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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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          ISAIAH BAKER, 
			 son of the foregoing, born in 
    Barnstable, Massachusetts, in the year 1780, came to this county with his 
    family in 1814, and settled three miles west of Athens, where he followed 
    farming the rest of his life. He died in 1825, leaving seven sons and three 
    daughters, all of whom are living, except one son, Matthias, who was killed 
    by the kick of a horse in 1837. Mr. Baker was a worthy member of the 
    Methodist church. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 289 | 
         
        
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          JACOB L. 
          BAKER, another of the sons of Isaiah Baker, is an 
          extensive farmer in Athens township.  He has a family of seven 
          sons and one daughter, most of whom are well settled on good farms in 
          the neighborhood of their father, who manages to buy an additional 
          farm as often as needed, for some of his family.  
     The five other sons of Isaiah Baker removed to 
          the west and are there settled - most of them in Illinois. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 290 | 
         
        
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          JAMES BAKER 
			born in Coshocton county, Ohio, in the year 1805, and came to 
			Carthage in 1826, where he has followed the joint vocation of farmer 
			and miller.  Six of his sons and one son-in-law were in the 
			Union army during the late war. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page  457 | 
         
        
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          NICHOLAS BAKER, son of Isaiah, born in Massachusetts 
    in 1799, has lived in Athens (town and township) fifty-four years. Social 
    and genial in his daily intercourse with friends, few men lead a more placid 
    life than "Uncle Nick." With a heart corresponding in capacity to his 
    ponderous frame, with a healthy and happy temperament, he is one of those 
    kind-hearted men whom dumb animals like and children make friends with. He 
    fondly cherishes the remembrance of his once having lived in Judge Silvanus 
    Ames' family, in Ames township, in the summer of 1817. Edward R. Ames (Rev.
          Bishop Ames) at that time was eleven years old, and Mr. Baker, partial to 
    him in boyhood, refers to their early acquaintance with lively pleasure. He 
    relates with much gusto and laughter how "the bishop," being naturally 
    rather lazy, would lie on the grass in the shade and amuse young Baker with 
    his talk, while the latter cheerfully performed an extra amount of work for 
    his dreaming companion. Mr. Baker, formerly a farmer, has resided for many 
    years past in the town of Athens. His son, George W. Baker, is now treasurer 
    of Athens county. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 
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          NICHOLAS 
          BAKER, SR., born in England in 1760, was brought to this 
          country at seven years of age, for forty-four years followed the sea, 
          as cabin boy and sailor, and in 1814, with his only son Isaiah 
          Baker, came to Athens county where he lived in his son's family, 
          in the vicinity of Athens, till his death in 1829. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 289 | 
         
        
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          CAPT. ISAAC 
          BARKER,  
			came from New Bedford, Massachusetts, to the 
          northwestern territory in the autumn of 1788.  For several years 
          he lived in the Belpre settlement on the Ohio river, about fifteen 
          miles from Marietta, and his name is preserved as one of the heads of 
          families who, in the year 1792, took refuge in the block house called 
          "Farmers' Castle," where he and his family remained till the violence 
          of the Indian war was spent.  In 1798 he removed with his family 
          of five sons and three daughters to Athens township, and settled near 
          the village of Athens, where he passed the remainder of his life. 
          Capt. Barker was a sea-faring man in early life, being 
          supercargo and captain of an East India vessel, and, during the 
          revolutionary war, took an active part in the privateering service.  
          His sons were Michael, Isaac, Joseph, William, and Timothy. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 277 | 
         
        
          
			
			
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          ISAAC 
			BARKER, JR., (son of Capt. Isaac Barker), long known 
			in Athens county as Judge Barker, was born in Massachusetts, 
			February 17th, 1779.  He remembers his father setting out with 
			his family for the northwestern territory, from New Bedford, 
			Massachusetts, in 1788.  They had one wagon drawn by two oxen 
			and a horse, and were accompanied on the journey by Capt. Dana 
			and his family, also emigrating to the west.  They journey was 
			not marked by any special incidents.  At one state Capt. 
			Barker's oxen having become footsore, he exchanged them with a 
			Dutch tavern keeper where they stopped for a fresh yoke.  The 
			next morning the boys started on early with the team, the father 
			remaining behind a little while.  They had not gone far before 
			they came to a very bad place in the road, over which the oxen 
			refused to go.  After working with them for some time the boys 
			suddenly thought it was because the Dutch oxen could not understand 
			English that they were so stubborn; one of them accordingly went 
			back for the Dutchman, who soon arrived, and, by dint of 
			considerable hard swearing at the oxen, in good Dutch, got the team 
			over.  The emigrants traveled by land to Sumrill's ferry on the 
			Youghiogheny, where they procured keel boats and continued their 
			journey by water to Marietta.  Captain Barker's family 
			spent several months in the family of Paul Fearing, at 
			Marietta, and removed thence early in 1790 to Belpre, where he 
			settled on a one-hundred-acre donation lot.  They had hard work 
			to get along here, especially for the first year or two. 
          Mr. Barker says corn was four dollars a bushel and none to be 
			had at that.  They lived for one year almost solely on corn 
			bread and wild meat.  "One quart of cracked corn," he says, 
			"Was the daily allowance for our family of eleven.  The 
			children used to stand by looking wistfully while their mother baked 
			the daily loaf, and, having received their share, would hoard it 
			carefully, nibbling it like mice during the day."  They lived 
			in a block house, or garrison, some four or five years, during the 
			Indian war.  At this time, says Mr. Barker, "I was a 
			pretty smart boy and able to handle a gun, and while father and my 
			older brother worked in the field I stood guard with the rifle.  
			Every evening we barred up the door before sundown.  In the 
			morning we would open it an hour or so after sunrise, look carefully 
			about, and, if no signs of Indians appeared, brother Michael 
			would go out (the door being instantly barred behind him), and scout 
			around a little."  Several men and one or two whole families 
			were killed in that neighborhood by the Indians during these years.  
			Mr. Barker 
          recollects the massacre of the Armstrong family just across the 
			river from where they lived, the killing of Benoni Hurlbut, 
			the chase of Waldo Putnam and a man by the name of 
			Bradford, by the Indians, and the killing of Jonas Davis.  
			This 
          Mr. Davis was engaged to be married to one of Mr. Barker's 
			sisters.  One cold day during the war, seeing an old skiff 
			lodged on the ice some distance up the river, he ventured out to get 
			some nails out of her  - they being very scarce.  He never 
			returned.  Being missed, after several hours, a search made, he 
			was found dead, stripped, and scalped on the ice.  Though a 
			mere boy during the war, Judge Barker received at its close 
			one hundred acres of land as a bounty from the Ohio Company - 
			General Putnam saying that he had done a man's work and was 
			entitled to a man's pay.  He used frequently to stand guard at 
			the garrison. 
          Capt. Barker's family came to Athens in 1798, poling their 
			goods up the Hockhocking in the light flat boat.  These boats 
			were built with a "running board" along each side; a man on each 
			side, furnished with a long pole with a pointed iron socket at the 
			end would plant it firmly in the bottom at the bow, and then with 
			the upper end against his shoulder would run to the other end of the 
			boat, propelling her by that means.  After coming to Athens 
			they lived a year at the point close to Harper's Ferry.  
			Judge Barker 
          tended this ferry for a while, and married Christiana, a 
			daughter of Mr. Harper.  At this time they got their 
			milling from Capt. Devol's floating mill, some five miles up 
			the Muskingum.  It took four days to go and come, and Mr. 
			Barker has himself more than once made this long trip to mill, 
			going down the Hocking and up the Ohio in a pirogue and back by the 
			same means, camping out over night. 
     Moses Hewitt and his family lived a short 
			distance up Margaret's creek.  In the year 1800 some thirty or 
			forty Indians came in on Factory run, and three of them came over to
          Mr. Hewitt's house.  They were somewhat in liquor, and 
          Mrs. Hewitt  in alarm sent hastily for her husband, who was a 
			short distance from the house.  When Mr. Hewitt came he 
			ordered them in their own language (he had been a captive among them 
			several years before), to "go away."  They refused and were 
			insulting, whereupon, Mr. Hewitt flew at the drunken ones and 
			knocked one into the fireplace and another headlong out of the door. 
          Mr. Barker was in the house and saw all this.  A large 
			athletic Indian, who seemed entirely sober, then grappled with 
			Mr. Hewitt, and after a violent struggle, threw him on the 
			floor. 
          Mrs. Hewitt and Mr. Barker, excited and alarmed, were 
			about to pull the Indian off, when Hewitt, who was a noted 
			fighter, told them to stand off and let him alone.  The fight 
			continued, and Hewitt very soon managed to get his thumb into 
			the Indian's eye, and the Indian's thumb into his mouth, when the 
			latter screamed lustily and begged till Mr. Hewitt released 
			him.  The moment he was on his feet, the Indian ran to the 
			door, and, putting his hand to his mouth, gave a regular war whoop, 
			loud and long continued, and then ran away.  Mr. Hewitt 
			 himself was now alarmed, thinking that the Indian would come over 
			in the night and kill his family.  Accordingly he requested 
			Garner Bobo, a man named Cutter, and Mr. Barker, 
			to stay in the house over night while he took his wife and the 
			children some distance across the river.  Mr. Barker 
			says, "We had but one gun among us - Bobo had that.  I 
			was armed with a heavy clothespounder, and Cutter had a 
			conchshell which he was to blow for help in case of great danger.  
			Thus accountered we barred the door and prepared to pass the night.  
			We took turns sleeping and watching, and the night passed without 
			any alarm.  About daylight I, being on watch, saw some three or 
			four figures gliding about the house and thought the redskins were 
			after us now, sure enough.  I woke Bobo who had his gun 
			ready in a minute, and we were preparing for fight or a siege when 
			we heard a loud laugh outside, and looking out saw Hewitt and 
			two or three others coming up to the house.  They had come over 
			to scare us.  We saw nothing more of the Indians, and I think 
			this was the last considerable party of them seen in this part of 
			the country." 
     About this time Mr. Barker and Martin 
			Mansfield both vigorous and athletic young men, boated a man by 
			the name of King, with his family, from the mouth of the 
			Hockhocking river to the falls near Logan, and then dragging their 
			boat around the falls, continued to within eight miles of Lancaster, 
			the place of destination. 
     The town plat of Athens was very heavily timbered at 
			that time, and the few cabins that stood here were widely separated. 
          Mr. Barker, though not a great hunter, killed great numbers of 
			deer and turkeys hereabouts.  He remembers the following 
			incident: 
     Chris. Stevens, who lived back of the college 
			green, and a German named Heck, were hunting one day and 
			treed a bear in a large poplar not far from Stevens' house.  
			The bear climbed nearly to the top of the tree, which was very tall.  
			They had but one gun between them and Stevens was to shoot.  
			He had leveled his gun, taken aim, and sighted a long time;  
          Heck stood a little off waiting for him to fire, when, his 
			patience exhausted, he asked, "Why don't you shot?"  Stevens, 
			who was a kind-hearted man, deliberately lowered his gun and said, " 
			I can't bear to see the poor thing fall so far!" 
               "Gott im himmels," cried the German, "gif 
			me de gun den - I shoots him if he falls mit de ground till a 
			tousand feet," and bruin soon came tumbling down. 
     Old Capt. Barker's first cabin stood about where
          Joseph Herrold's house now stands.  He afterward built a 
			log house near the river, south of John White's present 
			residence.  Judge Barker's first cabin about one hundred 
			yards west of his father's first house, and he afterward built a two 
			story hewed log house on the river bank just at the turn of the 
			road, which was standing a few years since and occupied by the 
			Beveridge family.  In 1815 Judge Barker moved to the 
			town plat and took the "Dunbaugh House," which stood where 
			the "Brown House" now stands, and which had been kept for a 
			few years by one
          Jacob Dunbaugh.  Mr. Barker kept tavern here till 
			1818, when he bought the lot where he now resides.  There was a 
			hewed log house on this lot, and he kept tavern in this while his 
			brick house was building, and till it was finished in 1823, and then 
			in his present dwelling till about 1830. 
     During his residence here, Mr. Barker has held 
			the offices of county sheriff, county treasurer, collector of rents 
			for the university, and was judge of the court of common pleas for 
			about ten years.  He has lived for nearly three score years and 
			ten in the town of Athens, where he is passing the evening of his 
			days in quiet serenity.  Though now eighty-nine years old, he 
			devoted a part of every day during this season (1868) to working in 
			his garden - his favorite employment - and is in possession of all 
			his faculties. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 278 | 
         
        
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          JOHN BALLARD
			 was born in Charlemont, Massachusetts, 
    October 1st, 1790, and came to Athens in February, 1839. During the greater 
    part of his residence here he engaged successfully in the mercantile 
    business; was also for several years president of the Athens branch of the 
    State Bank, and a leading man in the local enterprises of the place. He has 
    now retired from business. Four of his sons are living, viz: Otis, a banker 
    in Circleville, Ohio; Charles, manufacturer of farm implements in 
    Springfield, O.; James, merchant in Athens, and the Rev. Addison Ballard at 
    Detroit, Michigan. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 307 | 
         
        
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          MICHAEL 
          BARKER, son of Capt. Isaac Barker, born in 1776 at New 
          Bedford, Massachusetts, came with his father's family to Marietta in 
          the autumn of 1788.  During the Indian war, from 1792 to 1795, 
          while they lived in Farmers' Castle at Belpre, Michael served 
          as a scout or spy against the Indians in a company raised under the 
          authority of the Ohio Company.  He came to Athens county and 
          settled near the town of Athens in April, 1798, where he spent the 
          rest of his life.  He married a daughter of Wm. Harper, 
          who was county treasurer from 1809 to 1811.  Mr. Barker 
          was for many years constable in Athens township, and held other local 
          offices.  He was a man of scrupulous exactness in his dealings, 
          and of much firmness and decision of character.  He died June 
          10th 1857. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 277 | 
         
        
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          Trimble Twp. -  
			ENOS 
          BARNES, from New England, a son-in-law of Mr. Bagley, 
          settled here in 1818.  He was a blacksmith. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page  524 | 
         
        
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          The 
			BARROWS 
			BROTHERS, William, George, and Henry, came to 
			what is now Canaan township in 1797, and settled near where N. O. 
			Warren now resides.  During the next year they brought out 
			their father, Ebenezer Barrows, and the rest of the family 
			from the east.  The old man had been a soldier in the French 
			and revolutionary wars.  His descendants are widely scattered 
			through Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Iowa.  One of his 
			daughters, Mrs. Ebenezer Culver, is living in Upper Sandusky, 
			Ohio, aged ninety years.  Two of his grandsons, Voltaire 
			and Massena, own the old Barrow's mill on Federal 
			creek.  Perry Barrows has a farm near the mill tract.  
			These are sons of Henry Barrows.  Several of the 
			children of George Barrows survive.  Parker, now 
			seventy years old, is a respectable farmers of Canaan township. 
			Orange and George, also farmers, live in Rome 
			township, the latter on the old farm.  Between seventy-five and 
			eighty of the descendants of Ebenezer Barrows, are known to 
			have served in the Union army during the late rebellion. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page  445 | 
         
        
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    Town and Township of Athens. -  
	HENRY BARTLETT, the son of Captain William 
	Bartlett, was both at Beverly, Massachusetts, Feb. 3, 1771.  His 
	father was a seafaring man, and received, it is believed, the first 
	commission that was issued to engage in privateering, during the 
	revolutionary struggle, in which he rendered conspicuous service.  In 
	1785, Captain Bartlett removed with his family to Westmoreland 
	county, Pennsylvania, and settled near the Forks of Yoh, where he lived till 
	his death in 1794.  While living in Westmoreland county, Henry
	Bartlett married Miss Betsey Corey, and in 1796, 
	brought his young family to the northwestern territory and settled the next 
	year at Athens.  During his youth, Mr. Bartlett enjoyed 
	pretty good educational advantages, and after his arrival at Athens was soon 
	recognized as one of the readiest and most accurate clerks and business men 
	in the community.  Previous to the organization of the county, he 
	taught school several quarters In the surrounding neighborhoods.  Soon 
	after the organization of the county in 1805, he was appointed by the county 
	commissioners as clerk of the board and of the county courts, which position 
	he held, discharging the duties with great fidelity for thirty years.  
	He ceased to be clerk in 1836, and from that time till his death, acted as a 
	justice of the peace in Athens.  He was also for many years secretary 
	and auditor of the Ohio university.  He died September 9th, 1850. 
	Esquire Bartlett was a man of great purity of character, 
	thoroughly judicial mind and excellent capacity for business.  During 
	his early residence here, he adapted himself with admirable facility to 
	pioneer life, and to the changing circumstances of the times, and was for 
	many years almost indispensable in the management of county affairs.  
	He possessed a fine quality of wit and humor, which he was fond of 
	exercising, though always without offense to others, and which made him one 
	of the most popular as he was one of the most highly respected men in the 
	county.  His family consisted of two sons and ten daughters, of whom 
	nine daughters are living. 
	
	Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. 
	Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 264 | 
         
        
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    FRANCIS BEARDSLEY, born at Stratford, Hartford 
    county, Connecticut, December 28, 1792, came to Athens in 1814, where he has 
    lived ever since. Soon after coming here he married Miss Culver, sister of 
    John Gillmore's wife, who died in _____. For his second wife 
    he married Rebecca, daughter of Esquire Henry Bartlett. Of a retiring 
    disposition and unobtrusive manners, Mr. Beardsley has led a quiet and 
    useful life. A model of Christian rectitude under all circumstances, he is 
    respected and esteemed by all who know him. 
	
	Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. 
	Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 298 | 
         
        
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    CAPTAIN 
			HOPSON BEEBE was born in Connecticut, Feb. 17, 1749, was a 
			soldier of the revolutionary war, and settled in Rome township in 
			1804, where he resided till his death in 1836.  One of this 
			sons, the venerable Mr. Charles Beebe, now in his 
			eighty-third year, resided on the "old farm" until quite recently.  
			He now lives with Mrs. J. W. Johnson in this township. 
			Doctor Wm. Beebe, another son, was an assistant surgeon in 
			General Tupper's brigade in the war of 1812.  After the war 
			he settled in Belpre, and practiced medicine there for the rest of 
			his life.  His son, Dr. Wm. Beebe (grandson of 
			Captain Hopson Beebe), is now a practicing physician in Barlow, 
			Washington county. 
     The youngest son, Peter Beebe, was an active and 
			successful business man, and for several years one of the township 
			trustees.  He died in the prime of life in 1849.  
	Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. 
	Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page  516 | 
         
        
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    DR. WILLIAM BLACKSTONE was born in Bottetourt county, 
    Virginia, in 1796, and came with his father's family to Ohio in 1802, 
    settling first in Pickaway and afterward in Ross county. He studied medicine 
    at Circleville, Ohio, and Lexington, Kentucky, and graduated at the 
    Cincinnati Medical college in 1833, having engaged actively in the practice 
    during several years before this. Dr. B. came to Athens in 1838, and has 
    practiced here continuously since. He and Dr. Carpenter have both partially 
    retired from active practice. 
     Dr. Perkins, Dr. Jewett, Dr. Bierce (who left here about 1840),
          Dr. Carpenter, and Dr. Blackstone are the only resident physicians who remained 
    for any length of time in the place during the first half of this century. 
    There are now three practicing physicians here, viz: Dr. W. P. Johnson, 
          Dr. C. L. Wilson, and Dr. George Carpenter. 
	
	Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. 
	Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 303 | 
         
        
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    SAMUEL L. BLAKE, born in Middletown, Middlesex 
    county, Connecticut, in 1779, removed in 1816 to Alexander township, where 
    he lived the rest of his life.  He was a thorough farmer, a man of 
    excellent character and sound judgment, and assisted largely in molding the 
    society of the township.  He died March 16, 1859, leaving a large 
    number of descendants, some of whom are well known in the county. 
	
	Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. 
	Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 359 | 
         
        
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          JAMES 
          BOSWORTH, from Fall River, Massachusetts, came here in 1821, 
          but, after living in the township a few years, went back New England. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page  524 | 
         
        
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          DANIEL BOYD 
			was born in Ireland in 1794, emigrated to the United States in 1819, 
			and settled in Carthage township as a farmer in 1838.  He was 
			an active member of the Methodist church and an excellent citizen.  
			He died August 20, 1867.  His oldest son, Dr. John E. Boyd, 
			died in West Virginia in 1855.  His other two sons, Hugh and 
			William F., graduated at the Ohio university in 1860 and 1866, 
			respectively, and have engaged successfully in teaching. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page  458 | 
         
        
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          COL. 
			ABSALOM BOYLES, born in Franklin county, Pennsylvania, in 
			1797, came with his father's family to the northwestern territory in 
			1799, and to Ames township in 1801.  He grew up with the 
			community, and was largely identified with the development of the 
			township and county during a long and active life.  With fine 
			intelligence, high sense of honor and ardent desire to benefit 
			others, he was always one of the first and most active supporters of 
			social reform, and of every movement that tended to the common 
			welfare.  He held various civil positions in the township and 
			county, and, in connection with the early militia organization of 
			the county, was commissioned, by Governor Ethan A. Brown, 
			ensign in 1819; lieutenant in 1820; captain in 1821; by Governor 
			Trimble, lieutenant colonel in 1822, and by Governor Morrow, 
			colonel in 1823. 
     He lived an honorable and useful life, and died May 3, 
			1863, on the farm near Amesville, where he had resided for sixty-two 
			years. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 416 | 
         
        
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          JOHN BOYLES, 
			son of Peter, was born in Pennsylvania in 1791, came to 
			Canaan township with his father's family in 1795, and lived there 
			till his death in 1849.  Some of his descendants still reside 
			in the county. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 447 | 
         
        
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          PETER BOYLES, 
			a native of Bedford county, Pennsylvania, settled in what is now 
			Canaan township in 1795.  He was probably the first white 
			settler within the present county of Athens.  This was the year 
			of the treaty of Greenville, and the close of the Indian war.  
			Athens county was the very frontier at that time, and Mr. Boyles, 
			in settling here, took his life in his hand, for this section was by 
			no means safe in that year from Indian outrages.  He lived in 
			Canaan township till 1827, when he removed west, and died in 
			Missouri in 1843.  The date of his settlement here is 
			accurately fixed by his son, George Boyles, who is still 
			living in Andrew county, Missouri, and who was born in Canaan 
			township June 5, 1795.  He was, beyond doubt, the first white 
			child born in Athens county.  He says he was born "on the 
			school section between the graveyard and the river."  Mr. 
			Hocking H. Hunter, of Lancaster, Ohio, has frequently been 
			accorded the distinction of having been the first white child born 
			in the Hockhocking valley.  He was not born till Aug. 23, 1801.  
			It hardly admits of a question that George Boyles, a native 
			of Canaan, was the first white child born on the waters of the 
			Hockhocking. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 446 | 
         
        
          |   | 
          PETER J. 
			BOYLES, son of John Boyles, was born in Canaan 
			township, Dec. 20, 1820, and has since passed his life in this 
			county.  He now owns and lives on the "Daniel Stewart 
			farm" in Rome township - probably the best farm in the county. 
			Samuel S. Boyles, another son of John lives in Lodi 
			township.  Both he and Peter W. are prosperous and 
			highly respected citizens. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page  447 | 
         
        
          |   | 
          JAMES BRICE
            was born in Maryland in the year 1750, 
    and, removing to western Pennsylvania, settled near Fort Pitt (Pittsburg) in 
    1787. While living here he held various public stations, such as member of 
    the state legislature, county commissioner, collector of internal revenue, 
    trustee of Washington college, etc. In 1821 he removed further west, and 
    settled in the town of Athens, where he passed the latter years of his life, 
    living in the family of his son. He was a man of high character, and during 
    his long life was an active and exemplary Christian. He died in Athens, 
    December 22, 1832.    
    Barnet Brice, 
    his son, and a native of Pennsylvania, preceded his father to Athens, having 
    settled here in 1807. He kept public house many years (he built the Union 
    hotel now occupied by O. B. Potter), and was extensively acquainted through 
    the country. He died about 1853. 
    Thomas Brice, another son of James, came to Athens in 1818. He was a 
    successful merchant here for many years, and a large dealer in cattle from 
    1820 to 1830. He built the brick dwelling house on Court street, now owned 
    and occupied by Dr. W, P, Johnson. 
          THOMAS BRICE, 
          another son of James, came to Athens in 1818.  He was a 
          successful merchant here for many years, and a large dealer in cattle 
          from 1820 to 1830.  He built the brick dwelling house on Court 
          street, now owned and occupied by Dr. W. P. Johnson. 
			 
          Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 292  | 
         
        
          | 
      | 
          
    A. G. BROWN, 
	 son of 
    Captain Benjamin Brown, was born April 16th, 1798, near Waterford, in 
    Washington county, Ohio, and has lived in Athens county since he was one 
    year old.  His youth was passed in working on his father's farm (in 
    Ames township), and in assiduous study and preparation for college.  In 
    due time he became a student at the Ohio university, and graduated there in 
    1822.  From 1824 to 1825, he was preceptor in the academical department 
    of the university.  In 1825 he began the publication of the Athens 
    Mirror, the first paper printed in the county, and continued as its 
    editor and publisher for five years.  From 1827 to 1833, he was county 
    recorder, which office he again filled from 1836 to 1841, when he began the 
    practice of law in Athens..  In 1841 he became a member of the board of 
    trustees of the university, which position he still holds.  He was a 
    delegate to the convention which formed the present constitution of Ohio, 
    and was for two years president judge of the Athens district.  Judge 
    Brown came to Athens county when nearly the whole of its area was an 
    unbroken forest and to the town of Athens when it was a mere cluster of log 
    cabins.  The personal friend and associate of the leading men of the 
    community who assisted in building up society here, most of whom have passed 
    away, he has witnessed the steady development of the county during 
    considerably more than half a century.  Looking back over its whole 
    history to a period before it was organized, he may very truthfully say: 
    - "Qua ipse vidi, 
    Et quorum pars magna fui."  
         Judge Brown's  sons, 
    Henry T. Brown, an active lawyer and business man, and Louis W. Brown, 
    for many years clerk of the county, are natives of Athens, and well known in 
    the Community. 
	
	Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. 
	Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 262  | 
         
        
          | 
      | 
          
    CAPT. BENJAMIN 
          BROWN, father 
    of General John, and of Judge A. G. Brown, and one of the most prominent 
    among the early settlers of Ames, was born Oct. 17, 1745, at Leicester, 
    Massachusetts.  His grandfather, William Brown, came from England to 
    America while a youth, was the first settler in the town of Hatfield, on the 
    Connecticut river, and was often engaged in the Indian wars of that period.  
    Capt. John Brown, father of Benjamin, served with credit in the colonial 
    army during the French war, and represented the town of Leicester in the 
    Massachusetts legislature during, and for many years after, a revolutionary 
    war.  In February, 1775, Benjamin Brown, then thirty years old, joined 
    a regiment of minute men, and two months later was engaged in active 
    hostilities.  In May he was commissioned a lieutenant in Colonel
	Prescott's regiment of the Massachusetts line, and in June participated in 
    the battle of Bunker's Hill.  Two of his brothers, Pearly and John 
    Brown, were also engaged in this battle, the latter being dangerously 
    wounded in two laces, and born off the field during the engagement.  
    This brother Pearly was subsequently killed at the battle of White Plains, 
    and another brother, William, died in hospital.  In January, 1777,
	Lieut. Brown was commissioned a captain in the eighth regiment Massachusetts 
    line.  His regiment took a very active part in the operations directed 
    against Burgoyne during the summer of 1777, and Capt. Brown was engaged in 
    nearly all of the battles that preceded Burgoyne's surrender, in some of 
    which he particularly distinguished himself by his gallantry and daring.  
    A short time after this he was offered the position of aide-de-camp on Baron
	Steuben's staff, but declined it, fearing that his military knowledge was 
    inadequate.  In 1779, compelled by the necessities of his family and 
    other personal reasons, he resigned his commission and returned home to 
    provide for their support.  About the year 1789, he removed with his 
    family to Hartford, Washington county, New York, then a new settlement, 
    whence he again migrated in the fall of 1796, and sought a home in the 
    northwestern territory.  He reached Marietta in the spring of 1797, and 
    in 1799 came to Ames township, in company with Judge Cutler, as 
    elsewhere stated.  He was one of the prominent citizens during the time 
    he resided in Ames, holding various township offices and contributing 
    largely to the advancement of the settlement.  In 1817, his health 
    becoming feeble, he went to live with his son, Gen. John Brown, in 
    Athens, and here he died in October, 1821. 
     His wife, whom he married in Massachusetts in 1772, and 
    who bore him a large family of children, died at Athens in 1840, aged 
    eighty-six years. 
	
	Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. 
	Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 404 | 
         
        
          
			
			
			  | 
          JOHN BROWN, 
          well known in southern Ohio as "General Brown," son of 
          Captain Benjamin Brown, one of the pioneers of Ames, was born in 
          Rowe, Massachusetts, December 1, 1785.  in 1787, his father's 
          family moved to Hartford, Washington county, New York, and in 1796, 
          with several another families seeking homes in the west, came to the 
          Forks of Yoh, on the Monongahela, three miles above Williamsport, 
          Pennsylvania.  Here they remained til February, 1797, building a 
          boat during the winter, in which they completed their journey and 
          arrived at Marietta, February 11, 1797.  Of the twenty-three 
          persons of various ages who descended the river in this boat, there 
          are but four now living, viz:  Samuel and John Brown, 
          Mrs. Aphia Hamilton, and Mrs. Phebe Sprague.  As 
          elsewhere stated, Captain Brown's family came out to Ames 
          township in the spring of 1799, moving their household effects by 
          canoes down the Ohio, and up the Hockhocking and Federal creek - the 
          members of the family not required to work the canoes coming across 
          the country. 
     In 1811, Mr. Brown married Sophia Walker, 
          daughter of Dr. Ezra Walker, and continued to live in Ames 
          township till 1817, when he removed to the town of Athens, where he 
          still resides.  On coming to Athens he kept a public house one 
          year at the Zadoc Foster house (on the south end of the lot now 
          owned and occupied by Judge Barker), when he bought the corner 
          property in front of the university, and built and kept the "Brown
          House," so long known to the public, and so kindly remembered by 
          his hosts of friends.  He kept this house till December, 1865, a 
          period of forty-seven years. 
     In 1808, Mr. Brown was elected captain in the 
          militia, and was subsequently made major and colonel, and in 1817 was 
          elected brigadier general.  He was county auditor from 1822 to 
          1827, and has been treasurer of the Ohio university from 1824 to the 
          present time.  He was also mayor of Athens for several years, and 
          coroner for two terms.  He is, in every good sense, one of the 
          village fathers who has "come down to us from a former generation."  
          Possessed of sound judgment, a kind heart, sterling integrity, and 
          unfailing humor, General Brown has for fifty years had the 
          respect and affectionate regard of this community.  His genial 
          wit still oft enlivens the social circle, and his venerable form is 
          recognized with pleasure by all, on the streets of the town where he 
          has lived so long and where, without an enemy in the world, he is 
          cheerfully approaching the end of his journey.  He reared here a 
          family of six sons and two daughters; four of the sons graduated at 
          the Ohio university, and three survive, viz:  Oscar W., Wm. 
          Loring and Archibald Douglas; the latter is cashier of a 
          bank in Pomeroy, Ohio.  One of the daughters, Mrs. Hanna Pratt, 
          lives in Illinois, and the other, Mrs. Lucy Hey, in Cincinnati, 
          Ohio. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 260 | 
         
        
          |   | 
          
			JOHN 
          BROWN (nephew of Capt. Brown), born February 10, 1774, 
          Leicester, Massachusetts, married Miss Polly Green, of Spencer, 
          Massachusetts, in 1797, and set out for the Ohio Company's purchase in 
          the autumn of 1801.  He brought his young family and few effects 
          over the mountains, with one horse, in a little wagon, and, when 
          descending difficult places in the road, attached a small tree to the 
          rear end of his wagon, to act as a break, or lock.  When he 
          reached wheeling, on the Ohio river, after a most toilsome journey, he 
          "swapped" his wagon for a canoe and two heifers, and proceeded down 
          the river toward his destination.  His second son, Lemuel 
          Green Brown,  was born the day after their landing, near 
          Marietta, and the head of the family found himself in these rather 
          difficult circumstances, with but fifty cents in his pocket.  As 
          soon as practicable he resumed travel, and reached Ames township in 
          March, 1802.  He first settled on the farm now owned and occupied 
          by the heirs of Stephen Green, where he lived for a short time, 
          and thence moved to where John D. Brown now lives.  He was 
          soon elected a justice of the peace, and was frequently re-elected, 
          holding the position, altogether, twenty-seven years.  He was 
          also at one time one of the appraisers the college lands in this 
          county, and of the same in Miami county.  In 1811 he built a 
          brick house on his farm in Ames (one of the first brick houses, if not 
          the first, erected in this part of the county), where for many years 
          he kept public house.  Being situated on the principal 
          thoroughfare from Marietta westward, it was, during fifteen or twenty 
          years, much resorted to by travelers.  The building was standing 
          till within a few years.  Of excellent business capacity, and of 
          a kind and genial nature, Mr. Brown was always able and willing 
          to relieve the poor and help the distressed.  His house was at 
          all times open for religious services, and a list was made of 
          seventy-two preachers, who, at different times, had held meetings 
          there.  He was twice married, and his second wife is still living 
          in the county, nearly eighty years old.  He died July 23, 1833. 
			 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 406 | 
         
        
          |   | 
          JOHN 
          BROWN, son of Samuel, was 
          born in Ames township, December 23, 1801, but lived the greater part 
          of the time, until 1840, in Washington county, about eight miles from 
          Marietta.  In that year he bought property in Albany, Athens 
          county, where he located and engaged successfully for many years in 
          the mercantile business.  In 1867 he associated with his son, 
          J. D. Brown, and engaged in the banking business.  During the 
          present year they have removed from Albany to Athens, which is Mr. 
          Brown's present residence.  He is a gentleman of fine 
          business capacity, and a public spirited citizen. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 411 | 
         
        
          |   | 
          JOHN B. BROWN, 
          another son of John, was born in the 
          year 1803, in Ames township, where he has lived ever since.  He 
          has been successful in life, and is respected as one of the solid men 
          of the community. 
			
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 403 | 
         
        
          |   | 
          Ames Twp. - 
			PEARLY BROWN, 
			oldest son of the preceding (John Brown) 
			was born in Massachusetts, July 24, 1798, and was four years old 
			when brought to this county.  In the year 1819 he married 
			Eliza Hulbert (who is still living), and settled in Ames 
			township, on a new farm, given him by his father.  A 
			hard-working and energetic man, he soon improved his circumstances, 
			and laid the foundation for a competence.  To afford some idea 
			of the prices that prevailed when he was a young man, Mr. Brown 
			states that he worked a week for Judge Currier, in Athens, in 
			1823, at 31¼ cents a day, and at 
			Saturday night was paid in two tin cups at 25 cents each; a quarter 
			of a pound of tea, 50 cents; one pound of coffee, 50 cents, and 37½ 
			cents in money - making $1.87½ - with which valuables he walked home 
			- ten miles.  While yet living with his father, in 1814 or 
			1815, he was hired to carry the mail, with two other riders, between 
			Marietta and Chillicothe, the distance being about one hundred 
			miles, and to make three trips a week, or two hundred miles a week 
			for each rider; for which service he received $6 a month.  He 
			cultivated his farm in Ames till 1829 or 1830, when he removed to 
			McArthurstown (then in Athens county), and engaged for many years in 
			selling goods and dealing in live stock.  In 1839 he and his 
			partners drove across the mountains to the eastern markets 2,100 
			cattle, 1,300 hogs, 1,800 sheep and 20 horses.  He was at the 
			same time quite extensively engaged in the mercantile business with 
			his brother, Samuel H. Brown, well known in the county for 
			many years, and till his death in 1854, as an untiring business man. 
			Pearly Brown has held the positions of county commissioner 
			and justice of the peace, and is widely known in this and adjoining 
			counties as a man of unswerving integrity.  He has reared a 
			family of three sons and six daughters.  His oldest son, 
			Pinckney Brown, is an extensive dealer in live stock. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles 
			M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 408 | 
         
        
          |   | 
          SAMUEL BROWN, 
			brother of John and nephew of Capt. Benjamin Brown, a 
			native of Massachusetts, came to the northwestern territory in 1797, 
			and settled with his family on "Round Bottom," on the Muskingum 
			river.  In the year 1800 he bought a piece of land on Sunday 
			creek, within the limits of Ames township as soon after defined, but 
			in the present township of Dover.  In 1805 he returned to 
			Washington county (having sold his farm on Sunday creek), and opened 
			a new farm about eight miles west of Marietta.  He lived here 
			till 1835, when he took up his residence with his son-in-law, Mr. 
			James Dickey, at whose house he died Jan. 15, 1841. 
			Source:  History 
			of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: 
			Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page   410 | 
         
        
          |   | 
          SAMUEL H. 
          BROWN, youngest son of John, 
          was born in Ames township, October 8th, 1807.  He became an 
          active business man, and well known in southern Ohio and in the 
          eastern markets as an extensive and successful cattle dealer, in which 
          business he engaged, with little intermission, for over twenty-two 
          years.  He served as justice of the peace and associate judge in 
          this county.  He removed to Meigs county about 1850, and died 
          there October 2d, 1854.  He was an honest and capable man. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page  409 | 
         
        
          |   | 
          WILLIAM BROWN, 
			son of Capt. Benjamin Brown, settled in Ames township in the 
			year 1800, and lived here till about 1817, when he removed to the 
			Moses Hewitt farm, in Waterloo.  In 1820 he moved to 
			Lee township, where he lived until a short time before his death, 
			which took place at his son, Leonard Brown's, in 
			Athens.  His son, Austin, still lives in Lee township, on a 
			part of the old homestead.  Another son, Leonard, who 
			served one term as sheriff and two terms as treasurer of the county, 
			now lives in the town of Albany.  He is engaged in the 
			mercantile business, and is a leading citizen. 
			 
			Source:  History 
			of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: 
			Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page   410 | 
         
        
          |   | 
          EBENEZER 
			BUCKINGHAM, SEN., settled in what is now Carthage township in 
			1801, near to Esquire Cooley.  He was the father of the 
			late Ebenezer Buckingham of Muskingum county, who was at one 
			time esteemed one of the wealthiest men of southern Ohio.  
			Stephen Buckingham of Muskingum county, who was at one time 
			esteemed one of the wealthiest men of southern Ohio.  
			Stephen Buckingham, his brother, setter, settled near him 
			and about the same time. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page  456 | 
         
         
       
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