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		BIOGRAPHIES 
			
                  Source: 
					
					History  
                of 
                Athens County, Ohio 
                And Incidentally 
    of the Ohio Land Company 
                and the First Settlement of the State at Marietta 
                with personal and biographical sketches of the early 
                settlers, narratives of pioneer adventures, etc. 
                By
                Charles M. Walker 
                "Forsam et hæc olim 
                meminisse juvabit." - Virgil. 
                Publ. Cincinnati:  
                Robert Clarke & Co. 
                1869. 
		
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			Rome Twp. -  
			
			SAMUEL ALLISON, a native of Maryland, settled here in 
			1836, as a farmer.  He reared a large family, some of whom have 
			been well known in the county.  Mr. W. H. Allison, a son 
			of his, now lives in Chillicothe, but owns considerable property in 
			Athens county. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 540 | 
         
        
          
			
			
			  
			Edward Raymond Ames | 
          
			Ames Twp. -  
			
			EDWARD R. AMES, third son of Silvanus Ames, was bon in 
			Ames township, May 20, 1806 on the farm now owned by James and 
			George Henry.  His early education, though limited, was 
			healthful and solid, and, while still a youth, having access to the 
			local library in Amesville, he formed a taste for reading that has 
			largely influenced the conduct of his life.  At the age of 
			twenty he left his father's farm to attend the Ohio university at 
			Athens, where he remained some two or three years, mainly supporting 
			himself,, meanwhile, by teaching and other chance employments.  
			While at college he became a member of the Methodist church. 
     In the autumn of 1828 the late Bishop Roberts presided 
			over the Ohio conference of the Methodist church, which was held at 
			Chillicothe.  to see their manner of doing business, and to 
			obtain some knowledge as to the growth of the church, the young 
			collegian attended the session.  Bishop Roberts, who had a rare 
			discernment of men, saw the youth and that there was something more 
			than ordinary in him.  The result of their acquaintance was, 
			that, acting on the advice of the bishop to "go west", young Ames 
			accompanied him a few weeks later to the Illinois conference, held 
			that year in Madison, Indiana.  Here he made further 
			acquaintance with active Methodists from the western states, and, at 
			their suggestion, he proceeded to Illinois and opened a high school 
			at Lebanon, in the present county of St. Clair.  He had fine 
			success as a teacher, and remained here, making friends influence, 
			till 1830.  In the autumn of this year he was licensed to 
			preach by the Illinois conference and was admitted and appointed to 
			Shoal Creek circuit, embracing an indefinite extent of country. 
     Thenceforward, for some years, his was the usual 
			history of a Methodist itinerant.  He was elected as a delegate 
			from the Indiana conference to the general conference, which met in 
			Baltimore in 1840, and, by that body, elected corresponding 
			secretary of the missionary society for the south and west.  
			This was before the days of railroads.  Traveling was slow and 
			difficult, and the labors of his office were arduous and wide 
			extended.  During the four years that he filled it, he traveled 
			some twenty-five thousand miles.  In one tour he passed over 
			the entire frontier line, from Lake Superior to Texas, camping out 
			almost the whole route, and one part of the time so destitute of 
			provisions that, for two days, the only nourishment of himself  
			and fellow travelers, was a little moistened maple sugar.  
     In 1852 he was elected one of the bishops of the 
			Methodist Episcopal church, since when his official labors have been 
			most onerous, responsible, and unremitting.  Possessed of 
			extraordinary capacity for business, and of great physical 
			endurance, no task appals, and apparently no amount of labor 
			fatigues him.  His character and talents are so well known, 
			both in and out of church, as to render any analysis or description 
			of them unnecessary in this place. 
     Bishop Ames is esteemed one of the most eloquent 
			preachers in the Methodist church, as he certainly is one of the 
			most popular.  A well known minister and editor of the church 
			says: 
     "As a conference debater he was always effective.  
			We often met in the conference room, but never did we hear him make 
			a speech ten minutes long.  He listened to the discussion til 
			he saw the strong points of a case, and these he would present in a 
			few clear, terse statements, which could not be misunderstood, and 
			which went far toward conviction.  As a public speaker he is 
			impressive and commanding, whether on the platform or in the pulpit.  
			His voice is quite peculiar, and while under his management it is 
			quite effective, yet it should never be imitated.  He rises 
			calmly, states his subject clearly, introduces it with some striking 
			remark, which at once rivets the attention, and then by an easy, 
			direct manner, moves along the track of thought chosen for the 
			occasion.  His sermons, though never written, are evidently 
			carefully thought out.  His style is molded by the old English 
			classics.  Many of his sentences are pure aphorisms.  On 
			he talks, till he talks up into the highest realm of thought.  
			We think perhaps his most effective preaching was when he was 
			presiding elder and addressed gathered thousands on western camp 
			grounds.  then we have seen his whole soul aroused, and his 
			full tide of impassioned oratory was almost resistless.  We 
			forbear sketching some of those scenes, though they pass before us." 
     During the greater part of his adult life, Bishop Ames 
			has resided in Indiana, though his official duties have required 
			protracted absences from home, and long journeys to the most distant 
			parts of the country.  A few years since he removed to 
			Baltimore, Maryland, which is his present place of residence.  
			Of late yeas he has frequently visited Athens, where he has 
			relatives living, and where he finds great enjoyment in meeting the 
			friends of his youth, and in recalling early memories.  He is 
			very fond of familiar converse, and, in his "hours of ease," talks 
			in the most genial manner, of early reminiscences or of more modern 
			and weighty affairs.  During an evening recently passed by the 
			writer in his company, when his boyhood and early life were the 
			topic of speech, he gave, with much amusement, the following account 
			ofTHE WOLF HUNT. 
			     "In 1822 Pitt Putnam, of 
			Marietta,, organized a grand wolf hunt, to be held on the head 
			waters of Big run.  I suppose Putnam inherited his aversion to 
			wolves from his Massachusetts ancestor, as men sometimes inherit 
			politics or religion; at any rate he seemed to think that he had a 
			call to exterminate wolves.  The region fixed on for the hunt 
			lay in Washington county, not far from the borders of Ames, and a 
			great many of the male inhabitants of Ames and Bern took part in it.  
			A space about four miles square was surveyed in the years of the 
			forest, and marked all the way around by blazing the trees.  
			General notice was given some weeks beforehand through the newspaper 
			printed at Marietta, and I remember that a rude diagram of the 
			country and of the line of battle was published.  The plan of 
			proceeding was well organized.  The hunters were to be 
			stationed at regular distances from each other, all the way around 
			the tract, some supplied with guns and others with horns.  
			Certain men were appointed captains, lieutenants, etc., and gave 
			orders to those nearest them.   On the appointed day the 
			hunters assembled from all directions, and were soon placed.  I 
			was then only sixteen years old, and was more highly excited over 
			the affair than I am apt to become over any event now-a-days.  
			when all was ready, the men stationed, armed, etc., a horn was blown 
			by the leader, and the signal in a few minutes passed around the 
			whole circuit; whereupon they all began to march toward a common 
			center, keeping in line.  Each man was ordered to make as great 
			a hubbub as possible, those with horns to blow them and the rest to 
			shout and halloo.  I was a pretty well grown boy of my age, and 
			was allowed to march with the rest.  Furnished with a tin horn 
			nearly as long as myself, I blew such blasts as I would, I suppose, 
			have shaken down the walls of Jericho, if they had been there, and 
			blew till I had no strength to blow any more.  The object of 
			the noise, hooting, blowing horns and beating bushes was to scare up 
			the wolves, and dive them before us, and, of course, when the poor 
			doomed wolves had been thus driven closer and closer to a common 
			center by the contracting lines, the purpose was to slay them 
			ruthlessly, by the hundreds, that is, if they were there.  As 
			we drew near the center, where there was a running brook and a cave 
			in the rocks, the excitement increased.  soon wild animals of 
			different sorts were seen darting about.  there were deer in 
			considerable numbers and though in poor condition as I remember a 
			great many were killed.  In their fright and eagerness to 
			escape, they ran directly at the liens of hunters, and I saw some of 
			them leap clear over the heads of the men.  Foxes were numerous 
			too, and a good many were killed, with smaller game of different 
			sorts.  But we were after wolves; and after all our marching 
			and hallooing, and beating of bushes, my recollection is that not a 
			single wolf was captured or killed - or, if any, over one or two - 
			and the whole affair was a laughable failure, so far as the wolf 
			part was concerned.  I think I have never wasted so much breath 
			to so little profit as I did in blowing that tin horn.  I 
			walked home a tired boy, and very skeptical as to Pitt Putnam's 
			having any great inspiration  as a wolf hunter." 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 420  | 
         
        
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			Ames Twp. -  
			
			SILVANUS AMES, long known in this county as Judge Ames, 
			was born at Bridgewater, Massachusetts, Mar. 26, 1771.  His 
			father, whose ancestor, William Ames, came from England in 
			1654, was a graduate of Harvard college, and an Episcopalian 
			clergyman.  He preached several years at Trinity church, in 
			Taunton, Massachusetts, as afterwards a chaplain in the 
			revolutionary army, and died in the camp at Valley Forge, during the 
			hard winter of 1777-78.  Silvanus Ames married Nabby 
			Lee Johnsonin 1795, and moved to the northwestern territory in 
			1798.  They settled temporarily in Belpre, whence they removed 
			to Ames township, in May, 1800, and settled on the farm now owned by 
			the Henrys and still familiarly called the "Ames farm."  
			Mr. Ames' strong sense and solid judgment gave him a commanding 
			influence among the early settlers, and he was soon brought into the 
			public life of that day.  He was the public life of that day.  
			He was the second sheriff of the county, colonel of militia, trustee 
			of the Ohio university for many years, and associate judge from 1813 
			to 1823.  He was also several times elected representative to 
			the state legislature, and in all of these positions evinced a 
			capacity for public affairs, and gained the approbation of the 
			community.  Intimately connected, as he was, with the political 
			movements of the day, Judge Ames' house became the resort of 
			the political leaders in southern Ohio, and a favorite stopping 
			place of public men, when making their long trips between the east 
			and west.  He was an active and liberal supporter of all 
			educational and religious movements, and an acknowledged leader in 
			the community for several years.  He died Sept. 23, 1823.  
			At the time of his death his family consisted of five sons and four 
			daughters, of whom four sons and daughters are now living, viz: the
			Rev. Bishop E. R. Ames, John, in Kansas, Charles B., 
			in the state of Mississippi, and George W., at Greencastle, 
			Indiana.  One of the daughters, Mrs. Eliza Dawes, lives 
			at Ripon, Wisconsin, and the other, Mrs. A. B. Walker, at 
			Athens.  Another daughter, Mrs. de Steiguer, died in 
			Athens, July 29, 1851; a son of her's, Rodolph de Steiguer, a 
			native of the county, is a leading lawyer at Athens. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 411 | 
         
        
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			Ames Twp. -  
			
			ELMER ARMSTRONG, 
			 youngest 
			son of the preceding, was born in Alexander township, January 17, 
			1812, and now lives on the farm which his father settled upon in 
			1799.  One of the apple trees, brought from Pennsylvania by his 
			father in 1799, and planted on the place that year, is still living 
			- measures seven feet seven and a half inches in circumference, and 
			rarely fails to bear a good annual crop of apples.  Mr. 
			Armstrong married the daughter of Levi Booth, formerly of 
			Alexander, and has one son and two daughters.  He has for many 
			years been well known as a prosperous farmer and successful dealer 
			in live stock. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 358 | 
         
        
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			Ames Twp. -  
			
			THOMAS ARMSTRONG, born April 
			2, 1777, in Greene county, Pennsylvania, came to Athens county in 
			1799, and settled in Alexander township, where his son, Elmer 
			Armstrong, now lives.  Mrs. Alice Armstrong, wife of 
			Thomas, was also a native of Greene county, Pennsylvania, and 
			daughter of Col. Wm. Crawford,
    who served creditably in the revolutionary and Indian wars. 
     In March, 1799, Mr. Armstrong and wife, with 
			their first child, then three months old, accompanied by Charles 
			Harper, wife and child, put their movable goods, consisting in 
			part of furniture, live stock, etc. and forty young apple trees into 
			a flatboat at the mouth of Muddy creek, on the Monongahela river, 
			and set out for northwestern territory.  Landing at the mouth 
			of the Hockhocking, in April 1799, the women and children, and live 
			stock, were sent forward from this point by land to Athens, while 
			the goods, provisions, etc., were poled up the river by 
			Messrs, Armstrong and Harper in a pirogue.  There 
			was no road from Athens to Alexander (their destination), but the 
			woods being tolerably open, they made "a rig" from poles, to which a 
			horse was hitched, and thus their goods were hauled out.  
			Provisions were scarce, and the new settlers depended mainly on 
			hunting for meat, and on the skins of the wild animals, which the 
			men very generally used, for clothes. 
    Mr. Armstrong himself was never much of a hunter, but frequently 
			received a share of the meat and skins for packing the game home for 
			the hunters on his horse.  The manner of packing bears and deer 
			was to take the entrails out, skin the nose of the animal for a 
			crupper for the horse, place the skin on the back of the horse, 
			tying the skin of the fore-legs around his breast; then put on a 
			second one, with the two flesh sides together.  Buffalo skins 
			were cut in strips and used for bed cords, and for harness "tugs" in 
			hauling.  On one occasion, Mrs. Armstrong 
    		was the dogs pursue a deer on to the ice in the creek, near the 
			house, when, there being no man at hand, she hastened down with an 
			ax and butcher's knife, and, the deer being helpless on the ice, 
			killed it with the ax and cut its throat with the knife.  The 
			skin of this deer was dressed, made into gloves by Mrs. A. 
			and sent to her friends in Pennsylvania. 
     In her youth, Mrs. Armstrong spent some time in 
			a fort, which was on her father's farm, near Carmichaeltown, 
			Pennsylvania.  During that period the Indians were peaceable, 
			and, for a time, committed no hostilities.  But, one Sabbath 
			morning, the Reverend John Corbley, a Baptist minister, 
			started to church, a short distance from the fort, and, when 
			returning to the house for something which had been forgotten, he 
			and the family were furiously set upon by Indians.  The savages 
			instantly killed the wife and babe, and scalped the two daughters.  
			Mr. Corbley and two boys made their escape into the fort.  
			Col. Crawford immediately went with a party in pursuit.  He 
			did not overtake the Indians, but found the woman and child dead, 
			and the two girls yet alive.  They were carried into the fort, 
			their wounds dressed, and both recovered, married, and raised 
			families, and a daughter of one of them is now living in St. Mary's, 
			Ohio. 
     In the summer of 1799, Mr. Armstrong prepared to 
			erect a substantial log house on his place.  On such occasions, 
			the settlers from far and near were expected to assemble and aid in 
			the labor.  It was also an occasion of much mirth and good 
			feeling; the slender news of the settlement was discussed, and there 
			was a general interchange of neighborly offices.  Among others 
			who came to assist Mr. Armstrong 
    		at his "raising" were John Thompson, then a prominent citizen 
			of the township, but long since dead, and Wm. Gabriel, Matthew 
			Haning, and
    Thomas Jones, who settled in Alexander in 1798 and 1799. 
     Mr. Armstrong was for several years lister of 
			taxes in Alexander, and collector of college rents.  He was 
			also sheriff of the county, and held other positions of trust in the 
			community.  He died October 22, 1853. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 355 | 
         
         
       
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