USA > Michigan > Washtenaw County > Combination atlas map of Washtenaw County, Michigan > Part 8
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He was engaged at an early day as an agent in locating the Kalamazoo Institute, and has contributed to its growing prosperity. In 1836 he was chairman of the Michigan Missionary State Convention, at Detroit, at its organization, and for two successive years president of its board, and for the years of 1888 and 1839 its general agent.
The year of 1845 was one of gloom. The erysipelas bore off his dear wife, a married daughter and her babe, his aged mother (æt. eighty-two), and a widowed sister to the silent grave within forty-nine days. This was a day of solemn thought. But they slept in Jesus, and all was well.
In October following God provided a helpmate in the person of Mrs. Lydia Smith, the mother of the Fisks in this place, and of General C. B. Fisk of St. Louis, Mo. In 1851-2 he spent a year in New York State as agent of the American Bible Union, and addressed nearly one hundred churches, twenty associations, and the scholars and faculty of the Madison
University on the revision question. His health again gave way, and he returned to close his labors in the State of his adoption.
For several years he continued agent a part of the time, and cultivated his farm mainly for the support of his family and preservation of health. The burden of his labors during his forty years residence has been in Clinton and adjoining towns, and laboring in the field to keep up a healthful tone in his system. He is now in his eighty-fourth year, and still preaches occasionally and attends somewhat to his temporal concerns.
CURRAN WHITE.
The subject of this sketch is a descendant of Peregrine White, who came over in the " Mayflower," and father of the first white child born in New England. Curran's great-grandfather settled near the head of Weymouth Bay, Massachusetts, and Michael White, his grandfather, emigrated to Hampshire County, in the same State, soon after the old French war. Jacob White was an only son. He married Jane Robinson and moved to Manchester, Ontario County, New York, in the year 1800. Raised a family of five boys and one daughter. Sold his farm and emi- grated to Michigan in 1832, locating in the town of Lima, Washtenaw County. Curran, son of the last-named, was born January 9, 1814, in Ontario County, New York, and came to Michigan, with his two older brothers, in the spring of 1833, making an overland journey from Detroit with an ox-team. The latter bought land in Dover, six miles west of Adrian. At that time Adrian had but eight dwellings and three taverns. Until the following September they and their families stopped with Stephen Perkins, making in all a party of sixteen, who.all lived in a log hut eighteen by twenty-four feet. Of this experience Mr. White says: " We had ' music by the band ;' and how we managed I could hardly tell; but were as happy a family as you ever see. Our living was bread, pork, and potatoes, and, for a change, my brother would bring in a ven- ison occasionally. Game was plenty ; also wolves (my oldest brother caught fifty-five of the prowlers, and got a snug little sum as bounty for their scalps." In May, 1884, Curran went out with Mr. Kidder, and helped him raise the first log house on Bean Creek, laying the foundation of the well-known " Ames-Kidder settlement." Mr. White bought a farm in the neighborhood. He did not settle upon it, however, but sold it and returned to his native town in New York the following year. In 1887 he returned to Michigan, and stopped with his father, in Lima Township, this County. Two years later he took the homestead, and, during fifteen years' residence there, " with many hard knocks," cleared up a farm of two hundred acres of wild land. In 1856 he sold the farm and moved into Chelsea village, where he occupies a neat and substantial residence. Soon after locating in the village, he built a mill for the man- ufacture of cider and vinegar, with a capacity of ninety barrels per day, to which he subsequently added a planing-mill and other wood-working machinery, all propelled by steam.
In 1889 Mr. White married Miss Jane Sophia Keys, the fruits of which union has been two children. The son was a member of the Fourth Michigan Cavalry Regiment, and died in 1862,-a martyr in the cause of liberty. The daughter, Mrs. Balina Negus, was born in 1843 in Lima, and married in 1867. Although sixty years of age, Mr. White is hale, hearty, and active, and shows evidence of the blue blood of Puritan stock in the energetic business life he leads,-superintending a large manufacturing establishment,-besides participating in other interests of his town, where he is held in general esteem.
CYRUS BECKWITH,
a native of New Hampshire, was born the 23d of August, 1801. His father, Richard, was a farmer ; and young Cyrus passed his early life upon his father's farm, until he came to Michigan, in the spring of 1825, locating at Ann Arbor, and there building the first house made of sawed lumber. In 1832 his father died. During his residence at the County- seat, Mr. Beckwith was engaged in trade,-opening the first store in the village,-and also served one term as Register of Deeds, being the first person to fill that responsible position in Washtenaw County. In 1830 he located a farm in Sylvan Township. He built the first house and was the first settler in that town, thereby earning the distinction of being the pioneer of Sylvan. He took up five hundred acres of land, a little over four hundred of which he yet owns, and has worked until within a short time, when, on account of failing health, he leased it, and took up his residence in the village of Chelsea, some four miles distant from his farm.
Mr. Beckwith was married in 1827 to Miss Amarilla H. Gorham, a native of New York, by whom he has had six children, all of whom are living, except one. He has served as supervisor of his town, and held other local offices of trust, besides administering the law as a justice of the peace. He is yet strong and active for his years, his faculties unclouded, and his hair untouched by the finger of time. With his consort and family he is, in his declining years, enjoying the fruits of a hard-earned competency. He has grown up with the County, been identified with the progress and prosperity of his town and section, possesses a host of friends, and enjoys the confidence of all.
JOHN FALCONER.
The subject of this sketch is of that family familiarly known fifty years ago in Inverness County, Scotland, as the " Both Hill Falconers," and might also, we think, have been very appropriately called the " Masonic Falconers," as the men all followed the calling of stone masons, and were widely known, not only as excellent workmen, but for their sterling integrity and sober and industrious habits,-they also stood high in the Order of Free Masons. Alexander Falconer, father of the subject of this record, was born in the year 1781, in the town of Nairn, Inverness County ; he married Miss Isabella Hutchinson, four sons were born to them, and named in the order of their ages; as follows : Hugh, Peter, John, and Alexander. John was born in Cameltown, In- verness County, February 18, 1816. In the year 1829 his father and family came to America and settled in the State of New York; the following year work was commenced on the Mohawk and Hudson Rail- road, running from Albany to Schenectady, and Mr. Falconer was engaged in constructing the first bridge built upon this road, noted as being the first in the United States. In 1882 Mr. Falconer decided to try his fortunes as a farmer ; and, as Southern Michigan was at that time considered the Eldorado of the West, he determined to make him a home in this State; he accordingly took up the line of march, the terminus of which was, in his case, Section 28, in the township of Freedom, where he located one hundred and twenty acres of land. The trials of the early settlers were at this time unusually severe; sickness and the want of the common necessities of life visited their households day by day, but these were nothing in comparison with the horrors of an Indian war. At this time the aggressions of the Sac and Fox Indians, headed by the noted Indian
chief Black Hawk, were so atrocious as to demand the interposition of the government; the territory being sparsely settled, the militia were called out to repress them, and soon after arriving in Freedom, Mr. Falconer (then sixteen years of age) was drafted and ordered to report at Jones- ville, but before leaving that place Black Hawk was defeated, and he returned home.
There were, at the time of Mr. Falconer's settlement in Freedom, only three families in the Township; bridges and roads were like " angels' visits,-few and far between ;" and strange as it now seems, a trip from Freedom to Ann Arbor and back with a team required nearly two days. Mr. Falconer thus relates his first experience in "going to mill."
"I, in company with Isaac Airs, started from Freedom with an ox- team, and being on short rations, our breakfast consisted of two biscuits ; we were all day going to Timothy Hunt's, where we stopped and took supper. We got to Ann Arbor about ten o'clock in the evening, and put up at the " Nowland Tavern." Mr. Falconer resided in Freedom until 1846, when he disposed of his property and moved to Manchester, where he engaged in mercantile business ; he also dealt heavily in real estate, and run a distillery ; his talents and energies as a financier, and his in- dustry and good management in his business relations placed him in possession of property which to-day would be worth at a low estimate sixty thousand dollars, but meeting with reverses in business, he decided to go to farming again. In 1856 he moved from Manchester to his present residence, where he has since resided, and where he now owns a beautiful farm of two hundred acres, on Section 29, in the township of Sharon. Mr. Falconer's farm is a very desirable one, being well fenced, in a high state of cultivation, and well stocked. He has a comfortable house, and his farm is supplied with improved labor-saving machinery and other conveniences of a modern enterprising farmer. Mr. Falconer is emphatically domestic in his habits; no man more enjoys the comforts of the home circle, blessed with an estimable wife who well knows how to make home happy,-his chief pleasure is in the bosom of his family. They have been blessed with two children,-John and Phebe Jane, both born in Manchester, the former March 24, 1847, and the latter on May 9th, 1848,-both are living with their parents. In closing this brief sketch, it only remains for us to say that Mr. Falconer has the repu- tation of being a thoroughly honest, true, and good man, without ostenta- tion he moves through life respected by all.
CHESTER PARSONS.
The subject of this sketch was born in the town of Sandersfield, Berk- shire County, Mass., December 1, 1799. His parents removed to Wind- ham, Greene County, N. Y., in the spring of 1802, remaining there until 1826. His father died in 1818. He remained at home until he was nine- teen years old, and learned the tanner's trade. In 1820, at the age of twenty-one, he commenced life for himself on eight dollars a month. In 1828 he became foreman of the " Beam House" of John Bray, and the follow- ing year was married to Miss Deborah B. Maben. He emigrated to this County, and located eighty acres of land, one and a quarter miles south . of the present village of Saline, being the second lot south of the "Salt Spring Reserve." Two little log houses constituted the village of Saline at this time. He was assisted by a resident friend in locating his land ; and fearing some one might get the start of him, he and his brother, Orrin, started an hour before sundown for Monroe, thirty miles distant, through a dense wilderness, without a house. They made over twenty miles by daylight, often having to feel their way with their hands. On returning from Monroe, he put up a log house, with ground floor, until it could be covered with split logs. He worked out-doors days, and added a log to his floor each evening. Let no young man envy Mr. Parsons his " broad acres" who is unwilling to make the same effort he did to attain success. To Mr. Chester Parsons and his brother, Orrin, belong the honor of erecting the first frame building in Saline Township, being a much-needed saw mill, which they supplemented by other improvements, until 1834, when Mr. C. Parsons bought one hundred and sixty acres where he now resides. Subsequent additions to his original purchase gives him now three hundred and seventy-four acres of choice land, well improved, with good buildings, and a steam saw-mill. Benton Post-office was re- moved to his house soon after, and he has held the office of postmaster ever since. Mr. and Mrs. Parsons have had seven children, of whom one son and two daughters remain to cheer their home. Mrs. Parsons is now sixty-nine years old, and takes great delight in family re-unions, which, besides their own family-circle, includes nineteen grand-children and six great-grand-children. Mr. and Mrs. Parsons are the only unbroken couple among the first settlers of this section now living. Mr. Parsons is a respected citizen and a successful business man, enjoying the confidence of the community with which he has so many years been connected.
REV. CHARLES GLENN
was born in the town of Genoa, Tompkins County, N. Y., February 22, 1803. His father, Charles Glenn, emigrated from Ireland to this country about the year 1780; he married and settled in Genoa, from whence he moved his family to the town of Junius, Seneca County, N. Y, the sub- ject of this record then being four years old. In 1810 he removed to the town of Tyre, in the same county, where both himself and wife departed this life.
In the year 1824 Mr. Glenn married Eliza A. Brown. The results of this alliance were three children,-Benjamin H., John T., and Margaret M. In 1831 his house and contents were destroyed by fire, and his wife and two youngest children perished in the flames-the mother losing her life in trying to save her offspring. This was a terrible bereavement to the husband and father. On the 18th of January, 1832, he married Mary A. Bignall, and by her had two children, viz. : Sabrah J. and an infant babe, both dead. The year following he moved to Michigan, and bought two lots of government land in the town of Dexter, Washtenaw County, upon which farm he i located, and in the cultivation of which he is occupied.
He experienced religion in the year 1831, and within six months was appointed a class-leader. He has acted as such ever since ; also as trustee of the Church, superintendent of the Sabbath-school, and as local preacher for thirty years. He has kept no record of the sermons preached during that period, but the funeral services alone amount to over one hundred. His parents had ten children, and they have all passed away except hin of whom we write. Mr. Glenn is the father of five children, and they have all preceded him to the spirit land. He has lived with his present companion forty-one years, and at this date (1874) is seventy-one years of age, his wife being seventy-nine,-a venerable couple,-and both are enjoying good health for persons of their years. They possess the com- forts of a pleasant home, and with contented minds give thanks to God for spiritual and temporal blessings.
25
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RE S. OF BERNARD KEENAN, SEC. 14 NORTHFIELD TP. MICH.
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