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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. GEORGE LEE practiced in Fremont about three years, removing to Washington, District of Columbia, i 1880, where he is now in practice.  He is a graduate of Western Reserve College, and of Lane Theological Seminary.  He edited a paper for some time i n Minneapolis, and then studied medicine and graduated at Cleveland Homeopathic Medical College in 1877.  His first location was in Fremont.
   Source: 1812 History of Sandusky, Ohio with Portraits and Biographies - Publ. Cleveland, Ohio:  H. Z. William & Bro. - 1882 - Page 461
  JOHN McINTYRE LEMMON was born in Townsend township.  Sandusky county, Ohio, July 25, 1839, his father being Uriah Blake Lemmon, and his mother Emily A. McIntyre Lemmon.  John McIntyre remained with his parents until eighteen years old, and received a common school education.  He taught a district school in the winter of 1857-58; attended school at Oberlin college in the summer of 1858; taught again the following winter, and in the spring of 1859 went to Missouri and began the study of law in the office of Knoll & McIntyre.  In November, 1859, he went to Jefferson City, Missouri, and studied with Mr. Knoll, who had been appointed attorney general of the State.  In April, 1860, Mr. Lemmon was admitted to the Bar by the supreme court of Missouri, and soon after returned to his home.
     July 12, 1860, his mother died, after a lingering illness.  In the winter of 1860-61 Mr. Lemmon again taught a district school.  April 24, 1861, he enlisted in company F, Eight Ohio, in the three months' service, and was discharged Aug. 18, 1861.  Oct. 9, 1861, Mr. Lemmon again enlisted in company B, Seventy-second Ohio Volunteer infantry, and continued in the service until the close of the war; was promoted to second lieutenant May 23, 1862, and to captain July 23, 1863, and was mustered out at Selma, Alabama, June 21, 1865.  During part of the war he was on detached duty as judge advocate of a military commission at Memphis, Tennessee.
     Mar. 29, 1864, Mr. Lemmon was married to Miss Annie Covell, of Perkins, Erie county, Ohio.  In December, 1865, he settled in Clyde, and began the practice of his profession.  He has met with good success in his practice and has for many years past enjoyed an extensive practice in the State and Federal courts.  He has one child living, named Mack, born Apr. 8, 1870.  One child, Frank, born Oct. 8, 1865, died Nov. 9, 1867.
     When the village of Clyde was incorporated, in May, 1866, Mr. Lemmon was chosen it first mayor, and was re-elected in April, 1867.  He has never held any other civil office.
     Mr. Lemmon is one of the most studious, active, and industrious members of the Bar now in practice in the county.  He has accumulated money and property by his practice.  His library at Clyde consists of fifteen hundred well selected, volumes.  Mr. Lemmon's energy and industry have brought him into such prominence in the northwest portion of Ohio, that a bright career is opening before him.  His practice already extends into Erie, Huron, Ottawa, Seneca, and other counties in northwestern Ohio.  He also practices in the circuit, district, and supreme courts of the United States, as well as the supreme court of Ohio.
  Source: 1812 History of Sandusky, Ohio with Portraits and Biographies - Publ. Cleveland, Ohio:  H. Z. William & Bro. - 1882 - Page 392
  JOHN B. LOVELAND was born in New Haven township, Huron county, Ohio, on the 10th day of February, 1827.  At the age of nineteen years he left his father's farm for Oberlin College to supplement the education picked up in a pioneer district school on the classic Huron River.  On the 22d day of August, 1850, he was married to Miss Martha Jane Watts, of New Haven, by whom he has had three children.  In 1854 he removed to Fremont, Sandusky county, Ohio, to take a position as teacher in the Fremont graded schools.  This position he held with credit to himself and to the entire satisfaction of all concerned for the term of ten years.  From his position in the schools of Fremont he was called to the superintendency of the schools at Bellevue and Green Spring respectively, in which position he spent eight years.  All this time he was one of the reliable members of the board of county school examiners, in which position he well and faithfully discharged the duties of the office for the term of fourteen years.  He commenced the study of the law while superintending the schools of Green Spring, with Marcus D. Baldwin, esq., and was admitted to the Bar by the district court of Sandusky county at Fremont, Ohio, on the 20th of March, 1876, where he commenced the practice of law, and has continued practice until the present time.  Although a member of the legal profession.  Mr. Loveland does not make the practice of the law a specialty, preferring the retirement of his farm, situated one and a half miles southwest of the city.  In solid scientific attainments, and in that practical common sense which is the result of learning and original thought, Mr. Loveland has few superiors.  His father, Mr. John Loveland, one of the oldest pioneers of Huron county, is still in good health at the advanced age of eighty-three years.
  Source: 1812 History of Sandusky, Ohio with Portraits and Biographies - Publ. Cleveland, Ohio:  H. Z. William & Bro. - 1882 - Page 388

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