The History of Wyandot County, Ohio, containing a history of the county, its townships, towns general and local statistics, military record, portraits of early settlers and prominent men etc, Part 103

Author:
Publication date: 1884
Publisher: Chicago, Leggett, Conaway
Number of Pages: 1072


USA > Ohio > Wyandot County > The History of Wyandot County, Ohio, containing a history of the county, its townships, towns general and local statistics, military record, portraits of early settlers and prominent men etc > Part 103


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JOHN H. MARCH was born April 7, 1838. The subject of this sketch first saw the light in Columbiana County, Ohio. His parents were Philip and Sarah (Gilmore) March, the former born in Berkeley County, Va., Sep- tember 14, 1803, and the latter in Allegheny County, Penn., in 1804, of Irish and German ancestry. They had eight children, six living, viz., Will- iam G., Henry C., John H., Samuel Q., Margaret J. and Daniel W. Mary A. and James S. are deceased. Our subject, John H. March, was educated in the ordinary branches of the common schools, and is a farmer by occupa- tion. October 3, 1868, he married Sarah Adams, daughter of Thomas and


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HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


Susanna (Fisher) Adams. She was born January 18, 1848. They have six children-Alvin, born July 6, 1869; Frank, born March 19, 1871; Clara L., born November 5, 1872; Charley, born June 6, 1875; Howard, born Febru- ary 18, 1879; Roy, born June 4, 1881. After marriage, Mr. March came with his family to Wyandot County, and in 1870, purchased land in Jack- son Township to the amount of eighty acres. Of this, about forty acres are cultivated, and the whole forms one of the pleasant and thrifty farms of the township. Mr. March has served six years as Township Clerk, and is a Democrat politically.


ELIAS McPEEK, now one of Wyandot's best citizens, was born Au- gust 17, 1833, in Guernsey County, Ohio, being the son of Rev. William and Rebecca (Bowen) McPeek, both of whom were born in Guernsey County, the former in 1808. A minister by profession, member of the Baptist Church in Noble County, he is still living, in excellent health for one of his years, filling three appointments in his ministerial work. The latter was born in 1811, and is still living. Seven children have blessed this union, but one having joined the army of the dead. They are Elias, Joseph, Eli D., Allen D., Philipp, Mary E. and Sarah J., deceased. Three of the sons, Joseph, Allen D. and Philipp, served in the late war. Joseph, enlisting in the three months' service, at the expiration of that time volunteered in the regular army, Ninety-second Regiment, serving nearly four years. He was at length discharged, however, on account of wounds received by the explosion of a shell, having five bullet-holes shot through various parts of his clothes at the same time. Allen D. entered the same regiment about the same time, but was soon discharged on account of physical disability. Philipp entered the service as a substitute, serving about three months. Elias, the main subject of this sketch, received a fair education in the public school of his time, closing his literary career in his seventeenth year. After this time he was engaged at monthly wages as a laborer on the farm, which occupation he followed till his marriage to Miss Mary A. E. Armstrong July 22, 1858. Mrs. McPeek was born March 22, 1833, and is the daughter of Thomas and Margaret (McQuoun) Armstrong, who are both yet living and in good health. The former has reached the advanced age of eighty and the latter seventy-five years. Six children are the result of their marriage- Washington A., Thomas M., William F., Eugene, Lillie and Ella M., de- ceased. After marriage, they rented and farmed for five years, then bought seventy-five acres of land in Jackson Township, Wyandot County, where they still reside, in the enjoyment of an elegant home as the fruits of their honest industry. A fine residence, good barn and other improvements to the value of $3,000 are the results of a commencement in life with but $300. In politics, Mr. McPeek is a thorough Democrat.


WALTER SANFORD, now one of Wyandot's most respected citizens, was born in Allegany County, N. Y., May 5, 1832. His parents were Jeremiah F. and Rebecca (Simerson) Sanford, the former being a native of New York, born February 18, 1805; the latter, of New Jersey, born in 1811. They were the parents of eight children-Walter, George F., John F. and Millissie, living, and Christina, Edward, Jackson L. and Jerod, deceased. A farmer by occupation, he received the education afforded by the common schools. March 11, 1858, he married Susannah McDaniel, daughter of Jane and Nancy (Hannah) McDaniel. Mrs. Sanford was born in 1830, December 4, and came of an excellent family. After his marriage, Mr. Sanford removed to Wyandot County, purchasing a farm of forty acres, upon which he still resides. His entire possession of real estate is 120 acres.


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JACKSON TOWNSHIP


This has been accumulated by hard labor, Mr. Sanford having but one horse, one cow and an ax with which to begin. In politics he is of Demo- cratic persuasion, and is a member of the Grange Lodge and Union Chris- tian Church.


HENRY SCHRIVER was born in Hardin County, Ohio, December 8, 1843. His parents were Henry and Sarah Schriver, natives of Pennsylvania, and of German extraction. Mr. Schriver was educated in the district school, and worked upon the farm till 1861, when he enlisted in the army of the United States, being mustered in at Camp Bartley, Mansfield, Ohio. Mov- ing from this point to Lexington, Ky., and other points, and spending five weeks of his time in the hospitals along the route. he was at length enabled to join his regiment at Nashville. At the battle of Shiloh, so memorable in history, he first engaged in the dreadful work of destroying his fellow-men. From Shiloh he was moved to East Tennessee; thence to Louisville, Ky., and from that point to Stone River, where he was wounded on the second day of the great fight at that point. After four months' confinement in the hos- pitals at Nashville, 'T'enn., and New Albany, Ind., he next joined his regi- ment at Murfreesboro, taking part in the engagements at Liberty Gap, Chickamauga, Mission Ridge, Buzzard Roost, Resaca, Peach Tree Creek and Kenesaw Mountain. Here he received a second wound and was subsequently removed to the rear a short time and again went to the front and served in the engagements of Atlanta and Lovejoy Station, being under fire 112 days. He then went to Chattanooga. His three years' service being now expired, he was mustered out and received an honorable discharge, having partici- pated in some of the greatest battles of the greatest nation beneath the sun. On his return home, Mr. Schriver resumed his labor upon the farm, which occupation he is still engaged in. He was married, September 19, 1869, to Mrs. Susanna Hogan, and subsequently emigrated to Missouri. Meeting with misfortune here in the death of his wife, he returned to Ohio and after- ward was united in marriage to Mrs. Maggie E. Morrison, widow of James R. Morrison. She was born August 13, 1849, and was married to her first husband, February 25, 1869. Two children were born to them-Eldorado G., born June 24, 1871, and Lillian M., born August 2, 1873. The wife having obtained the homestead from the administrator, the husband has added fifty acres more by subsequent purchase and a fine new dwelling, worth $2,000, has been erected upon the premises. In politics Mr. Schriver is a Republican. He is a member of the G. A. R., and also of the Presby - terian Church.


ABRAHAM H. VANORSDALL was born March 18, 1827, in Cayuga County, N. Y. He is the son of Andrew and Catharine (Vanorsdale) Vanors- dall, natives of Pennsylvania and New Jersey respectively; the former born in the year 1800, and the latter in 1803, of German lineage. In 1846, Mr. Vanors- dall, with his family, moved to Ohio, settling in Wyandot County, Mifflin Township, where he purchased eighty acres of land, upon which he resided till his death, which occurred in July, 1848. Eight children were born to them, six of whom still survive-Abraham H., Hannah P., John A., Jonathan O., Katie and Ruby. The deceased were Lovind and Isaac A. Our subject received a liberal education in the common schools of his day, closing his literary pursuits at the age of nineteen years. After this he was engaged in farm labor during the summer, and taught school in winter until his mar- riage, which took place in June, 1849, to Miss Ruth Snider, daughter of Daniel and Anna (Dean) Snider. Six children were the fruits of this mar- riage, all of which are still living except Daniel S. Their names are as


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HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


follows: Daniel S .; Agnes, wife of G. N. Fox; Julia M., wife of B. F. Stultz; Emma E., wife of John M. La Rowe; Curtis A. and Minnie M. Mr. Van- orsdall purchased 240 acres of land in Wyandot County, and settled upon the same in 1863. Since that time he has served in nearly all the offices in the township in which he resides, and also in some of the county offices. As Township Clerk he served for a term of sixteen years; as Treasurer, ten years; as Justice of the Peace, twenty-one years; as Assessor, two years. By appointment he was made Infirmary Director for one year, and afterward, by election, six years. In 1882, he was chosen as Commissioner, which office he still (1883) holds. He is a member of the F. and A. M., I. O. O. F. and Grange fraternities, and also of the Christian Union Church. In politics he is a stanch Democrat. He is still living on his finely cultivated farm, in the companionship of an excellent wife, and surrounded by a host of friends.


M. H. WALTERMIRE was born in Fairfield County, Ohio, September 29, 1827, and is the son of Samuel and Margaret (Clymer) Waltermire. Having a good knowledge of the English branches, at the age of twenty-one years he obtained a livelihood by teaching school and laboring at the car- penter's trade till the year 1865, when he obtained a piece of land in Jack- son 'Township, Wyandot County, where he has since resided. On January 26, 1854, he married Mary E. Edwards, daughter of William and Mary A. (Bell) Edwards. Mrs. Waltermire was born November 22, 1832, in Bel- mont County, Ohio. Their marriage has been blessed by eight children- William M., born January 21, 1855; Mary M., born September 5, 1856 (wife of J. D. Alexander); Samuel H., born August 3, 1858; Andrew J., born August 30, 1860; Lemuel G., born February 19, 1864; Joseph H., born February 23, 1866; George W., born June 7, 1868; Emma M., born May 6, 1875. Mr. Waltermire is the owner of 120 acres of land, all under cultivation, and provided with a comfortable residence. He is a member of the I. O. O. F., and a sound Democrat. As Justice of the Peace he has served fifteen years, and as Township Clerk five years. He enjoys a pleas- ant home, the companionship of an excellent wife, and is well respected as a citizen.


HEZEKIAH YOUNG. In Crawford County, Ohio, March 11, 1844, this gentleman first appeared on the scene of life. He is the son of Surrena (Sinn) and George Young, the former born in Pennsylvania, in 1810, the latter in Virginia, in 1806, and dying in the years 1877 and 1848 respectively, being of German ancestry. Eight children blessed this union, five of whom are still living, as follows: Peter S., Jeremiah, Delilah, Hezekiah and Martin. Fannie, Isaac and Maria are numbered among the dead. Mr. Young was a soldier in the Mexican war, and in that capacity rendered able service in the cause of his country. The subject of this sketch was educated in the common schools of his day, emigrating to Missouri at the age of fifteen, but returning to Crawford County, Ohio, after an absence of six months, and working on the farm as a hand till the spring of 1864, at which time he entered the United States service. He was enlisted in the One Hundred and Forty-fourth Regiment, and, after three months' skirmishing in the Shen- andoah Valley, was honorably discharged. Returning home, he labored on the farm till his marriage, which took place September 27, 1866, to Miss Malinda Baum, daughter of Jackson and Jane (Stokely) Baum, who was born May 8, 1847. As a result of this marriage eight children were born to them, all of whom are still living. The names of these are as follows: George W., Mary M., Ruie S., James W., Hezekiah, Gustus F., Harley L.


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JACKSON TOWNSHIP.


and Myrtie J. After marriage he still engaged in farming and saw milling till the year 1877, when he purchased 107 acres of land in Wyandot County, sixty of which are in a good state of cultivation. Mr. Young is Independent in politics, is a member of the G. A. R., and highly respected as a citizen.


PETER ZIMMERMAN. On May 15, 1811, in Columbiana County, Ohio, the subject of this sketch first saw the light of this world. He is the son of Peter and Sarah (Connel) Zimmerman, the former born April 15, 1776; the latter was born in Northampton County, Penn., both of German extraction. Our subject received a moderate English education in the common school, closing his work in that direction to engage in the more rugged pursuits of farm labor. On January 14, 1841, he was united in marriage with Miss Caroline Felty, daughter of John G. and Barbara (Hem- merly) Felty. Her father was born in Wittenburg, Germany, in 1789. Her mother was born in Wittenburg, Germany, in 1792. To them were born seven children, but three of whom are now living, viz .: Catharine G., Caroline and Frederica. The deceased are Christina E., John C., Jacob and John. After his marriage Mr. Zimmerman moved to Wyandot County, Ohio, locating in Jackson Township. Here he entered 160 acres of land, making the entry in 1835, when but little more than a dozen families were living in the township, it being then in its wildest condition, with the Indian roaming at will over its uninhabited plains. Of this land he has placed about 130 acres in an enviable state of improvement, and by incessant toil has built for himself a comfortable home. In politics, Mr. Zimmerman is a firm Democrat, having cast his first vote for the venerable "Hickory" Jackson. He is a member of the Lutheran Church, and is the happy father of twelve children, ten of whom are still living, named as follows: John F., born December 23, 1841; Simon P., February 9, 1844; Henry K., November 3, 1845; Juda, March 30, 1849; Catharine, April 22, 1851; Christina, May 11, 1853; David W., born August 11, 1855; Susana, April 18, 1860; Con- rad T., February 23, 1862; Perry C., November 22, 1865. The deceased are Sarah, born August 18, 1847, died October 6, 1848; Caroline, born De- cember 1, 1857, died March 1, 1865.


SIMON ZIMMERMAN was born in Columbiana County, Ohio, August 12, 1823. He is the son of Peter and Sarah (Kemne) Zimmerman. His father was born in Virginia, May 15, 1776, and died September 15, 1861. His mother was born in Maryland, May 26, 1781, and died January 18, 1834. Mr. Zimmerman obtained his education in the common schools, and at the age of eighteen turned his entire attention to farming. On Septem- ber 7, 1854, he married Miss Mary A. Dubbs, daughter of John and Anna (Woolfrom) Dubbs, born January 29, 1837, in Columbiana County, Ohio. They are the parents of three children-George L., born June 11, 1855; Ida Ann, born May 26, 1858; John O., born January 30, 1869. Mr. Zimmer- man emigrated to Wyandot County, Jackson Township, in 1863, buying 160 acres of land, to which he afterward added forty more. Although over- grown with timber, Mr. Zimmerman has made his farm tillable, and now lives in the enjoyment of worldly plenty, surrounded by many warm friends. He is a Democrat in politics, a member of the Lutheran Church and of the I. O. O. F. He has served nine years as Township Trustee.


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HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


CHAPTER VI.


MARSEILLES TOWNSHIP.


THE TOWNSHIP AS ORGANIZED-ITS PHYSICAL FEATURES-FIRST IMPROVE- MENTS-EARLY SETTLERS-OWNERS OF REAL AND PERSONAL ESTATE IN 1845-EDUCATIONAL-RELIGIOUS-OFFICIALS SINCE 1849-MISCELLANEOUS- VILLAGE OF MARSEILLES-BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.


T' HIS township, which comprises Township 4 south, Ranges 12 and 13 east, is what is termed a fractional township, being longer, by an aver- age of five miles from east to west, than it is in breadth from north to south. It was organized in 1824. Part of it was formerly Grand Township, Marion County, and part was separated from Goshen Township, Hardin County, by the erection of Wyandot County in 1845, when it derived its name from its chief village, Marseilles. It is bounded on the north by Jackson and Mifflin Townships; on the east by Pitt Township; on the south by Marion and Hardin Counties, and on the west by Hardin County and Jackson Township.


The quality of the soil is some of the best in the county, and is specially adapted for bearing wheat and other cereals. Although a goodly portion of this township to the east of Marseilles Village is solid forest or prairie land, yet the many prosperous farms that abound in the remainder afford abundant evidence of the fruitfulness of the land under care of the agri- culturist, whose attention appears to be pretty equally bestowed in the pro- duction of corn, wheat, hay, potatoes, and other crops.


The principal stream that pursues its meandering course through Mar- seilles Township is known as Tymochtee Creek. Entering from Marion County, on the farm of Frederick Fehl, in the southeast corner of Section 17, the creek takes an almost due northerly course, and, after skirting the western limits of Marseilles Village, it passes through Sections 8 and 5 in a somewhat serpentine manner. and makes its exit into Mifflin Township on the farm of Isaac Johnson, in Section 5. Most of the tributaries which give birth to the Tymochtee have their sources in the northwest quarter of Marion County; some of them rise in Hardin County, and the Little Tymochtee, which pours its waters into its more pretentious namesake in Marion County, has its genesis partly in Hardin County and partly in Jackson Township. The main artery of this tributary peragrates the western portion of Mar- seilles Township from northwest to southeast, entering at the southwest corner of Section 2 west, and in passing through the northeast quarter of Section 11 west, it picks up a streamlet (which has its rise in Hardin County, flowing northeast), and, after coursing through Sections 12 west, 13 west and 18, it forsakes this township on the farm of Adam M. Hartle, at a point where the old Bellefontaine road crosses it on the southern edge of Section 18. A small bend of one of the feeders of the Little Tymochtee dodges across the northwest corner of Section 10 west, on the farm of James B. Pool, and other than a rill that rises in the west of Section 7, on the farm of Michael Bower, and trills eastward into Tymochtee Creek at Marseilles Village. There is no other stream of any moment in the township.


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MARSEILLES TOWNSHIP.


FIRST IMPROVEMENTS.


The first highway to be regularly laid out, in this township, was the State or Bellefontaine road in 1822, which enters from Mifflin Township, on the farm of John P. Miller, in Section 4, and, after traversing the township in a southwesterly direction and passing through Marseilles Village, it enters Marion County at the southern edge of Section 18. Two roads enter from Pitt Township in the east at Sections 1 and 13 respectively, the more north- erly of which runs about due west, and strikes Jackson Township at Section 2 west; the other road leads due west till it reaches the western edge of Sec- tion 16, when it proceeds due north a short distance; then due west again for a quarter of a mile; then northwest till it terminates in Marseilles Vil- lage. From the old Bellefontaine road two others diverge, one leading northwest into Jackson Township, and the other taking a somewhat irregu- lar route northwest, west and southwest, into Hardin County.


EARLY SETTLEMENTS.


It was not until within the second decade of this century that the first ax was wielded toward clearing the township we now write of, and reducing it from the condition of an unbroken forest to a place fit for the habitation of civilized man.


Probably the oldest settler in the township, now living, is Samuel Simp- son, who was born July 8, 1815. He at one time drove a stage between Cincinnati and Portland, and between Springfield and Columbus, for two . years, commencing that occupation when eighteen years of age. He came with his parents, Samuel and Elizabeth Simpson, to Marseilles Township in 1821, and now resides in Marseilles. In his association with the Indians, he learned to speak their language, and still possesses that acquirement. Garrett Fitzgerald; a native of Virginia and a married man with a family of seven children, settled in the southeast quarter section in 1822. In the same year came David and Jerry Terry. In 1823, William Renick, a native of Virginia, and Charles Crosberry; in 1824, Thomas Wallace; in 1825, A. Renick, James Brown, Robert Ward, Richard Lee, Harvey Buckmeister, Col. Hunt, William Bowsher, Anthony Bowsher, David Harpster, David Miller. In 1826, Daniel and Samuel Straw and Joseph Parish; John Heckathorn came in 1828, and Maj. Hugh Long, a tanner, located in the village of Marseilles in 1832. He was born in West Liberty, Va., April 12, 1794, and served in the war of 1812 as a member of a Light Horse Com- pany, commanded by Capt. Ichabod Nye, of Knox County. They camped on what is now known as "Armstrong's Bottom," about two miles south of Upper Sandusky. When Maj. Long came to engage in the business of tan- ning in Marseilles in 1832, Charles Merriman owned the only frame house in the village, which then consisted of some six or eight cabins. The Major filled, in his lifetime, nearly every township office, and he did much toward building up the village to what it now is. During the latter years of his life, he drew a pension from the Government for his services.


John Fehl, a native of Pennsylvania, was born September 1, 1792; came to this township in 1834, and entered eighty acres of land. He was the father of nine children. His death occurred July 8, 1871. Mrs. Fehl, his widow, was born April 16, 1794, and is now living on the old homestead, in her ninety-first year.


Alexander Pool, born in Pennsylvania in July, 1799, came to Marseilles Township in the spring of 1834, and entered eighty acres of land. He died December 24, 1880. John W. Kennedy settled in Marseilles in 1835,


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HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


and was appointed Postmaster of Marseilles Village April 17, 1883. He was born October 6, 1809. Frederick Kennedy, a native of Pennsylvania, came to the village of Marseilles in 1835, and worked as a mechanic until his death in 1841. Michael Bower, born in New York, January 19, 1818, came with his parents, David and Susanna Bower, in 1835; entered 276 acres of land. David Bower died in 1857, aged seventy-four, and Mrs. Bower died in the same year at the same age. Peter L. Demarest was born August 19. 1800, in New York; came here in 1835 from Covington, N. Y., in a wagon, and entered 160 acres of land near Marseilles Village. In 1868, he moved into that village, where he died October 10, 1883. Among others who arrived in this township during or prior to 1835, may be mentioned Socrates Hartle, born July 23, 1818, in Georgetown, Penn., who came with his mother, brother and sister (John and Esther) and entered 240 acres of land. He acquired in all 1,288 acres of land, and died June 21, 1877, leaving an estate valued at $70,000. He was a very prominent and highly esteemed citizen, and as a solid, reliable man was known far and wide. Others were Henry Quail, David Young and son, John Hankins. David Bowers, Henry Haner, Z. Hurd, - Waller, Ethan and John Terry, Dr. Westbrook, Nicholas Bowers, Elisha Parker, Benjamin Ellis, Dr. Hall, Henry Hawthorne and T. Hendrickson.


Samuel Studebaker, who was born in Pennsylvania in 1816, settled in Marseilles Township prior to 1838. Enoch Thomas, born in Hardy County, Va., July 30, 1814, came to Franklin County, Ohio, in 1838, and in the spring of the same year to this township, where he bought the land on which he now resides. Thomas Emptage, a native of Kent, England, born July 18, 1802, emigrated to America in 1833, and after residing two years in Richland County, Ohio, and four years in Hardin County, Ohio. came to Marseilles, where he died March 15, 1879. His widow, a native of Hamer- sham, England, is now living, in the seventy-fifth year of her age. Parker Lee, who spent 1840-42 in Marseilles Township, was born in Maryland, served through the war of 1812, and died in Salt Rock Township, Marion County.


The owners of real and personal estate in the township of Marseilles in 1845, at the organization of the county, were as follows:


OWNERS OF REAL ESTATE.


Andrew Alexander, William Adams, Solomon Adams, Samuel Adams, Hugh Adams, Alexander Armstrong, Ephraim Atkinson, David Bower, Charles L. Boalt, Joseph Boucher, Ozias Bowen, David Bowers, John Bowers, George H. Busby, S. S. Bennett, Joseph P. Corey, David J. Corey, David Cross, Edwin Case, John Caughly, Josiah Copeland, Abraham Dean, Peter L. Demarest, Elisha Davis, Davenport & Monahan, Frank Eller, Stephen Frost, Jr., Isaac Farmer, John Fehl, Talmage Hildreth, Hanson Hooker, Henry H. Haner, Zadock Hurd. Thomas B. Hendrickson, Alexan- der Ingham, Orange Johnson, John W. Kennedy, Samuel Kelly, Rachel Kirk, Henry Heckathorne, John Heckathorne, Jacob Harrold, Robert Longberry, Hugh Long, Simeon Miller, Peter H. Mitchell, James May, David Miller, Charles Merriman, Merriman & Carey, T. McCaully, Hugh Nugent, Will- iam Norton, Alston Norton, Charles Merriman, Gilbert Olney, Jonathan Owens, Alexander Pool, Philip Penser, James Pool, Elisha Parker, Benja- min Pancake, Henry Quail, Ivey Renick, Elizabeth Renick, Abel Renick, Paulina Reber, James Rhoads, Crawford Richey, Josiah Robinson, Rob- ert Smith, David Smith, State of Ohio, Jacob Smail, Daniel Snyder,




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