USA > Indiana > Steuben County > History of Steuben County, Indiana, together withbiographies of representative citizens > Part 65
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children-Lena, Myrtie, Lillie, Charles F. and Guy K. They are among the progressive residents of Steuben County. Both are well educated and taught school for a number of years before their marriage. Realizing the advantage of mental culture they endeavor to give their children the benefits of the best schools in the country.
Michael Bowerman was born in Seneca County, N. Y., in Septem- ber, 1823, and when four years of age his parents, Jacob and Mary Bowerman, removed to Seneca County, Ohio, where they made their home till their death. He was married in Seneca County, Ohio, to Jane Gooding, who died in 1869. They were the parents of four children, of whom two only survive-Milo and Mrs. Sarah Doudt. He was again married and has had one child, Ira, by his present wife. Mr. Bowerman settled on the farin on section 14, which he now occupies, in 1853. The land was unimproved when he bought it, but he has brought it to its present state of cultiva- tion. He has been successful in his agricultural pursuits and now owns 160 acres of land, 120 of which is improved. His first house was a log cabin, which he occupied till 1869, when he built his present residence. His house is built of cobble stone, 20 x 28 feet with a wing of the same dimensions.
George Brown, section 12, Jackson Township, was born in Mas- sachusetts, in 1829, a son of Harvey Brown, who was born in Mas- sachusetts in 1804, and in 1846 came to Steuben County, Ind., with his family and settled on section 1, Jackson Township, where he now lives. In early life George Brown worked at woolen mann- facturing, and later at the carpenter's and wagon maker's trades. In 1870 he bought the farm where he now lives of Charles Batch- elder and has since followed agricultural pursuits. He has one of the pleasantest homes in the township. He was married to Ursula Stockton, a native of Jamaica, Vt., born in 1834, a daughter of John and Betsey Stockton, who settled in Orland, Ind., in 1834, where the mother died May 12, 1849, and her father Sept. 21, of the same year. To Mr. and Mrs. Brown have been born four chil- dren-Frank, Irving H., Elizabeth H. and Chester. Elizabeth is the wife of Don Carlos Ransburg, of Pleasant Lake.
Morris Brown was born in Oneida County, N. Y ., in 1838, a son of Charles Brown, who died about 1851. When fifteen years of age he began to work for his own livelihood, and when seventeen went to Whitesides County, Ill., where he remained two years. In 1857 he came to Steuben County, Ind., and taught two winter terms of school in Flint, 1857-'58 and 1859-'60. The winter of 1860-'61
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he taught in District No. 8. In November, 1858, he bought sixty acres of land on the north part of the south half of the northeast quarter of section 28, Jackson Township, which was wholly un- improved and heavily timbered. He cleared and improved his land and subsequently added forty acres of the same section, and twenty acres on section 27, making a fine farm of 120 acres. His residence is on the land first purchased. April 1, 1858, he married Catherine Clink, daughter of Christian Clink, of Salem Township. After his marriage he went to Michigan, where he lived ten months, and then returned to Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Brown have three children-Carrie A .. wife of Asher Preston, of Fremont; Jennie M., wire of Frank Golden, and Homer T. Politically Mr. Brown is a Republican, casting his first vote for President Lincoln. He is one of the representative citizens of Jackson Township, and has held several positions of trust and responsibility.
Justus Butler, one of Steuben County's pioneers, was born in New York State, July 2, 1802. He was reared in his native State and when a young man removed to Lorain County, Ohio, where he was married Nov. 23, 1829, to Anna Clark, a native of the State of Vermont, born Aug. 6, 1812, and removed to Lorain County with her parents when two years of age. In 1836 Mr. Butler, accom- panied by his father-in-law, Samuel Clark, came to Steuben County for the purpose of locating land. He entered 313 acres on section 2, Jackson Township, and fifty-four acres on section 35, Mill Grove Township. In the spring of 1837 he moved his family to their new home; locating in Jackson Township, on the south side of Lake Gage. He built a log house and began at once to improve his land. He died March 1, 1853. His wife lived till Feb. 10, 1885. Their family consisted of nine children, three born in Ohio and six in Steuben County. Of those born in Ohio -- Jackson W., Sarah Ann and Samuel E .- the former died at the age of eight years, the second Sept. 20, 1847, aged fifteen years, and the last named was killed by lightning in 1854, at the age of nineteen years. But two of the children born in Steuben County lived till maturity-Joseph and Mark Justus, the latter now in Nebraska. Joseph Butler now owns and occupies the old homestead. He was born July 24, 1847, and was reared on the farm. In 1874 he was elected Clerk of the Courts of Steuben County and served four years. At the expiration of his term of service he entered the law office of Wood- hull & Croxton, Angola, and in January, 1880, entered the law department of the Illinois Wesleyan University, at Bloomington.
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He subsequently resumed his reading in the office of Woodhull & Croxton, and in November, 1881, formed a partnership in the practice of his profession at Angola, the firm being Butler, Walls & Cline. In the spring of 1882 Mr. Walls retired from the firm, and the firm of Butler & Cline continued till July, 1884. In November, 1883, Mr. Butler returned to the homestead, where he has since lived. He served as Trustee of Pleasant Township from April, 1882, till April, 1884. He was married in 1881 to Salena, daughter of Dr. Weicht, of Angola. They have one child-Bessie Nola.
George D. Cleveland is the only living son of David Cleveland, one of the pioneers of Jackson Township. David Cleveland was born in New York State, June 1, 1816. In 1835, with his elder brother, Amasa Maro Cleveland, he came to Steuben County, Ind. He lived with his brother till his marriage, and then lived on Pretty Prairie, Lagrange County, for a time. Then located on land he purchased when he first came to the county, on section 22, Jackson Township, where he lived till his death, Aug. 23, 1849. He was married in November, 1837, to Eliza Littlefield, a native of New York, born Feb. 9, 1812, daughter of Edmond and Amy Littlefield, who were among the earliest settlers of that section. Mrs. Cleveland is now living at Sturgiss, Mich. Her children were five in number, only two of whom are living-George D. and Emily, wife of Newton Clark, of Nebraska. George D. Cleveland enlisted in Angust, 1861, in the Twenty-ninth Indiana Infantry, and served three years and nine months, seventeen months of which he was confined in rebel prisons. He participated in the battles of Shiloh, Corinth, Stone River and Chickamauga. He with seventeen others of his company was taken prisoner at the latter battle and taken to Richmond, and confined in Castle Pemberton about two months. Thence to Danville, and April 1, 1864, to Andersonville, where they remained five and a half months, and were then taken to Charleston, S. C., and thence to Florence, and paroled from there March 1, 1865, and sent to Wilmington, N. C. His long experi- ence in rebel prisons so shattered his constitution that he has never recovered from its effects. Mr. Cleveland married Nancy Kirk- land, daughter of James Kirkland, who came to Steuben County from Richland County, Ohio, in 1864, and died in February, 1876. He was married four times. His second wife was a sister of Dr. McConnell, of Angola. Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland have five children -Zula M., John M., Iona M., Andrew C. and Ina D. They lost
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one daughter-Kittie M. Mr. Cleveland is by trade a blacksmith, and is now engaged in that occupation in Flint. He is serving his first term or fourth year as Assessor of Jackson Township. An elder brother of Mr. Cleveland, Osmer W., was a member of the Fifth Indiana Cavalry, and was captured at Macon, Ga., and was taken to Andersonville Prison and thence to Florence, S. C. There he escaped but was again captured after three or four days and was confined at Florence till paroled, March 1, 1865. Was then trans- ferred to the general hospital in New York City. His sufferings while a prisoner were intense, and his feet were so bruised and lacerated in endeavoring to escape from Florence that after his ex- change it was found to be necessary to amputate all his toes. He came home in August, 1865, and died of consumption, induced by his exposure and sufferings, Jan. 31, 1866, aged twenty-seven years.
John Coleman was born in Pennslyvania in 1822 and removed when a child with his parents to Ohio. He made his uncle's house his home for several years and when eighteen years of age began working for farmers by the month. Subsequently was employed in various capacities till he had earned enough to buy forty acres of land. In 1852 he moved to St. Joseph County, Ind., and bought 100 acres of land which was partially improved. He made an ad- dition of twenty acres to this farm but in August, 1863, sold it and moved to Steuben County, Ind., and bought 120 acres on the north- west quarter of section 15, Jackson Township, where he has since lived. About fifty acres had been cleared and a small frame house had been built. He now has 100 acres improved and in 1876 erected a fine two-story frame house at a cost of $1,500. He was married in Ohio to Sarah Whiteman, who died Aug. 11, 1868, leaving five children-Ellen, Jane, Ida, Theadore and Evalena. Jan, 1, 1870, Mr. Coleman married Mrs. Ruth Maritte, a native of Richland County, Ohio, born in 1844, a daughter of Richard and Harriet Shields and widow of Lutelious Maritte. To them have been born four children-Lettie, Eliza, Maud and Elga. Mrs. Coleman has two sons by her former marriage-Alfred and Lutel- ions. Her father was born in England in 1795 and was there reared and married. Emigrated to America with his family and settled in Richland County, and in 1849 came to Steuben County and settled in Salem Township, where he died in 1858. His wife died in May, 1884.
David Davis, section 4, Jackson Township, owns and resides on
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the farm where his father, Abner Davis, settled in 1836. Abner Davis was born in New York, December, 1795. His wife, Polly Bardsley, was born in Fairfield, Conn., in 1798, and came to Steu- ben County in company with Jonas and Benjamin Twichell and their families. They settled on the land which is now in posses- sion of their children. The father died March 20, 1843, and the mother Feb. 28, 1881, aged eighty-three years. David Davis was was born in Chenango County, N. Y., in 1830, and was six years of age when his parents moved to Steuben County. He has made agriculture his life-work and has been successful, owning now one of the finest farms in the township. He was married Dec. 25, 1866, to Frances Morse, a native of Geneva, N. Y., daughter of John and Susan Morse, who moved to Steuben County in 1862, and still reside in Jackson Township. Mr. and Mrs. Davis have three children-Horace, Lola and Susie.
Levi Doudt was born in Lehigh County, Pa., in 1828, and when five years old he came with his parents, Elias and Mary (Peter) Doudt, to Seneca County, Ohio, where he was reared to the occu- pation of farming, and where his father died in 1847. His mother died in Branch County, Mich., in 1877, and was buried in Jackson Township. He was married in 1852 to Anna Metzger, a native of Seneca County, Ohio, born in 1835, a daughter of Adam and Mary Metzger, who came to Steuben County, Ind., in 1868 and settled on section 11. Her mother died June 1, 1877. Her father is still living. To Mr. and Mrs. Doudt have been born three children -- Martha, wife of Peter Wireck, of Lagrange County, Ind .; Elias J., and Melissa, wife of Franklin P. Johnson, of Jackson Township. Mr. Doudt settled in Jackson Township, April 16, 1855, locating where he now lives on section 11, which he purchased from Cor- nelius Shank. Not much had been done to the land before our subject became the owner, ten acres having been partially cleared and a small frame house built. He at first purchased eighty acres on section 11 to which he added, later, forty acres adjoining on the south, on section 14, which he bought of Elias Coleman.
George Golden, one of the successful farmers of Jackson Town- ship, resides on section 22, where he settled in November, 1864. He owns 3022 acres of land, entered and partially improved by Maro Cleveland. Mr. Golden has made many improvements which have greatly advanced its value since he owned the farm. In 1876 he built his residence, which is one of the finest in the township, at a cost of $3,000, and in 1883 built his barn at a cost
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of $1,200. He is a son of Nathaniel Golden who was born in Nova Scotia about 1795, and removed with his parents to Seneca County, N. Y., where he married Elizabeth Arey. In 1839 he moved to Steuben County, Ind., and settled on a farm in Steuben Township, now owned by Henry Ritter, where he died in 1848; his wife's death preceded his. They had a family of nine children. One daugh- ter died in New York, and eight children accompanied their parents to Indiana, viz .: Amy, wife of Ever Thayer; Thomas was killed by the caving in of a well, when twenty-two years of age; Louisa married Eli Frink; Ann, wife of Zephaniah Carr; Horace, Nathan and George. The latter is the youngest, and the only surviving member of his father's family. He was born in New York in Oc- tober, 1835, and has lived in Steuben County, Ind., since 1839. He married Adelpha Cleveland, daughter of Amasa Maro Cleveland, who settled in Steuben County in 1835. Mr. and Mrs. Golden have three children-Frank, Edd and Judd, all natives of Jackson Township. Mrs. Golden's fatherwas one of the prominent early settlers of the county. He entered the farm where Mr. Golden now lives and lived there till his death in 1863. His wife died in 1852. They had three daughters-Mrs. Golden, Louisa, now in California, and Mary, widow of Dr. John B. Blue, of Jackson Township.
Thomas W. Haines, farmer, section 32, Jackson Township, is one of the most enterprising citizens of Steuben County. He is a son of William Haines and came with him to this county in Octo- ber, 1853. He was born in Carroll County, Ohio, in 1840, and there received his education, his time after coming to Indiana being re. quired on the farm helping to clear the land of trees and stumps and prepare it for cultivation. He remained with his parents till the breaking out of the Rebellion, and in 1861 enlisted in the Twenty-third Indiana Light Artillery, and served three years and nine months. He was married after his return home to Nancy Ryan, a native of the State of New York. They have a family of three children-Adelbert, Addie and Robert.
John Huffman, deceased, was born in Armstrong County, Pa., in 1808, and lived in his native county till eighteen years of age when he was married to Mary Rifenberrick, a native of New Jersey, born in 1811. Soon after his marriage he removed to Colum- biana County, Ohio, and two years later moved to Portage County. In the fall of 1844 he moved to Crawford County, and the following spring to Steuben County, Ind., and settled on a farm on section 26,
45
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Jackson Township, for which he had exchanged his farm in Ohio. The land was wholly unimproved, consisting of what is known as openings. His first residence was a board shanty and his second a hewed-log house. With the assistance of his sons he cleared ten acres of land the same spring and planted it to corn, from which he realized a fair crop. Mr. Huffinan made of this land a fine farm, residing here till his death, March 17, 1872. His wife, Mary, died March 29, 1863. They had a family of thirteen children-Jane, Richard W., Lucinda H., Catherine, Samnel, William J., Joseph, John W., Melissa, Anna, Benajah, Rachel A. and Mary. Five sons and two sons-in-law served in the defense of the Union in the war of the Rebellion. Richard was a member of the One Hun- dred and Fifty-second Indiana Infantry. Samuel enlisted in the Fourth Michigan Infantry and later in the Twelfth Indiana Cavalry. William J. enlisted in Chicago in Company A, McClellan Dragoons, April 21, 1862, and served four months. May 16, 1863, he en- listed in the Ninth Michigan Cavalry, and served till July 21, 1865. He participated in many severe engagements, serving in the raid after Morgan, the Atlanta campaign, and Sherman's march to the sea. Joseph was a member of the Twelfth Indiana Cavalry, and John W. of Company A, Twenty-ninth Indiana Infantry. Jane married Franklin Alexander and died many years ago. Richard W. is supposed to be living in Missouri. Lucinda is the wife of Albert Markle, of Michigan. Catherine died at the age of thir- teen years. Samuel is living in Idaho. Joseph is living in Flint. John W. died Aug. 2, 1864. Melissa, Anna, Benajah and Mary died in childhood. Rachel is the wife of James Miller, of Waterloo. William J. was born in Portage County, Ohio, April 13, 1835. He was married Aug. 20, 1865, to Martha J. Stiles, daughter of Rud Stiles. In 1866 he moved to Rome City, Noble County, but the following spring returned to Steuben County. He is by trade a blacksmith, but his health failing he ran a produce wagon ten years, and then worked at the shoemaker's trade. Since Decem- ber, 1881, he has been engaged in the mercantile business at Flint.
Guernsey Hults (deceased) was born in the town of Halfmoon, Saratoga Co., N. Y., in 1806, and died in Jackson Township, Sten- ben Co., Ind., Feb. 6, 1883. When eleven years of age he accompa- nied his parents to Huron County, Ohio, and thence to Richland County. In the fall of 1846 he came to Steuben County, Ind., and bought eighty acres of unimproved land, comprising the south half of the southwest quarter of section 26, Jackson Town-
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ship, giving as part payment his horses and wagon. After purchas- ing his land he returned to Ohio and remained till the following spring, when he came again to Stenben County. He built a log cabin and began to improve his land. In 1850 he went to Ohio and was married to Fanny Maria Darby, a native of Allegany County, N. Y., born in 1829, a daughter of Samuel B. and Sepharna (Guil- ford) Darby, the former a native of Vermont, born in 1807, and the latter a native of Massachusetts. In 1838 her parents moved to Fulton County, Ohio, where her father died July 15, 1884. Her mother is living in Wauseon, Fulton Co., Ohio. Immediately after their marriage Mr. and Mrs. Hults removed to their new home, and together labored to surround themselves and the family with first the necessaries and then the comforts of life. They had a family of two daughters-Sepharna J. and Sarah E. Mrs. Hults is a lady of culture and refinement, possessing a fund of general informa- tion, acquired by both reading and observation.
Israel Jarvis was born in Canada in 1844, and when he was three years of age his parents moved to Vermont, and from there in the fall of 1859 to Steuben County, Ind., and located in Salem Town- ship. In the fall of 1867 his parents moved to Kansas where they have since lived. Israel Jarvis received the greater part of his ed- ucation in Vermont. He was reared on a farm and after coming to Indiana assisted his father in clearing and improving a pioneer farm. In 1875 he came to Jackson Township and bought the farm where he now lives, of Harvey Leeves, on section 33. It contains 210 acres of choice land, and his residence and farm buildings are comfortable and commodious. He was married to Eunice Wiggins, a native of Pleasant Township, Steuben County, born in July, 1852, a daughter of John Wiggins, an early settler of Pleasant Township. Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis have four children-Lu- ella, Ada, Essie E. and Judson. Mrs. Jarvis had two brothers, Nathan and Endress, who were soldiers in the war of the Rebell- ion. Both lived to return, but the former was accidentally killed in Lagrange County, Ind., in February, 1876. The latter lives on the old homestead in Pleasant Township. A brother of Mr. Jarvis, Clement, was a member of the One Hundredth Indiana Infantry in the war of the Rebellion.
Hiram S. Jones (deceased) settled in Jackson Township on the farm now owned by his heirs, in May, 1864. It contains 160 acres, 120 on the southwest quarter of section 10 and forty aeres on the northwest quarter of section 15. This farm has long been
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noted for its fine fruit. It was formerly owned by Dr. Madison Marsh, who set out thirty acres of apple-trees, 300 peach-trees, and a variety of pear and cherry trees. It was the first fruit farm on so extensive a scale in Northern Indiana. The apples alone have yielded a revenue of $1,300 in a single year. Hiram S. Jones was born in Vermont in January, 1834, and when nine years old removed with his parents, Samuel and Jerusha Jones, to De Kalb County, Ind. When a young man he went to California, remaining there six years. He was married Oct. 21, 1860, to Nancy J. Clark, a native of Lockport, N. Y., born in 1836, daugh- ter of Isaac and Jane M. Clark, natives of New York, who moved to Spring Hill, near Wanseon, Fulton Co., Ohio, in 1857, and in 1860 to Waterloo, De Kalb Co., Ind., and two years later to Kala- mazoo County, Mich., where they still live. Mr. Jones lived on his farm in Steuben County a number of years, and then ex- changed it for his father-in-law's farm in Michigan, but bought it again April 15, 1872. He died at Waterloo, Ind., while there attending the county fair, Oct. 18, 1877. To Mr. and Mrs. Jones were born five children, four of whom are living-Charles O., Frank B., Fred A. and Lilly A. Rose L., a twin sister of Lilly, died at the age of nine years. May 6, 1884, Mrs. Jones married Almon W. Thorpe, who was born in Portage County, Ohio, in 1836. When twenty-seven years of age he went to Vine- land, N. J., where he worked at his trade (painter) and engaged in fruit-growing. He subsequently moved to Algansee, Mich., where he was Postmaster ten years. He was first married in 1857 to Mrs. Elvira M. (King) Allen, and has four children -- Morris N., Minnie M., Eli and Lavern. Mr. Thorpe has a fine collection of prehistoric relics, which he has accumulated by extended research and at great expense, many of them curiosities as examples of the skill and ingenuity of the early ages. He also has a number of Indiau relics and a fine collection of geological specimens.
Daniel Mariette, section 26, Jackson Township, settled on his present farm in 1874, coming to Jackson from Otsego Township, where he settled in 1846. He was born in Morgan County, Ohio, in 1815. He was reared and educated in his native county, re- maining there till manhood. He was married in Washington County, Ohio, to Nancy Trowbridge, a native of Morgan County, born in 1820. In 1844 they came to Indiana and lived two years in Lagrange County; thence to Steuben County, and lived in Ot- sego Township till 1874. He has been prominently identified
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with all public enterprises, assisting liberally with both time and money. Mr. and Mrs. Mariette have had eight children, but three of whom are living-Elisha M., Polly and Angenora. Four sons and one daughter are deceased. Their eldest son, Francis, was a member of the Seventy-fourth Indiana Infantry in the war of the Rebellion, and died at Nashville, Tenn., in August, 1863.
George Mundy (deceased) was born in New Jersey in 1817, and when a boy removed with his parents to Steuben County, N. Y. At the age of nineteen years he came with his parents to Seneca County, Ohio, where he was married to Miss Margaret Kimbel, a daughter of Francis and Catherine Kimbel, natives of New Jer- sey, who removed to Jefferson County, Ohio, the year of Mrs. Mundy's birth-1817. To Mr. and Mrs. Mundy were born four sons and one daughter, of whom the latter, Mrs. Martha J. Snow- berger, is the only one living. She and her husband reside on the old homestead with her mother. The sons were-David, who died in his sixth year; Daniel, at the age of five years; Louis, in his twenty-sixth year, and Francis in his fourteenth year. Mr. and Mrs. Mundy came to De Kalb County, Ind., in 1840, where they lived till 1844, when they came to this county and settled on the farm now owned by his family on sections 19 and 20. Mr. . Mundy built the first house-a log cabin-on the place, which he occupied till he built the present residence in 1863. Mr. Mundy's death occurred May 28, 1882.
Lewis Mundy, son of David and Sarah Mundy, was born in 1815, a native of New Jersey. When fourteen years old he removed with his parents to Steuben County, N. Y., and thence to Seneca County, Ohio. Later they came to Steuben County, but finally settled in Branch County, Mich., where they spent the rest of their lives. Lewis Mundy came to Steuben County in 1852 and settled on section 28 on eighty acres of land. He has since added to his first purchase and now possesses 120 acres, having sold forty acres. He has about 110 acres well improved, and has a fine residence, built in 1877. His barn was built in 1863. He was first married in Ohio in 1839 to Polly Stevenson, a native of Essex County, N. Y., who died in 1849, leaving two children, yet living, Jaspar and Alanson, both of whom served in the late war. Mr. Mundy was married again in 1850 to Mrs. Mercy B. (King) Purce, whose death occurred in 1863. He has two children by this marriage, Otis and Julia, wife of Franklin Castner, of Kansas. Mr. Mun- dy's present wife was Mrs. Mary (Doudt) Bolin, born in Seneca
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