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WILLIAM H. NEAL.
An able and honored member of the judiciary of Lawrence
County, Mr. Neal is one of the representative
citizens of Ironton, the county seat, and here he is
giving a most effective administration as justice of hte
peace, his services being such as to make the office
justify its name.
Mr. Neal was born at Keystone Furnace, Jackson
County, Ohio, on the 31st of May, 1856, and is a son of
Levi and Nancy (Hunt) Neal, the former of whom
was born in Pennsylvania and the latter of whom was born
in Lawrence County, Ohio, in 1835, a date that indicates
that she is a representative of a pioneer family of this
section of the Buckeye State, her home being now in
Elizabeth Township, this county, where she is held in
affectionate regard by all who know her. Levi
Neal promptly manifested his patriotism when the
Civil war was precipitated on a divided nation. In
response to the first call for volunteers he enlisted in
an Ohio Regiment, and he sacrificed his life in the
cause of the Union, as he was killed on the field of
battle, in 1862, when about twenty-seven years of age.
His widow subsequently became the wife of Philip S.
Justin, whose death occurred in 1914, he having been
a prosperous farmer of Lawrence County. Of the
nine children of the first marriage William H.,
of this review is the only survivor, and by his mother's
second marriage she became the parent of five children,
of whom four are living - Frank, Philip, Daniel
and Charles.
William H. Neal attended the public schools of
Lawrence County until he had attained the age of
eighteen years, and he thereafter became a workman in
the iron mines of the county. While thus employed
he was injured by a caving in of the section of mine in
which he was working, and the result of the injury was
that it became necessary to amputate his right leg at a
point below the knee. This injury incapacitated
him for further manual labor of the more strenuous
order, and after attending school for another year he
proved himself eligible for pedagogic honors. For
the long period of sixteen years he was numbered among
the successful and popular teachers in the public
schools of Lawrence County, and this discipline, in
connection with earnest study and reading, enabled him
to round out a liberal education, the while he achieved
marked prestige in his chosen profession, besides
gaining secure vantage-ground in popular confidence and
esteem. For nine years after his retirement from
the pedagogic profession Mr. Neal was
engaged as manager of the general merchandise store of
Halley & Company at Pedro, Lawrence County, and
he then removed to Ironton, the county seat, while he
engaged in the insurance business. To this line of
enterprise lie devoted his attention for three years, at
the expiration of which, in 1912, he was elected justice
of the peace, of which office he has since been the
efficient incumbent. He has accurate knowledge of
the basic principles of the science of jurisprudence,
and his judicial rulings have invariably been marked by
circumspection and mature judgment, so that he has
wielded emphatic influence in the conserving of equity
and justice. While a resident of Elizabeth
Township Mr. Neal was called upon to serve in
various local offices of public trust, including those
of township clerk, assessor, trustee and land appraiser,
besides which he was for a number of years a member of
the school board of his district. Mr. Neal
is a stanch advocate of the principles of the democratic
party and both he and his wife are zealous members of
the Methodist Episcopal Church.
At Ironton, on the 11th of September, 1882, was
solemnized the marriage of Mr. Neal to
Miss Lyda Grant, daughter of the late Stephen
Grant, of Pedro, this county.
Concerning the eight children of Mr. and Mrs. Neal
the following brief record is given: Otis, who is
station agent for the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad at
Russell, Greenup County, Kentucky, married Miss Ethel
Taylor, and they have two children - William A.
and Estherlin; Harry and Jessie are
not married and both reside in Lawrence County; Ray,
who occupies a responsible clerical position with a
representative firm at Norwood, Ohio, married Miss
Mabel Fowler; Inez died in childhood, as did
also Clara and Clarence, who were twins;
and Nora remains at the parental home.
Source: A Standard History of The Hanging Rock
Iron Region of Ohio, Vol. II - Illustrated - Published
by The Lewis Publishing Company, 1916 - Page 752 |