| 
			 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. 
			
		
		<  BACK TO 
			1869 BIOGRAPHICAL INDEX > 
		<
		CLICK HERE to GO to LIST of HISTORIES 
		and BIOGRAPHICAL INDEXES > 
      
        
          |   | 
          
			 HULL FOSTER, only surviving son of 
      Zadoc Foster, 
      was born in Sudbury, Rutland county, Vermont, January 23, 1796, and came 
      to the northwestern territory, with his father's family, when a few months 
      old. His first visit to Athens was in 1804 or 1805. He came to visit Dr.
      Leonard Jewett's family, and traveled on horseback from Belpre, there 
      being no visible road, but only a horse path which crossed the river at 
      the present site of Coolville. There was a sort of ferry at this point. At 
      that time one Strickland kept public house in a log building, on the lot 
      now occupied by Judge Barker, and Joseph B. Miles had a small lot of goods 
      in a room of the same house. Timothy Wilkins had a cabin near where 
      General John Brown now lives, and ran a little distillery in the hollow 
      close by. Esquire Henry Bartlett lived in a cabin back of the college 
      green, near the present site of Mr. J. L. Kessinger's house. There was a 
      horse mill on the point of the hill, a short distance northeast of the town, on the Bingham farm. 
      Mr. Foster, when a boy, drove the horse 
      at this mill; the usual terms of grinding were, that parties should bring 
      their own horse and pay one-fourth of the corn as toll. In 1809 his father 
      removed with his family to Athens. In the interval a few brick houses had 
      been built; Dr. Eliphaz Perkins had built on the Ballard corner, and 
      Esquire Henry Bartlett on Congress street, nearly opposite 
      Dr. Wilson's 
      present residence; these, with Abbott's tavern, the academy building, near 
      Nelson Van Vorhes' present residence, and a school house just east of 
      where the Presbyterian church now stands, were, it is thought, all the 
      brick buildings here in 1809. When about seventeen, Mr. Foster took up the 
      trade of shoemaking - to use his own expression, "just as a cow does 
      kicking - her own head." Between 1816 and 1820 he traveled with his kit on 
      his back, through the west and southwest, visiting the present states of 
      Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, etc.  
     In 1821 he returned to Athens, resumed his trade, and 
      built the house where Mr. Abner Cooley now lives. Soon after he married 
      his first wife, a daughter of Mr. Ira Carpenter. Since then he has 
      steadily adhered to his trade, at which he has worked for more than fifty 
      years, and still works some, though under no necessity to do so. There is 
      one family in the county for whom he has made shoes for five generations. 
      He has been twice married - his second wife was a daughter of Mr. William 
      Brown, of Lee township - and is now a widower. A man of strong sense, 
      strict integrity, and marked force of character, his life and virtues are 
      known and read of all of his neighbors. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page  286  | 
         
        
          |   | 
          
			 ZADOC FOSTER, a native of Massachusetts, moved with 
      his family to the northwestern territory in 1796. He came, like many 
      others of that time, with an ox team as far as Olean point, on the 
      Allegheny river, and thence proceeded by raft down the Ohio to Marietta, 
      in the autumn of 1796. Remaining that winter in the stockade, he made a 
      settlement in the spring of Belpre, and remained there till he came to 
      Athens in 1809. During his residence at the Belpre settlement in Indians 
      were frequently seen, but had ceased to be considered dangerous, while the 
      game was so abundant that Deer and turkeys were sometimes shot, from the 
      door of the cabin in which he lived.  
           Mr. Foster kept public house in Athens till his death, by the "cold 
      plague," in 1814, first in the McNichol house, on the lot now occupied by 
      Mr. E. C. Crippen, and afterwards across the street, on the lot now 
      occupied by Judge Baker. His widow, Mrs. Sarah Foster, continued to keep 
      the tavern a few years after his death. She then began to teach a school 
      for young children, in which vocation she was eminently useful and beloved 
      during the remainder of her life. She continued to teach within four days 
      of her death, which occurred in 1849. 
			Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. 
			Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page  285  | 
         
         
      			   
       |