USA > Missouri > Harrison County > History of Harrison County, Missouri > Part 22
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The first location of these partners was on West Main Street, where they handled the Buick automobiles, Wallace tractors and International trucks. They did a good business and in September, 1920, they changed their lines, buying their present business, one block north of the Public Square. Here they occupy a two story building 36x99 feet in dimensions. As a firm they succeeded Charles Hacker, deceased. Under the new firm name of the Crossan Motor Company, Mr. Flint and Mr. Crossan sell Ford cars, trucks and tractors. They carry a full line of repairs and do all sorts of repair work. Under the management of the two proprietors, the busi-
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ness has prospered and the Crossan Motor Company has met with well merited success.
A. C. Flint was married in 1913 to Lucy Rose Kenyon, a daughter of John W. and Hettie Kenyon, of Bethany. Mrs. Flint was born and reared in Bethany, attending the Bethany Public Schools and later the State Teachers College at Maryville, Missouri, and the State University at Columbia, Missouri. For several years prior to her marriage Mrs. Flint was a teacher in the public schools. To Mr. and Mrs. Flint one child has been born, a daughter, Madeline Clare.
Mr. Flint is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows; the Knights of Pythias Lodge, and the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons Lodge. Mr. Flint is industrious and stands high in the estimation of the community.
Alva C. Bartlett is an enterprising young farmer of Bethany Town- ship. He is a native of Harrison County, having been born in Grant Town- ship, May 16, 1892. His father is David Bartlett and his mother was Anna (Cave) Bartlett, a daughter of Reverend A. N. Cave, a minister in the Methodist Church. Mrs. Bartlett was born and reared in Harrison County and was fifty-four years of age at the time of her death, February 22, 1921. To the marriage of David and Anna (Cave) Bartlett two chil- dren were born: Alva C., the subject of this sketch, and M. Kathryn, the wife of A. C. Fay, living in Bethany Township on the home place. Mr. Fay is at present attending the Wisconsin State University at Madison.
Alva C. Bartlett was educated in the public schools of the county and spent two years in the Bethany High School. He has followed the voca- tion of farming ever since. He bought his present place of eighty acres from his father in March, 1917, and has lived here since that time. He raises stock and has Duroc Jersey hogs, with one registered male; pure- bred Jersey cattle with a registered male; full blood Shropshire sheep, and White Leghorn chickens. He has about 275 fowls and 500 or more chicks.
Mr. Bartlett was married December 24, 1913, to Hazel Roleke. Mrs. Bartlett is a daughter of Herman and Rachel (Mainwang) Roleke, both living at Bethany.
Mr. Bartlett is one of the promising young men of the county. He has high standards of citizenship and is esteemed throughout his community.
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Robert M. Mitchell, Civil War veteran and pioneer farmer of Harrison County, was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania, March 6, 1840, the son of J. T. and Elizabeth Mitchell, both of whom died in the county where their son was born. There were six girls and five boys in the Mitchell family, of whom the only one living now, besides Robert M. Mitchell, is Mrs. Sarah Ann Adams, of Columbus, Kansas.
Robert M. Mitchell enlisted in the Union Army at the age of twenty- one, on October 15, 1861, in the Eighty-fifth Regiment, Pennsylvania Vo !- unteers, under Colonel Joshin B. Howell, who was killed accidentally September 14, 1864. Mr. Mitchell was mustered out of service at City Point, Virginia, in January, 1866. He entered the army under General McClellan and was mustered out under General Grant, having served four years and two months without ever having tasted liquor, played a game of cards or spoken an oath. Mr. Mitchell learned to read and write while in the army and his penmanship is quite legible. Mr. Mitchell was present at the historic scene at Apponiattox Court House in Virginia when Gen- eral Lee surrendered. He secured a piece of the apple tree under which the surrender was signed and on this wood he had inscribed the names of the various battles in which he participated. The wood has since been cut into pieces and given to Mr. Mitchell's children. The list included Yorktown, Williamsburg, Fair Oak, Seven Pines, Seven Days' Battle, Jones Ford, Harrison Landing, Suffolk, Blackwater, Southwest Creek, Kingston, White Hall, Goldsboro, Folly Island, Morris Island, Fort Wagner, Fort Gregg, White Marsh Island, Charleston, Bermuda Hundred, Strawberry Plains, Deep Bottom, Chaplin's Farm, Petersburg and Appomattox Court House. Mr. Mitchell was fortunate in never having been wounded dur- ing his period of service in the army.
Robert M. Mitchell came to Harrison County in 1871 and worked by the month for two years. He then settled on the farm where he now lives when all but six acres of the land was covered with timber, and he at once began to improve the place. He now owns 182 acres in Bethany Township. He has always engaged in general farming and stockraising until the last three years, when his sons have operated the farm. The house on the farm was burned in November, 1900, and Mr. Mitchell then built his present residence, two miles southeast of Bethany. The farm is well improved and well kept.
Mr. Mitchell was married November 29, 1871, to Susan T. Buck, a daughter of Bethuel and Mary P. Buck, both early settlers of Bethany
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Township. Mrs. Mitchell died July 16, 1920, at the age of sixty-nine years, and her remains are buried at Bethany. To Robert M. and Susan T. (Buck) Mitchell the following children were born: James, married to Katie Miller and living at Bethany; Charles, married to Etta Long and living in Bethany Township; Alonzo, married to Carrie Prather, living in Bethany Township; William, married Ina Hall and living in Bethany Township; Clint, on the home place; Ed, married to Nellie Ray and living at Coffey, Missouri; Mart, died at the age of twenty-three, was married to Hattie Flint and had one son, Robert; and Pearl, now Mrs. Andrew Murray, of Bethany Township.
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell had the following grandchildren: Gladys Mitchell. married to Paul Bethel; Clyde, Owen, Raymond, Victor, Ross and Lee Mitchell; and Garland and Dean Murray. The great-grandchildren are Robert and Opal Mitchell.
Mr. Mitchell, because of his experience in the Civil War, and his work as a pioneer farmer of the township, is a very interesting man. He is a good citizen and holds the esteem of his community.
Daniel D. Boyce, deceased, widely known in Harrison County, was born in Harrison County, Kentucky, in 1832, and died at Blue Ridge, Harrison County, Missouri, October 31, 1901. He was the son of Noah and Matilda (Toadvine) Boyce, who located in Sherman Township, where they both died, and are buried at Fairview Cemetery.
Mr. and Mrs. Noah Boyce were the parents of twelve children, as follows, all deceased: William; Mrs. Abbie Brown; Mrs. Amelia Speigle; Margaret Hodson: Evaline Bolar; Ann Bolar; Paris Ann Massie; Daniel D .; and Taylor; and four children who died in infancy.
Daniel D. Boyce was a member of Company E 43rd Regiment, Mis- souri Volunteers, having served first in the State Militia, and then joined the 43rd Regiment, during the Civil War. He bought from the government 160 acres of land in Sherman Township, paying $1.25 'per acre-and preempted eighty acres, and after the war bought other tracts of land there. Besides his farming activities, Mr. Boyce was county judge of Harrison County, and also justice of the peace of Sherman Township for several terms, and was well and favorably known through- out the county. Mr. Boyce was a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows of Bethany.
DANIEL D. BOYCE
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Daniel D. Boyce was married the first time to Sarah C. Maddox, and they were the parents of two children; Ida Frances, the wife of Charles C. Fordyce of Ridgeway, Missouri; and Susan Elizabeth, deceased.
Mr. Boyce's second marriage was to Nancy J. Baldwin on April 28, 1863. Mrs. Boyce was a daughter of William and Elizabeth (Harrison) Baldwin, who came to Missouri in 1856, and settled in Daviess County, Missouri. Mr. Baldwin was a minister of the Baptist Church, and was pastor of Grand River Church for twelve years. He was also pastor at Blue Ridge, Coon Creek, and Pilot Grove Churches in Daviess County, Missouri. Mr. Baldwin died August 30, 1911, at the age of ninety- seven years and seven months, and his wife, who was born January, 20, 1814, died September 19, 1850.
Mr. and Mrs. Baldwin were the parents of the following children: Mary Hannah Dollins, deceased; Alzina Ann, deceased; Sarah Elizabeth Hunter, deceased; Mrs. Boyce, who was born at Ladoga, Indiana, Feb- rurary 4, 1842; Serilda Calista, deceased; Samantha Evelyn Ward, who died December 20, 1920; and Martha Ellen Brown, who died June 5, 1921, who were twins; and John Wiliam Baldwin, the only son, who, for many years. resided in Colorado, but who now lives in Daviess County, Missouri.
Mr. and Mrs. Boyce were the parents of two daughters: Mrs. Lillie Paris Taggart, deceased; and Etta Lura, the widow of S. W. Brandom. Mr. and Mrs. Brandom were the parents of four children: Vincent Boyce, Ralph Wallace, Charles Daniel and Lena.
Mrs. Boyce is a member of the Baptist Church, Ladies Aid Society, and The Ladies Relief Corps. She is a lady of unusual intelligence, very active and alert, and has many friends throughout the county.
George W. Nickerson, pioneer farmer of Harrison County and pro- prietor of the Fairview Stock Farm, was born in Schoharie County, New York, April 19, 1858, the son of Peter B. and Mary Ann (Tibbetts) Nick- erson, both deceased. Peter B. Nickerson was a Civil War veteran, enlist- ing from New York. His two sons, Reynolds and Andrew, also enlisted in the Union Army in New York. Peter B. Nickerson and his wife came west in 1865, settling first in Henry County, Iowa, where they lived four years, coming to Harrison County, Missouri, in 1869. They settled three miles east of Martinsville on a farm, and here Mr. Nickerson died in 1878.
(17)
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His remains are buried in Kidwell Cemetery. His widow later married Jacob McLey, of Bolton, Missouri. She died in February, 1907, and her remains are buried in Kidwell Cemetery. To Peter B. and Mary Ann (Tibbetts) Nickerson the following children were born : Mrs. Phoebe Height, deceased; Reynolds, died while superintendent of the County Home of Harrison County; Andrew, a resident of Hays County, Nebraska; Mrs. Thedosia Kibbey, deceased; Mrs. Eliza White, deceased; Joshua, died while in Washington County, Iowa; Mrs. Ruth Grace, of Stafford County, Kansas; George W., the subject of this sketch; Charlie, a resident of Chillicothe, Missouri; and Peter, now living in Oklahoma.
George W. Nickerson came to Harrison County with his parents in 1869 when the county was comparatively new. He attended the old dis- trict school and began to make his own way in the world at the age of nineteen. He recalls vividly the trials and hardships of those early days when he was getting started on his life work. He drove oxen for eight years, breaking the prairie land, for fifty cents a day. He saved the money that he earned and in 1889 he bought a farm in the northwest corner of Bethany Township, paying three dollars an acre for it. Here he lived for thirty-two years. The first farm contained forty acres, but Mr. Nick- erson soon added to the original tract. This land was entered in pioneer days by John Tarleton. It was sold by Mr. Nickerson for fifty dollars an acre, later it was sold again for $140.00 an acre and in 1920 for $165.00 an acre. The increased price of this tract of land is indicative of the rapid economic and commercial growth of Harrison County. Mr. Nicker- son bought his present farm, the Fairview Stock Farm, comprising 220 acres of land, in 1908. This land was originally entered by Sam Neal. Mr. Neal's old cabin still stands on the farm and has been weatherboarded and plastered and is used as a home by his son. Mr. Nickerson has always been a farmer and stockraiser and for several years has raised Percheron horses and Red Polled cattle. He now has twenty-seven registered cows and has always found a ready market for his stock. The residence on the farm was built by Mr. Nickerson in 1910 and affords a fine view of Bethany. There are also two good stock barns and other good farm buildings. Mr. Nickerson has owned 1,200 acres of land in Harrison County, all of it now owned by his children with the exception of the Fairview Stock Farm.
Mr. Nickerson was married February 18, 1888, to Eunice C. Miller, a daughter of J. H. and Elizabeth Miller. The former died June 9, 1920, and buried in Miriam Cemetery; the latter lives with her children. To
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George W. and Eunice C. (Miller) Nickerson the following children were born : Raleigh R., married to Mary Glenn, and is now with the Farm Bureau at Bethany ; John J., of Bethany, married to Ethel Myers; Rosa, the wife of O. N. Falles, of Blue Jacket, Oklahoma ; Bert B., of Bethany Township, married Kittie Ross; Edward, of Bethany, married Mrs. Pearl Sutton; Elizabeth, wife of Charles King, of Genoa, Nebraska; Pearl, married Willa Ross and lives on the home farm; Phoebe, wife of R. L. Preighter, of Bethany Township; Elsie, wife of J. H. Hall, of Bethany. William was accidentally killed in an automobile accident in June, 1918; Clayton, of Grant Township, married to Chloe Wooderson ; and Steward, living at home.
Mr. Nickerson is a director in the First National Bank and assisted in its organization. He is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fel- lows, the Knights of Pythias and the Modern Woodmen of America. Mr. Nickerson is one of the progressive and prominent farmers and stockmen of his county, where his name has always stood for enterprise, industry and integrity.
John E. Claytor, member of a well known pioneer family of Harrison County, was born in Bethany Township, February 9, 1860, the son of Sam- uel A. and Margaret J. (Six) Claytor. Samuel A. Claytor was born in Bed- ford County, Virginia, in 1827. In 1859 he left his native State and made the long, hard journey to Missouri, driving all the way. Hc settled on a farm a mile south of the present John E. Claytor farm, buying 100 acres of land at first and adding to the original tract until he owned 1,060 acres. He was a prominent breeder of fine stock. He bought one of the first registered Shorthorn bulls ever brought to the county, and raised and fed cattle and hogs. He died at the home of his son, Samuel, September 14, 1907, and his remains are buried in Shady Grove Cemetery. His wife was born in Tazewell County, Virginia, in 1830 and died at the home of her son, Samuel, June 14, 1911. Her remains are also buried in Shady Grove Cemetery.
To Samuel A. and Margaret J. (Six) Claytor the following children were born: Nancy, married to M. Smith and died in Springfield, Missouri, ir. 1907; W. N. and J. W., twins, now farmers in White Oak Township; Mary J., married W. McCoy and lives in White Oak Township; John E., the subject of this review; and Samuel, of Harrison County.
John E. Claytor was educated in the public schools and remained with his parents until he was thirty-two years of age. He now owns 144
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acres that was formerly a part of the home place, and to this he has added 100 acres, thus making a farm of 244 acres. He built a new residence of the bungalow style in 1918 and in 1921 built a barn. He has most of his farm in pasture.
Mr. Claytor was married March 30, 1892, to Stella Price ,a daughter of J. T. and Rebecca A. (Miller) Price, and for the ten years prior to her marriage she was a teacher in Harrison and Daviess counties. Her father was born in Kentucky, September 2, 1835. He enlisted for service in the Civil War in September, 1862, and was a member of Company M. Merrill's Horse. He served until the close of the war, when he settled in Daviess County, where he lived until 1882, when he moved to White Oak Town- ship, Harrison County. He died here May 30, 1901, and his remains are buried in Miriam Cemetery, at Bethany. His wife was born in Ohio in 1839 and came to Harrison County with her parents in 1855. They settled in Adams Township and entered land there. Mrs. Price was a teacher before her marriage, and she, as well as her husband, entered a tract of land. To J. T. and Rebecca A. (Miller) Price the following chil- dren were born: Orlando, a resident of Potosi, Missouri; Stella, now Mrs. Claytor; Orville, died at the age of forty-nine; Frank, who is deceased and whose family live in Pattonsburg, Missouri; and John T., a graduate of St. Louis Medical College, for thirteen years a practicing physician and now a resident of Shamrock, Oklahoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Claytor have two children. Their daughter, Mabel Price, is a graduate of the Bethany High School, holds the Bachelor of Science degree with a state life certificate to teach from the Missouri State Uni- versity, which she attended for four years, and is a teacher in the Bethany High School. Their son, Orville B., is now a student in the Missouri State University.
Mr. Claytor is a stockholder in the Bethany Trust Company and in the Farmers' Lumber Yard and the Bethany Fair Association. He is a commissioner of the Southwest Special Road District and has taken an active interest in securing good roads for the county. Mr. Claytor is one of the prominent men in his community and has always manifested deep interest in civic affairs.
C. W. Wiley, prominent farmer and well known proprietor of the Plain View Farm in Bethany Township, on Rural Route No. 6, was born in Bolton, Fox Creek Township, October 25, 1867, the son of Dr. J. W. and Susan M. (Howerdon) Wiley.
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Doctor Wiley was born in Indiana and came to Missouri with his parents in the pioneer days. The family settled near Bolton, Harrison County, entering land there. Doctor Wiley enlisted in the Union Army during the Civil War and remained in service until the close of the war. He left the army in bad health, caused by an attack of measles. He graduated from the St. Louis Medical College and practiced medicine there for a while, working under his brother, Wilfred Wiley. He came to Bolton and began the practice of his profession about 1865. He rode horseback over the prairies for many years and was one of the men who did much to make possible the present growth of Harrison County. Doctor Wiley died of pneumonia in Blue Ridge, Sherman Township, about 1894. His wife, Susan M. (Howerdon) Wiley, also died in 1894. They are buried in the same grave in Springer Cemetery.
To Dr. J. W. and Susan M. (Howerdon) Wiley the following children were born : Lulu M., later Mrs. McGown, and now deceased; Doctor W. H., living in Clearmont, Missouri; Robert J., who was killed accidentally by the kick of a horse when he was twelve years old; C. W., the subject of this sketch ; Claude I., now living in Casper, Wyoming; and Lillie Maude, married Eugene Taylor, of Kansas City, Missouri.
C. W. Wiley was educated in the public school of Bolton. He went to Nebraska and took up a homestead in 1889, where he lived for sixteen years, improving a ranch of 1,500 acres in Dundy County, 800 acres of which belonged to him. He followed the cattle business in Nebraska until 1906, when he sold out and returned to Harrison County, Missouri, where he bought his present home of 1591/2 acres three miles southwest of Bethany. This farm was originally known as the Lewis Justice farm. Mr. Wiley has built a good residence on it, also a barn. He has most of the farm in pasture. He raises Jersey cattle, Chester White hogs and Rhode Island and Brown and Buff Leghorn chickens.
C. W. Wiley was married to Jessie C. Gray, December 8, 1889. Mrs. Wiley is a daughter of Thomas and Francis D. Gray. Thomas Gray died in Bethany, Missouri, in 1906, and is buried in Miriam Cemetery; his widow, now seventy-nine years of age, lives with her daughter, Mrs. Wiley.
Mr. and Mrs. Wiley had the following children, all born in Dundy County, Nebraska: Mura Maude, born November 28, 1890, married to Eugene Leazenby, and died at the age of twenty-seven. She is buried in the Knights of Pythias Cemetery at Bethany, Missouri; Samuel Porter, born August 16, 1894, married Marie Chipp, a daughter of John and
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Fannie Chipp, now living in Cypress Township; and Gray Wesley, born September 1, 1902, and now living at home.
Mr. Wiley is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias, Knights and Ladies of Security and the Yeoman Lodge. He is of Scotch descent, and is one of the reliable men of his community, where he is known for his integrity and uprightness.
Isaac Newton Whitaker, well known farmer of Bethany Township, was born in Bracken County, Kentucky, March 11, 1849, the son of Alfred and Sarah Ann (French) Whitaker.
The Whitaker family has been known in Harrison County since the pioneer days. Alfred Whitaker came to Missouri in 1852 and settled in Daviess County. In 1866 he went to Ray County, where he spent the remainder of his life. He died in 1881 and is buried in Ray County. A brother of Alfred Whitaker, James F., settled in Harrison County in 1852, buying land and improving a farm there. He died in Bethany. Mrs. Sarah Ann (French) Whitaker, mother of the subject of this sketch, died in 1874 at the age of forty-six, and is buried in Ray County.
To Alfred and Sarah Ann (French) Whitaker the following children were born: Miranda, was the wife of Hagen Mulinix, now deceased ; James, died in Kentucky in childhood; John R., served in the Union Army during the Civil War, and died in Barton County, Missouri, about 1906; Lawson, who lived to raise a family in Barton County, where he died; Isaac N., the subject of this sketch; Marshal, who died in Ray County ; Alfred, died in 1919 at Cameron, Missouri; and Martha Jane, died in childhood.
Isaac Newton Whitaker came to Harrison County in 1881. He bought his present farm of 200 acres two miles south of Bethany from Colonel Robinson in 1894. This is a good stock farm, with a nice residence, plenty of shade trees, and good farm buildings. Mr. Whitaker does very little farming himself.
Mr. Whitaker was married in Ray County in 1872 to Virginia Fravel, a daughter of William and Sarah Jane (Perry) Fravel, of Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. Fravel came to Missouri from Virginia in 1869 and settled in Ray County, where they both died, he at the age of fifty-five, and she at the age of forty-six. They are buried in Hickory Grove Cemetery, Ray County.
Mr. and Mrs. Whitaker have two sons: Reuben Berkeley, now farm-
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ing the home place; and Henry Clay, who married Ethel Hall, a daughter of William H. Hall, living in Bethany Township. To Henry Clay and Ethel (Hall) Whitaker the following children have been born: Russell, Virgil, Jewel Fern, Mabel, Raymond, Robert, Carlee, Alice and Mary Virginia.
Mr. Whitaker has served as a member of the Board of Education in his district. He is a member of the County Farm Bureau and is one of the substantial citizens of the county.
Jonathan G. E. Hinkle, well known doctor of dental surgery of Beth- any, Missouri, was born in Bloomington Township, Decatur County, Iowa, June 17, 1883, the son of Michael L. and Lydia A. (Emmons) Hinkle, both now living in Ridgeway, Missouri.
Michael Hinkle was born in Mercer County, Illinois, in 1848, and his wife was born in Indiana in 1856. Michael L. Hinkle came to Missouri with his father in 1852. They settled near New Benda, Iowa, when the Indians were still there. His father, Colonel G. M. Hinkle, was a Civil War veteran. To Michael L. and Lydia A. (Emmons) Hinkle the follow- ing children were born: Zenos H., now a resident of Clio, Iowa; Mary L., the widow of J. R. Bowman, of Lamoni, Iowa; Jonathan G. E., the subject of this review; Doctor V. V., living in Ridgeway, Missouri; and Quincy E., now a resident of Clio, Iowa.
Jonathan G. E. Hinkle was educated in the rural schools of Mercer County, the Pleasanton, Iowa, High School and Graceland College at La- moni, Iowa. He entered the Dental College at the State University of Iowa and graduated with the degree of D. D. S., June 16, 1909. He located in Hatfield, Harrison County, Missouri, and remained in that place for eighteen months. In the fall of 1910 he went to New Hampton, Missouri, and after practicing there for four years he moved, in April, 1914, to Bethany, Missouri, where he has since practiced. Doctor Hinkle special- izes in the treatment of pyorrhea alveolaris and is winning a wide repu- tation for his success in the treatment and cure of this disease. Doctor Hinkle has invented a machine for the administering of anesthetic gases derived from a cold liquid solution. He is known throughout the county as a progressive and scientific exponent of dental surgery.
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