USA > Ohio > Fayette County > History of Fayette County : together with historic notes on the Northwest, and the State of Ohio, gleaned from early authors, old maps and manuscripts, private and official correspondence, and all other authentic sources > Part 82
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Our subject was fairly educated, and at the age of twenty-one, assumed the management of a large estate in this township. He is a single man, of steady, studious habits, giving his time to his own affairs-a man of few words, but who impresses a stranger favor- ably.
JONAH B. CORSON.
Jonah B. Corson, farmer, was born June 26, 1853, in this town-
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ship. He is the second son of Benjamin and Nancy (Baldwin) Corson, who were also natives of this township. The education of our subject was obtained at the common schools of the neighbor- hood, and is of no inferior kind. He gives attention to farming, and legitimate trading on a moderate scale, and is a young man of good judgment in matters pertaining to his sphere of life. He is a young man of good standing where he is known, and bids fair for a bright future. His mother was the youngest daughter of the family. She died, in 1854, leaving four children : Minerva, Martha J., Margaret A., and Jonah B.
WESLEY COX.
John Cox, the father of this subject, was a native of Maryland, and came to Ohio in about the year 1800. He settled in Ross County, near the present city of Chillicothe. His wife, Isabel Arington, was also from Maryland. They were the parents of. eight children : Sarah, Phœbe, Mary, Joseph, David, Rebecca, Nel- son, and Wesley; these were all born in Ohio.
Wesley, the youngest of the family, was born in Madison Coun- ty, May 13, 1833. He was married, November 12, 1857, to Mary Catharine Porter, the eleventh child of Robert and Mary (Thomas) Porter, of Madison County. The Porters were Virginians, and immigrated to this county about 1820. The Thomas family came a few years later. To Robert and Mary Porter were born eleven children : John Milton, Robert, Moses, Rebecca, Lucinda, Griffith, William, Daniel, Benjamin, Isaac, and Mary.
In coming to Ohio, Robert Porter started in a two-horse wagon, but one horse failing on the way, the wagon was sold, the goods packed on the stoutest horse, and the mother, with her son Robert in her arms, made the rest of the trip riding upon the same horse which carried the household effects. Mr. Porter died in August, 1851.
Mrs. Cox was born June 4, 1839. To the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Cox have been born three children : A son, born September 16, 1858, died in infancy ; Lucinda May, born September 8, 1859, died March 4, 1864; Almer W., born September 19, 1864. Follow- ing their marriage, they spent four years in Madison County, the next four in Fayette, and the next five in Madison. They then came to their present location, near Madison Mills, where they have
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HISTORY OF FAYETTE COUNTY.
ever since resided, on their comfortable little farm. They have been members of the Christian Church since 1859.
AARON CRISPIN.
Aaron Crispin, farmer, and the subject of this sketch, is a native Buckeye, and was born near South Charleston, January 2, 1825. He is the first son, and third child, of Francis and Fannie (Gaines) Crispin. The father of our subject was a native of New Jersey ; the mother of Virginia. They came to Ohio early in the present century, settling first in Ross County. In 1815, they came to Clarke County.
Our subject became a citizen of this county in 1838, and on the 9th of May, 1846, was united in marriage to Maria E., daughter of Isaac and Deborah (Grant) Thomas, of this county. The Thomases were among the early settlers of this township.
This union resulted in six sons and two daughters: Francis M. (deceased), Marion, Isaac M., Anderson M., Abraham (deceased), William Irvin, Mary Elizabeth, and Eliza Jane.
Our subject has a military record worthy of a place in history. He enlisted in September, 1864, serving in Company L, Fifth Ken- tucky Cavalry. They campaigned in Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina, participating in a number of engagements, and were at Fort McAllister, at the taking of Savannah, Decem- ber, 1864. He was honorably discharged following the grand re- view at the nation's capital. He is a gentleman of the old, sub- stantial sort, and is one of the few yet alive who has had the expe- rience of driving hogs from Ohio to the markets of the East, re- turning on foot. This he has done repeatedly. He now carries on a farm three and a half miles from Madison Mills.
HENRY FULTON.
Henry Fulton, the eighth child, and fifth son, of William and Eliza (Loofbourrow) Fulton, was born in Ross County, Ohio, Aug- ust 3, 1826. His grandparents, John A. and Lavina (Irwin) Fulton, were of Pennsylvania, and came to Ohio in 1801, settling in Ross County.
John A. was a prominent surveyor of that early day, and in later years his son William pursued the same profession.
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Henry, in his youth, enjoyed the meager advantages of the early schools of that time, and the prominent business qualities of the man Fulton, are more the results of practical contact with the world, than of his early schooling.
In November, 1846, he married Lettice, daughter of Shreve Pan- coast. To their union has been born nine children : Wade, Shreve, Maggie, William, Polly, Effie, Franklin P., Harry, and Laban. Franklin P. died August 8, 1868, aged eight years.
Our subject is a man of local prominence, having served his town- ship, either as trustee or treasurer, for the past twenty years, and was land appraiser in 1880. He owns two hundred and fifty acres of choice land at Madison Mills. Is a member of Bloomingburg Lodge, and of the Chapter, F. & A. M., at Washington, and treas- urer of Madison Grange No. 229.
SHRIEVE GASKILL.
The Gaskills were Pennsylvanians, and came to this state in 1809, settling two miles east of Waterloo, in Pickaway County.
Shrieve, the subject of this sketch, was the son of Caleb and Elizabeth Gaskill, and was born June 8, 1806. He married Cynthia, daughter of Thomas and Mary (Harvey) Barton, of Virginia. Their marriage took place January 5, 1827. Mrs. Gaskill was born July 28, 1812. To this marriage was born ten children : Elizabeth, born October 6, 1828, wife of Warford Young; Harriet, born June 2, 1830, wife of Laban Timmons; Mary Ann, born January 23, 1832, wife of James Young; Lewis, born January 30, 1834, died October 29, 1835 ; Sophronia, born April 22, 1836, died January 4, 1837 ; James W., born April 13, 1837, married Mary Lysinger; Orrelius J., born September 19, 1839, died August 4, 1851; Vin- cent H., born August 5, 1842; Warford Nilson, born November 19, 1844, died August 24, 1861 ; Artie, born June 19, 1846, died August 8, 1867.
Mr. Gaskill accumulated considerable property during a busy life time, and died in 1875, at the age of sixty-three years. He was a man of sterling qualities, greatly esteemed for his character, which was that of an upright, consistent Christian. He was a mem- ber of the Christian Church at Waterloo, and in the support of the ministry and other expenses of the church, he was liberal to a fault.
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HISTORY OF FAYETTE COUNTY.
During the years of the rebellion, he was known as a man who stood firm for the right, and in word and deed went in for a vigor- ous prosecution of the war.
His son, Vincent H., was fairly educated in the common schools, and at an early age evinced a taste for books. He began reading medicine in 1860, completing his studies, in 1863, graduating at the Old Berkshire Medical Institution, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, in No- vember of the same year.
In the following January, he entered the United States service as assistant surgeon; ranking as first lieutenant. He did duty at Mound City and Cairo, Illinois, till the war closed. Following this, he engaged in the practice of medicine in Waterloo, meeting with deserved success. His reputation and standing as a physician, place him in the front rank of practitioners of this county.
Dr. Gaskill has been twice married ; his first wife, Frances Mess- more, died January, 1876 : she bore one son, Pliny E. To his present wife, he was married March, 1879. To this marriage has been one child, Ralph, born January, 1880.
LEVI GRIFFIN.
The subject of this sketch gave his life that the country might live. All that was mortal of Levi Griffin fills the grave of a heroic soldier of the Union, and awaits the reveille of the martyr. He was born on the 18th of May, 1828, and was the son of Caleb and Martha (Pliley) Griffin, of Indiana. He came to Ohio with his parents when a child, and on the 22d day of October, 1849, he was married to Rebecca V., seventh child of James and Rachel (Cart- mill) Nutt, of Clarke County. Caleb and Martha Griffin had but two children : Levi and Harriet. James and Rachel Nutt were the parents of thirteen children : Sarah, John, Elizabeth, Catherine, Nancy, William, Rebecca, James Monroe, Hannah Jane, Lucinda, George W., Matilda D., and Madison Willis.
To Levi and Rebecca V. Griffin were born five children : George V., born April 10, 1851 ; Nathaniel Willis, born August 26, 1852; Elizabeth, born August 30, 1855, died August 30, 1856; Laura Jane, born January 3, 1857; John Franklin, born October 22, 1858.
Mr. Griffin answered the country's call for troops by enlisting in Company G, 113th O. V. I., in August, 1862. His regiment was a part of the second brigade, second division, fourteenth army
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corps, and participated at Chickamauga, Kenesaw Mountain, Ben- tonville, and many other hotly contested fields. On the 27th day of June, 1864, while charging the works of the enemy at Kenesaw Mountain, Georgia, Levi Griffin was instantly killed, and was bur- ried on the field after the battle. His bereaved widow makes her home in Waterloo, and by the assistance of a pension from the government lives comfortably. His children are the wards of the nation he died to save.
ALEXANDER GRIM.
. Alexander Grim, farmer, is the youngest son and fourth child of Jonathan and Betsey (Long) Grim. He was born in Ross County, this state, July 25, 1815. His father's family consisted of four sons and four daughters : John, Jacob, William, Alexander, Polly, Susan, Elizabeth, and Sarah.
Our subject was married in the year 1836, to Elizabeth Cochran, of Ross County. They had four children : Mary Ann, Susan, Margaret, and John. Mrs. Grim died in Ross County, in 1840. Mr. Grim was again married, in the year 1844, to Jane Dick, of this county. By this marriage eight children have been born : William, Charles, Martha J., Ann, Jacob W., James M., Laura Alice and Evan.
Mr. Grim has been a resident of this county since 1840. He owns a farm, and is comfortably fixed for life.
JOSEPH S. HARRISON.
Joseph S. Harrison, farmer, was born in Madison Township, June 23, 1851, and is the first child of John J. and Cynthia A. (Shuffleberger) Harrison. His father was born in the same town- ship ; his mother was a native of Virginia. Batteal Harrison, his grandfather, was one of the early settlers of Madison Township, and did much in locating land claims for early settlers. The Har- rison family are directly related to William H. Harrison, ninth president of the United States.
Mr. Harrison was educated in the common schools of the neigh- borhood, obtained a fair education, and by years of practical busi- ness life, has added much knowledge to his store of book learning.
On the 28th of August, 1878, he married Margaret, first daughter
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of Henry Fulton, of Madison Township. Their only child, Nellie, was born May 17, 1880.
Mr. Harrison was elected to the office of justice of the peace, for Madison Township, April 4, 1881. He possesses the proper qualities of a good officer.
JOHN W. KELLOUGH.
John W. Kellough, farmer, was born in Indiana, July 5, 1839, and is the only son of John W. sen., and Rebecca (Pummel) Kel- lough of that state. The Kellough ancestry were from Scotland. Mr. Kellough came to this state, with his parents, at six weeks of age. He has but one sister, Mary Jane, wife of Samuel P. McLean, a resident of Madison County.
Our subject obtained a good education in his youth, and for several years taught school in Ross and Pike counties. He was married, June 5, 1862, to Senith V., daughter of Henry and Mary (Vinsonhaler) Poole, of Ross County.
George Vinsonhaler, the grandfather, of Mrs Kellough, was a native of Virginia, but was among the early pioneers of Ross Coun- ty, and it is said he assisted in laying out Chillicothe. Mrs. Kel- lough is of a family of seven children: Martha, Henry, Eleanor, (deceased,) Mary, Senith V., Emma C. and Christina. Mr. and Mrs. Kellough have had born to them ten children : Mary, born June 28, 1863; Charles Creighton, born January 4, 1865 ; Anna, born September 11, 1866 ; Nellie Dun, born February 20, 1868; Sallie Candis, born January 23, 1869; John William, born March 17, 1870; Claude H., born January 27, 1872, died November 28, 1878; Jesse Paul Ross, born April 17, 1874; Christine Kate, born September 20, 1877 ; Guy Robert, born March 2, 1881.
Mr. Kellough owns and occupies a farm of two hundred and four acres, lying partly in Madison and partly in this county. He resides on that part lying in Madison County, but in his business and other relations, he is indentified with the people of this county. He is a man of intelligence, and his children have a taste for books and study. .
JAMES M. NOBLE.
This subject is a native of Pennsylvania, and was born October
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21, 1833. He is the third son of James and Jane (Moore) Noble, who came to this state in 1835, settling in Guernsey County, where the father still resides.
The senior Noble was three times married. By the first wife he is the father of William, Samuel, James M., Margaret Ann, Sarah Jane and John Watson; by the second wife, Mary Elizabeth, Ethalinda, Joseph D., David and Thomas Pollock; by the third wife, Ezekiel and George.
Our subject enjoyed limited means of education, but made such careful use of his opportunities of study, as to obtain more than an ordinary education. He was a teacher of some experience in the years preceding his marriage. He was married July 29, 1856, to Maggie P., seventh child of William and Phœbe (Mannen) Ing- mire, of this state.
Mrs. Noble's father was a native of Maryland; her mother was from one of the New England States. Her father's family were Snowden, Nancy, George, Martha Ann, Edmond, James, Maggie P., Sarah J., Thomas, (died of wounds received at the battle of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania,) David, John, Lavina C., William and Mary. The sons all served in the Union army except William. Their mother died from the result of an accident from a runaway horse, in the year 1864 ; the father died six weeks later.
To Mr. and Mrs. Noble have been born three sons and eight daughters: Mary Elizabeth, born February 18, 1857, died October 3, 1863; Emma J., born June 12, 1858, married September 23, 1879, to Franklin R. Crow; Elmer E., born February 3, 1861, died October 2, 1867; Charles Vernon, born August 9, 1863; Ida, born July 8, 1865 ; Alfaretta, born August 1, 1867 ; Lulu May, born Oc- tober 7, 1869 ; Lenora Dell, born June 23, 1872; Maud Lettice, born July 24, 1875; Warren Pendleton, born August 2, 1877; Maggie Frances, born January 1, 1879.
Mr. Noble is practically a lumber and saw-mill man, having managed a saw-mill for more than twenty-six years. For the past years he has given attention to his farm of one hundred and four acres, near Madison Mills, on the north fork of Paint. This farm he purchased in 1865.
He has served as trustee of Madison Township for the past eleven years; is Master of Madison Grange, No. 229; represented the county in the State Grange three times; is a member of Bloom- ingburg Lodge, No. 449, F. & A. M .; a member of Fayette Chap-
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HISTORY OF FAYETTE COUNTY.
ter, No. 103, and of Ely Commandery, No. 28. He and his wife are members of the Presbyterian Church of Bloomingburg; the four oldest daughters are Methodists. Mr. Noble is superintendent of the Sabbath-school, of the Metliodist Episcopal Church, at Mad- ison Mills.
JAMES W. M'CAFFERTY.
James Wilson McCafferty is the second son and fourth child of William and Elizabeth (Mace) McCafferty, of Madison Township. He was born in the above township, March 21, 1853, and had the advantages of a common school education. He applied himself well to his studies, and by so doing obtained a fair education.
He was married March 13, 1877, to Mary, second daughter and fifth child of Henry and Lettice (Pancoast) Fulton, of Madison Mills. Mrs. McCafferty was born January 13, 1855. They have had one daughter born to their marriage, Marie, born June 12, 1879.
See biographies of Henry Fulton and William McCafferty.
JAMES M. NUTT.
James Monroe Nutt, is the eighth child and third son of his par- ents, James and Rachel (Cartmill) Nutt, of Virginia, in which state James was born January 1, 1821. His grandparents, John and Elizabeth (Houston) Nutt, came with their family and settled on the lands now occupied by Cornelius Leavell, in the year 1800. The parents and grandparents of our subject, died in the same place. The children of Rachel and James Nutt, were John, Sarah, Elizabeth, Catherine, Nancy, William, Rebecca, James M., Anna J., Lucinda, George, Matilda and Madison.
Our subject was married, to Mildred Cline, in the year 1842. Mrs. Nutt is the daughter of Henry and Catherine (Ramsey) Cline, of this county, and was born in 1823. They have had eight chil- dren born to them : Joanna, Lafayette, Angeline, Cornelius, James Mack, Serepta, Irvin W. and Elvina. Serepta and Irvin are de- ceased.
Joanna, married Phillip Sockman ; Lafayette, married Frances Callender ; Angeline, married Allen Keller; Cornelius, married Mary Holby ; James M. married Sarah Haggart ; Elvina, married Samuel Holby.
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Mr. Nutt began for himself' on a capital of eighty dollars, bought some stock, and by successive years of hard labor and careful in- vestment, has obtained a comfortable home near Waterloo. His son, Lafayette, did honorable service as a soldier in the late war. Mr. Nutt was educated very sparingly in the schools of the early time; but to this meagre store of knowledge, has added much by observation, reading, and contact with the world.
JOSHUA MAHAN.
See page 612.
JOHN MESSMORE.
The parents of John Messmore were natives of Pennsylvania, and came to Ohio in the year 1809, settling in Licking County. Our subject was born in 1808. He is of a family of seven children: Susanna, Mary, Laban, John, Eliza, and Rhoda.
Mr. Messmore was brought up to hard labor, and in his youth learned the business of carding and fulling. At twenty-eight years of age he came to the neighborhood of Waterloo, and es- tablished himself in the woolen-mill business; carried it on for forty years, keeping pace with the many improvements that per- tained to the trade in that time. In 1866 he sold his factory to his son, and in 1871 bought the Pancoast Mills on Deer Creek, above Waterloo, where he has since carried on the flouring busi- ness.
He was married, December 13, 1829, to Jerusua, daughter of Isaiah and Lettice Pancoast, born June 4, 1805, and fifty years afterwards, December 13, 1879, celebrated, with a multitude of friends, their golden wedding. Just one year later-December 13, 1880-his esteemed companion died. They were the parents of seven children who grew to maturity: Mariamne, Flavius J., Alvin L., Aurelius B., Otis B., Rienzi W., and Francenia. Of these only three survive. Alvin L. married Evaline Leach, of this county. He served in the war as captain of Company G, 113th[O. V. I., and was an officer of more than ordinary soldierly bearing. . He [is now a resident of St. Louis. Aurelius B. married Sarah Lindsey, and resides in Kansas. Rienzi W. married Mary F. Kel- ley, and resides in Waterloo.
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HISTORY OF FAYETTE COUNTY.
Uncle John Messmore is a man of steady habits, and unswerv- ing Christian character. For the past forty years he has lived a consistent member of the Old School Predestinarian Baptist Church. The society of which he is a member was established at the house of Isaiah Pancoast in the year 1813.
WILLIAM M. LEACH.
This subject is the second son of William B. and Mary (Monroe) Leach, of Virginia. On his mother's side, he is related to James Monroe, fifth president of the United States. His grandfather, Colonel William Monroe, after whom our subject was named, served with distinction in the Revolutionary War. Mr. Leach's father served in the war of 1812.
Our subject was born in Frederick County, Virginia, June 9, 1825, and at ten years of age came to Ohio with his father's family. They settled on what is now the land of O. W. Loof bourrow, near Mount Sterling. His father's family were Edgar B., William M., Sarah A., John N., George. T., Henry C., Mary C., and Benjamin F.
Our subject was married, March 18, 1847, to Clarissa J., daugh- ter of Adoniram and Roxana Bostwick, of Madison County. She was born July 29, 1827. Her father's children were Sally, Clarissa J., William, Caroline, Eliza Ann, Benjamin F. and Otho W. (twins), and Celesta.
They have had eight children born to them: Asher B., born August 31, 1848, died April 15, 1854; Adoniram B., born October 5, 1849, married Myrtle Parker, and lives in Kansas; Mary F., born November 26, 1851, married Cary Haines, and lives in Millville, Ohio; Finley, born October 27, 1854, died in infancy ; Mabel G., born September 24, 1857, married William H. Peasly, January 29, 1874, died October 7, 1875; Thurman B., born July 9, 1861, died March 16, 1862; Viola, born May 23, 1872, died June 19, 1872; Burl, born August 31, 1875, died in September, 1875.
Ralph Peasly, son of W. H. and Mabel (Leach) Peasly, lives with his grandparents since his mother's death, which occurred when Ralph was but seven months old.
The Bostwicks were originally from Vermont. Adoniram, the father of Mrs. Leach, was one of the early settlers of this township, and settled near Yankeetown. He now lives in Pike County. His father, William Bostwick, came to Ohio, with a large family, in
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1
1808, or 1810. His children were Adoniram, Sarah, Joseph, Fred- erick, William, Lucy Ann, Oliver, and Adley. Adoniram, Sarah, Oliver, and Adley, were long residents of this county.
C. G. LEAVELL.
Cornelius Gaines Leavell, farmer, was born in this township, No- vember 7, 1825, and is the first son and second child of John and Cynthia (Hedges) Leavell. His parents came to Ohio in 1797, from Virginia. To them were born Mary Ann, Cornelius G., John Boli- var, Benjamin Franklin, Nancy, Melinda, and Hannah Elizabeth.
Our subject was married, April 17, 1849, to Emma Harr, youngest daughter of James and Mary Harr, of Ross County. She was born in that county, May 23, 1829. Her parents had born to them six children : Elizabeth, James, William, Mary, Martha, and Emma.
To this union two children have been born : John P., born March 25, 1850, married Frankie Gamble, of this county, June 16, 1878; Benjamin W., born May 12, 1856, married Inez G. Clarridge, Octo- ber, 1880.
Our subject has resided in this township all his life, and has given his time and energies to hard work and legitimate trade, accumu- lating a valuable farm, and other representatives of wealth. He owns one hundred and thirty-five acres of land in Union, and five hundred and seventy-six acres in this township, and is one of the heaviest tax-payers of the township. He has, in years past, served the township as trustee, treasurer, and clerk, and in his official character was noted for honesty and efficiency. He pays consider- able attention to affairs of a public character, is a constant reader, and for twenty years past has taken a daily paper. His politics are of the staunch Republican sort, a fact made prominent in all the later years of his life.
JOHN LINDSEY.
John, sen., and Nancy Lindsey came from Virginia to Ohio, in 1809, and located first in Ross, and subsequently in Pickaway Coun- ty, where they died. They were the parents of the following chil- dren : John, Jacob, Thomas, Abram, James, Doratha, and Sarah and Phœbe (twins).
In 1802, Abram, father of our subject, was married, in Virginia,
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HISTORY OF FAYETTE COUNTY.
to Abigail Stewart, and came to Ohio with his parents, and died in Pickaway County. He was a soldier in the war of 1812. To him were born the following children: Sally, Thomas, Mary, John, Nancy, Samuel, and Abraham.
John spent the years of his minority in Pickaway County. He was sparingly educated in the common schools of the early times. He was married, November 9, 1839, to Sarah, daughter of John and Barbara (Hedrick) Bouse, of Virginia. The Bouses came to Ohio in 1821; they were of Dutch descent. Mrs. Lindsey was born February 17, 1819.
To this union nine children were born: Abraham, born Septem- ber 11, 1840; Thomas F., born January 6, 1843; Phæbe, born No- bember 28, 1845, died July 22, 1863; John Clinton, born July 25, 1848, died August 13, 1848 ; James, born September 9, 1849; Mary J .; born September 17, 1852; Sarah Missouri, born August 12, 1856; Abbie, born September 2, 1859; Charles, born March 17, 1862. Thomas married Marietta Dyer, January 31. 1860; Abraham mar- ried Catharine Glaze, November 29, 1864; James married Elizabeth Taylor, January 18, 1872; Missouri married J. W. Long, January 23, 1875; Mary J. married Amos Van Pelt, August 23, 1879.
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