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SANDUSKY COUNTY, OHIO
History & Genealogy

Biographies

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909  Source:
Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens -
by Basil Meek, Fremont, Ohio
Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publ. Co., Chicago.
1909

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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  EUGENE MAILLARD

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 794

  OLIVER M. MALLERNEE

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 794

  WILLIAM MALLERNEE

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 794

  ANDREW MARTIN

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 495

  FERDINAND MARTIN

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 495

  FREDERICK MARTIN

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 485

  JACOB MARTIN

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 502

  JOHN MARTIN

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 502

  FREDERICK L. MAUNTLER

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 827

  HENRY MAUNTLER

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 443

  JOHN F. MAUNTLER

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 443

  CHARLES E. MAY

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 745

  DANIEL S. McCREERY

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 576

  THOMAS McCREERY

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 576

  C. R. McCULLOCH

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 521

  BASIL MEEK

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 752

  GEORGE G. MEEK

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 912

  JOHN MEEK

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 752

  DR. ROBERT B. MEEK

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 884

  SAMUEL MEEK

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 912

  PROF. ALOYSIUS MENKHAUS

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 640

  FRANK W. MERRIAM

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 552

  DAVID F. MESNARD

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 663

  LEWIS MESNARD

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 663

  FRANK M. METCALF

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 847

  JOSEPH METCALF

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 847

  HOMER METZGAR

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 908

  ANTHONY B. MEYER

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 521

  JACOB MEYER

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 526

  JOHN C. MEYER

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 522

  JOSEPH MEYER

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 526

  JOACHIM MEYERS

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 581

  JOHN MIARER

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 496

  PHILIIP MIARER

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 496

  CHARLES F. MICHAEL

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 717

  CHRISTIAN MICHAEL

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 717

  GEORGE MICHAEL

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 553

  JOHN C. MICHAEL

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 626

  LOUIS MICHAEL

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 791

  GARRETT MICHEL

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 564

  J. HENRY MICHEL

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 564

  A. H. MILLER, a representative business man of Gibsonburg. where he deals in coal, ice, cement and sand, was born at Bettsville, Seneca County, Ohio. Nov. 1. 1856, and is a son of John A. and Mary (Pence) Miller.  The father of Mr. Miller was a merchant and had a general store at Bettsville.  He died in 1866 and left a widow and children.  He married Mary Pence, who died in 1896 and was buried at Old Fort.  They were members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
     A. H. Miller was educated in the schools at Bettsville, after which he learned telegraphing and became operator and agent for one of the railway lines at Gibsonburg, later embarking in his present business, which he has handled successfully.  On Apr. 21, 1888, Mr. Miller was married to Miss Edla Ferrenburg, a daughter of Edward and Catherine Ferrenburg, and they have three children: Alice L., who is her father's bookkeeper; Ralph C., who is deceased; and Bertha F.  Mr. Miller and family attend the Methodist Episcopal Church.  He is identified with the Masons and the Knights of Pythias.
Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909
Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 787
  ANDREW MILLER, who resides on a farm of ninety-three acres located about two miles southeast of Fremont, in Ballville Township, has long been a resident of Sandusky County, Ohio, and has always engaged in agricultural pursuits.  He was born in Seneca County, Ohio, Oct. 3, 1832, and is a son of Andrew and Charlotte (Snyder) Miller.  His father was a native of Hagerstown, Maryland, and his mother of Berkeley County, West Virginia.
     Andrew Miller was an early resident of Seneca County, Ohio, where he lived until 1833 in which year he moved with his wife and children to Sandusky County, Ohio.  He purchased eighty acres of Government land in Washington Township, cleared the place of its timber, and there followed farming until 1861. In that year he returned to Seneca County, purchasing a farm in Thompson Township on which he lived for eight years.  At the end of that time he sold out and moved to Michigan, where he lived until his death at the age of eighty-five years.  His wife also died in Michigan at the same age.  They were parents of the following children: Abraham, deceased; George W., living in Michigan; James, who was killed in an accident at the age of fifteen years; Rose, wife of Levi Fought; Daniel; Charlotte, wife of Levi Smith; Samantha, deceased wife of Casper Shirk; and one who died in infancy.
     DANIEL MILLER was about one year old when his parents removed to Washington Township, Sandusky County, Ohio, and there he was reared to maturity and educated in the district schools.  He followed farming from early manhood until he entered the army during the Civil War.  He enlisted in the 100-day service in 1864, being a member of Company K, 169th O. Vol. Inf. and was stationed at Fort Ethan Allen.  He was mustered out of service at Fremont in September, 1865.  He returned to the farm in Sandusky Township, which he operated until 1891, when he purchased his present farm in Ballville Township from William Mowery.  He has a well improved place, having made many of the improvements himself, and is engaged in general farming.
     Mr. Miller was married Jan. 27, 1854, to Miss Belinda Fisher, who was born Jan. 13, 1834, in Sandusky County, and is a daughter of William and Mary (McCollough) Fisher.  Eight children were born of this union, as follows: Rose (Robins), deceased; Addie (Smith); William T.; James C.; Maud (Sacks); Charles E., who died at the age of four years; and two who died in infancy.  Rose Miller, who married C. B. Robins, died leaving two children: George W. and Maud M.  Addie Miller married J. F. Smith, who is superintendent of schools at Findlay, Ohio, and they had one son, Walter J., now deceased.  William T. Miller, a man of high educational attainments, attended Oberlin College and Wooster University and is now superintendent of schools at Bell Center, Ohio.  He married Bessie Thompson and has three children: Dale, Blake and MargaretJames C. Miller, who also attended Oberlin College, engaged in teaching for some years in the district schools and at Fremont, but is now located with his parents on the home place and engaged in farming.  He married Martha Green and they have a daughter, Eva M.  Maud Miller married Henry J. Sacks of Seneca County, Ohio, and they have three children: Laura, Eva and Adelaide.  The subject of this record is a Republican in politics, and served some years as school director and two years as township trustee.  He is a member of the Grand Army of the Republic at Fremont.
Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909
Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 480
  ANSON H. MILLER, deceased, late president of the First National Bank of Fremont, Ohio, was connected with the banking interests of this city for more than a half century.  He was a member of the first board of directors of the First National, when the institution was founded, in 1863, subsequently served as cashier, later became vice president and finally president, occupying the last named office at the time of his death, which occurred Mar. 30, 1905.  Mr. Miller was born May 2, 1824, at Hillsdale, New Hampshire, and was the second son of John and Hannah (Bassett) Miller.
     In the year following his birth the parents of Mr. Miller moved to Norwalk, Ohio, and in 1839 they settled in New London Township, in Huron County.  Anson H. was educated in the Norwalk Seminary and at Milan Academy, after which he eagerly turned his attention to business.  In 1847 he became an employe of a lumber firm at New Orleans, and after about one year's experience, he returned to New London Township, where he engaged in farming until 1852.  He had no taste, however, for agricultural pursuits and after taking a .commercial course in a business college at Cleveland, became bookkeeper for Dr. William F. Kittridge, who was then treasurer of the Toledo, Norwalk & Cleveland Railroad.  In 1854 he became cashier for the firm of Birchard & Otis, bankers, at Fremont, and became a resident of this city on Aug. 2, 1854, and remained identified with its many interests throughout the remainder of his life.  Changes soon came about in the firm, Judge Otis retiring in January, 1856, and at that time Mr. Miller became a partner, the firm style becoming Birchard, Miller & Company.  In the following year when the late Dr. James W. Wilson became a member of the firm, its resources were increased, but no change was made in the firm name, which continued until 1863.  It was a purely private banking enterprise and did a large volume of business.
     Notwithstanding the general financial stringency in the third year of the Civil War, the capitalists of Fremont did not hesitate in increasing their responsibilities, and in this year the private firm was merged into the First National Bank of Fremont, with the following first officers: Sardis Birchard, president; James W. Wilson, vice president; and Anson H. Miller, cashier.  The bank started out with a paid up capital of $100,000, and an authorized capital of $200,000.  This bank was the fifth National Bank organized in the United States, and through all these succeeding years it has held its supremacy, owing, in large measure its unquestioned solvency and its successful business career to the high personal character of its officers, and their careful, conservative methods.  The fine quarters of the bank, the solid, substantial building on the corner of Front and Croghan Streets, its exterior appearance being typical of the solidity of the bank itself, offer quite a contrast to the small one-story building where Mr. Miller first served as one of its officials.  Mr. Miller was married in March, 1854, to Miss Nancy J. Otis, who is a daughter of Joseph and Nancy B. Otis, a family of age and prominence at Berlin, Ohio.  They had three daughters: Mary O., Fannie B. and Julia E.
Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909
Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 454
  DANIEL MILLER - See ANDREW MILLER

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 480

  HARKNESS J. MILLER - See HENRY W. MILLER

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 922


Henry W. Miller
HENRY W. MILLER, an esteemed citizen of Clyde, who is a veteran of the great Civil War, is a descendant of one of the first settlers of Sandusky County.  He was born on the present site of Clyde, Sandusky County. Ohio, June 2, 1838, and is a son of Lyman F. and Melissa K. (Harkness) Miller.
     His paternal grandfather, also named Lyman F. Miller, resided at Geneva, New York, where he died.  He was married Miss Lucy Brown, whose mother was in maidenhood, Hannah Richmond.  The latter married for her second husband, Asa Smith, Sept. 22, 1795, and they lived at Waterloo, New York, for several years, where were born to them the following children:  William B., Frederick F., Sally, Nancy, Clarissa, and Susan.  In 1810 the family moved to Ohio and settled on a farm near Huron, where another child - Hiram R. - was born Jan. 7, 1813.  Mrs. Hannah (Richmond) Brown Smith, mother of the above mentioned children, was born in Dighton, Massachusetts, Mar. 21, 1774, and died at Sandusky City, Ohio, Aug. 30, 1842.  Her second husband, Asa Smith, was born in Massachusetts in 1760? and died near Huron, Ohio, Aug. 30, 1815.
     The first frame dwelling house in Sandusky City was built by William Smith about the year 1817, at which time there were but half a dozen families in the place, which was then called Ogontz.
     The death of Lyman F. Miller, grandfather of the subject of this sketch, at Geneva, New York, has been already mentioned.  His wife, Mrs. Lucy Brown Miller, who had lived with her mother and stepfather, Asa Smith, until her marriage to Lyman F. Miller, after her husband's death moved to Huron, Ohio, to which place her mother and stepfather had moved in 1810.  Here she was again married, to Samuel Poge, who had served in the army under General Harrison.  They suffered from the depredations of the Indians, having their house and all its contents destroyed by fire.  Then in 1816 they moved to Clyde.
     The Poge, Fenn, and Dewey families were the first three families to settle in Green Creek Township, they coming to Clyde in March, 1816.  Mr. Poge had previously camped here while conveying supplies from Huron to Fort Seneca, while serving in the quartermaster's department under General Harrison.  He was accompanied here later, as above stated in part, by Amos Fenn and Silas Dewey.  Mr. Fenn married Nancy Smith, a half sister of Mrs. Poge, at Marblehead, Ohio, where the Smith family resided at the time.  Silas Dewey married Sally Smith, also a half sister of Mrs. Poge.
     To Samuel Poge and wife was born one daughter, Jane, in 1818, said to have been the first white child born in Green Creek Township.  She was born in the pioneer log cabin that had been built by Mr. Poge, assisted by Fenn and Dewey, and which was located a little west of what is now called Spring Avenue, just south of Colonel Rhoades' residence, just north of the spring that breaks out at the foot of the hill.  Here Mr. Poge had entered eighty acres of land, all heavy timber.  In this log cabin Mr. Poge died in 1827, being survived by his wife and her two children, Lyman F. Miller and Jane Poge.
    
LYMAN F. MILLER (2d), father of the subject of this sketch, was born in Geneva, New York, Nov. 22, 1813.  As we have seen, he was left fatherless in his infancy, and was but fourteen years old when his stepfather, Mr. Poge, died.  With his assistance, his mother by hard work and economy managed to save their home, which consisted of eighty acres of land.  He and his half sister Jane attended school in a log schoolhouse kept by Grandma Slocum, which stood on the spot now occupied by the McPherson Monument.  A number of other families had now moved in and settled in the vicinity of Clyde, among them the Bentons, Bakers, Clevelands, Rathburns, Hamers, McMillans and Russells, who came in the twenties and who all lived in log cabins.  The Harkness family came in 1834.  More in regard to these early settlers and others may be found in the history of the township, published elsewhere in this volume.
     On his stepfather's death, above alluded to, he, and his half sister, there being no other children, came into possession of the farm, which he had helped to clear, and was equally divided between them.  He possessed much native strength of mind and took up his onerous responsibilities with a stout heart and a resolution to do his best and in later years he became one of the representative men of his neighborhood.  He took an active part in local politics, though declining to serve in public office.  On the formation of the Republican party he identified himself with it, believing thoroughly in its principles.  He was one of the early active members of the Masonic fraternity in this section and was a Universalist in his religious faith.  In addition to general farming, he bred live stock and his interest in horticulture resulted in the setting out of many orchards by his neighbors throughout Sandusky County.
     He made the first plot in Clyde in 1852: it consisted of the ground lying between Maple and Buckeye, Main and George Streets.  He also built the Junction House near the depot, the railroad crossing being on his farm.  He also built a frame building on the north side of the Lake Shore Railroad on Main Street, it being used by a Mr. Clark as a grocery store in 1854 or 1855.  He plotted that part of the town between Cherry and Buckeye, Main and George, including Forest Street, which was soon covered with handsome residences and business blocks.  He also bought a farm containing 300 acres of land just north and west of town, building a fine stone house and other buildings, where he died. In these and many other ways he contributed to the development of Clyde, and when he died in 1878, his loss was universally regretted as that of a citizen that the town could ill afford to lose.
     In 1836 he married Melissa E. Harkness, a member of the Harkness family previously mentioned as having moved to Clyde in 1834.  She was a daughter of William G. Harkness, and a descendant in the fifth generation of William Harkness, who came to Massachusetts from Scotland in 1710.  The following are the connecting links in this genealogical chain: William Harkness (2), son of the foregoing, born in 1703, came to this country with his father, and died in 1778.  He married a Miss Grey, at Telharn, Massachusetts, in 1730.  William (3), his second son, lived at Auburn, New York, where his son, William G. Harkness (4) was born in 1781, the latter being the father of Melissa E., wife of Lyman F. Miller 2d.  The entire family of William G. Harkness numbered seven children—William K., Harkness, Melissa, Darwin, Caroline, Dexter and Adaline.  He also had two brothers—David, the father of Stephen and Daniel, and Seamon.  The last three named were interested in the Standard Oil Company and assisted in making it a success.  There were also five sisters — Louisa, who married Wesley Anderson; Isabel, who married a Mr. Gray ; Elizabeth, Mary and Annie.
     To Lyman F. and Melissa (Harkness) Miller were born nine children, namely : William G., Henry W.. Mary E, George N., Oscar J., Isabel E., Emma J., Fanny O., and Louisa J., whose record in brief is as follows: William G. who had taken up the law profession, had been practicing only a short time when he enlisted in October, 1861, in the Civil War, in Company A, 72nd Regt., O. Vol. Inf., in which he held the rank of corporal, and was killed in the retreat from Ripley, Mississippi. June 11, 1864.  George N. met an accidental death at the age of four years by falling into a kettle of hot water.  Mary became the wife of Chester PersingIsabel married W. BellMr. Bell having died some time ago she is now married to a Mr. GregsEmma was the wife of F. J. MetcalfMr. Metcalf having died some time ago she is now married to Carl Price.  Louisa was the wife of Fremont Mears.  The sisters are still living.
     Henry W. Miller, our direct subject, the date of whose nativity has been already recorded, spent his boyhood in attending the district schools and in assisting in the work of the farm; also, so far as he was able, he cultivated a decided talent for music.  In 1862 he joined Company E, First Sandusky County Ohio State Militia, was elected orderly sergeant and shortly afterward was promoted to captain of the same company, which numbered 130 men.
     In October, 1863, he enlisted in Company A, 72nd Reg., O. Vol. Inf., and after spending some time at Tod Barracks, Columbus, Ohio, joined his regiment at Germantown, Tennessee, Jan. 5, 1864.  After a series of skirmishes with the enemy, who were commanded by General Forest, they were ordered to go on the Tallahatcha campaign.  On this campaign, with Colonel Eaton in command, they were actively engaged for some time, fighting more or less every day, and burning the bridges across the Tallahatcha river in face of the enemy's opposition. More or less skirmishing was done all the way to Memphis, Tennessee, whence, after a few days' stay, they were ordered out on another raid through Tennessee and Mississippi, on which march they had some lively skirmishing with the Confederates.  On their return to Memphis, all who had re-enlisted were granted a furlough; the others, with the new recruits, were ordered on guard duty at the navy yard at the mouth of Wolf River.
     On the return of the regiment they were ordered out on the Bolivar raid, having daily skirmishes with the enemy and driving them across Wolf River about 100 miles from Memphis.  On their way back they raided the country for supplies.  A few days after their return they were ordered out on the Guntown raid and drove the enemy back nearly two hundred miles through Tennessee and Mississippi, until they received reinforcements and made a stand at Price's Cross Roads. June to, 1864.  Mr. Miller's company was ordered to support Miller's battery, which they did, the enemy being driven back into the woods on the opposite side of a cleared field.
     Companies A and D were ordered into the woods as skirmishers, fighting on their right being now quite desperate.  In the woods they drove the Confederates back, taking some prisoners.  They now found that most of their own forces had been driven to the rear of their own position and were ordered to fall back, and accordingly they retreated, running back parallel to the enemy's line.  The Confederates commanded than to halt, at the same time firing at them, but without effect, no one being hit.  They rejoined their command in battle line in the rear, where they remained behind an old fence.
     They were now ordered to retreat and were obliged to leave about four hundred wagons and some artillery in possession of the Confederates, thus depriving them of practically all the necessaries of war.  They were closely pursued by the enemy, who shot a number of the men after capturing them, especially the black troops, a small body of which was with the command.  At Ripley, Mississippi, the Confederates made a charge on their rear, Mr. Miller's company and regiment receiving the brunt of the attack.  Here, while Mr. Miller and his brother William were in the act of firing at a Confederate officer, some of their own cavalry rode through them, knocking him senseless and giving him a severe injury.  When he recovered, the forces had gone and he never saw his brother afterwards.  He finally succeeded in rejoining the Union forces, who had halted, and though suffering great pain from the injuries he received, he took part in again repulsing the Confederates.
     A little later, through the hurried retreat or dispersal of the Union forces, Mr. Miller found himself one of a small handful of men who took refuge in the woods, where they found hiding another member of their company and a negro.  Some Confederate skirmishers, evidently acting on a guess, shouted to them, employing many injurious epithets, to "come out of there," but they paid no attention, except the negro, who would have responded had not Mr. Miller restrained him.  Here, having had no rest for two days, they fell asleep, and when they awoke it was eleven o'clock p. m., pitch dark, with a drizzling rain falling, and Confederates all around them.  The negro had been shot in the mouth, losing several teeth.  Owing to his condition, the other men objected to his accompanying them in their attempt to rejoin their forces, but at Mr. Miller's earnest intercession they finally gave way, and although all were so sore and stiff that they could scarcely walk, a start was made.  They tramped until three o'clock in the morning, when Mr. Miller discovered, from having noticed on which side of the trees the moss was growing, that they had been moving practically in a circle and were not very far from where they had started.  While arguing this point with the leader, who was not inclined to believe it, they were startled by the summons to surrender from a hand of Confederates, numbering some fifteen men.  The dawn was just about breaking.  Mr. Miller succeeded in getting away, but the other fugitives ran straight into the road and were captured by the enemy, who took the negro into the brush and shot him.
     The enemy continued their search for Mr. Miller until about six o'clock in the evening, at times passing so close to him that he could hear their remarks.  At last a squad of five rode directly up to his hiding-place and one of them, forcing his horse into the brush, the animal suddenly stopped and Mr. Miller was discovered.  He was seized and searched and threatened with death, the men being very angry at his having eluded them for so long.  They took all his clothing but his pants and shirt and then, after some controversy as to whether it would not be best to shoot him on the spot, they commenced a twenty-mile tramp to where they said they had the Union forces all captured, compelling him try make the journey on foot and keep up with their horses.  Although scarcely able to drag one foot after another, and having had practically nothing to eat for three days, he had to tramp all night through the mud, which in some places was knee-deep, owing to heavy rains and passage over the road of both armies.  He arrived at Ripley in a wretched condition and found there some of his comrades, prisoners, and not much better off than himself.  The rebels had shot some of the Union soldiers after their surrender, both white and black, and their bodies were to be seen along the road.  One, however, who had been sentenced, escaped, and through his testimony, the Confederate officer who commanded the squad guilty of these murders, having been captured, was tried by court martial and executed at Fort Pickering, near Memphis, Tennessee.
     Having been stripped of everything they possessed, on the order of General Forest, they were taken to Guntown, where they received some scanty rations, most of them by this time being almost in a state of starvation.  Thence they were sent to Andersonville, stopping on the way at Meriden, Mississippi, and at Selma, Alabama.  At Meriden Comrade Loudwick, of Company D, was shot by the rebel guard.  At Selma they were marched through the city, exposed to the jeers and insults of the populace.  At Anderson they were greeted by Captain Wirz with a speech, in which he said: "Go in there and I will show you that I can kill more Yankee here than are killed at the front."  We will continue the narrative in Mr. Miller's own words:
     "Our names and rank were taken, then we were put into a prison pen. Such a sight!   There never was a place on this earth where so many human beings were required to make such sacrifices for their country for days and months, until endurance and human flesh could not stand it any longer and God in his merciful kindness welcomed them home, thus ending the torture of their poor bodies by such fiendish treatment, proving man's inhumanity to man.  They had stripped us of all the necessaries of life, we not having even shelter from the storms, from the hot sun which at times seemed as if it would burn us up, and the cold nights which chilled us through and through, without sufficient food to nourish the body and give us strength to resist the terrible strain put on us.  Men became so emaciated that there was nothing left of their poor bodies but skin and bones.
     "If they had money they could buy food at the following prices: Flour at $1.00 a pint, milk 50c. a pint, eggs 50c. each, biscuit 50c. a piece, salt 25c. a spoonful, molasses 25c. a spoonful, potatoes small one 25c, medium 50c., and large ones $1.00, onions, apples and other fruit and vegetables the same rate, a small piece of meat not weighing over two ounces 50c.  A small piece of soap about as large as your thumb sold tor 25c., and even wood, although the prison was surrounded with timber— a little bundle that you could grasp in your hand sold for 25c. a bunch, and this was in greenbacks which we could exchange for their currency, three of theirs for one of ours; but when you know nearly all of these men were robbed of their money you can see how utterly impossible it was for them to buy anything:  thus they were compelled to live on what the rebels saw fit to give them or starve.  It usually consisted of two inches square of corn bread or a pint of mush and this made from meal without lilting, the coarse hulls and all as it came from the mill without salt, and was often burnt or raw.  Yet we would have been satisfied if we could only get even that, but many times they would not give us anything and thus our hungry appetites were increased until there was nothing so filthy that we could not relish.  Some time they would give us raw meal or cow peas, but we had nothing to cook them in.  We had in our company thirty-four men and we had three fruit cans that we had to drink out of and we used them.  Then our wood would give out before the beans were half cooked, so we then had to swallow them w hole or our mush raw; in fact, it seemed as though everything they did was 10 starve us to death, and the long list of our dead proves that they accomplished their designs.
     "Some if the boys worked outside the prison for the Confederates.  My company did not think it right: we thought it would be treason, so we stayed inside and took care of each other as best we could, and such sights and experiences no tongue can tell or pen describe, nearly all becoming helpless through starvation and exposure, having no shelter and having to he on rain soaked ground.
     "They had taken all my clothing away when they captured me except my old pants and shirt, so it became necessary for me to get some clothing. I would not steal, so I bought a plug of tobacco by selling my day's ration.  This was divided into small pieces and sold so I would make a profit on it, but after selling some of it, it made rich handling, so I told the boys if they gave me what I paid they might have it.  Then I went into the molasses trade.  I would buy molasses of those who could not use it. for it was generally sour sorghum, they would issue this stuff to us once a month and I would pay the boys what they would ask, from ten to twenty cents a ration, and then keep it until it became scarce, when I would sell it at 25c. a spoonful.  I sold to the boys who sold what they called beer: when it got sour they would sweeten it with molasses.  This beer was made from water and cornmeal: they would first let it stand until it soured, then it was ready for sale and the boys would buy it paying 5c. a glass.  This sour drink they claimed would keep off the scurvy, so you see they had an excuse for selling it, just as our saloons have now.
     "One day 1 sold some molasses, when the beer man said it was his treat and handed me a glass.  I held it up to the sun, when I discovered it was thick with flies' legs and wings, the other parts of their bodies being dissolved so one could not see through it.  Thanking him I said I was not thirsty.
     "I continued selling molasses until I had seven dollars, then went down on Broadway, as the street was called that ran from the northwest gate through the prison.  On this street you could buy dead men's clothes or most any old thing—some of the finest bone rings and ornamental carvings made from bone and wood, if you had the money.  Not being on the street long one of our boys came along with an artillery jacket nearly new; he had taken it from the body of one of his boys who had just died.  He wanted $20 for it and I told him I would gladly give $50 if 1 had the money, but only had $7.  He said. no. he must have S20 and it was cheap at that.  Following him all day I saw he did not get another offer.  He returned to me and said "I will take your $7.  for I must have some money to buy something to eat for sick comrades.'  When 1 put on the jacket it lacked two inches of reaching the waist of my pants, so it left a space two inches wide around my body that was exposed to the hot sun or chilly wind, but it seemed so warm and comfortable that I could shout with joy, and then how sad it made me feel when I thought of the man that had sacrificed his life in such a place and the many comrades around me who had scarcely any clothing on their bodies.
     "One of the first of our boys who sacrificed his life in prison was Alex. Almond, not yet eighteen years old.  He belonged to my mess, and a nobler, brighter boy was not to be found, patiently and uncomplainingly lying on the ground, slowly sacrificing all that was dear —a comfortable home, a dear mother and sisters and brother near Clyde, Ohio.
     "We had already decided from what the old prison boys told us. that none of our sick boys should be taken to the hospital, where we could not see them or know whether they were being properly cared for or not.  They told us that many times the boys lay there all day without even a drink of water, and scarcely any of them came out alive; so we kept our sick with us. that if we were deprived of all the necessities to properly care for them, we could give them our sympathy at least.  Often when we saw them suffering and could not help them, the tears would fill our eyes and at the same time it would take all our manhood and strength and we would turn our faces away from our sick comrades until we could dry our tears and would then turn and give them our attention again.  I do not think there was a company of men in the prison that stood by one another and cared for each other any better than did Company A boys.
     "I would not do my duty if I did not mention Comrade Harkness Lay in particular.  No mother could have done more under the circumstances, and it seemed that God gave him strength, for he kept up better and had the disposition and sympathy to help the poor boys when and wherever he could.  Comrade Almond would ask us frequently to read him chapters in the New Testament, for we had one of those books with us, and it seemed to please him much when I would do so.  This Testament was worn out, the print became so dim we could hardly make out the words and sentences.
     Mr. Miller was the only One of a little group of five comrades who survived this long and terrible ordeal, and during his confinement of six months at Andersonville, Savannah and Millin, Georgia, the appalling number of 13,082 Union prisoners gave up their lives there.  Mr. Miller was finally paroled at Savannah and reached home in time for Christmas, though the hearts of all were tempered with sadness on account of the death of his brother William, killed in the retreat from Ripley.
     After a period of necessary recuperation, Mr. Miller returned to his company and regiment, joining them at Selma, Ala., and was mustered out at Vicksburg, Mississippi, in September, 1865.
     Returning home he engaged in teaching music, being an expert organist and singer, and was hired by Mr. C. Hunter, an edge-tool maker, at $100.00 a week and expenses, and traveled with him, visiting many towns and cities in Ohio and other adjoining states.  He then settled on his farm of about one hundred acres, where he engaged in farming and fruit growing.  This farm now consists of 140 acres, seven acres of which lie along State and Main Streets, within the corporate limits of Clyde, the balance being just north of the corporation line.  The farm he bought was sold by his father during the war at $25 per acre; when he bought it it cost him nearly $100 per acre, only a few years after; and this in spite of the fact that there were no improvements on it.
     Mr. Miller was first married on Christmas eve, 1860, to Miss Louisa Metcalf, who died Apr. 2, 1862, aged twenty-one years.  He married for his second wife, Sept. 22, 1868, Miss Maria L. Deyo, a daughter of John P. Deyo, a doctor and farmer of Groten Township, Erie County, of which he was also a pioneer.  Of this union there have been three children, Jessie L., Esma M., and Harkness J., whose record in brief is as follows:
     Jessie, born Nov. 20, 1869, graduated in the high school of Clyde and then taught in the Union School of Clyde a number of years.  She married Frank F. Jodon, a graduate of Oberlin College, the 29th of September, 1900, and they now live in a fine home of their own at Salina, Kansas, her husband having charge of the newspaper delivery of that city.  They have one daughter, Louise, born Feb. 29, 1904.  They are members of the Presbyterian Church of that city.  In politics he is a Republican.
     Esma, born Dec. 29, 1872, at Clyde, Ohio, graduated in the high school in Clyde, and then taught school in the country some time.  She was married on the 15th of June, 1899, to H. A. Cook, prosperous and honored merchant of Huron, Ohio, and they have two children.  Paul, born Aug. 12, 1903, and Wendel, born Nov. 2, 1905.  They are members of the Presbyterian Church.  Mr. Cook is a member of the Masonic fraternity.  His wife is a member of the Stars.  In politics he is a Republican.
     HARKNESS J. MILLER was born on the farm just north of town Nov. 11, 1877.  He attended the Clyde public school until sixteen years of age; served as musician of Co. I, 6th Regiment O. V. I., also as a private in the U. S. hospital corps in the United States and Cuba during the Spanish-American War.  Later he graduated from the bookkeeping department of the Sandusky City Business College: after which he spent two years doing office work at Sandusky, Ohio.  On June 18, 1904, he was married to Miss Freada K. Myers, a piano teacher of Huron, Ohio.  In April. 1905. they moved to his old boyhood home at Clyde, Ohio, where they still reside, devoting time to breeding fancy poultry, to fruit culture, and to music.  He is a member of the Masonic Lodge; in politics a Republican.
     In politics Mr. Miller has always been an adherent of the Republican party, though his prohibition tendencies—he having "no use for either whisky or tobacco"—have caused him to take pride that the county has recently voted down the liquor traffic.  For thirty or forty years he was identified with everything musical in Clyde and the vicinity, and he still takes an interest in this pleasing art, though he no longer, as formerly, teaches music.  In 1865 he was admitted to the Masonic fraternity, of which he has since been an active member.  He is both a past and the present commander of the Grand Army post at Clyde, and was elected at the State Encampment a delegate from the Eighteenth District to the G. A. R. National Encampment at Salt Lake City in 1909.  He has spent many an interesting hour with his old comrades who, like himself, have known the terrors and cruelties of war, and who are therefore the better able to appreciate the blessings of peace which our united country now enjoys, which peace he and they helped to conquer.
Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 916
  LYMAN F. MILLER - See HENRY W. MILLER

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 916


Mr. & Mrs.
Peter Miller
PETER MILLER, who is engaged in agriculture on a tract of 240 acres, of which 224 acres are located in Jackson Township, and sixteen acres in Scott Township, is a native of Medina County, Ohio, having been born there Apr. 24, 1840, son of Peter and Katherine (Albright) Miller.
     Peter and Katherine Miller, parents of the subject of this sketch, were both natives of Germany, and Peter Miller came to the United States at the age of twenty-one years, locating in Medina County, Ohio, where he resided for many years, engaged in farming.  Later in life he moved to Sandusky County and settled on the farm now owned by his son Peter in Jackson Township.  He married Mrs. Katherine Albright, a widow, and to them were born the following children: Mary, Peter, Christina and Augustus, the last mentioned being now deceased.  Mrs. Miller was the mother of three children also by her first marriage, namely, Coonrod, Katherine Rechter, and John Rechter, all of whom are now deceased.  Peter Miller, Sr., died on the present farm of his son, the subject of this sketch, having attained the advanced age of eighty-seven years; his wife passed away at the age of seventy-four.
     Peter Miller, of the present generation, passed his boyhood days on his father's farm in Medina County, Ohio, and attending district school as he found opportunity.  In 1864 he accompanied his father to Sandusky County and operated his present farm on shares with his father, who had purchased it, for a period of six years.  He then purchased the property and has since made most of the improvements thereon, having erected all the buildings now standing, including two houses and a barn.  A portion of his farm lies in Millersville, which village was named after his father.
     Mr. Miller was married, Feb. 6, 1866, at Tiffin, Ohio, to Lucy Bihn, a daughter of Andrew and Anna Mary (Link) Bihn, of Seneca County, Ohio. Of this union have been born nine children, as follows:  Augustus, Catherine, Hubert, Mary, Joseph, Lucy, Anna, George and Leo, the last mentioned of whom is deceased.  Augustus, a resident of Tiffin, Ohio, married Emma Grine, and has seven children—Marie, Peter, Albert, Stella, Loretta, Urban, Arthur, and Catherine Helena (deceased).  Catherine married Anthony Foos, of Jackson Township, and has nine children—Lucy, Agnes, Rosie, Catherine, Alfred, Clement, Leo, Lewis, and one that died when a week old.  Hubert, who is a resident of Jackson Township, married Josephine Walby, and their children are: Edmond, Walter, Vincent (deceased), Celeste, Alfred and Herman.
     Mrs. Miller has one sister, Katherine, who is the widow of Marcus Zirger and the mother of twelve children, namely: Louis, Frances, Anna, Otto, Ida, Lucy, Tillie, Lea, Clara (deceased), Albert, Edward and Millie.
     Mr. Miller and his sons without the assistance of any company or professional oil operators, have drilled eight oil wells on the farm, all of which have proved good producers.  He and his family are members of St. Mary's Catholic Church of Millersville.
Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909
Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 636
  CHRISTOPHER MOLKENBUR

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 838

  HENRY W. MOLKENBUR

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 838

  JOHN C. MOOK

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 855

  JOHN H. MOOK

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 855

  JACOB MOONEY

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 588

  LUTHER MOONEY

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 588

  CHARLES T. MOORE

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 864

  JAMES MOORE

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 864

  CHARLES B. MORRIS

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 542

  JOHN MORRIS

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 542

  WEALTHY M. MORRISON

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 115

  JOSEPH D. MUCHMORE - See WILLIAM O. MUCHMORE

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 680


Residence of
William O. Muchmore,
Ballville Twp.
w/ Portrait of
Joseph D. Muchmore
WILLIAM O. MUCHMORE, who conducts the Glenn Hill Nursery in Ballville Township, Sandusky County, owns the two acres of valuable land on which he lives and in association with his mother, owns twenty acres more.  He was born Aug. 6, 1855, in Spring Creek Township, Black Hawk County, Iowa, and is a son of Joseph D. and Elizabeth H. (Rideout) Muchmore.
    
JOSEPH D. MUCHMORE was born in Hamilton County, Ohio, June 5, 1825 and died in Ballville Township, Oct. 4, 1906.  He was married Apr. 25, 1850, to Elizabeth H. Rideout,  who was born in Ballville Township, Sandusky County, Ohio, Nov. 4, 1830.  She still survives.  Her parents were John S. and Sarah (Randall) Rideout, the former of whom was born in Maine and the latter in Connecticut.  He served in the War of 1812, being very young at the time, and when he came to Ballville township, bought the land on which he and wife died.  Of the nine children born to Joseph D. Muchmore and wife, only two survived infancy: John S. and William O., the latter being the only one living, his brother's death occurring on Mar. 27, 1896, when aged forty-five years.
     When he was about ten months old, the parents of Mr. Muchmore moved from Iowa to Nebraska, where the father followed farming eight years and then came to Ballville Township, Sandusky County, and in 1864 started until his death.  To this large enterprise William O. Muchmore succeeded, during his father's lifetime having learned all the details of the business.  He carries a large amount of first class nursery stock, such as will flourish in this climate, and his business is in a prosperous condition.
     On May 22, 1877, Mr. Muchmore was married to Miss Abbie L. Plantz, a daughter of Peter and Alice (Entsminger) Plantz, and they have had the following children:  Delila M., James G., Clarence B., Bessie A., William H., Grace E., and IreneDelila M. who died at Battle-Creek, Michigan, Feb. 13, 1909, was the wife of C. E. Baldwin and left two sons.  James G. resides at Fremont, Ohio, married Olivia De Mars.  William H. resides in Ballville Township, married Emma Creager and they have one child.  The other members of the family still reside at home.  The family belongs to the Evangelical Church.  Mr. Muchmore has always been an active and useful citizen in his township and at various times has been elected to local office.  He served for sixteen years as a school director.  He was a member of the Ancient Order of United Workmen.
Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909
Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 680
  JOHN B. MUGG

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 804

  NORTON R. MUGG

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 800

  WILLIAM A. MUGG

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 804

  ALBERT S. MYERS

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 764

  CHRISTIAN MYERS

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 764

  EUGENE MYERS

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 533

  PERRY, MYERS

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 533

  WILHELM MYERS

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 863

  WILLIAM MYERS

Source: History of Sandusky - Publ. 1909 Source:  Twentieth Century History of Sandusky County, Ohio & Representative Citizens - Publ. Richmond - Arnold Publishing Co. - Chicago - 1909 - Page 725

NOTES:

 

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