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Source:
1812 History of Sandusky, Ohio
with Portraits and Biographies
- Publ. Cleveland, Ohio: H. Z. William & Bro.
1882
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DR. S. P. ECKI was
born in Holmes county, Ohio, in 1854. After attending the
common schools of his neighborhood he pursued a course in
Northwestern college, Illinois. He studied Medicine in
Mansfield under J. C. Anderson, an attended lectures at
the New York Homeopathic Medical college, from which institution
he graduated in 1881. He selected Fremont as the field of
his practice, and opened an office there in June.
Source:
1812 History of Sandusky, Ohio with Portraits and Biographies -
Publ. Cleveland, Ohio: H. Z. William & Bro. - 1882 - Page 462 |
|
JEREMIAH
EVERETT AND FAMILY. Jeremiah Everett was a
son of John Everett and was born in the State of
Massachusetts in the year 1783. His father moved from
Massachusetts to the State of New York, and settled at
Schenectady, where he raised his family and died.
Jeremiah married Elizabeth Emery, and left home soon
after attaining his majority, and worked at an early day at the
Onondaga salt works. When the war of 1812 broke out he
volunteered, and served at Fort Erie for a time. The
musket he carried in that service was preserved in the family,
and kept after his death by his oldest son, Lorenzo, and
all traces of it are now lost, Lorenzo's family being
long since dispersed in various parts of the country, but the
writer remembers well using the old musket in boyhood to shoot
,blackbirds away from the oat and corn fields in and about Lower
Sandusky.
In the fall of the year 1812, intending to settle on
the Connecticut Western Reserve, which was then attracting
pioneers in search of land, he settled on the Huron River, in
Huron county, at the old county seat, sometimes called the
Abbott Place, where Mr. Abbott,
afterwards known as Judge Abbott, then resided.
There was a settlement of several families in the vicinity, and
the fear of Indian attacks caused them to construct a
block-house of heavy logs, with port-holes, in which the
families lodged at night, or fled to in case of alarm in the day
time. The settlement planted corn and potatoes, and such
vegetables as they could, along the river. But the
frequent alarms of Indians, arising from the capture of Mrs.
Snow and the Putnam family, on Pipe Creek,
not far away, put them in great fear, and during the summer the
settlers tended their crops with loaded guns standing near, to
fire in defence of an attack, and give warning of the approach
of danger. Here, after the arrival of Jeremiah Everett,
and on the 30th of January, 1813, his son Homer was born.
Through the summer of 1813 the inhabitants tended their
crops and managed to live without 'any serious demonstration
from the lurking savages. On the 2d of August, 1813,
Croghan's victory at Fort Stephenson rather diminished the
danger from the savages, and yet the settlers at the old county
seat did not slack their vigilance.
On the 10th of September, 1813, when the writer of this
sketch was probably on a blanket, laid upon an earthen floor in
a log cabin by the banks of the Huron River, and perhaps trying
to put his big toe in his mouth, his anxious parents were
listening to the distant roar of the battle on Lake Erie in
which the gallant Perry gained such a signal victory over
the British fleet. Jeremiah afterwards visited the
fleet and saw the evidences of the fight in the shattered hulls,
broken spars and rigging, and bloody decks of the vessels which
had been engaged. This signal victory lifted a load from
the hearts of those pioneers. If the British conquered
they must flee, or be scalped; if the Americans should win the
battle they could stay. There is no doubt some very
earnest praying was done by that handful of settlers while the
fight was progressing. But the news of the victory soon
brought joy of deliverance from peril, and from that time the
little band of pioneers felt safer.
In the spring of the year 1815 Jeremiah Everett,
with the help of one Aden Breed, started for the
new El Dorado, Lower Sandusky. They moved family and goods
by team from the old county seat to Ogontz place,
afterwards called Portland and now Sandusky City, on the shore
of the Sandusky Bay. The household goods and provisions
and the family were there transferred to a pirogue or very large
canoe, worked by hand with paddles after the aboriginal fashion.
When the wind was fair, they hoisted a common blanket on a pole
for a sail and thus made the voyage up the Sandusky Bay and the
river to Lower Sandusky, arriving about the middle of April in
the year 1815. He found shelter with some hospitable
pioneers until he, with the help of generous neighbors and
settlers, erected a log house on the ground where the present
residence of Isaac
E. Amsden stands, then in Lower Sandusky, now in the city of
Fremont. While living in his house, he farmed from the
land near the residence to the mill-race, and there raised fine
crops of corn. A little north of and near this house stood
a mortar for pounding corn into Indian meal, which was
used by him and his neighbors, before any grist-mill had been
built in the vicinity. While living in this house
Jeremiah was, in the year 1818, engaged by the Government to
carry the mail from Lower Sandusky to Fort Meigs. This mail was
carried both ways once a week, when it was possible to get
through, but was often omitted on account of the high streams
and impassable swamps. In performing this duty Jeremiah
Everett often encountered difficulties and dangers.
There were streams to cross and swamps to go through, which were
enough to discourage any traveler. Often it was impossible
for a horse to go through on account of ice, which, while it
would bear a man, would break under the weight of the horse,
rider and mail, and the only way to perform the service in such
case was to put the mail in saddle-bags and strap that on the
back of the man and go on foot. Mr. Everett
was often compelled to take this course, especially in the
spring and fall of the year. Sometimes he would reach
Portage River at night, when he would lodge at the house of
Mr. Harris. At other times on his return trip
he would be unable to reach their hospitable cabin, and would be
compelled to stay in the woods between the Maumee and Portage
Rivers. On the narrow blazed way through the woods between
these two rivers, he found a large, fallen, hollow, sycamore
tree, which had been blown down by the winds which swept over
the lonely forest. When he, on the trip, admonished by the
approach of darkness, found he could not reach the cabin of
Harrison the Portage River, he would make his home in the
hollow of this upturned monarch of the forest for the night.
Besides the mail he carried a large knife, a tomahawk, his
provisions for the day and a steel, flint and punk with which to
strike and kindle fire and a blanket. Reaching his tree he
would strike a fire and gather logs and sticks until a good
strong fire was blazing in front of his hollow log. Then,
after taking a lunch of cornbread and dried venison or fried
pork, he would crawl into the log, wrap himself in his blanket
for a rest and sleep until the morning would break and reveal
his way through the woods. Several times, while lodging in
his lonely retreat, he heard the tramp of some wild beasts
making a circuit about his resting place. In such case he
kept his fire burning brightly to frighten them away, and it did
keep them off. One night while thus camping out, the
wolves beat a path on the ground around him, but fled at the
approach of day and on seeing the fire blaze up. At
another time he heard a soft, steady tread of some animal around
his lodging place, when there was a light fall of snow, and on
looking around, found what was evidently the track of a panther,
which had been reconnoitering around his premises during the
night, but was kept at a respectful distance by the fire.
About the year 1825 Jeremiah Everett
removed from the log cabin, and settled on the farm now owned by
Timothy H. Bush, within the corporate limits of the
present city of Fremont. This tract was then owned by
David Harrold, of Philadelphia, a wealthy Quaker. Harrold
attended the land sale at Wooster, Ohio, and bought this tract.
He was wealthy and invested his money with a view of settling on
this land for a home.EVERETT AND HARROLD.
After Harrold purchased the
tract of land mentioned, which is now known as out-lot number
thirty-one, in Fremont, he ordered pine lumber from Buffalo for
a house, which he built entirely of that wood, excepting the
frame, which was mostly of native oak. While Everett
was living in the log house mentioned, Harrold was out in
the woods, on the premises now owned by ex-President R. B.
Hayes, looking for suitable timber for his building.
While waiting for his workmen, and having an axe with him, he
chopped and felled a choice tree while alone. When the
tree fell in a direction contrary to his expectations, he
endeavored to escape being injured, and started away but was
tripped down in some way and fell, and the tree fell on one of
his legs crushing into the ground and holding him fast, without
any means of extrication. It so happened that on the same
morning Judge Everett was hunting his oxen which
had strayed into the woods. The judge was on horse-back
and stopped to look around and listen for the cattle, when he
heard a faint groan at some distance off, and presently a loud
call for help. He hastened to the spot, chopped off the
tree with Harrold's axe and released him, when he found
that the stranger's leg was broken. He put the man on his
horse and took him home, sent for Dr. Brainard,
who set his leg, and Harrold was nursed at Everett's
house until he recovered and was able to walk. The
men of course became acquainted, and were ever after warm
friends. Harrold was quite wealthy and his wife
refused to emigrate from Philadelphia to the wilderness in the
West. Harrold, after finishing his house, offered
the use of the house and farm for a nominal rent, and the judge
occupied it for about eight years, and until he moved his family
down the river on tract number two of the original survey of the
reservation. Here, on tract two, Judge Everett,
having purchased it, made a home and kept his family until his
wife died in December, 1832. About two years after,
Judge Everett, to help his sons Joel and
Lorenzo, sold this tract and married Mrs. Eunice Wolley,
widow of Daniel Wolley, who owned a farm on the
Sandusky River about six miles north of Fremont. He
settled there and both husband and wife having minor children,
devoted their time and care to the farm and the welfare of the
children. He lived on this farm until his death, on the
29th day of December, 1842.
The children of Judge Jeremiah Everett
were Lorenzo, Joel, Homer, Adelaide,
Lodoiska, Zachariah, and Charles by the
first wife; by the second, Elizabeth, Helen,
Cyrus, and two others, who died young and were buried on the
Wolley farm.
Lorenzo Everett, the oldest son, married
Catharine Kline, the daughter of a neighboring
farmer, and died in the year 1847, leaving one daughter,
Harriet, who married a Mr. Fulkinson, and
removed to near White Pigeon, Michigan, and died. He also
left three sons, Charles Henry Everett, now
of Wood county, Ohio; Thomas Hubert Everett,
now married and living in Green Creek township, in Sandusky
county, a farmer; and Jeremiah Everett, who
married a Miss Hutchins, and had one son, who died
in infancy. Jeremiah volunteered in the cavalry
service in the war for the suppression of the Southern
Rebellion, and was shot from his horse and killed in battle.
The second son, Joel Everett, married Mariah
Grimes, an adopted daughter of Dr. Daniel
Brainard, and died of cholera in September, 1834, leaving
one child, a daughter, who married Arthur Ellsworth,
of York township, and has since died, leaving one child, a son,
named Everett Ellsworth, who is still living. Judge
Everett's third son, Homer Everett, was
married, in 1837 to Hannah Bates, in Sandusky
county. His wife died in June, 1840, leaving an infant
daughter, named Hannah Bates Everett.
This daughter was married to Henry Hatfield, in
the year 1856, and is still living, having two sons, one now in
Osborne, Kansas, and one in Denver, Colorado.
Homer Everett married again, Susan
Albina Brush, widow of John T. Brush, in
December, 1842. By this wife he had two sons and two
daughters. George Homer, his first child,
born at Fremont, Nov. 4, 1844, was an expert as a telegrapher,
and in the war of the Rebellion was employed by General
Thomas as telegraph operator about Nashville, while that
city was threatened by the rebels, and there in his labors and
exposures as field operator contracted the disease of
consumption. After working successfully after the war, at
Cincinnati, he came home to his father's house, and as he
entered the door said, “I have come home to die, father.”
This was in September, 1873. After living through autumn
and winter, he died on the 26th day of March, 1874, at his
father's house, the home of his childhood, and peacefully passed
out of this mortal life without a murmur. The second child
of this marriage was Charles Egbert, born on the
17th day of June, 1846, on his father's farm, about six miles
below Fremont. Charles served in the naval service
during the Rebellion. On his return from the service he
married Miss Hattie Tindall, daughter of
Edward Tindall, of Ballville township. He learned, the
trade of cabinet-making, is a natural mechanic and expert in his
business, and is now engaged as foreman in the manufacturing
establishment of H. Bowlus & Co. He has two
children, Eddie and Nellie, all living together in
Fremont, at the homestead of Homer Everett's
family.
Homer Everett's next and third child of
this second marriage was Albina Elizabeth, born at
Fremont Apr. 27, 1850, who went to Kansas as a school-teacher
and afterwards married at Osborne City, in that State,
Frederick Yoxall, a native of England, with whom she
is now happily living there, the mother of two beautiful
daughters. The fourth child by Homer's second
marriage was Lillie Everett, born at Fremont Jan. 10,
1853, who followed her sister to Osborne, Kansas, about a year
after her sister's departure, and after carrying on the
millinery business for a time was married to James A. Wilson,
then doing a large business as a drug and hardware merchant in
Osborne, where she is now living and has one child, a daughter.
Susan Albina, wife of Homer Everett,
died at Fremont, Dec. 21, 1855, at the age of thirty-four years.
In November, 1873, Mr. Homer Everett,
having educated and settled his children, was again married and
took for his third wife Minerva E. Justice, daughter of
James Justice, whose biography will be found in
this history. With his third wife he is now comfortably
living in the old homestead of the Justice family,
at the foot of the hill on the north side of State street in the
pleasant city of Fremont.
Few men were ever endowed with better intellectual and
conversational powers than those possessed by Judge
Jeremiah Everett. Few men possessed the faculty
of keeping the respect and confidence and even the love of all
his acquaintances in so high a degree. He was too
unselfish to get rich, and too industrious to come to want.
He was fond of social converse and philosophic thought.
Sardis Birchard used to say that he never met a man
whom he took as much pleasure in conversing with and listening
to as he did with Judge Everett. Jeremiah
Everett was appreciated by the early citizens of the
county. He early held the office of justice of the peace,
and kept the office as long as he could afford to do so, and
until he positively declined to serve longer at the dictates of
his own necessities. The first suits about the riparian
ownership on the Sandusky River between David Moore
and David Chambers, the results of which were
given by the lately affirmed decision of the Supreme Court of
Ohio and may be found in the Twelfth Ohio Reports, were tried
before him; and Judge Lane in deciding the case, of Chambers
vs. Gavit announced the same principles as the law which
Judge Everett as justice of the peace had declared in his
decisions. He was elected Representative to the General
Assembly in 1825, and was the first resident of Sandusky county
chosen for that place. He was again elected in 1835 and
served to the satisfaction of the people, but declined to accept
the position again. During his first term of service in
the Assembly he was largely influential in passing measures
favorable to the construction of the Maumee and Western Reserve
turnpike. His remains are buried in the old cemetery in a
lot surrounded by a hedge of arbor-vitae, and a plain marble
slab marks the resting place of an honest and honorable man who
died a Christian.
Source:
1812 History of Sandusky, Ohio with Portraits and Biographies -
Publ. Cleveland, Ohio: H. Z. William & Bro. - 1882 - Page
540 |
|
HOMER EVERETT,
a son of Jeremiah Everett and Elizabeth (Emery) Everett,
was born at the old' county seat of Huron county, on the Huron
River, below where the village of Milan now stands, now,
however, within the bounds of Erie county, on the 30th of
January, 1813.
The education of Homer Everett was such as he
could acquire by attending the schools in Lower Sandusky two
summer and four winter terms, and what he afterwards acquired by
his own study out of school. His teachers were Justus
and Ezia Williams, Edson Goit, and Samuel Crowell
at different periods, who are gratefully remembered by their
pupil for their efforts to stimulate a desire for study.
In December, 1830, his father gave him liberty to leave home if
he thought best, and he accordingly procured from Rodolphus
Dickinson, then examiner of teachers, a certificate of
qualification to teach, and he immediately started on foot for
York township, where he had heard a teacher was wanted.
The day brought on a terrible snow storm, but he plodded on.
When about half way to Hamar's Corners, on the Western
Reserve and Maumee road, he met a man with a yoke of oxen and a
sled going to mill, of whom he enquired the road to the district
where a teacher was wanted. This man turned out to be
Oliver Comstock, one of the directors of the very
district young Everett was seeking. Mr.
Comstock was well acquainted with Judge Everett,
the young man's father, and on learning that the applicant was
his son, and on seeing Mr. Dickinson's
certificate, told young Everett that he could have the
school, and might come and begin the following Monday. He
then gave him leave to ride back to Lower Sandusky and make
ready. Meantime Judge Everett had seen Jesse S.
Olmsted and made arrangements for Homer to enter his
employ as clerk in his store. On returning home the young
man chose to do what his father and mother thought best.
Mr. Comstock was seen and the engagement to teach
school cancelled. The following Monday young Everett
went into the store as clerk. When he left home he took
with him two plain cotton shirts, made by his mother, two pairs
of woollen socks, knit by her kind hands, one suit, coat, vest,
and pants, of linsey cloth, made by her, one pair of shoes, and
one wool hat which cost fifty cents, and nothing more of worldly
goods or apparel, but took what was better than gold, a father's
and mother's blessing, with an exhortation to be honest and true
under all circumstances.
He was boarded in Judge Olmsted's family, and
his wages for the first year was, cost price for cloth to make a
more stylish suit of clothes, and thirty dollars. His
wages was, however, increased the next year to a salary of fifty
dollars and a suit of clothes, and afterwards still further
increased, until on the close of his engagement, after six
years' service, he was boarded and drew a salary of one hundred
and fifty dollars. Judge Olmstned held the
office of postmaster for several of the latter years of young
Everett's service, and Everett, as deputy postmaster,
performed the duties of that office in addition to those of
salesman and bookkeeper in the store. In 1837
Judge Olmsted resigned the office, and kindly
recommended his boy Homer, as he called him, to be
appointed in his stead, an appointment which seemed to please
the people. He was accordingly appointed and
commissioned by President Van Buren in that
year. While engaged in this office he was elected sheriff
of the county, and then resigned the office of postmaster.
He was reelected sheriff. He commenced reading law in
1834, improving his leisure time in so doing until 1841, when,
on the solicitation of Nathaniel B. Eddy, he was admitted
to the Bar at Columbus, Ohio, and resigned the sheriff's office
to form a law partner-ship
with him. He practiced several years successfully with
Mr. Eddy, when the latter abandoned practice and
engaged in mercantile business. Mr. Everett
soon after formed a partnership in the practice of
hisprofession. with Hon. Lucius B. Otis, now of Chicago.
After several years' practice in association with Judge Otis,
Mr. Everett retired from practice and removed to his farm on
the river, about six miles below Fremont, intending to lead a
quiet farmer's life from that time. In 1847, however, he
accepted the office of county auditor, to which he was elected
by the people of the
county. This position he held for nearly four years, when,
in 1852, he resigned the remainder of the last term of that
office to return to the practice of the law with Ralph P.
Buckland. This partnership continued until 1866, when
General Buckland retired from practice, and
Everett continued the business about one year alone, when he
formed a partnership with James H. Fowler, who had
studied law under his instruction. This still continues,
and Mr. Everett is still in the active practice of
his profession.
During his life Mr. Homer Everett has held, at
various times, the following official positions: Deputy
postmaster under Jesse S. Olmsted; postmaster under the
appointment of Martin Van Buren; township clerk; member
of the board of education many years, in which position he was
active in bringing about the adoption of the Akron school law;
deputy county clerk under, James A. Scranton; mayor of
the city of Fremont. Two scenes while mayor, Mr.
Everett says he can never for-get. The first was the
death of Michael Wegstein at the battle of Shiloh,
April 6, 1862. Wegstein had been a member of the
band of music then organized in Fremont. On receipt of the
news of his death while bravely fighting for his country, the
whole community of Fremont was. deeply affected. The
band of which he had been a member was perhaps affected most of
all. When the news of his death was made certain, his
brother musicians, numbering among them some of our best
citizens, met, draped their instruments in mourning crape, and
went along the sidewalks of the principal streets, playing a
solemn dirge for their lost friend: The band and a large
procession of sympathizers stopped under the window of the
mayor, and after closing the solemn dirge were silent, as if
expecting some remarks.
Mayor Everett advanced to an open window
and delivered them a short address, alluding in touching terms
to the bravery of their lost friend, and urging all to support
the cause in which he had so gloriously died. All present
were affected and departed in a significant and touching
silence. The members of the band were too deeply affected
to even play another dirge then for Michael Wegstein.
The other incident Mr. Everett says was
that which occurred at the news of the death of Abraham
Lincoln, in 1865. On coming to his office about 7
o'clock in the morning, he found the telegraphic, dispatches
announced the assassination of the President by Booth,
and that he was dead. Mayor Everett threw
the black signal of public mourning from his office window and
repaired to the printing office with a notice of the great
National bereavement.
Mr. Everett was sheriff of the county two
terms, county auditor two terms, and, to finish up his public
services, was elected to represent the Thirtieth Ohio Senatorial
District, composed of Huron, Erie, Sandusky, and Ottawa
counties, at the fall election of 1867, and re-elected in 1869,
being nominated by acclamation. During his service in the
Ohio Senate he was a member of the. judiciary committee,
committee on finance, and other committees, But his chief labor
was on a select committee with Charles Scribner and D.
B. Lynn, to certify the laws relating to municipal
corporations, which was the first municipal code enacted in the
State of Ohio.
Of Hon. Homer Everett's family
nothing need be said, as they are set, forth in the history of
Jeremiah Everett and family, to which reference is
made for the particulars.
Source:
1812 History of Sandusky, Ohio with Portraits and Biographies -
Publ. Cleveland, Ohio: H. Z. William & Bro. - 1882 - Page
544 |
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