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FRANKLIN ADAMS |
FRANKLIN ADAMS
Source: A Centennial Biographical History of Crawford County,
Ohio - Chicago: 1902 - Page |
J. AGNEW, D. D. S.
Although one of the younger representatives of the dental
fraternity in Crestline, Dr. Agnew possesses the skill
and ability which will win him success, and the ambition which
prompts energetic and continued action. He was born in
western Ontario, Canada, in May, 1872, and his parents are still
residing in Wingham, Ontario. He is the eighth in a family
of nine children, among whom are two dentists, two physicians,
two sisters who are nurses in the Pennsylvania hospital, at
Philadelphia, while the youngest brother is now studying
medicine. Such a record probably has scarcely ever been
paralleled, and the family is certainly doing its share toward
the alleviation of human suffering.
Dr. Agnew, whose name introduces this review,
pursued his education in the public schools of his native
county, and prepared for his professional career as a student in
the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery, in which institution
he was graduated on the completion of the regular course, with
the class of 1899. He was located at Galion for some time,
but in June 1900, came to Crestline, where he opened an office.
Although hardly a year has passed since that time he has already
secured a large clientage. He is thoroughly in touch with
the most advanced and improved methods of the day, and the work
which he does in the line of his profession has given excellent
satisfaction. He is a young man of determined purpose, of
resolute spirit and commendable ambition, and these qualities
cannot fail to bring him success.
Source: A Centennial Biographical History of Crawford County,
Ohio - Chicago: 1902 - Page 864 |
WM. L. ALEXANDER |
WILLIAM L. ALEXANDER
Source: A Centennial Biographical History of Crawford County,
Ohio - Chicago: 1902 - Page 194 |
HENRY ALTSTAETTER |
HENRY ALTSTAETTER
Source: A Centennial Biographical History of Crawford County,
Ohio - Chicago: 1902 - Page 358 |
Vernon Twp. -
JAMES ANDERSON, farmer, P. O. Tiro; was
born June 21, 1833, in Vernon Twp., on the site of his present
home. He is the son of David and Rachel (Dickson)
Andrerson, His father was born in Huntington Co., Penn., and
when a young man came to Ohio with a kit of shoe-maker's tools,
and worked at his trade for some time. He then returned to
Pennsylvania, where, in 1826 he was married to Mary D.
Hamilton, who died in 1828. He came to Crawford County
and settled in Vernon Township in the year 1830, and after
farming awhile engaged in mercantile pursuits at De Kalb,
keeping a general store for some fifteen years, during which
time he made considerable money. He next went to Shelby,
where he also engaged in business for some two years. He
was one of the original stockholders in the old State Bank of
Mansfield, now the Richland County Bank, and continued so until
his death. He was also Vice President of the Shelby Bank.
In 1838 he had married Miss Rachel Dickson, of this
township. He was a distinguished patriot and Republican,
and during the war assisted the cause of the Union by his means
and influence. He was a member of the Presbyterian Church,
and was distinguished for his liberality in church beneficence.
He was the father of thirteen children, now scattered throughout
several States, all doing well. This truly good and
honored man died May 17 1873, at Morrison, Ill., while on his
way to California, to visit a son. His wife lived until
Oct. 9, 1879, when she died at Shelby, Ohio, in the 75th year of
her age. She was loved and revered by all who knew her as
a noble woman who had lived a consistent Christian life, and is
remembered as a dignified, refined and intelligent woman, worthy
of the honored husband whose faithful wife she was.
James, her son and the subject of this sketch, lived in this
township until 1852, at which time he went to Shelby and engaged
in the store of his father. He also engaged in mercantile
pursuits in Shiloh and New London. He then came back to
Shelby, and commenced in the grain business, which he continued
until the close of the war, making a considerable amount of
money. In 1866, he removed to his farm of some 400 acres,
and has since lived there and tilled the soil. He is a
prominent business man and a prominent farmer of his
neighborhood. He is a stalwart Republican and has always
held to that faith. He was married, Oct. 15, 1858, to
Elizabeth Stimmel, of Shelby, Ohio. They have four
children - Alva H., a student at Gambier, Ohio; Willis
Swanner, Charles Henry and Rachel May at home.
Source: History of Crawford County, Ohio,
Publ. Chicago: Baskin & Battey, Historical Publishers,
186 Dearborn Street. -
1881 - Page 974 |
WILLIAM ARBUCKLE,
a successful farmer, who for many years has carried on
agricultural pursuits in Crawford county, makes his home on
sections 15 and 16, Bucyrus township. He was born in
Juniata county, Pennsylvania, on the 5th of September, 1832, a
son of John and Isabella (Innis) Arbuckle, who were also
natives of the same county. The father was of Irish
lineage and the mother was of both Irish and Scotch descent.
William Arbuckle, the paternal grandfather, was likewise
a native of the Keystone state and there followed the occupation
of farming. In the state of their nativity the parents of
our subject were married and then took up their abode on a farm,
where were born unto them three children, one of whom died in
infancy, the others being William and James.
The last named died in Marion county, Ohio, in 1874. The
mother passed away in Pennsylvania, in 1851, at the age of forty
years, and in 1853 William Arbuckle came to Ohio,
settling in Marion county. The following year he and his
father removed to Macon county, Illinois, the father remaining
in that state until 1862, when he became a citizen of Bucyrus,
which was his place of abode for four years. On the
expiration of that period he returned to Pennsylvania, where his
death occurred about 1893, when he was eighty-six years of age.
He was a second time married, Mary Dobbs becoming his
wife.
In the common schools, William Arbuckle of this
review, pursued his education and in his early youth he worked
on the home farm. Later he was employed by others, but his
father received his wages until he had attained his majority.
For six years he was employed as a salesman in one store in
Pennsylvania. As before stated he came to Ohio in 1853 and
for one year engaged in clerking in Marion county, after which
he went to Illinois. For seen years he resided in Macon
county, that state, and was there engaged in the stock business,
but in 1861 he returned to Marion county, where he again spent a
year handling stock. In the spring of 1861 he went to New
York with a shipment of stock and was in that city when Fort
Sumter was fired upon.
In the spring of 1862, Mr. Arbuckle was united
in marriage to Miss Susan Kerr, a daughter of James
and Nancy (Towers) Kerr, of Crawford county, Ohio, and then
took up his abode upon his present farm in Bucyrus township,
where he has now lived for almost forty years. At first
the farm comprised one hundred and thirty-five acres, given his
wife by her father, and to this he has since added sixty acres;
and his wife has a valuable farm of one hundred and twenty acres
in Whetstone township, Crawford county. He makes a
specialty of sheep-raising and has large flocks of fine sheep.
His farm is well improved with modern accessories, indicating
his careful supervision and progressive spirit, and the place is
characterized by neatness and thrift.
The marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Arbuckle has been
blessed with six children: James Franklin, who is
living in Cleveland; Elmer, who died when four years of
age; Clara, the wife of William Price, of Bucyrus;
William I., who was a railroad brake and was killed on
the road Nov. 28, 1900, leaving a little daughter, Ethel,
her mother, who bore the maiden name of Cora Sauer, being
also deceased; Grace, the wife of Oscar S. Quaintance,
of Whetstone township; and John K., at home. The
parents are members of the Christian church, and in his
political views Mr. Arbuckle is a Democrat, but he never
seeks or desires office, preferring to devote his time and
energies to his business affairs, in which he is meeting with
creditable and gratifying success. He started out in life
on attaining his majority, having no capital to aid him in the
commencement of his business career, but by close application,
industry, economy and perseverance he has gradually increased
his possessions until he is now numbered among the men of
affluence in the community.
Source: A Centennial Biographical History of Crawford County, Ohio -
Chicago: 1902 - Page 292 |
ADAM ASHCROFT.
The subject of this sketch is the son of parents who were
pioneers in what is now Crawford county, Ohio, and was born
within the limits of Jefferson township at so early a date that
he might well claim pioneership for himself. He comes of the old
Pennsylvania family of Ashcroft and his father was
Newton Ashcroft, a son of Adam Ashcroft,
in honor of whom the present Adam Ashcroft was
named and who was himself an early settler in Crawford county.
Adam Ashcroft came out from Pennsylvania in 1828
accompanied by his son Newton and other members of his family
and settled in Jefferson township, where he bought the farm
which is now the property and home of his grandson, the second
Adam Ashcroft. It consisted of one hundred and
sixty acres of land, on which there had been a small clearing,
in the midst of which stood a lonely little log cabin. Adam
Ashcroft, who was a surveyor and school teacher, became
prominent in the county and being a member of the church, with a
gift for prayer and speech, he did effective work among the
early settlers as an exhorter and an evangelist. He was a very
industrious man and worked on his woodland farm early and late,
chopping down trees, logging, grubbing and burning out stumps
and in all necessary ways preparing for cultivation, and when he
died at the age of ninety-two years, it was a farm of which he
had long been proud.
Adam Ashcroft, grandson of
Adam Ashcroft and son of Newton Ashcroft,
was born in 1834 and passed his youth on the farm and in
obtaining a practical education in local subscription schools,
an ambition in which he was encouraged by his mother, who before
her marriage to Newton Ashcroft,. was Miss
Mary Hershener. Of the seven children of Newton
and Mary (Hershener) Ashcroft, three of whom -were
sons and four of whom were daughters, the subject of this sketch
and his sisters survive. Elizabeth is the widow of
Samuel Trosh. Mary is the wife of John
Creider. Catherine is the wife of John
Johnson. Lydia is the wife of Johnson Davis.
John and Henry are dead. Newton Ashcroft,
who is a carpenter and stone cutter by trade, was a constant
resident of Jefferson township, from his advent there in 1828,
until his death in 1892, at the age of ninety-two. His wife died
at the age of eighty-eight years. Their son Adam, who now
owns one hundred and eleven acres of his grandfather's original
homestead, has lived on the place ail his life, except during
two years and he took charge of the place in 1858. He owns
two other pieces of land of twenty-five and thirteen acres,
respectively. At the age of twenty-one he began working at the
carpenter's trade, at which he was employed four years.
In 1858 Mr. Ashcroft married Lydia
Crieder, who has borne him four-children, as follows:
Homer, who lives in Wells county, Indiana; Alice, who
is the wife of Richard Hiltner, of Jefferson
township; Edith, who is the wife of Harry Smith,
of Jefferson township: and Pearl, who is the wife of
William De Gray, of Jefferson township. Since he
married Mr. Ashcroft has given-his attention
entirely to farming, in which he has been very successful.
Politically he is a Republican, devoted to the principles and
measures of his party and, while he is not without influence in
local affairs, he is neither a practical politician nor an
office seeker, but he is a man of recognized public spirit. He
is a member of the Methodist Episcopal church and is a liberal
supporter of Christian worship in his township.
Source: A Centennial Biographical History of Crawford County,
Ohio - Chicago: 1902 - Page 824 |
Auburn Twp. -
E. E. ASHLEY, farmer and stock-dealer; P.
O. Tiro. There is no family more worthy of notice in the
history of Crawford Co., than the Ashley family.
Ebenezer Ashley, the father of our subject, was born in New
York, May 6, 1804, and came to Auburn Twp., Crawford Co., Ohio,
in 1830. Mary Aumend, the mother, was a native of
Pennsylvania, and was born in 1812. Her father, Adam
Aumend, came with his family to Auburn Township in 1819, it
then being an almost unbroken wilderness. Ebenezer
Ashley and Mary Aumend were united in marriage in Auburn
Township Nov. 21, 1830, and to them were born six children
Clarissa, Philo, Franklin, E. E., Leonora and
William. All are living except Clarissa.
Mr. Ashley remarried July 11, 1844, her second husband
being Elijah Ashley, a brother of her former husband.
To the second marriage were born two sons - Jerome and
Judson. Mrs. Ashley's second husband died Apr. 21,
1850. The subject of this biography was reared upon a
farm. His education was limited, being confined to the
common schools. He was united in marriage with Mary
Cummins, daughter of Thomas Cummins Jan. 17, 1861,
and by her has the following family - Frank S., born Jul.
10, 1862; Ella L., born Jul. 6, 1864; Philo A.,
born Nov. 27, 1866; Edson C., born Jul. 29, 1869,and
Ida A., born Jun. 12, 1873. All of these are single,
and are living at home with their parents. Politically,
Mr. Ashley is a Republican; religiously, a Baptist. He
is a member of hte I. O. O. F. at Tiro. He owns 80 acres
of well-improved land, and is a prominent and influential man in
his neighborhood. His family are among the first in
Crawford Co.
Source: History of Crawford County, Ohio, Publ. Chicago:
Baskin & Battey, Historical Publishers, 186 Dearborn Street. -
1881 - Page 861 |
MICHAEL AUCK |
MICHAEL AUCK
Source: A Centennial Biographical History of Crawford County,
Ohio - Chicago: 1902 - Page 184 |
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