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BURTON C. RAMEY.
––It is but mete that in a history of the careers of
representative citizens of Morrow county, Ohio, be accorded
recognition to him whose name initiates this review. Mr.
Ramey has resided on his splendid country estate in South
Bloomfield township during practically his entire life time, and
the same is one of the model farms in this section of the
country. It comprises one hundred and forty-four acres and is
in a high state of cultivation, the substantial buildings and
general air of thrift which pervades the place being the best
evidence of Mr. Ramey’s ability as a practical
agriculturist.
Burton C. Ramey is a son of Alonzo Ramey and
he was born on a farm in Knox county, Ohio, on the 4th of
January, 1868. Alonzo Ramey was a grandson of Peter
Kile, one of the oldest settlers in South Bloomfield
township, and he was born in 1842, a son of T. A. and Melinda
(Kile) Ramey. Peter Kile was the father of ten
children, namely: John Reason, Melinda (Mrs. T. A. Ramey),
Simon, Washington, Ransom, Harvey, Catherine, Mary E. and
Wiliam [sic]
W.
Alonzo Ramey was one in a family of six children:
Alonzo, Armida, Washington, Brown, Emmett and Orpha.
He farmed until he was twenty years of age and he then, in 1862,
enlisted as a soldier in the Ninety-sixth Ohio Volunteer
Infantry, serving with all of gallantry and faithfulness for a
period of ten months, at the expiration of which he was so
reduced by disease that he was discharged and mustered out of
service. Thereafter he was an inmate of the parental home until
his marriage, October 4, 1864, to Miss Sarah A. Mortley,
a niece of David Mortley, who wrote the constitution of
Ohio and who was long actively connected with the progress and
development of the old Buckeye state. Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo
Ramey became the parents of two children: Delma, born
July 9, 1865; and Burton C., the subject of this review.
Mr. Ramey passed his life as a farmer and he resided upon
the old Peter Kile estate until his death, March 3, 1907.
Mr. Ramey, of this notice, was reared to the sturdy
discipline of the home farm, in the work and management of which
he early became associated with his father. His educational
advantages consisted of such privileges as were afforded in the
public schools of his native place and after his marriage, in
1890, he assumed active charge of the old home farm, upon which
he has resided during the long intervening years to the present
time. This estate was the first tract of land to be entered in
this section of Morrow county, the original owner having been
Peter Kile, great-grandfather of Mr. Ramey. It is
interesting to note that Mr. Ramey has in his possession
the old sheep-skin deed, signed by President James Monroe,
which Mr. Peter Kile received when he settled here.
Diversified farming and the raising of high-grade Delaine sheep
occupy Mr. Ramey’s working hours and he holds prestige as
one of the most successful farmers in this vicinity.
On the 9th of October, 1890, Mr. Ramey was united in
marriage to Miss Belle Bockover, who was born and reared
at Sparta, the date of her nativity being the 25th of December,
1872. She is a daughter of James and Mary Bockover, of
Chester township. Mr. and Mrs. Ramey have one son,
Homer A., whose birth occurred on the 2nd of March, 1892.
He was graduated in the Sparta High School as a member of the
class of 1908 and for one year was a student in the Parkville
University, at Kansas City, Missouri. He is now engaged in
teaching in the public schools of this county and in the same is
achieving marked success. He has remarkable talent in public
speaking and is known throughout this section of the state as
the young boy orator. He has a magnetic voice and personality,
has a wonderful command of language and his eloquent manner of
presenting his speeches has been the means of winning to him
numerous medals in the various contests in which he has
participated. In August, 1906, he was presented with a silver
medal at Sparta; in the following October he won a gold medal at
Mount Gilead; in August, 1907, at Levering, Ohio, he won the
grand gold medal in the Women’s Christian Temperance Union
contest; at a contest at Steubenville, Ohio, he won second
place; and in November, 1907, he was chosen from seven
candidates as the winner of the diamond medal at Nashville,
Tennessee. In the last-mentioned contest seven states were
represented: Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama,
Georgia and Texas, and the finals were held at Nashville,
Tennessee, on the 9th of November 1907. In this contest Mr.
Ramey was awarded the diamond medal and he had the honor of
meeting personally the governor of Tennessee, who heartily
congratulated him for his success. A brilliant future is
predicted for this gifted son of Ohio.
In his political adherency Mr. Ramey accords a
stanch allegiance to the cause of the Republican party and he is
an ardent sympathizer with all measures and enterprises advanced
for the general welfare of the community. In a fraternal way he
is connected with the Sons of Veterans at Mount Vernon, Ohio.
He and his wife are popular and prominent factors in connection
with the best social activities of their home township and hold
a secure vantage ground in the confidence and esteem of their
fellow citizens. Mr. and Mrs. Ramey have four of the old
parchment deeds, the oldest one being signed by President
James Monroe, April, 1819. Two of 1834, are signed by
President Andrew Jackson, and the other signed by
President John Quincy Adams. This makes twelve of the old
heirloom deeds found in Morrow county and they are valuable
documents.
Source: History of Morrow County, Ohio by A. J. Baughman - Vol.
II - Chicago-New York: The Lewis Publishing Co. - 1911 – pp.
750-752
Contributed by a Generous Genealogist. |
|
WALTER H. RAMEY.
––Among the able representatives of the great basic art of
agriculture in Gilead township, Morrow county, Ohio, is
Walter H. Ramey, who has figured prominently in public
affairs in this township and who owns some valuable real estate
in. Mount Gilead. He was born in South Bloomfield township,
Morrow county, Ohio, on the 6th of August, 1862, a son of
John W. and Catherine (Kile) Ramey, the former of whom was
born near Jersey, Licking county, Ohio, and the latter of whom
claims South Bloomfield township, Morrow county, as the place of
her birth. Mr. Ramey’s grandparents, Peter Kile
and wife, were among the first settlers of South Bloomfield
township, locating when the Indians were natives and their first
home was a log house. He was a carpenter by trade and erected
the first house in Fredericktown. The Kiles entered the
land from the government and the deed is yet held in the
family. John W. Ramey was born on the 25th of February,
1827, and his wife on the 12th of February, 1832. Their
marriage was solemnized on the 15th of August, 1850. Mr. and
Mrs. Ramey commenced housekeeping at Mount Liberty, Knox
county, Ohio, where he worked at his trade, that of a
shoemaker. In 1852 they removed to Clark street, now South
Bloomfield, where he was identified with the work of his trade
until 1859, in which year he purchased a farm in the vicinity of
the village of South Bloomfield, where they continued to reside
until the 1st of September, 1882. In that year he bought a farm
located one and a half miles northwest of Mount Gilead, where he
has continued to maintain his home during the long intervening
years to me present time. He began life with practically
nothing except persistency of purpose and a determination to
succeed and to-day he is worth no less than fifty thousand
dollars, all of which he accumulated through personal labor and
thrift. Mrs. Ramey is still living and has now attained
to the venerable age of seventy-eight years, while her husband
is eighty-three years of age. They became the parents of two
children: Charley W., who is engaged in farming in Marion
county, Ohio, and Walter. H., the immediate subject of
this review.
Walter H. Ramey received his preliminary educational
training in the common schools of his native township and in the
graded schools of Sparta, Ohio. Later he supplemented this
discipline by a course of study in the Northern Indiana Normal
University at Valparaiso, Indiana, and after leaving that
institution he was engaged in teaching school for a period of
two years. Thereafter he turned his attention to agricultural
pursuits in this county, where he devotes his attention to
diversified agriculture and the raising of high grade stock. In
politics he accords a stalwart allegiance to the principles and
policies of the Republican party, in the local councils of which
he has taken a most active part. He has been township assessor
of Gilead township on three different occasions and has served
as assistant surveyor of Morrow county for some four years. He
has considerable property in Mount Gilead and in all his
financial ventures has met with the most gratifying success.
Mr. Ramey is a man of influence in Morrow county, where his
business ability and genial kindliness of disposition have
gained him the high regard of his fellow men.
On the 22nd of September, 1885, was solemnized the marriage
of Mr. Ramey to Miss Kate Wieland, who was born at
Mount Gilead on the 24th of May, 1863, a daughter of George
and Mary Wieland. She was graduated in the Mount Gilead
high school as a member of the class of 1882 and prior to her
marriage was engaged in teaching in the public schools of Morrow
county for three years. To this union have been born five
children: Wesley Merle, born on the 29th of July, 1886;
Edith G., born on the 14th of March, 1888, and for three
years a successful teacher in Morrow county, was summoned to the
life eternal on the 31st of October, 1910; Helen Josie,
born November 20, 1889, is a trained nurse at Columbus, Ohio;
Hazel D., born April 18, 1893, was graduated in the Mount
Gilead high school at the age of fifteen years; and Catherine
Ruth, born May 5, 1895, died on the 25th of December, 1895.
On May 11, 1891, Mrs. Ramey also passed away. She was a
valued member of the Universalist church at Mt. Gilead, Ohio.
Source: History of Morrow County, Ohio by A. J. Baughman - Vol.
II - Chicago-New York: The Lewis Publishing Co. - 1911 – pp.
612-614
Contributed by a Generous Genealogist. |
|
ALFORD F. RANDOLPH.
-- To Mr. Randolph belongs the distinction not only of
being one of the older native born citizens of Morrow county,
but also of belonging to one of the oldest families of America.
He is of the seventh generation from Elizabeth Blossom,
who in the first year of her life came with the Pilgrims in the
Mayflower and landed at Plymouth Rock “on the stern and
rock-bound coast” of New England, December 21, 1620. She was
born in the year 1620, in the city of Leyden, Holland, whence
her parents had fled a few years previous, under the leadership
of Brewster and Robinson, in order to escape
religious persecution in England, their native land. On the 10th
day of May, 1837, she was married by the Reverend John
Lathrope, pastor of the churches at Scituate and Barnstable,
Massachusetts, to Edward F. Randolph, who was born in
Nottinghamshire, England, in the year 1617, and had come to
Plymouth, Massachusetts in the year 1630. About the year 1668,
Edward F. and Elizabeth Randolph left Massachusetts and
removed to New Jersey, locating at Piscataway, where he soon
after died. Later his widow married Captain John Pike, of
Woodbridge, New Jersey, who was an ancestor of General
Zebulon Montgomery Pike, who was killed at the attack on
Toronto, (then York) Canada, in 1813, and who won distinction
for having discovered the source of the Mississippi river and
the mountain in Colorado that still bears his name -- Pike's
Peak.
Nathaniel F. Randolph, son of Edward F. and
Elizabeth Randolph, was married at Barnstable, Massachusetts
to Mary Holby, in November, 1660, and about 1667 he
removed to Woodbridge, New Jersey. In the year 1693, he
represented Woodbridge in the state assembly held at Perth
Amboy. From 1705 to 1713, the church services of the Friends
were held in his house and his descendants were members of that
church for several generations. His son Edward married
Katherine Hartshorn, daughter of Richard and Margaret
Hartshorn, of Middleton, Monmouth county, New Jersey.
Richard Hartshorn was sheriff of Monmouth county and
represented his county in the assembly in which he served as
speaker and he was also a member of the governor's council.
George Fox, founder of the Friends church, makes
mention in his published journel of travel in America of having
been entertained in the Randolph home. The younger son of
Edward and Katherine Randolph, was Hartshorn F.
Randolph, for whom the township of Randoph in Morris county,
New Jersey, was named. The wife of Governor Thomas Corwin,
of Ohio, was his granddaughter. Edward F. Randolph, son
of Edward and Katherine Randolph and an older brother of
Hartshorn F. Randolph was born July 5, 1706, and was
married to Phoebe Jackson, of Flushing, Long Island, in
August, 1734. Their oldest son, James F. Randolph, born
August 16, 1735, was twice married and reared a large family. He
migrated to what was then considered the far west and located
near Rice's Landing on the Monongahela river in Green county,
Pennsylvania, where he died June 1, 1828. His son, James F.
Randolph, the second, was born September 9, 1767, and
married Catherine Baker, of Rahway, New Jersey, in 1793.
She was a member of the Presbyterian church and for this offence
her husband was excommunicated from the Friends' church. He
removed with his father to Green county, Pennsylvania, where he
resided a few years, but being imbued with the pioneer spirit of
the times, he pushed on farther west and in the year 1817, in
company with his family, located on Alum creek, in Peru
township, Morrow county, Ohio. His wife, Catherine Baker,
was born at Rahway, New Jersey, April 18, 1767, and was the
daughter of Cornelius Baker. Her mother's maiden name was
Susanna Lee, who was born February 28, 1736, and she was
the daughter of. Adam Lee. Cornelius Baker was
born May 5, 1739, and died November 5, 1815: His father,
Henry Baker, was born in England in the year 1700 and came
to America about the year 1730, settling near Rahway, New
Jersey, on the road from Rahway to Elizabethtown, in the
Province of East New Jersey. He died March 17, 1760. Mary
Hatfield, his wife, was born in the year 1705 and died in
1755. Their remains lie buried in the burying-ground of the
First Presbyterian church in Rahway, New Jersey. Henry Baker
was a son of Vice-Admiral Baker of the English navy.
James F. Randolph, the third, was born in Greene
county, Pennsylvania, August 8, 1811, and when but six years of
age he came with his parents, James F. and Catherine Randolph,
to their new home on Alum creek, in Peru township, where with
parents, brothers and sisters, he shared the hardships incident
to the establishment of a new home in the wilderness. He was
married to Miss Marry Butters in Bennington township in
1829, his wife being the daughter of Rev. Alford Butters;
a physician and minister, who immigrated to Bennington township
from the state of Maine at the close of the war of 1812. He was
a local minister in the Methodist Episcopal church and a
practicing physician, which profession he followed until the
close of his life, which occurred in the year 1837. He built the
first frame dwelling house in Bennington township, which is
still occupied and in a fair state of preservation. James F.
Randolph, the third, studied medicine with his father-in-law
(Dr. Butters) and began the practice of his profession at
his home on Alum creek, in Peru township, later moving to
Ashley, Delaware county, Ohio, and afterward to Bennington
township, Morrow county, where he operated a farm in connection
with his practice. He built what was then considered to be the
most elegant residence in this part of the state and laid out a
flower garden, all of which have since been razed. He was a man
of culture and refinement, of delicate sensibilities and keen
perception of the aesthetic. He and his wife were life-long
members of the Wesleyan Methodist church. His wife died in 1876
and he afterward married Mrs. Martha Brestler. After his
second marriage he removed to Marengo, Morrow county, Ohio,
where he died April 14, 1883. His widow afterwards married
Amos Harris, of Licking county, Ohio, and both are now
deecased. The children of James F. and Mary Randolph who
lived to years of maturity, were Cornelia, wife of
Harvey Chambers; Margaret, wife of O. Meredith;
Mary, wife of Ganza Evans; Amaretta, wife
of Frank Ghant; Jefferson and Alford, the
subject of this sketch, who was born in Bennington township,
November 18, 1833.
Alford F. Randolph acquired a common school
education and in his early manhood assisted in the operation of
his father's farm. He inherited from his pious ancestors a
natural inclination toward religious thought and conduct. He has
always taken a firm stand for whatever he considered to be for
the best interest of the community and society in general and
has always endeavored to follow after the things that make for
harmony, and as much as possible has lived peaceably with all
men. In politics he has always been a stanch Federalist, which
belief naturally induced him to affiliation with the Republican
party, and when the doctrine of state sovereignty became so
chrystallized
[sic]
as to
attempt, by armed rebellion, the disruption of the nation, he
laid down the implements of peace and took up the implements of
war, and bidding adieu to kindred, home and all that life holds
dear, he laid, as it were, his young life, upon the altar of his
country and beneath the fluttering folds of the star-spangled
ensign of liberty, marched out to the bloody field of carnage,
there to dare, to do, and to die, if need be, that this Republic
might not perish from among men. He enlisted in Company D of the
One Hundred and Twenty-first Regiment of Ohio Volunteer Infantry
which became a part of the Army of the Cumberland. He did active
service on the battlefield and was captured at Columbia,
Kentucky, and was subsequently in the hospital for a while. He
was paroled as a prisoner of war, having been captured by the
raider, Morgan. Upon the expiration of his term of
enlistment, he again offered his services to his country, but
was rejected on account of disabilities received while in the
service. Upon his return home, he beat as it were, his sword
into a plough-share, his spear into a pruning-hook, and again
resumed the pursuits of peace.
September 10, 1865, Mr. Randolph was united in
marriage to Mrs. Sarah J. (Chambers) Brokaw, widow of
Joshua Brokaw, who died at Bowling Green, Kentucky, while in
the service of his country. Soon after his marriage to Mrs.
Brokaw, Mr. and Mrs. Randolph established a home on a
farm about two miles south of Marengo, where they have ever
since resided, and where now in conjugal bliss and domestic
felicity, respected by all who know them, they are spending
their declining years in the enjoyment of the well-earned
blessings of peace and prosperity. In early life they united
with the Wesleyan Methodist church and are still engaged in the
activities of church work. Their children are as follows: Eva,
the wife of Nelson Mead; Daisy, wife of Hanson
Fowler; Florence, wife of Douglas Moore;
Luella, wife of William Chilcote; and James
Elsworth Randolph. The latter was born July 8, 1868, and on
October 18, 1893, lie was married to Miss Orrie C. Barr.
To their union two daughters were born, Delta Eva,
November 25, 1894; and Mary Augusta, September 28, 1896.
Mrs. Randolph died in the year 1900 and Delta the
following year at the age of seven years. At the time of
Delta's death the children were living with their
grand-parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Barr, near Centerburg,
Ohio, and Mary still resides with them. On October 1,
1902, Mr. J. E. Randolph was united in marriage to
Miss Nellie M. Sipe, of Fulton, Ohio, and they have three
children: Sarah Alice, born June 7, 1904; Niles
Elsworth, born July 12, 1906; and Harold Eugene, born
January 29, 1911.
Source: History of Morrow County, Ohio by A. J. Baughman - Vol.
II - Chicago-New York: The Lewis Publishing Co. - 1911 – pp.
936-939
Contributed by a Generous Genealogist |
|
AMOS RINEHART
has a finely improved and strictly up-to-date farm of eighty
acres of most arable land in Troy township, Morrow county, where
he is engaged in diversified agriculture and the raising of
breeded horses. Mr. Rinehart is also the owner of one
hundred and sixty acres of splendid farming land in Texas and he
is a citizen who has ever manifested a deep and sincere interest
in all matters touching the welfare of the community in which he
has long resided.
In Perry township, Morrow county, Ohio, on the 14th of May,
1866, occurred the birth of Amos Rinehart, who is a son
of Michael B. and Margaret (Baker) Rinehart, both of whom
are now deceased. The father was born on the 11th of April, 1825
and he was summoned to the life eternal on the 6th of May, 1880.
On the 13th of June, 1852, was solemnized the marriage of Mr.
Michael Rinehart to Miss Margaret E. Baker, whose
natal day was the 31st of July, 1834, and who passed into the
great beyond on the 30th of March, 1910. The family name in
Germany was spelled Reinhardt, but in Morrow county it is
spelled Rinehart. The original progenitor of the
Rinehart family in America was Jacob Rinehart, Sr.,
great-grandfather of him to whom this sketch is dedicated.
Jacob Rinehart claimed the great Empire of Germany as the
place of his nativity and he immigrated to the United States in
an early day where he turned his time and attention to farming.
He became the father of seven children, whose names are here
entered in respective order of birth: George, Conrad, Jacob,
Michael, Peter, Betsey and Polly. Conrad Rinehart
married and had the following children: Polly, Jacob, Sally,
Betsey, John, Yettie, Daniel, Lydia, Susan, Michael and
Conrad. Michael Rinehart, father of the immediate
subject of this sketch, married Margaret Baker, as
previously noted, and they became the parents of sixteen
children, concerning whom the following brief data are here
recorded: Josiah, born on January 23, 1853, died on the
11th of May, 1854; Almeda, born August 27, 1854, is now
the wife of George W. Fringer, of Kansas; Louisa,
born on the 11th of December, 1885, married Upton Lucas,
of Perry county; Lydia, born on the 24th of February,
1857, wedded R. M. Stull and they maintain their home at
Troy; Mary S., born on the 19th of May, 1858, is the wife
of Emanuel Grogg and they reside at North Woodbury;
Levi B., born on the 22nd of October, 1859, married Miss
Mattie Feigley and they live in Morrow county; Barbara E.,
born on the 2nd of February, 1861, is the wife of J. W.
Dukman, of Galion, Ohio ; George C., born on the 6th
of March, 1862, married Lydia Lewis and they maintain
their home in Perry township; Sarah A., born on the 13th
of July, 1863, became the wife of Daniel W. Feigley, of
Perry township; Charles B., born on the 16th of March,
1865, married Emma Lucas and they live at Troy; Amos
is the immediate subject of this review; Silas C., born
on the 25th of September, 1867, married Della Quay and
they are now living at Troy; Adam B., born January 24,
1870, married Maude Shamble and they reside in Troy
township; Jacob H., born on the 24th of March, 1872, is
single and lives in California; Arthur S., born on the
18th of May, 1873, wedded Miss Nevada Carpenter and they
maintain their home in Perry township; and John A., born
on the 12th of December, 1874, married Miss Belle Carpenter
and they live in Perry township
Amos Rinehart was reared to the sturdy influence of
the home farm in Perry township, this county, and he early
became associated with his father in the work and management of
the parental farm. His educational training consisted of such
advantages as were afforded in the district schools, which he
attended during the winter terms. When he had attained to the
age of seventeen years he began to work as a farm hand for
different farmers in Perry township and after his marriage, in
1891, he settled on his present splendid estate of eighty acres
in Troy township, on which he has continued to maintain his home
during the long intervening years to 1911. In addition to his
landed interests in Morrow county he is the owner of a tract of
one hundred and sixty acres of finely improved land in Texas,
and he also has had land holdings in the state of Washington.
While much of his attention is devoted to general farming he is
also deeply interested in the breeding of high-grade horses and
in the same has made a great success.
On the 15th of January, 1891, was solemnized the marriage
of Mr. Rinehart to Miss Wilda M. Ross, who was
born on the farm on which she and her husband now reside, the
date of her nativity being the 4th of July, 1867. She is a
daughter of Robert and Lydia (Snyder) Ross, the former of
whom was born in Troy township and who was called to eternal
rest in the year 1895. Mrs. Rinehart was educated in the
common schools of this locality and she is a woman of rare charm
and most gracious personality. She is deeply beloved by all her
friends and acquaintances and her home is a center of most
refined hospitality. Mr. and Mrs. Rinehart have two
children, Vonnie B., born on the 15th of March, 1892, was
graduated in the Lexington high school as a member of the class
of 1911; and Robert R., born on the 12th of March, 1900,
is now attending the district schools.
In his political convictions Mr. Rinehart is a loyal
Democrat in all matters of national import but in local affairs
he maintains an independent attitude, preferring to give his
support to men and measures meeting with the approval of his
judgment rather than to follow along strictly partisan lines.
While he has never been fired with ambition for the honors or
emoluments of political office of any description he is most
active and sincere in his support of all projects advanced for
the good of the community and county at large. In their
religious faith Mr. and Mrs. Rinehart are devout members
of the St. Paul Evangelical church and they are interested
factors in the various departments of church work. Mr.
Rinehart is a man of fine, straightforward conduct, one who
is fair and honorable in all his business dealings, and as a
citizen he commands the unalloyed confidence and esteem of all
with whom he has come in contact.
Source: History of Morrow County, Ohio by A. J. Baughman - Vol.
II - Chicago-New York: The Lewis Publishing Co. - 1911 – pp.
520-522
Contributed by a Generous Genealogist |
|
BENJAMIN F. RINEHART
is a prominent farmer and stock raiser in Washington township,
Morrow county, Ohio. He owns a finely improved farm of one
hundred and two acres and the same is in a state of high
cultivation. Mr. Rinehart has been identified with
various lines of enterprise and in all of them has achieved
eminent success as the result of well applied energy. He was
born in Perry township, Morrow county, Ohio, the date of his
nativity being June 3, 1848. He is a son of Joshua and Salome
(Shafer) Rinehart, the former of whom was a son of Jacob
Rinehart a daughter of Conrad Shafer. The Rinehart
family traces its ancestry back to stanch German stock and the
name was originally spelled Reinhard. Joshua Rinehart
was born and reared in York county, Pennsylvania, whence he came
to Perry Township, Morrow county, in an early day. He became the
father of the following named children: Isaiah, Jemima,
William, Ephraim, Benjamin F. and Genius P. The only
daughter, Jemima, became the wife of Hiram Craven
and they maintained their home at Morrow. The father was
summoned to the life eternal in 1897 and the mother passed away
in 1892.
Benjamin F. Rinehart was reared to maturity on the
old homestead farm in Perry township, this county, and in that
place he attended school until he had attained to the age of
seventeen years, at which time he went to Pennsylvania, where he
was variously employed, one of his interests being the nursery
business. In 1869 he went west to Kansas, where he remained for
two years, at the expiration of which he returned to Morrow
county, Ohio. Soon after his return he was married and
thereafter he turned his attention to agriculture and the
growing of high grade stock. He is a carpenter by trade but is
not actively identified with that occupation. In politics he is
a Democrat and at the present time, in 1911, is assessor of the
southern part of Washington township. Mr. Rinehart is a
valued and appreciative member of the Mt. Gilead Lodge, Free and
Accepted Masons, and he and his wife are zealous members of the
Methodist Episcopal church at Iberia.
On March 9, 1876, was solemnized the marriage of Mr.
Rinehart to Miss Mary E. Braddock, who was born in
Washington township on the 1st of January, 1853, a daughter of
Martin C. and Mary A. (Sipes) Braddock, whose ancestory [sic]
is traced back to General Braddock of Revolutionary war
fame. Mr. and Mrs. Martin C. Braddock passed their entire
lives in Ohio, where their deaths occurred in 1856 and 1899
respectively. John Braddock, paternal grandfather of
Mrs. Rinehart, married Margaret Gray in 1801, and in
1808 came to Ohio, where he entered a tract of government land
in Morrow county. Mr. and Mrs. Rinehart have four
children, concerning whom the following brief data are here
incorporated: Starling A., is married and resides in
Washington township; Bessie, was graduated in the Iberia
High School and is now a student in the business college at
Mansfield, Ohio; Enola, was graduated in the Iberia High
School as a member of the class of 1905 and for the past three
years has been a popular and successful teacher in the public
schools of Morrow county; Lemoine D., was a student in
the Iberia and Mt. Gilead High Schools and he now remains at the
parental home, where he is associated with his father in the
work and management of the home farm. One child, Verna E.,
who was born March 27, 1880, died July 25, 1893. Mrs.
Rinehart being of Revolutionary stock is entitled as well as
her children to become members of the great order, sons and
daughters of the Revolution, which is a high honor. Mr.
Rinehart is well known in Morrow county, where occurred his
birth and where he has passed much of his life, and here he has
gained the warm regard which is ever given in recognition of
sterling worth and admirable personal traits of character.
Source: History of Morrow County, Ohio by A. J. Baughman - Vol.
II - Chicago-New York: The Lewis Publishing Co. - 1911 – pp.
786-788
Contributed by a Generous Genealogist |
|
HUGH G. ROGERS.
-- As the years relentlessly mark the milestones on the pathway
of time the older generation slowly gives way to the new and
gradually there passes from our midst the men who made our
country what it is and who built up this great empire of the
middle west for the men of today. In every generation and in
every community some few men leave an indelible imprint upon the
history of that community and upon the memories of those who
have known them by their ability to fight and win even against
great odds, and by that kind of character which wins lasting
friends because of that innate quality which people know as
loyalty. Hugh G. Rogers, who passed into the Great Beyond
on the 31st of December, 1899, was one of these. He was a
gallant and faithful soldier in the Union ranks of the Civil
war, represented his home district in the State Legislature and
during the major portion of his life resided in Chester
township, Morrow county, Ohio. By reason of his admirable
character and exemplary life he is well deserving of
representation in this historical compilation.
Hugh G. Rogers was born in Cambria county,
Pennsylvania, on the 15th of August, 1831, and was a son of
George and Catherine (Russ) Rogers, both of whom were born
and reared in Wales, whence they immigrated to the United States
in an early day. Mr. Rogers, of this review, was reared
to adult age and educated in the old Keystone state of the Union
and at the age of eighteen years began to learn the carpenter's
trade, later going to Philadelphia to learn stair-making. His
great industry and thrift made him an exceedingly good workman.
After his first marriage, in 1858, he came to Ohio, settling on
a farm in Harmony township, in Morrow county. When the dark
cloud of Civil war cast its pall over the national horizon
Mr. Rogers responded to President Lincoln's call for
volunteers and with a number of other brave young men enlisted
as a member of Company C., Ninety-sixth Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
He entered the United States army at Cardington and proceeded
thence to Camp Chase at Columbus. He was sent on with the
soldiers to meet General Kirby Smith on his invasion of
Kentucky and later he was with General Sherman at
Vicksburg, where he was disabled. He received his honorable
discharge and was mustered out of service at Jefferson Barracks,
in St. Louis, Missouri, as fourth sergeant.
After his military service had been ended Mr. Rogers
returned home and subsequently established the family home in
Chester township, Morrow county, where he purchased the old
Trowbridge estate, the same consisting of some one hundred
and twelve acres of land, on which is located a beautiful little
lake. Rogers Lake, as this body of water is called, was
improved and beautified by Mr. Rogers, who made it an
exceedingly popular summer resort, his kind, genial manner
winning for him many friends who loved to come here to camp
during the warm summer seasons. In his political allegiance
Mr. Rogers was aligned as a stalwart supporter of the cause
for which the Republican party stands sponsor. In the year 1894
he was honored by his fellow citizens with election to the
office of representative from the Marion and Morrow county
district in the State Legislature. He served in that capacity
during the session of 1894-5 and during his incumbency served
with all of efficiency on a number of important committees. He
ever manifested a deep and sincere interest in educational
matters in this section of the state and served most creditably
for a number of years as a member of the local school board. He
retained a deep and abiding interest in his old comrades in arms
and signified the same by membership in Crayton Orr Post,
No. 405, Grand Army of the Republic, of which he was commander
for a time. He devoted a large portion of his time and attention
to agricultural pursuits during the latter part of his life and
in connection with that occupation was a valued and appreciative
member of the Grange.
Mr. Rogers was twice married, his first union
having been to Miss Rachel Hayden Evans, the ceremony
having taken place in the year 1858. This union was prolific of
four children: Thomas and Lewis, both deceased;
and George W. and Olive. Mrs. Rogers was
summoned to eternal rest in 1870 and subsequently he married
Miss Eliza Bruce, who was born and reared in Morrow county,
Ohio, and who is a daughter of Joel Bruce, of Chester
township. There were no children born of this marriage. Mr.
and Mrs. Rogers continued to reside on the old homestead
farm in Chester township until his death, which occurred on the
31st of December, 1899. A peculiar thing connected with Mr.
Rogers’ demise is that he died in one century and was buried
in the next.
There is no perfection in human nature, yet Mr.
Rogers came as near to the most attractive ideal of such
perfection as any man who has gathered about him the affection
and admiration of his fellow men. He was free from a censorious
spirit and he never uttered an unkind criticism of any one. His
convictions were as solid as adamant and neither fear nor favor
could shake them from him, yet he tried to estimate human
conduct in the light of that charity which “hopeth all things,
which beareth all things, which is not easily provoked, which
thinketh no evil.” He was a man swayed by a conscience
enlightened by the truth and spirit of God. His ambition to be
right and do right was the paramount incentive and he counted
not the cost in the attainment of so noble an end. But his most
sterling and shining quality was his religious character. He was
a devoted member of the Methodist Episcopal church, in which he
was a member of the board of trustees at the time of his demise.
He was a careful student of the history of the great
denomination to which he belonged and tried as best he could to
glorify Christ through the love and devotion of his individual
life.
George W. Rogers, the only surviving child of
Hugh G. Rogers, was born in Morrow county, Ohio, on the 17th
of December, 1858. He was educated in the public schools of his
native place and was reared under the invigorating influence of
the old homestead farm, in the work and management of which he
early began to assist his father. On January 19, 1887, was
celebrated his marriage to Miss Blanche Bulyer, of
Fredericktown. She is a daughter of David and Amanda (Reep)
Bulyer, both natives of Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Rogers
became the parents of five children, namely: Hoy G., Dorothea
M., Dewey D., Pauline and Hugh. All the children have
been afforded excellent educational advantages. After being
graduated in the high school at Chesterville, Ohio, Hoy G.
was matriculated as a student in the Ohio Wesleyan College, at
Delaware, Ohio, in the theological department of which splendid
institution he was graduated as a member of the class of 1910.
He is an ordained minister in the Methodist Episcopal church and
his first charge was at Belleville
[sic].
He is now a resident of Butler, Ohio, where he has charge of the
Methodist Episcopal parish, and where he has just closed a
successful revival, in which were numbered sixty-five converts.
Dorothea M. is a member of the class of 1911 in the high
school at Chesterville, and Dewey and Pauline are
attending the graded school.
Mr. Rogers is engaged in farming on a splendid
estate of one hundred and fifty acres, the same being located on
a pleasant eminence overlooking the town of Chesterville. On one
occasion, on being asked what his business was, Mr. Rogers
replied: “My business is rearing and educating boys and girls.
My work is farming to pay expenses.” The Rogers family is
certainly well deserving of the high place they hold in popular
confidence and esteem in this community, where their efforts to
promote progress and improvement have ever been of the most
insistent order. In politics Mr. Rogers endorses the
cause of the Republican party and while he has never manifested
aught of ambition for the honors or emoluments of public office
of any description he is ever on the alert and enthusiastically
in sympathy with all projects advanced for the general welfare.
In a fraternal way he is affiliated with the Independent Order
of Odd Fellows and in religious matters is with his family a
valued and appreciative member of the Methodist Episcopal
church.
Source: History of Morrow County, Ohio by A. J. Baughman - Vol.
II - Chicago-New York: The Lewis Publishing Co. - 1911 – pp.
852-855
Contributed by a Generous Genealogist. |
|
THOMAS J. ROOD.
––The prosperity which this great American commonwealth enjoys
is due largely to the industry, thrift and progressive spirit of
its people. Among the foremost families of Morrow county and
its vicinity it is a matter of the greatest pleasure to record
the name of Rood. He whose name initiates this review
has gained recognition as one of the substantial agriculturists
and stockmen of the region of Fredericktown, Ohio. By his
labors, his earnest cooperation in all matters projected for the
general welfare and his sterling integrity and worth he has
succeeded in winning a high place for himself in the confidence
and esteem of his fellow men.
Thomas J. Rood was born on a farm near
Fredericktown, Ohio, on the 24th of August, 1876, and he is a
son of Madison and Sarah A. (Wertz) Rood, both of whom
were born and reared in the fine old Buckeye state of the
Union. Madison Rood was born on the 31st of July, 1819,
near Fredericktown, of parents whom were natives of
Pennsylvania. As a young man he settled on the land that now
comprises the old Rood homestead and associated with him
in the early pioneer days were his two brothers, Harrison
and Samuel, and a sister, Cynthia. At that time
this section of Ohio was practically all virgin forest but the
young men industriously set to work to make a clearing on which
to erect a somewhat crude log cabin. Forming a partnership,
they purchased a tract of one hundred acres of wild land, paying
for it with their wages of fifty cents per day. Sister
Cynthia kept house for her brothers while they worked
energetically early and late, away from home during the day time
and clearing off their land at night. In those early days there
were but few bridges across the swift, cold streams, and
frequently on their way to work the Rood Brothers were
obliged to remove their shoes and wade barefooted through the
icy water. The hardships they endured and the energy manifested
to redeem from the wilds a home for themselves were truly
surprising.
After a number of years passed together the brothers
dissolved partnership, Harrison taking the land which had
been newly purchased, the same being now owned by Joe Wilson,
while Madison and Samuel remained at the old
homestead. Later in life Harrison drove back into the
old neighborhood to visit his daughter, Mrs. Duane Swetland,
to whose home had come the first heir. On his return he was
stricken with paralysis and in passing the old home his faithful
horse turned into the familiar road, going up to the door with
his unconscious master in the buggy. He died almost immediately
and was buried from the old home then occupied by Madison
Rood and his family. Madison Rood married Miss
Sarah A. Wertz, a daughter of George and Amanda Wertz
and a native of Ohio, her birth having occurred on the 25th of
December, 1838. Mrs. Rood proved a most worthy and
efficient helpmeet to her honored husband; she was industrious
and practical, working out-of-doors as well as within and
frequently assisting her husband in burning log heaps until the
hour of midnight. Madison Rood was a very powerful man,
and as proof of his endurance it is said that he once chopped
into slabs in one day, seven cords of wood for a neighbor,
Iden V. Ball. Of the children born to Mr. and Mrs. Rood,
Noah came into the world on the 1st of May, 1861;
Amanda was born on the 22nd of June, 1869; and Thomas J.,
on the 24th of August, 1876. Noah married Miss Alice
N. Melick on the 22nd of November, 1882. She is a daughter
of Noah and Margaret Melick, and she and her husband are
the fond parents of four daughters: Virginia, Sarah, Forest
and Tinsel. Amanda became the wife of William
Shineberry on the 25th of September, 1885, and she was
called to eternal rest on the 22nd of February, 1908.
Thomas J. Rood was reared to the invigorating
influences of the old homestead farm, in the work and management
of which he early began to assist his father. He received his
preliminary educational training in the neighboring country
schools and after attaining to years of maturity began to work
the old home farm on his own responsibility. He was married, on
the 12th of January; 1895, to Miss Lecta G. Pipes, the
only daughter of Morgan and Ella Pipes. Mrs. Thomas
J. Rood attended school in this vicinity and one of her old
instructors was Uteridge Cole, now a practicing physician
at Columbus, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Pipes have no children
of their own except Mrs. T. J. Rood, but they have one
foster son, Ray Horn, whom they took in infancy and
raised to manhood.
The industry of Madison Rood and his wife was
rewarded with a fine property. From time to time they added to
their original estate until eventually they owned some six
hundred and seventy-eight acres of fine farming and stock land.
When the sons married they settled down on the old homestead,
Noah building a fine residence for himself and Thomas J.
occuying [sic] a part of his father’s large house. With the
passage of time failing health necessitated the parents giving
up the farm duties and, consigning the management of the estate
to the sons, they moved to Sparta. They resided in that place
for a period of eight years, during which time their children
supplied them with every possible comfort and relieved them of
every care. Samuel and Cynthia lived with
Madison Rood and his wife at Sparta until their respective
deaths and Madison himself died there on the 10th of
February, 1908. Mrs. Rood survived her honored and
cherished husband for about one year, her demise having occurred
at the old homestead, whither she had gone after the death of
her life companion, on the 22nd February, 1909. By reason of
their intense energy and unflinching courage they made of
success not an accident but a logical result and they were
everywhere honored and respected by their fellow citizens.
The sons industriously taking up the lines of work laid down
by their parents, their fine buildings and well tilled fields
give ample proof of their practical business ability and energy
as up-to-date farmers. Thomas J. Rood’s farm comprises
three hundred and twenty-five acres of splendid land upon which
he recently erected a new barn, fifty-two by seventy feet in
lateral dimensions. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J Rood have one
son and one daughter, Dell and Marie, both of whom
are enrolled as pupils in the Washington district school. In
his political convictions Mr. Rood was formerly a stanch
advocate of the principles and policies promulgated by the
Democratic party, but of recent years he has maintained an
independent attitude, preferring to give his support to men and
measures meeting with the full approval of his judgment rather
than follow along strictly partisan lines. He firmly believes
that the man who will do the best for his constituency is the
man worthy of his support and exercises his right of franchise
accordingly. In their religious affiliations Mr. and Mrs.
Rood attend the Hedding Chapel Methodist Episcopal church,
to whose charities they are most liberal contributors and of
which Mrs. Rood is a devout member. Throughout the
entire community in which they reside the Rood family are
accorded the unqualified confidence and esteem of their fellow
citizens and it may be said truly that the list of their friends
is coincident with that of their acquaintances.
Source: History of Morrow County, Ohio by A. J. Baughman - Vol.
II - Chicago-New York: The Lewis Publishing Co. - 1911 – pp.
622-624
Contributed by a Generous Genealogist. |
|
ANDREW M. ROSE.
––The history of Andrew M. Rose shows how potent an element is
persistent purpose in the active affairs of life. Dependent
upon his own resources at an early age, he went into debt for
land in Lincoln township, Morrow county, where he applied
himself vigorously to the work at hand and where he steadily
worked his way upward. Being imbued with a laudable ambition to
attain something better than ordinary success he gradually
advanced in those walks of life demanding business ability and
fidelity to duty and to-day commands the respect and esteem of
all with whom he has come in contact.
Mr. Rose is a native of Cass township, Richland
county, Ohio, where his birth occurred on the 23d of February,
1839. His parents, Thomas T. and Elizabeth A. (Armstrong)
Rose, were born in Sussex county, New Jersey, and Erie
county, Ohio, respectively. The father was born on the 13th of
July, 1814, and was a son of Aaron Rose, whose birth
occurred in New Jersey on the 5th of October, 1782. Aaron
Rose came to Richland county, Ohio, with his family in 1828,
and he was identified with agricultural interests in that
section during the remainder of his life, his death having
occurred on the 27th of September, 1849. He was the father of
the following named children: Frederick, Thomas T., William,
Andrew, May A., Emily, Margaret, Martha and Isabelle,
the father of the subject of this review being the second in
order of birth. Aaron Rose was a devout member of the
Methodist Episcopal church and he was an active participant in
the public affairs of Richland county during his lifetime.
Thomas T. Rose was afforded good educational advantages in
his youth and as he reached man’s estate he turned his attention
to the ministry, becoming a preacher in the United Brethren
church and traveling in connecton [sic]
with
his calling for some ten years. He married Miss Elizabeth A.
Armstrong on the 12th of July, 1837, and they became the
parents of eight children: Andrew M., Catharine, Mina, Eliza,
Seaberry Ford, Alice E., Emma and Charles H.
Catharine and Eliza are deceased and Mina is
the widow of Judson Benton, of Shiloh, Ohio. Mr. Rose
was summoned to eternal rest on the 8th of October, 1864, and
his cherished and devoted wife, who was born on the 1st of
March, 1818, survived him for fully two-score years, her death
having occurred on the 3d of August, 1905, at the venerable age
of eighty-seven years.
Andrew M. Rose, the immediate subject of this
review, was sixteen years of age at the when his father was
appointed to the United Brethren church at Cardington, where the
family resided for a period of five years. He had been educated
in the public schools of Richland county and after his marriage,
in 1859, he worked by the day for a time and eventually went
into debt for land in Lincoln township, where he continued to be
engaged in diversified agriculture until 1903, in which year he
retired from active business affairs and removed to Cardington,
where he is now living in the enjoyment of former years of
earnest toil and endeavor. With the passage of time Mr. Rose
became a most successful farmer and after paying for his land he
raised the same to a high state of cultivation and introduced
the best of improvements. At the time of the Civil war he was
an ardent Union man and on the 24th of October, 1863, he
enlisted as a member of Company F, Eighty-first Ohio Volunteer
Infantry. He saw much active service in the Sixteenth Army
Corps in the Army of the Tennessee, participating in many of the
important conflicts marking the progress of the war, and after
the fall of Atlanta he was transferred to the Fifteenth Corps,
accompanying General Sherman on his ever memorable march
to the sea. He was never wounded while in service and at the
close of war received his honorable discharge. He retains a
deep and abiding interest in his old comrades in arms and
signifies the same by membership in James St. John Post,
No. 82, Grand Army of the Republic. He is the recipient of a
pension of fifteen dollars a month as a reward for his services
to the country in the time of her direst need.
In politics Mr. Rose accords a loyal allegiance to
the cause of the Republican party, and although he was never
anxious for political preferment he gave most effficent [sic]
service as clerk of Lincoln township for a period of twenty-five
years, acquitting himself most creditably in the demands of that
office. In a fraternal way he is affiliated with Bennington
Lodge, No. 433, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, at Fulton,
Ohio, and in the same is past grand. He and his wife are most
worthy citizens and their home is a recognized center of refined
and generous hospitality.
On April 6, 1859, Mr. Rose was united in marriage to
Miss Catharine Click, who was born in Franklin county,
Ohio, on the 13th of January, 1840, and who is a daughter of
Andrew and Sarah (Alspauch) Click, who established their
home in Lincoln township, this county, when Catharine was
a child of four years of age. She was educated in the public
schools of this county and is a woman of most gracious
personality, being deeply beloved by all who have come within
the sphere of her gentle influence. Mr. and Mrs. Rose
became the parents of two children, concerning whom the
following brief data are here incorporated: Ada A., born
on the 11th of January, 1860, is the wife of James R. Sage,
who is engaged in agricultural pursuits in Lincoln township; and
Judson H., born on the 25th of March, 1863, resides on
his father’s farm in Lincoln township. He married Miss Sarah
J. Ocher and they have one son, Avon M., whose birth
occurred on the 3d of November, 1897. The grandson is attending
school at Fulton, Ohio.
In every sense of the word Mr. Rose and his
estimable wife are representative citizens whose loyalty and
public spirit have been of the most insistent order. He is a
man of extensive information and broad human sympathy and no one
in the community holds a higher place in popular confidence and
esteem.
Source: History of Morrow County, Ohio by A. J. Baughman - Vol.
II - Chicago-New York: The Lewis Publishing Co. - 1911 – pp.
661-663
Contributed by a Generous Genealogist. |
|
CHARLES A. RUHLEN, D. D. S.,
has been engaged in the work of dental surgery at Mount Gilead,
Morrow county, Ohio, since 1900, and in the field of his chosen
profession he is a skilled and scientific worker. He is one of
the most prominent Masons and Pythian Knights in this section of
the Buckeye state and in the Republican party is chairman of the
county executive committee in 1911. Dr. Charles A. Ruhlen
was born in Union county, Ohio, on the 2nd of August, 1877, and
is a son of Samuel H. and Susan (Dort) Ruhlen, both of
whom are living in retirement on their splendid farm in Madison
county, this state. The father was a gallant soldier in the
Civil war, having served for four years in that sanguinary
struggle––four months in the Ohio volunteer infantry and the
remainder of the time in the Ohio cavalry. After the close of
the war he engaged in agricultural pursuits in Madison county,
Ohio, and there is recognized as a most successful and
public-spirited citizen.
In the public schools of his native place Dr. Ruhlen
received his early educational discipline, which he later
supplemented with a course in the New California High School, in
which he was graduated in 1895. Thereafter he worked on his
father’s farm for some two years, at the expiration of which, in
1897, he was matriculated in the Ohio Medical University, at
Columbus, Ohio, that institution being now a part of the
Sterling, Ohio, Medical College, in the dental department of
which he was graduated as a member of the class of 1900, with
the degree of Doctor of Dental Surgery. Immediately after his
graduation, in the spring of 1900, he located at Mount Gilead,
where he has built up a large and lucrative patronage and gained
distinctive prestige as one of the leading dentists in Morrow
county.
On the 24th of December, 1902, was celebrated the marriage
of Dr. Ruhlen to Miss Ethel Iden, of Caledonia,
Ohio. To this union have been born two children––Ruth,
whose birth occurred on the 23rd of August, 1903; and Roscoe,
born September 17, 1910. Dr. and Mrs. Ruhlen are devout
members of the Methodist Episcopal church, in which he is one of
the officers and a teacher in the Sunday school. Both are
popular factors in the best social circles of Mount Gilead and
their attractive home is recognized as a center of refinement
and most gracious hospitality.
Fraternally Dr. Ruhlen is affiliated with Charles
Hull Lodge, No. 195, Knights of Pythias, in which he is past
chancellor and past representative in the Grand Lodge of the
state. He is also connected with Mount Gilead Lodge, No. 206,
Free and Accepted Masons; Gilead Chapter, No. 59, Royal Arch
Masons; Marion Council, No. 22, Royal and Select Masters; and
Marion Commandery, No. 36, Knights Templars. He and his wife
are valued and appreciative members of the adjunct Masonic
organization, the Order of the Eastern Star. In the Modern
Woodmen of America Dr. Ruhlen holds membership in Camp
No. 3575, and in the sons of Veterans he is a member of
Lemuel H. Breese Camp No. 64. Politically he has ever been
aligned as a stanch supporter of the principles and policies for
which the Republican party stands sponsor and at the present
time he is chairman of the county executive committee. As a
citizen Dr. Ruhlen has ever adhered strictly to the
highest principles of honesty and integrity and in all measures
advanced for the general welfare he has taken a prominent part.
He is a man of high ideals and fair and honorable business
methods and no citizen in the town commands a higher degree of
popular confidence and esteem than does he.
Source: History of Morrow County, Ohio by A. J. Baughman - Vol.
II - Chicago-New York: The Lewis Publishing Co. - 1911 – pp.
604-605
Contributed by a Generous Genealogist. |
|
JACOB RULE.
––Among the influential and highly honored agriculturists of
Perry township, Morrow county, Ohio, Jacob Rule holds
distinctive prestige as a man of worth and impregnable
integrity. He is the owner of a splendid farm of one
hundred and sixty acres of most arable land in Perry township
and he also has a tract of eighty acres of land in Congress
township, all of which is in a high state of cultivation.
A native son of Perry township, Mr.
Rule has passed practically his entire life thus far within
its bounds, and the fact that he has always commanded the high
regard of his fellow citizens who have known him from earliest
youth is sufficient voucher for his estimable character.
Mr. Rule was born on the 24th of November, 1842, and he is a
son of George and Mary (Rule) Rule, both of whom are
deceased. Both parents were natives of the state of
Pennsylvania, whence they immigrated to Morrow county, Ohio, at
an early day, location having been made on a farm, where they
passed the residue of their lives. They became the parents
of eight children, three of whom are living in 1911, namely:
Jacob, the immediate subject of this review; Margaret,
who is the wife of
John Gaunt, and who maintains her home in Marshall county,
Indiana, and George, a business man of Goshen, Indiana.
George Rule, the father, was eminently successful as a
pioneer farmer in Ohio, and he was summoned to the great beyond
about the year 1900.
Jacob Rule, of this review, was
reared to the strenuous influences of the home farm, in
connection with the work of which he waxed strong both mentally
and physically. He remained an inmate of the parental home
until he had attained to the age of twenty-one years, at which
time he turned his attention to agricultural pursuits on his own
account. He is now the owner of a farm of one hundred and
sixty acres in Perry township and the thrifty, prosperous
condition of his place well indicates his ability as a
practical, conscientious farmer. He has long been
identified with diversified agriculture and the raising of
high-grade stock and in addition to his estate in Perry township
he has a fine farm of eighty acres in Congress township.
He is a man of fair and honorable business methods and he stands
four-square to every wind that blows.
In 1865 was celebrated the marriage of
Mr. Rule to
Miss Catherine Ruhl Fall, who was born and reared in
Morrow county, Ohio, and who is a daughter of H. H. Fall,
who has long engaged in agricultural pursuits in Morrow county.
To Mr. and Mrs. Rule have been born four children,
concerning whom the following brief record is here entered:
Eva is the wife of Riley Brewer and they reside in
Morrow county; Hernie married George W. Dawson, of
Mount Gilead; Dellie is the wife of Bert Zollman,
of Mount Gilead; and Heilman H. remains at home, where he
assists his father in the work and management of the farm.
Mrs. Rule was called to the life eternal on the 15th of
January, 1911, and her death was uniformly mourned by a wide
circle of relatives and friends. She was a woman of high
ideals and sweet personality and was deeply beloved by all who
knew her.
In his religious faith Mr. Rule
is a devout member of the Lutheran church, to whose charities
and good works he has ever been a most liberal contributor, and
in a fraternal way he is connected with various organizations of
a local nature. Politically he endorses the cause of the
Democratic party and in connection with public affairs he has
given most efficient service as a member of the township board
of supervisors and as a school director. His genial
kindliness and unfailing courtesy have won him a secure place in
the hearts of his fellow citizens and no one commands a greater
degree of popular confidence and esteem than does he.
Source: History of Morrow County, Ohio by A. J. Baughman -
Vol. II - Chicago-New York: The Lewis Publishing Co. - 1911 –
pp.
802-804
Contributed by a Generous Genealogist. |
|
CHARLES RUTHARDT.
—Many of Ohio's most thriving agriculturists came from lands far
across the sea, poor in purse but possessing an unlimited stock
of energy and perseverance, noteworthy among the number being
Charles Ruthardt, a well-known farmer of North
Bloomfield township, who by industry and good management has met
with excellent success in his labors, winning a fair share of
this world's goods. He was born January 22, 1849, in Baden,
Germany, where his parents, Charles and Phoebe
(Camoror) Ruthardt, were born, lived and died.
Educated in the public schools of the Fatherland,
Charles Ruthardt was confirmed in the Reformed
Lutheran church at the age of fourteen years, and afterwards
served an apprenticeship at the barber's trade. Leaving home in
1869, he came to the United States, hoping in this newer land to
better his financial condition. Coming directly to Ohio, he
located in Morrow county with a very limited amount of money in
his pocket, and first found employment on a farm, working for
monthly wages. Subsequently securing a position in the railroad
shops, he remained in Galion for nearly a quarter of a century,
in the meantime saving up money. In 1889 Mr. Ruthardt
invested his surplus earnings in land, buying seventy-six acres
in North Bloomfield township where he has since been profitably
employed in general farming and stock raising, his farm being
under a good state of culture and well improved and wisely
managed. During his long residence in this locality he has
acquired an enviable reputation as an honest, straightforward
business man, and has won the respect of the community. He is a
Democrat in politics, but not an office seeker.
Mr. Ruthardt married, January 20, 1876,
Elizabeth Sargel, who died August 13, 1905, leaving two
children, namely: Laura, wife of Calvin Trach, and
Emma, wife of Rolland Hershner.
Source: History of Morrow County, Ohio by A. J. Baughman - Vol.
II - Chicago-New York: The Lewis Publishing Co. - 1911 – pp.
566-567 |