USA > West Virginia > Upshur County > The history of Upshur county, West Virginia, from its earliest exploration and settlement to the present time > Part 50
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Take alone dear old Augusta, and cast your eyes about ;
See you not, short-sighted stranger, how this mighty tree has grown? Can you not repeat with me then, "By our fruits we all are known"?
1850
We know that Michael K., was brave, because his sons were so,
We know that Michaels sons were brave, because they faced the foe. We know that Michaels grandsons were brave as they were true, For they shed their blood for freedom, and laid their lives down too.
1860
We know that Margaret K., was good, because her daughters were,
This rule has come straight down to us, and shines out bright and clear ; No better soldiers ever drew, a sword in any strife,
No better citizens can be found within our civil life.
1865
They followed the noble Washington and share his glory now, In the war of eighteen hundred and twelve, they gladly left the plow ; They followed Lee and Jackson, all honor to their name, And history will record this fact, to their glory and their fame.
1870
A hundred Koiners live today, a hundred come and go, A hundred till this great old earth, and wander to and fro; A hundred Koiners join the son, for peace in this broad land, From the mountains in Virginia, to the river Rio Grande.
1872
Their lives o'er all this glorious land are happy bright and free, Their hearts are full of music now, o'er valley, hill and lea ; In this land of love and chivalry, no matter where or when, They are first in peace and war, among the sons of men.
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1873
With gentle hearts in time of peace, in war they're steady, strong, And though they're first in charity, they'll frown upon a wrong ; There are many men in time of peace, who are silent as the grave,
But insult their home or country, they are gallant, strong and brave.
1874
If you don't think a Koiner'll fight, first put him in the van, In one company in the Civil War, there were ten Koiners to the man; And not a single one of them, but shed his noble blood, Which flowed out for his country, in that awful civil flood.
1875
There were Koiners followed Ashby, there were those who followed Lee, There were those who followed Jackson, in the struggle to be. free ; There are men who dare to blame them for what they thought was right, There are men who call them traitors, for their duty in this fight.
1876
If Washington was a traitor, in his effort to be free, So, too, was Stonewall Jackson, so was the immortal Lee ; So was Sir William Wallace, who for Scotland, lost his life, So was William Tell a traitor, fighting for his home and wife.
1877
No, they'll never be called traitors, by those who love the right,
By those who love true charity, or view with reason's sight ; Or so long as Virginia's mountains, o'er their graves their vigils keep, And her noble Shenandoah rushes down the mountains steep.
1878
Where's the father who fought with Jackson? where's the son who fought with Lee?
Where's the mother who prayed for liberty? or the sister to be free?
Where are husbands, wives, and daughters? who served their native State? Where are lover, friends and sweethearts, parted by the garden gate?
1879
Some have passed beyond the river, and "sleep beneath the trees," Some are nearing now the border, gently wafted by the breeze; Some are only waiting, watching, for the bugle on the shore, To be called to meet their captain, and to join that happy corps.
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1880
It has been said that it would take a hundred years or more, For any man to become great, in song and story lore ; But in the case of Michael K., though great his memory now, His greatness told in everything, in sword, in anvil, plow.
1881
Of this father of this goodly race, many stories are told, They the told in acts of chivalry, and written in letters of gold; They are living, walking stories, shown in every noble son, Some of these will soon be ended, there are some that's just begun.
1882
The mother of this sturdy band, still moves a shining lighe,
Her daughters living come and go, the stars ne'er shone more bright ; As mothers they tell the story, as wives, are gentle true, They never fail at duty's call, or liberty to imbue.
1883
The same God of Michael Koiner blesses his descendants here, The same sun upon their harvests shines down from year to year ; The stars of heaven twinkle on, at night, the same old moon, The seasons come and go, as then, the blessings just as soon.
1885
We'll sing a song to Michael K., and to his noble wife, She loved him for himself alone, and followed him through life; Here let him rest where now he lies, here, too, his worthy dame, But in honor to them raise a stone, to signify their fame.
1886
Then to this brave old pioneer, a monument we'll raise. Who calmly sleeps beneath the sod, in token of our praise ; For nearly one hundred years, he'd rested here in peace And though his body's in the earth, his memory ne'er shall cease.
1887
And here beside him rests his wife, as good and fully great, She loved him too, while living, and dying shares his fate ; The dew of many, many years, have wet the graves o'er head ; Though cold and silent they lie here, yet their memory's not dead.
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1888
An hundred coming after him, have honored loved his name, An hundred more to come will do and say the very same; They read the same old bible, this Kioner read, They led the same true honest lives, this pioneer led.
1889
So hundreds that will come and go, from o'er this wide, wide land, Will tell to children on their knees of Michael Koiner's band; Of how the children of this side, with single intent moved, Erected here a monument, to one they honored, loved.
1890
How from the Gulf of Mexico, from the Atlantic ocean's roar, From the Rocky Mountains high, from the Pacific's placid shore, From the plains of Illinois, from the river Rio Grande,
Come this mighty race of people. from over all this wide, wide land.
I891
Come to show their honor for him, come to look upon his grave,
Come to raise a stone above him, come to show that they were brave ; Come to see a patriarch's tomb, help to carve his deathless name ;
Come to raise a monument, to show his never dying fame.
1892
We'll sing of these when far away, if e'er we chance to roam, We'll sing of these to children, around each happy home ; We'll tell of these many virtues, we'll tell too, of their fame, And how we erected a monument, in honor of their name.
JOSEPH CRAWFORD, born May 24, 1829, in Rockingham County, Virgi- nia, moved to Lewis County in 1847.
November 4, 1852, he married Lydia Margaret Eagle, the daughter of George Eagle of Highland County, Va., she was born March I, 1832, and imme- diately they returned to Lewis County to make that their future home. Children : George Robert, born June 2, 1852; Bertie, born June 2, 1854, dead ; John Bickes, born April 13, 1855; Hazel Wyant, born April 9, 1857; Henry Harrison, born February 16, 1859; Joseph Wilbur, born December 2, 1866; Mary Anetta, born November 4, 1862; Suanna Susan, born October 8, 1865; Anna Viola, born December 17, 1867; Minnie Bell, born September 5, 1872; Alvin Willie, born March 13, 1876; Rosa Alice, born May 2, 1876, adopted daughter.
Joseph Crawford was a son of Obediah Crawford and grandson of Zach- ariah and the great grandson of Morton Crawford of Scotch-Irish ancestry.
He is a farmer and a leading citizen of Banks District.
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GEORGE L. CRITES, born December 13, 1847, son of Jacob Crites and Mahalia Pringle and the grandson of William Pringle and NeNie (Rollins) Pringle, Pringle being a direct descendant of Samuel Pringle. He married Mar- garet J. Heavner, December 24, 1868. She was the daughter of Jonathan and Margaret J. (Flesher) Hefner, and the granddaughter of Peter Hefner of Ger- man descent from Virginia. And their children are William P., Columbus J., Henry J., and Edgar Fay.
At the beginning of the war, August 1863, he volunteered in Company E. of the 4th Regiment of the West Virginia Cavalry, for six months and when that time expired he re-enlisted in the Ist West Virginia Cavalry and served in that Company until the close of the war, and was discharged with his company at Wheeling.
He has been a farmer all his life, owning a large farm on the waters of Glady Fork. He retired and gave the farm to his sons.
COLUMBUS JONATHAN CRITES, a farmer and live stockman of Buck- hannon District. His farms containing 220 acres of land, lies on the waters of Glady Fork and Stone Coal. He lives in the homestead of the once Hon. A. W. C. Lemons. His birth is fixed as the 10th day of April, 1871. His parents are George L. Crites and Margaret Hefner Crites, his grandparents are Jacob M. Crites and Mahala Pringle on his fathers side and Jonathan Hefner on his mother's side. He was raised on a farm, loves farming and pursues it with success.
On June 19, 1896, he married Stella McCue, daughter of Franklin and Par- thena McCue, and their childrenare: Aubra Cecil, Ernie Lester, Esker Franklin.
WILLIAM P. CRITES, County Commissioner of Upshur County, 1907- 19II, was born September 7, 1869, on Glady Fork of Stone Coal, the son of George L. Crites and Margaret Heavner, the grandson of Jacob Crites and the great grandson of Michael and Catherine Hyer, both of German descent. His mother was the daughter of Johnathan Heavner and Margaret Flesher, who were natives of Highland County, Virginia.
The subject of this sketch was raised on a farm and received his education in the public school.
On April 5, 1893, he married Alice M. McCue of Lewis County, the daughter of Franklin and Parthens Hudson and the granddaughter of William McCue and Frances Stansberry of Albermarle County, Va.
Mr. Crites is a farmer, owns a good farm, is a Republican in politics and is the father of one child whose name is Dessie.
JAMES DAVID CRITES, was born at Hinkleville on June 4, 1852, the son of Abram Crites and the grandson of Jacob Crites, emigrant direct from Gemany. His mother was Wealthy Pringle, the daughter of John Pringle of Sycamore Fame. He was one of a family of sixteen children. His brothers and sisters being, Asberry, Marietta, wife of A. B. Vincent; Catherine, wife of Clayton P. Cutright ; Rebecca Ann, wife of A. E. Crites ; Martha wife of Gideon Hawkins ; Jane, wife of Samuel Smallridge; Harriet, wife of Elzie Nixon ; Peggy, Hanson, Homer, Stillman, Joseph, Isaac, John D and Abram.
He married Virginia Wentz, February 26, 1872.
Children, Lucy W., Sarah May, Olie E., James B., Jr., and Charles W.
His wife's parents were James W. Wentz and Lucy K. Harris, and his wife's grandfather was John Wentz of Rockbridge County, Va., being a descendant from one of the Wentzes who served seven years in the army for the Independence of
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his country. His wife's mother was a daughter of David Harris of Hanover County, Va.
Mr. Crites is a farmer and an ordained minister in the New School Baptist Church.
JAMES L. CRITES, a farmer, was born January 26, 1854. Son of Isaac N. G. Crites the grandson of Jacob Crites and the great grandson of Abram Crites, who is the son of a German emigrant, by that name. His mother was Martha Shackleford of Virginia, his father was a union soldier and a private in the Ioth West Virginia Infantry.
Married Stella M. Duke and to them was born one child, Vesta L.
JOSEPH CRITES was born March 23, 1846, is a native of Upshur County, Son of Abraham and Wealthy (Pringle) Crites. His mother was the daughter of William Pringle, who was the son of Samuel Pringle, who came with his brother John to Turkey Run in 1770. He is one of sixteen children, had seven sisters and eight brothers, fourteen lived to majority and thirteen lived to marry.
On the first day of April. 1862, he volunteered in Company B, 10th West Virginia Volunteer Infantry, U. S. A .. under Captain J. L. Gould. His company was with General Averill in all of his raids including the notorious Salem raid. Was discharged at Richmond July 9, 1865, and mustered out at Wheeling August 9, 1865.
In 1869, January 1., he married Harriet A. Brake, daughter of Lemuel and Mary (Hyre) Brake and the granddaughter of John Brake. His wife's mother was the daughter of Noah Hyre. To this union were born five children : Infant dead : Coleman C., James D .. Abraham L., and Florence. The third and last are still alive.
December 19, 1892, he married for his second wife Sarah E. Mckinley, daughter of Albert G. and Berlinda (Blake) Mckinley and the granddaughter of Thomas and Sarah ( Stewart) Mckinley, she was a descendant of the Stewart family of Morgantown.
PHILLIP CRITES. One of the industrious and energetic young business men of Banks District. His birth place was Selbyville. One of the towns springing up along the B. & O., after its extension southward from Buckhannon to Pickens. This young man being raised on a farm and in a grist mill, availed himself of every opportunity for improvement and when the iron horse found its way into the dense lumber forests about his home, was ready to accept positions of trust. He went into the lumber business and is still in it, always working for the good of his employers.
He is the son of Abraham Crites, Jr., and Rebecca Ann Crites and the grand- son of Abraham Crites, Sr., whose wife was Wealthy Pringle, a daughter of Wil- liam Pringle.
His wife was Margaret Lewis, daughter of Abram Lewis.
JACOB W. CRITES, born March 20, 1839. son of Jacob and Lucinda (Gil- lett) Crites and the grandson of Abram and Barbara (Post) Crites. Had twelve brothers and sisters as follows: Lucy, wife of John D. Linger: Susan, wife of Jacob Clark; Samantha, wife of Wash Summers; Abraham; Milvina, wife of Chanie Pringle ; Isaac ; Barbara Ann, wife of Christopher T. Cutright ; Elizabeth ; Louvernie, wife of Thamer Cutright ; Jane, wife of Jacob Hunt : Minerva, wife of Coyner Wyatt ; Jemima, wife of Jonathan Gould.
Married Martha Liggett, daughter of Levi and Rebecca (Reger) Liggett in December, 1862.
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Children : Hoy Crites, married Virginia Miles; Nimrod Crites and Hyer D. Crites ; Daniel W. Crites.
Elected Constable in Buckhannon District ; elected first member of Board of Education and then made President of the same.
Owns 50 acres, at Lorentz, of valuable land. Resided in Ohio for some time. WILLIAM CLARK CRITES, son of Abram Crites, Jr. A soldier in Com- pany A, under Captain Morgan Darnall. His father is now a pensioner. His mother was Mary Simmons, daughter of Jonas Simmons. His father being a blacksmith, raised his son to pursue the same trade and thus W. C., since his birth, December 10, 1855, has spent the most of his life in the shop of his father, and in his own shop. He is a Republican in politics and his wife's maiden name was Lenora Davis of Barbour County.
CHARLES W. CROWSER, son of David and Elizabeth, (Sprouse) Crow- ser of Lewis County, his father was a confederate soldier, was captured and died in Camp Chase and was the father of nine children. Seven of whom are still living.
The subject of this sketch was born June 9, 1863. Married Maud J. Tong of Missouri, and to them have been born three children.
Ray W., Charles R. and Terissa May.
Mr. Crowser has been more or less engaged in the lumber business for the past twenty years. First in the State of Missouri, and since in the state of West Virginia. In 1892, he was made foreman of the Holly Lumber Company Mills at Pickens, West Virginia. Was afterwards promoted to assistant General Man- ager. Came to Buckhannon in 1900, where he has since lived.
SAMUEL WEBSTER CURRENCE, born October 5, 1871. Son of Adam M. Currence and Sarah Jane Tenney, daughter of John L. Tenney, soldier in Upshur Battery, and son of Josiah Tenney and Lydia (Currence) Tenney, daughter of William Currence, who built Currence Fort in Randolph County.
Adam M. Currence was a son of John, who was a son of John, mentioned in History of Randolph, as Sheriff of Randolph County. Adam M. was a soldier in Company I, 3d West Virginia Cavalry and served throughout the war. Is a pensioner and a farmer of Washington District. In the Adam M. Currence family there were five sons and two daughters of which the subject of this sketch is the oldest.
Samuel Webster Currence married on January 1, 1895, Lou Nay, daughter of Jed and Julia (Jollif) Nay and four children have been given to this union : Emerson De Witt, Troy Mansell, Stewart Blair and Theodore Mason.
Mr. Currence began teaching in 1887. Is a farmer of Washington District, has been Postmaster of Queens for four years and is now Postmaster at Sand Run. Was secretary of Board of Education for four years and was County Execuive Committeeman for six years. He is a member of the Odd Fellows, Lodge No 248, Middle Fork and was one of the charter members.
THOMAS C. CUNNINGHAM, was born February 14, 1861. The son of Andrew and Rebecca (Fleming) Cunningham. He has three brothers and one sister, namely : Samuel W., Charles F., Andrew, and Sarah J.
Married Maud Bean, daughter of Gabriel Bean.
Children : James A., Gracie M., Roy L., Troy S., Laura B.
JOHN MCAVOY CURRY, member elect of the Lower House of the West Virginia Legislature, was born October 23, 1847. Raised on a farm, owns a farm of 350 acres on the waters of the Little Kanawha River, near the postoffice of Kan- awha Head. His land is all underlaid with the Freeport Coal vein, which is locally
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known as the McKiskic vein. His term of office as legislator expires in 1908. He is a Methodist and a Republican.
On March 8, 1877, he married Sabina (Conrad) Curry, a daughter of Jacob P. and Elizabeth M. (Alkire) Conrad, and a granddaughter of John and Eliza- beth (Currence) Conrad, who emigrated from Germany to Rockingham County, Va., in an early day, and their children are: Gertrude M. Douglas, wife of J. T. Douglas of Canaan ; Esker F., educated in the West Virginia Conference Seminary and the Mountain State Business College, Parkersburg, W. Va., and married Miss Maude Williams of Webster County and has been a merchant of Linwood, Poco- hontas County since 1904; James L. married Miss Nella Kincaid; Landona B., wife of Robert 'T. Brooks, a prominent school teacher of Upshur County ; William B., married Carrie Morrison of Gaines, W. Va., and entered the mercantile busi- ness at Carter in 1906; Charles E., a school teacher, who was educated in public and normal schools and taught at Eden, Kanawha Head, Canaan, Kanawha Run and in Randolph and Pocahontas Counties, before becoming a merchant at home ; John D., was educated in the common schools and the Wesleyan College, taught in Upshur and Pocahontas Counties, which profession he still follows; Martha B., wife of A. S., McKisic of Kanawha Head.
The subject of this sketch was a son of James and Sarah ( McAvoy) Curry. HOWARD ULYSSES CURRY, the son of William H. Curry and Sarah Catherine Townsend, born January 27, 1865, and was married November 19, 1891, to Celia McCoy, the daughter of Chapman McCoy and Marie Douglas, his wife was born May 12, 1865.
He is a farmer and lumberman, belongs to the M. E. Church, has a good residence in Centerville and is a good Democrat in politics.
LLOYD J. CURRY is a merchant at Rock Cave, is a Prohibitionist in politics and with his family belong to the M. E. Church. His birth occurred July 7, 1856. His parents are : William H., and Catherine (Townsend) Curry. On August 29, 1875, he married Elizabeth Sophronia McDowell, the daughter of J. A. and Margaret (Donnely) McDowell. And their children are: Mina, the wife of Sherman Hileman, whose occupation is that of a machinist and whose children are, Dana Hugh and Lauretta; Loreta, the wife of Ira H. Mearns, a merchant of Rock Cave, her death occurred May 30, 1906, and her mother speaks of her in the words of the poem.
"I sometimes dream her pleasant smiles, Still on me sweetly fall Her tones of love I faintly hear, My name in her sadness call. I know that she is happy, With her robe of heaven on;
But my heart is very desolate, To know that she is gone."
ISON RAY CURTIS, born September 14, 1877, in Lewis County, the son of Ison Curtis and Catherine E. Jackson, his mother was the daughter of Randolph Jackson and Mary D. Linger, who was the daughter of Nicholas D. Linger.
His father was the son of George W. Curtis and Mary E. Allen. He is the great grandson of John Curtis of Rockingham County, Va.
The subject of this sketch was raised on a farm and was educated in the public schools of Lewis County. His attention to his studies was so close in his
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school days, that on leaving the public schools, he was able to hold a No. I teacher's certificate, but not having the desire to teach, he never engaged in the teaching profession. Since 1900 he has been the employe of practically one firm in the town of Buckhannon, namely, the Buckhannon Light and Water Company, and his fidelity to that company has been so remembered that he has held the positions of engineer, bookkeeper, and is now the superintendent and purchasing agent. He married Nancy Linger, the daughter of Oliver Linger and Mary A. Self, and the granddaughter of Philio Linger and Martin Self. The date of their marriage was January 30, 1902, and their children are: Silvia Hazeltine, born April 15, 1903, Earnestine, born December 3, 1906.
Brothers and sisters of the subject of this sketch are : Clinton A., who married Etta Strader, Mintie I., wife of O. L. Woofter, Mary E., wife of J. R. McNemar.
Mr. Curtis was field superintendent for the B. L. & W. Co., in the construc- tion of their new plant in South Buckhannon and by perseverance, having learned the electric business, was invaluable to his employer.
JOHN CUTRIGHT, SR., was a native of Virginia. His parents lived near Fairfax Courthouse for many years prior to their immigration to Looney's Creek, now in Hardy County, West Virginia, where he grew up, and about the year 1770, came to the Buckhannon Valley, joining the Pringle brothers. His father's name was likely Hendrick Cartright, for in the year 1753, he witnessed a deed from. Peter Reed to Peter Haas.
The biography of this first settler has been given in preceeding pages, except his connection with the Revolutionary War and his marriage after that war to Rebecca Truby.
The Adjutant General's Office of the War Department of the United States Government furnishes this record of his service. "John Cutright served as a private in Captain Machen Boswell's Company, 2d Virginia State Regiment, com- manded by Colonel Gregory Smith, Revolutionary War, and it appears on the company payroll for September. 1778, without remark, and it last appears on the company muster for February, 1779, which shows him "discharged."
The report of the Secretary of War of 1833, contains the name of John Cut- right, who began drawing a pension for his services in the Revolutionary War in the year 1831. At the time of his death in 1852, he was still drawing this pension.
John Cutright's children : Jacob, Ann, John, William, Isaac and Christopher T .. Jacob married Elizabeth Westfall and their children were: Naomi, George. Isabella, Elmore, Susan, Theodore, Clark, Dexter W., and Ann.
Ann married David Casto, and their children were: William, John, Martin, Ananias, Jacob, Rebecca, Isaac.
John married Christina Wetherholt and their children were: David, William, Mary Ann, Maudline, Jemima, Jacob and Isaac.
William married Elizabeth Cutright and their children were : Melvin, Matilda, Nathan, Isabelle, Bermelia, Adam, Catherine and Albert.
Isaac married Cassie Ann Cutright and their children were: Salathiel, Marshall, Cynthia, Samantha, Oriah, Harriet and Thamar.
Christopher T. married Sinai Pringle and their children were: John, Rebecca, Bednego, Nebo, Esther, Christopher, Ashby, Rachel, Ann, Wealthy, Minerva, Thursa and Jaspr N.
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ALONZO CUTRIGHT, son of Elmore Cutright, married Catherine D. Strader, daughter of John Strader.
Children, Parley E., Loy F., and Isa M.
Mr. Cutright is a farmer and carpenter.
ALBRO A. CUTRIGHT,is a son of Richard A. and Irene (Teets) Cut- right, was raised a farmer of Washington District, three miles south of Postoffice of Queens. He is the eldest son and oldest child of his father's family. Was educated in the common schools and at a young age began working in the lumber woods, where he continued to work until his father's death, when he was com- pelled to come back to the farm and look after the care and keeping of the homestead. He now resides at Ellamore, West Virginia.
ASA I. CUTRIGHT a farmer living at Kingsville, Ohio, was born in this County, August 6, 1851, the son of Elmore Cutright, the grandson of Jacob Cut- right and the great grandson of John Cutright, was raised on a farm near the mouth of Cutright's run and the postoffice of Hampton on the B. & O. R. R., and on September 11, 1871, married Mary F. Kiddy, the daughter of Wm. H. and Hannah Kiddy, and to them have been born four daughters and two sons; Alverta Lee, born 1872, the wife of C. W. Shurtliff ; Curtis Columbus , born February 7, 1874, and married Miss Clara Garrabrant of Ashtabula, O., Feb- ruary 18, 1906; Virginia Frances, born May 17, 1876. the wife of J. L. Crise ; Walter Joseph, born September 7, 1877 ; George Orma, born May 19, 1881, the wife of Charles Brake; Icy Winifred, born July, 1884, the wife of Wilson M. Bugby of Kingsville, Ohio.
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