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Richland County,  Ohio
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BIOGRAPHIES
Source:
North Central Ohio Biographies
embracing Richland, Ashland, Wayne, Medina, Lorain, Huron & Knox Counties

by William A. Duff - 3 vols.
Published 1931
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

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WILLIS C. WAPPNER.  One of hte leading young business men of Mansfield is Willis C. Wappner, who is proprietor of Wappner's Furniture Store, and a veteran of the World War.  He was born in this city, May 10, 1891, the son of Henry and Rosa H. (Michael) Wappner.
    
A complete sketch of Henry Wappner appears elsewhere in this history.
     The boyhood of Willis C. Wappner was spent in Mansfield and he received his education in the public schools of this city.  He entered his father's business as a clerk, and in 1916 was graduated from the Renauard College of Embalming, New York City.  During the World War he enlisted for service and was sent to Camp Sherman, Ohio, and later to Syracuse, N. Y., where he did special duty in army funeral work.  He also continued in this work in New York City for a time, and was discharged from the service, Nov. 30, 1918.  After the death of his father in 1920, Mr. Wappner purchased the heirs' interest in the Wappner Furniture Store, is located at 20 South Park Street.
     Mr. Wappner is a member of St. John's Evangelical Church, and belongs to B. P. O. Elks No. 56, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, American Legion, McVey Post No. 16, the Chamber of Commerce, and West Brook Country Club.
(Source:  History of north central Ohio : embracing Richland, Ashland, Wayne, Medina, Lorain, Huron and Knox Counties - Publ. 1931 - Page 1008)
CHRISTIAN WARD, farmer; P. O. Olivesburg; he was born in Lancaster Co., Penn., in 1818; he lived at home on the farm until 1849, when he was married, and in the same year he came to this county to look after some land that his father had entered some time before in Weller Township; he leased it out for a few years, and then moved on it and went to farming himself; Mr. Ward has been honored with the office of Justice of the Peace nine years, and Infirmary Director and other minor offices in the township; he has, by his industry and strict attention to business, put himself in such a position that he can give each of his children a farm when they become of age.  Mr. and Mrs. Ward have raised eight children, three of whom are dead; he lost one son, Jacob, in the late war.  He enlisted in Co. G, 15th O. V. I., and was killed at the battle of Nashville, Tenn.
Source: History of Richland Co., Ohio - A. A., Graham & Co., Publishers. 1807 - 1880 - Page 914 - Weller Twp.
J. L. WARD, proprietor Beverstock House, Shelby, Ohio; was born in Columbiana Co., Ohio, in 1837.  His father J. W. Ward, moved to Richland Co. about 1847.  About the age of 15 years he began clerking, which he followed for a number of years; he also taught for a number of terms; he engaged in several business enterprises, furniture and undertaking being the principal; he has lately built in 1847, and is well calculated  for the business.  Mr. Ward is gentlemanly and accommodating; he and his wife fully understand the wants of the traveling public.  He was married to Mrs. Ann E. Kline Feb. 22, 1880, and has settled in Shelby.
Source: History of Richland Co., Ohio - A. A., Graham & Co., Publishers. 1807 - 1880 - Page 891 - Sharon Twp.
JOHN WARD, farmer; P. O. West Windsor; was born in England in 1816.  His father, and located where Mr. Ward now lives; his father, Mr. Joseph Ward, was the first school teacher, and taught the first school in this part of the township; the first school-house was built of logs, in 1823, near Olivesburg; the one built near West Windsor was built about 1826.  There were a few settlements around, within a mile or two, when they came here, and very little improvements made in the shape of buildings and clearing up the farms.  They now have a very fine farm and a pleasant home.  Mr. Ward has always lived here, with the exception of one year that he lived in South Carolina; while there he, together with a brother, were engaged in staging and carrying the mails over the route from Washington City to New Orleans; they run from Columbia, S. C., to Augusta, Ga.  The manner and habits of the people there were not becoming to Mr. Ward's idea of living and thinking, and at the expiration of one year, he returned home, where he has since lived; he has occupied several offices in the gift of the people, such as Township Trustee, which he held for several years, also Township Clerk, etc., and is one of the first men in the township.  He was married in 1844, to Miss Mary N. Condon, of Mifflin Township.  Her father was one of the first settlers of Springfield Township; came in 1815; was Sheriff of the county at one time.  Mr. and Mrs. Ward are highly respected citizens, and have a nice and intelligent family; they have a steam saw-mill in connection with the farm, owned and operated by his sons, C. C. and C. P. Ward, which has been in successful operation over one year. 
Source: History of Richland Co., Ohio - A. A., Graham & Co., Publishers. 1807 - 1880 - Page 914 - Weller Twp.
M. DALE WARD is secretary and treasurer of the H. L. Bowers Cigar Company, and is numbered among the prominent business men of Mansfield.  He was born in this city, Oct. 9, 1881, the son of Marion D. and Mary (Stevenson) Ward.
     A sketch of Marion D. Ward appears elsewhere in this history.
     M. Dale Ward attended the public schools of Mansfield.  He began as a messenger for the Bank of Mansfield and later became a teller.  He has been identified with the interests of ht H. L. Bowers Cigar Company as secretary and treasurer since 1907.  He is also secretary and treasurer of the Mansfield Telephone Company, president of the May Realty Company, director of the Richland Trust Company, director of the Hughes-Keenan Company, and president of the Walpark Realty Company.
     In 1905 Mr. Ward married Miss Hazel Bowers, who died in 1928.  She was a daughter of Lewis and Eleanor (McCullough) Bowers.  They were natives of Richland County.  He died in 1917 and his wife died in 1930.  Both are buried at Mansfield.  To Mr. and Mrs. Ward a son of born, Marion Dale, III.  He is a graduate of Mansfield High School and in 1930 received the degree of Bachelor of Arts from Amherst College.  He is now attending the Law School at the University of Michigan.  He is a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity.
     Mr. Ward is a Democrat, a member of the First Congregational Church and belongs to Mansfield Lodge, F. and A. M., No. 35; B. P. O. Elks, No. 56; and Westbrook Country Club.  During 1928-29 he was president of the Rotary Club.  He is president of the Mansfield General Hospital and a director of the Red Cross Society.
(Source: North Central Ohio Biographies embracing Ashland, Wayne, Medina, Lorain, Huron & Knox Counties by William A. Duff - 3 vols. 1931, pg. 758)
MARION D. WARD, secretary of the Mechanics' Building & Loan Association and prominently connected with many of Mansfield's important financial, commercial and industrial concerns, was born in Weller township, Richland county, Ohio, on the 20th of November, 1841.  He spent his boyhood on teh home farm and received his education in the district school and at the Hayesville Academy, which he attended for two terms.  When twenty years of age he began teaching and during the winter of 1861-62 taught a country school.  On the 7th of August, 1862, he enlisted for service in the Civil war as a sergeant of Company D, One Hundred and Second Ohio Volunteer Infantry, remaining with that company during its entire campaign and participating in the battle of Athens, Alabama, and intercepting Hood at Decatur, Alabama.  He served throughout the war and was mustered out July 7, 1865.  On returning to the home farm he taught school and also singing school for nine winters.
     On the 5th of November, 1873, Mr. Ward was united in marriage, at the home of his bride's father, to Mary Stevenson, a daughter of Samuel Stevenson, a farmer and pioneer resident of Weller township.  In that township Mr. Ward taught school during the following winter and in the spring of 1874 took up his abode in Mansfield.  From that time until the fall of 1877 he served continuously as deputy auditor of Richland county, being then elected auditor and serving as such until the fall of 1880.  Owing to his reelection at that time he filled the position until the fall of 1883, having for two terms of three years each been the capable and faithful incumbent in the office.  Upon retiring from public service he entered the wholesale lumber business and, in association with Merchant Carter, established the firm of Carter & Ward.  His connection with lumber interests was thus maintained until 1893, and during that time he was a member of the board of education for six years, serving as its president for one year and as its treasurer for three years.  He was also a member of the Richland Agricultural Society from 1875 until 1893, acting as its treasurer until 1887, in which year he was elected secretary.  During his incumbency in that position, which continued until 1893, improvements were made upon the grounds and buildings of the society and additional grounds were annexed at a cost of more than twenty-five thousand dollars.  In January, 1893, he was one of the organizers of the Bank of Mansfield and became the assistant cashier of the institution, while in the spring of 1897 he became cashier, remaining in the latter capacity until the spring of 1907.  He then retired but still retains his interest in the bank, being succeeded in the position of cashier by his son, Stevenson E. Ward.  He was likewise one of the original stockholders of the Mechanics Building & Loan Association when it was organized in 1886 and became its secretary in 1891, which office he still holds.  He was also one of the founders and organizers of the Mansfield Telephone Company in 1898, which has proven one of the most successful and most beneficial institutions of the city, and has been secretary and Realty Company, to the credit of which concern there stand many commodious and substantial structures in this city.  Among the various other enterprises in Mansfield in which he is largely interested are the Ohio Suspender Company, the Mansfield Lumber Company, the Gallego Coal & Land Company and the Ohio Timber Company, the two last named operating in West Virginia.  He has invested to some extent in Mansfield real estate and among his holdings in his home at No. 117 North Mulberry street,  where he has resided since 1879.  History is no longer a record of wars, conquests and strife between man and man as in former years but is the account of business and intellectual development, and the real upbuilders of a community are they who found and conduct successful commercial and financial interests.  In this connection Marion D. Ward is widely known, his cooperation having been sought in the establishment and control of many of hte most important enterprises of Mansfield.
     Unto Mr. and Mrs. Ward have been born four children, two sons and two daughters.  The latter, Mabel and Edna, are both at home.  Stevenson E., cashier of the Bank of Mansfield, married Miss May L., a daughter of Jerry and Katherine Sullivan, of Mansfield.  M. D. Ward, Jr., is a member of the firm of H. L. Bowers Cigar Company, manufacturers of this city.  He wedded Hazel, the daughter of Louis and Ella Bowers of Mansfield.
     A firm believer in the democracy, Mr. Ward took an active part in the local work of that organization for many years.  That he has labored unselfishly for the good of the community is shown in the fact that while serving as trustee of the Orphans' Home for three years he appointed a man of opposite political belief as superintendent.  On account of this he was asked to resign but refused to do so, saying that politics should not enter into consideration in caring for the children of the county who were orphans.  He was also instrumental in having the Western Union Telegram Company's stock and other stock taxed.  He is a member of the Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks, the Westbrook Country Club, and his religious faith is indicated by his identification with the First Methodist Episcopal church.  He is very fond of music and all out-of-door sports but of recent years has indulged in the latter only as a spectator.  He owns an automobile, which furnishes him his principal source of recreation, and he likewise has a fine library, being a lover of good literature.  Though modest and retiring in disposition, his friends find him a genial, social companion, and he stands today as one of the foremost citizens of Mansfield by reason of his long residence here, by reason of his active, honorable and successful connection with its business interests, and by reason of the helpful part which he has taken in promoting those plans and measures that have been of direct benefit to the city.
Source: History of Richland Co., Ohio - from 1808 to 1908 - Vol. I & II by A. J. Baughman - Chicago: The J. S. Clarke Publishing Co. - 1908 - Page 1047
MARION D. WARD.  One of the recognized leading men of Mansfield, prominent in its business life for many years, was Marion D. Ward, who died Oct. 20, 1913.  He was born in Weller Township, Richland County, Nov. 20, 1841. 
     Mr. Ward spent his boyhood on the farm and was educated in the district schools.  He also attended Hayesville Academy and during 1861-62 taught in the district schools.  He enlisted for service in the Civil War on Aug. 7, 1862, and served as a member of Company D, 102nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry.  He participated in the battle of Athens, Ala., and was with the forces which intercepted Hood at Decatur, Ala.  He was discharged with the rank of sergeant, July 7, 1865, and spent the following nine years as a school teacher.  In 1874 Mr. Ward came to Mansfield and served as deputy auditor of Richland County until 1877.  He held the office of auditor from 1877 until 1883, spent the following ten years in the wholesale lumber business as a member of the firm of Carter & Ward, and in January, 1893, was one of the founders of the Bank of Mansfield.  He served as assistant cashier until 1897 and as cashier until 1907, when he retired from active business.  Mr. Ward was also one of the organizers and original stockholders of the Mechanics Building & Loan Association in 1886, and held the office of secretary from 1891 until 1907.  He was one of the founders of the Mansfield Telephone Company in 1898 and served as secretary and treasurer.  Mr. Ward was widely known in the business circles,  his cooperation being sought in the establishment and control of many of the most important enterprises of Mansfield.  He was interested in the Ohio Suspender Company, May Realty Company, Gallego Coal and Land Company of West Virginia, and Ohio Timber Company of West Virginia.
     On Nov. 5, 1873, Mr. Ward married Miss Mary Stevenson, who died in 1921.  She was the daughter of Samuel Stevenson, one of the first settlers of Weller Township.  Mr. and Mrs. Ward were the parents of four children: Mabel and Edna, who live at Mansfield; Stevenson E., who was president of the Guarantee Trust Company, also a partner in the firm of E. F. Hutton, brokers, New York City; and M. Dale, who lives at Mansfield.
     Mr. Ward was a member of the Richland County Agricultural Society from 1875 until 1893 and served as its secretary and treasurer.  He was trustee of the Orphan's Home and served as president and treasurer of the Board of Education.  He held membership in the First Methodist Episcopal Church and belonged to B. P. O. Elks No. 56, and Westbrook Country Club.  He was a Democrat.
(Source: North Central Ohio Biographies embracing Ashland, Wayne, Medina, Lorain, Huron & Knox Counties by William A. Duff - 3 vols. 1931, pg. 765)
STEVENSON E. WARD, the efficient and popular cashier of the Bank of Mansfield, was born in this city July 22, 1879.  His father, M. D. Ward, also a native of Richland county, was formerly cashier of the Bank of Mansfield, but is now secretary of the Mechanics' Building & Loan Association, which position he has held for twenty years.  He wedded Mary Stevenson, and further mention of him is made on another page of this work.
     Stevenson E. Ward was graduated from the Mansfield high school in the year 1898 and subsequently attended the University of Michigan until 1902, pursuing both literary and law courses.  On returning to this city he became bookkeeper for the Mansfield Telephone Company, his term as such extending throughout the entire period of its construction.  The plant was built by the Everett-Moore syndicate, of Cleveland, with only a small local interest, but, becoming financially embarrassed early in 1903, it was purchased from them by Mr. Ward and others, who assumed control on the 1st of November, 1903.  At that time our subject became general manager.  This company developed the entire county, having a plant in Mansfield and exchanges in this city, Adario, Belleville, butler, Lexington and Shiloh, a total system of more than four thousand subscribers and an investment of over three hundred thousand dollars.  This wonderful growth has been attained in five years and is attributable in no small degree to the excellent executive ability and keen discrimination of Mr. Ward in his position as manager.  The Mansfield exchange is noted as being one of the best constructed in the country and the county system is one of the best developed.  Throughout the business district their lines are all underground.  Though still retaining his interest and membership on the executive committee, Mr. Ward resigned the management of the concern on the 1st of January, 1907, on that date succeeding his father, who had retired, as cashier of the Bank of Mansfield.  He is still filling that position and is notably prompt and capable in the discharge of his important duties.
     On the 5th of October, 1904, at Mansfield, Mr. Ward was united in marriage to Miss May L., daughter of J. J. Sullivan, now deceased, who was a boiler manufacturer and one of the most popular residents of Mansfield.  Mrs. Ward graduated from Mansfield high school in the same class with her future husband, and later completed a course in the Georgetown convent.  She is a niece of J. H. Barrett, deceased, formerly general superintendent of the Southern Railway, who transported all troops to the scene of conflict in the Spanish-American war and was very highly complimented by Secretary Root for his efficient service in that direction.  Unto Mr. and Mrs. Ward has been born one child, Mary Katherine, two years of age.  In his political views Mr. Ward is a democrat but has no desire for official preferment, for he finds that his time is fully occupied by other interests.  He is secretary of the Westbrook Country Club and is serving as exalted ruler of the Elks lodge, while his membership relations also connect him with the Masonic fraternity and Our Club.  His religious faith is indicated by his identification with the First Methodist Episcopal church.  He is a lover of literature and spends most of his leisure time in reading, while golf and tennis, of which he is very fond, also furnish him recreation.  Both he and his wife are active and prominent in social and club circles and have gained the high regard and esteem of all with whom they have come in contact.  Although still a young man he has already won for himself a prominent position among the representative business men of his native city and well deserves mention as one of its substantial and enterprising residents.
Source: History of Richland Co., Ohio - from 1808 to 1908 - Vol. I & II by A. J. Baughman - Chicago: The J. S. Clarke Publishing Co. - 1908 - Page 847

JOHN HARVEY WOODS, a rural mail carrier living at No. 50 Glesner avenue in Mansfield, was born Aug. 16, 1844, upon a farm in this county.  His father, James Woods, was a native of Pennsylvania, and with his parents removed to Ashland county, Ohio, in his childhood days.  When he had attained his majority he began farming on his own account across the line in Richland county and was thus identified with agricultural pursuits in Ohio until 1863, when he removed to Indiana, where his death occurred in 1865.  His entire life has been devoted to farming.  He wedded Mary Fifcoat, who was born in Marion county, Ohio, and they became the parents of four children; John F., who, though a resident of Mansfield, is now sojourning in Los Angeles, California, for the benefit of his health; William, a resident of Oklahoma; John H., of this review; and Ebenezer, deceased.
     John Harvey Woods pursued his early education in Quail Trap school in Springfield township until the age of sixteen years, after which he devoted his undivided attention to the work of the home farm, continuing thus to assist his father until he reached the age of nineteen years.  He had not yet attained his majority when he offered his services to the government in defense of the Union, enlisting at Mansfield on the 19th of August, 1862, as a member of Company I, One Hundred and Twentieth O. V. I.  He served for three years, two months and four days, and was discharged at Detroit, Michigan, although the regiment was mustered out at Columbus.  Mr. Woods, however, was at that time a messenger on staff duty.  He participated in the battles of Chickasaw Bayou and Arkansas Post and went down the Mississippi river to Young’s Point, where he was in camp for a time.  With his command he afterward crossed the river below Vicksburg and participated in the battle of Thompson Hill, while later he took part in the battles of Jackson and Black River and was also present at the siege of Vicksburg until its surrender.  From the battle of Arkansas Post he served as a messenger on special duty until the close of the war, being connected with the staffs of General Henseman, General Joseph Hooker, and others.  Although he was not wounded in battle he had met with an accident which, though seemingly slight, has since been felt.  HE started with a message on a dark night and, tripping on a rope, fell and hit a stake.  The fall impaired his health and he feels the effects to this day.
     When the war was over Mr. Woods returned to Richland county and began to clerk for his brother.  He afterward went upon the road as a traveling salesman and subsequently was engaged in business on his own account until about six years ago, when he began carrying the mails on rural delivery route No. 7.
     In 1873 Mr. Woods was united in marriage to Miss Emily A. Brown,  who was born in Medina county, Ohio, and came with her parents to Richland county at the age of sixteen years.  They now have one child, Cassius H., who was born in 1876 and after attending the public schools of Mansfield became a student in the dental department of the Ohio Medical University.  He was graduated in 1897 with the D. D. S. degree and began the practice of dentistry in Bellville, where he remained for six years.  He afterward practiced in Mansfield for two and a half years, but during the past four years awake, progressive business man.  In 1899 he married Miss Jeannette . Oberlin, a resident of Bellville, Ohio.
     In his political views Mr. Woods is a stalwart republican and, keeping well informed on the questions and issues of the day, is enabled to support his position by intelligent argument.  Hew as born and reared in the faith of the Seceders church, but both he and his wife are now members of the Congregational church.  They own an attractive and well furnished home in the city, keep a team of horses and are pleasantly situated in life.  Comparatively few men of Mr. .Woods’ years can boast of three years’ service as a soldier in the Union army and in the years which have since come and gone he has proven himself equally loyal to the interests of his country.
Source#2: History of Richland Co., Ohio - from 1808 to 1908 - Page 1151

CHARLES H. WORKMAN.  One of the old families of Ohio is that bearing the name of Workman, and its representatives are to be found in different sections of the commonwealth, although the founder of it in Ohio, Elias Workman, settled in Holmes County, where Charles H. Workman, at attorney of Mansfield, whose names heads this review, was born April 23, 1859.  The Workman family is of English origin, and for some time was located in Maryland, came west and entered a large tract of land from whence Elias Workman, the grandfather of Charles H. Workman, came west and entered a large tract of land from the government in what is now Holmes County.
     The nineteenth century was just beginning; Ohio was still frontier country; and there were no provisions made for the instruction of the children.  A well-educated man, Elias Workman in 1800 made an agreement with his neighbors that for four months of the year, when his farm duties left him at leisure, he would teach their children, and take his pay in bolts of cloth or produce of any kind, and through this barter gained the equivalent of fifty dollars a month.  His son, John Workman, father of Charles H. Workman, was born on his father’s homestead about 1831, and he, too, was a teacher.  The elder man encountered more difficulties in his scholastic labors, for he faced an absolute dearth of textbooks, so he had to make his own, and some of his carefully written pages, still preserved, prove him to have been a splendid penman.  John Workman also a farmer, and he died on this same farm when he was in his early ‘60s.
     Charles H. Workman was reared on the Workman farm in Holmes County, which became the site of camp of Federal soldiers in 1863, at the time of the Holmes County rebellion.  With the other children Charles H. Workman was sent to the Smithville Academy in Wayne County, Ohio, where he had the good fortune to be under the instruction of J. B. Eberley, a noted educator.  This was the last of the old New England academies that had been established in the state from which came so many men later illustrious in the history of the state and nation.  So well prepared was Mr. Workman in this academy that he was able to begin teaching in the Normal School at Ada, Ohio, occupying the chair of literature, rhetoric and civil government, and from 1883 to 1893 he maintained this connection with the institution.  During this period, however, he was studying law, and taking an active part in local politics.
     In 1894 Mr. Workman was elected to the Legislature of his native state, and served during the two sessions of the first administration of President McKinley.  Mr. Workman was author of two important measures while in the legislature, one of them the Workman School Law, which recognized the township as the school unit, and which became the basis of the present school law; the other being the law which established a board of arbitration to settle disputes between capital and labor, one of the first moves in this direction in any state.  The youngest member of the Assembly, Mr. Workman consulted Governor McKinley with reference to the latter bill before he drew it up, and was advised by that dignitary to submit the latter to Attorney General Richards, whose views coincided with those of Mr. Workman.  As this bill was introduced over thirty years ago, Mr. Workman was a pioneer in this line of legislation.
     It was in 1894 that Mr. Workman located permanently at Mansfield, and for five years was secretary of the board of managers of the Ohio State Reformatory.  He was made a member of the board of examiners of applicants for admission to the bar, and held that office for many years.  Probably no one man in Ohio has carried more legal questions originating in the local courts to the higher tribunals where precedent has been established than he.  Independent and advanced in thought, new points have been fought out upon original lines, and in this way he has largely contributed to present legal practice, the law now practically demanding his entire attention.  He is legal adviser for several important enterprises.
     Ever a Republican, the Blaine campaign found him making stump speeches, and there has not been a campaign since then that has not had his services.  In 1896 he was sent by the National Executive Committee of has party into the West to beard the “silver-tongued orator” on his native heath, and made gold-standard speeches all over those states considered strongholds of the free-silver doctrine.  Having made a special study of economics, social conditions and civil government he was well prepared to meet any opposition, and so eloquent and convincing was he that although some of his addresses lasted for three hours, he held his audiences enthralled.  No matter what questions were put to him he was ready with an answer, and he was very active in what was known as “Mark Hanna’s Educational Campaign.”
     Earlier in life Mr. Workman desired nothing more than to become an editor, and he did not conduct a local paper.  His institute and normal labors made him a popular figure during a number of years, and he added to those laurels on the lecture platform in connection with educational work.
     Mr. Workman was married to Mary Sheedy, who had been a teacher in the Miami Valley, and author of “An Americanized Singer in Paris.”  She was quite familiar with the romance languages, having spent some years in Paris with her two daughters, Helen and Florence, who were both educated there in modern languages and music.  Both were accepted by the director of grand opera in Paris, but their studies were interrupted by the outbreak of the World War, although they have continued studying systematically ever since.  Mrs. Workman died Mar. 21, 1826.  Long before the United States became involved in the war Mr. Workman had taken a decided stand publicly, asserting that no self-respecting citizen could be neutral.  Upon the return of Company M of the National Guard from service on the Mexican border its membership dwindled to about forty men.  With them as a nucleus he was constantly working, and after holding “open house” for ten days in the park, and having almost continuous speaking, the company was recruited to 180 men, who responded when the call came, and no Ohio county has greater cause for pride in its “Doughboys” than Richland.  In Central Park, Mansfield, is erected his design of “The American Doughboy,” a figure in Carrara marble mounted upon a granite boulder, seeming to say, “The American Doughboy could fight in a just cause in a foreign land, but his feet were forever on the rock of his native hills.”  It faces Lincoln Highway, and is viewed with interest by tourists from coast to coast.
     Mr. Workman successfully promoted the erection of the Richland Trust Building, located at the corner of Park Avenue, West, and Main Street, Mansfield.  He is president of the Richland Building Corporation.  He was instrumental in the consolidation of three banks in the city of Mansfield into one, the Richland Trust Company, and he is chairman of the executive board.
Source: History of North Central Ohio - page 592 (photo available)

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