USA > Illinois > Bureau County > History of Bureau County, Illinois > Part 104
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MARTIN R. ZEARING, Princeton, was born in Shiremantown, Cumberland Co., Penn., December 15, 1825. He is the son of Martin Zearing. (See sketch of Martin Zear- ing, deceased.) Mr. Zearing came to Bu- reau County with his parents in 1836, and has since resided in this county. He was reared on a farm and suffered the hardships to which the pioneer is subjected. He was the oldest son, and much of the burden fell upon him of supporting the family in the new country. And so his youth was occupied in the steady plodding necessary to improve a farm and gain a sustenance. He remained at the old home near Dover till his marriage in 1855, when he settled on his farm, three
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miles east of Dover. His wife, Louisa Rack- ley, was born September, 1825, and was the daughter of Nathan Rackley, a native of Ver- mont, but who had lived in the State of New York some time previous to coming to Bu- reau County in June, 1836. Mrs. Zearing died January 12, 1877. She was the mother of one daughter, viz .: Mrs Susan L. Moore, a resident of this county. April 3, 1879, Mr. Zearing was united in marriage to Mrs. Fan- nie E. Garten. widow of E. D. Garten, by whom she had five children, now living, viz. : Mrs. Mary Cary, of Joliet, III. ; William, Melchard, Emma and Laura B. Garten. Mr. Zearing followed farming till January, 1882, when he removed to Princeton and retired from an active business life; but yet retains his farm of over 300 acres. For many years he has been an active member of the Method- ist Episcopal Church, as is also his wife. His first wife was also a member of the same church. In politics he is a Republican.
LOUIS ZEARING, Westfield, was born September 10, 1827, in Shiremantown, Cum- berland Co., Penn. He is the son of Martin Zearing, deceased (see sketch.) Louis Zear- ing came to Bureau County with his parents May 9, 1836. He was reared and educated in this county, and has made farming his oc- cupation. In 1850 he crossed the plains with an ox team, making the trip in 180 days, and was one of the first to enter Hang- town. He was engaged in mining success- fully in California for three years, and then returned via Nicaragua and New York. April 1, 1856, he bought a farm in Westfield Town- ship, where he now resides and owns 257 acres of land. He has always taken great interest in the affairs of the county and town- ship, and has held the offices of School Trustee, Commissioner and Supervisor. Mr. Zearing was married in New York City to Jane Cochran, a native of Scotland. She died November 10, 1868, aged thirty-seven years. She was the mother of four children, viz. : Louis F., of New York City; Mrs. Jes- sie McKee, of Galesburg; Margaret, de- ceased, and Martin. Mr. Zearing was again married in Mechanicsburg, Penn., February 11, 1869, to Helen M. Whistler, daughter of Nathaniel and Frances (Schneble) Whistler, natives of Pennsylvania. Mrs. Zearing was
born September 8, 1835, in Shiremantown, Penn. She is the mother of two children, viz. : Susan and John P., the latter deceased. Mr. Zearing is a member of the Baptist Church; his wife of the Lutheran. In poli- tics he is a Republican.
DAVID S. ZEARING, Princeton, was born February 16, 1834, in Shiremantown, Cumberland Co., Penn. He came to Bureau County, Ill., with his parents in 1836. (See sketch of Martin Zearing, deceased.) He was educated in Dover and Pern, and fol- lowed farming until 1859, when he crossed the plains with an ox team, starting April 25, and crossing the eastern line of California September 6. While in California he met with many adventures, and was a successful gold miner. In the winter of 1867 he re- turned to Bureau County and resumed farm- ing. At present Mr. Zearing owns about 900 acres of land, mostly in this county, and is considered one of our most thrifty and prosperous citizens. In the fall of 1879 he came to Princeton, where he has resided ever since. Since July, 1881, he has owned a one-third interest in the mercantile firm of Zearing, Johnson & Bros., of Princeton. Mr. Zearing was married December 5, 1869, to Harriet Bass, who was born August 10. 1842, in Bureau County, III. She is a daughter of George and Mary L. (Carey) Bass, and is the mother of the following children: Alice M., born December 2, 1870; Elmer E., born Jan- uary 19, 1872; George B., born December 3, 1874; David S., born December 28, 1877; Roy William, born September 21, 1880; and Martin M., born April 14, 1882. Mr. and Mrs. Zearing are active members of the Bap- tist Church. In political matters Mr. Zear- ing's sympathies are with the Republican party.
GEORGE ZINK, Concord, was born in Bedford County, Penn., November 30, 1822. He is the son of Samuel Zink. (See sketch of John Zink.) Our subject came to this county in 1844 without anything but willing hands and a strong determination to succeed. For nearly three years he worked for John Stevens & Sons, and during that time pur- chased eighty acres of land in Macon Town- ship, and in 1848 settled on it. Through his industry Mr. Zink has added to his farm
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till now he owns 220 acres of well-improved land near Buda, and now he resides on the farm in Concord Township. His occupation has been that of farming, and in this he has been successful. November 25, 1847, he was united in marriage to Catherine Thompson, who was born in Huntingdon County, Penn., in 1822, and is the daughter of Andrew and Elizabeth Thompson, who came to this State in the fall of 1845, and died liere. Mr. and Mrs. Zink have seven children, viz .: Davis, who died while in camp at Springfield, Ill., during his service in the army; Andrew T., of Buda; Elizabeth E., at home; Catherine M., wife of William H. Stutzman, of Buda; George A., Orren and Warren. The two lat- ter are twins. In politics Mr. Zink is iden- tified with the Republican party. He and wife are members of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Buda.
JOHN ZINK, Macon, was born in Bedford County, Penn., August 23, 1813. He is the son of Samuel and Catherine (Hannawalt) Zink, both natives of Pennsylvania and of German descent. The father died in this county February 7, 1866, but the mother yet survives. She was born August 26, 1789. She is the mother of six sons and five daugh- ters; four sons and two daughters are yet living. Our subject is the oldest of the fam- ily. His early life was spent on the farm, but
at the age of twenty-one years he learned the tanner's trade, which he followed till 1844, when he removed to Fulton County, Ill., since which time he has been engaged in farming. In 1846 he came to Bureau County and set- tled his present farm of 199 acres. He was married in Bureau County, Ill., September 5, 1847, to Elizabeth Thompson, who was born November 2, 1816, and died November 27, 1859. She was the daughter of Andrew and Elizabeth Thompson, who came to this Stato in the fall of 1845. Mrs. Zink was the mother of the following-named children: Mary E., John A., Harriet A. (deceased), and Christian W. S. March 7, 1865, Mr. Zink was united in marriage to Elizabeth Sensel, who was born August 22, 1835, in Knox County, Ohio. She is the daughter of John and Catherine (Schnebly) Sensel, both of whom were born in Washington County, Md., and were married there, but soon after mar- riage, in 1829, removed to Ohio, and he died there June 14, 1868, in his sixty- fourth year. His widow now lives in Mt. Vernon, Ohio. She is the mother of thirteen children, ten of whom yet survive. Mrs. Zink is the mother of the following-named children: James L. (deceased), George E., Catherine E., Samuel H., Maggie J. (deceased) and Almeda M.
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HISTORY OF BUREAU COUNTY.
RECEIVED TOO LATE FOR INSERTION IN PROPER ORDER.
ELIJAH DEE, Princeton, was born in Franklin County, Vt., in 1816, December 20. He is the son of Elijah and Mary(Post) Dee, natives of Connecticut. The father's occupation was that of a farmer. During the war of 1812 he fought in the battle of Plattsburg, N. Y., as a volunteer. He died in 1842 in Vermont at the age of sixty-nine years. His widow lived till 1864, and died at the age of about seventy-five. She was the mother of eleven children -seven sons and four daughters. The sons are all liv- ing, the eldest being seventy-one years of age. Only two of the daughters now sur- vive. Our subject's early life was spent on his father's farm in the Green Mountain State, and in attending the schools of his native county. In 1843 he came West, and for some years lived in Greene County, Ill., but in 1855 he came to Princeton, Ill., and has since continued to reside here. His bus- iness through life has been that of farmer and stock-raiser, and was one of the earliest to engage in the growing of thorough-bred cat- tle in this county, as he began in 1856, and continued in the same till 1883, when he sold his herd, and also his farm near town ; but owns a farm of 160 acres in Wyanet Township. Mr. Dee in politics is far from being an extremist, but yet is iden- tified with the Republican party. For years he has been a member of Tonaluka Lodge, No. 89, I. O. O. F. He was married October 10, 1850, in this county, to Mrs. Angeline (Wiswal) Woodman. She is a native of Mas- sachusetts.
A G. DOWNER, M. D., Princeton, was born in Rensselaer County, N. Y., in 1856. When but seven years of age he was taken to Madison County, and was there educated in the high schools of Chittenango, where he
began the study of medicine under the occu- list and surgeon, W. E. Deuel, with whom he remained one year. He then entered the Homeopathic and Ophthalmic Medical Col- lege of New York City, and after a three years' course graduated in 1882. During this time he was private student and assistant surgeon to Dr. W. T. Helmuth, and was student to S. P. Burdick, and assistant of W. O. Mc- Donald. The New York Homoeopathic and Ophthalmic Medical College is the only one in the United States, which confers the de- gree of O. et A. Chirg. and this degree Dr. Downer deservedly received. He was appointed to Five Points Honse of Indus- try, New York City, but resigned on account of ill health, and in the fall of 1882 located at Princeton where he makes a specialty of the treatment of the eye, ear, and throat diseases and surgery, and is also assistant of Dr. E. J. Schenk.
GEORGE B. HARRINGTON, Princeton, was born January, 31, 1844, in Williams- town, Vt. His ancestors were of Scotch de- scent. His grandfather, Daniel Harrington, removed from Williamstown, Mass., to Williamstown, Vt .; how long before 1794 cannot be ascertained, but in that year he purchased his farm, which has remained in the possession of the family ever since. In 1797 he brought his newly-married wife, Bethiah Smith, from Putney, Vt., one horse being sufficient to carry wife and household goods. They were the parents of seven chil- dren, of whom Daniel M., the father of our subject, was born December 12, 1799, on the old homestead, where he also died in June, 1878. Ho was a farmer, and married Esther Allen who was born in Brookfield, Vt., in 1800. She was the daughter of Nathan Allen, a native of Connecticut. Mrs. Esther Harring-
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
ton died in 1878, having reared a family of twelve children, six of whom are now living, viz .: Mrs. Bethiah Goodrich, of Williams- town, Vt .; Mrs. Mary A. Smith, of Mont- pelier, Vt .; Mrs. Atlanta Winchester, of Williamstown, Vt .; Nathan, of Grinnell, Iowa; Asa, of Barre, Vt .; and George B. Har- rington, the subject of this sketch, who was reared on a farm in Vermont, where he also obtained his education. For several years he taught school in his native State, and in September, 1867, came to Bureau County, where he continued to follow his profession. In 1869 he was elected Principal of the Annawan, Henry County, schools, which posi- tion he held for five years, and for the two years following had charge of the Tiskilwa schools, resigning at the end of that time on account of ill health. In 1877 he was elected County Superintendent of schools, serving five years, during which time he was actively engaged in promoting the interests of the schools. In 1879 he published Circular No. 1, a system for teaching Civil Government in the common schools, which was repub- lished by the New York Tribune and Inde- pendent, and also by many of the leading educational journals in different States, arousing a deep interest in this important but hitherto neglected subject. During this time he also published in book form a " Help- er for the Teachers of Bureau County," which was of material assistance to teachers and proved a great benefit to the common schools. He was the prime-mover in and has the credit of erecting the Educational Hall, at the fair grounds, which has proved such a decided success. Mr. Harrington holds a certificate from the State Superin- tendent of Public Instruction, which is of perpetual validity throughout the State. July 27, 1869, Mr. Harrington was united in marriage in this county to Miss Emma V. Carpenter, a native of Orange County Vt. Her parents, Marshall D. and Dorcas (Con- ner) Carpenter are natives of Vermont, but are now residents of Humboldt County, Iowa.
Mr. and Mrs. Harrington have had two chil- dren : L. Ward, who died at the age of four years, and Grace V. Mr. and Mrs. Har- rington are members of the Congregational
Church. Politically he is a Republican. He is an A. F. & A. M., having taken the degree of Knight Templar.
W. H. SAUNDERS, Sheffield, Ill., was born in Litchfield County, Conn., in 1834; son of Harry Saunders, who had a family of seven children-three sons and four daugh- ters -and he being a thrifty, well-to-do farm- er, our subject was brought up on the farm. Both his parents died when he was seventeen years of age, but he remained on the farm till he was twenty-one. He then went to Chicago, where he remained for about four years; from there he went to Bureau County, Ill., and engaged in farming till the break- ing out of the war of the Rebellion in 1861. In September, 1861, he enlisted in what was then known as Birge's Western Sharpshoot- ers, afterward the Sixty-sixth Illinois Volun- teer Infantry. This regiment, which was organized at St. Louis, spent the winter of 1861-62 in north Missouri, guarding the rail- roads. In the spring of 1862 the regiment returned to St. Louis, and shortly after ac- companied Gen. Grant down the Mississippi in opening up that river. They landed at Fort Henry, marched to Fort Donelson, and after a two days' fight went to Pittsburg Lauding. Our subject was present at the battle of Shiloh, the siege of Corinth, etc. He enlisted in Company C, but was trans- ferred by the Colonel to Company F, and on November 26, 1862, was promoted to First Lieutenant; his regiment veteranized and returned home for thirty days' furlough. Be- ing then attached to Gen. Sherman's army, it accompanied him in his memorable march to the sea, participating in all the battles. The captain of Company F being on detail serv- ice much of the time, the command devolved upon Lieut. Saunders. When starting on the campaign through Georgia the Captain re- turned to his company, but lost his leg on the 14th day of May, 1864, when Lieut. Saunders again took command of the compa- ny, which he held during the campaign. On July 22, 1864, when in front of Atlanta, Ga., he received a flesh-wound in the shoulder. At Savannah-his three-years' term of service having expired while at Atlanta-Lieut. Saunders was mustered out and returned
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HISTORY OF BUREAU COUNTY.
home, but only for one week's repose, for an- other call for men being then made, he at once raised a company of one year's service men and was elected Captain of Company G, One Hundred and Fifty-first Illinois Volun- Infantry. The regiment was ordered to Georgia, where it remained nearly a year. While the army lay at Corinth in the winter of 1863 an order came that one officer from each regiment should be sent hoine on ro- cruiting service, and Lieut. Saunders was chosen from among the officers of the Sixty- sixth Regiment for that purpose. He enlist ed some twenty men for the Sixty-sixth Illinois Volunteer Infantry. It may here be said that he enrolled as many recruits as any man in Bureau County. In 1866 he was married to Miss Sarah Barnes, of Sheffield, Bureau Co., Ill., and by this union were born four children, the two eldest of which died in infancy. Those now living are George E., aged twelve years, and Sophia M., aged ten years.
J. M. WILSON, Westfield, was born Oc. tober 3, 1822, in Medina County, Ohio, in a lit- tle village called Wilson's Corner, named after our subject's father and uncle who were the first settlers of that vicinity. His grand- father, Martin Wilson, was born in Mary- land, and was of Irish extraction. He mar- ried Margaret Kent who was the mother of six children. Of these John Wilson married Margaret Martin ; they reared three chil- dren. Mrs Wilson died in 1826 in Medina
County, Ohio. Mr. Wilson was married a second time to Elizabeth Van Slack, who was the mother of nine children. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson died in Medina County, Ohio. The former was a farmer and a soldier in the war of 1812. Of the twelve children eleven reached maturity and reared families. Our subject was reared in his native county where he farmed. He was married in Cleveland, Ohio, to Jane E. Curtis, a native of Bruns- wick, Medina Co. Ohio, daughter of Joel and Sally (Hulett) Curtis ; he a native of Connecticut and she of Massachusetts. Mrs. Wilson is the mother of four children, viz .: Mrs. Clara B. Wilds (who is the mother of Martin Wilson Wilds), Adelia, Maggie and Hannah M. Wilson (a teacher of this County). Mr. John M. Wilson came to Bureau County in June, 1844, and clerked over three years for Wm. Carse, after which he farmed in Clarion and Westfield Town- ships. In 1875 he engaged in the hardware business. In January, 1882, the store and con- tents were burned, and since then Mr. Wilson has engaged in the agricultural implement business. He has ever been a quiet, peace- loving citizen, and made his influence for good felt in Arlington and vicinity. He is a Knight Templar. Politically he has always been identified with the Democratic party, and has filled the offices of Commissioner, Collector, Trustee and Supervisor.
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
In Memoriam.
HON. JUSTUS STEVENS died at his residence in Princeton at twenty minutes past one o'clock, Sunday afternoon, January 18, 1885.
The sad event occurred after this book had gone to press, and hence this notice appears here, and not in the biography of Mr. Stevens, as it may be found in a preceding page, and to which the reader is referred for the facts and the prominent records in his life.
On the Wednesday preceding his death Mr. Stevens was soized with neuralgia of the stomach, and was stricken to the floor while passing from the dinner table to the lounge. From that attack he soon rallied, and although at intervals suffering acute pain for twenty- four hours, yet the day following he was resting quietly, and his family and friends believed he was slowly and completely recov- ering. On Sunday morning he felt greatly better, and within a few minutes of his death he so expressed himself to his friends. About 1 o'clock he arose from his bed, walked to a chair which had been prepared for him, and seated himself in it, and assisted his daugh- ter in placing the wraps about him, and while thus engaged he suddenly leaned back in his chair, placed his hand on his breast, and ex- claimed that there was a terrible pain in his heart; his head sank back upon the chair, and he was dead.
Mr. Stevens came to Princeton in 1842, and with his father opened stores in Prince- ton and Tiskilwa, and Justus Stevens soon became not only the leading merchant, but the chief pork and grain buyer, and at the same time one of the most extensive farmers in Bureau County. In his varied and exten- sive enterprises he was a leader among men, and his large warehouses, stores, farms, public buildings and residences contributed more than probably any man ever in the
county to encourage a spirit of enterprise among the people, and to adorn, enrich and beautify this portion of Illinois. With all these demands upon his mental and physical powers, his sleepless energies enabled him to more than supply the deficiencies of his early opportunities of education and esthetic culture, and in social, intellectual and politi- cal life he was well equipped at an early age to command the same influence and power here that he so easily possessed in the business and commercial world. His execu- tive and financial talents wero of the highest order. A Democrat by birth and conviction; and although spending tho days of his useful manhood in a community and district over- whelmingly Republican, and although in no sense a politician by profession or practice, yet his Republican friends rarely failed to call him to the helm where they might enjoy the benefits of his masterly abilities exer- cised in their behalf in positions of im- portant financial or executive responsibility. Thus, as early as 1854, when the people wanted a much needed county building, the vexing question was settled by making Mr. Stevens Supervisor. When war funds were wanted in the trying times of the late war, he was made a member of a committee to solve the hard problem. He had thus many important political trusts thrust upon him, and upon his private and public life no shadow has ever fallen. Whenever and wherever the public weal was to be conserved, great and beneficial improvements to the county or the city of Princoton to be formed or fashioned into actual existence, the com- mon mind turned to Mr. Stevens as the one man wholly to be trusted, and the rich agri- cultural county of Bureau and the lovely and splendid little city of Princeton, with its perfect drainage, smooth gravelled streets,
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HISTORY OF BUREAU COUNTY.
elegant parks and trees and flowers and splendid houses, are and will forever remain his true and imperishable monument.
To his rare financial and executive tal- ents were added abilities, in any walk of life he might have chosen, of a high order and varied character. He possessed a vigor- ous body and an active temperament, an iron will, indomitable perseverance and a sleep- less energy. Astute, far-sighted, a deep thinker, and a keen and logical reasoner; honest and sincero in his convictions, he never sought popularity, and yet this came to him as only he would have had it come- through the performance of what he believed to be his duty. He was robust in body as in mind; fearless, honest, sincere and cleanly in his characteristics; his friendship was a precious boon, given without the asking to all of real worth, and his ill-will was to be dreaded by the evil-doers, whom he ever struck down unflinchingly. In person he was above the average in size, and heavy and muscular in build. A complexion and hair of light color, with small blue eyes intense- ly penetrating; erect and strong, and nervous in every movement, he was the
picture of a strong, healthy man. He was suave in manners; genial and companionable in his business and social life, it was but natural that his strong gnerdon of friends should be ever widening and extending.
In the sacred precincts of that stricken family circle he has left we will not intrude except to say here, indeed, he was best known, best understood and best beloved.
His loss to the community and to his wide circle of friends is irreparable.
But he is gone. A master mind among men, a man of affairs, an honest man, a good citizen, a lov- ing husband and father, he has paid the debt of life. A rich man, exacting his due, and dealing with rich and poor on business principles, he has gone to his grave with his departure regretted by an entire com- munity; and none feel more genuine or unselfish sorrow than there rests now in the hearts of the laboring men of Princeton, in the hearts of those who feel the aches of toil and the stern realities of an existence sustained by daily labor. The working men of Princeton have long been the unswerving friends of Justus Stevens, and a prouder epitaph a rich man cannot have.
Funeral services were held at his late residence by Rev. Mr. Milligan, at 11 A. M., Wednesday, and notwithstanding the intense cold, about 20 degrees below zero, some 300 of his late fellow citizens were present as a testimonial of their appreciation of his worth.
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