USA > Ohio > Butler County > A history and biographical cyclopaedia of Butler County, Ohio, with illustrations and sketches of its representative men and pioneers. Vol. 1 > Part 21
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Mr. Reily moved to Hamilten in 1803, being the agent of the proprietors of Rossville, and resided here until the time of his death. Some of the buildings of the old fori were yet standing, and many of the picket: which had made the inclosures were still to be seen. . The inhabitants of the town were few in number, and had been chiefly soldiers of the various armies. After the erection of the county of Builer Mr. Reily acted as the clerk of the court. He held the office under successive rcappointments until the fourteenth day of March, 1840. a period of nearly thirty-seven years, when he declined farther service. He was also clerk of the Supreme Court of Butler County from the Hith of October, 1803, until the 3d of May, 1842, when he resigned. Judge Burnet states that this was a longer term than any other person had held such an office, with the exception of Mr. Hngh Boyle, of Fairfield County.
The only lawyer re-iding in Hamilton at that time was William Corry, whose ofice was in the sapie com in which Mr. Reily kept his. Mr. Rely was appolut d the first recorder of Butler County in 1908, and held the position until May, 1811, when he was siercoded by
When Cincinnati had a charter granted to it. John Reily was made one of the town trustees, and at the first meeting he was elected the clerk and collector. He James Heaton, who had been the first county surveyor.
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Mr. Reily was also clerk of the board of county commis- sioners from 1803 to 1819, when he resigned. His ster- ling qualities and thorough practical knowledge of the routine of the office gave him a great influence with the successive boards. In fact, during the time he held the position he had the chief management and control of the finances of the county, and conducted them with great prudence.
In 1804, under the administration of Thomas Jeffer- son, a post-office was established in Hamilton, of which Mr. Reily was appointed postmaster. His commission was signed by Gideon Granger. postmaster-general, and bears date August 2, 1804. This was then the western- most post-office north of the Ohio. He held this place until July, 1832, when he resigned, being succeeded by James B. Thomas.
In 1809, when Oxford University was founded, Mr. Reily was made a trustee, and served in that capacity for many years. He was its president until the organi- zation of the college in 1824, when by law the president of the college, by virtue of his office, became president of the board of trustees. He was always a warm friend of this institution, attending the meetings of the board with regularity. For years his name appears in the newspa- pers as secretary. He resigned his trusteeship in 1840, on account of advanced age and the inconvenience of being so often absent from home.
Mr. Reily was a man of the utmost regularity of hab- its. He canic to his room at a certain hour, and departed from it at a certain hour. His papers were all method- ically filed away, and he couldl at any time refer to any paper with which he had any thing to do, although it might have been a quarter of a century before., He trusted nothing to another person which it was possible himself to do. He held office many years, and during the whole course of his life his integrity and veracity were never questioned, nor does the writer recolleet in any of the old newspapers whose files he has examined an attack upon his character-an exemption which no one else enjoyed. His judgment was excellent, bis mem- ory good, his patriotism of the highest. He took part in the Revolution while still a mere boy; he was an actor in the scenes of pioneer life when in carly uranhood, and he discharged important trasts to his fellow-men when he had reached che maturity of his powers. He was fre- quently a trustee of estates or guardian of children, and occupied other fiduciary positions. He was educated in the Presbyterian faith, and liberally contributed to the support of that denomination. He also gave largely to other Churches.
His death occurred in Hamilton on the 7th of June, 1850. He was then eighty-seven years of age. Ur les enjoyed good health nearly all his life, and his death was not proceled by any long sickness. The decease was announced to the Court of Common Pleas, which was then in session, by Governor Bebb, who paid a feel-
ing tribute to his memory. Resolutions were adopted by the bar, which were ordered to be entered upon the journal of the court, and adjournment then took place.
He died on Friday. On Sunday a discourse was pro- nouneed by the Rev. William Davidson, of the United Presbyterian Church, and the body was conveyed to its last resting-place in Greenwood Cemetery, which had been opened only a short time before. The attendance at the funeral was vast. People came from every town- ship in the county, as well as fron over the border and .from Indiana. The solemnities were rendered more im- pressive by the presence of many old men, who had been associated with him in the foundation of the com- monwealth which had now grown so great.
The constitutional convention was at that time in ses- sion at Columbus. On Tuesday, June 11th, Judge Elijah Vance, a member of the convention from Butler County, arose and said :
" Mr. Speaker, -- I have been induced, sir, by a letter which has been placed in my lands by an honorable member of this convention, to announce to this body the decrase of Mr. John Reily, late of Butler County. It is known, perhaps, to every member upon this floor that the deceased was one of the members of the convention which framed the present constitution of Ohio, and that he had been for many years a citizen of the Northwest Territory or the State of Ohio."
After giving a detailed sketch of the life and public services of Mr. Reily, the judge continued :
" Hle was a man of many peculiarities, but of the most strict and vucompromising integrity. In every de- partment of life he was faithful and scrupulously honest. It is an incident worthy of profound contemplation that, at the very period of time in which our people are seek- ing to enlarge the sphere of constitutional liberty-while they are about to bid farewell to the constitution under which they have lived and prospered for near fifty years, and to seek enlarged ble -ings midler a uew form -- the mind that so largely aidel in diffusing these blessings under the guarantee aforded by organic law, has been remodeled, regenerated, and prepared for usefulness in : wider and better sphere of existence.
.. Mr. Speaker, U offer for adoption the following res- olutions :
" Resolved, That this convention has heard with deep sensibility the annunciation of the death of John Reily, Esquire, late of the county of Butler, a soklier of the Revolution, one of the carly pioneers of the West, one who filled important trusts under the territorial govern- ment, and one of the framers of the present constitution: of Chio.
" Realend, That this convention deeply sympathize with the family of the deceased on this melancholy vecasion.
. .. Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions, signed by
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the president and secretary of this convention, be for- warded to the family of the deceased."
Judge George J. Smith, a member of the convention from Warren County, then rose and said :
" Mr. President. -- I hope I may be pardoned for rising to make a few remarks by way of seconding the resolu- tions offered by the honorable member from Butler. I live in an adjoining county to that in which the deceased resided, and have been intimately acquainted with him for a period of some thirty years. I first became ac- quainted with Mr. Reily about the year 1821, just after I had connueneed the practice of law, and was uniformly in the habit of attending the courts of Butler County, in the practice of my profession, whilst he was clerk of the Court of Common Pleas and of the Supreme Court of that county. I know that I speak the sentiments of every member of the profession who had the good fortune and the pleasure of practicing in the Court of Common Pieas of Butier County during the time he was clerk of the the court, when I bear witness to the urbanity of his de- meanor and the politeness and courtesy which he always bestowed upon every member, and especially upon the younger members of the profession. Toward the latter his deportment was peculiarly kind and paternal.
. " In some respects Mr. Reily was a most extraordinary man; and, as the gentleman from Butler has well re- marked, in the qualities of punctuality and honesty and the inost strict and marked integrity I do not think he had his superior anywhere. During the whole period of my service on the bench of the Court of Common Pleas he was clerk of the court, which brought us into official relation. During more than thirty years that he served as clerk of the court, be discharged bis duties with the strictest fidelity and utmost punctuality. Indeed, as a clerk he was a model. As an instance of his rigid punc- tuality, he never knowingly permitted any large amount of fees to accumulate in his office without paying them over to those who were entitled to receive them. This vas a rule with Mr. Reily which, in my opinion, made him an exception to any other gentleman I have known who filled that office. He did not usually wait until the witnesses or other persons having money collected in his office would call for it, but would seek opportunities of searching for the claimant, and sending it to him as soon as collected. I mention this as an instance of his seru- pulous honesty.
" I have heard it remarked by some of the older cit- izens of Butler, who from an early day have been famil- inr with the fiscal concerns of that county, that to Mr. Reily, more than to any other man, was to be attributed the correct and prudent maaner in which the fiscal con- rorns of that county were alway's managed during the period in which Mr. Reilly, to a very considerable extent, had their oversight and management. Such was the rare and attention which he bestowed in the discharge of the duties of -every office he was called to fill that no
one ever complained of his neglecting or omitting bis official duties.
"I had the pleasure of an interview with Mr. Reily in the month of March last, at his own residence. I have been uniformly in the habit, since, from the infirmi- ities of age, he has been almost wholly confined to his house, of calling on him on all proper occasions when visiting the town in which he resided. The interview to which I refer was after the passage of the law of the last session of the General Assembly which has called this assembly together. (Mr. Reily was emphatically a gentleman of the old school. . He had his principles and opinions, and was firm in the maintenance of them; at the same time paying due respect and regard to the opinions of others. On the occasion referred to he spoke of his Revolutionary services, and of the proceedings of the convention of 1802. He looked forward with deep interest to the proceedings of this convention, and re- marked to me that, although he felt the inconveniences and defects of the present constitution, still he looked forward with some forebodings as to what might be the result of the deliberations of this convention. At the same time that he acknowledged the defects in the ex- isting constitution, he was apprehensive that, amidst the turmoil and excitement of contending parties, the public good might be sacrificed to party feeling, and the organic law of the State despoiled of some of its essential pro- visions. Mr. Reily, in the ordinary acceptation of the term, was not a partisan. He never obtruded his opin- ions upon any one. When he formed opinions he main- tained them upon all proper occasions with becoming firmness and commendable modesty.
" If I am not mistaken, he was originally attached to the Federal party. My impression is (though in this I may be in error) that at one period be supported the claims of General Jackson for the presidency. It is proper, also, to remark that in his latter years he was attached to the Whig party. But no one ever heard him condemn any may, or set of men, for entertaining and expressing political opinions different from his own. He was perfectty tolerant and gentlemanly in his deport- ment toward every person with whom he came in con- tact, amiable and courteons in his manners and in all his social relations. Fuil of years, honored and respected by all who knew him, he has gone from among us. But his memory will live after him, highly esteemed as he was when living. and revered when dead. Respectable for his intelligence and official qualifications-permit me, Mr. President, to say that, in my estimation, the crown- ing glory of his lite was his spotless purity, bis serupu- lous honesty, and his unsullied integrity. He lived and died a humble, pious Christian."
Mr. Edward Archbold. a member of the convention from Monroe County, rose and said that, though an the tire stranger to the deceased, he joined heartily in the | honorable testimonials which had been offered by the
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gentlemen from Butler and Warren. He had learned that there were but four or five members of the conven- tion which framed the present constitution of Ohio now living, and that from the time he was returned a dele- gate to this convention till he came up to this place he had indulged the idea of obtaining the services of some one of these time-honored survivors to preside during the preliminary organization, and perform those duties which were so ably discharged by his friend, the senior member from the county of Wayne (Mr. Larwell). He had thought that while such a thing would constitute an ap- propriate expression of respect for those honored and honorable representatives of the past, it might also reflect a very wholesome influence upon the convention itself.
The resolutions presented by Judge Vanee were then unanimously passed, and a copy of them was forwarded to the family of the deceased.
Mr. John Larwell then moved that, as a further tes- timonial of respect for the memory of the deceased, the convention now adjourn, which was carried.
Mr. Reily was married on the sixth day of February, 1808, to Miss Nancy Hunter, a daughter of Joseph Hunter, who was living in the neighborhood of Hamil- ton. Mrs. Reily died July 18, 1881. They had three `sons and two daughters. Joseph HI. Reily, who was born November 8, 1809, was educated at the Miami University. He possessed a natural taste for art, and painted many portraits and landscapes, which are still in the pos-cesion of our oller families. He died at Hamilton, on the twentieth day of March, 1849, in the same room in which he was born.
James Reily was born July 3, 1811, and was graduated at the Miami University in 1829. He studied law with John Woods, of Hamilton, and practiced for a while in Mississippi, but went from there to Texas. During the short life of that republic as a separate government, he was sent to Washington as its minister-plenipotentiary. Ile became a large landholder, and at the beginning of the Rebellion entered the Confederate serv ee. He was killed at the'head of his regiment, when leading them at the battle of Bayou Teche, in 1863. He married a niece of Henry Clay, a Miss Ross, who is now also dead.
Robert Reily was born June 1, 1820, and was in mercantile business in Cincinnati. In the war of the Rebellion he was a field officer in the Seventy-fifth Ohio Infantry, doing much fighting, and receiving deserved encomiums. On the 20th of April, 1862, at the battle of Chancellorsville, Reily, who was then the colonel of the regiment, received a severe wound at the close of the day, of which he died on the 5th of May, 1863. His troops had been handled admirably, and there was a uni- versal manifestation of regret at his loss.
Caroline Reily, the chle-t daughter, died in infancy. The younger, Jane II. Kelly, who was born October !. 1815, is still living. She is the wife of Lewis D. Camp- bell, formerly Member of Congress, and one of the most
influential men in the nation. A full sketch of him will be found elsewhere. Mrs. Reily made her home with him and her daughter until her decease.
GENERAL RICHARD BUTLER.
RICHARD BUTLER, after whom this county was named, was born in Ireland. With his brothers, he came to America before 1760, and was for a long time in the In- dian trade. Just before the outbreak of the American War he was settled in Pennsylvania, where his courage and knowledge of character made him a man of influence. It was a matter of great importance to persuade the In- dians not to take up army against us, and as agent and interpreter he went to Fort Pitt, in April, 1776, hoping to dissuade the Six Nations from entering the field as our antagonists. They were the most powerful of all the In- dian tribes, and had been able to maintain their inde- pendence against both the French and English. With the latter, however, they had formed an alliance at the close of the war that added Canada to the British domin- ions, and, while not unfriendly to the Americans, it was feared that the solicitations of English agents would finally turn them from neutrals into enemies. Mr. Butler met the Indians in formal conference, and during their mitet- ings delivered three speeches, two to Kiosola, the leading Indian chief, and one to the Delawares, who were in a Touse subsidiary to the Iroquois. His efforts were for the time successful; Kiosola declared himself in favor of the Americans, and every thing promised prosperously, but the current of feeling was too strong for the chief, and he and the Six Nations finally drifted into an alliance with the English, a movement which proved in the end fatal to the confederated tribes.
Butler was made a lientenant-colonel of the Pennsyl- vania line at the beginning of the war, and in the Spring of 1777 was lieutenant colonel of Morgan's rifle corps. which was present at the battle of Saratoga. and dis- tinguished himself by his couduet on several occasions. He was in the battle of Monmouth. While with a dip- tachment commanded by General Lafayette, near Will- iamsburg, Virginia, on the 26th of January, 1781, he attacked Colonel Simcoe's rangers, gaining the advantage. He held the rink of colonel of the Ninth Pennsylvania regiment at the close of the war, and acted as a com- missioner in settling affairs with the Indians at about that time. He took up his resideure in Carlisle, where with General Irvine and General Armstrong, att a few others, au agreeable society was formed. In conjunction with these officers, he quelled a mutiny at Fort Pitt.
In 1784 he was one of the United States commission- ers at a treaty held at Fort Stanwix, New York. His follow commissioners were Oliver Wolcott, of Connectiont. and Arthur Lee, of Virginia. It does not appear that. they had any particular knowledge of the Indian charae. ter, and the bulk of the business tell up General Bather. New York State sent a commissioner, Pear Schuyler, o
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protect her interests, as the chief portion of the lands which were indisputably in the possession of the Six Na- tions were within her limits, and for all west of New York a treaty some twenty years old was in existenec. The United States commissioners adopted a very high and lofty tone to the Indians, and but for the conciliatory policy adopted by New York in her treatment it is prob- able an Indian warfare would have broken out, retarding the settlement of Western New York, as, at the same time, Indian troubles did the territory northwest of the Ohio. The Indians advocated their side at this meeting with much ability.
General Butler subsequently attended at Fort MeIn- tosh, and in September, 1785, left his home in Carlisle to proceed to the Miami, where it was thought desirable a treaty should be made. He kept a journal, which is full of interesting matter. From it we learn that the journey was down the river, and occupied considerable time. James Monroe, afterward President, and then a Member of Congress, accompanied him a considerable part of the way. Three months after starting. at the mouth of the Great Miami, a treaty was concluded be- tween the American commissioners -- General Parsons, General Butler, and General Clark --- and several tribes of Indians. The honors were with General Butler, who de- livered the principal address to the Indians. Tradition has imparted to this scene some startling particulars not to be found corroborated in history.
In 1791 he joined the expedition of St. Clair, together with a brother, Colonel Butler. He was appointed second in command, and was charged with the arrangements necessary for the recruiting service. He established a rendezvous at Baltimore, and several points in Pennsyl vania. Those enlisted east of the mountains assembled at Carlisle, where they were disciplined and prepared to march for the West. He joined the army at Fort Ham- ilton, on the 27th of September, and the army was set in motion on the 4th of October, being led by General Butler. They crossed the river by wading At Fort Hamilton, General St. Clan issued an order prohibiting more than two or three women for cach company from proceeding with the army. This, however, was disre- warded, and when the men commenced crossing the river they also plunged into the stream, but the water being deep, their progress was considerably obstructed by their clothes. Many of them got out of the water on the artil- lery carriages, and rode over astride of the cannon.
We have elsewhere given an account of the march to the fatal field where St. Clair's army was destroyed. General Butler had been active and vigilant, and when the attack came, on the 4th of November, fought bravely. Ho and General St. Clair were continually going up and down the lines. As one of them went up one line. the other was going down the other line. About an hour after the charge made by Major Thomas Butler's troops. General Richard Butler was mortally wounded, when pass-
ing on the left of that battalion. Four soldiers put him in a blanket, and carried Him back to have his wounds dressed by a surgeon. They placed him in a sitting posture on the blauket, leaning against a tree. He was vomiting blood at the time. Almost immediately afterward, while the surgeon was examining General Butler's wounds, a single Indian, who had penetrated the ranks of the regi- ment, darted forward, and tomahawkel and sealped the general before his attendants were aware and could in- terfere.
Such was the end of life to this brave soldier. He came of a patriotic family, three of his brothers having been in the service of the United States, fighting nobly for-us. His son has caused his journal to be published ; and the other descendants of the family have filled high stations in Kentucky and Pennsylvania.
GENERAL ST. CLAIR.
ARTHUR ST. CLAIR, once governor of the Northwest Territory, and a soldier of the Revolution, was a native of Edinburgh, Scotland, where he was born in the year 1735. He received a classical education, and afterward studied medicine. He became a surgeon in the British army, and in that capacity crossed the ocean. He served under Wolfe, at Quebec, actively participating in the fighting when that city was, taken, and previously being in General Amherst's army, as a member of the Sixtieth British Regiment, at the taking of Louisbourg, in 1758. After the peace with Frauce, in 1763, he was assigned to the command of Fort Ligonier, in Western Pennsyl- vania, receiving there a grant of a thousand acres of land. In 1771 he was commissioned as a justice of the peace of Bedford County, and by virtue of his office sat as one of the julges. It. 1773, upon the organization of Western Pennsylvania into the county of Westmoreland, Arthur St. Clair was appointed prothonotary, or clerk of the court. St. Clair also represented the Penn family in the western portion of the colony, a highly honorable position. When the war broke out, he espoused the cause of the colonists, and was appointed a colonel of Conti- mentals. In six weeks he was ready for the field. A month after the Declaration of Independence he was ap- pointed a brigadier-general, and served as sach in the battles of Princeton and Trenton. The next year he was made a major-general, and placed in command of Fort Ticonderoga, which, though garrisoned by two thousand men. he abandoned at the approach of Burgoyne. For this action he was charged with incapacity and cowardice, but after a thorough investigation of the circumstances by a court-martial, he was honorably acquitted, and Con- gress, by a unanimous vote, indorsed the decision-his action, however unpopular, being justified as a wise mie, since an attempt to hold the works must have resulted in defeat. with a useless sacrifice of man whose services were needed elsewhere. He served during the following years in various parts of the country, and was present at
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