USA > Missouri > A History of Northeast Missouri, Volume I > Part 78
Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90
William Allen was first elected to the legislature in 1846 and after- ward served in the state senate. He was a ,fluent stump speaker and an able representative. He was a Whig till the Know-nothings killed that old party. He then became a Jeffersonian Democrat. The Whigs ad- vocated internal improvements by the general government, a national bank and a protective tariff. These measures were all opposed by the Democrats. These were the main principles upon which the two divided.
PIONEER CITIZENS
William Massilon Campbell was born in 1805 in Rockbridge county. Virginia. He came to Missouri in 1829, in company with Dr. Robert Mc- Cluer. Mr. Campbell was prominent as a lawyer and an editor, and took an active interest in political matters. He was most highly esteemed by his friends and acquaintances, and served several years in the state legislature. Mr. Campbell was exceedingly modest and retiring. but possessed a brilliant mind which won him applause and honor, even though unsought. His untimely death at the early age of forty-five years caused deep regret and sorrow.
Dr. Robert McCluer and family moved from Lexington, Rockbridge county, Virginia, in 1829. They settled southeast of Dardenne Prairie. on a farm which is still in the possession of some of their descendants.
585
HISTORY OF NORTHEAST MISSOURI
In company with him when coming to Missouri were William M. Camp- bell, a brother-in-law, James H. Alexander and family, Messrs. Mc- Nutt and Cummings, and Jacob Icenhouer and family. Dr. McCluer lived but a few years after coming to Missouri, falling a victim to the bilious fever, which was the scourge of this new territory. Four of his children grew to maturity and settled in homes in the same locality. These were Samuel Campbell McCluer, Mrs. Dr. John Baptist Mus- chaney, Mrs. Thomas Watson and Robert Alexander McCluer, who is still living.
The Reverend Thomas Watson was of Irish-English descent, his father, Thos. Watson, being a native of Londonderry, Ireland, and his mother, Sarah Hannis, an English woman. The family crossed the seas to our country, settling at New Berne, North Carolina. There, in 1820, the young Thomas was born and continued to reside until 1836, when his father moved to St. Louis. He received his theological training at Princeton, New Jersey, and became pastor of the Dardenne Presby- terian church in the autumn of 1844, six months after he was licensed to preach. He continued pastor of this church till shortly before his death, a period of nearly forty-four years. Mr. Watson was genial and affable in manner, a close reasoner, a delightful conversationalist, and brimming over with sentiment.
He loved nature in all her aspects and was the very soul of music and poetry. He loved his people, and they returned that love with a devotion rare and beautiful. His sermons were characterized by earnest- ness and logical argument. He was a "gentleman of the old school," adhering strictly to the old-time Calvinistic doctrines of his church. Throughout his long, useful career he was aided and comforted by his loving wife, formerly Nancy Calhoun McCluer, whom he married five years after taking the pastorate of the Dardenne church. There, to- gether, in the quiet church yard so dear to them, they sleep in the midst of that community where the largest part of their lives was spent. On the pastor's tombstone are these words, taken from one of his own poems, "He never cared for earthly fame, His record is on high."
Nelson L. Overall came from Tennessee and settled in St. Charles in 1797. His wife was Mary Griffith. He had seven sons and two daughters by this marriage. By his second wife he had one son, and by his third wife, who was the Widow Patten, he had three children. His oldest son, Ezra, never married. He gave St. Charles College its present location on Kings Highway, and about ten thousand dollars. Samuel was a prominent physician of St. Charles, a man of ability and enter- prise. Asa was a lawyer, and also John H., his youngest son, became a noted lawyer of St. Charles. Nelson Overall built a house in the Point Prairie of red cedar logs that had been cut in the Alleghany Mountains, rafted down the Alleghany and Ohio rivers, and brought up from Cairo on boats. There were two of these houses built and they were known as "The Red Houses of the Point." Major Nelson Overall represented the county in the state legislature and was a useful and able member of that body.
. Major Nathan Heald was an early settler in the county. He was the son of Colonel Thomas Heald, who was an officer in the Revolutionary war; whose wife was Sybil Adams. He was born in Ipswich, New Hamp- shire, September 29, 1775. He was married to Rebecca Wells, daughter of Colonel Samuel Wells, in Louisville, Kentucky, May 23, 1811. He was in command of Fort Dearborn, the present site of Chicago, when it was captured by the English and Indians on August 15, 1812, and the garrison massacred. Major Heald was severely wounded at the time and the wounds eventually caused his death. He came on horseback
586
HISTORY OF NORTHEAST MISSOURI
with his wife in 1815 and purchased a farm of 360 acres from Adam Zumwalt on Ballou Creek, one mile south of where O'Fallon is located. His son, Darius, was born here in 1822. Major Heald died in 1832, and his widow in 1857. Darius Heald was married twice. First to Miss Virginia Campbell, who died in a few years. In 1861 he married Miss Hunter. He left two sons and five daughters. He represented the county in the state legislature in 1854. He was a painstaking law maker, and had enacted the first game law ever enacted in the state. He was fond of the sport of hunting and fishing.
St. Charles county, up to 1860, had been noted for the ability of her representatives in both branches of the legislature, but after what was known as the Drake Constitution came in force, a large element were disfranchised by a test oath and for ten years, until that constitution was set aside, misrule prevailed and mediocre men were selected for law makers. Very few counties in the state elected the best men for representatives. The result was a bonded debt of about twenty-five or thirty millions of dollars was fixed on the state. After the infamous Drake Constitution had been set aside, and the southern element had been again made citizens of the United States, abler men were sent to the state capital. Henry Abbington, an old settler and a Virginian by birth was elected to the legislature .. He was not an orator, but he was a man endowed with more than ordinary sense, and at once restored his county to her original prestige. After several terms in the assembly, he was succeeded by Albert H. Edwards, a young lawyer, son of the late Henry Edwards, and a man of great ability. While not an orator, he com- manded the entire confidence of the house, and was instrumental in shap- ing the actions of the law-making body. He served several times in both branches of the assembly, and died while a member of the senate.
Henry C. Lackland, a man of irreproachable character and great ability, served his county and his state and maintained the high record of his county in the legislative assembly.
For the first sixty years of the county's history the two old parties alternated in the selection of representatives. Party lines were not so strictly drawn as to induce the party voters to elect an inferior man. Both parties were forced to put forward their ablest men, and it made little difference which party triumphed. In politics the county has been overwhelmingly Republican for the past twenty-five years. Her prim- aries name her officers, the final election only confirming them.
Henry C. Lackland, son of James C. Lackland, an early settler of the county, was educated at St. Charles College, graduating in 1849. He studied law. In 1856, he was elected a professor in St. Charles College, and taught mathematics and also Greek and Latin. In 1860 he resumed the practice of law. He was one of the ablest men of the hour. In 1875 he was elected to the state convention that had been called to repeal the iniquitous Drake Constitution. He had no opposi- tion, and received every vote cast in the county except five. The Drake oath had become a dead letter, and the franchise had been restored to the better class of citizens who had been disfranchised for ten years. Mr. Lackland was a leading figure in that convention and the county came into her own once more. He afterwards represented the county in the legislature where he at once became a leading spirit and conferred much honor on his county and constituents. He died two years ago (in 1910) honored and lamented by his fellow citizens.
FRANCIS HOWELL
Francis Howell married Susan Stone in South Carolina and came to St. Charles in 1797. He settled on and gave name to Howell's Prairie
587
HISTORY OF NORTHEAST MISSOURI
fifteen miles west of St. Charles. He built a mill, the third one in the county. His home became a central point for the meet and drill of the militia, and rendezvous for public functions. He died in 1834, aged seventy-three, and his wife died eight years after. They had ten chil- dren. Thomas married Susanna Callaway, grand-daughter of Daniel Boone. He died in his eighty-fifth year, and his wife lived to be ninety years of age. They had fourteen children. He was a colonel in the war of 1812, and commanded the militia. Newton married and raised ten children. Benjamin married Mahala Costlio and they raised twelve children. These men all served in the Indian wars and the war of 1812. They certainly lived up to the Bible command, "Multiply and replenish the earth." Lewis Howell, the youngest child, was born on Howell's ยท Prairie and grew to manhood in the piping times of the earliest settle- ment of the county. By his fondness for study and his boyish energy, he succeeded even in that early day in acquiring a fine classical educa- tion, and became an able teacher. By his energy and scholarly influence, he aided materially in advancing an active interest in education in the county, and assisted in the education of a number of young men, who afterwards became eminent and useful citizens. He lived to be nearly ninety years of age, retaining full control of his bright intellect to the last. He was an educated Christian gentleman, eminently useful to his fellow man, in his day and generation, and the world was better for his having lived in it. He left one son, John William Howell, who served through the Civil war, a brave Confederate soldier under the banner of Sterling Price. He is still living on Howell's Prairie, an active farmer.
COLONEL JOHN PITMAN
Colonel John Pitman, a part of whose life has already been noted, came to the county in 1804, and was an active part and participant in all the leading events of that period, as soldier, law-maker, and class- leader in his chosen church, an ideal citizen to open to civilization a new world. He had one son by his first wife, the late David Kile Pit- man, who was born about the time he moved west. The young man grew up amid the stirring scenes of frontier life, improving the scant oppor- tunities for an education that were offered in a frontier life. He inher- ited from his father, many broad acres of fertile land, and had been trained by this careful and competent father to a farmer 's life. He soon became the leading planter of his section and led an ideal rural life. He was fond of all innocent sports, hunting, fishing and social pastimes. He married Caroline L. Hickman of Kentucky, about 1827. She bore him one son, Richard Hickman Pitman. She died in 1833. In a few years he was again married to Miss Eliza H. Baker, of Virginia. They had two children, Anna, who married William Glanvil in 1854; and Dr. John Pitman, of Kirkwood, Missouri. David K. Pitman was a pol- ished Christian gentleman, affable and entertaining in conversation, and lived an exemplary Christian life, read and known of all men. In him was no guile. He exerted a wide Christian influence in the county.
Professor R. H. Pitman, of Woodlawn Female Seminary, was an educator of the highest order. No man who ever lived in the county ren- dered a greater service to it and to society than he did. For forty years he educated and trained the girls of Northeast Missouri. His pupils, many of them now gone to their reward, have made Christian homes and reared sons and daughters who are now some of the brightest ornaments and fill the highest places in our broad and happy land. Dr. John Pitman, now of Kirkwood, has been an active and able physician, an ornament to his profession and a factor in the progress of the county.
588
HISTORY OF NORTHEAST MISSOURI
MILITARY RECORD
All of the early settlers who came to the county in pioneer days were endowed with the military spirit. Making a home in the wilderness, surrounded by savage tribes, whose every instinct impelled to cruelty and bloodshed, inspired the art of defence and aroused courage in the hearts of the inhabitants. But a few years passed after the county came under the government before it became necessary to form military organ- izations and erect forts for the protection of the people; and such organ- izations were formed and officered by brave and competent men. From 1805 to 1812 many of the settlers were killed by the treacherous red man. Among the murdered were Joseph Price, Lewis, Mike Baldrage, Abram Keithly, Hutchins and a number of others. These murders were . perpetrated by desultory bands of marauding Indians; and not infre- quently the savages met the same fate they had meted out to the whites.
A courageous settler, William Van Burkleo, returning to. his cabin opposite Grafton on the Mississippi, after being out a number of days with the Rangers, was attacked by eight Indians. He, with a friend and his wife, were sitting in the door when they were fired on. He was shot in the leg and his wife slightly wounded. He returned the fire and killed the chief. The others retreated, but carried off the body of their dead chieftain. The bullet that killed the Indian, severed the buck- skin cord that fastened to the red man's neck a peculiar talismanic stone, which Van Burkleo found the next morning. The stone is of white quartz, highly polished. In shape, a perfect prism, with a smooth round hole piercing it longitudinally. It is about an inch and a half long. No such quartz is found in this section. The writer has the stone from the old man, who died in 1864, in his ninetieth year. He was a noted character, an Indian fighter of note, and fond of horse-racing. His descendants are scattered over the West.
EBENEZER AYRES
Ebenezer Ayres came from Pennsylvania about 1795, and settled on the borders of the Mere Cranch lake. His house was built of logs cut on the Alleghany mountains, rafted down that stream and the Ohio to its mouth, thence on keel boats up the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, and two hewed log houses were built of them in the Point Prairie by Ayres and a neighbor in 1800. He built the first horse-mill in that part of the county. He planted an orchard and made cheese for the market. His house was of red cedar, and it was called the "Red House," and in it was preached the first Protestant sermon ever delivered in the "Point." He had one son who married Louisiana Overall. His daugh- ter married Anthony C. Palmer, who taught the first school in the "Point." He served as a soldier in the Indian wars under Captain Cal- laway.
Samuel Griffith settled in the Point in 1795. He was one of the first American settlers in the territory.' Mr. Griffith was married in North Carolina and raised four children : Daniel A., Asa, Mary and Sarah. Daniel married Matilda Mcknight and had five children. Asa married Elizabeth Johnson and they had five children. Mary married Wilson Overall and Sarah married Forster Mcknight.
Alexander Garvin of Pennsylvania, married Amy Mallerson and set- tled in the county in an early day. His house was built in a day. It was 16x18 feet in dimensions and was covered with linden bark weighted down with poles. The chimney was of sticks and mud. They moved into
.
589
HISTORY OF NORTHEAST MISSOURI
it the next day. The son, Alexander Garvin, married Elizabeth Boyd. Their children live in St. Louis. One son is a lawyer of fine reputation.
THE EDWARDS FAMILY
The Edwards family were pioneers of the county. The progenitors of the family came to the colony of Virginia in an early day. In the early part of the eighteenth century, a Welsh gentleman fitted out a vessel called the "Brice," and sent his young son, John Edwards, with a number of Welsh families to the colony of Virginia. They settled in what is now Caroline and Albemarle counties. John Edwards was mar- ried to Susanna Chiles, an English girl, about 1740. To this marriage were born eight children. The oldest son was John. One of the girls married William Bibb. Her son, William A. Bibb, lived and died in Charlottesville, Virginia. The third son, Ambrose, was born in Novem- ber, 1747, at Shadwell, on the Rivanna river, in Albemarle county, Vir- ginia. He was married to Miss Olive Martin, daughter of Joseph Martin, on the 14th of February, 1774. They had ten children: Susanna, Brice, James, John, Martha, Henry, Chiles, Joseph, Booker and Carr. Four of them died in Virginia. The other six came to Missouri between 1833 and 1840 and settled in St. Charles county. In 1811, John Edwards married Martha Johnston. They had seven children, five sons and two daughters. Of these children, only one is living, Dr. J. C. Edwards. Judge Samuel Edwards died at his home in Mexico, Missouri, in 1910. Captain John Edwards, served in the Fourteenth Virginia regiment in the War of 1812. So did his brothers, Brice, James and Henry. Their father served in the Revolutionary war under General Gates at the surrender of Burgoyne, and also in 1780, under General Lafayette in Virginia. Henry Edwards married Sarah Waller in Henry county, Virginia, in 1811. His sons were W. W. Edwards, a lawyer who served his state faithfully. He was district attorney for the Eastern District of Missouri, appointed by Judge Edward Bates when he was United States attorney-general in 1841. He also served as a circuit judge for many years. His youngest son, Colonel James T. Edwards, born 1836, was a gallant Confederate soldier. He entered the southern army under General Price. He was soon selected by General Parsons as his chief of staff, and was promoted to the rank of colonel. He was badly wounded at Wilson's creek where General Lyons was killed. He served with honor until the close of the war. In 1876, he was appointed assistant door-keeper of the United States senate, and is still serving in that capacity. He has filled that honorable position for thirty-two years, through all the political changes, notwithstanding the fact that he is a Jeffersonian Democrat.
THE GERMAN IMMIGRATION
The German immigration set in about 1830. In 1825 an intelligent and enterprising German came to the United States on a visit of inspec- tion and to increase his knowledge of the western country. This gentle- man, Gottfried Duden, spent a year in St. Charles and the adjoining counties studying the climate and the various productions as well as the manners and customs of the people. He traveled and made his observations under the guidance of Daniel M. Boone and others. He was delighted with the country and the people he met with and their cordial and hospitable treatment. On his return to the "Fatherland" he pub- lished a book in German giving a description of the country, the people, their manners and customs, the laws of the country and its wonderfully
590
HISTORY OF NORTHEAST MISSOURI
productive soil. The book, which had a phenomenal sale, aroused an in- terest in many of his countrymen and a number of well to do, educated men came over and settled in the county. Louis Eversman came with Duden and remained here. He married a Miss McLane, raised an intel- ligent family and was a prominent and influential citizen. He purchased a farm in Warren county.
Among the early German settlers were Francis Krekel with four sons, one of whom was Judge Arnold Krekel, a prominent and honored citizen, a lawyer of prominence, who represented the county in the legislature in connection with Dr. John A. Tally in the early fifties; Julius, Herman, Emile and Conrad Mallinckrodt. These men were all well educated and became influential. They had studied the English language before they came to the country but their pronunciation was very defective, but they soon learned the correct pronunciation. When Julius Mallinckrodt arrived in St. Louis, wishing to make some inquiries about the town he addressed the first man he met in what he supposed to be the English tongue, as it had been taught him, but the man could not understand him. He then addressed him in German, and then in Latin with no bet- ter success; as a last resort he tried French. Instantly the man em- braced him delighted to find some one with whom he also could con- verse. He was a Frenchman who had also just arrived in the city and had been unable to find any one with whom he could converse.
In 1834 a small colony from Hesse Darmstadt arrived in the care of Frederick Muench, who was a man of talent. He was a minister of a Liberal Protestant church in Germany for fourteen years. In 1834 he organized what he called the Gissen Society from among the members of his congregation and migrated to America, settling in the western part of this county and Warren. He was popular and influential and repre- sented his county in the legislature. With him came Dr. Fred Kruge. Jonathan Kunze and a number of others with their families. This man and his colonists were Rationalists in their religious belief. Their So- ciety gave way in time to Orthodox Christian denominations, German Methodists, Lutherans and Evangelical. A large German immigration came to the county from this commencement up to 1850. They have been a valuable acquisition to the county. While not so quickly assimi- lated by the Anglo-American as some other nationalities, they are, however, in the second generation, thoroughly Americanized.
Immigration for seventy years from foreign countries has been great, but the amalgamation of races has not been so thorough as to evolve an American type. That result will follow in due time.
AGRICULTURE AND PROGRESS
Great improvements in the manner of agriculture have been achieved, and a great variety of products have been added since the primitive days of one hundred years ago. In the advance of civilization crude methods have succumbed to science. The wooden mould board, the bull-tongue plow and the shovel and the hoe have forever disappeared, and in their places we have riding plows, disc harrows, self binders, motor plows, steam threshers and every appliance of labor saving machinery. Verily the glory of the reap hook, the cradle and the threshing floor is gone. The little two-horse mill that ground our fathers' corn and wheat into meal has been superseded by the steam roller mills.
From 1804 the increase in population was very rapid. In 1810 when the first census was taken it had increased from 700 to 3,505. At the next enumeration, it had increased but 465, but the Indian wars and the war with England had checked immigration almost entirely. In
591
HISTORY OF NORTHEAST MISSOURI
1830 it was 4,320; in 1840, it reached 7,911, almost double. In 1860 it had reached 16,523. In 1900, 24,474. In the next decade to 1910, there was an increase of only 110. In 1804 the amount of taxes collected was $705.00. In 1818, the taxable property was $87,419. In 1830 it had increased to $727,575. In the next twenty years there was a phenomenal increase of wealth in the county. Its assessed valuation up to 1912 has been about three hundred and fifty per cent. The county has kept pace with the balance of the state in wealth and all the varied produc- tions of the soil as also in manufactories.
The city of St. Charles has one of the largest car factories in the United States, besides a large shoe factory, breweries and other impor- tant factory concerns.
The number of farms in the county as shown by the last census is about fifteen hundred. Number of acres in cultivation is 206,000. The amount of corn raised in 1911 on forty-five thousand acres was 1,675,000 bushels. The wheat raised on seventy-five thousand acres of land was 1,500,000 bushels. Oats, barley and potatoes in about equal pro- portions. In the early settlements of the county, the farmer, for home consumption, also raised cotton and flax and some hemp of fair quality and good yield to the acre. Farm lands in the county are valued at from fifty to one hundred and twenty-five dollars per acre. About seven-eighths of the land in the county is under cultivation or under pas- turage. Stock raising is largely followed, and the poultry business is second only to the other combined interests of her agriculture.
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.