USA > Ohio > Delaware County > Century history of Delaware County, Ohio and representative citizens 20th > Part 110
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HISTORY OF DELAWARE COUNTY
AAngeline and John Joseph. Septer Stark be- came the largest land owner in Delaware County, at the time of death, owning 2,000 acres. He was married ( first ) to Sylvia Ben- ton and ( second ) to Maria Ross. Sarah Stark married Samuel Wilcox and died in Porter Township. Mary married James Sher- man and died in Porter Township. John Jo- seph, who resides on the old Stark homestead in Kingston Township, married Anna Robin- SO11.
Mr. and Mrs. Waldron have one son, Homer, who was born July 9, 1865. He re- sides at Lewis Center, where he is manager of a creamery plant. He married Emma Owen, and they have one daughter, Christovel, a beautiful girl of 15 years. In politics, Mr. Waldron is a stanch Republican and he has held many offices of responsibility. In 1894 he was first elected county commissioner and assumed the duties of this office in September. 1895, and was re-elected in 1897, his official life closing in the fall of 1901. In young manhood he united with the Methodist Episco- pal Church and he has been very active in for- warding its interests, serving in many official positions. Mrs. Waldron also is active in church work.
DAM S. SHOEMAKER, of Ashley. Delaware County, Ohio, is a minis- ter of the Primitive Baptist Church and has three charges at .Ashley. Pleasant Run in Fairfield County, and Rocky Fork, in Marion County. He is a veteran of the Civil War, and for many years was honored with the office of mayor of the village in which he resides.
Elder Shoemaker was born north of Ash- ley, in that part of Morrow County which was then Delaware County, March 9, 1832. and is a son of Daniel and Harriet ( Smith ) Shoemaker. Daniel was a young man when in 1820, he came with his father, Adam Shoe- inaker, from Somerset County, Pennsylvania. They stopped at Zanesville a short time, then came to Delaware County, locating a half mile
north of Ashley. Daniel later left that place and bought a farm half a mile east of _Ashley. in Oxford Township, on which he lived until his death in 1842. He married Harriet Smith. a daughter of Elijah Smith, who came with his family from New York State at about the same time that the Shoemakers did. He lo- cated one-half mile east of Ashley. The fol- lowing children were born to this union : Adam S .: Adelia. now deceased, who was the wife of T. M. Seeds: Milton B., who was for many years a prominent citizen of Ashley. where he erected the first flour mill and was identified with important business interests. and who died in 1906; and Adeline, who died of typhoid fever in 1867. Mr. Shoemaker and his wife were members of the Primitive Bap- tist Church. She died in 1890 at an advanced age.
Adam S. Shoemaker was reared on the old home place and attended the schools of this vicinity. Ashley was at that time an un- cleared timber tract. He remained on the home place and farmed until 1859. when he sold his interest in the farm and bought a place one mile south of Ashley, where he remained ten years. Ile sold out there, then lived in Lincoln Township, Morrow County, for seven years, after which he moved to Clark County. Iowa, where he farmed for five years. He re- turned to Ashley in 1881 and has lived here continuously since. He operated a saw mill a few years, and during the past nine years has been writing fire, tornado and lightning insur- ance.
In January, 1865. Mr. Shoemaker enlisted in Company G. Eighty-eighth Regiment. O. V. 1., and served until the war closed, being mustered out July 3. 1865. He was located at Camp Chase, where they guarded 30,000 pris- oners, and he will never forget the rejoicing of those men when news reached them of the end of the war and their early return home. Elder Shoemaker began preaching in the Primitive Baptist Church in 1863 and has had care of churches most of the time since. His ministerial work has carried him ex- tensively over the states of Ohio, Indiana and Iowa.
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July 21, 1853. Mr. Shoemaker married Mary Ann Smith, who was born in Morrow County, Ohio, and who was a daughter of Ne- hemiah and Experience ( Carpenter ) Smith. She died in 1894, having been the mother of eight children, namely : Daniel N., now residing in Missouri, who married Lizzie Dixon and has two children-Lloyd and Grace : Welling- ton M .. who married Lucy Sherwood and has three children-Lewis. Blanche and Laura : Millard A., now of Topeka. Kansas, who mar- ried Ann Bishop, and has six children-May. Walter. Edna. Hazel, Wilma and Zelda: Les- ter E .. who married Mary Sherwood and lives in Ashley: Adeline, wife of Elmore Coomer and mother of a daughter-Flossie Marie: Harriett, who died in 1890: Emma. wife of Orrie G. Benedict, who has a son, Murray, and two daughters-Buelah Dawn and Thelma Gertrude: and Milton Henry, who is a drug- gist in Dayton. Elder Shoemaker formed a second marriage April 3. 1898, with Mrs. Mary J. Ogden. nee Thomas, who died sud- denly in November. 1907. Mr. Shoemaker is a Republican in politics and cast his first presidential vote for John C. Fremont. Hc served on the School Board 13 years and as mayor of the village II years.
HOMAS MERCER SEEDS. for many years a prominent business man of Ashley, Delaware County Ohio, is now living in retirement. Ile has re- sided here almost continuously since he was 19 years of age and is widely known among the people of this vicinity. He was born in Chester County, Pennsylvania. No- vember 8. 1835. and is a son of Job and Mary ( Mercer ) Seeds.
Job Seeds was born and reared in Ches- ter County, Pennsylvania, and during his younger days taught in the public schools. He then followed surveying for some years, and then engaged in farming. . He was first lo- cated on Brandywine Creek. where the fa- mous battle of that name was fought during the Revolution, but moved from there to Co-
lumbiana County, Ohio, where he lived until his death. Ile married Mary Mercer, a native of Chester County, and they became parents of the following children: Edward, deceased ; Thomas Mercer: Paschal, who now lives in California : Hannah. deceased : Margaret, wife of William Brown, deceased, resides in Co- lumbiana County, Ohio: and Mary. deceased.
Thomas M. Seeds was reared in his native county and there learned the trade of shoema- ker. He was 19 years old when, in 1854. he came west alone. and began working at his trade in the establishment of Aaron More- house, near Ashley. After one year he moved to Stantontown and continued his trade for a like period, then returned to Ashley. In 1862 he formed a partnership with M. B. Shoema- ker, and under the name and style of Seeds & Shoemaker conducted a general store, incluid- ing hardware and groceries, until 1879. In the meantime he also engaged extensively in buying and shipping grain. Then in partner- ship with his son. under the firm name of T. M. Seeds & Son, he conducted a general hard- ware store, including a stock of farming uten- sils, general hardware and builders' supplies. In connection with this enterprise they op- erated the only lumber yard in the village. Finally Mr. Seeds and his son dissolved part- nership, when he took the hardware and his son the lumber business, and he continued in the hardware line until 1896, since which time he has lived in retirement. AAbout 1873. he erected a modern brick residence on a tract of four and a half acres he owns, adjoining the village. and resided there until 1904. when he moved to his present location. On July 26, 1856, Mr. Seeds was married ( first) to Adelia Shoemaker, who was born and reared in Delaware County, and was a daughter of Daniel Shoemaker. She died October 19, 1903. having given birth to nine children. the record being as follows: Rosa married Rob- ert Sherman of Dayton. Tennessee, and have the following offspring : Blanche, wife of John Reidy, has three children: Dawn, wife of Ray Sperry, has three children. Lillian and Edwin Sperry, and a daughter. Julia Mlc- Gough by a first marriage: Walter. Bessie and
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HISTORY OF DELAWARE COUNTY
Belle. Edward Seeds, second child of Mr. Seeds, married Lillian Baumbarger and has one son, Cyloneous. Weston, residing at Co- lumbus, married Kitty Gilbert and they have one son, Gerald. Etta married Melvin Mc- Conbrey of Algier, Ohio, and they have a son, Ray. Myrtie married Frank Wigton, and they have a son, Harry Seeds Wigton.
Mr. Seeds was married ( second) Novem- ber 23, 1904, to "Ars. Elizabeth ( Laughrey ) Waugh, who was born in Knox County, Ohio, September 9. 1840, and is a daughter of Sam- uel and Julia Ann ( Harris) Laughrey. She first married Samuel Waugh, by whom she has four children living: William E., who re- sides in California : Samuel Charles, who lives in California: Elizabeth Viola, who is the wife of Josephine Doty. of Leonardsburg. Ohio; and Nancy Rosella, who is the wife of Wilber Wandell of California. Religiously, both Mr. and Mrs. Seeds have been Spiritual- ists for many years. Mr. Seeds served for years as township and village treasurer and is a Democrat in politics.
S. CRUIKSHANK, who is a lead- ing general farmer and fruit grower of Liberty Township, owns and re- sides on a very valuable farm of 221 acres, this being a part of the farm of 500 acres originally secured by his grand- father. George Cruikshank, soon after the War of 1812.
George Cruikshank was a native of New York and belonged to a family that came to America in 1760. He married Elizabeth Conway, who was born in Ireland, and they came to Delaware County from Salem, Wash- ington County, New York. The property that George Cruikshank secured had been obtained from the Government prior to this, by General Stansbury. No improvements had been made, but a few of the trees had been slashed to mark a path through the forest. The children of George and Elizabeth Cruikshank were : Mary, who married John Dutcher : William. who died young: David G., who was born in
1808. married Eliza Eaton: Jane C., who was born November 2, 1814, married Joseph Leonard : William (2), who was born in 1816, married Cynthia Fisher: Elizabeth, who was born in 1819. died in 1820: George H., who was born Apirl 4. 1821, was the father of .1. S. Cruikshank: and James, who was born in 1823. married Lucia Kenyon.
Of his father's estate. George H. Cruik- shank owned 221 acres. He followed agri- cultural pursuits until his children were okl enough to require educational opportunities. when he moved to Delaware to give them the benefits of excellent schools and resided there for about 25 years. Hle died at the home of his son. A. S., on the present farm, January 10, 1902. aged 81 years. George II. Cruik- shank was married, June 5. 1850. to AAugusta F. Smith, who was a daughter of Alwood Smith. She was born in 1822 and died De- cember 25, 1899. The children of George H. Cruikshank and wife were as follows: Har- riett Jane, who was born May 4. 1851. died in 1854: Alwood Smith: George Thompson, who was born October 23. 1854. died in Oc- tober. 1855: Frederick V., who was born Au- gust 10. 1856, died August 27, 1856: Mary Augusta, who was born June 25. 1858, mar- ried Rev. Edwin Brown, June 18, 1884, and they reside at Lawton, Oklahoma: Martha Elizabeth, who was born October 16, 1860. (lied April 9. 1875: Peter, who was born July 22, 1862, died September 23. 1862: Lucy Joy. who was born September 2. 1863. married Newton H. Fairbanks and they reside at Springfield, Ohio; and Dora, who was born February 4, 1866, died July 8, 1866.
Mlwood Smith was born December 25. 1852. He obtained his education in the schools at Delaware and the Wesleyan University. and was about 21 years old when he adopted farming as his life work. After his marriage he located on his present farm and here he has engaged in general farming and has given considerable attention to growing fine fruit. In 1878 he married Viola J. Pollock, who is a daughter of S. D. and Mary ( Taylor) Pol- lock, of Delaware County, but formerly of Lodi, Medina County, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs.
CAPT. J. F. CURREN
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Cruikshank have had four children: Alwood Pollock, Mabel Janett, Mary Augusta and George Harvey. The eldest son was born January 25. 1880. He was educated in the common and High School at Delaware and served in the Spanish-American War in Porto Rico, as a member of Company K. Fourth Regiment. Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Ile is now engaged as one of the engineers at the Stratford power house, for the C. D. M. Com- pany. He married Gertrude Snyder. The eldest daughter, Mabel Janette, was born March 20, 1885. and died while a student at the Wesleyan University, July 15. 1906. The passing away of this daughter was a grevious affliction to the family. Mary Augusta, born October 28, 1887, is now a student of the Ohio Wesleyan University, and George Harvey, born March 6, 1891. is a student in the Dela- ware High School. The family residence was built stout and strong by the grandfather of Mr. Cruikshank. The stone house on the farm, just south of the residence, was erected by the father of Mr. Cruikshank, and in it the latter was born.
In political views, the Cruikshanks have been identified with the Republican party since its formation but in addition to this they have 1.een zealous prohibitionists and to such an extent that the late George H. Cruikshank was at one time the candidate for the State As- sembly on the Prohibition ticket. Like his father. Mr. Cruikshank is a member of the Presbyterian Church at Delaware, in which he is an elder. He has been active in all move- ments designed to promote agricultural inter- ests and for a number of years was a member of the Grange.
APT. J. F. CURREN, whose period of residence at Delaware covers al- most half a century, is one of the city's reliable business men, as well as a deservedly honored veteran of the Civil War. He was born September 19, 1839. in Delaware County, Ohio, and is a son of Stephen Curren.
Joseph Curren, the grandfather, located in Delaware County in 1808, coming from Wash- ington County, Virginia, and was one of the pioneer teachers in this section. Ile went on horseback to East Tennessee, where he mar- ried, and brought his bride back with him in the same way, and settled permanently in Delaware County, where his son, Stephen Cur- ren, was born in 1816. The latter became a man of substance and prominence in Delaware County. For a number of years he was en- gaged in a general mercantile business at Nor- ton, Waldo, Leonardsburg and Ashley.
J. F. Curren was 18 years of age when he came to Delaware, and his education was ob- tained entirely in the schools of his native county. In 1861 he enlisted as a private in Company D. Twentieth Ohio Volunteer In- fantry, and was mustered into the service at Camp Chase, Columbus. He participated in the battles of Fort Donelson. Pittsburg Land- ing. Shiloh, Bolivar, and luka, and in those which occurred daily while the army was get- ting in the rear of Vicksburg. The Twentieth Infantry on every occasion gave a good ac- count of itself. It went to Memphis and then to Yazoo Bend, through Louisiana, and took part in the battle at Port Gibson. In the en- gagement at Raymond, Tennessee, the regi- ment lost heavily and went thence to Jackson, Champion Hill and Black River, and came up in front of Vicksburg on May 18. taking part in the charge on the city on May 22d. Cap- tain Curren, during all these movements, was ever at the post of duty. After the fall ot Vicksburg be accompanied the regiment to Me- chanicsburg, and later back to Vicksburg. and on November to. 1863. he was sent home on recruiting service. On the 18th of April. fol- lowing, he was made regimental adjutant of the Sixtieth Regiment. O. V. I., which was as- signed to the Ninth Corps, and on May 5. took part in the memorable battle of the Wilder- ness. Ilere, with his comrades, he was for five hours under fire. At Nye Run they were again in battle for five hours, and out of three companies of 200, 98 were killed and wounded. On May 12th, came the terrible battle of Spottsylvania, and later that of Cokl Harbor.
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HISTORY OF DELAWARE COUNTY
Following that came 36 hours of marching be- fore the regiment was halted in front of Peters- burg, where, after a rest of 24 hours, these brave men were again called into action, and made that fierce charge which opened the siege, 17th June, 1864, and in this Captain Curren was wounded and lost his right arm.
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Here it may be mentioned as a curious co- incidence that Captain Curren's mother's great- grandfather lost his right arm, June 17. 1775, at the battle of Bunker Hill. Captain Curren's injury necessitated his being taken to a hos- pital at Washington, D. C., and he soon went home on furlough. In October, 1864, he re- joined his regiment in front of Petersburg, and was then transferred to the Veteran Reserve Corps, subsequently being sent to the Reserve garrison on Galloup's Island, Boston, where he remained until the close of the war. Ilis service was of long duration and filled with severe hardships, but he emerged from all dangers with but one serious wound and had been gradually promoted to high rank.
Shortly after his return to Delaware, Cap- tain Curren became an agent in the Refugee Bureau, under General Howard, and served at different places in North Carolina, until De- cember 31. 1868. Subsequently. he served as postmaster at Delaware for
a
twelve years and a half, later entering into manufacturing business at Columbus, in which he continued for but a short time. In 1885 he opened a fire insurance office at Delaware, located at 5212 North Sandusky Street, where he has carried on business ever since. In 1895 Captain Curren established the Citizens Fire Insurance Association, of which he has been secretary since its organization.
Captain Curren was married February I. 1866, to Mary A. Gavitt, and they have three children: Lena C., who married John W. Roby, a prominent attorney residing at Lima, Ohio: Arthur J., residing at Elyria, Ohio, where he is manager of the Citizens' Tele- phone Company; and Marie, who resides at home. Captain Curren is a valued comrade in the local post of the Grand Army of the Republic, and of the Union Veteran Legion. He is a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
ILLIAM ILARRIS. A. B., a leading citizen of Ostrander, is cashier of the Ostrander Banking Company and is identified with other suc- cessful enterprises of this section. Mr. Harris was born at Victoria, in Mon- mouthshire, Wales, November 22. 1870, and is a son of Edwin M. and Elizabeth ( Wat- kins ) Harris.
Victoria, the birthplace of Mr. Harris, has been the family home for generations. The grandfather was a sailor and like many others who have followed the sea, made one voyage from which he never returned. Edwin M. Harris was born in 1840 and was a child when his father was lost. He learned the trade of molder, which he followed in his own country until 1880, when he came to America and re- sumed work at his trade in Cleveland, Ohio, which he has but recently given up. He is a member of the Ancient Order of Foresters, having joined the order in Wales. He mar- ried Elizabeth Watkins and they have three surviving children : William, residing at Os- trander ; Cyrus M., residing at Cleveland ; and Elizabeth, who married John Mosely, residing at Cleveland. The family was reared in the Congregational Church.
William Harris was ten years old when his parents came to America. He was educated in the public schools of Cleveland and at Hiram College, graduating from the latter institution in 1897, having taken the theological course. In June, 1897, he was ordained to the ministry of the Christian Church. Prior to this he had taken charge of the Christian Church on West Madison Avenue. Cleveland, where he con- tinued for three years, removing from there to West Mansfield, Logan County. He remained in this charge for two years and his last settled pastorate was in Paulding County, where he was stationed for two or more years.
In the spring of 1905. Mr. Harris came to Ostrander and entered into business, on the first of the following July assuming the duties of cashier of the Ostrander Banking Company. He has been interested in the organization of several telephone companies and is secretary and a director of the Crooksville Company. The Ostrander Banking Company was or-
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ganized in March, 1903, and it does a general commercial banking business and has a savings department. The bank has proven very popu- lar and profitable, its deposits now being some $115,000. while the total resources of the bank are $150,000. The president of the banking company is W. H. Carr, its vice-president is J. C. Maugans, while the following capitalists make up its board of directors: W. H. Carr. J. C. Maugans, Marion Kirkland, H. W. Rit- tenhouse and J. I. Adamson.
Mr. Harris married Ethel M. Carr, who is a daughter of S. T. Carr, a prominent resi- dent of Ostrander, and they have two chil- dren, namely : Helen Elizabeth and David Carr. The family attends the Baptist Church.
In political sentiment, Mr. Harris is a Re- publican and in 1907. he was elected to mem- bership on the School Board, although the township is strongly Democratic. He is a member of both the Masons and Odd Fellows, being connected with Ostrander Lodge, No. 594. F. & A. M., and the Chapter at Delaware, in the former fraternity, while in the latter. he is a member of Edinburg Lodge and is past grand of White Lodge at West Mansfield and belongs to the Encampment at Middleburg. Mr. Harris is an esteemed citizen of Ostrander. a man who exercises a strong and helpful personal influence in the community.
OHN RICHEY NEWHOUSE, one of Scioto Township's most honored citi- zens, who has spent almost the whole G of his long and useful life on his pres- ent farm, is a worthy representative of two of the pioneers of Delaware County and can claim a Revolutionary ancestor in the person of his great-grandfather. Mr. New- house was born in Union County, Ohio, Au- gust 27. 1829. His parents were William and Annie ( Richey) Newhouse.
The history of the Newhouse family is very interesting. The family is of English origin and the first members came to Loudoun County, Virginia, prior to 1740, in which year the great-grandfather of John Richey was
born. When he attained manhood, he mar- ried a lady who was also of English extraction and they reared the following children : Jona- than, Isaac. Anthony, Eura and David. He died of camp fever, when forty years of age, having served in the Patriot army from Lou- doun County, from 1776 to 1780.
Anthony Newhouse, the third son of the above family, became the grandfather of John Richey Newhouse. He was eight years of age when his father died in the army, and with his older brothers he was forced to assist his widowed mother in providing for the needs of the family. He remained closely at home until 1794, when General Washington called for soldiers to assist in suppressing what is known to history as the "Whiskey Insurrection." Anthony Newhouse responded and remained in the 'service for six months, or until the in- surrectionists had been subdued, accompanying the command of General Lee as far as Fort Pitt, where the city of Pittsburg now stands. He returned to his home in Virginia and re- mained there, following his former pursuits. until 1798. when he visited Wheeling for six months and went from there to old Red Stone Fort, the site of which is now included in Fayette County, Pennsylvania.
At that place. Mr. Newhouse became ac- quainted with Nancy Coons. to whom he was married, June 28, 1799, and through this mar- riage the Newhouse family became established in Ohio. His father-in-law, John Coons, had (lecided to become a pioneer and settled in the rich country offered to those who sought per- manent homes, in Pickaway County. Ohio. Early in the year 1800, a party consisting of John Coons and family, Henry More and family and Anthony Newhouse and family. started on what was then a long and perilous journey, for which they made great prepar- ation. They journeyed to Wheeling, Virginia. on the Ohio River and there the men put their wives aboard an old-fashioned keel-boat which plied up and down the river, by which route they were to reach the mouth of the Scioto River. When their families and possessions were safely started. the men set out for the same point, along what was called "Zane's
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Trace," being really the first road in the State of Ohio, covering the distance to Chillicothe. When the "house-boat" party, as we might term it in modern days, reached the mouth of the Scioto, it was necessary to take a still smaller vessel in order to ascend the narrower stream. They boarded what was termed a "pirogue," which was the Indian name for a primitive boat, sometimes consisting of several canoes fastened together and sometimes of a kind of flat-boat with a sail, and by this means they safely reached Chillicothe and joined their husbands. A still further journey had to be made up the Scioto Creek until they reached some land that had been previously cleared and partially cultivated by the Indians, and here they stopped and built log cabins very close together. mainly for protection, as they were daily visited by the Indians and they were far from civilization, the nearest settle- ment being Chillicothe, thirteen miles away. while Lancaster was eighteen miles distant. At this time all the land in this vicinity be- longed to the Government, the county not hav- ing been yet surveyed. During the first year, the little colony subsisted on corn which was brought from Marietta, either by way of the river or on horseback, and on game, there be- ing an abundance of deer and wild turkeys. while bears were often killed. There was thus no danger of hunger, and the wild berries and wild honey found in the forest, gave variety to the fare. During the residence of the family in Pickaway County the following children were born : William, Sarah, Elizabeth, John, Isaac, Margaret and Eura.
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