives on the old homestead; is the father of three children, viz.: George W., Lillie and Frank.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. -
Page 279
  GEORGE W. CAREY was born in Ashland county, near; Perrysville, in 1824. In 1847 he married Elizabeth; Foster. He was both a lawyer and farmer; was admitted to the bar in Wayne county, Ohio. He was Republican in politics and took an active part in all political campaigns. He represented Ashland county in the; legislature in 1864, and held the office of justice of the; peace several years. He died in 1867. He was the father of four children: Thomas, who married Susan M. Parr, and lives in Richland county; Mary, wife of R. H. Goram, living in Richland county; George, who died in Rowsburgh, Ashland county, and Charles.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. - Page 279
  JOHN CARR, Sr. was born in Maryland, and came to Washington county, Pennsylvania, about 1790, and married Margaret McGuire, sister of the late Thomas and Hugh McGuire,  and during the border wars acted as an Indian spy a short time, when the Bradys, the Poes, as well as Frank McGuire, Robert McGuire,  and the Wetsels, scouted along the western border of Pennsylvania.  From Washington county, Pennsylvania, John Carr removed into Tuscarawas county, Ohio, where he remained until about 1810, when he came to Mohican township, then in Wayne, now in Ashland, county, with his family, and settled on what is now known as the Chessman farm, about half a mile northwest of Jeromeville, which he subsequently sold to John Ewing, sr. and purchased what is now the Horn farm, on the east line of Montgomery township, where he died in 1837, aged about sixty years.  Mrs. Carr died there also.  His children were:  Thomas, Nicholas, Nancy, Hugh, Joshua, Benjamin, John, Samuel, Margaret, Aaron, Susan, and Curtis, by his first wife, and Aquilla and David by the second wife.  When the people became alarmed in Mohican, in the fall of 1812, because of the menacing conduct of the Indians, Mr. Carr and his family took refuge upon the Tuscarawas, until all danger, and threats had been so far removed as to warrant a return to his cabin.  Mr. Carr is understood to have been on friendly terms with the Indians of Mohican township, many of whom had resided in other days, at Goshen, on the Tuscarawas.  In fact, it has often been suggested, that so warm was his attachments for many of the Jerome Indians, and so deep their regard for Mr. Carr, that he probably would have remained unmolested in his cabin, near the fort, had he chosen to do so, during the war.  The Indians often called on him, after the war, in their hunting excursions in Mohican.  He was a good man.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. -
 Page 279
  DANIEL CARTER, JR., was born in Butler county, Pennsylvania, May 23, 1802. He emigrated, with his father's family, in March, 1806, to Stark county, Ohio, where he resided until February 12, 1812, and then removed, by way of Jerome's Place, now Jeromeville, where they remained a few days at the cabin of the late John Carr until Daniel Carter, sr., erected a cabin in Montgomery township, half a mile northeast of the present site of Ashland.
     Daniel Carter, sr., had entered at the land office in Canton three hundred and twenty acres of land in Montgomery, constituting the present lands of Peter Thomas, and what was recently known as the John Mason farm. The cabin was a frail affair. It resembled a camp house—was open at one end and made of poles and covered with clapboards. He moved into it in February, 1812. The family began active work on a clearing for corn, and got along quietly, being occasionally visited by Indians, until after Hull's surrender at Detroit, on the sixteenth of August. About this time several families quartered for a short time at the cabin of Robert Newell, in the lower part of Montgomery, recently known as the Hugh McGuire place. When General Harrison moved his army to the northwest, these families, Frys, Tridrels, Cuppys and Carters, returned to their cabins. In September, after the murders on the
     He was often elected school director, and was township trustee sixteen or eighteen times, but was always nominated and pressed into the service, against his own wishes.
Black fork, most of these families fled to the block­house at Jerome's place..
     Mr. Daniel Carter, sr., as has been elsewhere stated, took his family to Harrison county, and remained for some time at the cabin of a friend, Mr. William Rhodes, about four miles from New Philadelphia. In February, 1813, he returned to his cabin and remained until the fifth of March, when he received news of the Colyer excitement near Tylertown, a son of John Carr bringing him news of the appearance of Indians, when he fled with his family to the block-house at Jerome's Place, and remained there until the spring of 1814.
     Daniel Carter, jr., retains a vivid recollection of the incidents of block-house life. His father, in the spring of 1814, purchased at Canton the farm upon which David Carter now resides, and removed to it.
     The settlers, for several years in Montgomery, were very much scattered. The schools were indifferent, and the youth of that era were deprived of educational op­portunities, except in the primary branches. Mr. Carter says he never attended school over three months. He grew up among the pioneers, attending cabin raisings, log rollings and other pioneer gatherings. He purchased one hundred and sixty acres of land on sec­tion sixteen, built a cabin and improved his farm. The farm had been entered by William Drumm. In 1829 he married Miss Elizabeth, daughter of Elias Slocum. His family consisted of two daughters—Amanda, wife of William M. Patterson, of Cleveland, Ohio, and Anna A., wife of Hon. William B. Allison, now a senator of the United States, from Iowa. Mr. Carter sold his farm in 1864, and now resides in Ashland. In 1850 he made a trip to California via. Panama, and remained about three and a half years. He never sought political promotion, but in sentiment was a Whig until that party disbanded, when he became a Republican, and still adheres to the principles of that party.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. - Page 159
  DANIEL CARTER, Sr., was born in Baltimore county, Maryland, and moved, when young, with his mother to Huntingdon county, Pennsylvania, in the year 1774.  He emigrated to near Canton, Stark county, Ohio, in 1806, and then to what is now Montgomery township, Ashland county, in January, 1812, stopping a few days with John Carr, who had a cabin adjoining a few days of Baptiste Jerome, until the erection of his cabin, and entered it with his family in February, 1812.  The circumstances attending the erect of his cabin, and its first and second abandonment; his flight to New Philadelphia; his return, and his seeking safety, for several months, for himself and family, at the block-house at Jerome's place, now Jeromeville, have been described in former chapters.  The death of his wife and son James, has also been spoken of in connection with his residence at the block-house.  About the time he left the block-house he sold the tract of land northeast of the present site of Ashland, to Conrad Kline and John Heller, and purchased four quarters, some two miles south of his original purchase, upon one of which he located, having, in the meantime, married Miss Ruth Warner.  Mr. Carter continued to reside on the new purchase until February 7, 1854, when, after a brief illness, he died at the advance age of eighty years.  Mrs. Carter, his second wife, survived him eight or nine years.  Mr. Carter was an industrious, frugal and upright man.  He had been a very faithful member of the Methodist church for over sixty years.  His children, by his first wife, were - John, William, Daniel, Rachel, Elizabeth, James, George, and Anna; by his second - David, Sarah, Mary, Samuel, Miranda, Milton and Charles.  Daniel, David, and Samuel, are residents of Montgomery county.  All the rest have moved elsewhere.
     Daniel Carter, jr., is a citizen of Ashland.  His pioneer experiences are as exciting and interesting as those of any settler of that period.  When about eleven years of age, he states his father dispatched him with a sack of shelled corn, on horseback, through the forest, to Odell's mill, in the south part of what is now Lake township, to have it ground into meal.  This was early in the spring of 1812.  Pipe and his Delawares had not yet left Mohican Johnstown.  On his return in the evening, being belated by the difficulty of winding his way along the Indian paths, he reached the Indian village a little after dark, and seeing a number of Indians collected for a sort of council at the council house, he stopped to witness the performances.  It was at this "pow-wow" that the "red-stick," of Tecumseh was rejected by "Old Captain Pipe".  He returned to his father's cabin, however, without molestation by the Indians, who, at that time, were on friendly terms with their white neighbors.  Mr. Carter relates many adventures, amid the forest, in his youthful days, of a thilling character.  He married Miss Eliza Slocum, daughter of another leading pioneer of a later period.
     David Carter was born Mar. 18, 1815, on the homestead in section twenty-eight, Montgomery township.  He is believed to be the first male child born in Montgomery township.  He married Miss Elizabeth Griffith, of Fayette county, Pennsylvania, Dec. 26, 1837.  He resides on the old Carter homestead, and is a farmer by occupation.  His children - three - deceased in infancy.  He is a man of good natural attainments, and possesses a fund of pioneer experiences.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. - Page 149
  NORMAN CARTER was born in Warren, Connecticut, Jan. 23, 1802, and came to Ruggles in 1824, and located on lot twenty-six, section four.  He labored some three years, part of the time for Daniel Beach, and returned to Connecticut in 1827, and married Lavina Hopkins; and in 1828 removed to Ruggles, where he has since deceased.  His family consisted of Huldah Adelaide, wife of Isaac G. Sturtevant, and Sarah Lavina, married to William Gault.  They all reside in Ruggles.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. - Page 180
  H. B. CASE is of Welch ancestry. His great-great-grandfather, Augustus Case, his great-grandfather, Joshua Case, and his grandfather, Augustus Case, were all born on Long Island, New York. The latter was born July 27, 1759 entered the army of the Revolution in 1777, married Elizabeth Bell in 1793, settled in Wayne county, Plain township, in 1803, and was the father of ten children—five sons and five daughters. The youngest son, Joshua, was born October 2, 1812, married Rebecca J. Phillips, and died March 18, 1845. He was the father of six children—Elizabeth E., wife of John Coleman, who died in Wayne county, Ohio; Mary Etta, wife of James Miles, who died in Richland county, Ohio; Henry B., who married Mina Horn, and lives at McKay; Sarah A., wife of Samuel L. Paramore, who died in Richland county, Ohio; Carrie J., wife of Joseph H. Hartuper, who lives in Loudonville; Joshua M., who married Mary A. Hissem, and died at McKay. H. B. Case, born in Plain township, Wayne county, Ohio, December 13,1839, moved to Washington township, Holmes county, Ohio, in 1850; and to Green township, Ashland county, Ohio, in 1856. He worked at marble cutting, clerked in a store, and taught school until the spring of. 1863, when he purchased the McKay store of A. B. Case, and married Mina Horn. He is the father of five children, four sons and one daughter, viz.: Dayton L., Albert P., Jessie, deceased, Frederick and Herbert. He continued business at McKay as merchant, postmaster, and notary public, until the fall of 1872, when he left the business in the hands of J. M. Case (who afterwards became his partner in the McKay store) to engage in the clothing business with J. C. Pell, of Loudonville, Ohio. In the spring of 1873 he moved with his family to Loudonville, and remained in the clothing business until 1879, when he returned to McKay to take charge of the store (his brother, J. M. Case, having died), where he still continues as merchant and postmaster.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. -
Page 280
 

JESSE CHAMBERLAIN was born in Windom county, Vermont, Sept. 27, 1794.  In June, 1815, he married Betsy Mann, of the same county.  In 1817 he accompanied what is known as a Parmely colony as far as Medina, where he remained until 1819, when he settled in Sullivan, now Ashland county.  The colony traveled from the east with six teams, one yoke of oxen, and sometimes the addition of one horse to each wagon.  The wagons were covered and contained beds, cooking utensils, and provisions for the trip.  They also brought along a number of cows, which supplied milk on the way.  They came by the way of Buffalo, New York, and were many weeks making the journey.  These aged people yet (1876) retain considerable physical vigor.  They are quite lively, and their mental powers seem to be unimpaired.  They had three children – Adeline, wife of Mr. Rice, Alzina, deceased, and Miranda, deceased.  Whitney and Richard Chamberlain, brothers of Jesse, settled in the township with the mother who died in 1843.  They are deceased.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. -
Page 214

  JOHN CHAPMAN aka JOHNNY APPLESEED
  DR. BELA B. CLARK was in New Milford, Connecticut, Oct. 1, 1796.  He studied medicine in the same place, and attended lectures under Drs. Hosae, Francis and Mott, in New York city in 1817.  He came to Medina, Ohio, in 1818, and was married to Sophia P. Sears, Oct. 28, 1820.  He practiced medicine in Medina county twenty-four years, and removed to the city of Columbus in 1842, where he practiced three years.  During his residence in that city he became acquainted with several gentlemen from Ashland, who were laboring for the passage of an act for the erection of the new county of Ashland, and became identified with the measure.  Upon the passage of that act, he removed to Ashland and entered upon his profession.  He continued to practice medicine about fourteen years.  When the enterprise of constructing the Atlantic & Great Western railway originated, Dr. Clark entered heartily into the project, and sided until it was nearly graded.  He was among the first directors.  Soon after his arrival in Ashland he was appointed one of the associate judges of the court of common pleas, and served until the adoption of the constitution in 1851.  During his medical practice he received a diploma from the fellows of the Connecticut medical society in 1817; also one from the nineteenth medical district of Ohio, at Cleveland, May 25, 1824; and a license from the court of the third judicial circuit of Ohio, Nov. 30, 1818, and another from the medical society of the eighty medical district of Ohio, November 5, 1818; and in 1841, Willoughby Medial college conferred an honorary degree of medicine, with diploma, upon him.
     The doctor died from apoplexy, August 20, 1859, aged about sixty-three years.  He had been an active member and ruling elder in the Presbyterian church for a number of years.  He was an accomplished physician, a zealous advocate of education and always active for the public weal.  His family consists of his wife, who still survives; Dr. W. R. Clark, of Des Moines, Iowa, a successful physician; Elizabeth, wife of Dr. P. H. Clark, of Ashland and Charles F. M., of Iowa.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. -
Page 170
  JAMES CLARK, was born in Chambersburgh, Pennsylvania, Oct. 7, 1790, and in youth attended the common schools of his neighborhood.  In 1797 his parents removed to Washington county, in the same State, where he grew to manhood.  War having been declared against Great Britain in 1812, by the United States, all those capable of bearing arms in the contest were either drafted or volunteered for the service.  Washington county during the Revolution and subsequent struggles, had suffered severely by the incursions of the red men from Sandusky and the Scioto.  From the temper evinced by the mother country, it was apprehended that so far as her agents could corrupt and inflame the passions of the tribes of the northwest against our people they would do so.  Her agents secretly gave to the fierce red men ammunition, blankets, and arms, as the price of human scalps.  They regarded the Americans as rebels in rebellion, and in a relentless war expected to subdue our people.  The border settlers were aroused, and a most determined effort was put forth to turn back the red fiend, headed by British bayonets, and thus parry every attempt to subdue our country a second time.  The young men of Washington county, in 1813, of the proper age, were drafted into the service.  Mr. Clark was among those who drew a place in the service, and was soon enrolled.  The heroic victory on Lake Erie, by Commodore Perry, and the brave conduct of Captain Crogan, turned back the red hordes of the northwest, headed by British bayonets, and thus repelled invasion, by lake and land, and by the time the troops of western Pennsylvania had reached Pittsburgh, a full in the contest soon caused a declaration of peace, and Mr. Clark and his comrades were discharged without further service.  He was in no battle, but evinced his readiness for the fray.
     In 1814, he entered, at the land office, his late home in Orange township.  When he visited his land he came by way of Wheeling, Zanesville, Coshocton, up the Walhonding, the Lake and Jerome forks, by Finley's, to the blockhouse on Jerome's farm, and thence up the stream by what became the home of Jacob Young, to his own location northwest of what is now the village of Orange, on the waters of Mohican.  In 1818 he built a small cabin on his land, and kept bachelor's hall during the summer season, doing his own cooking, grubbing, chopping, and preparing his land, and in the fall returned home and engaged in teaming to "old Pitt."  In this manner he continued to labor on his land, each summer for seven successive years.  When he came out in 1818, he was accompanied by his brother John, and stayed all night at Uniontown, now Ashland, at the cabin hotel of Joseph Sheets, just opposite the present hardware store of Mr. Stull, on the north side of Main street.  Mr. Sheets deceased several years since; but Mrs. Nancy Sheets, the former landlady, resides in South Ashland, possessing a good deal of energy, and quite a vigorous mind, for an aged lady.  For some time after his arrival wild game was abundant.  Mr. Clark was a good marksman, and easily procured plenty of venison, wild turkeys, and occasionally a black bear.  These he dressed and cooked according to this taste.  Wolves were very numerous and bold.  He related that on several occasions, having no door to his cabin, wolves ventured in during the night and actually carried away meat and other articles.  On one occasion he killed and dressed a large, fat turkey, expecting to enjoy the luxury of roasting and eating the same.  On going to bed he hung it up in his cabin; but when he arose next morning he found that during the night some howling, hungry wolf and carried it away and devoured it while he slept.
     He was repeatedly visited by hands of Delaware Indians, from the Fire Lands, during their encampment and hunts in the neighborhood.  These Indians were very poor, and miserably clad.  They were always apparently hungry, and in a begging humor.  They often got corn-meal and other food from him, and agreed to pay him in deer skins and peltry for it, but invariably forgot to remember the agreement.  Mr. Clark, in his prime, was fully six feet high, and would weigh one hundred and eighty pounds.  He was very resolute in his manner, and frank in his interviews with the Indians, and hence was never uncivilly treated by them.  These Indians had a number of wigwams, or bark huts, three quarters of a mile northwest of him, in what is now Troy township.  Old Tom Lyons, Jonacake and his squaw, Catttawa, and other Indians, often came to his cabin, on their hunting excursions.  He was also visited on several occasions by the eccentric, but harmless, Johnny Appleseed, who was engaged in planting, on Mason's run, a nursery in advance of the pioneers.
     These were solitary times; but Mr. Clark often stated that, being busily engaged in clearing and preparing his farm, time passed rapidly, and he really enjoyed himself working, and occasionally traversing the wild forests in search of game.  When he entered the township, he was of the opinion there were not over sixteen or seventeen families in it.  Joel Mackerel, John Bishop, and Peter Biddinger were his nearest neighbors.  Mr. Biddinger was a blacksmith, and also repaired guns and tomahawks for the Indians.
     At that time two shillings a day, and twenty-five cents a hundred for cutting and splitting twelve foot rails in trade was the customary price.  He often traveled five miles on foot, to help roll logs or raise a cabin, and was really glad to assist in this manner all new settlers.  There were no improved roads; all was new, and no road fund to repair highways.  The willing hands and stout arms of the resolute pioneer had it all to do, and right cheerfully did they perform the task.  It was some years before the advantages of good schools were enjoyed by the rising generation.
     Mr. Clark dwelt on the reminiscences of the past, the growth of the country in population, intelligence and wealth, and regarded the change that had occurred in this region, as simply wondrous in the last sixty-one years.  In 1830 he married Miss Charlotte Myers, daughter of Jacob Myers, of Clearcreek, by whom he had four sons:  Josephus, John, M. L., and James M. Clark, and two daughters, Mary A. McBride and Mrs. C. SharrickMrs. Clark died in 1841, and Mr. Clark subsequently married a Miss Marshall, who, at an advanced age, survives her husband, and resides at the home of James M. Clark, on the old homestead.  Mr. Clark and his aged lady enjoyed the filial attentions of the family, and esteem of all his pioneer neighbors, and life ebbed quietly away, and at eighty-nine years he became gradually feeble, and gently passed over the dark river to a better and happier land July 7, 1879.
     A deep veneration for the memory of these fathers and mothers of a new country pervades the rising generation.  In the last twelve months we have parted with over twenty-five of the pioneers of the county, who have been gathered to their fathers.  Ere long the last will disappear from among us.  It is a grateful duty we owe them  to smooth their departing hours by kind and respectful attention, ere we are called upon to enjoy the fruits of their toil and valor.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. - Page 231
  NATHANIEL CLARK was born in the State of New York, Mar. 10, 1872.  In 1799 his father removed to Seneca county, New York.  In 1812 he was drafted and served in the war.  After peace he married Elizabeth Phelps, of the same county.  In 1832 he moved to Troy township and settled amid the forests.  He located north of the center, where he still resides on lot eighteen, upon an improved farm of ninety-nine acres.  His family consists of but two children, both of whom are married.  His honorable wife is a sister of Mrs. Parker, and of the same township.  At this time, 1876, he and his aged wife are in the enjoyment of good health.  They are members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. -
Page 181
ALSO NOTE:  The following came for History of Ashland County, Ohio - Publ. 1863: 
Nathaniel Clark and family settled in the township (Troy) in 1834.
  DR. P. H. CLARK, born in Wakeman, Huron county, Ohio, August 3, 1819; studied medicine and attended one course of lectures at Willoughby in 1839-40, and practiced in Allen county, Indiana, and in Wisconsin, for some time; removed to Ashland in 1850; was assistant surgeon in the late war of 1862-3 in the field hospitals.  He attended a second course of lectures at the University of Buffalo, New York in 1861-2 and graduated.  He is a member of the Ohio State Medical society, and has been pension surgeon since Dec. 1862.  He is now in practice.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. -
Page 170
  DR. W. R. S. CLARK, born Nov. 26, 1821, in Medina Ohio; attended school at Kenyon college; studied medicine with his father; attended lectures at Willoughby and Cleveland, where he graduated.  He practiced in Lorain county and Ashland; removed to Bucyrus and practiced until the war, and was appointed surgeon, and subsequently removed to Des Moines, Iowa.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. -
Page 395
  DR. JOSEPH E. CLIFF, a native of London, England, an energetic and spirited physician, well calculated to make himself known and felt in the community, settled in Loudonville in 1825. He studied medicine with Dr. Daniel McPhail, of Wooster, 1821-2 a Scotchman, and leading physician of Wayne county, for several years, in At that period Dr. McPhail frequently visited Clearcreek, Montgomery, Vermillion, and Mohican townships, accompanied by Dr. Cliff, who sometimes repeated the visits. He remained about two years at Loudonville, and returned to Wooster, and shortly afterwards departed for the gold mines in Brazil, South America. He landed in the midst of a revolution, and proceeding to the mines, remained several years, and became possessed of considerable wealth. In the meantime, his wife, a daughter of Dr. McPhail, supposing him dead, married Robert W. Smith, late of Mohican township. Dr. Cliff returned from South America and found his wife in the possession of another! Accepting the condition of things as philosophically as possible, he proceeded to provide liberally for his son, who afterwards read medicine, and now enjoys a wide reputation as Dr. D. B. Cliff, of Franklin, Tennessee. After this the old doctor returned to London, England, where he died some years since. This is highly romantic, but nevertheless true. It is obtained from the lips of his venerable wife, who still survives, and is now seventy-six years of age, and resides with her son, Edward P. Smith, near Ashland.
     Money was very scarce, and the surplus products of the country, in 1825, had no market. High spirited and ambitious, the doctor hoped to better his fortunes in other countries. He was wholly deprived of the means of corresponding with his family, and the sequel shows that, while he accomplished the object of his adventure, he lost an amiable and accomplished wife.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. -
Page 167
  HENRY COBLE was born in Northumberland county, Pennsylvania, May 9, 1798; came to Ohio with his father at an early date and settled in Wayne county, near Wooster, where he married Anna M. Harner in 1824.  In 1823, he came to Ashland county, and settled in Lake township, and has always been engaged in farming.  In politics, he is a Republican; and is a member of the Presbyterian church.  Feb. 28, 1880, his wife died.  Six children constitute his family, viz.: John, who married Sophia Kantzer, and afterwards married Rebecca Horn; Sarah, wife of John Norris, deceased; Rebecca, wife of Thomas Metcalf, living in Iowa; Daniel, who married Margaret Kantzer; Henry, who married Mary E. Young; Maria A., wife of Joseph Chesseroun.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. - Page 283)
  FREDERICK W. COFFIN was born in Washington county, New York, January 6, 1809.  He learned the trade of a cabinet-maker in Vermont.  On reaching manhood he married Mary Waters, of Bennington, and located in Troy, New York, in 1833.  In 1845 he removed to Mohicanville, Ashland county, where he remained two years, and removed to Ashland, where he still resides.  He is of English descent, and the family trace their ancestry back to the invasion of the conqueror William, of Normandy.  The Coffins settled in Worcester, Massachusetts, as early as 1642.  At one time the Coffins were the proprietors of Nantucket.
     Mr. Coffin is an excellent mechanic, and a gentleman of high integrity.  He is the parent of twelve children, part of whom are deceased.  In December, 1875, he held a family reunion; those present were: the father, Frederick W. Coffin, aged sixty-seven; the mother, Mary Coffin, aged sixty-two; Mrs. L. J. Sprengle, Mrs. F. H. Smith, Mrs. M. Jennings, Mrs. E. L. McIlrath, Thaddeus Coffin, Arthur W. Coffin, Eugenen Coffin, Harry T. Coffin, and Edward.  These, with relations by marriage, and offspring, numbered in all thirty-two souls.  If the mother of Mrs. Mary Coffin, who resides in Troy, New York, aged eighty-six, had been present, there would have been five generations under the same roof.
     The Coffins are noted for their musical endowments, and when all together make an interesting family concert.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. -
Page 177
  WESLEY COPUS was born in Green county, Pennsylvania, Aug. 15, 1804, and immigrated, with his father's family, to Mifflin township, Richland, now Ashland county, in the spring of 1809.  In reaching their wilderness home, they passed through the Indian village of Greentown, and followed a trail to the south part of what is now Mifflin township, and erected a camp cabin of poles about one mile northeast of what is now Charles' mill, near a man subsequently named Zimmer's.  They resided in this cabin about fifteen months.  In the meantime, the family cleared a few acres and planted corn.  It was frosted in July, and much injured.  Mr. Copus had moved his family in a cart, with a good yoke of oxen; and also brought two or three milch cows, which fed, during the summer, on sedge grass and pea-vines.  In the spring of 1810, he commenced the erection of a more substantial log cabin near a fine spring, about one mile south of his pole cabin, and removed to it during the summer of 1810.  The old Greentown trail passed near the spring, and Mr. Copus was often visited by the Greentown Indians, during the spring and summers of 1809-10-11-12.  Thomas Armstrong, the chief, and his sons Silas and James, and Tom Lyons, Bill Dowdee, Billy Montour, Abram Williams, and others frequently came to the cabin, and were quite friendly.  James and Silas Armstrong, then boys, often came to the sugar camp and ran races and wrestled with the Copus boys.  For over three years the intercourse continued in harmony, and not until after the disgraceful surrender of General Hull at Detroit, in August, 1812, were any apprehensions of danger from the Greentown Indians felt.  Fears were then entertained that they might be corrupted through British influence, and attack the defenseless settlements along the branches of the Mohican.
     As a means of safety the State authorities ordered the removal fo the Jerome and Greentown Indians to Piqua, after which, a number of Greentown Indians, who had, prior to that time, fled to Upper Sandusky, returned and assassinated the family of Frederick Zimmer and Margaret Ruffner, and, a few days afterward, attacked the cabin of James Copus, father of Wesley, and killed him, and several soldiers near the cabin.  Wesley, then nine years old, with the balance of the family, was in the cabin during the assault, and saw his father fall and expire.  He retained a vivid recollection of the terrific screams of the savages as they riddled the walls of the cabin with bullets.
     After this tragedy, his mother and children returned to Guernsey county, where they remained until the fall of 1814, when they came back to the old cabin, where, some forty years afterward, Mrs. Copus deceased.  At that time the family consisted of Henry, Nancy, Sarah, James, Wesley, Nelson, and Anna.
     Wesley Copus
continued to reside in the vicinity of the old homestead.  For several years his health had been gradually failing.  It had been apparent for some time that he could not survive a great wile.  Having been somewhat exposed to the inclemency of the weather, he was attacked with pneumonia, and expired Feb. 14, 1876.
     During his youth his educational advantages were limited, and his entire schooling consisted of about three months; but by observation, a retentive memory, and good judgment, he had acquired a fund of information, and was a very interesting conversationalist.
     He was twice married.  His first wife survived only six months.  By his second wife he had ten children, six of whom survive - John W., Madison, Eliza J., Sarah, Mary, and Nancy E. all of whom are married.
     Mr. Copus was a member of the United Brethren church for thirty-five years.  As a citizen, he was industrious, conscientious, and the opponent of all shams and vices.  He was buried at the old cemetery near Charles' mill, where many of his kindred sleep.  Mr. Copus being enrolled among the pioneers, the obituary committee of the Pioneer and Historical society, of Ashland county, adopted the customary resolution.
     Only two of the James Copus family now survive - Mrs. Sarah Vail, of Mifflin, and Mrs. Anna Whitmer of Wood county, Ohi
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. - Page 177
  JACOB P. COWEN, M. D., was born of Scotch-Irish parents, in the village of Florence, Washington County, Pennsylvania, Mar. 20, 1823.  He attended the schools of that place until thirteen years of age, when he removed with his parents to Steubenville, Ohio, in 1835, and was engaged in manufacturing until 1843, when he commenced the study of medicine and removed to Jeromeville, Ashland county, Ohio, in 1846 and engaged in the practice of his profession; attended lectures and graduated at Starling Medical college, in Columbus; was elected a member of the State legislature in 1855, and re-elected in 1857.  At the expiration of his term in 1859, he removed to Ashland and engaged in the practice of his profession.  In 1874 he was nominated and elected to Congress from the Fourteenth district, composed of the counties of Ashland, Holmes, Richland, Wyandot, and Crawford.  While a member, he served on several standing committees and was chairman of the committee on militia.  The doctor was married in June, 1846, to Miss Mary J. Hooker, of West Virginia.  He has had, by this union, nine children:  Randolph and Darwin S.; Dr. Frank, of Jeromeville; Samantha (Mrs. Dr. Benjamin Myers), William F.; Lucy and Edgar; Harry  and Emma.  of these, Mrs. Myers, Harry and Emma, Randolph and Darwin Stanton, are deceased.  In political opinion the doctor is a Democrat.  At present he is the senior member of the medical firm of Cowan & Myers, of Ashland, Ohio.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880 - Page 404
  Vermillion Twp. -
SAMUEL CRAIG was born in Allegheny county, Pennsylvania, Dec. 25, 1814.  In 1834 he came to Ohio with his parents, and located where William Craig now lives.  Samuel was twenty years of age at the time.  On Nov. 22, 1837, he was married to Miss Jemima, daughter of James and Rebecca Stafford, of Vermillion township.  They moved into a house on Mr. Craig's farm, where they remained most of the time until 1846.  Mr. Craig them bought the farm in section sixteen, Vermillion township, on which they now live, and which has been their home ever since, and is likely to be the remainder of their lives.  They have had nine children, seven of whom are living; two died when quite young - a boy and a girl; two sons and one daughter are married:  James S., who married Miss Barbara Mosser, of Vermillion township; Daniel, who married Miss Lydia Youngling, of Vermillion township; Rebecca Jane, who married William Sites, and now lives in Mifflin township, Richland county; Albon, Mary Ann, Elizabeth and Ella are at home.  Mr. Craig has a fine farm, and gives it his undivided attention.  He has been assessor and trustee a number of years, and has been elected to other township offices, which he declined to fill, as his farm required his whole time.  He is a man with many friends in the community that has been his home so many years.  He is a hard worker and a good manager.  Mr. Criag is a Democrat in politics, though at home elections leaves politics out of the question, and votes for the man he considers best fitted to do credit to the trust conferred by the people.  He belongs to no church, but is a liberal supporter of religious and educational institutions, and considers them necessary for the well being of any community.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880 - Page 302
  JACOB CRALL was born near Harrisburgh, Dauphin county, Pennsylvania, December 16, 1811.  He is of German descent.  He attended the common Schools of his neighborhood until he reached manhood, and emigrated, in 1835, to Ashland Ohio, and became a clerk in the store of R. B. Campbell & Co., where he remained about one year.  In 1836 he became the partner of John P. Reynor if the mercantile business, and continued until 1838, when he separated from Reynor and formed the partnership with Hulbert and, under the name of style of Luther & Crall, and continued as a member of the firm until 1854.  In 1851 he also, in company with Mr. Luther, opened a hardware store, which subsequently became the property of Crall & Topping.  In the fall of 1851 he became a stockholder and one of the directors in the establishment of a bank of exchange and deposit in Ashland, and continued in the same until 1864.  In 1864 the First National Bank of Ashland was organized under a law of Congress, and the stockholders of the bank of Luther, Crall & Co. transferred their interest to the new institution, and Mr. Crall became one of the directors, and still acts in that capacity.  In the fall of 1855 he was elected treasurer of Ashland county, and held the office two years.  In 1861 he was appointed postmaster of Ashland by the administration of Abraham Lincoln, and retained the office four years.  He has been a member of the town council two years.  He was elected mayor of Ashland in 1876.  He is at present largely engaged in the purchase and sale of coal.  As a business man he has always sustained an unblemished reputation.  Very few men in this region have taken a deeper interest in the improvement of the county.  He was among the foremost in procuring the location of a railroad at Ashland, and was engaged in its construction.  He has been a member of the Methodist Episcopal church for a number of years.  He married Miss Elizabeth M. Melsheimer, of Ashland, June 27, 1837.  His family consists of three sons - George, of Virginia City, Nevada; Oscar F. of Ashland, and Charles, of California; and one daughter. Helen J., who resides with her parents.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. -
Page 238
  DR. ISAAC L. CRANE was born in Akron, Ohio, May 7, 1825. His parents having died when he was quite young, he was compelled to depend upon his own industry and energy, for success. He learned the trade of a tailor, and, by economy and close application, earned sufficient to warrant an attempt to study medicine. He became a student of Dr. L. Firestone about the year 1850, and graduated in the Western Reserve college, in the session of 1853-54. He soon after located in Ashland, and drew around him many warm and devoted friends. He was a careful practitioner, and unremitting in his attentions to his patients, and evinced a good deal of skill as a physician. In 1861 he was commissioned in the three months' service as surgeon in the Twenty-third regiment Ohio militia. After the expiration of his service he was again commissioned, for three years, in the Sixty-third regiment Ohio volunteer infantry, October 17, 1861, and served until January, 1864. During his service he acted for some time as medical director in the army of the Tennessee. He acquitted himself with honor to the profession and his friends.
     Full of zeal for the dignity and honor of the medical profession, few of his age have done more to dignify it. He became president of the county medical society upon its organization, in 1864, and was a member of the Ohio State Medical association.
During his arduous services in the war, he greatly impaired his constitution, and gradually became more feeble, until his lungs became involved, and drained his vitality. He died June 12, 1867, of pulmonary consumption. The County Medical society and the Masonic fraternity, of which he was a member, paid him their last honors in accompanying; him to his final resting place in the cemetery at Ashland. His wife resides in Iowa.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. - Page 171
  Vermillion Twp. -
THOMAS CRONE was born in Mifflin county, Pennsylvania, Oct. 27, 1800; and married Fannie Starkey Feb. 18, 1823.  In 1840, with his wife and seven children, he came to Ohio, and located in Mohican township; where he remained one year, when he moved to Perry township and remained three years.  Then he moved to Chester township, Wayne county, remained four years, and returned to a farm adjoining the one he first located on.  There he remained until the spring of 1877, when he moved to the farm on which he now resides.  All his life he has been a farmer, and has now one of the best farms in this section of the county.  Mrs. Crone died Apr. 16, 1865.  One son, James, was  a soldier in the One Hundred and Second Ohio volunteer infantry, and served till the close of the war, a term of nearly three years; he is now married, and lives in Green township.  The children, with the exception of three daughters, are married and live in Ashland county.  One married daughter lives in Clinton county, Indiana.  Mr. Crone is yet bright in mind, and as active as men of his age can expect to be.  In politics he is a Democrat; and he has been township trustee.  He is a member of the United Presbyterian church, at Hayesville, Ohio.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. - Page 303
  JACOB CROUSE. 

Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. - Page 234


Michael Culler


Barbara Culler

MICHAEL CULLER, of Mifflin, purchased the Zimmer farm in 1815.  Having come from Frederick county, Maryland, by way of Charleston (now Wellsburgh), Virginia, through Cadiz, Ohio, to Wooster, he proceeded thence, by way of Mr. Gardner's (now Windsor), to Mansfield, where he met Philip Zimmer, whose father, mother, and sister, had been killed at the Zimmer cabin on the Black fork, in the fall of 1812, and purchased the farm.  To have the deed properly executed, he accompanied Philip to Circleville, Pickaway county, Ohio, to the residence of George Zimmer, May 6, 1815, the original patent being made to him, and signed by James Madison, President, and Edward Tiffin, commissioner of the land office, October 2, 1812.  Zimmer was the German name of the family.  While Mr. Culler was there Philip married a Miss Ballentine, and removed west.  In 1826 he returned to visit the grave of his father, mother, and sister, on the old farm, since which time he has resided in the west.  Mr. Culler cultivated his land for two or three years, stopping most of the time with John Lambright, who was a relative.
     Returning to Maryland, he married, about the year 1818, and moved to the Zimmer farm, where he has resided ever since.  He lived two or three years in the old Zimmer cabin, which still showed marks of the tragedy of 1812.  He was a Circleville in 1812, when the Zimmer murder took place, and is conversant with the whole affair, having heard all its details repeatedly from John Lambright and Philip Zimmer.  He says:
     "Martin Ruffner was a stout, frolicsome sort of man, and went to Zimmer's more to capture the Indians and have a little fun, than to bring on a fight, and believes that if Philip had remained at home, instead of going for James Copus, the whole disaster would have been averted, for Philip was a very rugged and active young man, and the two would have deterred the Indians from the attack.
     Mrs. Culler died in the summer of 1873.  Mr. Culler died at his residence in Mifflin township, July 28, 1874, aged eighty-four years, four months, and three days.  Two or three of his sons reside in this county.
     Mr. Culler was benevolent and kind to the poor, and his donations to religious and benevolent institutions very liberal.  He was regarded as quite wealthy, but was always humble, and seldom referred to his worldly possessions, believing it better to lay up his treasures in Heaven, where moth and rust doth not corrupt.  He was followed to his last resting place by a large number of people, who said in their hearts, "Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord."
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. - Page 203)
  GEORGE W. CURRY was born in Tompkins county, New York, May 20, 1812.  He attended school and remained there until 1838, when he married Ava Ann Smith, and removed to Clarksfield, Huron county, and resided there five months, and located in Clearcreek, Richland, now Ashland county, where he farmed four years, and in 1842 settled in the north part of Ruggles, and in 1849 sold to Mr. Peck, and purchased the farm formerly owned by Geo. Eaton,  where he now (1876) resides.  Mr. Curry was a very active anti-slavery man, during the palmy days of that institution.  He is the parent of thirteen children, nine of whom are deceased.  The living are John B., Geo. W., Lucretia A., and Francis J.; all married.  Mr. Curry is noted for his skill and industry as a farmer, and his real in whatever he regards as right and honorable.
Source: History of Ashland County, Ohio with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, by George William Hill, M.D. - Published by Williams Bros. 1880. -
Page 183

NOTES:

 

CLICK HERE to Return to
ASHLAND COUNTY, OHIO
INDEX PAGE

CLICK HERE to Return to
OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS
INDEX PAGE

FREE GENEALOGY RESEARCH is My MISSION
GENEALOGY EXPRESS
This Webpage has been created by Sharon Wick exclusively for Genealogy Express  ©2008
Submitters retain all copyrights