BIOGRAPHIES
Source:
History of Fayette County,
Ohio
With Biographical Sketches of Representative Citizens and
Genealogical Records of Old Families
Frank M. Allen, Editor
Indianapolis, Ind. : B.F. Bowen & Co.,
1914
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William J. Selsor |
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Morris Sharp |
MORRIS
SHARP. The success of men in business
or any vocation depends upon character as well as upon
knowledge, it being a self-evident proposition that honestly
and uprightness is held in higher value than the opposite
qualities. Business demands confidence, and where that
is lacking business ends. In every community some men
are known for their upright lives, strong common sense and
moral worth rather than for the wealth or political standing
they sense and moral worth rather than for the wealth or
political standing they may possess. Their neighbors
and acquaintances respect them, the younger generations heed
their example, and when they "wrap the drapery of their
couches about them and lie down to pleasant dreams"
posterity listens with reverence to the story of their quiet
and useful lives. Among such men of the past
generation in Fayette county was the late Morris
Sharp, who was not only of progressive man of affairs,
successful in material pursuits, but a man of modest and
unassuming demeanor, well educated, a fine type of the
reliable, self-made American, a friend to the poor,
charitable to the faults of his neighbors and one who always
stood ready to unite with them in every good work and active
in the support of laudable public enterprises. He was
a man who in every respect merited the high esteem in which
he was universally held, for he was a man of public spirit,
intellectual attainments and exemplary character.
Morris Sharp was born in Aberdeen, Brown
County, Ohio, on august 30, 1838, and was the son of
Morgan and Frances (Warren) Sharp.
These parents were natives, respectively, of Fayette county,
Pennsylvania, and Kentucky, and were the parents of three
children, namely: J. H. Baker of Jamestown, and
Samuel, who died in early childhood. In 1851
Morgan Sharp and his wife came to Jamestown,
Greene county, Ohio, where they settled and remained some
years, eventually removing to Washington C. H., where they
made their home with their son Morris until their
deaths. Morgan Sharp had passed an
active and strenuous life, having served as a pilot on
steamboats running from Cincinnati to New Orleans for
twenty-two years, during which period he lived at Aberdeen,
Ohio, and Covington, Kentucky. After 1851, for some
years, he and his son Morris were engaged in the
mercantile business at Jamestown. He was a man of
strong character and enjoyed universal respect.
Morris Sharp's paternal grandfather,
Samuel Sharp, was born in 1780 and died in
Jamestown, Ohio, in 1846. He and his wife, whose
maiden name had been Susanna Cook, moved from
Fayette county, Pennsylvania, to Brown county, Ohio, and
thence to Jamestown, which was their last resting place.
They were the parents of nine children, Morgan,
Eliza, Thomas, Lydia, Henry,
Susan, Samuel, Melissa and one who died in
infancy. Susanna Cook was, on the
maternal side, descended from the Copes, whose
history dates back to Oliver Cope, who came
from Wilshire, England, and settled near Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, locating with his wife and children, on
Naaman's creek in about 1688.
Morris Sharp was about nine years of age when
his parents removed from Aberdeen to Covington, Kentucky,
whence they went to Jamestown, Ohio, and in the schools of
the latter place he received his education. Upon
leaving school he became associated with his father in the
mercantile business, but a few years later, on account of
the failure of his health, he was compelled to change his
vocation and for several years he was engaged in the banking
business there, serving as cashier of the Farmers' and
Traders' Bank from 1867 to 1873. In the year last
mentioned Mr. Sharp came to Washington C. H., and
became cashier of the Merchants' and Traders' Bank and later
president of the Commercial Bank, which he organized.
He quickly became recognized here as a man of unusual
business ability and sagacity and was numbered among the
foremost citizens of his adopted city. He remained
closely and actively identified with banking interests here
up to the time of his death, which occurred on February 5,
1905, in the sixty-seventh year of his age. Besides
his bank holdings, Mr. Sharp had other material
interests, being the owner of extensive tracts of farm
lands. His career was a long and useful one, and
although he devoted his attention primarily to his
individual affairs, as is quite natural and right, he never
allowed the pursuit of wealth to warp his kindly nature, but
preserved his faculties and the warmth of his heart for the
broadening and helpful influences of human life, being to
the end of a kindly, genial friend and gentleman, with whom
it was a pleasure to associate. Through the long years
of his residence in this locality he was ever true to all
trusts reposed in him and his reputation in a business way
was unassailable. He commanded the respect of all by
his upright life and engraved his name indelibly on the
pages of Fayette county's history. His career was
complete and rounded in its beautiful simplicity; he did his
full duty in all the relations of life, and he died beloved
by those near to him and respected and esteemed by his
fellow citizens.
Morris Sharp was a big man in other
spheres than in the business world. He was a man of
strong and honest convictions, his actions being ever the
result of careful and conscientious thought, and on the
great questions of the day he took a definite stand.
The cause of temperance found in him an earnest and eloquent
advocate, who gave no thought to self when by his personal
effort the cause of temperance or prohibition could be
advanced. His ability and active efforts were
recognized and he was placed in nomination for the
governorship by the Prohibition party. That he was a
man of more than ordinary strength is shown by the statement
that he polled more votes than any other candidate on the
Prohibition ticket has ever received to the state of Ohio.
Religiously, Mr. Sharp was an earnest and
faithful member of the Methodist Episcopal church,
supporting the various activities of that society and
serving a great many years as superintendent of the Sunday
schools in the different towns in which he lived.
On Oct. 15, 1861, Morris Sharp married
Madeline Baker, who was born in Jamestown, Ohio, on the
20th of December, 1838. She is the daughter of
William G. and Thirza A. (Larken) Baker, her
father being a native of Kentucky and her mother of Ohio.
They are both deceased, Mr. Baker dying in Jamestown,
Ohio, when eighty years old and Mrs. Baker was a man
of versatile talents, being successful as saddler, merchant
and farmer. They were the parents of seven children.
Mrs. Sharp's paternal grandparents were William
and Mary (Winans) Baker, who were natives of
Kentucky and early settlers in Jamestown, Ohio. Their
children were Mathias, Elizabeth, William, Lydia, John,
Jacob, Douglas, Andrew, Mary, Hillary and George.
The maternal grandparents were David and Nancy
(Harper) Larkin, who came from Harper's Ferry and
settled in Clark county, Ohio. They had five children,
Eliza Ann, Thirza, Synthia, Perry and Oliver.
Mrs. Sharp was married on the 27th of June, 1911,
to Prof. William W. Davies, who is referred to
specifically elsewhere in this work. She is a lady of
culture and refinement, who, because of her hospitable ways,
her cheerful disposition and kindly attitude towards all
whom she meets, is popular in the circles in which she
moves. She is an earnest supporter of all local
movements for the betterment of the community and has been
an effectual worker in religious and charitable fields for
many years.
Source: History of Fayette
County, Ohio - Published Indianapolis, Ind. : B.F.
Bowen & Co., 1914 - Page 367 |
Mr. & Mrs.
Samuel E. Shultz |
|
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JACOB C. SMITH.
The Smith family, now represented by Jacob C.
Smith, one of the most substantial farmers of Paint
township, this county, was probably the first family to
locate in Fayette county on the present site of Washington
C. H. Edward Smith, Sr., the grandfather of
Jacob C. Smith, was born in Pennsylvania, married in
that state and located in Fayette county, Ohio, in 1810, the
same year the county was organized. He entered land
along the waters of Paint creek, since called the East fork,
and erected his rude wigwam in the midst of an unbroken
forest. He commenced clearing and improving his land,
but suddenly the War of 1812 broke in on his arrangements
and, with his neighbors, he volunteered and served in the
defense of his country. At the close of this war he
returned to his home in this county and took up the task of
clearing and improving his farm. Upon returning home
one night from the county seat he attempted to cross a creek
and was thrown from his horse and drowned. Edward
Smith, Sr., married Margaret Casselman, in
Pennsylvania, and to this marriage ten children were born,
all of whom grew to maturity, married and reared families of
their own. These children in the order of their ages
are as follows: Sarah, Casselman, Mary, Susan,
Rachel, Eliza, Selina, Edward, July and Maggie.
Edward Smith, Jr., was born in Pennsylvania and
came here with his parents in 1810. He grew to manhood
in Fayette county and married Nancy Kukel, and to
this union ten children were born: Mary, Jacob C.,
Richard, James Madison, Lewis, John R., Luther, Rachel,
William and Noah. Of these ten children,
Mary, Richard, John and Luther are deceased,
while the others are married and have families of their own.
Jacob C. Smith, the grandson of the first member
of the family to come to this county, was born in Union
township, this county, July 20, 1835. He has been
life-long farmer and it is his boast that for seventy years
he has never lost a summer in the harvest field. He
received a very meager education, since the schools of his
day were limited in their instruction. He remained at
home until twenty-five years of age and then began renting
land from his father. He moved upon his present farm,
five miles north of Washington C. H., in 1873, and has now
lived upon it more than forty years. As he has
prospered from year to year he had added to his land
holdings and now owns three separate farms, aggregating
three hundred and four acres. One farm of one hundred
and twenty-four acres is the one on which he is now
residing; another of one hundred acres is near his own home
place in Union township, while the other farm of eighty
acres is in the same township. He has always been a
heavy stock raiser, giving particular attention to the
raising of hogs, in which he has been very successful.
Mr. Smith was married Jan. 6, 1859, to Every
MacLean, the daughter of Joseph and Lucinda (Bush)
MacLean, and to this union were born seven children:
Mrs. Luella Bitsen, who has one son, Willard; Mrs.
Nancy Droce, who has two children, Emma and
Howard, deceased; Mrs. Ida Baughn; Joseph E., who
married Miss Swinehart; Norman, deceased; Mrs.
Mary Reed, who has two sons, Loren and Herbert;
and William. The mother of these seven children
died Sept. 7, 1890. She was a faithful and consistent
member of the Methodist Episcopal church.
Mr. Smith, while not taking an active
part in politics, is interested in all matters of local
interest, and always lends his influence to aid in promoting
the good of the community in which he has resided so long.
Source: History of Fayette County, Ohio -
Indianapolis, Ind. : B.F. Bowen & Co., 1914~
Page 752 |
NOTES:
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