1847 - |
Trustees - James Dorland, John Scott,
John S. Brown; Clerk - S. B. Johnson; Treasurer - James Creswill. |
1848 - |
Trustees - J. S. Brown, John Scott,
John Firestone; Clerk - S. B. Johnston; Treasurer - James Creswill;
Assessor - Peter Franks. |
1849 - |
Trustees - J. S. Brown, John Firestone,
Jacob Halfhill; Clerk - Isaiah McDonald; Treasurer - John S. Smith;
Assessor - S. B. Johnston. |
1850 - |
Trustees - Jacob Halfhill, Moses
Kelley, James Crosby; Clerk - A. B. Cosper; Treasurer - John S.
Smith; Assessor - S. B. Johnston. |
1851 - |
Trustees - James Crosby, Jacob Halfhill,
James Hutchison, Clerk - S. B. Johnston; Treasurer - Moses Kelley;
Assessor - J. S. Brown. |
1852 - |
Trustees - Jimsey Hutchison, James
Crosby, Jacob Halfhill; Clerk - A. B. Robison; Treasurer - Moses
Kelley; Assessor - John S. Brown. |
1853 - |
Trustees - Jimsey Hutchison, John S.
Brown, Andrew Knox; Clerk - A. B. Robison; Treasurer - Moses Kelley;
Assessor - David Thompson. |
1854 - |
Trustees - Thomas McCAughey, Andrew
Knox, John Crosby; Clerk - B. C. McClellan; Treasurer - John
Lindsey; Assessor - adam Reaser. |
1855 - |
Trustees - J. B. Crosby, Thomas H.
McCaughey, C. R. Strauss; Clerk - William Clark; Treasurer - Andrew
knox; Assessor - Adam Reaser. |
1856 - |
Trustees - C. R. Strauss, John B.
Crosby, William Johnston; Clerk - Henry C. Ober; Treasurer - Andrew
Knox; Assessor - Thomas McCaughey. |
1857 - |
Trustees - William W. Johnston, John B.
Crosby, A. B. Cosper; Clerk - H. C. Ober; Treasurer - Andrew Knox;
Assessor - John Smedley. |
1858 - |
Trustees - Robert Hacket, A. B. Cosper,
Jones Thompson; Clerk - H. C. Ober; Treasurer - Andrw Knox; Assessor
- Hugh Truesdale. |
1859 - |
Trustees - Robert Hacket, John Rogers,
Isaiah Rayl; Clerk - John H. Gregor; Treasurer - Samuel Searight;
Assessor - Andrew Watson. |
1860 - |
Trustees - John Rogers, Robert
Cunningham, T. R. Goodin; Clerk - William Guthrie; Treasurer -
Samuel Searight; |
1861 - |
Trustees - Robert Cunningham, Thomas
Dunham, David Truesdale; Clerk - William Guthrie; Treasurer - Samuel
Searight; Assessor - John H. Foultz. |
1862 - |
Trustees - T. R. Goodin, Thomas Dunham,
D. P. Truesdale; Clerk - J. H. Gregor; Treasurer - Samuel Searight;
Assessor - John H. Fouts. |
1863 - |
Trustees - D. P. Truesdale, John
Stauffer, James Spencer; Clerk - J. B. Koch; Treasurer - John
Wilson; Assessor - A. J. Reider. |
[Page 763]
1864 - |
Trustees - John Stauffer, Eugene
Grossjean, William Moore; Clerk - J. B. Koch; Treasurer - John
Wilson; Assessor - Johnson Brown. |
1865 - |
Trustees - Eugene Groesjean,
Michael Streel, Albert Sweeney; Clerk - J. B. Koch; Treasurer -
William Coulter; Assessor - Peter Franks. |
1866 - |
Trustees - M. H. Steel, Eugene
Groesjean, Alfred Sweeney; Clark - J. B. Koch; Treasurer - Wm.
Coulter; Assessor - John H. Fouts. |
1867 - |
Trustees - M. H. Steel, Frederick
Brown, William Scott; Clerk - J. B. Koch; Treasurer - T. C. Franks;
Assessor - John Stauffer, Jr. |
1868 - |
Trustees - William Scott, George Moore,
John Orr; Clerk - M. H. Steel; Treasurer - T. C. Franks; Assessor -
John Stauffer. |
1869 - |
Trustees - George Moore, John Orr,
James Criswell; Clerk - P. F. Gerard; Treasurer - S. C. Franks ;
Assessor - William B. Johnson. |
1870 - |
Trustees - George Moore, John Orr,
James Criswell; Clerk - P. F. Gerard; Treasurer - Eugene Grosjean;
Assessor - Eugene Wisard. |
1871 - |
Trustees - George Moore, James
Criswell, John Orr; Clerk - Peter Gerard; Treasurer - Eugene
Grosjean; Assessor - C. A. Reider. |
1872 - |
Trustees - George Moore, James
Criswell, Eli S. Barnes; Clerk - Peter Gerard; Treasurer - Eugene
Grosjean; Assessor - John Fouts. |
1873 - |
Trustees - George Moore, William
Coulter, John Flory; Clerk - Peter Gerard; Treasurer - Eugene
Grosjean; Assessor - John Fouts. |
1874 - |
Trustees - William Coulter, John Flory,
_____ Brown; Clerk - Peter Gerard; Treasurer - Eugene Grosjean;
Assessor - John Fouts. |
1875 - |
Trustees - William B. Moore, Johnson
Brown, John Flory; Clerk - Peter Gerard; Treasurer - Henry Goudy;
Assessor - John H. Fouts. |
1876 - |
Trustees - William Moore, Johnson
Brown, George Shambard; Clerk - Peter Gerard; Treasurer - David
Simon; Assessor - Eugene Grosjean. |
1877 - |
Trustees - John B. Armstrong, J. B.
Crosby, J. W. Johnson; Clerk - Edward Amiet; Treasurer - David
Simon; Assessor - C. A. Scott. |
Justices of the Peace -
Samuel L. Lorah, Oct. 26, 1833; James McFadden, Oct. 26,
1833; James McFadden, Dec. 31, 1836; Jesse B. Ramsey Nov.
17, 1837; James McFadden, Oct. 24, 1839; J. B. Ramsey,
Nov. 23, 1840; B. F. Barns, Dec. 10, 1841; James Hoge,
Oct. 21, 1842; B. F. Barnes, Nov. 19, 1844; James Hoge,
Oct. 23, 1845; Thomas Moore Nov. 13, 1847; Adam Reaser,
Oct. 21, 1848; William Peppard, Oct. 19, 1850; Adam Reaser,
Dec. 9, 1851; Anthony B. Robison Oct. 27, 1853; D. Thompson,
Oct. 21, 1854; S. Johnson Nov. 12, 1856; R. R. Gailey,
Apr. 22, 1857; S. Johnson, Oct. 20, 1859; Robert Hacket,
Apr. 17, 1860; S. D. Miller, Apr. 17, 1863; Daniel Reider,
Apr. 17, 1863; David Thompson, Nov. 17, 1864; H. C. Ober,
Oct. 15, 1867; John Brownfield, Apr. 13, 1869; Daniel Reider,
Apr. 13, 1869; John Ruch Apr. 9, 1872; John Brownfield,
Apr. 9, 1872; John Stauffer, Oct. 22, 1873; Ezra Dunham
Oct. 20, 1874; William Coulter, Apr. 12, 1875; Arthur
Anderson, Apr. 12, 1877.
William Searight was born Oct. 17, 1779, in
Cumberland county, Pa. His father was a native of Ireland,
immigrated to America about 1760, settling in Carlisle, Pa., and served
seven years in the Revolutionary war. William married
Jane Johnson of Shippensburg, Pa., July 3, 1787, and in the spring
of 1811 immigrated to Wayne county with his wife and two children,
Ann
[Page 764]
and Jane, coming by way of Pittsburg, Marietta, the
Muskingum and then to Coshocton, and then on to his own place, which he
had selected the year before (1810), building his cabin on the banks of
Salt creek, facing the "Pine Hill." He was then the only man and
his the only family in Saltcreek township, and was truly "monarch of all
he surveyed." Here he had entered 460 acres of land. His
nearest neighbors lived in what is now Prairie township, Holmes county,
and where John Martin, Hugh McCollough, John Castor and his sons.
Henry Barnes, father of Peter Barnes, was the first
settler to join him in Saltcreek township, and he came just after the
war of 1812. After the news of Hull's surrender Mr.
Searight and family fled for safety to the block-house, four and a
half miles distant, built in Prairie township, Holmes county, on the
farm now owned by Benjamin Dawson, where, assembled for a time,
the Castors, Martins, McColloughs and Dawsons. The Indians
were friendly. Old Chief Lyon, about this time, visited the
Searights, and told Mrs. Searight that he had cut out the
tongues of ninety-nine women, and wanted hers to make the
even one hundred. William Searight died July 16, 1846, and
his wife followed him in February, 1848. They had ten children, as
follows: Ann, Francis G., Elizabeth, Jane, Ezzelar, Samuel,
Gilbert, Elizabeth G., George W. and H. S.
Fredericksburg
was laid out by Jacob Frederick, Nov. 27, 1824, the plat and
certificate recorded two days thereafter, and found on page 450, volume
3, County Recorder's office. It was named on page 450, volume 3,
County Recorder's office. It was named in honor of its founder,
who served as one of the Associate Judges of Wayne county as early as
1826.
Recollections of Joseph
Miller - William Searight built the first
saw-mill erected on Salt creek, four rods above the residence of
Gilbert Searight, in 1813. Judge Frederick built the
next one in 1816-17. The Searight mill burned down, and
John Cheyney and Samuel Miller rebuilt another in 1820 for
saw-mill uses. Frederick's second mill was built in 1836,
and had a capacity of 200 barrels per day. Joseph Firestone,
John Miller and Jacob Frederick ran it in its more prosperous
days. It was destroyed by fire in 1876. James Russell,
a blacksmith, built the first house in the town where the stone corner
now stands. The first house kept for a hotel was built by
Samuel Miller, and stood on the north half of the AEtna property, it
being conducted by Samuel, the father of Joseph Miller.
Cornelius Dorling and Mr. Frederick kept the first store
in the old still-house. The first school-house built in Saltcreek
township as on Jacob Beerbower's farm, now owned by John
Grossjean, and Aaron Thompson, was among the first teachers.
The first school-house built in Fredericksburg was in 1828, where
Andrew Knox's blacksmith shop stands, and the first teacher was
John C. Taylor, although C. P.
[Page 765]
Tennant had taught select
school twelve years prior to this. The Presbyterians built the
first church. Frederick had the first distillery, and, it
is said, at the time of the building of the Ohio Canal, there were eight
distilleries within two miles of the village. The first doctor was
James Clarkson, of Washington county, Pa., who came in1827, and
died in 1846. James Taylor was the first lawyer. The
first Postmaster was Samuel Miller, appointed in 1827, holding it
11 years; he was succeeded by J. J. Deitrich, W. C. Ream, James Hoag,
Amos Cosper and Daniel Cosper, the present incumbent.
On George Brown's place parties bored for salt to the depth of
350 feet, but it did not pay. Samuel Goodwin, who lived on
the farm where William Moore now lives, said that buffalo, elk
and deer would haunt these salt licks. John Harrison and
Miss Miller, were the first couple married in Fredericksburg, and by
Rev. A. Hanna. My father, Samuel Miller, was born in
Westmoreland county, Pa., in 1787, and removed to Wayne county in 1819,
settling in Franklin, but in 1826 removing to Saltcreek. He died
Dec. 18, 1862, his wife dying Feb. 3, 1876. He was a tradesman and
hotel keeper.
W.
T. Barnes, M. D., was born Nov. 10, 1843, and worked on
the farm till he was seventeen, when he entered the army, enlisting as a
private in the 51st Ohio Regiment, Stanley Matthews, Colonel.
After his return from the army he attended school at Lexington, Richland
county, Ohio, and in 1866 began studying medicine with John Russell,
M. D., of Mt. Vernon graduating from Charity Hospital Medical College,
Cleveland, Ohio, in the spring of 1869, and in 1870 began the practice
in Fredericksburg, where he is at present located. He was married
to Almeda Greer, of Knox county, Ohio, Aug. 24, 1869.
Daniel Rieder, Jr.,
was born Oct. 24, 1815, in York county, Pa. He is a son of
Daniel Rieder, of the same State and county, who immigrated to Wayne
county in 1816, settling first in Paint township, and in about 1833
removing to Saltcreek. His son, Daniel, was married to
Sarah A. Mowrey, and has had sixteen children, ten of whom are
living. He has served as Justice of the eace of Saltcreek township
nine years, and with John Mackey laid out the town of Maysville.
J. B. Koch, of Wooster, had started a store there before the
village was laid out. His son, Cyrus Rieder, is practicing law in
Wooster.
Thomas Armstrong was born
in county Cavan, Ireland, in the province of Ulster, and immigrated to
America, landing at New York, May 17, 1804. He removed to
Saltcreek township Apr. 5, 1816, the same year being married to Nancy
Dunlevy, of Washington county, Pa., and had thirteen children.
He became a naturalized citizen of the United States in October, 1824.
He was
[Page 766]
twice elected Justice of the Peace - in 1826 and 1830.
Mr. Armstrong was educated in Ireland. John D. Armstrong,
at our request, kindly furnished us with these facts.
John
Mackey was born in Saltcreek Township, in 1824. He
was raised on the farm with his father, who came to the township in
1816; was married to Elizabeth Cunningham in 1845. He had
three children, to wit: Albert, Mary J. and John. He
met death by accident in a saw-mill, at Maysville, being hurt Oct. 11,
1850, and dying six days tehreafter. His son, Albert Mackey
was elected Justice in 1876, of Saltcreek township, and in 1874 was
chosen Surveyor of Wayne county, but declined to serve. He spent
over a year in the employ of the Government, under General J. S.
Ingalls, aiding in the survey of Oregon and California lands.
Parmenas Appleman was born
in Washington county, Pa., Dec. 20, 1804, and came to Wayne county with
his father, Jacob, in 1819, who was a native of New Jersey, and
married to a sister of Hon. John Harris, of Canton. He
removed to Saltcreek township in the spring of 1827, and settled half a
mile south of Maysville. He was married Apr. 5, 1827, to Mary
Rodgers, and has had the following children: William, John,
James, Parmenas, Thomas, Harris, Samuel, Nancy, Jane, Eliza.
His wife died in 1847, and he was again married in 1854, to Martha
Kilgore, Miss Eliza E. Appleman being the only child of this
marriage. Both as farmer and merchant Mr. Appleman has made
his life a success. He is a member of the Presbyterian church.
Rev.
Samuel Irvine, D. D., was born in County Tyrone,
Ireland, June 25, 1787, his parents immigrating to America June 25,
1788, two years thereafter settling in Huntington county. Pa. He
labored on the farm until 1810, when he entered college. In 1815
he attended the theological seminary at Servia, Pa., where he was
licensed to preach by the Presbytery of Philadelphia, in 1819. In
1820 he came to Wooster, and received a call from the congregations of
Saltcreek, Wooster, Newman's creek and Mohican, which he accepted, and
was ordained at the Court House, in Wooster, March, 1821. He
finally relinquished the two latter charges, retaining Wooster and
Saltcreek until 1835, when he resigned the former and went to
Millersburg, retaining his relation with the Saltcreek church until his
death, Apr. 28, 1861. He was married Jan. 22, 1822, to Maria
Glasgow, of Beaver, county, Pa., who,
[Page 767]
with three sons and four daughters, survived him. His second son,
S. P. Irvine, became a minister. His first Elder in Wooster
was John McClellan, Sr.; in Mohican, Nathaniel Paxton;
in Newman's Creek, Colonel McDowell; in Saltcreek,
William Trusdale. He had charge of the first select
school ever opened in Wooster, and taught upon the premises where E.
Quinby, Jr., resides.
United Presbyterian
Church of Fredericksburg - This congregation, prior to
1858, was called the Associate Presbyterian, or Seceder. Some of
the first Associate families were John Sorrel and
George Miller, who settled in the neighborhood in 1812 or
1813; William Truesdale, John Lytle and
Henry Caldwell in 1815, and James Truesdale in
181 7, and Samuel Miller, David Knox and
George Boon. Some of the first ministers who supplied
these people with preaching were Revs. John Walker, W. M.
Wilson and James Ramsey, D. D.
The congregation was organized by Rev.
William Wilson in 1818, with Messrs. John
Sorrel, George Miller and William Truesdale
as Elders. The organization was effected and the Elders elected in
the house of Mr. Robert Knox. The first house
of worship was built of logs, commonly called a log house, and stood
near the old Associate burying-ground on the hill, south of where Mr.
Smith Peppard now lives. This was commenced soon after the
organization of the congregation.
In 1820 Rev. Samuel Irvine, D. D., was called to
take charge of the congregation, and in March, 1821, he was ordained and
installed pastor of this and three other congregations. For quite
a number of years he ministered to this, in connection with other
congregations in the neighborhood. But the last few years of his
life were devoted to this congregation exclusively. By his death
the congregation was left without a pastor in the spring of 1861, and
continued so, being ministered to by a large number of men until 1866.
In 1866 Rev. T. J. Kennedy was called from Jamestown, Pa., and
took charge of the congregation; continued in charge until the fall of
1869, when he was released. In July, 1870, a call was made for
R. R. Atchison, who entered upon his duties as pastor the following
January, and still continues in charge. The congregation now
worship m a brick church in the south-western part of the town, which
was built in 1838. Present officers: Elders—Messrs. Thomas
Smith, Joseph McElroy, Francis B. Lytle, James Kerr, Thomas McCaughey,
Arthur Anderson and Samuel McCoy.
The first Methodist
church in Fredericksburg was built in 1830, and stood
south of town, where William Barnes now lives, and the
first minister was Rev. H. O. Sheldon. The second edifice
was built in 1860. Some of the earlier of the members of this
church were John Miller and family, David
Griffith and family, Samuel Brown and family, Robert
Armstrong, Sr., Robert Armstrong, Jr.,
J. R. Armstrong, Jacob Kiser (the singing shoemaker), Stinson
McWilliams, Nancy Sefton and family, C. P. Tennant and
family, R. S. McEwen and family.
[The sketch of the Presbyterian
Church was unfortunately lost.]
B.
C. Smith was born in
Paint township. His parents, Moses and Keziah Smith, were
natives of Fayette county, Pa., his mother and coming to Wayne county
when a child with her parents, Bazaleel and Mary Tracy, in 1814,
and his father in 1822, at the age of 24, and soon thereafter settled on
the northwest quarter of Paint township. Here the subject of this
sketch was born, and his
[Page 768]
early life passed. After quitting
district school he entered the Academy at Edinburg; then studied in
Vermillion Institute at Haysville, and after being a short time at
Oberlin College, he established the Fredericksburg High School. In
1859 he was appointed a member of the County Baord of School Examiniers,
a position he has continued to fill, with but little intermission to the
present time.
Fredericksburg High
School - This was established in 1852, by Prof. B. C.
Smith, commencing with forty pupils, and in a few years thereafter
had won a wide and enviable reputation as an educational institution.
The rolls show an attendance of from 150 to 175 for years. The
martial excitement at the opening of the civil war had, a depressing
effect upon institutions of learning everywhere, and Prof. Smith
chose to close his school for a time. In the fall of 1862 he
re-opened the institution with 25 pupils, and although the war was
fiercely raging, and terrifying drafts impending, in the years 1863 and
1864 the number of students increased to 60 to 80. But in the
summer of 1866 Prof. Smith's health failed, and he was compelled
to abandon his labors as teacher, since which time the Fredericksburg
High School has been known more in name than in fact. His
assistant, from 1856 to 1859, was Rev. S. McAnderson, of the
Presbyterian church, who assumed the Professorship of Language and Moral
Science. Prof. Smith's assistant teachers afterwards were
young men who had been educated within the walls of the institution, and
among these may be mentioned J. M. Huchison, S. D. Miller and
P. F. Graham, all now clergymen, the first a Presbyterian, the
others Methodist.
Peter
Franks, a native of Fayette county, Pa., was born May 21,
1797, and came to Wayne county Aug. 7, 1820, although he had visited the
county in 1816, and that year helped to raise a barn at Robert
Hackett's. He remembers the names of those present at that
raising, to wit: James and George Hackett,
Basil and George Tracey, John Beerbower,
Isaac Sowers, George, Solomon and Daniel
Firestone, Thomas, William and James
Johnson, John and George Brown, James
Numbers, David Clark, George and Philip First,
Job Lee, Dan Merriman, John S. and Robert Brown, Abner Geddis, Leonard
Langell, John and Andrew Moore, and Peter Franks. Besides
Mr. Franks, all are dead save Andrew Moore, George Hackett
and Robert Brown. Mr. Franks was married Sept. 5, 1819,
in Fayette county. Pa., to Julia Fletcher, who died May 6, 1871.
She was a member of the Methodist church. He has had nine
children, viz.: William, Sarah, Naomi, Jacob,
Manoah, Thomas, Samantha, Solomon and
Lemuel.
The Fredericksburg Cemetery Association
was organized Nov. 16, 1872, as follows: Original members—John
Richards, Andrew J. Knox, John Dobbins,
[Page 769]
Noah Brown, William T. Barnes, James Martin, John S. , S. C. Franks,
W. S. Peppard, Joshua Brother, George Gardner and Rev. W. J. Park.
First Trustees— George Gardner, John Richards, Noah Brown, Wm. T.
Barnes, W. S. Peppard; S. C. Franks, Clerk; W. S. Peppard,
Treasurer; James Martin, President. It embraces fifteen
acres of land, on the hill east of town, purchased of V. Menuez.
Margaret Cramer was the first person buried therein.
Fredericksburg Lodge No. 391, I. O. O. F.—Date
of dispensation, July 10, 1867. Charter members: N. J. Close,
John Rechert, M. H. Steel, G. J. Rhodes, J. H. Vananda, E. H.
Millhon. Present officers: C. N. Gastill, N. G.; O.
J. Searight, V. G.; S. S. Rutter, R. S.; A. C. Bayless,
Permanent Secretary; D. Swinehart, Treasurer. Whole number
initiated since organization, 78; present membership,
28.
James
Martin, M. D. was born October 20, 1824, on
Martin's creek, on the old Edward Martin homestead. The subject of this
notice remained upon the farm until he was twenty-two years of age. He
attended the public schools about three months in the winter, until he
was eighteen years of age, then the select schools at Fredericksburg for
several years, when he began teaching school.
He read medicine with T. B. Abbott, of
Massillon, and during this time availed himself of a course of lectures
then being given by William Bowen, of Akron, Ohio, subsequently
graduating at the Jefferson Medical College, of Philadelphia. He
began the practice at East Rochester, Columbiana county, in August,
1850, remained there three years, when he removed to Fredericksburg in
1854, where he has since resided in the active pursuit of his
profession. He was married Nov. 13, 1851, to Miss Elizabeth
Craig, of Columbiana county, Ohio, and by this union had seven
children, only five of whom are living—O. E., Jessie F., Frank H.,
Mary J. and James S. Dr. Martin, wife and all his family are members
of the Presbyterian church.
Dr. Martin descends from an old
and most worthy pioneer family of Ohio. He is a thorough
gentleman, and one of the most popular and best educated physicians in
the county. His abilities and skill have achieved for him an
enlarged reputation and associated him with the foremost practitioners
in his section of the country. He is a courteous, affable and
estimable gentleman, and has reared an intelligent and worthy family,
several of whom have attended the Wooster University, to which Dr,
Martin largely contributed.
Sinclair Johnson, son of James Johnson, was born February,
1824. Having obtained a good degree of common school
education, he commenced the work of life by teaching school when
seventeen years of age. By studying during recesses of
teaching, he completed his academical studies in 1849, at the
Edinburg Academy, and entered the Junior Class at Jefferson College,
Pa., where he graduated with marked honor in August, 1851.
From that time he followed teaching until 1871, when he retired from
that pursuit, and is now living at the old homestead, overseeing the
work of the farm.
William Peppard was born in New Jersey, and removed with his father, Jonathan
Peppard, to Beaver county, Pa. He was married to Nancy
Gaston, of Finleyville, Washington county, Pa. In 1823 he
removed to Wayne county, Ohio, settling, upon his arrival, in
Saltcreek township, two and one-half miles north of Fredericksburg,
and in 1836 settling in the village. Here he remained until
1864, when, his wife dying in 1863, he made his home with his son,
William S. Peppard. He had eight children, to wit:
Samuel G., Elizabeth, Francis W., Hiram H., Margaret, William S.,
Mary and Amanda. Mr. Peppard was elected Justice of
Saltcreek township several terms, and served in the Ohio Legislature
from December 4, 1837, to December 2, 1839, having been re-elected
in 1838.
William S. Peppard,
his son, was born in Saltcreek township Mar. 24, 1829. His
earlier years were spent in going to school and teaching, having
attended the High School, under Rev. Edward Geary, brother of
Governor Geary, of Pennsylvania. He has taught school
for thirteen terms, and established a reputation for efficiency in
the school-room and scholarship. He is now actively engaged in
the practice of the law. His mind is of the cool, calculating
and reticent order, and he is not inclined to unfold his purposes or
meaning until the occasion suits him. He has an independent
mind, a methodical brain, and transacts business carefully and
cautiously. He was married July 23, 1861, to Miss Mary A.
Giauque, a classmate at Vermillion Institute of the writer, a
lady of culture and refinement, and an excellent scholar in both the
French and English languages. They have five children, viz.:
Arbor V., Florena M., Maggie E., Evangeline and Florian G.
Henry
Barnes,
a native of Maryland, immigrated to Wayne county in 1811,
settling on the farm now owned by Gilbert Searight. He died
Mar. 19, 1848. He had the following children: Peter, Catharine,
Robert, Hugh, Boston F., Jesse, William, Lucinda and William H.,
five of whom are living.
Reminiscences of his son,
Peter Barnes. - I was born Feb. 8, 1805, in Beaver Co., Pa., and
came to Wayne county with my father in 1811. I have been a farmer
and school-teacher - taught my first school in 1826 - had a good English
education. I was married Jan. 6, 1831, to Margaret Guthrie,
and had seven children, viz: Joseph M., Henry C., Mary J., Eli
S., Catharine, William G., and Maggie E. I am a member
of the Presbyterian church. My impression is that James Sorrels,
a native of Pennsylvania, was the first Justice of Saltcreek township,
and that Richard Buckmaster was the second. The
Buckmasters, Joseph, Wilson, Joshua, Richard and John, came
to Saltcreek township in the fall of 1813. It was necessary in
those days for some people to be whipped, and the Buckmasters
could do it. Henry Buckmaster, M. D., was born in Saltcreek
townshp, read medicine in Millersburg, became Probate Judge of Wayne
county, went to Missouri and died there. William
Truesdale came to the township in 1815. Mary, Hugh, James
W., Mary, Jane, Phoebe, Elizabeth, John and David were his
children. Caleb Brown, the Dunhams, Hatfield,
Traceys, Johnsons, Thompsons, Hutchisons, Lytles, Caldwells, were
early settlers. Eliza Searight was the first person who
died in the present limits of Saltcreek township; Sarah Willowby
the first person who was buried in the Presbyterian graveyard, and
John Hamilton and Margaret Castor the first couple married.
END OF CHAPTER XXX - SALTCREEK TOWNSHIP.