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Clark County, Ohio
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BIOGRAPHIES
Source:
Portrait
Biographical Album
of
Greene and Clark Counties, Ohio
containing Full Page
Portraits
and Prominent and
Representative Citizens
of the County
Together with Portraits and Biographies of all the
Presidents of the United States.
Chicago:
Chapman Bros.
1890.
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CHARLES M. CLARK,
a native-born citizen of Ohio, is distinguished as being one
of the oldest settlers of this county now living in
Springfield, and he is honored for the active part he has
taken in developing its resources and in furthering its
material prosperity. He has retired from the active
duties of life, and is living in an attractive home at No.
359 East High Street*. By energetic and shrewd
business methods and by honorable dealings he has acquired a
valuable property, and is numbered among the substantial and
wealthy citizens of this section of the State. He has
been for a long time closely identified with the
agricultural interests of Clark County, engaged in tilling
the soil. He improved a valuable farm, carried on a
large cattle business, and for many years was the most
extensive wool buyer in this part of the country.
He was born in Coshocton County, Aug. 12, 1808.
His father, James Clark, was a native of
Virginia, and when a young man learned the cooper’s trade,
which he carried on during Ids residence in his native
State. About 1803, he decided to emigrate to the West,
and accompanied by his family started with a team, and made
an overland journey to this State, and became one of the
early settlers of Ohio, locating in Coshocton County, where
he lived until about 1811. In that year he again
started westward with a team, and came as far as Clark
County. His means were limited, and as he had not the
wherewithal to buy land he rented a tract in Springfield
Township, on which he resided a few years, and then made
another move, selecting Champaign County as a suitable
location. He had worked hard and saved some money,
which he then invested in a tract of land near
Mechanicsburg. There he engaged in agriculture, and
quietly passed the remaining years of his life. The maiden
name of his wife was Martha Davis. She
was also a native of Virginia, and, like him, passed her
declining years on the home farm in Mechanicsburg.
The son of whom we write was a child of three years
when his parents came to the wilds of Clark County; yet he
remembers well some of the incidents of the journey through
the dense primeval forests and over the wild prairies that
intervened between the old home and the new. This
county was at that time very thinly settled, and deer,
bears, wolves, and other kinds of wild animals were
plentiful. Springfield was but a hamlet, giving no
indications of its present size and importance, and as there
were no railways or canals, all transportation was done by
team, and all travel was either by foot, horseback or stage.
Our subject remained an inmate of the parental household
until after attaining manhood. His father then gave
him a horse, saddle and bridle, and thus equipped he started
out in life for himself. He soon began dealing in
cattle, buying them in the surrounding country and driving
them to Eastern Pennsylvania, a distance of upwards of five
hundred miles, and usually about six months time would be
required in getting a drove together, driving them to market
and disposing of them. On one of his trips he bought a
buggy, which was the first vehicle of the kind ever
introduced into this section of Ohio and he recalls with
pride that he had the honor of taking the Hon. Thaddeus
Stevens to ride in it. He made his home with an
older brother until his marriage, and then purchased a farm
in Moorefield Township, where he carried on agricultural
pursuits, and also continued the cattle trade, and was for
many years an extensive wool buyer, continuing in that
business until 1889. He resided on his farm until
1875,when he came to this city and purchased his present
substantial residence on East High Street, where he lives in
retirement, having accumulated an ample fortune.
Mr. Clark’s home is made pleasant and his life
is cheered by the presence of his amiable wife, to whom he
was united in marriage in early manhood. Her maiden
name was Chloe Foley, and she was like
himself, a native of Ohio, born in Moorefield Township, this
county, and is also of pioneer antecedents. Her
father, Absalom Foley, was, like the father of
our subject, a Virginian by birth. His father John
Foley was a planter and so far as known, spent his
entire life in the Old Dominion. Her father was reared
in his native State, and when a young man came to Ohio in
pioneer times. He worked for his brother-in-law in
this county, and finally bought with his earnings a tract of
timber land, on which he began farming on his own account.
He built a brick house, which was the first ever erected in
that section of the county, and was considered a fine
residence in those days. He later purchased another
farm near by, and passed the latter part of his life there.
The maiden name of the wife of Absalom Foley was
Susan Bishop, and she was a daughter of James C. and
Chloe (Lake) Bishop. Mr. and Mrs. Clark
have eight children living, namely: Martha J. (Mrs.
Jones), Charles E., James M., Absalom F., Robert R., Fannie
F. (Mrs. Worley), Sally (Mrs. Lyon), and Alice Belle,
single, living at home.
Though not among the earliest settlers of this county,
Mr. Clark was one of its pioneers, having
settled in Clark County with his parents in 1811, and, as we
have seen, ably assisted in establishing it on a firm basis
of enduring prosperity, and while thus doing has accumulated
wealth for himself. His record through a long and busy
life has been such as to command the respect of his
fellow-men, and all appreciate his personal worth and the
fine qualities of heart and mind that make him a good
citizen and true in all the relations of life. Both he
and his estimable wife are members in high standing of the
First Presbyterian Church. Politically, he was an old
line Whig and on the formation of the Republican party
became a strong adherent of its principles and has remained
steadfast to the Republican party ever since.
Source:
Portrait
Biographical Album
of Greene and Clark Counties, Ohio,
Published
Chicago: Chapman Bros. - 1890 - Page 451
* Residence no longer there. |
NOTES:
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