USA > Missouri > Cooper County > History of Cooper County, Missouri > Part 96
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Henry Gibson Hurt, assistant Captain of Company D, Missouri Train- ing School, Boonville, Mo., was born on a farm southeast of Boonville, Nov. 23, 1872. His father was Fleming Mitchell Hurt, who was born on a pioneer farm in Cooper County in 1826 and departed this life in 1908. Clayton Hurt, his grandfather, was a native of Virginia who settled in Cooper County in 1812 and assisted in the building of Fort Boone. He held the title of Colonel Hurt and had charge of the task of defending the pioneer settlement against the attacks of the Indians during the War of 1812. From 1812 to 1815 the settlers of this section of Missouri lived in the forts and stockades on the north side of the Missouri River and were kept constantly on the alert to ward off attacks by the Indians who had been incited by British agents to attack the Americans. Colonel Hurt married Nancy Dillard of Kentucky and after the frontier had been made safe for the settlers, he pre-empted a large tract of government land in Cooper County on which his descendants are still living.
Fleming Mitchell Hurt owned a fine farm of 240 acres and was a substantial citizen of Cooper County during his lifetime. He married Miss Flora Ann Davis of Macon County, a daughter of Jeremiah Davis who married a Miss Gilbreath and came from Virginia to Macon County and thence to Cooper County in pioneer days. Four children were born to Fleming Mitchell and Flora Ann Hurt, as follows: Mary Ann, deceased
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wife of Albert Adair; Mrs. Leonora Byler, Clarks Fork township; Henry Gibson Hurt, of this review; Florence B., widow of Lee Davis, living east of Boonville.
H. G. Hurt was reared on the home farm and in addition to his dis- trict school studies he attended the Pilot Grove Seminary and the Otter- ville Seminary. ' He pursued a business course at Chillicothe, Mo., in 1892 and then engaged in farming. He improved a tract of 182 acres of land and was successfully engaged in agricultural pursuits for 20 years. In the spring of 1915 he disposed of his farm land and engaged in the auto- mobile business in partnership with G. A. Brownfield. In the spring of 1918 he disposed of his interest in the business and took up the duties of his present position in the Missouri Training School for Boys.
Oct. 21, 1896, Mr. Hurt was married to Miss Myrtle Rankin who was born in Cooper County, and is a daughter of Robert S. and Louisa (Dun- can) Rankin, pioneer settlers of Cooper County. William Rankin, grand- father of Mrs. Hurt erected the Rankin mill in the southeastern part of Cooper County. Mrs. Louisa Rankin is deceased and Robert S. Rankin makes his home with Mr. H. A. Jewett in Cooper county. Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Hurt are parents of four children: Ewing Rankin Hurt; Mabel Louise ; Holman G., a student in Boonville High School; and William.
Ewing Rankin Hurt, the soldier of the family, was born Sept. 21, 1897, and is a volunteer in the National Army. He enlisted in the U. S. army, March 22, 1917, first as an infantryman and was then transferred to the aviation corps. He was trained at Ft. Sill, Okla. and holds the rank of first sergeant.
Mr. Hurt is a democrat of the pronounced type. Mrs. Hurt is a mem- ber of the Presbyterian Church. He is a member of the Modern Wood- men of America and the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons and is past master in the local lodge.
Dr. William Peyton Harriman, late prominent physician and stock- man of Cooper County, was born in Louisiana, May 28, 1838, and died at his home in Boonville, Sept. 14, 1918. He was a son of Dr. William Harri- man who was born in New York City and accompanied his parents to Ken- tucky when he was a child. He was reared in Kentucky, married a Miss Mayo and came to Cooper County in 1846. Dr. William Harriman located at Pilot Grove and there reared his family.
Dr. W. P. Harriman received his higher education in the University of Michigan and began the practice of medicine at Pilot Grove, Mo. He was successful as a physician but became more successful as a farmer and
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stockman. He accumulated a large acreage of land and built a flouring mill and hired a miller to operate the mill. Prior to this time he had lived on Lone Elm Prairie, and after establishing himself on the old Harri- man place near Pilot Grove he made a trip to Kentucky and returned with some blooded horses. He then engaged in the breeding and raising of thoroughbred horses and became widely known throughout the country as a result. Dr. Harriman produced some splendid animals which sold for very high prices. As age came upon him he relinquished much of his interests and sold out his stock and farming interests to his son and went south in 1900, purchasing a home in San Antonio, Texas. He re- turned to Boonville in 1912 and died here six years later.
Dr. W. P. Harriman was married April 6, 1866 to Miss Elizabeth Russell, who was born on Lone Elm Prairie, Jan. 8, 1842. She was a daughter of Col. Thomas Russell of Virginia. Her mother was Elizabeth Eleanor Russell who was born in 1796 and died April 5, 1868. The Rus- sells came to Cooper County in 1838. Colonel Russell brought along 30 slaves and purchased 1,300 acres of land. Col. Thomas Russell was born in 1796 and died in 1852. He was a scion of an old and prominent Vir- ginia family, which formerly owned a beautiful country seat in Virginia, now known as "Rannemead Farm" and owned by Sen. Charles A. Faulkner.
Col. Thomas Russell was a son of Captain Russell, a soldier of the Revolution, who resided in Alexandria, Va. The history of the family begins with Lord John Russell, whose younger son, James Russell, emi- grated from England in 1700 and settled in York County, Va. Captain Russell married a Miss Throckmorton of Louisville, Ky.
Out of seven children born to Col. Thomas and Elizabeth Eleanor Russell, only two are living: Mrs. Dr. W. P. Harriman of this review; and John N. Russell of Los Angeles, Cal., aged 84 years, who has a son, Dr. John N. Russell, president of the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Los Angeles.
Four children were born to Dr. W. P. and Elizabeth (Russell) Harri- man, as follows: William Mayo, died at the age of 16 years; Russell lives in California; Albert C. Harriman, farmer and stockman at Pilot Grove, Mo .; Bessie, deceased wife of Will Ross, left one child, Margaret E. Ross.
Dr. Harriman was a democrat and was prominent in the affairs of his party. He was a member of the Presbyterian Church.
Feodor Stegner, living comfortably on his farm of 89 acres near Billingsville, the old home place of the Stegner family, is one of the best known of the pioneer citizens of Cooper County. Mr. Stegner has lived all of the 64 years of his existence on his farm and has reared a fine
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family. The Stegner place is a pretty farmstead, the residence, a neat cottage home sets far back from the roadway and the land is fertile and protective.
Feodor Stegner was born on the place which he now owns, Feb. 26, 1855. His birth took place in a log house which was the first home of the Stegner family in Cooper County. He is a son of John Peter and Margaret Barbara Stegner who emigrated from Germany and settled in Cooper County in 1853.
Mr. Stegner was married Nov. 24, 1887 to Miss Louise Back, who was born at Pleasant Green, Mo., July 3, 1866 and died June 6, 1905. She was a daughter of Daniel and Christina (Yost) Back, natives of Germany and old settlers of Cooper County. The children born of this union are: Daniel P., born in 1888, lives on a farm; Bertha, born 1890, married Albert Gerhardt near Speed and is mother of four children, Louise, Ruth, Joseph and Frances; Flora, born Nov. 9, 1893, wife of August Gerhardt, a farmer near Speed, is mother of two children, Elmer and Helen; Edna, born March 1, 1896, is her father's housekeeper; Rudolph, born Dec. 26, 1899, makes his home with his father; Herman, born Aug. 9, 1902, is at home with his father; and Louis was born June 6, 1905.
While Mr. Stegner is generally a republican and supports republican party principles, he is an independent voter who refuses to wear a party yoke. He is a member of the Billingsville Evangelical Church.
Henry F. Torbeck, prosperous farmer and stockman of Boonville township is owner of 153 acres of productive land which he is creating into a splendid farm. Mr. Torbeck has just completed the erection of a handsome 10 room house, with bath, water, electric light and furnace, at a cost of $5,250. Mr. Torbeck is a breeder of Duroc Jersey hogs, not as a specialist but because he favors this breed as being the most remunera- tive to raise on the farm. He was born in Germany, Jan. 17, 1870. His father, William H. Torbeck, now living retired in Boonville, was born in Germany, April 29, 1841, and is a son of Rudolph and Sophia Torbeck. He was married Aug. 10, 1866 to Sophia Loss who was born Nov. 7, 1839. He brought his family to America in 1882, landing in Boonville in Noveni- ber of that year. He immediately went to the farming section and worked as farm laborers for the first six months in order to familiarize himself with American methods of tilling soil. He then rented land until 1892 when he bought an 80 acres in Boonville township upon which he lived for 25 years, prior to his retirement to a home in Boonville. Mr. Torbeck has recently sold his farm to his son, Ernest W. Torbeck. Six children
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were born to William H. and Sophia Torbeck, as follows: Henry, of this review; Ernest W., a farmer south of Boonville; Anna, widow of J. C. Neff,, Boonville township; Mrs. Bertha Winkler, Saline County, Mo .; Mary Tor- beck died at the home of Senator Cockrell, Warrensburg, Mo., where she was serving as nurse; Amelia died at the age of six years.
When he attained young manhood, Henry Torbeck purchased land in partnership with his brother Ernest W. Torbeck. This partnership con- tinued amicably and profitably until his marriage. Then the brothers divided their holdings and Mr. Torbeck started to improve his property. He was married Feb. 23, 1910, to Annie C. Schwitzky, a daughter of Rob- ert Schwitzky, a prosperous farmer of Palestine township. Three chil- dren have been born to Henry and Annie C. Torbeck, as follows: Sophia Wilhelmina, aged seven years; Agnes Marie, aged six years; Henrietta Alma, deceased.
Mr. Torbeck is a republican. He is a member of the Billingsville Evangelical Church. He is a progressive and enterprising citizen who takes an active and influential part in civic affairs and is highly respected in his neighborhood. He is a director of the Blackwater Telephone Com- pany.
William L. Bryan .- For over fifty years, William L. Bryan has re- sided upon his pretty farm just south of Prairie Lick, Mo. He is owner of 134 acres which is nicely improved with a neat cottage home and attractive surroundings. Mr. Bryan was born in Kentucky, Jan. 1, 1850, and is a son of Benjamin B. and Mary (West) Bryan, the former of whom was a native of Virginia and the latter a native of England.
Benjamin B. Bryan came to Missouri in 1869 and settled upon the place which W. L. Bryan now owns. Mr. Bryan erected a double log cabin which served as the family home for a number of years. A big brick chimney was built in one end of the house and a flue was built in the other end. Oxen were used in breaking up the Bryan land and it took much labor to gradually clear away the woods and create a farm. B. B. Bryan died in Nov., 1880, at the age of 65 years. Mrs. Mary Bryan died in 1873 at the age of 55 years. The children in the Bryan family were: Jennie, dead; William L., of this sketch; Mrs. Sarah Case, Belling- ham, Wash .; B. F. Bryan, on a farm ncar Prairie Lick.
Prior to purchasing the Bryan home place, W. L. Bryan rented land. He erected his present home in 1895. He was married in January, 1872, to Miss Julia Burns, born April 4, 1857 in Atlanta, Ga., a daughter of Samuel and Jane (Faris) Burns, who were natives of Georgia. The
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Burns family went to Kentucky in 1864 and from there came to Cooper County in 1872. They settled near Boonville, on what is now known as the Barnhart farm. Later, Mr. Burns returned to Georgia and died there. His wife died in Tana County, Mo. There were eight children in the Burns family : Robert, deceased; Mrs. Julia Bryan, of this review; Mrs. Ellen Trammel, Okla .; John, Tana County, Mo .; Mrs. Margaret Trammel, Okla .; Mrs. Emma Aubury, Cedar Creek, Tana Co., Mo .; Mrs. Ida Claussen, deceased; Mrs. Georgia Williams, Tana County, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. Bryan have reared six children: Jennie, Robert, Wil- liam, Josephine, Riley and Mary Ellen, and Lloyd. Mrs. Jennie Case lives at Bellingham, Wash .; Robert is deceased; William lives on the home farm; Mrs. Josephine Dwyer, lives near Speed, Mo .; Riley, lives in Kan- sas .; Mary Ellen Bryan is a teacher in the Speed school; Lloyd Bryan was born Aug. 31, 1896 and was inducted into the National Army July 26, 1918. He was trained at Camp Funston until he was honorably dis- charged from the service Jan. 22, 1919.
Riley Bryan was born Oct. 25, 1885. He enlisted in Hospital Unit No. 28 of the National Army in May, 1917. He was trained for service at Fort McPherson, Ga. He was honorably discharged after 14 months of service. He now is a traveling drug salesman and resides in Kansas.
Mr. Bryan is a democrat and all of his sons are stanch democrats. He is also a Baptist-a fine combination of good qualities. He is a mem- ber of the Woodmen of the World.
Fred Deuschle, prosperous farmer and stockman of Palestine town- ship, has one of the finest farm homes in Cooper County, consisting of 208 acres and was purchased by the proprietor in 1898. The splendid appear- ing farm residence consists of six large rooms. Mr. Deuschle will har- vest 45 acres of wheat this season, 1919. Fred Deuschle was born Jan. 3, 1869 on a farm three miles west of Pleasant Green, Cooper County, and is a son of Adam and Catherine (Schupp) Deuschle.
Adam Deuschle was born in Wuertenburg, Germany, in 1824 and died in Cooper County, Mo., in 1897. He left his native country and came to America in 1845. During the great gold rush of 1849, he made the trip across the plains and mountains to the Pacific coast and spent two years in that region. When he returned to Cooper County in 1851, he built a home upon his 200 acre farm near Pleasant Green, becoming owner of the land at the close of the Civil War. He spent the remainder of his days upon his farm and died there. During the Civil War, Mr. Deuschle
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served in the Missouri State Guards. His wife, Catherine Schupp Deuschle, was born in Germany in 1838 and now resides with her daugh- ter one mile east of Pleasant Green. The children born to Adam and Catherine Deuschle are: Mrs. J. Louis Staebler, Billingsville; Fred Deuschle, subject of this review; Mrs. Catherine Bergmann, living two and a half miles north of Pleasant Green; Mary, deceased wife of Daniel Schupp, left five children; Adam, J., living on the old homestead; Louisa resides with the Schupp family ; Bertha, wife of Frank Schupp lives near Pleasant Green.
The early education of Fred Deuschle was obtained in the district school at Pleasant Green. When a boy he began to assist his father on the farm and learned to become a good farmer. When 28 years old he began to make his own way. In 1898 he made his first purchase of land and has made a success of his life work.
April 17, 1901, Mr. Deuschle was married to Miss Anna Stegner, a daughter of August Stegner. The children born of this marriage are: Martin Oliver, born July 4, 1902; Clara Anna, born May 3, 1904; Rudolph Frederick, born March 23, 1906; Frieda Catherine, born Jan. 3, 1910; Marie Augusta, born Aug. 30, 1916; Earl August, born Nov. 21, 1917.
Mr. Deuschle is a republican and is a member of the school board of his district. He takes a commendable interest in educational and civic affairs and is one of the leading and influential citizens of his vicinity. He is a member and a trustee of the Billingsville Evangelical Church.
Robert Snider, farmer and stockman, Boonville township, has resided on his fine farm of 110 acres just south of Boonville since 1886. His first home on this farm was a story and a half log house in which he and his wife lived for a few years. In 1906 he erected a pretty cottage which has an admirable setting with a sloping lawn and presents an attractive appearance. A large and substantial barn was built in 1901.
Robert Snider was born in Boonville, Feb. 10, 1853. He is a son of William (b. 1822, d. 1899) and Malinda (Houx) (b. 1830, d. 1898) Snider. His mother was a daughter of Uncle Fritz Houx who was a pioneer in Cooper County, from Kentucky and a member of the old pioneer Houx family of Missouri. William Snider was born in Pennsylvania and came to Cooper County in the early 40's. He went to the gold fields of Cali- fornia, crossing the plains and remained for 18 months on the Pacific coast. He was married in Cooper County and lived all of his days in this county. The children of William and Malinda Snider were: Margaret,
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widow of John Jamieson, Okla .; William, living in Cass County, Mo .; Robert; Charles, Coffeyville, Kan .; Mrs. Fannie Johnson, Bloomfield, Ill .; Sallie Snider resides with her sister Fannie; Edward Snider lives in But- ler, Mo.
Robert Snider attended the district schools and also studied under Professor Smiley. With the exception of three and a half years spent in the Rocky Mountain country from 1878 to 1881, he has always resided in Cooper County.
March 2, 1882, Robert Snider and Mollie Scott were united in mar- riage. Mrs. Mollie (Scott) Snider was born in this county, March 30, 1860 and is a daughter of Adam Scott, a Cooper County pioneer. Three sons were born to Robert and Mollie (Scott) Snider as follows: Harry Snider married Gertrude Toler and has one son, Eugene; Ross, Spokane, Wash .; and Ralph, aged 21 years, resides with his parents, married Miss Maude Wyland, daughter of Louis Weyland.
Mr. Snider is an independent democrat. He is a member of the Bap- tist Church.
Conrad M. Zollinger, mayor of Otterville and assistant cashier of the Bank of Otterville, was born at Otterville and is one of the most forceful factors in the general commercial life of the town. He was born on April 20, 1885, son of Capt. Augustus L. and Louisa (Mayfield) Zollinger, both members of old families in Cooper County and both now deceased, their last days having been spent at Otterville, of which place they had been residents even in the days before the railroad entered there.
The late Capt. Augustus L. Zollinger, an honored soldier of the Con- federacy during the Civil War and for many years one of the most con- spicuous figures in the commercial life of Otterville, an organizer of enter- prises and a leader of affairs, was a native of the state of Maryland, born on Aug. 30, 1825, and was reared and educated in that state, remaining there until he was 21 years of age when, in 1847, he came to Missouri with his parents. George Zollinger and wife (the latter of whom was a Meyers), the family locating on a farm in Boonville township, this county. Six months later, immediately following the cession of California to the United States, Augustus L. Zollinger left Missouri and crossed the plains with a company of other hardy adventurers, bent on seeking fortune in the then promising land on the western coast, the promise of gold in California just then beginning to attract general attention in the East. For seven years he remained in California and then, in 1854, returned to Cooper County and became engaged in the general mercantile business at Otter-
CAPT. AUGUSTUS L. ZOLLINGER
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ville. That was in the days before the railroad and his goods were hauled from Boonville by ox-teams. Upon the outbreak of the Civil War he dropped his commercial affairs at Otterville, leaving his store in charge of Mr. Cannon, and helped in the organization of a troop of cavalry for the service of the Confederacy ; was elected captain of Company A, Second Missouri Cavalry, attached to the command of General Forrest, and with that gallant command served until the close of the war. Upon the com- pletion of his military service Captain Zollinger resumed his mercantile business at Otterville and was thus engaged until his retirement from the store in 1892. Two years later, in 1894, he organized the present Bank of Otterville, was elected president of the same and thereafter gave his whole attention to his banking business, continuing thus engaged until his retirement from business in 1908. Following his retirement the Captain continued to make his home in Otterville and there spent his last days, his death occurring on March 30, 1914. In addition to his business inter- ests he was the owner of a fine farm of 350 acres and had other sound investments. At the time of his death he was the oldest continuous mem- ber of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows in the state of Missouri, having become a member of that order in Maryland when 18 years of age, affiliated with the lodge at Hagerstown, Md. He also was a member of the Pleasant Grove lodge, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, at Otter- ville. He was a democrat and was one of the leaders of that party in Cooper County. He and his wife were members of the Methodist Church and their children were reared in that faith. Captain Zollinger's wife died in 1901. She was born in Kentucky in 1845 and was but a girl when she came to Missouri with her parents, the Mayfields settling in the Pleas- ant Green neighborhood in this county. Captain Zollinger and his wife were the parents of six children, of whom the subject of this sketch was the last born, the others being as follows: George Zollinger, who is now engaged in general reporting work at St. Louis ; Stella, wife of H. M. Ames, a retired railroad man living at Otterville; Augustus L., a farmer and stockman of Warrensburg ; Elma L., wife of A. L. Ferguson, who is engaged in the drug business at Columbia, and John H., of Kansas City.
Conrad M. Zollinger grew up at Otterville, was graduated from the Otterville College in 1904 and then took a course in a commercial college at Sedalia. In the meantime he had become familiar with the details of his father's banking business at Otterville and upon his return from col-
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lege was made assistant cashier of the Bank of Otterville, a position he since has occupied and to the duties of which he has given his most thoughtful attention, long having been recognized as one of the most progressive young bankers in Cooper County. Mr. Zollinger owns a fine farm of 160 acres of LaMine River bottom land one mile east of Otter- ville and has other investments of a valuable character. He is a demo- crat and has ever given his thoughtful attention to local civic affairs. In 1918 he was elected mayor of Otterville and his administration has been marked by the erection of the admirable municipal electric light plant there as well as in the advancement of other movements looking to the promotion of the town's best interests.
July 9, 1916, Conrad M. Zollinger was united in marriage with Maud E. Varner, who also was born in this county, and he and his wife have a very pleasant home at Otterville. Mrs. Zollinger was born in Kelly town- ship, a daughter of Hiram B. and Lottie (Wyles) Varner, both members of pioneer families in this section of Missouri, the former born in Cooper County and the latter in Howard County, who are now living retired at Otterville. Mr. and Mrs. Zollinger are members of the Methodist Church and take a proper interest in church work, as well as in the general social activities of their home town. Mr. Zollinger is a member of Pleasant Grove Lodge, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, at Otterville, to the affairs of which organization he has for years given his earnest attention, and is a past master of the lodge.
Anton Henry Schler, owner of 200 acres of good farm land in Boon- ville township, is not only a good farmer, but he is rearing a fine family of children. The Schler farm is well improved with good buildings and a large, well built, farm residence which sets far back on the farm and is reached by a winding roadway which runs through the farm. For a number of years he and his brother, Peter Schler, farmed a large tract of land in partnership until this partnership was dissolved in Aug., 1916. The brothers then divided their accumulations which were the result of years of good, hard work, and excellent management, and each took his rightful share of the farm land. Anton Henry Schler was born May 30, 1865 in Clear Creek township. He is a son of Louis (b. 1817, d. 1871), a native of Germany who immigrated to America when a young man. He located in Clear Creek township, Cooper County, married Margaret Troes- ter (b. July 3, 1827, d. Oct. 3, 1912), the latter of whom resided with her sons after the father's death. The children of the Schler family are as follows: Two children died in infancy ; Charles, a farmer in Clear Creek township; Mrs. Josephine Troester lives in Clayton county, Iowa ; Peter, of
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