USA > Missouri > Harrison County > History of Harrison County, Missouri > Part 34
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Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Gale were the parents of the following children: Warren, who was killed at the battle of Whitewater Bridge in the Civil War, he having enlisted in the Union Army in Wisconsin under Captain Shepman with Company E, First Wisconsin Cavalry Volunteers; Serianious was a soldier of the Civil War, he died in 1883 on the home place ; Ida May, who died when nineteen years of age in Illinois; Robinson H., the subject of this sketch, who died October 10, 1921; and Ada May, who died when five years of age.
Robinson H. Gale was educated in Sherman Center School of this township, and had been engaged in farming practically all of his life. He carried on general farming and was very successful, enterprising and progressive.
Mr. Gale was married February 15, 1878, to Rosetta Robinson, of Fox Creek Township, a daughter of Henry Robinson. Mrs. Gale was born in Fox Creek Township and died November 28, 1888, at the age of twenty- eight years. Mr. and Mrs. Gale were the parents of the following chil - dren: Ada Adelma, the wife of C. H. McElhiney, who now lives on the home place ; Ida Velma, a twin of the Ada Adelma, who died in infancy ;
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Claude Henry, deceased ; Pearl Rose, the wife of Thomas Stretch, of Ender, Nebraska; and Olive Relief, deceased.
Mr. Gale married the second time in 1891 Addie M. Flint, a daughter of George and Sarah Flint, of this county. They were the parents of three children : Russell K .; Beulah, the wife of James Aginer; and Lucille, the wife of Bruce Mallory.
The grandchildren of Robinson H. and Rosetta Gale are as follows: James A., Naomi R., Lola L., Mabel M. McElhiney, and Olive, Opal, Alice L., Charles J. Stretch. To Robinson H. and Addie M. (Flint) Gale the following grandchildren were born: Mary L. Aginer, and Bruce G. Mallory, Jr.
Russell K. Gale, who now lives on a claim at Gillette, Wyoming, en- listed from Harrison County, Missouri, with Company G, and was sent to the Mexican border. When he returned from the border he was dis- charged and then re-enlisted for the World War, and went overseas with the Thirty-fifth Division. He was promoted to second lieutenant and was in the battle of Argonne and St. Mihiel and was captured at Argonne Forest. He was kept prisoner for several months, but returned home safely.
The Gales are well known in Harrison County and are highly regarded among their many friends and acquaintances.
Louden Samuel Brown, a wide awake and progressive farmer of Fox Creek Township, and pioneer of Harrison County, was born in a cabin which still stands on the farm he now owns, January 28, 1865, the son of William Louden and Ann M. (McBude) Brown, both deceased.
William Louden Brown was born in Kentucky and came to Missouri in the fifties and entered eighty acres of land in Sherman Township, and 120 acres in Fox Creek Township. The Bondurant and Chariton families preceded the Brown family here by a few years. William Louden Brown was accidentally killed while unloading a sawlog at a Grand River saw- mill. His wife died April 16, 1914, and is buried in Fairview Cemetery.
Mr. and Mrs. William Brown were the parents of the following chil- dren: Sarah E., widow of Marshal Linthacum; Etta, the wife of Frank McGowan, of Sherman Township; Mary Alice, the widow of Oliver Clink- enbeard, of Bethany, Missouri; and L. S., the subject of this sketch.
Louden Samuel Brown was educated in the school of Bondurant dis-
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trict, the first school he attended being in a log building. Mr. Brown bought out the heirs of the home place, and has an excellent farm, well improved, with good residence, two large barns, grain barn, etc., and the farm is well watered with ponds aud wells. The residence is situated on the Ben Hur trail, seven miles north of Gilman and ten miles southeast of Bethany, Missouri.
Mr. Brown raises Whiteface cattle, with registered males, grade hogs, and feeds cattle and hogs each year. Mr. Brown also does his house work and hires help to do his farming. He is a very successful, wide-awake farmer and besides his numerous duties, finds time to do a great deal of reading, thus keeping abreast with the news of the day, and with the latest developments along agricultural lines.
Oscar J. Clinkinbeard, an interesting and prominent pioneer of Har- rison County, was born in Mercer County, Missouri, May 14, 1849, the son of George W. and Susan C. (Rhea) Clinkinbeard. George Clinkinbeard was a native of Bourbon County, Kentucky, born in 1817. He went to Arkansas with his parents, Jonathan Clinkinbeard and wife, and his father died there, and he and his mother returned to Kentucky. After a short time. they came to Missouri and lived for a while in Buchanan County, then moved to Mercer County, and eventually locating in Fox Creek Township, where George Clinkinbeard entered 320 acres of land in 1855. He lived there until 1883 and then moved to Bethany, Missouri, where he died in 1888 and is buried in Goshen Cemetery in Mercer County, Missouri. His wife died at Mt. Moriah several years later, and his mother, who came here with him, died here and is buried at Nebraska City, Nebraska.
In pioneer days, the nearest neighbor of George Clinkinbeard on the north was John Prater, who lived near the present site of Mt. Moriah. His nearest neighbor on the east was H. C. Hamilton, three and one-half miles away, and on the south a man by the name of Pilcher, who lived three and one-fourth miles from Mr. Clinkinbeard, and on the west, John- son Queen, who lived one and one-half miles distant. Mr. Clinkinbeard built a log house on his place in which he lived for a few years and then built a frame house which was blown down. His third residence is now standing. Besides engaging in farming, Mr. Clinkinbeard was also col- lector of his township. He married Lizzie Foreman, who died and is buried in Buchanan County, Missouri, fifteen miles southwest of St.
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Joseph. His second wife was Susan C. Rhea and they were the parents of the following children: Sebert M., deceased; Oscar J., the subject of this sketch; Otwa L., of Genoa, Colorado; Oliver B., who died in Bethany ; Spartan R., of Bethany; O. H., deceased; and Lennie, who died in infancy.
Oscar J. Clinkinbeard was reared in Fox Creek Township and at- tended the Brown school, now the New Hope school. His first teacher was Cyrus Tiffany, who belonged to a pioneer family of this county.
Oscar J. Clinkinbeard has followed farming here all of his life. He owns 240 acres of land in section four, eleven miles east of Bethany, and all of the improvements were put on by him. Mr. Clinkinbeard does gen- eral farming and stock raising and has been very successful. He also has filed membership on the township board, and has many friends in this community.
March 12, 1871, Oscar J. Clinkinbeard was married to Sarah A. Hamilton, a daughter of H. C. and Catherine (Hickman) Hamilton. H. C. Hamilton ran a ferry boat across the Grand River in pioneer days. He died in 1890 and his wife died a few years later and they are buried in Hamilton Cemetery in Mercer County, Missouri.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinkinbeard are the parents of two children: Oren L., born December 22, 1871; and Bertie Leola, deceased. She was born in 1873 and was the wife of Bert Leggitt.
Oren L. Clinkinbeard died December 14, 1910. His wife, who was Mary Ellen Cruzan, is now living in Bethany, Missouri, and has two chil- dren: Avonalle Florence, who married Eugene Sutherland; and Olive Orlean. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Leggitt were the parents of four children: Edith Irene, the wife of L. T. Hamilton, of Mercer County, Missouri ; Coyle B., the wife of James Dewitt of Gilman, Missouri; Chester .A, of Fre- mont, Nebraska; and Bruce A., of Denver, Colorado.
The great grandchildren of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar J. Clinkinbeard are: Harley Hamilton, Gretchen and Eva Hamilton, Dorothy Doris, Oscar DeEtta and Virginia Dewitt, and Thomas Leggitt.
Oscar J. Clinkinbeard is a substantial citizen and member of the Clinkinbeard family are well known and highly respected in the com- munity.
Charles W. Hunt, a leading farmer of Fox Creek Township, and mem- ber of a pioneer family of Harrison County, was born near Ridgeway, Missouri, March 21, 1869, the son of Joseph Hunt and Sarah E. (Rake- straw) Hunt. Mrs. Hunt was later married to John Wiley and now lives
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with her son, Charles W. Hunt ; she is seventy-four years of age. Joseph Hunt, a veteran of the Civil War, is in the Soldiers' Home at Leaven- worth, Kansas.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hunt were the parents of the following children : Mrs. Bell Williamson; Mrs. Cora Isenbarger; Charles W., the subject of this sketch; Mrs. Stella Wiley; and Jesse, of South Dakota. By a second marriage of Mrs. Hunt to Mr. Wiley, she has two children; Arthur, of South Dakota; and Carwin, of Waterloo, Iowa.
Charles W. Hunt was educated in the public schools and has lived in this county all of his life, with the exception of two years he spent in Kansas. He bought 169 acres of his present home in 1909 from a Mr. Makelin, and he now owns 209 acres in Fox Creek Township. Mr. Hunt has remodeled his house and barn and has put two sets of improvements on the farm. In 1921, he built a new crib and other buildings suitable for farm and stock use. Mr. Hunt has an orchard and he does general farm- ing and stock raising, and has one of the best farms in this vicinity.
In January, 1890, Mr. Hunt was married to Columbia Stotts, a daugh- ter of W. M. and Ellen Stotts. The father is now deceased and the mother lives in Fox Creek Township.
Mr. and Mrs. Hunt have four children: Sarah, the wife of Amer Sallee, of Fox Creek Township; Alice, the wife of Riley Burton; William, who lives at home; and Mary, the wife of Ernest Salls, of Columbia, Missouri. Mr. and Mrs. Hunt have a granddaughter, Violet Columbia.
Mr. Hunt is one of the substantial and highly respected citizens of Harrison County.
Jacob M. Bender, a well known and excellent citizen of Sherman Township, of pioneer parentage, was born in White Oak Township, May 11, 1867, the son of John W. and Margaret E. (Funk) Bender. Mrs. Bender was a daughter of Martin and Elizabeth Funk, both deceased. She lives in New Hampton, Missouri, and is seventy-four years of age. John W. Bender was born in Ohio, but came to Missouri about the year 1854, and settled in White Oak Township, one and three-fourths miles north- east of New Hampton, where he died in October, 1919. He is buried in Foster Cemetery. He was a soldier of the Civil War, having enlisted at Bethany, Missouri.
John W. Bender and wife were the parents of the following children: William, of Chetopa, Kansas; Jacob M., the subject of this sketch; R. F ..
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of Mound Ridge, Kansas; Etta, the wife of Bert Dillon of Carmen, Okla- homa; John and Rose, who were twins, the former lives near New Hamp- ton and the latter is deceased ; Viola, deceased, was the wife of Ed Howery of Fairview, Oklahoma; Warren, of Canton, Oklahoma; Hattie, the wife of John E. Smith, of White Oak Township; Walter, of New Hampton, Missouri; Maggie, the wife of Edgar Claytor, of Bethany Township; and Stella, who lives at home.
Jacob M. Bender was educated in the common schools and after finish- ing his education, he engaged in carpenter work at New Hampton for nearly thirty years and also farmed at the same time. He moved to his present farm, known as the Uri Hallock place, in 1905. This farm con- sists of 250 acres and is situated three miles east of Bethany. Since moving here, Mr. Bender has built a modern, eight room residence, two barns, well equipped and there is also another residence on the farm. Mr. Bender does general farming and stock raising and is very successful.
November 29, 1905, Mr. Bender was married to Ora Hallack, a daughter of Uri and Electa (Fuller) Hallack. Uri Hallack was born in Ohio in 1840 and died in 1917, and his wife was born in Ohio in 1837 and died in September, 1916. They had lived in Harrison County forty- nine years prior to their death, locating here in 1867.
Mr. and Mrs. Hallack were the parents of the following children: Hymen and Barton, of Grant Township; John, of Bethany Township and Mrs. Bender. Mr. Hallack was a thresherman here for many years and was a blacksmith by trade. He also was a breeder of Englishire horses and later in life moved to Bethany and engaged in the implement business. Mr. Hallack was a veteran of the Civil War. He enlisted at Centerville, Iowa. He was shot through the arm in battle during the war.
Mr. and Mrs. Bender have four children: Electa, Hallack, Paul and Worth. Mr. Bender is public spirited and patriotic and one of Harrison County's foremost citizens.
Dr. Jerome A. Kintner, a noted hydropathist and electrician and superintendent of the Heilbron Sanitorium of Bethany, Missouri, was born at Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, August 29, 1855, the son of Rudolph and Sallie (Gronner) Kintner, the latter a native of Holland, and the former a native of Bavaria, Germany. Rudolph Kintner was reared in Berlin and his father was a noted physician of Berlin. Both Rudolph and Sallie Kintner died in Pennsylvania, he in 1881 and she in 1911, and they are buried at Stroudsburg.
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Dr. Jerome A. Kintner took his first training in Germany under Doctor Sailor of Berlin, and has followed his present vocation since a young man. He has worked at different watering places in the United States and Europe, and the sanitorium of which he is at present superin- tendent, is located one mile west of Bethany, Missouri. The building is four stories and also has a basement; it is furnished elegantly through- out and is completely modern. Doctor Kintner has accommodations for one hundred guests. The elevation of the building is one hundred and thirty feet above the surrounding country. Doctor Kintner is a very capable man and has never ceased to be a student.
Dr. J. A. Kintner was married the first time at Bismark, Dakota, September, 1879, to Flora Weister, of St. Paul, Minnesota. She died in 1887 at Kansas City, Missouri, leaving the following children: Nina, who was born in Helena, Montana, and died December 7, 1919, at the age of forty years, in St. Paul, Minnesota; Rudolph, who is on the Orpheum Circuit, with headquarters at New York City, who was born in 1883, and is a noted comedian ; Beatrice, born in Bismark, Dakota, in 1886, and who died with the influenza in October, 1918, was the wife of Charles W. Allen, of St. Paul, Minnesota.
Doctor Kintner married Laura Jones, of Albany, Missouri, a daughter of P. W. and Betsey (Little) Jones, at Siloam Springs, Gentry County, Missouri, April 7, 1894. Mrs. Kintner was born, reared and educated in Gentry County. Doctor and Mrs. Kintner have five children: Doris Corinne, a music teacher in St. Joseph, Missouri; Gretchen Theodosia, the wife of Dr. G. E. Ford, of St. Joseph, Missouri; Wilhelmina, who attends school in St. Joseph; Winifred Bettie May, who also attends school in St. Joseph ; and Jerome, Jr.
Doctor Kintner's sanitorium is one of the best in the state, and he ranks as one of the first citizens of Harrison County.
S. C. Spence, a well known farmer and stock raiser of Grant Town- ship, is a native of Harrison County. He was born in Jefferson Township about five miles north of Bethany, January 29, 1875, and is a son of Arch and Charlotte (Maniwaring) Spence, the former a native of Virginia and the latter of Harrison County.
When Arch Spence came to Harrison County he first settled in White Oak Township and later removed to Jefferson Township where he is now engaged in farming. To Arch and Charlotte (Maniwaring) Spence, were
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born two children: S. C., the subject of this sketch, and Guy who is engaged in farming in Jefferson Township.
S. C. Spence was reared in Jefferson Township and educated in the district school. He began farming for himself in Grant Township on a farm of 120 acres which he bought in 1903. He added sixty acres to that and sold his farm of 180 acres in 1919. Later he bought 139 acres which is his present home. This place is situated one and three-fourths of a mile east of Ridgeway on the Mount Moriah road. This is a valuable farm and is well improved. Mr. Spence carries on general farming and stock raising and takes more than an ordinary interest in the livestock business. He is shipper for the Ridgeway Livestock Association.
November 2, 1899, Mr. Spence was married to Miss Effie Buzzard, a native of Grant Township and a daughter of Henry Buzzard, who is now deceased. To Mr. and Mrs. Spence have been born five children as fol- lows: Gertie, married George Arkle and they live near Lorraine, Har- rison County ; Irene, Hubert, Alva and Marvin.
Mr. Spence is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias, American Brotherhood of Yoeman and the Modern Woodmen of America. He is a dependable citizen and widely and favor- ably known in Harrison County.
Elisha Allen Scott, deceased, was an early settler in Harrison County and had many friends in this part of the state. He was born in Beaver County, Pennsylvania, in 1843, but moved with his parents to Jackson County, Ohio, in 1845, and, in 1856, his parents located on a farm near Pleasant Ridge Church, Cypress Township, Harrison County. Isaac Scott, the father of Elisha Allen Scott, was a native of Scotland and his wife, Sarah Anna Vezie, was born in Ireland.
Elisha Allen Scott enlisted in Harrison County, Missouri, with Com- pany I of the 1st Missouri State Militia under Captain Burris and served for three years and six months in the Civil War. He was wounded in the leg while in service and was taken prisoner, but was paroled a few days afterward. Mr. Scott died in 1909 and is buried in Pleasant Ridge Cemetery.
He was married February, 1872, to Emily J. Carter, a native of Daviess County, Missouri, and daughter of Thomas and Margaret (Woodard) Carter. Thomas Carter was married a second time in Daviess County, Missouri. He died in 1873 and his wife died in 1874. By his
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ELISHA ALLEN SCOTT AND FAMILY
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first marriage, Mr. Carter had the following children: Franklin, deceased; John, deceased, and Mckinney, who lives in Pattonsburg, Missouri. By his second marriage, Mr. Carter had the following children: D. W., of Coffey, Missouri ; T. C., deceased and Mrs. Emily J. Scott.
Mr. and Mrs. Elisha Allen Scott were the parents of nine children: James F., of Los Angeles, California; W. C., who lives on the home place ; Adolph, deceased; Charles, deceased ; Bessie, deceased; Nellie E., deceased ; Ben, of Oakland, California; Rex, deceased; and Ollie, the wife of Allen Woods, of Los Angeles, California.
For the past seven years Mrs. Scott made her home in California, but is now living on her farm in Cypress Township. She owns 176 2/3 acres of land which she and her husband purchased about thirty-two years ago.
Mr. Scott was a member of the Grand Army of the Republic post at Bethany at the time of his death. He was highly respected and was one of the substantial citizens of Harrison County.
George Arney, a well known retired farmer of Bethany, Missouri, was born in Tennessee, November 9, 1854, the son of John W. and Mary Elizabeth (Wilber) Arney. John W. Arney was born in North Carolina, but went to Tennessee in boyhood and later came to Missouri and settled in Daviess County with David Arney, a brother. In the gold excitement of 1849, he crossed the plains with ox teams to California and was there several years. He then returned to Tennessee for awhile, finally coming to Harrison County, where he bought forty acres in Fox Creek Township, and later bought 100 additional acres where he lived until his death. During the Civil War he was with Company E, 23rd Missouri Infantry for two years. He and his wife are buried in Springer Cemetery.
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Arney were the parents of the following chil- dren: George, the subject of this sketch; Sarah, the wife of George Arney, deceased, who lives in Grundy County, Missouri; Mrs., May Pli- cher, Mrs. Vina Bairley, Clarinda Campbell, John W. and Emma, all de- ceased.
George Arney was educated in the public schools in Wooderson dis- trict, and, with the exception of two years, which he spent in Panhandle, Texas, he has lived in Fox Creek Township, until seven years ago, when he moved to Bethany, Missouri. He owned 240 acres which he improved and operated successfully, selling this farm in 1919 to his son James. Mr.
(25)
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Arney was road overseer of his district for eleven years and filled this office capably.
George Arney was married in 1878 to Hannah Hughes of Sugar Creek Township, a daughter of James Hughes and wife, pioneers of that town- ship. Mrs. Arney died July 29, 1917. She and her husband were the parents of the following children: James, on the home farm; Thomas, of Bethany, Missouri; J. D., of California ; Lummie, wife of Homer Hogan, of Fox Creek Township; Floyd Arney, of Fox Creek Township; Orson, of Fox Creek Township; Laura is the wife of Bert L. Neff, of Sherman Township; Rie, the wife of Boyce Dickover, near Marshalltown, Iowa; and Rue, the wife of A. E. Butcher, of St. Joseph, Missouri.
George Arney was married the second time June 5, 1919, to Mrs. Olive Musser Mickael, a daughter of Henry H. and Barbara E. (Dayton) Musser. Henry Musser was born in Pennsylvania in 1830 and died December 29, 1906, and his wife, who was born in Ohio in 1843, died March 7, 1917. Mr. Musser is buried in the National Cemetery at Leaven- worth, Kansas, and his wife is buried in Lone Rock Cemetery, Hamilton Township, Harrison County. They were married in Caldwell County, Missouri, and settled in Lincoln Township, Harrison County, in 1865, where Mr. Musser preempted 160 acres of land, afterward selling eighty acres. The farm was four miles northeast of Hatfield. Mr. Musser was a Civil War veteran. Mr. and Mrs. Musser were the parents of the fol- lowing children: Mrs. Arney, born July 19, 1866; Hester E., the wife of Thomas Moore, who died February 3, 1907; Clarence, who was born in 1873, and died in infancy; LeRoy S., who was in Ajo, Arizona, the last time he was heard from.
Olive Musser was married the first time, September 23, 1885, to George B. Mickael, who died January 22, 1894, and is buried in Lone Rock Cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. George Michael were the parents of the follow- ing children: Bertha, born September 16, 1886, the wife of Donald Allen, of Kansas City, Missouri; Osie M., born July 18, 1889, who died April 19, 1918, and is buried at Bethany, Missouri, was the wife of Louis Conda; Elmer A., born July 13, 1893, and died when twenty-seven years and four days old, and who was a veteran of the World War, having been overseas with the 35th Division, Company G, and who served on the Mexican border prior to going overseas. After the war closed, he learned aviation and, while in flight at Winfield, Kansas, was killed by an accidental break of the plane, which caused him to fall. He is buried in Bethany. Mrs. Arney has a grandchild, Polly Lee Allen. Mr. Arney has twenty-five
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grandchildren and one great grandchild, Vada Arney, a daughter of Verne Arney.
George Arney was six years of age when his parents settled in Fox Creek Township and remembers many interesting incidents of the early days. Their nearest neighbor was Robert Woolridge and the prairie was open and unimproved. His father drove oxen from Tennessee to Mis- souri, and these were used to break the prairie. He traded his ox team for the forty acres of land, and cut and split rails for fifty cents per hundred. He paid $20.00 for a cow. His wife spun the wool and made the clothes for the family for many years. The one room log house was always large enough for company, as well as the family and beds made on the floor served for the family when visitors arrived.
Mary Frances (Buck) England, widow of George England, a well known pioneer of Bethany, and one of the oldest residents of this county, was born in Tennessee, February 17, 1838, and came to Missouri with her parents, David Buck and wife, in 1840. David Buck, deceased, settled at that time on the present site of Bethany, which was then a brush patch. Clement and John Oatman were the first settlers at Bethany, and they started a store here and Doctor Oatman was the first physician here. David Buck and wife first lived east of the present site of Doctor Rey- nolds' residence. Their home was a one story, log cabin, about 14x16 feet, with a ladder which served as a stairway. David Buck married Rebecca Barnes of Tennessee, and they were the parents of four children: Catherine, who married Joseph Bartlett; Mary Frances England, the sub- ject of this sketch ; James, deceased; and Sarah Elizabeth Eads, deceased. David Buck died January 25, 1895 and his wife died March 26, 1889; both are buried in Miriam Cemetery at Bethany.
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