USA > Illinois > Cook County > Album of genealogy and biography, Cook County, Illinois, 8th ed. > Part 25
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The words quoted are from " Knight's New Me- chanical Dictionary," compiled and edited by Ed- ward H. Knight, A. M., LL. D., in charge of the classifications and publications of the United States Patent Office.
When the field experiment had demonstrated the practical utility of his invention, it was tem- porarily relegated to a secondary place in the mind of its inventor. To enter at once upon the work of building machines for general use would involve an expenditure and obligation which, at that time, it was felt, could not be assumed; and therefor, more perhaps as a stepping-stone than otherwise, Mr. McCormick entered into a partner- ship for the smelting of iron ore, a business which appears to have moved along smoothly and with some degree of success until the panic of 1837, when it went down in the general crash which carried with it so many older and more preten- tious enterprises. Looking out upon the wreck, Cyrus McCormick saw all material interests reced- ing from him; looking within, he saw a sturdy young manhood, and felt the red blood of ambi- tion coursing through his veins. Little time was spent in repining. The first thing to be done-
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or at least to be provided for-was the payment of every obligation which the firm had assumed, and to this end Mr. McCormick sacrificed all his possessions, including the farm which his father had given him. Then, with his face turned toward the light, with faith in himself and the reaper, he cast about him for ways and means for the further improvement of his machine, its manu- facture and sale. Like most stories of great suc- cesses, this is the story of small beginnings, many vicissitudes and perplexities, and some anxiety ; but over all the rainbow of hope. The shops of the old Virginia farm were utilized as " factories " during the first few years, and, as may be imag- ined, the annual output of machines was insig- nificant until the year 1845, when it was decided to start a plant at Cincinnati, Ohio. Arrange- ments were also made at this time with a firm at Brockport, New York, for building the reaper on a royalty. It was thought that from these two points the East and West could be supplied, but the popularity of the grain cutter outran the ex- pectations of its inventor, and, to accelerate the de- velopment of the regions farther west, a demand for it sprang up and became so general that it was decided to again enlarge the plant, increase the facilities, and locate near the great and grow- ing market of the West. Accordingly, in 1847, the McCormick Reaper Works became one of the great industries of the young city of Chicago. In 1848 seven hundred machines were built and sold, and from that time to this the business has shown a steady growth, until its proportions are well nigh amazing. The present capacity of the Mc- Cormick Reaper Works exceeds 150,000 machines every year; and, with the possible exception of India, there is no grain and grass growing conn- try beneath the sun where the McCormick ma- chines are not employed in garnering the crop.
After the assured success of the reaper at home, Mr. McCormick took measures to bring it to the attention of the agriculturists of the Old World. As an initial step in this direction, the machine was placed on exhibition at the first World's Fair, held in London in 1851. It was at a time when English eyes were given to the casting of unfriend- ly glances toward whatever emanated from Yan-
keedom, and the McCormick reaper was not al- lowed to escape the ridicule of the press, the London Times characterizing it as "a cross between an Astley chariot and a wheelbarrow." Before the Exposition season closed, however, the reaper completely conquered prejudice and the Times made the amende honorable by stating editorially that it was " alone worth the entire ex- pense of the Exhibition," and the Great Council Medal was awarded to Mr. McCormick on the ground of the originality and value of his inven- tion. From this moment fame and fortune were assured, and there were no fields either at home or abroad in which McCormick was not conquer- or. At the UniversalExposition at Paris, in 1855, he was awarded the Grand Prize. Again at Paris in 1867 he gained the Grand Prize and decoration by the Emperor with the Cross of the Legion of Hon- or. It was at this time that M. Eugene Tisserand, Director-General of the Imperial Domains, said: " The man who has labored most in the general distribution, perfection and discovery of the first practical reaper is assuredly Mr. McCormick, of Illinois. Equally as a. benefactor of humanity and as a skillful mechanician, Mr. McCormick has been adjudged worthy of the highest distinc- tion of the Exposition." A third triumph was secured at Paris in 1878, when the Grand Prize was once more bestowed upon Mr. McCormick, and he was also honored by the French Academy of Sciences, as was referred to in the opening paragraph of this sketch. Many personal trib- utes might be given illustrating the high regard in which Mr. McCormick was held, and showing the recognition of the value of his invention. During his life-time honors came to him thick and fast, and it is not untimely to add here that since his death the business which he founded, and the harvesting machines which still bear his name, stand first and foremost in the business and agri- cultural world. Honors have continued to come to the McCormick, not the least of which were those secured at the World's Columbian Exposi- tion of 1893.
Cyrus Hall McCormick encountered obstacles which only a matchless energy and ability could have overcome. At the beginning of his career,
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and for a long time afterwards, he was inconveni- enced by a lack of capital and by his isolation from centres of communication and trade. He was forced to overcome the opposition originally brought to bear against all labor-saving machines. Congress refused to give him just patent protec- tion, for the reason that his invention was so val- uable that all should be allowed to make it ! But against all these odds he came out conqueror. Steadily he overcame every obstacle and estab- lished his claim to be å benefactor of the indus- trial world.
Man's better nature, his human side, his kind- lier, gentler self, cannot be always seen to advan- tage in the hurly-burly of an active business ca- reer, and it is pleasant to recall the memory of Cyrus Hall McCormick as he appeared to those who knew him in social life, in his home, in his church relations, and in all those varied walks that lead away from business and touch the strings of human hearts. Mr. McCormick had this gen- tler nature, and, while it is not our purpose here to rehearse the many ways in which this charac- teristic evinced itself, still a sketch of his life should contain a brief mention of those more con- spicuous acts wherein are shown the trend of his benevolence and the munificence of his philanthro- py. In 1859, at the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church held at Indianapolis, he made a proposition to endow the professorships of the Presbyterian Theological Seminary of the Northwest, on condition that it be located at Chi-
cago. The conditions were accepted, and the seminary, which, in addition to the original en- dowment, received from Mr. McCormick numer- ous other magnificent donations, is to-day a proud monument to his liberality and nobility of heart. On the educational and religious lines of his work was also liis purchase of the Interior, a news- paper established in Chicago to represent the Pres- byterian Church. In the hour of its financial struggles he purchased it, placed it upon a sound financial basis, and it is to-day one of the most able and influential religious journals published. He was also a liberal contributor to various schools and colleges in different parts of the country, those of his native Virginia coming in for gener- ous recognition at his hands.
In 1858 Mr. McCormick married Miss Nettie Fowler, daughter of Melzar Fowler, Esq., of Jeff- erson County, New York. Four sons and three daughters were born to them, two of whom, a son and a daughter, died in infancy. The surviving children are: Cyrus Hall McCormick, now Presi- dent of the McCormick Harvesting Machine Com- pany; Mary Virginia; Anita, widow of the late Emmons Blaine; Harold and Stanley.
Mr. Mc Cormick died on the 13th of May, 1884. His life was rounded out by something more than the three-score and ten years of scriptural allot- ment; but we live in deeds, not years, and, meas- ured by this standard, the life of Cyrus Hall Mc- Cormick was long, and ever longer groweth.
JOHN BICE TURNER.
OHN BICE TURNER, founder of the great railway system now known as the Chicago & Northwestern, will ever deserve the grat- itude of Chicago for his public spirit and perse- verance in carrying out his enterprises in the face
of great financial and other difficulties. The pio- neers of Chicago, whose number is rapidly grow- ing small, speak of him in the most kindly and ap- proving terms. Probably but a very small percent- age of the thousands who daily ride to and from
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the city on the "Northwestern" suburban trains ever consider the hardships endured by those who first undertook to construct a railway to the West from the struggling young city by the lake. It had no double track at first, and no "parlor" or "palace sleeping" cars followed its strap rails. The generation which found a modern-equipped line ready for its accommodation cau little under- stand the conditions that obtained when John B. Turner laid the first "T" rails in Illinois.
The subject of this biography was born in Col- chester, Delaware County, N. Y., on the 14th of January, 1799, less than a decade after the estab- lishment of the present United States Government. His father, Elisha Turner, died when he was but two years old, and his mother when he was four- teen. Her maiden name was Patience Coville, and she was of Dutch origin. The Turners are of Eng- lish lineage. Soon after his father's death, J. B. Turner was adopted by David Powers, and passed his youth on a farm and about a tanyard operated by his foster-father, in the meantime receiving such instruction as the country schools of the time af- forded. In 1819, he married Miss Martha Volun- tine, and settled down at farming. Five years later, he sold out his interest in the farm and pur- chased a mill and store, and built a distillery at Maltaville, in Saratoga County, which he oper- ated six years. Financial reverses caused him to abandon these interests, and his attention was first turned to railroad construction in 1835, when he took a contract to build seven miles of the Ran- som & Saratoga Railroad. After its completion, Mr. Turner was placed in charge of this road, most of whose trains were hauled by horses, of which the company owned thirty head, and he constructed barns every ten miles for the accom- modation of the motive power. It was on this line, under Mr. Turner's management, that the "Champlain," an engine of five tons' weight, was placed in commission, being the second of its kind in use.
In November, 1835, Mr. Turner, with a part- ner, broke ground on the Delaware Division of the New York & Erie Railroad, but was forced to suspend operations when the financial disasters of April, 1837, crippled the owners, and the capital
of the contractors appeared to be swallowed up. The subsequent resumption of the company re- stored to Mr. Turner the $16,000 which he re- garded as lost, and with a brother-in-law, John Vernam, he engaged in building the Genesee Val- ley Canal. The suspension of operations by the State on the canal in 1840 again caused a heavy loss to Mr. Turner, but on the resminption of con- struction this was, in part, restored to him. By the spring of 1843, he had completed a section of the Troy & Schenectady Railroad with profit, and he turned his attention toward the growing West as the most desirable field for the investment of his capital. With his wife, he made a trip as far West as the Mississippi River, and decided to lo- cate at Chicago, returning East at once for his family.
The 15th of October, 1843, found him again in Chicago, and he took up quarters at the old Tre- mont House. His active mind readily grasped the opportunities for investment, and one of his first moves was the purchase of one thousand acres of land near Blue Island, on which he placed a herd of sheep, brought from Ohio in the spring. An attempt at railroad building had been made as early as 1837, and a few miles of strap rails had been laid, terminating on the prairie not far from the present western limits of the city of Chi- cago. In 1847, Mr. Turner and William B. Og- den, the first mayor of Chicago, organized a coin- pany to construct a road westward from Chicago, and on the 5th of April in that year, Mr. Ogden was elected President, and Mr. Turner Acting Director of the Chicago & Galena Union Railroad, the objective point being Galena-a town little less than Chicago in size and importance at that time. Both the gentlemen above named were en- thusiastic in the interest of the enterprise, and by their untiring labor in soliciting subscriptions to stock and securing right of way from the people most benefited by its construction, said construc- tion was made possible. At the election of officers in December, 1850, when Mr. Turner was made President, the track was completed beyond Elgin and reached Freeport, where it connected with the Illinois Central in September, 1852.
By this time, it had been demonstrated that the
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western prairies were destined to support an im- mense population, and attention was turned to the construction of the "Dixon Air Line," from Turner Junction west to the Mississippi River. This was rapidly completed under Mr. Turner's active and able management, and a portion of the line across the State of Iowa was also completed under his presidency, before he resigned in 1858. He continued an active director of the road, and in the Chicago & Northwestern, after the consol- idation of the different lines, until his death. In 1853, he organized the Beloit & Madison Railroad Company, which became a part of the same sys- tem, being now a part of the Madison Division, and on the consolidation, in June, 1864, of these various lines, he was chairman of the committee having the arrangements in charge, and was af- terward a member of the Executive Committee of the Chicago & Northwestern. Mr. Turner was also a director of the North Side Street Railroad, incorporated in February, 1859, and continued to hold stock during his life.
In1 1853, Mr. Turner was called upon to mourn the death of the wife who had shared in his early toils and successes, and in 1855 he married Miss Adeline Williams, of Columbus, Ga. Three sons and three daughters were given tohim. He was vigorous and active to the day of liis death, which was the 26th of February, 1871, more than sev- enty-two years of life having been liis allotted time. The end came peacefully and quietly, and on that day Chicago lost one of her most valued and upright citizens, who did what lie could to benefit his fellows. On the day of his funeral, the offices of the Chicago & Nortliwestern Rail- way were closed out of respect for the "judicious and faithful counselor, genial companion, consider- ate friend and Christian gentleman. His devo- tion to the material interests of the country was exceeded only by the patriotism which never lost sight of the highest duties of citizenship. His great works live after him, and will keep his memory green forever."
E. F. L. GAUSS.
F. L. GAUSS is First Assistant Librarian in the Chicago Public Library, and the responsi- ble position which lie occupies finds in him a capable incumbent. He is also a patron of literature and music, and indeed is a friend to all those arts which are calculated to elevate and benefit inan- kind. He claims Germany as the land of his birth, which occurred in Stuttgart in 1842. He came of one of the old aristocratic families of that country, and was reared accordingly. The father died in 1848, and the mother was called to her final rest in1 1845.
Mr. Gauss whose name heads this record at- tended school in his native land for a number of years, and in 1859, at the age of seventeen, he
crossed the Atlantic to America, settling in New York City. When the war for the Union broke out, and President Lincoln called for volunteers to aid in crushing the rebellion which threatened to destroy the nation, he at once enlisted, joining the boys in blue of Company K, First New York Infantry. After two years of valiant service he was honorably discharged, in 1863.
Mr. Gauss on leaving the army went to Mis- souri, where he studied theology in the Missouri Evangelical School, and later lie pursued his studies in an Episcopal academy in Ohio. In 1871, in St. Louis, he was ordained as a minister, and was given charge of the church in Bunker Hill, Ill., where, as there were many German
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ROBERT S. HILL.
settlers in that locality, his services were con- ducted in his native tongue. In 1874 he went to Europe in order to complete his studies, and from 1875 until 1878 was a minister in the State Church of the Canton of Zurich, Switzerland. In the latter year he again crossed the Atlantic to America, and took up his residence in Galena, Ill., being called to the pastorate of the church at that place, of which he continued in charge for two years. In 1880 he came to Chicago, and en- gaged in literary work while in the employ of the Government, in which employ he continued until 1885. In 1887 lie entered the Chicago Pub- lic Library. He was afterward made First As- sistant Librarian, and still fills that position. He also continues his ministerial work to a limited extent, although he accepts no pastorates.
I11 1867 Mr. Gauss was united in marriage with Miss Henrietta Stehlin, and to them has
been born a family of five children. The parents and their children are all members of the Con- gregational Church, and take a most active in- terest in church work, doing all in their power for its promotion and success.
Mr. Gauss has won a high reputation as a pub- lic speaker, and at one time delivered many ad- dresses in support of the Republican party, the principles of which he warmly advocates. He has, however, never aspired to public office. He has also won note as a inetrical translater. He is a man of most liberal education, and during the famous Anarchists' trial served as official in- terpreter. Socially, he is connected with the Schiller Club, of which he is Secretary, and also belongs to the Royal Arcanum, the National Union and the German Press Club, which latter he is now serving as Treasurer. He is also Pres- ident of the Chicago Library Club.
ROBERT S. HILL.
OBERT S. HILL, who is successfully en- gaged in the practice of law in Chicago, was born in Buxton, York County, Maine, on the 31st of August, 1851. His ancestors on his father's side came from England. Three brothers of the name of Hill crossed the Atlantic with the early English colonists and settled in Massachu- setts. One of them afterwards removed to the district of Maine, and from this branch of the Hill family the subject of this sketch is directly de- scended. The members of the family were prom- inent land-owners and business men, and often bore an important part in the events which went to make up the history of colonial days. Mr.
Hill's great-grandfather was the owner of the property in Buxton, Maine, now occupied by his father. The grandfather was a resident of Bux- ton, and took part in the War of 1812, during which he was commissioned as an officer by the Governor of the Pine Tree State. Another of the ancestors of the subject of this sketch was an offi- cer in the Revolution, and was numbered among the heroes of the battle of Bunker Hill. Another was captured by the English and taken to Can- ada, where he was forced to live among the Indi- ans for an entire winter, during which time he was subjected to great hardships and suffering. He finally escaped and returned to his home in Maine,
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ROBERT S. HILL.
much to the surprise and pleasure of his wife and family, who supposed him dead.
On his mother's side Mr. Hill traces his ances- try back to the "Mayflower, " being descended from Moses Fletcher, who crossed the Atlantic in the vessel which brought the Pilgrim Fathers to the shores of the New World. The latter was a member of the Council of Plymouth, and now lies buried at Plymouth Rock, Massachusetts, where his name appears on the monument erected in memory of those old heroes.
Mr. Hill's father, now retired from business with a competency, was an active lumberman and farmer in Buxton, Maine. He has always taken a keen interest in the religious, educational and po- litical matters pertaining to his town, state and country. He was a great admirer and a warm friend of the late Hon. James G. Blaine.
The boyhood days of R. S. Hill were pleasant- ly passed in his native town, and lie was given good educational advantages by his father. After leaving the common schools in Buxton, he at- tended Limington and Gorham Academies, both of Maine, and his first effort in life after leaving the latter institution was to engage in school teaching in his native state, being then twenty years of age. After a brief and successful experi- ence as a school teacher, lie came to the West with his uncle, and entered Michigan State University at Ann Arbor, being graduated from the law de- partment of that institution in the Class of '74. He then returned to New England, and for one year studied law in the office of an attorney in Bos- ton. The year 1876 witnessed his return to the West and saw him located in Chicago. He im- mediately embarked in practice, which he has car- ried on continuously since. He makes corpor- ation law a specialty, and has been very success- ful, winning many important cases. At the pres- ent time he is employed as attorney for a number of corporations.
On the 26th of January, 1877, Mr. Hill was married in Buxton, Maine, to Miss Fannie S. Owen. Her ancestors came from England and aided the colonies in their struggle for indepen-
ence, taking a leading part in the War of the Rev- olution. One of the number was captured by the British in 1807, taken on board a man-of-war, and forced to serve as a part of the crew. After a few weeks' service, while the ship was cruising off the coast of Massachusetts, he took advantage of a favorable opportunity, jumped overboard, swam safely ashore and returned home. To Mr. and Mrs. Hill have been born five children, as fol- lows: Harry Robert, who died of diphtheria in 1882; Owen T., now a student of the Fuller School, Hyde Park; Helen M. and Alice, who attend the same school; and Robert S., a little lad of three and a-half years.
Mr. Hill is a great admirer and firm supporter of the Hon. Thomas B. Reed, who is his choice for the presidency. He lias known Mr. Reid all his life, and on account of a knowledge of his character, ability and political proclivities, lie supports liim as a presidential candidate. Mr. Hill takes a very warm interest in political affairs, and labors earnestly to promote the growth and insure the success of liis party. He is recognized as a good parliamentarian and, because of his knowledge of the rules of parliamentary usage, lias often been called upon to preside over politi- cal meetings where trouble and turbulence were anticipated, and as such presiding officer has been able, even in very exciting meetings, to maintain order and discipline where one less skilled would have failed.
Mr. Hill is a member of the Sons of Maine. He contributes liberally to benevolent institutions, yet makes no display of his charity. In his tastes he is domestic and enjoys the companionship of his family much more than that of general society. In his religious belief he is liberal, broad minded and charitable, believes in his children attending church and Sunday-school and having instilled into their minds the principles of Christianity. In both business and social circles he is well known as an honorable, upright man, and is held in the highest regard by his many acquaintances and friends.
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LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
Passe Spalding
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JESSE SPALDING.
JESSE SPALDING
ESSE SPALDING is a descendant of one of with characteristic energy, and shortly thereafter, despite all discouragements, became a prosperous farmer and leading citizen of the community. the oldest American families. The environ- ment of the New England fathers was calcu- lated to bring out and develop all that was sturdy and vigorous in both mind and body, and their descendants continue to manifest the traits of character which enabled them to survive the hardships which they were compelled to endure, and which rendered prosperity possible in the . often perilous) duties in a new and somewhat face of the most forbidding conditions.
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