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History & Genealogy

Source: 
Biographical
and
Historical Sketches

A Narrative of Hamilton and Its Residents
From 1792 to 1896
by Stephen D. Cone
Illustrated
Hamilton, Ohio
Republican Publishing Company
1896

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

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  ROBERT HARGITT was a native of Yorkshire, England, and came to this country, when a boy, with his parents.  They settled in Lawrenceburg, Dearborn county, Indiana.
     In 1851 he came to Ohio and established the first news depot in Hamilton.  He was the first mayor of the consolidated villages of Hamilton and Rossville.  He was justice of the peace for several years.
     Of his family of eight children only two survive.  A few years ago he was killed by being run down by a passenger train at Cumminsville.  He was Mayor of the village of Rossville from December 10, 1853 to April 19, 1854, when the villages of Rossville and Hamilton were united.

Source:  Biographical & Historical Sketches - A Narrative of Hamilton and Its Residents from 1792 to 1896 - Publ. 1896 - Page 132

Charles E. Heiser
CHARLES E. HEISER

Source:  Biographical & Historical Sketches - A Narrative of Hamilton and Its Residents from 1792 to 1896 - Publ. 1896 - Page _____
Portrait between pps. 168 & 169


John E. Heiser
JOHN E. HEISER

Source:  Biographical & Historical Sketches - A Narrative of Hamilton and Its Residents from 1792 to 1896 - Publ. 1896 - Page _____
Portrait between pps. 168 & 169


Daniel H. Hensley
DANIEL H. HENSLEY was born in Logansport, Ind., January 10, 1844, where he received a liberal education.  On July 21, 1862, at the age of eighteen, he entered the army, enlisting in Company H, Seventy-third Indiana volunteers, Col. Gilbert Hathaway's regiment, which was in active service for three years, being mustered out July 1, 1865. 
     In the spring of 1863, during the darkest hours of the rebellion, this regiment was one of four picked regiments, composing the "Independent Provisional Brigade," under the command of the famous Col. A. D. Streight. On April 7, 1863, this brigade left Murfreesboro, Tennessee, under sealed orders for the interior of the Confederacy.  After a month's hard riding, much of the time day and night, with frequent severe fighting the brigade was compelled to surrender to Major-General Forrest May 3, 1863, near Rome, Ga.  After a short confinement on Belle Isle the rank and file were exchanged and sent North.  The officers were confined in Libby Prison, and the brigade was without a commander.  The privates were assigned to other organizations.  Sergeant Hensley was placed in the Twelfth Indiana battery, serving until the spring of 1864, when he was detached for special service at Gen. Hooker's headquarters, then in the Lookout valley.  A few of the regimental officers having escaped from Libby through the famous tunnel, the regiment was reorganized in the summer of 1864, and Sergeant Hensley rejoined his old command.
     He located in Hamilton in 1866, where he taught school for about one year.   Afterward he removed to New Albany, Ind., and followed the profession of teaching for a short time.  He returned to Hamilton in 1867, where he was married.  He was Secretary and Collector for the Hamilton Gas Light and Coke Co., for a period of twenty years.  Mr. Hensley was appointed Postmaster March 20, 1890, and served until June 13, 1893, when he was removed by President Cleveland and John E. Lohman appointed.  As an official Mr. Hensley was always painstaking, courteous and accommodating, thereby giving the public excellent service.

Source:  Biographical & Historical Sketches - A Narrative of Hamilton and Its Residents from 1792 to 1896 - Publ. 1896 - Page 127
Portrait between pps. 120 & 121

LeRoy R. Hensley
LE ROY R. HENSLEY

Source:  Biographical & Historical Sketches - A Narrative of Hamilton and Its Residents from 1792 to 1896 - Publ. 1896 - Page 373


J. C. Hooven
 
  GEORGE E. HOWE was born in Livonia, New York, May 21, 1825, and received an excellent education in Eastern colleges.  He was Superintendent of the schools in 1858-59.  As a man he was liberal and kind-hearted almost to a fault.  How well we remember him, giving us financial aid and private instruction while struggling for an education.  Subsequently he became the beloved Superintendent of the Boys' Industrial school at Lancaster, Ohio.  He was one of the best officers the state ever had in any capacity.  He was a successful reformer.  His genius in this line of work and faithfulness to all duties raised the Ohio Industrial school to the highest plane among institutions of its kind.
     In 1878, he assumed control of the Connecticut State Reform school where he died Nov. 23, 1893, of apoplexy.  It was difficult to fill his place officially.  In the hearts of all who knew him he will be long remembered and endeared.  Reform school; Frank M., Principal of the Elmwood school for boys, Milford, Conn.; Charles C., Superintendent of the mica mines, at Bristol, N. H.; and Mrs. Clara B. Warner of Meriden, Conn.
Source:  Biographical & Historical Sketches - A Narrative of Hamilton and Its Residents from 1792 to 1896 - Publ. 1896 - Page 106

Thomas V. Howell
THOMAS V. HOWELL was born in Rossville, Sept. 28, 1826.  He received an education in the common schools, and when from ten to twelve years of age entered the employment of G. P. Bell, a merchant, and continued with him some ten years, when he went to Cincinnati, with the firm of Reily & Woods.  He returned to Hamilton, and entered the employment of Brown & Leigh, remaining there until March, 1849, when, in company with D. G. Leigh, they purchased the business of William B. Van Hook, and began the firm of Leigh & Howell, under which title they traded for two and a half years.  Mr. Leigh then sold out to John Dye.
     About 1854, Mr. Howell purchased the interest of his partner and carried on business by himself for twelve years.  On beginning in 1849, his trade was not limited exclusively to dry goods, but embraced all that is commonly sold in country stores, including at one time a large stock of boots and shoes, and afterward of millinery.  In 1870, he admitted his son, David Leigh Howell, as a partner, under the firm name of T. V. Howell & Son.  In 1875, they built the store since occupied by the firm, a handsome three story building, and admirably adapted to its present use.   Their former store had been on the corner of Third and High streets.  The firm also carries on an extensive concern in Middletown, and are large dealers in all lines.  Much of their goods is imported directly by themselves.
     Mr. Howell was married Oct. 20, 1849, to Miss Sarah A. Connor, daughter of David Connor, a former well-known resident of this place.  They were the parents of one daughter and one son, the former being Kate C. Howell, and the latter David L,. HowellT. V. Howell is a self-made man, and had no early advantages.  He is a member of the Masonic order and the Royal Arcanum, and contributed liberally of his means and influence in sustaining the government during the Civil War.  Mrs. Howell died Apr. 30, 1896.
Source:  Biographical & Historical Sketches - A Narrative of Hamilton and Its Residents from 1792 to 1896 - Publ. 1896 - Page 401
  EDWARD HUGHES was born in Symmes Corner, June 25, 1848.  He was educated in the public schools of Hamilton, and in 1873 entered Bartlett's Commercial college, of Cincinnati, where he received a thorough business training.  After graduation he immediately entered upon his chosen profession as book keeper for Hunter & Brant in the old mill at the east end of the suspension bridge.  In turn he was employed by William Murphy on the West side; Kinsinger & L'Hommedieu, at Canal mills, and by John W. Sohn.  In 1874, he married Miss Clara B. Mars.  Six children have resulted from this union—three girls and three boys.  In 1877 he was elected Mayor, defeating M. N. Maginnis who stood for re-election.  He was Governor Campbell's executive clerk and has been in his employ for the last ten years.
Source:  Biographical & Historical Sketches - A Narrative of Hamilton and Its Residents from 1792 to 1896 - Publ. 1896 - Page 138

Francis W. Hurtt
FRANCIS W. HURTT, was born in the village of Dry Run, near Tarlton, Pickaway county, Ohio, Sept. 26, 1832.  He was educated partly at the schools of Frankfort, Ohio; taught in country schools, in the same county, before he was seventeen; and studied at Athens college, under the presidency of J. G. Blair, where he made a reputation as a mathematician.  He left He left college at the age of 20, before graduating, being called to superintend the schools at Ripley, Ohio, which he organized, graded and raised to a high standard.
     In 1854, he was appointed first assistant to Dr. Joseph Ray, and also appointed professor of chemistry at Woodward High school, Cincinnati, Ohio.  During this period he contributed a series of articles to a mathematical journal, published at Cambridge, Harvard, Mass., and achieved a remarkable reputation for his talent in this direction, for which he was awarded the degree of M. A. by his Alma Mater, Athens college.  In January, 1855, he married Sarah Ives, one of the
prominent teachers in the Texas school, Clinton street, Cincinnati, Ohio.
     In the fall of 1855, he was appointed Superintendent of the public schools at Springfield, Ohio.  Alter successfully grading the same he returned to Cincinnati where he spent the greater part of 1856 in a publishing enterprise, being the first one to publish a business directory in that city.  In 1859, permanently from the profession of teaching and returned to Cincinnati, resuming his publishing business.  In January 1860, he was invited by the Ohio State Journal, of Columbus, to assume its business management.  After consideration, he accepted, and subsequently became the proprietor.  The Journal at that time was the leading organ of the Republican party in Ohio; had a staff, including not only Mr. Hurtt, but also Henry D. Cooke, as editor-in-chief, (afterward governor of the District of
Columbia) W. D. Howells as literary editor and Samuel Reade, assistant editor.  Howells was appointed consul to Venice, Italy, early in the war.  Later, Mr. H. D. Cooke removed to Washington to assume charge of the Washington branch of the great banking firm of Jay, Cooke & Company, who negotiated most of the government loans made during the war.  During this period he was also editor and proprietor of the Ohio Journal of Education, or Educational Journal.  Mr. Hurtt then formed the firm of Hurtt, Allen & Company, but being unable to devote all of his time to the management of the paper, having been appointed an officer in the army, he sold his interest to Mr. Allen and others.  In August, 1865, he removed to New York and became later interested in the manufacture of the well known medicine, Pond's Extract.  It was largely due to Mr. Hurtt' s foresight, great business sagacity and indomitable energy that this large business was developed from its insignificant condition, when he took charge of it, to its present proportions.  Mr. Hurtt recognized at once the great value of the medicine, and felt sure that his efforts toward its world-wide publicity would be profitably recognized by the public.  During the later years of his life he traveled
extensively, not only visiting Europe many times, but crossing the Pacific to China and Japan.  In March, 1884, he died suddenly in New York, leaving a widow and two sons.

Source:  Biographical & Historical Sketches - A Narrative of Hamilton and Its Residents from 1792 to 1896 - Publ. 1896 - Page 107
NOTES:

 

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