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EARL H. IRVIN,
the well-known editor and publisher of the Eaton Democrat,
enjoyed a thorough preparation for newspaper work. Mr.
Irvin has made an unusual success in journalism and has been
honored politically on several occasions.
Earl H. Irvin was born in New Paris, Ohio, May
9, 1877, the son of Harvey and Eleanor (Bowman) Irvin,
the former a native of Ohio and the latter of Indiana.
They had three sons: Harry, of Campbellstown, Ohio;
Albert, who died in infancy, and Earl H.
Harvey Irvin was born in Highland county, but was
reared in Preble county. He was a bookkeeper and came to
Preble county about 1844, and lived here the balance of his
life. He died in New Paris in 1877, at the age of
thirty-five. His wife died at Richmond, Indiana, in 1880,
at the age of thirty-six. Both were active and devoted
members of the Presbyterian church.
The paternal grandparents of Earl H. Irvin were
Thomas and Caroline (Young) Irvin, natives of Highland
county, Ohio. Mr. Irvin was a farmer and died in
Preble county at an advanced age. He had a small family,
Harvey and Emma. The maternal grandparents of
Earl H. Irvin were Robert and Margaret Bowman, who
came from Indiana to Preble county and settled in New Paris.
Robert Bowman was a school teacher, being one of the
early teachers in Eaton. He also was a Union soldier in
the Civil War. He had six children: Lydia,
Lillian, Robert, Addie, Elizabeth and Eleanor.
Later in life he moved to Kansas, near Minneapolis, where he and
his wife died at advanced ages.
Earl H. Irvin was reared in New Paris and
attended the public schools there. He began learning the
printer's trade in the office of the New Paris Mirror,
and was with that paper from 1893 to 1896. He then went to
Chattanooga, Tennessee, and worked in the Chattanooga Times
office. In 1897 he came back to Ohio and bought the
New Madison Herald, in Darke county, publishing that paper
for a year, after which he returned to New Paris and worked with
the Mirror until 1902. He then bought the Eaton
Democrat, a weekly newspaper which was established in 1840,
and which he has published since. Mr. Irvin, in
addition to publishing the Eaton Democrat, also does a
general job printing business.
On Apr. 27, 1899, while at New Paris, Earl H. Irvin
was married to Jennie Boatman, of Seven Mile, Butler
county, Ohio, the daughter of Reed B. and Martha (Samuels)
Boatman. Seven children have been born to this union:
Ruth, Martha, Anna, Marjorie, Lois, Earla and Earl,
Jr.
Mrs. Irvin's parents were natives of Butler county
and are still living at Seven Mile. Of their children,
three are now living, Ollie, Alonzo and Jennie.
Mr. Irvin is an ardent Democrat, and while in New
Paris was a member of the council and mayor of the town.
He was a member of the seventy-seventh and seventy-ninth General
Assemblies of Ohio, from 1906 to 909 and from 1911 to 1913.
At present, Mr. Irvin is deputy collector of internal
revenue for the first Ohio district, with headquarters at
Cincinnati, but his residence is in Eaton.
Mr. Irvin belongs to the Universalist church,
while his wife is a member of the United Brethren church.
He is also a member of Bolivar Lodge3 No. 82, Free and Accepted
Masons, and of Eaton Chapter No. 22, Royal Arch Masons.
Mr. Irvin is held in universal esteem throughout
Preble county, is a man of great strength of character and
genial disposition, and is popular among a large circle of
friends.
Source: History of Preble County, Ohio -
Illustrated -
1915 -
B. F. Bowen & Company, Inc.,
Indianapolis, Indiana - Page 435 |