NOBLE TOWNSHIP
was organized in 1819. At that date
it became a township of Morgan County, and so continued until
the formation of Noble County. May 1, 1851, the county
commissioners changed the boundaries of the township, making
them as follows:
"Commencing at the southeast corner of section 34, in
township number 7, of range 9; thence north to the northeast
corner of section 3, in said township number 7, range 9; thence
west along the township line to the northwest corner of section
1, in township number 7, of range 10; thence south along section
lines to the southwest corner of section 36, in said
township number 7, range 10; thence east long the township line
to the place of beginning; containing thirty sections."
At an election for township officers which was held in
Noble Township, Morgan County, on Apr. 3, 1820, forty-three
votes were polled. Andrew Millslagle Asa
Burlingame and Joseph Franklin, acted as judges of
election; and Josiah Burlingame and John Fogle,
clerks. For justice of the peace, Peter Fogle had
thirty-five votes and William Ralph eight. The
names of the voters were Charles McKenny, James McKee, Elijah
Day, Samuel Noble, James Noble, John Davis, Alexander McKee
(still living), George Dye, David Devolld, William Hamilton,
Isaac Warpingba, Samuel Halley, John McKee, Jonas Ball, Linus
Moore, Lambert Newton, Daniel Ball, John Noble, Elly Moore, John
Clowser, Michael Fogle, Benjamin Thorla, Benjamin Severance,
Jacob Fogle, Robert Hellyer, Charles Posten, Ephraim Bates, John
McGarry, John Ralph, Solomon Brown, Joseph Lippitt, Sylvester
Westcott, Isaac Covalt, John Fogle, Josiah Burlingame, Joseph
Franklin, Andrew Millslagle, Asa Burlingame, Peter Fogle,
Armstrong Johnston, Ezekiel Bates, William Ralph and
James Dye.
At the general election held on
Oct. 10, 1820, Asa Burlingame, Andrew Millslagle and
Peter Fogle acted as judges of election; and
Pg. 484 -
Josiah Burlingame and Sylvester Westcott, as
clerks. Only twenty votes were cast. For governor,
Ethan A. Brown had eighteen votes; Robert Means,
two. For representative to the legislature, Alexander
McConnel two; William M. Dawes, fifteen; Amzi
Stanley three. For representative in Congress,
David Chambers, twenty. For county commissioner,
David Fulton, fifteen; Andrew Wharton, five.
What can be said of the political enthusiasm of that day, when an
election for aj ustice of the peace called out more than twice
as many voters as an election for State officers?
From the tax-list of Noble Township for the year 1822,
made out by Josiah Burlingame, lister, and Lambert
Newton, appraiser, it appears that the township contained
ninety-six property holders, and ninety-nine horses and one
hundred and four neat cattle were listed for taxation.
Upon this list appear the following names in addition to those
upon the poll-book for 1820:
Richard Albury, Amos Bates, Benjamin Barry, James
Barry, Edward Beck, Andrew Brawton, Dexter Brown, Benjamin Cox,
Jarret Cox, Ezekiel Cole, Richard Chillcott, Daniel Devolld,
John Devolld, Samuel Dennis, Thomas Davis, Walter Downey, David
Frakes, Robert Frakes, George Frakes, Lemuel Fowler, Royal
Fowler (still living), Royal Fowler (still living),
Jacob Fogle, Calvin Franklin, John Griswold, John
George, Samuel Gookins, George Hellyer, Joshua Holster, John
Jones, Jeremiah McMahan, John Mead, Martha McKee, John Moore,
David McGarry, Andrew, Millslagle, Lambert Newton, Joseph Posten,
Charles Parsons, Jane Ralph, William Rees, Joseph Reed, John
Reed, Sr., James Reed, William Smith, Jr., William Seevers,
John Seevers, Benjamin Severance, Jr., William P. Willey and
Enos Wheeler.
Along the West Fork of Duck Creek
was an Indian trail which had evidently been much traveled by
the red hunters prior to the settlement of the valley by white
people. The stream seems to have been a favorite
resort for the elk, deer and buffalo, and was doubtless an
attractive hunting-ground for the Indians. The buffalo
paths, in many places deeply worn into the earth, were
distinguishable long after the white settlers came into the
valley. For some years prior to the War of 1812, the
Indians devoted themselves to the destruction of the larger wild
animals of the forest, apparently for the sole purpose of
thwarting the white hunters, as they left the carcasses to rot
upon the ground. The Duck Creek Valley was frequented by
the Indian hunters almost up to the time of the war, but never
after its close. Mr. John Noble, who came to his
present farm in 1812, states that an Indian camp, evidently
erected only a few years previous, was then standing on the bank
of the creek, a short distance above his present residence.
Buffalo Township, Guernsey County, was organized in
1810, and then
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included all the northwest part of the present County of Noble,
extending south to the old line of Washington County. In
1816 Olive Township was formed from part of Buffalo. We
have no description of its boundaries, but it probably included
the greater part, if not all, of Noble. In 1819 Noble
Township, Morgan County, included township 7 of range 9 of the
original survey.
Old residents recall an election that was held at the
house of the Jordans, in the vicinity of where Hiramsburg
now is, in 1816. This being the first election, the event
was celebrated in a manner characteristic of the pioneer days.
Some enterprising citizens succeeded in getting a barrel of
cider from some point on the Muskingum River, and after
"doctoring" it to their satisfaction with stronger liquors, put
it on tap on the day of election. Cider being an article
which the settlers of Duck Creek seldom had an opportunity of
tasting, all partook freely, and as a consequence, nearly every
man there became gloriously inebriated before the day was over.
The more sober ones placed their intoxicated neighbors upon
their horses, and started them toward home, some of them
sitting, or rather lying, upon their horses, as inert, and
apparently as lifeless as bags of meal.
The first entry of land on the West Fork of Duck Creek
was made in 1806 by a man named Bain, near where Belle Valley
now is. Richard Fletcher made an entry of land in
the same year. The McKees came in 1811, and the
Nobles in 1812.
John Noble
John Noble, a
Pennsylvanian by birth, settled in 1812 on the farm which his
son John now occupies. A family sketch will be
found elsewhere in this chapter.
In the early years, the settlers found it very
difficult to keep stock of any kind. Aside from the danger
that it might be destroyed by wolves or bears, there were other
obstacles to encounter. Cattle died of murrain in large
numbers. On the bottoms along the creek cattle were
permitted to run at large, getting their own living at all
seasons. Many wintered on the bunch grass found along the
creek, without ever being fed at all. Hogs were also
allowed to pick up their living as best they could in the woods.
John Noble, Sr., brought a herd of twenty-five young hogs
to his farm when he settled here, but the first season the bears
made such havoc among them that but three were left. The
old hogs were usually strong enough to defend themselves from
their enemies, but young swine were never safe.
The climate was by no means healthy. A variety of
chills, known as the "cold plague" attacked many, and those
suffering from this disease found it impossible to get warm.
Many died. Bleeding was then considered the sovereign
remedy for nearly all the ills that flesh is heir to, and that
process doubtless hastened the exit of many invalids from the
world. Richard Fletcher was an early settler on the
creek, on land now owned by James Carr. His
Page 486 -
wife, Jemima, was an Enochs, a daughter of the
pioneer settler of that name.
Charles
McCune
and John Reed were both Irishmen and early settlers.
Reed was a very worthy citizen. He came in 1813.
His sons, Joseph, John and James, lived here and
reared families.
Joseph
Lippitt
was one of the few pioneer settlers that had money. He was
considered a rich man in his day. He bought and settled
upon a whole section of land north of where Belle Valley station
now is. He was from New England, and had the trading
faculty which is popularly supposed to be inherent in all
Yankees. In early days he kept a few goods at his house,
and would give a yard of muslin for a day's work. His
father had an interest in a cotton-mill in one of the Eastern
States. Mrs. Lippitt was a woman of good judgment
and shrewdness, and was an excellent manager. Lippitt
died here, and after his death the farm was sold, and the family
became scattered. The Lippitt family were among the
very earliest permanent settlers in the township, and among the
earliest on Duck Creek.
Solomon
Brown, a
blacksmith, was among the early settlers. For a number of
years he made salt on the creek, on a part of the John Noble
farm. The well was 130 feet deep. A deer-lick
near the spot had been much frequented before the country was
settled.
Lambert
Newton
was a Yankee who lived where his son Lambert now resides.
Joab, another son, lives on part of the old Lippitt
farm.
There were many
eccentric and peculiar characters among the early residents.
Such an one was an Irishman named Crawford. One day
he came to John Noble, who, then as since, was an
excellent, thrifty, orderly farmer, and wished to obtain some
seed-corn. Mr. Noble sent him to his corn-crib, and
told him to help himself to any that he liked, except some
choice speckled corn, which Mr. Noble had placed by
itself for his own use. Later, it was discovered that the
speckled corn had all been removed by Crawford, who had piled
some ears of the common variety in its place, and that the
Hibernian was retailing among the neighbors what he called "a
very foine arti-kel of calico cor-rn."
Another Irishman came to Mr. Noble to borrow a
scythe in the days when those instruments were scarce and
valuable. Not wishing to lend, Mr. Noble told him
he hadn't any. The Irishman's shrewdness then became
apparent. "But," said he, "didn't I see it hanging up?"
"Well, go and take it then, but be careful of it," returned
Mr. Noble. "And where will I find it, sor?" asked the
borrower.
Andrew
Brawton was the first settler where Hoskinsville now is. He and
two other New Englanders made the first clearing there at an
early date.
Benjamin Thorla, from England, settled where Belle Valley now is.
Some of the early
elections were held at the house
Page 487 -
of Jarret Cox. Later they were held
at his brother Benjamin's.
John Clowser a
Virginian, settled where his son Benjamin now lives.
John and Thomas Davis, Virginians, settled in the north part of the
township. Their descendants are still numerous here.
Lemuel Fowler, a
New Englander, was among the early settlers. His son,
Royal Fowler, still living (1886), is among the oldest
residents of the township.
John McKee was
commissioned justice of the peace May 1, 1817, two years prior
to the organization of Noble Township and Morgan County.
His authority was derived from Guernsey County. His
commission, record of which still exists in Morgan County,
expired May 1, 1820. Peter Fogle, the first
justice chosen in Noble Township, was commissioned April 24,
1820.
Benjamin Severance,
a Yankee, and his sons, Benjamin and Rodney, were
early settlers near Hiramsburg, Rodney was for some years
engaged in making of salt on the Muskingum River.
The Fogles were a
numerous and respectable family. They were natives of
Virginia, but came here from Washington County, Pa. There
were three brothers, Jacob, Michael and Peter, who
settled in the same neighborhood - Jacob and Michael
came first, and a year or two later Peter settled on the
farm where he lived and died. He came about 1818. He
was the first justice of the peace in the township, and held the
office about twenty years. He was also an active member of
the Methodist Episcopal church. He died in 1875, at the
age of eighty-nine years. The Fogle brothers were
all married before they came to Ohio. Jacob lived
and died in Noble Township. His son Jacob still
lives here. He and Mrs. Mary Merry Caldwell, are
the only children of Jacob Fogle now living in the
county. Michael moved from Noble Township to
Enoch and died there. He left no family.
Peter Fogle was twice married. His first wife was
Elizabeth Salliday, and their children were Mary,
Eliza, Sarah and Margaret, all living, the oldest two in
this county. For his second wife he married Phebe
Stevens. Their children were Rachael (Rucker),
who lives on part of the homestead; John, Illinois;
Lucretia, Kansas; Anna, dead; Annary, Vinton
County, Ohio; James, Colorado; George, Kentucky
and Peter, Caldwell. Peter lived on a farm
until 1879, and then engaged in hotel-keeping in Caldwell.
Since 1880 he has been in the business of undertaker and
furniture dealer in Caldwell, owning a large and fine store.
He has a German Bible, printed in 1590, which has been in the
Fogle family nearly three hundred years.
Joseph,
Calvin
and Nathan Franklin were early settlers and good men.
Calvin had an early mill, run by horse-power.
Joseph was a wagon-maker. He built and run a mill near
Hiramsburg station.
Page 488 -
George, Robert and Thomas Hellyer
were
early settlers. George was a tailor. The
others were stonemasons. Robert was the first
auditor of Noble County.
Joseph,
Zacharian
and Wesley Cooper lived in the north part of the township
and operated a distillery. Samuel Thompson, a
tanner and Methodist preacher, was a somewhat eccentric
character, who lived in the same neighborhood. Richard
Thorla was another early distiller.
Among other interesting
memorabilia in the possession of
George Burlingame,
of Belle Valley, is a tax receipt signed by treasurer of Morgan
County. It is dated Sept. 19, 1835, and shows that
Josiah Burlingame's tax on 166 acres of land was one dollar,
ninety-six cents and nine mills, and his tax on personal
property, on dollar, eighty-four cents and eight mills.
The valuation of the land was then $179. It is the present
Chris. McKee farm, one of the best in the valley.
In 1816 Josiah Burlingame and family were living
on the present farm of Chris McKee. The bears and
panthers were still frequently found in the valley. On one
occasion, Mrs. Burlingame was away from home, and a
neighbor by the name of Edmond Burton was staying with
Mr. Burlingame. In the night, they heard loud noises
proceeding from a pig-pen near the house. Surmising the
cause, Burlingame sized a large hand-spike and
Burton an axe, the only one about the house, and proceeded
to investigate. They found a large bear attempting to
devour one of the pigs. Mr. Burlingame use his
weapon with such good effect upon the bear that he finally
caused him to desist; but Burton was so alarmed by the
fierce actions of the bear, that he did not attack him, and he
was allowed to make his escape.
Andrew
Millslagle
was an early settler, and served in the War of 1812.
After the war closed,
farms were taken up and occupied quite rapidly, although times
were very hard for poor people. There was a great scarcity
of money, and those who were compelled to hire it were obliged
to pay exorbitant interest. But settlers came pouring in
from Pennsylvania, Virginia and Belmont County, so that it was
not long before all the land was taken up, and the work of
clearing and improving it was inaugurated. There has been
steady and constant progress ever since. The township now
contains many fine farms, good residences and a thrifty
population.
In the western part of the township is one tier of
sections running from north to south which belonged to
Brookfield Township, before the erection of Noble County.
Among the early settlers in this part of the township was
Hugh Nickerson, father of Sparrow Nickerson, who
settled on the farm now occupied by the latter, in 1817, coming
form Massachusetts. He was a prominent man, and served
eighteen consecutive years as justice of the peace in
Brookfield.
Page 489 -
Rev. Sparrow Nickerson says that when he came to
the township with his father, John Noble was the nearest
settler east of him. The Westcotts, Scotts and
Browns were the nearest neighbors. Mr. Nickerson
used to go, when a boy, to Benjamin Bay's mill, on Will's
Creek, eight miles distant, passing only three houses on the
way.
In the spring of the same year Christopher Westcott,
from Rhode Island, settled on the farm now occupied by his son,
Lewis C. Westcott. Dexter Brown, also from Rhode
Island, settled in 1817. He was one of the commissioners
of Morgan County, 1833. His son Andrew now owns the
farm. Erastus Hoskins, after whom
Hoskinsville was named, came from Connecticut in 1818. He
was an influential citizen and in the early years was colonel of
a regiment of the Morgan militia. He represented
his county in the legislature two terms, 1831-2 and 1832-3.
"An old log barn standing on Alexander McKee's
farm, one mile north of Caldwell, was erected in 1811, by
Daniel Bates and George Dye. Many of the
hands who helped to raise it came up from the Marietta
settlement, thirty miles distant. After the barn was
completed, Bates and Dye both enlisted and served
through the War of 1812-14. Dye was badly wounded
in an engagement with the British and the Indians."
NOTE: See More on Rev. Sparrow Nickerson,
CLICK HERE
Samuel Noble was
born in Lycoming County, Pa. He came to Ohio in 1805, and
afterward to the farm where he passed the remainder of his life.
He died in 1875 at the age of seventy-eight years. He was
an honest man and led a useful life.
Miss Mary F. Brown,
a native of Rhode Island, taught the first school near
Hoskinsville in 1820, where she settled with a brother and
a sister in 1818. She died in 1883 in the ninety-seventh
year of her age. She taught school a number of years and
was a member of the Methodist Episcopal church for sixty-four
years.
According to the
recollection of an old resident, the first school in the
vicinity of Caldwell was taught by Walter Stevens on the
McKee place. A space between a couple of corncribs
served as the school-room in fair, warm weather; but when the
open air became unsuitable, the school adjourned to the house.
Josiah
Burlingame was an early settler and a prominent citizen, a surveyor by
profession. He came to Ohio from Rhode Island, and in 1814
located in this township. In 1815 he married Sarah
Noble, a sister of the venerable John Noble. He
was county commissioner of Morgan County from 1827 to 1832.
He reared a large family, all of whom are now widely scattered.
A re-union of the Burlingame family at Belle Valley, in
the fall of 1886, was an interesting occasion.
George Burlingame,
one of a family of nine brothers, all living but one (Samuel),
was born Jan. 21, 1829. In 1860 he married Miss E. J.
Coffee of this county. They have one child, Alta,
now Mrs. Frank L. Green, of Belle Valley. Mr.
Burlingame
Page 490 -
was formerly a Whig, and is now a Democrat. He has served
as county surveyor, and was township assessor six terms.
He has been engaged in the mercantile business at Belle Valley
since 1884.
Sylvester
Westcott
is among the oldest residents of the township. He was born
in Providence, R. I., in 1815, and has resided in Noble Township
since 1817. He married Mary A. Wheeler in 1840, and
is the father of three daughters. He has a vivid
recollection of the early days, and of the difficulties under
which the early settlers labored.
Rev. David Gorby was born in Ohio County, W. Va., in 1810, and has resided in
Noble County since his parents settled here in 1824. His
maternal grandfather took part in the Revolutionary War, and
afterward assisted in suppressing the "whisky insurrection"
In Pennsylvania. Mr. Gorby is a farmer,
mill-wright, and minister of the Free Methodist church. He
has recently been engaged in developing a fine mine of carbonate
iron ore, which, with coal, renders his land valuable. He
married, first, Mary Mason, and second, Eliza N.
Hunter.
Robert R. Danford,
a representative of one of the early and prminent families of
Noble County, was born in this county in June, 1828. In
1850 he married Mary A. Grove, of his county. Their
children are Ellis J., Eliza A. and Arizona R.,
living, and Osceola C. deceased. Mr. Danford
is a Republican. Both he and his
wife are members of the Methodist Episcopal church. He
served as justice of the peace of Morgan County six years, and,
although living in a Democratic township, was chosen township
assessor by seventy-five majority. Mr. Danford was
in the late war as first lieutenant of Company F, Eighteenth
Ohio Volunteer Infantry, resigning in 1862, on account of
rheumatism. In 1864 he was in the One Hundred and
Sixty-first Ohio Volunteer Infantry, in the one hundred days'
service.
David D. Jennings,
who for fifty years was a prominent citizen of this township,
was a pioneer on section 31, Center Township. He was
originally from western Pennsylvania, where he married Miss
Ruth Wright. He was a successful farmer and accumulated a
fine competency, under rather adverse circumstances. It is
related of him that the first winter after his arrival in Center
he was obliged to thresh grain with a flail for one-half the
straw, in order to provide food for his only cow. He was
one of the pioneers of the Methodist church of the county.
For many years the "meetings" were held at his house, and all
religious projects had in him a firm friend and patron. He
died Apr. 22, 1879, aged eighty-three years. He reared a
family of ten children - four boys and six girls.
John McCleary was
born in 1839, in this county, as now constituted. His
father was a drummer boy in the War of 1812, and his grandfather
was killed in the same war. John McCleary enlisted
September, 1861, in Company K, Thirtieth Ohio Volunteer
Page 491 -
Infantry, and was discharged in September, 1865. He
participated in the battles of Carnifex Ferry, Vicksburg,
Jackson, Mission Ridge, Chattanooga, and the engagements during
the "march to the sea."
William P. Willey,
one of the early settlers of what is now Noble Township, was
a native of Pennsylvania, and came to this county about 1870.
His first location was on a small tract of land which he bought
from his brother-in-law, George Dye. He was
identified with the township as a pioneer farmer, and was one of
the early and prominent members of the Protestant Methodist
Episcopal church and helped to build one of the first churches
of this society. He married Sarah Dye, and had a
family of thirteen children, eight of whom were born in
Pennsylvania.
William, one of the sons, was born in 1822; he
married in 1849 Miss Ruth, daughter of Daniel Belford;
they have had five children.
George Willey was
born in Pennsylvania, in 1804, and came with his parents to
Noble County about 1817. He was a carpenter by trade, and
several years after his immigration bought a mill near Belle
Valley, which he operated until 1848, when he removed to
Hoskinsville, and engaged in trade. He died in 1856.
In 1828 he married Miss Nancy Wescott. They had
seven children. Sylvester, one of the sons, was
born in 1835. In 1864 he enlisted in the Twenty-Second
Ohio Light Artillery and served until the close of the war.
He and his wife, nee Ellen Moore, are members of
the Protestant Episcopal church.
J. W. R. Newton,
a prominent farmer and a leading citizen, is the son of an early
settler. His father, a native of Maine, came to this
township in 1818. Mr. Newton was born in 1834.
In 1854 he married Miss Mary McKee, and is the father of
two sons and one daughter. His wife died in 1880; in 1885
he married Mrs. Elizabeth Sipe. Mr. Newton is a
Republican.
J. C. Campbell was born in Noble Township, in 1832, and is by occupation a
farmer and merchant. His father, a native of Ireland,
settled near Philadelphia, in the latter part of the last
century, removing thence to Ohio. He died in Noble
Township in 1847. On his mother's side Mr. Campbell
was married in 1860 to Martha Noble. HE has always
been a Democrat. For six years he served as postmaster at
Hoskinsville under the Republican administration.
Samuel
McFerren was born in Pennsylvania in 1776. In 1836 he settled in
Noble Township, where he died about 1866. He married a
Miss Needham, whose father, J. Needham settled
in Morgan County. Mr. Needham was the only survivor
of a family of several members. The rest were killed by
the Indians on their way from Pennsylvania to Ohio.
Richard C. McFerren
is of German and English descent. His father, a native of
Pennsylvania, settled in 1808, in Jefferson County, Ohio, where
Richard was born in 1821. In
Page 492 -
1835 he came to the vicinity of Hoskinsvile, where he has since
resided, engaged in farming. Mr. McFerren was
married in 1841 to Louisa Jennings, and is the father of
two sons and three daughters, all living and all married.
He is a Democrat in politics, and a member of the Methodist
church. He served as township treasurer fourteen years.
SHARON WICK'S NOTE:
Found Richard's death record: Date: 1907 - No. 3 on R. C.
McFerren died July 25, 1907, aged 86 yrs 3 mos 28 days.
Died in Noble Twp. Born in Noble Co. - Farmer - Cause of death:
Cancer, Resided in Noble Twp.
Also listed on No. 2 - Ina McFerren, died June 28, 1907 - Died
Hoskinsville - Born in Hoskinsville - Cause of death: Still born
- Resided Hoskinsville.
Also listed on No. 4 - J. T. McFerren died Apr. 28, 1904 aged 59
yrs 4 mos 20 days, died Hoskinsville, Born in Hoskinsville -
Farmer- Cause of death: Heart disease - Residence: Hoskinsville.
Harrison
Jones is of Irish and Welsh descent. His father, an
1812 soldier, was born in Pennsylvania. He was an early
settler in Muskingum County, Ohio, where the subject of this
notice was born in 1821. In 1840 Mr. Jones settled in Noble
Township, where he has since resided. He married Anna
McKee, a native of this township, in 1845. They have
had had four children, two of whom, Joseph and Margaret,
are still living, both married. Mr. Jones is a
Methodist and a Democrat. He maternal grandfather was a
soldier of the American Revolution.
Joseph W. Jones,
son of Harrison Jones, was born in Noble Township, Oct.
6, 1846, and has resided in this vicinity. He was educated
at Sharon College, and was a teacher for some years. He is
now engaged in the mercantile business at Hoskinsville.
Mr. Jones is a prominent Democrat. He
has served thirteen years as justice of the peace. In 1870
he married Tryphena R. Walters daughter of the late
John B. Walters, of this county. They have two
daughters living and one deceased.
Elijah Fogle, a
descendant of one of the old families of this county, was born
in Noble Township in 1842. In 1861 he entered the service
of his country in the Seventy-eighth Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
and was in the engagements at Fort Donelson and Pittsburg
Landing. In 1862 he was honorably discharged by reason of
poor health. In 1865 he married Maria Oliver of
Center Township: six children living, one deceased.
Peter J. Walters was born in Noble Township in 1838. His father was born in
Belmont County, and came to this township quite early. The
family consisted of nine children, six of whom are living.
In 1865 P. J. Walters married Miss Teresa A. Brown,
of this township. They have one child, a son. He is
a member of the Baptist church, and of the Republican party.
He enlisted in June, 1863, in Company I, First Ohio Heavy
Artillery, and served for two years, being honorably discharged
at Knoxville, Tenn.
L. W. Palmer was
born in Chester County, Pa., Oct. 14, 1835. His parents
were natives of the same county; came to Harrison County,
Ohio, in 1838, and to Noble County in 1839. The subject of
this notice has always followed farming. He was married to
Nancy Harkins in 1836, and has had seven children, all
living, except one- Lydia J. He is a Republican and
has held several township offices, although the township is
Democratic.
L. C. Westcott
was born in 1820, on the farm where he now resides. His
father was among the early settlers, coming from Rhode Island,
and settling here in 1816. L. C. Westcott
Page 493 -
married Cordelia F. Howland in 1844, and is the father of
five children, all living. He is a farmer and a
Republican.
W. F. Jordan is a
descendant of one of the pioneer families. Both his father
and his mother were born in this county. Mr. Jordan
was born in 1854. In 1877 he married Mary E. Glass,
who died in 1878. In 1881 he married Maggie L.
Archibald. They have had three children, two of whom
are living. Mr. Jordan is station agent and
telegraph operator at Belle Valley.
Thomas Racey is
of English and German descent. His father, Landon Racey,
was born in Frederick County, Va., and his mother, nee
Susannah Barnhouse, in Loudoun County, Va. They
were married in Harrison County, Ohio, and came to Noble County
in 1828, settling on Duck Creek. Landon Racey was a
farmer and school- teacher. He died in this township in
1855. Of his children six sons and two daughters are
living; George A., Arthur W., Thomas and Rosanna
(Cain) live in Noble County; Rachel (Engle),
in Morgan County; James F., in Missouri; Peter A.,
in Kansas; and Samuel, in Iowa. Thomas
Racey was born on the line of Jefferson and Harrison
Counties in 1826, and has resided in Noble County since 1828.
In early life he followed teaching. He is now engaged in
farming and the insurance business. He is a Democrat, and
a deacon in the Presbyterian church. He has served as
justice of the peace. He was married in 1847 to Matilda
A. Marquis, and is the father of seven children, four of
whom are living.
P. D. Jordan is a
descendant of one of the early families and is a son of
John Jordan, of Brookfield Township. Mr. Jordan
has resided at Ava since 1877 and is engaged in mercantile
business and farming. He was married in 1867 to Sarah
A. Fair, of Washington County, and has three children
living, one deceased. He is a member of the Baptist church
and a prominent merchant at Ava.
B. W. Clark was born in
Washington County in 1843. His father was a native of
Pennsylvania, and his mother of Guernsey County. His
grandfather was an 1812 soldier. B. W. Clark came
to Noble County at the age of three years. He is a
Republican and a prominent farmer. They have six children,
all daughters. In 1864 he volunteered in the One Hundred
and Sixty-first Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and served until
honorably discharged in September, 1864.
Elijah Davis,
second, was born in Virginia in 1810, and came to Noble Township
with his parents in 1822, and has since resided here. In
1831 he married Mary Buckey, whose father lost his life
in the War of 1812. They have had two daughters and nine
sons. Six of the children are yet living. Five of
the sons enlisted in the Union army in the late war.
Eli Davis, son of Elijah, was born Nov. 2, 1846, on
the place where he now lives. He enlisted when seventeen
years of age, and served until 1865. He was first with
Page 494 -
the One Hundred and Sixty-first Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and
afterward with the One Hundred and Ninety-fourth until the close
of the war. He was married in 1873 to Mary Russell.
They have had five children; four are now living. In
politics he is a Republican.
Bartholomew Davis
was born in 1821 on the place where he now lives. He
married Hannah Cox, and is the father of eight sons and
four daughters. Benjamin F. and Thomas J.
were in the service in the late war, the former in the
Twenty-second Ohio Battery, and the latter in the Sixty second
Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Benjamin was captured, and
died of starvation after seven months in Libby prison.
Benjamin Clowser was born
Oct. 29, 1827, on the farm where he now resides. His
parents were from Virginia, and came to this township about
1820. In 1853 Benjamin Clowser married Sarah
Anderson. They have had two sons and six daughters.
Five of the daughters are still living. Three of them are
married - to E. C. Westcott, I. L. Archer and W. L.
Archer, respectively. Mr. Clowser was in the
service in the late war as first lieutenant, in Company H, One
Hundred and Sixty-first Ohio Volunteer Infantry. He is a
Republican and a member of the Methodist Protestant church.
John
Russell was born in Belmont County, Feb. 2, 1813.
His parents were Virginians, and emigrated to Ohio about 1800.
In 1820 the family came to Noble County, settling on the farm
where John Russell now lives. The latter was
married in 1837 to Nancy Anderson, who died in 1851.
In 1853 he married Rachael Anderson. He is the
father of ten children, seven of whom are living. Two
sons, Joseph and Ezra, were in the late war. The
former enlisted in the Seventeenth Illinois Infantry, and served
in that and other organizations until the close of the war.
Ezra served in the One Hundred and Sixty-first Ohio
Volunteer Infantry. Mr. and Mrs. Russell are
members of the Baptist church. He is a Republican, and a
man of excellent reputation.
W.
B. Secrest was born in Hartford, Guernsey County, and his
parents were natives of the same county. The family came
to Noble County in 1854, and settled in noble Township.
W. B. Secrest married Fannie Westcott in 1870, and is
the father of three sons and one daughter. He is a member
of the Methodist Protestant church, and a Republican in
politics. He has held the offices of township clerk and
church trustee.
W. H. H. Burlingame is of New England descent, and
was born in Noble County in 1838. His father came from
Rhode Island to the vicinity of Hiramsburg in 1818. W.
H. H. Burlingame has followed farming and mercantile
business. He enlisted in October, 1861, in the
Sixty-second Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and served four years.
He was wounded at Fort Wagner, and saw much active service.
John
R. Gory, son of David
Page 495 -
Gorby, an old resident, was born Jan. 23, 1848. His
father settled in NOble County in 1823, being then fourteen
eyars of age. J. R. Gorby has been engaged in
farming and the lumber business. He spent some time in
Illinois and Alabama. He married Rebecca Davis, in
Illinois. Mr. Gorby is a Republican, and a member
of the Methodist Episcopal church. He has held several
township offices, and is now serving as a county commissioner.
John Preston, of
Belleville, was born in Belmont County in 1837, and came to
Morgan County in 1840. In 1861 he enlisted in the
Seventy-seventh Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and was in the
engagements at Pittsburg Landing, the battle and siege of
Corinth, the battle and siege of Corinth, the battle of Holly
Springs, and many others of less note. In 1864 he settled
at Sharon, and engaged in Shoemaking. In 1875 he came to
Belle Valley, where he still follows his trade. Mr.
Preston is a Democrat in politics, and in 1867 was a
candidate for the office of county auditor.
V. E. Harkins, of the
firm of Harkins & Co., merchants, Belle Valley, was born
in Noble County in 1856, and has followed mercantile and other
occupations in Belle Valley and vicinity since attaining his
majority. He married Miss Emeline Ginn of Noble
Township, in 1880. In politi8cs he is a Democrat. He
is the present postmaster at Belle Valley.
James
Stevens, ex-clerk of courts of Noble County, is the son
of Elijah Stevens, formerly of Morgan County, and was
born June 4, 1836. The family, consisting of James
and five sisters, settled in Sharon Township in 1847. In
1857 James began the mercantile business. He is at
present a member of the firm of Harkins & Co., Belle
Valley. In 1857 he married Miss Mary McMahon, and
in 1870 was again married, to Miss Sarah A Tolbert.
One child was born of this union and is now deceased.
Mr. Stevens is a Methodist, and a Democrat. He was
elected county clerk in 1862.
Joseph Parmiter was born in Bristol Township, Morgan
County, in 1818. His parents came from Maine, and were
among the pioneer settlers of that locality. In 1885 he
came to Belle Valley, where he follows his trade, carpentry.
He married Elizabeth Shuster in 1851, and is the father
of two sons and two daughters. He is a Democrat, and a
member of the Christian church.
SHARON WICK'S NOTE: See 1880
Census - Fam. 69, Dwelling 59;
Also See Death Cert #3704 - Allegheny Co., McKeesport, 2709
Walnut St., 11th Wd. - Name: John D. Parmiter, Male, White,
Married, b. Dec. 24, 1847, aged 83 yrs, 9 ds. - Carpenter,
retired, b. Meigs, OH, Father: Joseph Parmiter, b. Maine -
Mother's maiden name: Elizabeth Shuster, b. Adamsburg, VA.,
Informant: Owen K. Parmiter, McKeesport, PA, died 1/2/1931 -
Cause: Cardiac A__thmia, Bural: Richland Cem., Jan. 5, 1931 by
B. Volk, Jr., Undertaker, McKkeesport, PA.
J.
B. Perry is of Scotch descent. His grandfather was
a brother of the father of Commodore Oliver H. Perry, of
naval renown. Both his grandfathers were in the
Revolutionary War of 1812, and was on board the brig
"Enterprise" when she captured the English vessel, "Boxer."
J. B. Perry was born in Phippsburg, Me., Jan. 10, 1816,
and is one of a family of five sons and five daughters.
The sons all became sea-faring men. One of Mr. Perry's
brothers was a celebrated sailor, and twice circumnavigated
the globe. J. B. Perry came to Noble County in
Page 496 -
1846. In 1848 he married Olive Blake, of Olive
Township, a representative of one of the early families.
They had a son and a daughter, both of whom are dead.
Mr. Perry is by occupation a farmer and a mason. He is
a member of the Congregational church. He served fifteen
years as a clerk of Olive Township and the same length of time
as postmaster at South Olive.
VILLAGES.
The villages of Noble Township,
although numerous, are small and unimportant. They are
Hiramsburg, Hoskinsville, Rochester, Belle Valley and Ava.
Hiramsburg was named for its founder, Hiram Calvert.
The survey was made by John F. Talley, Nov. 5, 1836.
The plat contained twenty lots. An addition was made by
the same proprietor in 1838, and another in 1858.
Samuel Stevens was a merchant
here before the town was laid out. Harrison P. Larry
built the first house in the village, and kept store here a
number of years. The building remained standing until
1886. He was succeeded by Wakefield & Shankland, Hiram
Knight, Fortune Galbreath, Asa Burlingame and others.
Charles Lukens established an early store. Asa
Burlingame kept the first hotel, and was the first
postmaster. The office was established about 1845, and
supplied with a weekly mail room Cumberland.
Stevens & McClure engaged in the
mercantile business in 1847. The firm consisted of John
Stevens and George McClure. George McClure and
his son, George A., have continued the business up to
the present.
Jacob Jordan was the pioneer
blacksmith of the village. There
was, however, a blacksmith here long before the village was
projected. His name was Jacob Stoneking.
He owned the land on which the village is, and sold it to
Calvert.
Among the early settlers of Hiramsburg
was Reason Calvert. He bought wood ashes at five
cents per bushel, from which he made potash. The potash
was sold to refineries and converted into pearl-ash. He
also manufactured castor oil and linseed oil.
The village of Hoskinsville, E. E.
Parrish, proprietor, was platted by John F. Talley in
February, 1839. The plat was placed upon the Morgan County
records Oct. 22, 1840. The place was named in honor of
Colonel Erastus Hoskins. He was the first postmaster.
Hoskinsville postoffice was established prior to 1830. In
that year it was supplied with a weekly mail form McConnelsville
and Barnesville.
The first house in Hoskinsville, after
the projection of the town, was erected by James Needham,
a shoemaker. The first store was started by a man named
Saveall. As a village the place never realized the
ambitious expectations of its founders.
Page 497 -
Hoskinsville now contains about ten
houses and two stores. The merchants are J. W. Jones
and J. C. Campbell.
Rochester was laid out as a village by Samuel
Aikens, surveyor, May 4, 1841. Robert Hellyer
was the proprietor. In September, 1845, he made an
addition to the town plat. The growth of the place has
been so slow that no other enlargement of its boundaries has
been necessary. There is scarcely enough of the place to
warrant its being dignified by the name of a village. It
contains one small store and a postoffice which goes by the name
of Nobleville.
Belle Valley is a hamlet of about a dozen houses, and
owes its origin to the Cleveland & Marietta Railroad. It
was laid out on the farm of Benton Thorla. The
first store was started by Mr. Thorla in 1872. The
postoffice was established in the same year, with Mr. Thorla
as the first postmaster. The business of the place is
represented by Harkins & Stevens and Burlingame &
Green, general merchants; Manly Parmiter, grocer;
John Preston, shoemaker; and Newton Bros.,
proprietors of a steam flouring-mill, erected in 1886.
There are two hotels, kept by George Burlingame and
Greenbery Davis, and one church, Methodist Protestant.
Belle Valley is a telegraph station on both the Cleveland &
Marietta and teh B., Z. & C. Railroads.
The village of Belle Valley (Benton Thorla,
proprietor) was surveyed and divided into lots in 1875, by
William Lowe.
Ava, a railroad station in the northern part of the
township, has also been built since the completion of the C. &
M. Railroad. It contains three stores, kept by P. D.
Jordan, Amos Pryor and D. F. Stottsbury. H.
Burlingame has a cooper shop, and Albert Davis, a
blacksmith shop. A steam grist-mill is being erected by
George Stewart. There is one church - Methodist
Episcopal.
Ava was laid out as a village of twenty-two lots, April
10, 1873. The survey was made by William Lowe for
Levi Glover, the proprietor.
CHURCHES.
Regan's Chapel
Methodist Protestant Church. - This church is
situated at Hoskinsville. The Methodist Protestant
congregation was organized in 1829. Previous to that time
the Methodist Episcopal denomination had organized a society had
held services in the neighborhood. In 1829 Revs.
Cornelius Springer and Jacob Myers organized a
Methodist Protestant circuit. The first preachers on the
circuit were Jacob Myers and Daniel Gibbons.
The Hoskinsville congregation met in dwellings and in the
school-house until 1836, when a brick meeting-house was erected
on the site of the frame church in which the congregation now
worships. Among the original members of the church were
Erastus Hoskins, Edward Parrish, Francis Scott, William Willey,
Lambert Newton, Mary Brown, Sylvester Westcott, Hugh Nickerson,
and others, most of them belonging with their wives and
families. The pres-
Page 498 -
ent membership is about 150. The Sabbath-school has about
one hundred scholars. The present pastor is Rev. W. L.
Wells.
It is believed that the earliest
Sabbath school in the county was organized in the Hoskinsville
neighborhood. About 1825 a school was opened under the
superintendency of Colonel Erastus Hoskins. It was
then under the Methodist Episcopal denomination.
The Methodist Episcopal class mentioned in connection
with the history of Regan's chapel was organized in the
fall of 1818, by Rev. Abel Robinson, missionary.
Francis and Mary Scott, Erastus and Lydia Hoskins, and
an unmarried lady whose name is not recalled, were the original
members. Erastus Hoskins was the first leader.
Joseph Reed, Benjamin Thorla, Sylvester Westcott, William
Willey, Lambert Newton and their wives joined soon after the
organization. Abel Robinson, Archer MeElroy, John
Graham, John Coleman, William Tipton, Thomas McCleary, Isaac
Rannells, Cornelius Springer and two others were the
preachers prior to 1828.
Valley Chapel
Methodist Protestant Church - The Methodist
Protestant church at Belle Valley was organized in 1883, and the
house of worship erected in the spring and summer of the same
year, at a cost of about $1,500. The congregation was at
first composed of about fifteen members, partly from Union
church. The membership is now nearly one hundred.
Rev. W. L. Wells is the present pastor.
Cumberland Presbyterian Church. -
The Cumberland Presbyterians have maintained an organization
in Hiramsburg and vicinity for several years. They met for
a few years in the Methodist Episcopal church, and about 1870
purchased the old Baptist church, where they still continue to
worship. The congregation is small. The Baptist
church was built about 1850, principally through the means and
influence of the Lippitt family. Its membership
diminished to such an extent that the congregation was no longer
able to support regular preaching and the church was given up.
THE M'KEE FAMILY
Page 499 - McKee family continued
Page 500 - McKee family continued
Page 501 - McKee family continued
Page 502 - McKee family continued
JOHN NOBLE, SR.
JAMES CARR
Page 503 -
REV. SPARROW NICKERSON
Page 504 - Rev. Sparrow Nickerson continued
Page 505 -
GEORGE E. GEDDES
Page 506 -
GEORGE
ALONZO McCLURE.
Source:
History of Noble County, Ohio - Publ. Chicago: L. H.
Watkins & Co., 1887 - Pages 483 - 506
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