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Welcome to
Harrison County, Ohio
History & Genealogy |
BIOGRAPHIES
Source:
History of
Carroll and Harrison Counties, Ohio
Under the Editorial Supervision of
Judge H. H. Eckley, for Carroll County
and
Judge Wm. T. Perry, for Harrison County
---
Assisted by a Board of Advisory Editors
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ILLUSTRATED
---
The Lewis Publishing Company
Chicago and New York
1921
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A. CHALMERS WALLACE
is a scion of the fourth generation of the Wallace family in Harrison
County, where he is a successful representative of farm enterprise in his native
township of Moorefield. Here he was born on the 26th of September, 1871, a
son of Elijah R. and Elizabeth S. (Brokaw) Wallace. Elijah R. Wallace
was born in Moorefield Township, this county, on the 16th of March, 1828, and
here his death occurred December 23, 1910. He was a son of Allen and
Mary (Brown) Wallace, the former of whom was born in Pennsylvania, April 15,
1793, a son of John and Margaret (Anderson) Wallace, who were born and
reared in York County, that state, where they remained until about the year
1804, when they removed to Washington County, Pennsylvania, but in 1805 they
came to Ohio and became pioneer settlers in Pitney Township, Belmont County.
There they remained until 1822, when they came to Harrison County, where John
Wallace purchased 160 acres of wild land, in section, Moorefield
Township, where he instituted the development of a pioneer farm and where he and
his wife passed the remainder of their lives, their four children having been
William, Allen, Nancy and Jane. Allen Wallace was about twelve
years old at the time of the family immigration to Ohio, and was reared to
manhood in Belmont County, where his marriage was solemnized and where he
remained until 1822 when he came to Harrison County and purchased the farm, of
160 acres, which later came into the ownership of his son Elijah R., and
which continued to be his place of residence until his death. February 21,
1880, his wife having passed away April 12, 1874, and both having been zealous
members of the Presbyterian Church, in which he served many years as an elder.
They became the parents of eight children - John, Andrew, William Mary,
James, Elijah R., Anderson and Samuel.
Elijah R. Wallace passed his entire life in
Moorefield Township, where he eventually came into possession of the fine old
home farm on which he was born and on which he remained until the time of his
death, his political allegiance having been given to the democratic party and
both he and his wife having been zealous members of the Nottingham Presbyterian
Church, Jan. 23, 1868, recorded the marriage of Elijah R. Wallace and Miss
Elizabeth S. Brokaw, and after his death she remained on the old homestead
until she too passed to the life eternal, on the 23rd of February, 1917.
Mrs. Wallace was born Mar. 25, 1842, and was a daughter of Abraham and
Mary (Guthrie) Brokaw, both of whom passed their entire lives in Ohio, where
the respective families were founded in the pioneer days. Mr. and Mrs.
Wallace became the parents of six children: Samuel Vincent married
Miss Luella Hayes, and they reside in Jefferson County; A. Chalmers,
of this review, was the next in order of birth; Mary M. remains with her
brother Chalmers on the old homestead; Plummer W. died in infancy;
Clara A. died in July, 1893; and Lena B. is the widow of Joshua
A. Wallace, who died Feb. 18, 1914, and she still remaining on their old
home farm, in Moorefield Township, and her children being four in number -
Clara M., David B., William C. and Dean E.
A. Chalmers Wallace is indebted to the public
schools of the Village of Moorefield for his early educational discipline, and
save for brief intervals he has remained continuously on the old home farm,
where he is now conducting a substantial and prosperous enterprise as an
agriculturist and stock-grower, with a finely improved farm property of 170
acres, owned jointly by him and his sister Mary M., who presides over the
domestic economies and social affairs of the attractive home, both she and her
brother being unmarried, and both holding membership in the Nottingham
Presbyterian Church. In politics Mr. Wallace holds affiliation with
the democratic party and as a citizen he takes deep interest in all things
touching the welfare of his native township and county.
Source: History of Carroll and Harrison Counties, Ohio - Chicago: Lewis
Pub. Co., 1921 - Page 1017 |
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FRANCIS P. WALLACE.
The growth of intelligence and sound optimism has advanced agriculture to a
combination of art and science, the profound possibilities of which can be but
imperfectly mastered by any one man during his comparatively brief span of
years. Man, whose faith is pinned to the soil, and whose delight and
privilege it is to use its stored fertility for the most enlightened needs of
civilization, has brought it to a stage of usefulness unequaled in any other
walk of life. To such must come the greatest material satisfactions also,
as witnessed in all prosperous farming communities, of which Carroll County is
one of the best examples. Since the early history of this part of the
state, certain families have been connected with its continuous advancement,
lending color and enthusiasm and splendid purpose to its unfolding prosperity.
Of these, in Fox Township, a few are better or more favorable known than that of
which Francis P. Wallace is a representative.
Mr. Wallace was born on his father's farm in Fox
Township, Oct. 31, 1866, a son of John and Mary (Allmon) Wallace, natives
of the same township, and a grandson of Isaac and Matilda (Kean) Wallace
and B. P. and Elizabeth (Wood) Allmon, all natives of Jefferson County.
John Wallace was reared in his native township, where he was educated in
the public schools, and where his marriage to Miss Allmon took place.
When the Civil War came on he enlisted in Company K, Second Regiment, Ohio
Volunteer Infantry, with which organization he served bravely and faithfully to
the close of the struggle, in which he was twice wounded, once in the jaw at
the Battle of Resaca and once by gun-shot wound in the leg at the battle of
Chattanooga. Three of his brothers also served in the Union army during
that conflict. William, at home, Francis who died at
Vicksburg, and James, who is still living and served three years.
On his return from military service Mr. Wallace again took up work on his
farm in Fox Township, on which his son, Francis P. was born, and resided
there until 1875, when he took the family to a new farm which he had purchased,
and which is now owned by his son. Here Mr. Wallace rounded out his
worthy and useful career as a tiller of the soil, dying Sept. 1, 1900, aged
fifty-eight years, seven months, while his wife survived until Dec. 12, 1919,
and was lacking a few days of seventy-six years at her demise. They were
the parents of the following children: Francis P.; Emma, of
Bridgeport, Connecticut, the widow of David McCay; Wilford, of East
Liverpool, who married Mary Martin and has had six children - Lola,
the wife of William Kirkum, Hugh who is deceased, Otis, Marie, Edith
and William; Annie, who married Albert W. Rush of Bergholz, and
has seven children - Frank, Wilma, Blain, Cora, the wife of Paul
Madison of Salineville, Harry, John and Clara; John W., of New
Somerset, Ohio, who married Sarah Edmonson and has four children -
Clyde, Lester, Margaret and Laura May; and Marie E., who is
unmarried and a resident of East Liverpool.
Francis P. Wallace attended the public schools,
and from the age of fifteen years until twenty resided with his paternal
grandparents at Bergholz. In 1886 he began farming at Bergholz, and
continued to be so engaged until his marriage, June 5, 1895, to Mary A. Boyd,
who was born at Mooretown, Ohio, Nov. 23, 1871, a daughter of John and
Melissa (Hess) Boyd, natives of Amsterdam, Ohio. Mr. Boyd
served three years in the Union army during the Civil War. Following his
marriage Mr. Wallace continued to farm in the Bergholz community until
1900, in which year he bought out the heirs to the home estate in Fox Township,
where he is now the owner of Walnut Hill Farm, a splendidly cultivated tract of
200 acres. He carries on general farming and is accounted one of the
practical agriculturists of his locality.
Mr. Wallace is a republican in politics and at
one period in his career served his township as trustee for one term. He
is a member of the United American Mechanics at Bergholz, in both of which
orders he has numerous friends. He and Mrs. Wallace are
consistent members of the United Presbyterian Church. They have three
children: Cora May, who is the wife of Clare H. Snyder, of Canton,
Ohio; and Helen C. and John F., who reside with their parents.
Source: History of Carroll and Harrison Counties, Ohio - Chicago: Lewis
Pub. Co., 1921 - Page 974 |
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JAMES E. WALLACE.
Washington County, Pennsylvania, has contributed a good many families to the
population of Harrison County, Ohio, and James E. Wallace, of Athens
township, was born there Feb. 7, 1891, a son of Beverage Wallace.
His mother is Elizabeth (Richmond) Wallace. The were farmers in
Pennsylvania until 1903, when they removed to Green Township, Harrison County,
Ohio.
For five years Mr. Wallace farmed near
Unionville, when he sold the land and bought again in Cadiz Township,
where he died Jan. 4, 1912. He had two sons: James E. and Archie
Joseph Wallace. Mrs. Wallace later became the wife of William
Patterson, one of the commissioners of Harrison County, who lives near
Jewett.
The Wallace boys went to school in Pennsylvania
and in Ohio. Until his marriage, May 15, 1913, to Anna Watson, James E.
Wallace had farmed the homestead in Cadiz Township. Mrs. Wallace
is a daughter of Adam and Mary (Cobbs) Watson. After his
marriage Mr. Wallace lived on a farm in Greene township until Nov., 1918,
when he moved to the farm in Athens Township where he lives today. The
farm is owned by Adam Watson.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace have two sons: Arthur
and Russell. The family are members of Dickerson Methodist
Episcopal Church, a rural church near them. Adam Watson, father of
Mrs. Wallace, was born in March 24, 1850, and is a native of Harrison
County. He is a son of John W. Watson. He married Mary Ann
Cobbs, a daughter of Dr. Charles Cobbs. For many years
Mr. and Mrs. Watson lived on the farm, but when Mr. and Mrs. Wallace
came to it they retired to New Athens.
Source: History of Carroll and Harrison Counties, Ohio - Chicago: Lewis
Pub. Co., 1921 - Page 711 |
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JAMES S.
WALLACE who is one of the able exponents of farm industry in his native
township of Moorefield, Harrison County, bears a name to which attaches the
highest of honors, as well as much distinction in this section of the state of
Ohio, by reason of the faithful and exalted service of his grandfather, Rev.
William Wallace, an able and revered clergyman of the Presbyterian Church
and one of its pioneer representatives of central eastern Ohio. Rev.
William Wallace was born in Chester County, Pennsylvania, Mar. 17, 1787, a
son of John and Mary (Anderson) Wallace and a scion of staunch Scotch
ancestry. He attended Jefferson College, Pennsylvania, and in the spring
of 1821 he was licensed to preach the Gospel by presbytery of Steubenville,
Ohio. He became a domestic missionary through the new settlements in
eastern Ohio, and among the Presbyterian churches which he organized in Harrison
County were those at Nottingham and Freeport, to the pastoral service of which
he gave himself for eighteen years. He died on the 18th of December, 1841,
after nearly twenty years of earnest service in the ministry. Of him it
has been written: "He was faithful and successful as a pastor, mild and
amiable as a man and Christian tender as a husband and father." June 1,
1815, marked the marriage of Rev. William Wallace to Miss Mary W.
McWilliams, who was born Mar. 17, 1797, a daughter of David and Mary
(Wilson) McWilliams, who in that year came from Pennsylvania and settled in
Belmont County, Ohio, where they passed a residue of their lives. Mrs.
Wallace survived her honored husband by nearly thirty years and passed to
eternal rest in 1869, They became the parents of ten children, of whom
David B., father of the subject of this sketch, was born Apr. 3, 1825, on
the old Wallace homestead in Moorefield Township. He was reared
under the conditions that marked the pioneer history of Harrison County and
passed his entire active live as a farmer in his native township, where his
death occurred June 8, 1905. He was a zealous and influential member of
the Nottingham Presbyterian Church, which had been organized by his father, and
of this church his venerable widow is still an active member. On the 25th
March, 1857, was solemnized the marriage of David B. Wallace to Miss
Margaret Dickerson, who was born who is now one of the venerable and loved
representatives of a prominent pioneer family of this county. He is a
daughter of Joshua and Belijah (Lafferty) Dickerson, natives of Fayette
County, Pennsylvania, whence they came to Harrison County, Ohio, in an early
day. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace became the parents of six children:
William D., born Feb. 6, 1858, became the pioneer settler in what is now the
state of South Dakota; James S., of this sketch was born Nov. 23, 1859,
on the hold home farm in Moorefield Township; Mary E., who was born Feb.
28, 1862, became the wife of John Dickerson, of Moorefield Township;
Joshua A. was born Aug. 12, 1864, and is now deceased; Lillie B., who
was born Aug. 9, 1867, is the wife of John McConnell, of New Athens; and
Lewis V., born Oct. 13, 1869, is in the southwest.
To the district schools of his native township James
S. Wallace is indebted for his early education, which was supplemented by
his attending Northern Ohio University, at Ada, Hardin County. As a young
man he gave two years to effective service as a teacher in the district schools,
and about the year 1885 he initiated his independent career as a farmer in his
native township, where he has since continued his successful activities in this
important domain of industrial enterprise. About 1887 he became associated
with his uncle, William A. Wallace, in the purchase of the present home
farm, of which he later became sole owner, by purchasing his uncle's interest in
the property. this farm comprises about 165 acres, and Mr. Wallace
owns also a third interest in another farm, of 170 acres, in the same township.
All of the buildings on his home farm have been erected by Mr. Wallace
and these, with other improvements, attest to his progressiveness as well ad his
success. He is a staunch republican in politics and served three years as
trustee of Moorefield Township. He is an active member of the Nottingham
Presbyterian Church, as was also his wife, whose death occurred Oct. 19, 1919.
On the 29th of August, 1895, Mr. Wallace was
united in marriage to Mrs. Alice (Moore) Dunlap, widow of Adam C.
Dunlap.
Source: History of Carroll and Harrison Counties, Ohio - Chicago:
Lewis Pub. Co., 1921 - Page 906 |
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NATHAN M.
WALLACE has given a full quarter of a century to effective service as a
sturdy blacksmith in Nottingham Township, where he erected his present well
equipped blacksmith shop in the year 1914, and where the scope and character of
his trade patronage attest alike his skill as an artisan and his personal
popularity in his native township. He was born in Nottingham
Township on the 30th of May, 1866, and is a son of William H. and Ruth Anna
(Miller) Wallace, the former of whom was born near Steubenville, Jefferson
County, this state, April 27, 1841, and the latter was born in Washington
Township, Harrison County, on the 12th of October, 1840, a daughter of Nathan
and Amy (Jones) Miller. As a young man Nathan Miller worked as
a millwright in Washington Township, where later he became a successful farmer,
besides following the trade of shoemaker. He was a birthright member of
the Society of Friends. Mr. and Mrs. Miller continued their
residence in Washington township until their deaths. They became the
parents of five children - Ruth Anna, Jason, John N., Ardena, Jane and
Alwilda.
William H. Wallace was the son of Mark and
Margaret (Robinson) Wallace, born native of Ireland, where their marriage
was solemnized and whence they immigrated to America within a year thereafter.
Mr. Wallace was born November 23, 1806, and his lineage traces back to
staunch Scotch origin, as the name implies. Within a short time
after their arrival in the United States Mark Wallace and his wife
established their residence in Jefferson County, Ohio, whence they later came to
Harrison County and located in Moorefield Township, where he engaged in farming
and also did a prosperous business in the operating of a huckster's wagon.
Mr. Wallace died on the 3d of Nov., 1862, and his widow passed to the
life eternal on the 21st of Feb., 186, both having been devout and zealous
members of the Methodist Episcopal Church. They became the parents of five
children, whose names and dates of birth are here recorded: William H.,
April 27, 1841; John W., June 6, 1843; Mary J., Sept. 16, 1845;
Thomas R., Feb. 24, 1848; Leander M., Sept. 7, 1852 (died July 11,
1905). William H. Wallace was reared and educated in Nottingham
Township, and there he became a prosperous farmer. He continued his
residence in that township until his death, on the 13th of November, 1895, and
his widow passed away on the 23d of November, 1907, at a venerable age.
Mr. Wallace held membership in the Presbyterian Cutch and his wife was a
member of the Disciples or Christian Church. Their marriage was solemnized
in June, 1865, and they became the parents of three children: Nathan M.,
the immediate subject of this review; Miss Amy,, who married
Harvey Forsythe and resides in North Township, Harrison County; and Ella
M., the wife of Emanuel Mallernee, of Cadiz township, their children
being five in number - Eva E., Herbert E., Paul B., Rusk and Carl.
Nathan M. Wallace profited duly by the scholastic
advantages afforded in the district schools of his native township, and there he
continued his association with farm industry until he was twenty-nine years of
age, since which time he has here maintained a shop and worked successfully at
his trade, that of blacksmith. He is a republican in politics, is affiliated
with the Loyal Order of Moose, and is a member of the Christian Church at
Minksvillle, as was also his wife.
Source: History of Carroll and Harrison Counties, Ohio - Chicago: Lewis
Pub. Co., 1921 - Page 746 |
|
JOHN E. WARNER. One of the
men who has found it profitable to devote himself to agricultural pursuits in
Harrison County is John E. Warner, of Monroe Township, whose finely
cultivated farm shows the effect of hard work and careful planning. He was
born in Monroe Township, Feb. 17, 1888, a son of Simon Henry and Florence (Fierbaugh)
Warner, and grandson of Jeremiah Warner, who of the early settlers of
the township.
Simon Henry Warner was
born in Monroe Township, and was reared init, and attended its schools for a
period, but completed his education in the Hagerstown Academy at Hagerstown,
Ohio, where he remained for several years. Because of ill health however,
he did not graduate, and returned home. His father and Emanuel Bell
owned the first threshing machine of the neighborhood, and Simon Henry Warner
began operating the outfit, and was also interested later on in life in saw
milling. A natural mechanic he built himself the first saw-mill he ever
owned, and secured very good results with it. His death occurred August 4,
1907. His wife was born in North Township, Harrison County, a daughter of
John Fierbaugh. She survives him and makes her home at Canton,
Ohio, where she is active in the United Brethren Church, to which her husband
also belonged. Their only child is John E. Warner.
Growing up in Monroe Township, John E. Warner
attended its schools and the Bowerston High School for nearly two years, but on
account of his father's failing health he could not complete his courses for his
services were required on the farm. He has always lived on his present
farm of 145 acres of valuable land, and here he is profitably engaged in general
farming and stock-raising, his property being known as the "Rising Sun Stock
Farm."
On November 30, 1910, Mr. Warner was united in
marriage to Mary A. Smith, a daughter of N. A. Smith. They
have no children. Mr. Warner belongs to the United Brethren Church
of Bowerston, while Mrs. Warner is a member of the Asbury Chapel
Methodist Episcopal Church. His fraternal connections are those he maintains
with the Bowerston Lodge, Knights of Pythias. A hard-working and thrifty
man. Mr. Warner has exerted himself to produce the best results,
and his farm is a credit to him and his township. While he has never cared
to go into public life he has always taken an intelligent part in local affairs,
given his support to the good roads and similar movements, and is recognized as
one of the representative men of this region.
Source: History of Carroll and Harrison Counties, Ohio - Chicago: Lewis
Pub. Co., 1921 - Page 871 |
|
CLYDE E. WARREN is claimed by
his native county as one of its vigorous and successful younger exponents of
farm enterprise, and in January, 1919, his established his residence upon his
present well-known farm of 101 acres in Cadiz Township, Harrison County.
Here he is giving his attention to diversified agriculture and the raising of
approved types of lie stock, and on his farm he erected his present commodious
and attractive residence, which is of the bungalow style of architecture and
which adds to the picturesqueness of the countryside in Cadiz Township.
Mr. Warren takes a lively interest in all things pertaining to the communal
welfare, is affiliated with the Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons at Cadiz, and
he and his wife hold membership in the Methodist Episcopal Church in that city.
Clyde E. Warren was born in Franklin Township,
Harrison County, on the 20th of January, 1883, and is a son of James and
Elizabeth (Havnar) Warren, both likewise natives of this county and the
latter a daughter of Joseph and Rebecca (Mitchell) Havnar. Joseph
Havnar was born in Monroe Township, this county, a son of Dominic Havnar,
who came from Pennsylvania and became an early settler in Harrison County, he
and his wife having been residents of Monroe Township until their deaths.
Joseph Havnar followed the carpenter's trade and also became a successful
farmer in Cadiz Township, where he and his wife died, both having been members
of the Presbyterian Church. Their children were seen in number.
James Warren was born in Green Township,
Harrison County, a son of James and Eliza Jane (Emfield) Warren, the
former a native of Pennsylvania and the latter of Harrison County, Ohio, where
their marriage was solemnized. James Warren, Sr., was a physician
by profession and became a pioneer practitioner in Jefferson County, Ohio, as
did he later in Harrison County, where he and his wife passed the rest of their
lives. Their son James and reared and educated in Green Township,
and eventually became the owner of a fine farm of 212 acres in Cadiz Township,
where he continued as one of the representative farmers and honored citizens of
his native county until his death in 1918, his wife having passed away in 1902.
She was a member of the Presbyterian Church, from which in later years he
transferred his membership to the Methodist Episcopal Church. They became
the parents of seven children: Craig W., individually represented
on other pages of this work; Clara, wife of William C. Edwards; Carrie,
wife of Howard Heaston; Laura and John, twins, the latter of whom
died at the age of twenty-one years; Clyde E., the immediate subject of
this sketch; and Henry H., the maiden name of whose wife was Martha
Dickerson.
Clyde E. Warren acquired his youthful education in
the district schools of Franklin and Short Creek townships, and he continued his
association with farm activities until 1910, when he became a mail carrier on
one of the rural routes extending from Cadiz. He continued in this branch
of the Government mail service until the 1st of September, 1918, and in January
of the following year, as previously stated in this article, he established his
home on his present farm.
On the 22d of October, 1902, was solemnized the
marriage of Mr. Warren to Miss Ella Holmes, daughter of George
B. and Ada (Meek) Holmes, of Harrison County, and one child of this union is
a fine little son, Clyde Spencer.
Source: History of Carroll and Harrison Counties, Ohio - Chicago:
Lewis Pub. Co., 1921 - Page 1027 |
|
JAMES W. WILKIN.
Among the well-known farmers of Freeport Township, Harrison County, whose
industry, energy and good management have placed them in comfortable
circumstances and gained for them a reputable standing among their townsmen
is James W. Wilkin, who has successfully pursued his vocation on his
present property for twelve years. Mr. Wilkin was born in
Belmont County, Ohio, July 31, 1860, a son of Thomas and Mary (Griffin)
Wilkin.
The pioneer of this branch of the Wilkin family
in Ohio was Archibald Wilkin, the grandfather of James W., who
was born in Pennsylvania and in young manhood removed to Guernsey County,
this state, where he followed farming during the remainder of his life.
He was the father o the following children: Andrew, William, James,
Archibald, Mary Jane, Catherine and Rebecca. Thomas Wilkin
was born in Pennsylvania and as a young man adopted the pursuits of the soil
for his life work, subsequently following farming and stock raising in
Guernsey and Belmont counties during the remainder of a long and honorable
career. His death occurred in 1891. Mr. Wilkin married
Miss Mary Griffin, who was born in Belmont County, Ohio, a daughter
of James and Hannah Griffin, natives of Ireland. She died Dec.
9, 1920. They had nine children, as follows: Margaret;
Elizabeth, who died as a child; Hannah; Harriet; Martha; James W.;
Thomas Henry; John A., who died as a child; and Rebecca,
deceased.
James W. Wilkin was given the advantages of
attendance at the district schools of Guernsey County and resided on the
home farm until his marriage, in 1891, to Miss Lizzie Bond, a daughter
of Joshua and Susanna (Huffman) Bond. Following their marriage
Mr. Wilkin started farming in Belmont County, where he remained until
1906, then removing to Scio, Ohio, where he resided for four months.
At that time he made his advent in Harrison County, which has since been his
home, and during the past twelve years has lived on his present farm of 160
acres in Freeport Township. He carries on general farming and
stock-raising, and his labors have been attended with gratifying success, he
being justly accounted one of the substantial men of his section. As a
citizen he has given his moral and material support to worthy measures, and
while he has never sought office or public honors has endeavored to assist
in the securing of good officials and proper legislation. Mrs.
Wilkin is a member of the Methodist church. They have no children.
Thomas Henry Wilkin, a brother of James W.
Wilkin, was born in Guernsey County, Ohio, Jan. 15, 1864, and received
his education in the public schools in the vicinity of the home farm.
As a young man he started farming in his native county, where he became the
owner of 160 acres, but in 1906 disposed of his holdings and moved to his
present farm in Moorefield Township, Harrison County, where he owns a
valuable and productive property, consisting of ninety-three acres. He
does general farming and stock raising, in which he has achieved success,
and since his arrival has made numerous improvements, including the building
of a new barn. In 1895, Mr. Wilkin married Iona Campbell,
daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth (Donley) Campbell, and four children
were born to this union: Dorothy Blanche, who married Worthy
Milliken and has one son, Harry Raymond; an infant who died
unnamed; and Freda May and Ralph Raymond, who reside with
their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Wilkin are consistent members of
the Methodist Episcopal Church at Piedmont.
(Source: History of Carroll
and Harrison Counties, Ohio - Chicago: Lewis Pub. Co., 1921 -
Page 583) |
|
JAMES A. WILSON
Source: History of Carroll and Harrison Counties, Ohio - Chicago: Lewis Pub.
Co., 1921 ~ Page 909 |
|
JONAH D. WILSON
Source: History of Carroll and Harrison Counties, Ohio - Chicago: Lewis Pub.
Co., 1921 ~ Page 909 |
. |
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