Ernest S. Manatt, D. O.

Ernest S. Manatt, the pioneer osteopathic physician of Franklin county,
now practicing in Hampton, was born in Poweshiek county, Iowa, on the 26th of September,
1878. He represents one of the old families of the state. His father, James Manatt, was
for a half century a resident of Poweshiek county where death called him to the home
beyond. He was born in Somerset county Pennsylvania, in February, 1827, a son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Manatt, both of Irish descent. Robert Manatt was born in County Down, Ireland,
and in 1812 became a resident of Pennsylvania. Some years afterward he removed with his
family to Holmes county, Ohio, where his wife died. Later he brought his children to Iowa,
living for a time in Washington county and afterward in Brooklyn, Poweshiek county, where
he passed away in 1863 James Manatt attended district schools of Ohio and Iowa and at
twenty years of age was married and began farming. In time he became one of the most
extensive landowners of the county. In 1880 he removed to Brooklyn, where he passed away
in February, 1911. He was twice married. He first wedded Livina Snook of Warren township,
Poweshiek county, and they had six children. For his second wife he chose Miss Cornelia
Squires, a daughter of Sumner L. and Parizode (Payne) Squires. The latter was a descendant
of Sir Simon Fiske, and belonged to one of the oldest and best known cultured families of
Vermont. Mrs. Squires was born in Highgate, Vermont, and was a liberally educated woman.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Squires engaged in teaching in the-east in early life. In 1855 they
became residents of Poweshiek county, Iowa, and for thirty years remained upon the old
homestead, but spent their last days in Brooklyn, the father dying in February, 1892, and
the mother in April, 1904. Unto Mr. and Mrs. Manatt were born four children: Earl L., who
became a physician of Newcastle, Indiana, was born in 1877 and died in April, 1907; Ernest
S., is the next of the family. Rex Irving is living in Hampton, and Horace J. T. was
accidently killed at play in 1898.
Dr. Ernest S. Manatt spent his youthful days under the parental roof,
and as he approached manhood he became interested in the science and practice of
osteopathy which he determined to make his life work. Accordingly he supplemented his
public-school education by a course in the American School of Osteopathy at KirksviIle,
Missouri, from which he was graduated on the 31st Of .January, 1901. In the following
March he came to Franklin county and has since been located in Hampton, being the oldest
osteopathic practitioner of the county. He has been quite, successful, his ability being
attested by those who have come under his professional care.
Dr. Manatt was united in marriage to Miss Maude Kratchovil, a native of
this county, and unto them has been born a son, Earl, now three and a half years of age.
In politics Dr. Manatt is a republican but has never been an office seeker, preferring to
concentrate his energies upon his private professional interests, with leisure for the
enjoyment of home and social pleasures. He belongs to the Benevolent Protective Order of
Elks and to the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and his religious faith is that- of the
Congregational church, of which he is a consistent member.
Gideon A. Marken, a prosperous and progressive farmer of
Reeve township, owning and operating two hundred and five acres of land on
sections 16, 17 and 20, was born in Peru, Indiana, January 5, 1877, a son of
Gideon and Sarah (Silvious) Marken, natives of Maryland and Pennsylvania
respectively. The father engaged in farming during the entire period of his
active life and is now living retired in Peru, Indiana. The mother passed away
February 3, 1887. To their union were born fourteen children: John W., of
Apache, Arizona; Jacob, a resident of Toledo, Iowa; Joseph, deceased; Rebecca,
the wife of D. M. Butt, of Peru, Indiana; Matilda, who married A. L. Meyers,
of Moravia, California; Milo, Eli, Jane, the widow of William Butt, of Peru,
Indiana, and Lydia, all of whom have passed away; Laura, the wife of Edward J.
Miller, of Apache, Arizona; Daniel, of Sand Point, Idaho; Gideon A., of this
review; Edith, deceased; and Edward, of Lane, South Dakota. After the death of
his first wife the father of the subject of this review married Miss Amanda
Daniels, and they became the parents of three children: Pearl, the wife of
Charles Fost, of Peru, Indiana; Aaron, deceased; and Raymond, also of Peru.
When Gideon A. Marken was sixteen years of age he left home
and began his independent career. In 1895 he came to Hampton, Iowa, and two
years later turned his attention to farming, renting one hundred and sixty
acres of land in Reeve township. At the end of six years he rented another
farm of two hundred and five acres on sections 16, 17 and 20 and two years
later bought this property, which he has since operated along practical lines,
making it today one of the finest farms in his locality.
On July 1, 1897, Mr. Marken was united in marriage to Miss
Mary E. Doidge, a daughter of Thomas and Caroline (Jolly) Doidge, natives of
England, who came to America in 1868, locating in Warren, Illinois. In 1887
they moved to Franklin county, Iowa, where the father engaged in farming until
his death, which occurred .October 1, 1904. His wife survives him and makes
her home in Hampton. To their union were born ten children: Arthur and
William, deceased; Arthur, second of the name, a resident of Corinth, Iowa;
Frederick, of Hampton; Harry, who makes his home in Dumont; Hattie, the wife
of A. B. Atkinson, of Hampton; Ida, deceased; Mary E., wife of the subject of
this review; Willis, deceased; and Albert, of Hampton. Mr. and Mrs. Marken
have become the parents of three children, Esther E., who was born September
22, 1900; Ralph W., born January 8, 1904; and A. J., born January 8, 1911.
Mr. Marken is a member of the Christian church and is
connected fraternally with the Modern Brotherhood of America. He gives his
political allegiance to the republican party and is at present township
trustee, serving in a capable and public-spirited manner. He is a man of
force, ambition and enterprise, and he holds the esteem and confidence of all
with whom he has official, social or business relations.
G. A. Mayer, who has been numbered among the citizens of
Franklin county for the past quarter of a century, operates one of the most
highly improved farms in Ross township, on section 32, his holdings embracing
one hundred and thirty-four acres of land in Ross and Mott townships. He is
likewise the vice president of the Chapin Savings Bank, which institution as
assisted in organizing. His birth occurred in Washington county, Iowa, on the
26th of November, 1860, his father being John Mayer, a native of Germany. The
latter crossed the Atlantic to the United States as a young man and in
Burlington, Iowa, wedded Miss Catherine Neff, who was born in Pennsylvania.
John Mayer purchased an unimproved farm of one hundred and sixty-nine acres in
Washington county, Iowa, and gave his attention to its development and
cultivation throughout the remainder of his life. Both he and his wife passed
away in that county.
G. A. Mayer spent his boyhood in his native county and
acquired only a limited education, his assistance being necessary in the work
of the home farm. He remained under the parental roof until twenty years of
age and subsequently worked as a farm hand for others until 1888. In that year
he was married and came to Franklin county, Iowa, locating on a tract of
eighty acres in Mott township, which his wife had inherited. Mr. Mayer
improved the property and was busily engaged in its Operation until 1896, when
he took up his abode on his present farm on section 32, Ross township. The
place was devoid of improvements with the exception of a barn, but during the
years which have since elapsed our subject has enhanced its value in various
ways until it is now one of the most highly improved farms in Ross township.
His holdings embrace one hundred and thirty-four acres of land in Ross and
Mott townships, and he devotes his attention to general farming with excellent
results, enjoying an enviable reputation as one of the prosperous and
representative citizens of the community. His is a beautiful home, and an
evergreen grove adds much to the attractive appearance of the place. Mr. Mayer
was one of the organizers of the Chapin Savings Bank and has since served as a
member of its board of directors, likewise holding the office of vice
president at the present time.
In Washington county, Iowa, Mr. Mayer was united in
marriage to Miss Ella V. Brenton, a native of that county and a daughter of
Jonathan and Mary (Dillon) Brenton, both of whom are deceased. Our subject and
his wife have, three children: Ethel, Everett and Vera, all at home. Mr. Mayer
gives his political allegiance to the democracy and has served as a trustee
for three terms, while for sixteen years he has been a member of the school
board. He is a stalwart friend of the cause of education and, in fact, is
known throughout the entire community as a representative agriculturist and a
citizen whose support can be counted upon to further any measure or movement
that will promote the welfare and prosperity of the county.
N. B. McClintock
N. B. McClintock, a successful and enterprising
agriculturist of Franklin county, owns and operates a well improved farm of
eighty acres on section 32, Ross township, and for several years has been
making a specialty of the raising of registered Poland China hogs. He has
resided in this county continuously for a period of thirty-five years and has
improved two farms. His birth occurred in Pennsylvania on the 7th of July,
1850, his parents being Francis M. and Susan (Baird) McClintock, the former
born in Pennsylvania, of Irish descent, and the latter, a native of Scotland.
Their marriage was celebrated in the Keystone state. In 1851 they came to
Iowa, settling in Clinton county, where they spent the remainder of their
lives on a farm.
N. B. McClintock spent his boyhood on the home farm in
Clinton county, Iowa, and attended the common schools in the acquirement of
his early education, while subsequently he pursued a course of study in
Cornell College of Mount Vernon. He then took up the profession of school
teaching and taught in Clinton and Franklin counties for thirty terms,
imparting clearly and readily to others the knowledge that he had acquired. It
was in the spring of 1878 that he came to this county. He purchased one
hundred and twenty acres of raw land in Richland township and began the
arduous task of improving the property. There he successfully carried on
farming until 1900 and then disposed of the place, purchasing an unimproved
tract of land comprising eighty acres on section 32, Ross township. He has
developed the property until it is now valuable and productive and has erected
thereon a set of commodious and substantial buildings. For several years past
he has made a specialty of registered Poland China hogs, raising an average of
fifty head annually, which he sells for breeding purposes. He is a well
educated man of untiring energy and keen intellect who has always worked hard
and been wise in his expenditures. He has been enabled to provide his children
with excellent educational advantages and has every reason to be proud of
them.
In Clinton county Mr. McClintock was united in marriage to
Miss Elizabeth E. Pray, a native of Illinois, by whom he has four children.
Francis N., a graduate of the Iowa State Teachers' College at Cedar Falls, is
engaged in the profession of teaching at Coulter, Iowa. Alice L., who likewise
attended the Iowa State Teachers' College and taught for a time, is now
employed as operator and station agent at Chapin by the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway. Gordon B. is in the service of the Northern Pacific
Railway at Seattle, Washington. Stanley H. McClintock is farming in
partnership with his father.
In his political views Mr. McClintock is independent,
supporting men and measures rather than party. He has held a township office
of one kind or another during the entire period of his residence here and has
ever discharged his public duties in a prompt and capable manner. He has
served as clerk in both Richland and Ross townships and is now a justice of
the peace in the latter. His religious faith is indicated by his membership in
the Congregational church at Chapin, in the work of which he takes an active
and helpful interest. In matters of citizenship he is intensely loyal and
public spirited and gives his unqualified endorsement and cooperation to every
movement inaugurated that will promote the welfare of the community along the
various lines of human activity.
Thomas E. McCoy
Since 1883 Thomas E. McCoy has been
connected with agricultural interests of Franklin county and since 1899 has
lived upon his present farm of two hundred and forty acres on section 35,
Hamilton township. He was born in Wayne county, Ohio, September 17, 1862, and
is a son of William I. and Ruth (McClellan) McCoy, the former a native of
Pennsylvania and the latter of Ohio. They removed to Indiana and thence to
Wisconsin, where the father passed away. To them were born six children:
James, deceased; John, of Minnesota; Thomas E., of this review; Nelson, of
Wisconsin; Belle and Mary, deceased.
Thomas E. McCoy came to Franklin county in
1883 and turned his attention to farming here. In 1888 he bought one hundred
and fifty-one acres of land and improved and operated this farm until 1899,
when he disposed of it. Two years previously he had bought two hundred and
forty acres on section 35, Hamilton township. When he sold his first farm he
removed to Iowa Falls, but later to this property, where he has since resided.
His farm is in excellent condition, reflecting the many years of intelligent
care and labor which he has bestowed upon it.
Mr. McCoy married Miss Lucilla Stockdale, a
native of Franklin county and a daughter-of Thomas and Katherine (Hamilton)
Stockdale, pioneers of Hamilton township. Her father was born in Ireland in
1833 and emigrated to America in 1851, making his home for three years in New
York state, where he engaged in farming. From there he removed to Wisconsin
and in 1859 came to Franklin county, Iowa. In politics he was a republican. He
was twice married, his first wife being Katherine Hamilton, who died in 1877,
leaving four children, Stewart, Charles, Lucilla and Aaron. His second wife
was Caroline Killious, by whom he had six children, Fred, Maggie, Arthur,
Clinton, Edith and Vera. Mr. and Mrs. McCoy have two children, twins, Willis
and Wiltsey, born in 1898.
Mr. McCoy is a member of the Methodist
church and gives his political allegiance to the republican party. He is
interested in the development of the county, where he has lived for thirty
years, and his influence has been a tangible force for good in the community.
John
McGrath, a prosperous and progressive farmer of
Franklin county, owning and operating two hundred acres of well improved land on section
21, West Fork township, was born in Canada and is a son of Michael and Mary (Hogan)
McGrath, natives of Ireland. The father came to America when he was twenty years of age
and the mother at the age of thirteen and their marriage occurred in Canada, where Michael
McGrath owned land. They came to Franklin county in 1872 after having spent one and a half
years in Vermont, and they settled on section 8 on what is now Marion township. The father
purchased eighty acres of wild land for three hundred dollars and operated and developed
this property until his death, which occurred in 1876. His wife passed away in Ackley just
before the family removed to the Franklin county farm. In this family were seven children,
of whom five grew to maturity as follows: James, who owns two farms in West Fork township,
but who makes his.home in Mason City; Mrs.. Catherine Roaner, a widow living with her
daughter in Adrian,.Minnesota;john, of this review; and Mrs. John T. Kenefick and Mrs. J.
H. Ochs, both of whom have passed away.
John McGrath was twelve years of age when he began
herding, cattle on the Iowa prairies, and he later secured a position as a farm. hand
working for twenty-three years thereafter, for A. M. Mott, a large landowner and
prosperous farmer of Franklin county. Mr. McGrath managed Mr. Mott's farms for a number of
years, resigning his position in 1903 in order to become an independent
agriculturist. He bought one hundred and sixty acres on section 21, West Fork township and
to this has since added until he owns two hundred acres. The land is in a high state of
cultivation and is provided with excellent buildings and modern machinery.
Mr. McGrath is a member of the Catholic church. He
served as a member of the county board of supervisors for three years and in matters of
citizenship. is helpful and progressive, cooperating heartily in measures for the general
advancement and growth. He enjoys in full measure the friendship of those with whom he has
been brought in contact and a life of well directed activity has gained for him a high
place in agricultural circles.
Duncan J. McMillan, formerly engaged in general farming upon
two hundred and forty acres of excellent land in Geneva township, but now living
retired, was born in Dodge countv, Wisconsin, November 5, 1854. He is a son of
John and Christiana (Gunn) McMillan, natives of Scotland. The father moved to
Nova Scotia when he was three years of age and in 1844 went to Wisconsin, where
he resided until 1872. In that year he moved to Franklin county, Iowa, and
located on section 21, Geneva township, where his death occurred. He and his
wife became the parents of eleven children: William, of South Dakota; Ella, the
wife of William E. Jones, of Geneva; John, deceased; Isabel, the wife of Jacob
Sellers, of South Dakota; Alfred, of California; Jessie, deceased; Duncan J., of
this review; and Daniel, Jennie, Samuel and Maggie, who have passed away.
Duncan J. McMillan accompanied his parents to Franklin county
in 1872 and assisted for some time thereafter with the operation of the
homestead. This has since come into his possession, and he has developed it
along practical and modern lines, making it one of the finest properties in this
locality. He engaged in general farming and was likewise extensively interested
in stock-raising. In January, 1910, Mr. McMillan retired from active farming and
now lives in a beautiful home in Geneva.
On the 15th of July, 1891, Mr. McMillan was united in
marriage to Miss Hattie M. Crider, a native of Pennsylvania, and they have
become the parents of four children: Clinton, who is connected with the Fine
Arts Academy in Chicago; and Annie Laurie, Esmerelda and Bert, at home.
Mr. McMillan attends the Methodist Episcopal church while his
wife is a member thereof. He is a republican in his political views and is
connected fraternally with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. During the
period of his residence in Franklin county he has proven himself thoroughly
reliable in all business dealings and in matters of citizenship helpful and
progressive, giving his aid and influence to many measures for the public good.
Peter
Madson, connected with
mercantile interests of Coulter as a dealer in implements and automobiles, was
born in De Kalb county, Illinois, February 27, 1878. He is a son of Soren and
Marie (Knudsen) Madson, natives of Denmark, who came to America in 1868. They
came to Franklin county, this state, in 1883, and located in Hamilton township,
where the father engaged in farming for many years. He afterward removed to
Montana, where he now resides, having survived his wife since 1905. To their
union were born four children: Peter, of this review; Marie, who married J.
Oleson, of Montana; Celia, the wife of J. Olesen, of Eugene, Oregon; and Carl,
of the same city.
Peter Madson supplemented his
public-school education by one year in college at Elkhorn, Iowa. After he laid
aside his books he turned his attention to farming and in 1901 purchased two
hundred acres of land in Hamilton township which he sold after his return from
Oregon, having spent some time in that state and North Dakota. In 1910 he came
to Coulter and here established himself in the implement and automobile
business, in which he has since continued. He has a fine modern store,
forty-eight by eighty feet in dimensions, and controls a large patronage, for
his business methods are upright and honorable and his prices reasonable. He
owns in addition a comfortable home in Coulter and a one hundred and sixty acre
farm in Hampton township.
On the 4th of April,
1900, Mr. Madson married Miss Minnie Hansen, a daughter of Jense Hansen, and to
them have been born four children: Anita, Gilberta, Leon and Vera. Mr. Madson is
a member of the Lutheran church and gives his political support to the
republican party. He has served as township clerk and school director and has
proven capable and reliable in positions of public trust and responsibility. He
is one of the progressive and able men of Coulter and through his ability and
energy has acquired a high standing in commercial circles.
C. F.
Manifold
Since March, 1880, C. F.
Manifold has been connected with agricultural interests of Franklin county and
is today recognized as one of the most substantial and progressive farmers of
this locality. He owns three hundred and twenty acres on sections 28 and 29,
Hamilton township, and has made his home upon this property since 1895. He was
born in Henry county, Indiana, March 4, 1863, and is a son of Sheppard and
Lydia M. (Sears) Manifold, the former a native of Tennessee and the latter of
Ohio. The father grew to manhood in Indiana. Both parents have passed away.
They had eight children: William and Robert, both residents of Henry county,
Indiana; Jehu, of Newcastle, Indiana; Nancy M., the wife of J. L. Koons, of
Mason City, Iowa; J. H., of Hamilton township; C. F., of this review; Ulysses
G., deceased; and Finley A., of Wright county, Iowa.
C. F. Manifold remained in
Indiana until he was sixteen years of age and then moved to Geneva, Iowa,
locating in this state in March, 1880. In 1895 he removed to Hamilton
township, this county, and purchased two hundred and forty acres on sections
28 and 29. To this property he has since added from time to time and his
holdings now comprise six hundred and forty acres all in Hamilton township.
Upon this excellent property Mr. Manifold engages in general farming and is
also interested to a great extent in feeding sheep and other stock, his
interests along this line being of growing importance.
On the 31st Of December, 1890,
Mr. Manifold was united in marriage to Miss Etta March, a native of Wisconsin
and one of the early residents of Geneva township. She is a daughter of Thomas
and Elizabeth (Howsley) March, natives of England, the former of whom came to
America as a young man. He settled in Geneva township, Franklin county, March
1, 1877, and there died February 21, 1911. He and his wife were the parents of
eight children, five of whom lived to maturity, as follows: Elizabeth J., who
has passed away; Mary H., the wife of James A. Dovey, of Ingham township;
Thomas E., a resident of Geneva township; Etta, wife of the subject of this
review; and Emma, who married T. D. Jones, of Hamilton township.
Mr. Manifold gives his
political allegiance to the republican party. He is interested in the growth
and welfare of the community where he has resided for many years and where he
is held in high esteem as a progressive and representative citizen.
Henry
E. Marty, one of the
extensive landowners and progressive farmers of Franklin county, owning and
operating five hundred and thirty acres of land lying in Geneva and Ingham
townships, is a native of this part of Iowa, born March 8, 1871. He is a son
of John J. and Hannah (Zell) Marty, the former a native of Switzerland and the
latter of Prussia, Germany. They came to America in 1863 and located in
Wisconsin, whence they removed to Hardin county, Iowa, in 1866. Three years
later they came to Franklin county and located on a farm in Geneva township,
where the father resided until his death, which occurred October 15, 1891. His
wife survives him and lives in Franklin county. John J. Marty had been twice
married, wedding first Miss Barbara Baumgardner, by whom he had three
children: Jacob J., of Butler county; John E., a resident of Franklin county;
and a son who died in infancy. By his, second union John J. Marty had five
children: Henry E., of this review; George, deceased; George, second of the
name, a resident of North Dakota; Frank, deceased; and Ollie, the wife of John
Blum, of Reeve township.
Henry E. Marty was reared in
Geneva township and acquired his education in the district schools. His entire
active life has been devoted to agricultural pursuits. His first tract of
land-two hundred and sixty acres-was given him by his father and he has since
added to this from time to time until he now owns five hundred and thirty
acres, one hundred and seventy-one of which lie in Ingham township and the
remainder in Geneva. Mr. Marty engages in general farming and stock-raising
and has been remarkably successful along both lines.
On the 14th of March, 1895, Mr.
Marty was united in marriage to Miss Maggie Pfaltzgraff, a native of Germany,
and they have become the parents of four children: Earl E., born August 6,
1897; a son who died in infancy; Edith Lily, born November 15, 1900; and Ray
Harold, born June 14, 1903.
Mr. Marty is a member of the
Evangelical church and a republican in his political views. His worth is
widely acknowledged, his business enterprise having gained him a high place in
agricultural circles and his integrity standing as an unassailable fact in his
life record.
Charles F. Meier, prominently connected with business interests of
Hampton as secretary and treasurer of the Hampton Mercantile Company, Incorporated, was
born in Germany, October 13, 1860, a son of William and Elizabeth Meier. He came to
America in 1882 and located in Waverly, Iowa, where he engaged in the general merchandise
business until 1898, when he moved to Hampton. Here in 1902 he assumed the management of
the business conducted by the Hampton Mercantile Company, Incorporated, and he has since
been secretary and treasurer of this concern, the president being Dr. J. C. Powers. The
company controls one of the largest general mercantile establishments in Hampton, and
under Mr. Meier's competent and intelligent management its interests have grown steadily.
Its business has increased in volume and importance and has reached gratifying proportions
at the present time.
Mr. Meier married Miss Maggie Hoddel, and they have. two children,
Louis and Lenora. Mr. Meier is well known in business circles of Hampton as a man of
force, experience and capacity and he occupies a high place among representative and
valued citizens.
Dietrich
Mensing is well known in
Franklin county as an extensive stock feeder and shipper. He owns one hundred
and sixty-three acres of excellent land on section 7, Marion township, and
through his intelligent cultivation of this property has made it one of the
valuable farms of the locality. He was born in Germany, March 1, 1869, and is a
son of Dietrich and Wilhelmina (Dohrman) Mensing, also natives of Germany, who
came to America in 1887. They resided in Cook county, Illinois, for three years,
and then moved to Franklin county, Iowa, locating on section 7, Marion township.
Both have passed away. To them were born four children: Dietrich, of this
review; Fred, of Mott township; Henry, a missionary in Australia; and Louisa,
who married John Schnable, of Marion township.
Dietrich Mensing came with his
parents to Franklin county and he has lived upon the home farm in Marion
township since that time. In 1897 he bought the property, which comprises one
hundred and sixty-three acres on section 7, and here he engages in general
farming, specializing in the breeding of blooded percheron horses. He is a stock
feeder and shipper on an extensive scale and is recognized as an expert judge of
stock values.
On the 10th of February, 1898,
Mr. Mensing was united in marriage, to Miss Louisa Hoffmeier, a native of Cedar
county, Iowa, and they have become the parents of five children, Herman, Lydia,
Theodore, Hubert and Victor. Mr. Mensing is a member of the Lutheran church and
a republican in his political beliefs, serving for several years as school
director. He is widely known throughout the county as a representative citizen
and commands the confidence and respect of the entire community.
Fred Mensing, carrying on general farming and stock-raising
upon one hundred and one acres of excellent land on section 19, Mott township,
was born in Germany, November 5, 1875. He is a son of Dietrich and Wilhelmina (Dohrman)
Mensing, also natives of Germany, who came to America in April, 1888, and
located on a farm near Chicago, Illinois. From there they moved to Franklin
county, Iowa, in 1891, and the father engaged in farming upon property north of
Latimer until his death, which occurred September 6, 1901. He had survived his
wife since April 27, 1893. To their union were born four children: Dietrich, who
is operating the old homestead; Fred, of this review; Henry, a Lutheran minister
of Australia; and Louise, who married John Schnabel, of Marion township.
Fred Mensing remained at home until he was twenty-four years
of age, aiding in the operation of his father's farm. He then purchased one
hundred and one acres of land on section 19, Mott township, and here he has
since resided giving his attention to general farming and stock-raising.. Under
his able management his farm has become a productive and valuable property, and
his success places him among the representative and prominent agriculturists of
this vicinity.
On the 22d of February, 1900, Mr. Mensing was united in
marriage to Miss Charlotte Hoffmeier, a native of Cedar county, Iowa , and they
have become the parents of five children: Wilma, born December 26, 1903; Julia,
born November 3, 1905; Paul G., who was born September 11, 1908; and Gerhardt
and Gertrude, twins, born February 17, 1912. Mr. Mensing is a member of the
Lutheran church and gives his political allegiance to the republican party. He
occupies an enviable position in the esteem of his neighbors and friends and is
widely known throughout the community.
William Mensing, operating a fine farm of
eighty acres on section 8, Marion township, was born in Du Page county,
Illinois, July 15, 1885. His mother was twice married and had two children by
her first union, namely, the subject of this review and his sister, Bertha, now
the wife of Henry Norton of Cook county, Illinois. The mother afterward wedded
Henry Block and had two children by this marriage: Harry, connected with the
United States navy; and Edwin, of Cook county, Illinois.
When William Mensing was two years old he was
adopted by his aunt, Mrs. Minnie Malvitz, of Du Page county, Illinois, and with
her he made his home until he was thirteen years of age. He afterward worked on
a farm belonging to his uncle for seven years and then, in 1906, came to
Franklin county, Iowa, where he has since been connected with agricultural
interests. In 1910 he bought eighty acres of land on section 8, Marion township,
and this he has since operated, making it a productive and valuable property. He
has risen to a high place in agricultural circles.
On the 12th of September, 1907, Mr. Mensing
was united in marriage to Miss Malinda Schirmer, a native of Franklin county,
and they have three children: Louis, who was born July 27, 1908; Hilda,
born April 17, 1910; and Herbert, born March 20, 1912.
Mr. Mensing is a member of the Evangelical
church and gives his -political -allegiance to the republican party. He is now
serving as township assessor and school director and is interested in everything
that pertains 'to the growth and advancement of the community. He is a young man
of ambition energy and enterprise and will undoubtedly be carried forward into
important relations with agricultural interests of his locality.
Adam Messelheiser

Adam Messelheiser, occupying an enviable position in financial and
business circles of Franklin county, is now president of the State Savings Bank of
Hampton, a position to which he has attained through laudable ambition, ability and
energy. He was born in Wisconsin in 1851, a son of John A. and Mary Messelheiser, who in
the year 1868 brought their family to Iowa. The father purchased land adjoining Hampton,
becoming the owner of two hundred acres, which he converted into rich and productive
fields, the cultivation of the farm resulting in the acquirement of a good living for the
family. Both he and his wife remained residents of this county until called to their final
rest. They had a family of seven children, of whom three are now deceased.
The public schools of Wisconsin and Iowa afforded Adam Messelheiser his
educational opportunities. He spent his youthful days under the parental roof and was
seventeen years of age when he came with the family to Iowa, where he has since remained.
He had been reared to the occupation of farming, early becoming familiar with the best
methods of tilling the soil and caring for the crops. As the years passed on he continued
to engage in general agricultural pursuits until 1902, when he put aside farm work and
removed to Hampton, since which time he has rented his land. He built an attractive home
in the city which he now occupies and is. here comfortably located, largely living
retired, although he has a decisive voice in the management of the bank and gives personal
supervision to the control of his property. In all business affairs his judgment is sound
and reliable, and his connection; with the State Savings Bank has been a factor in making
it the strong :and reliable financial institution which it is today.
Mr. Messelheiser was married in 1877 to Miss Otillie Kugler of West
Fork township, whose people were among the pioneers of Franklin county. Mr. and Mrs.
Messelheiser had six children, but lost one. Those still living are: Cora, the wife of
Fred Schmitz, a resident of Idaho; Otto, who is engaged in the abstract business and makes
his home in Portland, Oregon; Winnifred, the wife of Clarence Loose, living in Washington,
Iowa; A. R., who is attending school at Evanston, Illinois; and Anita, now at Iowa City
College.
The parents and children are members of the Evangelical church and the
influence of the family has always been on the side of, right, progress, truth and reform.
In politics Mr. Messelheiser is a progressive republican and keeps well informed on the
issues of the day and the attitude of the leading parties in respect to vital questions.
He displays little personal prejudice in his outlook over the important phases of life as
affecting the material, intellectual, political and moral welfare and endeavors at all
times to assist the community in ways of public betterment.
Adolph Meyer is today the only one of the pioneer merchants remaining
in Hampton and has been appointed postmaster for a term of years by President Wilson. For
a long period he has been connected with commercial pursuits here, and the success he has
achieved is the logical outcome and the merited reward of persistent, earnest and
intelligently directed effort. He was born in Wisconsin, March 12, 1851, and is a son of
Henry and Sophia (Baumgardner) Meyer, both of whom were natives of Switzerland. Coming to
the new world, they settled in Missouri, and subsequently went to Wisconsin, whence in
1857 they arrived in Franklin county Iowa. They took up their abode in West Fork township,
where they lived until Mr. Meyer was elected county recorder, at which time they removed
to Hampton, where their remaining days were passed. As a pioneer settler he took an active
and helpful interest in the development and material progress of the county and as a
citizen was interested in all that pertained to Its welfare and upbuilding. To him and his
wife were born ten children, of whom four are vet living. Adolph Meyer, the youngest of
the family, was twenty years of age when he left home and went to Wichita, Kansas, where
he continued for a year. He then returned to Franklin county and was thereafter engaged in
farming for two years. He next embarked in general merchandising, which he has since
followed. He has purchased a fine brick building, which he occupies with a large and
attractive line of goods, and he is today the only pioneer merchant remaining in Hampton.
His store is liberally patronized, and at all times he keeps in touch with enterprising
business methods and has ever been found thoroughly honorable and reliable.
On the 3d of March, 1873, Mr. Meyer married Miss Sarah L. Gilchrist, a
native of Pennsylvania, and to them have been born three children: Cora, now deceased;
Ethel, the wife of W. F. Locke, of Spencer, Iowa; and Coral, at home. Mr. Meyer gives his
political allegiance to the democratic party but has never been an office seeker. However,
his worth has been recognized by his appointment, by President Wilson, as postmaster for a
term of four years.
The cause of education finds in him a stalwart friend and for eleven
years he has served as school director. He belongs to the Independent Order of Odd Fellows
and to the Knights of Pythias fraternity and his religious faith is evidenced in his
membership in the Methodist church. His has been an upright, honorable life, characterized
by energy and enterprise in business affairs and by loyalty in friendship.
Fred L. Meyer, a native son of Franklin county and during the entire
period of his active life connected with agricultural interests here, was born on the farm
he now operates December 1, 1880. He is a son of William and Emily (Surles) Meyer, the
former a native of Bavaria, Germany, born in 1841, and the latter of Hardin county, Iowa.
The father came to America with his parents when he was ten years of age and settled in
Illinois, whence he afterward moved to Grundy county, Iowa. Later he took up his residence
in Franklin county, this state, buying a half section of land on sections 10, 15 and 16,
Grant township. This property he improved and operated, carrying on general farming and
stock-raising until within three years of his death, which occurred April 11, 1906. He and
his wife became the parents of four children: Fred L., of this review; a son who died in
infancy; Clara the wife of Lars H. Green of Grant township; and Anthony Wayne.
Fred L. Meyer was reared at home and acquired his education in the
public schools of Grant township. At the age of twenty-two he took charge of the
homestead, which comprises a half section of land on sections 10, 15 and 16. He has met
with most gratifying success in the conduct of his farming interests and takes rank with
the most progressive and representative agriculturists of the vicinity. He married Miss
Clara Christman, a native of Stephenson county, Illinois, and they have become the parents
of three children: Lavern Arthur, who was born July 15, 1904; Nina Lucile, born October
17, 1908; and Thelma May, born May 6, 1913. Mr. Meyer is a member of the Christian church
and connected fraternally with the Modern Woodmen of America. He gives his political
allegiance to the democratic party and is at present serving as township trustee. Although
still a young man, he has already been carried forward into important relations with
agricultural interests, and his record is a credit to a name that has long been an honored
one in his locality.
Henry Meyer
For a period of thirty-six years
Henry Meyer has been connected with agricultural interests of Franklin county
and during that time has made many substantial contributions to general growth
and development, winning also an individual success which places him among the
representative and progressive farmers of this locality. He was born in Germany,
November 22, 1856, and is a son of Henry and Dorothea (Hener) Meyer, also
natives of Germany, where the mother passed away. The father came to America in
1877 and located in Marion township, Franklin county, Iowa, where he died in
1890.
Henry Meyer came to America in
1876 and in the same year bought eighty acres of land on section 15, Marion
township. This forms a portion of his present homestead, but he has added to his
holdings from time to time, owning today two hundred and forty acres of
excellent land. Upon this he engages in general farming and stock-raising and
has met with gratifying and well deserved success.
On the 9th of December, 1877, Mr.
Meyer married Miss Doris Gottschalk, and to them were born five children: Alwine
the wife of F. Lubkeman of Marion township; Doris, who married August Meyer of
Reeve township; Augusta, the wife of W. T. Burmester; Herman and Emma, at home.
Mr. Meyer is a member of the
Lutheran church and gives his political allegiance to the republican party.
During the thirty-six years of his residence in Franklin, county he has
contributed materially to its growth and development and is now recognized, not
only as one of the substantial farmers of the community but also as one of the
representative citizens of the township.
Milf Meyer, one of the extensive landowners and prosperous farmers of
Franklin county, owning and operating three hundred acres on section 9, Grant township,
was born in Germany, September 17, 1867. He is a son of Lambert and Angie (Rabenburg)
Mever, also natives of the fatherland. They came to America in 1881 and located in Grundy
county, Iowa, where the father died March 20, i889, and where the mother still resides. To
their union were born four children: Milf, of this review; Tonjes, a resident of Grundy
county; Heska, the widow of August Steinmeyer, of Grundy county; and Wort, of Grundy
county.
Milf Meyer came to America with his parents in 1881 and aided in the
operation of the homestead during his father's lifetime. After the father's death he
assumed charge of its operation, conducting. it until 1897, when he purchased one hundred
and sixty acres of the property. This he developed and improved along progressive and
modern lines until 1912, when he moved to Franklin county, buying three hundred acres on,
section 9, Grant township. He here engages in general farming and stock-raising and has
met with that success which always follows persistent and intelligently directed labor.
Mr. Meyer has been twice married. He wedded first Miss Lena Kramer, who
died January 1 1902, leaving five children, Annie, Harm, Lambert, Fannie and Milf, Jr. On
the 8th of February, 1905, Mr. Meyer was again married, his second union being with Miss
Minnie Kromminga, a native of Germany. To this union have been born four children: Tonjes;
Minnie, deceased; Heska; and Amos. Mr. and Mrs. Meyer are members of the Lutheran church,
and he gives his political allegiance to the democratic party, serving at the present time
as school director. Well known in Franklin county by reason of the extent of his interests
here, he is accounted one of the active workers and progressive farmers of Grant township,
.and he has the unqualified confidence and esteem of the entire community.
William Meyer
Agricultural interests of Franklin county lost a progressive
and worthy representative when William Meyer died in Iowa Falls in 1906. He had
long been numbered. among the progressive farmers of his locality and had made
many substantial contributions to its development during the period of his
residence here. He was born in Bavaria, Germany, in 1841 and came to America
with his parents when he was ten years of age, the family settling in Illinois.
Mr. Meyer afterward moved to Grundy county, Iowa, where he lived unti 1869 when
he went west, spending ten years in Montana, Wyoming and Colorado as a cowboy.
In 1879 he returned to Iowa coming to Franklin county where he bought three
hundred and twenty acres on sections 10, 15 and 16, Grant township, and upon
this property resided until 1903, meeting every year with increasing success. In
that year he retired to Iowa Falls. He made many improvements upon his farm,
erecting substantial buildings and installing modern machinery, and he gave a
great deal of his time and attention to its development. His efforts being
practical and well directed, he met with a gratifying measure of success and at
the time of his death was the owner of one of the best farms in this township.
Mr. Meyer married Miss Emily Surles. a native of Hardin
county, and they became the parents of four children: Fred L., a farmer of Grant
township; a son who died, in infancy; Clara the wife of Lars H. Green of Grant
township; and Anthony Wayne. Mr. Meyer's son-in-law, Lars H. Green, was born in
Jo Daviess county, Illinois, August 23, 1883. He is a son of Joseph and Louise (Krell)
Green, also natives of that county, who came to Iowa in 1891, locating in Grant
township, this county. They are now living retired in Iowa Falls. Mr. and Mrs.
Green have become the parents of a son, Millard W., who was born April 1, 1908.
Mr. Green belongs to the Christian church, is connected fraternally with the
Mystic Workers and gives his political allegiance to the republican party.
William Meyer attended the Christian church and was a
democrat in his political views. He held a number of local offices and as a
public-spirited and progressive citizen took an intelligent interest in public
affairs, cooperating heartily in all measures and projects for community
advancement. He became very well known throughout Franklin county, and his death
was widely and deeply regretted.
Peter Miller, who since 1892 has been
connected in an influential way with farming interests of Franklin county and
whose enterprise has contributed much toward the agricultural development of the
community, was born in Denmark, March 9, 1852, a son of Mogens and Karen Marie
(Beck) Miller, also natives of that country. The parents came to America in 1883
and located in Grundy county, Iowa, whence they moved to Franklin county in
1886, locating in Morgan township. The father afterward purchased land in
section 10, Hamilton township, and upon that property passed away on the 14th of
March, 1910. The mother died July 2, 1909. They had celebrated both their golden
and diamond wedding anniversaries upon their homestead in Hamilton township. To
their union were born five children: Jens, of Withee, Wisconsin; Peter, of this
review; Frederick, deceased; Ann Elizabeth; and Ann Elizabeth, second of the
name, both of whom have passed away.
Peter Miller remained in his native country
until 1871 and then crossed the Atlantic to America, landing in New York on
November 28th of that year. For four years afterward he engaged in carpentering
there, after which he moved to Cedar Falls, Iowa, and first rented a farm for
five years and later purchased land in the vicinity of the city, following
farming there for ten years. In 1892 he moved to Franklin county and bought one
hundred and twenty acres of land on section 10, Hamilton township. To this he
has since added another one hundred and twenty acre tract on section 11 and upon
this fine property carries on general farming and stock-raising, making a
specialty of feeding cattle. He has an excellent set of buildings upon the
place, including a modern silo, and the entire farm is in excellent condition,
showing the care and supervision of an able agriculturist. In addition to his
farming interests Mr. Miller is president of the Hamilton Creamery Company of
Coulter and has held this position with credit and ability for the past twenty
years.
On March 8, 1877, Mr. Miller was united in
marriage to Miss Kirsten Jensen, a native of Denmark, who died July 11, 1913. .
To their union were born eleven children: Frederick, deceased; Jens, principal
of a school in Bruno, Minnesota; Karen, who married Andrew Jorgensen, of
Hamilton township; Mette, who married Peter Lund, of Hamilton township; Dagmar,
engaged in teaching in Franklin county; Anna and Benjamin, at home; Esther,
teaching in the public schools of Franklin county; Ida, who is also engaged in
teaching; and Ruth and Ezra, at home. Mr. Miller is a member of the Lutheran
church and gives his political allegiance to the democratic party. He is a man
who takes a deep interest in the general welfare of the community, and he
commands the respect, and confidence of his fellow citizens.
Evin Millet, one of the valued and representative citizens of Bradford,
living in retirement after many years of close connection with agricultural
interests of Franklin county, was born in Jo Daviess county, Illinois, September
24, 1856. He is a son of Andrew and Lovern (Henderson) Millet, natives of Ohio,
who came to Franklin county in 1870, locating in Reeve township. The father died
here in January, 1909, and his widow makes her home in Hampton. To their union
were born six children: Albert, a resident of Hampton; Evin, of this review;
Ellen, deceased; Sarah, the wife of James Osborn, of Illinois; and Alma and
George, deceased.
Evin Millet's entire active life was devoted to farming. He was reared upon
his father's homestead and aided in its operation for some time, becoming
familiar at an early age with the details of farm operation. When he left home
he purchased land of his own and has owned farms in various parts of the county.
These properties he managed always in a capable and progressive way and became
well known as a successful and representative agriculturist. He is now living in
Bradford in practical retirement, although he owns seven acres of improved land
just outside the town limits.
Mr. Millet married Miss Dana Pickering, a native of Illinois, and they have
become the parents of five children: Charles, a resident of Dows, Iowa; Mabel,
the wife of W. I. Stockdale; Arthur, at home; Jessie, the wife of John Hickther,
of Lee township; and Emma, who married Edward Fits, also of Lee township. Mr.
Millet is a member of the Methodist church and gives his political allegiance to
the republican party. He is well known throughout the county for his many
excellent traits of character and has commanded the respect and confidence of
his neighbors and friends.
Joseph Mitchell, who has resided within the borders
of Franklin county for the past forty-five years, has devoted his attention to
agricultural pursuits with excellent success throughout his entire business career and is
now living in honorable retirement at Chapin, having recently leased his farm of one
hundred and eighty-five acres on section 1, Ross township. His birth occurred in Hazel
Green, Grant county, Wisconsin, on the 30th of September, 1853, his parents being Joseph
and Mary Ann (Crase) Mitchell, both of whom were natives of England. They emigrated to the
United States in early manhood and young womanhood and were married in Wisconsin. In 1868
they established their home in Franklin county, Iowa, Joseph Mitchell, Sr., who was an
agriculturist by occupation, purchasing one hundred and eighty-five acres of land on
section 31, Ross township, on which stood a little house. He made a number of substantial
improvements on the property and continued its operation throughout the remainder of his
life, passing away in February, 1907, at the, age of eighty-three years. His demise was
the occasion of deep and widespread regret, for he had gained an extensive circle of
friends during the period of his residence in this county, which covered almost four
decades. For a number of years he had survived his wife, who passed away at the age, of
sixty-eight, in the faith of the Methodist Episcopal church, to which Mr. Mitchell also
belonged. They were the parents of four children, as follows: Eliza Jane, who is the, wife
of Dr. Ross and resides in Hampton; Joseph, of this review; Mary, who gave her hand in
marriage to T. M. Hamilton, of Chapin; and William, who died at the age of fifteen years.
Joseph Mitchell, who was a youth of fifteen when he
came to this county with his parents, remained on the old home farm in Ross township and
eventually came into possession of the property. After the death of his mother he kept
bachelor's hall with his father for a number of years and has been alone since the
latter's demise. In the conduct of his agricultural interests he has won a well, merited
measure of prosperity, the well tilled fields annually yielding golden harvests in return
for the care and labor which he bestowed upon them. He has recently leased the farm and
erected a residence in Chapin, where he is now living retired in the enjoyment of the
fruits of his former toil. Mr. Mitchell is well known and highly esteemed throughout the
community in which he has so long resided and is justly entitled. to representation among
its best citizens.
E. M. Moore is an enterprising
and representative young citizen of Franklin county who has for a number of
years devoted his attention to general agricultural pursuits and still owns two
hundred and forty acres of valuable land on section 25, Ross township, but is
now planning to give all of his time to the real-estate business at Chapin,
having found this a congenial and profitable field of endeavor. His birth
occurred in Stokes county, North Carolina, on the 22d of February, 1881, his
parents being W. H. and Annie (Martin) Moore, likewise natives of that state.
The family is of Scotch and Irish descent in the paternal line but has been
represented in the United States for several generations. The parents of our
subject recently came to Franklin county and are now residing in Marion
township.
E. M. Moore was reared in the
state of his nativity and attended the common schools in the acquirement of an
education. Since putting aside his text-books he has been engaged in the work of
the fields. About thirteen years ago he came to Iowa and secured employment by
the month as a farm hand in Hardin county. When he had accumulated sufficient
capital he purchased a tract of eighty acres in that county and subsequently
bought a farm of similar size in Franklin county. Two years ago he came into
possession of the old Randolph farm, comprising one hundred and forty-four acres
on section 31, Ross township, which he has recently sold. He next purchased two
hundred and forty acres on section 25, Ross township, but has already put this
on sale and is preparing to establish himself In the real-estate business at
Chapin. Mr. Moore has done considerable buying and selling of realty with
gratifying results and believes that in this field he will find greater,
opportunity for the exercise of his business ability and judgment. Industry and
energy are among his salient characteristics and augur well for a successful
future.
In Hardin county, Iowa, Mr. Moore
was united in marriage to Miss Florence Fowler, a native of that county and a
daughter of J. W. and Arena (Clemens) Fowler, the former born in Ohio and the
latter in Hardin county, Iowa. Our subject and his wife have two children:
Clarence and Johnnie.
Mr. Moore gives his political
allegiance to the prohibition party and is a total abstainer from all alcoholic
beverages, believing that the liquor traffic is one of the worst evils which
besets the nation. Mrs. Moore is a member of the Friends church while Mr.
Moore's religious faith is indicated by his membership in the Baptist church.
His religion is an active and vital force in his life and has given to an
upright and honest business man the added qualification of a worthy and
honorable Christian gentleman.
John
Moore

For a period of thirty-six years
John Moore was connected with agricultural interests of Franklin county and
during that time contributed substantially to agricultural development and
growth while winning an individual success which placed him among the
representative and substantial farmers of his locality. His death, therefore,
which occurred November 7, 1913, when he was sixty-three years of age, was
widely and deeply regretted, being considered a distinct loss to agricultural
interests. Mr. Moore was born in England, November 8, 1850, and was a son of
John and Sarah (Hospital) Moore, also natives of England, where the father
engaged in farming during his entire active life, dying in March, 1872. He had
survived his wife several years, her death occurring in 1864. Sixteen children
were born to their union, of whom two are still living: Eliza, the wife of
Robert Cobble, of Dows, Wright county, Iowa; and Dennis, who resides in England.
John Moore acquired his education
in the public schools of his native country and there remained until 1872. In
that year he came to America and settled in Jo Daviess county, Illinois, where
he engaged in farming on rented land for five years. In 1877 he came to Franklin
county, this state, and located on section 2, Hamilton township, where he
resided until his death. He bought first eighty acres of land and to this added
from time to time, accumulating .finally two hundred and eighty-five acres. He
carried forward the work of improvement and development along practical lines
and made the property at length a well equipped and highly cultivated farm.
General farming and stock-raising commanded his attention, and he was especially
interested in raising blooded cattle and hogs.
On the 29th of March, 1880, Mr.
Moore was united in marriage to Miss Cyrene Justus, a native of St. Clair
county, Missouri, and a daughter of Isaac Justus, who was born in Pennsylvania,
July 13, 1821. He came to Franklin county, Iowa, in 1857 but after a few months
moved to Missouri, where he remained for about two years. At the end of that
time he returned to Franklin county and located in Hampton, remaining until he
enlisted in Company H, Thirty-second Iowa Volunteer Infantry, for service in the
Civil war. He was at the front for twenty-four months and was then discharged on
account of disability. Following this he returned to Franklin county and engaged
in farming and carpentering until his death, which occurred July 16, 1905. He
and his wife became the parents of four children,: Cyrene, who married John
Moore, of this review; Mary, the wife of William Meyers, of Galena, Illinois;
Mercy, deceased; and Hayes, of Seattle, Washington.
Mr. and Mrs. Moore became the
parents of four children: Sarah, deceased; Delld, the wife of John Brandt, of
Hamilton township Guy, of Lee township; and Opha Claire, at home. Mr. Moore was
a member of the Methodist church and gave his political allegiance to the
republican party. He held a number of township offices and took a great interest
in the advancement and growth of the community, where he was long numbered among
the public-spirited and representative citizens. During his life he enjoyed an
excellent reputation throughout the county for industry, honesty and good
judgment, qualities which gained him the esteem and confidence of an extensive
circle of friends.
L. Clarence Moore, a well known business man of Hampton
connected with commercial interests as the proprietor of a large livery, was
born in Audrain county, Missouri, March 16, 1881. He is a son of Leander and
Florence Jennie (Warren) Moore, natives of Kentucky. The father engaged in
farming during the entire period of his active life and is now living retired.
In his family were five children: Ollie, the wife of H. Utterback, of Clayton,
New Mexico; Effie, who married F. M. Brashears, of Laddonia, Missouri; Arthur,
a resident of San Francisco, California; L. Clarence, of this review; and
Hubert, of Franklin county.
When L. Clarence Moore was twenty years of age he, came to
Franklin county, Iowa, and turned his attention to farming, following this
occupation for four years. At the end of that time he moved to Missouri but
after two years returned to Franklin county, where he lived upon a farm
belonging to his father-in-law for three years. He then moved into Hampton and
established himself in the livery business, with which he has since been
connected. He is ambitious, enterprising and energetic and has built up a
large and profitable patronage, for his prices are reasonable and his service
prompt.
On November 23, 1903, Mr. Moore married Miss Bessie
Eberhart, a native of Illinois, and they became the parents of two children:
Helen, who died in infancy; and Orville, born May 23, 1910. Mr. Moore is a
member of the Christian church and gives his political allegiance to the
republican party. He is an active, intelligent and progressive business man
and one of the valued and representative citizens of Hampton.
J. F. Morehouse, who has lived retired in Sheffield for the
past four years, was a successful agriculturist of Franklin county throughout
his active business career and owns one of the well improved and valuable
farms of the district. He was born in Oakland county, Michigan, on the 7th of
January, 1856. His father, Hiram Morehouse, whose birth occurred in Canada in
1832, was a son of John and Clarissa Morehouse and accompanied his parents on
their removal to the United States in 1838, the family home being established
in Oakland county, Michigan. There he was reared to manhood and wedded a Miss
DeHaven, who passed away when our subject was but four months old. For his
second wife Hiram Morehouse chose Harriet M. Davis. In 1856 he removed to
Illinois and four years later came to Franklin county, Iowa, locating on two
hundred and sixty acres of wild land on section 3, West Fork township. There
he carried on general agricultural pursuits until 1881, when he took up his
abode in the town of Sheffield and became identified with his son Elmer in the
conduct of a store. His last days, however, were spent in honorable
retirement, his demise occurring when he had attained the age of fifty-seven
years. He was one of the pioneer settlers of West Fork township and continued
a substantial and esteemed citizen of Franklin county for about three decades.
For two years, in 1864 and 1865, he carried mail between Hampton and Cedar
Falls. His wife is likewis deceased. Hiram Morehouse was the father of four
sons, as follows: J. F., of this review; Lorenzo, who was a retired
agriculturist residing in Hampton at the time of his demise; George L., who
follows farming in Richland township; and Elmer E., now deceased, who was for
many years engaged in business as a merchant of Sheffield.
J. F. Morehouse spent his boyhood on his father's farm in
West Fork township and early became familiar with the duties and labors that
fall to the lot of the agriculturist. When twenty-five years of age he bought
a tract of land in West Fork township, where he carried on farming for a
decade. On the expiration of that period he purchased a farm of three hundred
and twenty acres in Richland township, operating the same continuously and
successfully for twenty years. He still owns the property, which constitutes
one of the well improved farms in Franklin county. During the past four. years
he has lived retired in Sheffield, enjoying the fruits of his former toil in
well earned ease.
Mr. Morehouse has been twice married. He first wedded Miss
Esther A. Bokes, a native of Illinois, by whom he had three children, namely:
Clyde, who is married and resides on his father's farm in Richland township;
Ethel, who gave her hand in marriage to Elwood Walker, a farmer of Ingham
township; and Rexford C., who is married and devotes his attention to general
agricultural pursuits in Ross township. Subsequent to the demise of the wife
and mother. Mr. Morehouse wedded Mrs. Frances Ashworth, a native of Whiteside
county, Illinois.
In politics Mr. Morehouse is a stanch republican and at the
present time is serving as a member of the Sheffield city council. He acted as
township trustee for several years, while living on the farm, and, for many
years also served as a school director, ever discharging his public duties in
a most commendable manner. His religious faith is indicated by his membership
in the Methodist Episcopal church, to which his wife also belongs and in which
he serves as steward. The period of his residence in Franklin county covers
more than a half century, and he has long enjoyed an enviable reputation as
one of its prosperous, respected and representative citizens.
Delos W. Mott

Delos W. Mott ranked with the pioneer
settlers of Iowa and with the most progressive citizens whose activity and
enterprise have been the chief factors in bringing about the upbuilding and
present prosperity of the state. From the time of his arrival here until his
death he was engaged in commercial and agricultural pursuits, and such was his
force of character and undaunted enterprise that he carried forward to
successful completion whatever he undertook.
Mr. Mott was a son of Jonathan and Charlotte
(Crumb) Mott, the latter a daughter of John W. Crumb. Her death occurred April
15, 1848, and for his second wife Jonathan Mott chose Elinda Colburn, who died
in 1882. There were four sons of the first marriage and Delos W., the second
in order of birth, was born in Otsego county, New York, November 11, 1832. He
attended the district schools and also spent one year in the Maysville
Academy. He engaged in teaching in Ellery, Chautauqua county, New York, and
also in a high school in South New Berlin, New York, where he remained until
1853. He afterward taught in Columbus, Chenango county, and went to Indiana
for a short time. After a visit home he returned to Indiana, and in 1856 he
started for Iowa, making his way partly on foot and partly by stage to Fort
Dodge. He walked altogether more than two hundred miles to Iowa Falls, meeting
with many hardships and privations but persevering until his purpose was
accomplished. In 1863 he and his brother, Albert Mott, embarked in the grain
business and later became active factors in the cattle trade. In 1865, in
company with two others, they started by steamboat upon a trip to sell
merchandise, visiting points along and near the river. In this way was laid
the foundation for the prosperity that afterward attended Delos W. Mott, Sr.,
and his brother. They had many narrow escapes from being raided by the
guerrilla bands. During most of their trips Mrs. Mott accompanied her husband
and had many thrilling experiences to recount later on. The business of the
two brothers increased and at one time they were the owners of three stores,
one at Caroline Ledge, one at Leota Ledge and a third at Lake Washington. They
also became extensively engaged in cotton planting in 1868. Subsequently they
returned to Iowa and bought land, owning large tracts at one time and becoming
leading farmers of their section of the state. Mr. Mott belonged to that
practical and progressive type of men who embody the spirit of advancement in
all that they undertake. He was interested in the progress that should be made
in the farming communities and for two terms he acted as a trustee of the
Agricultural College at Ames, Iowa. His life was, indeed, a busy, useful and
active one. He came to Franklin county in 1856, but after a short stay went to
Cedar Falls, where he remained for thirteen years, when, in 1869, he again
came to Franklin county, taking up his permanent abode here. He was in the
eightieth year of his age when death called him, for his birth occurred on the
11th of November, 1832, and he passed away in Hampton on the 29th of November,
1911. For eighteen years he had survived his wife, who died July 12, 1893. It
was on the 12th of June, 1859, that they were married. Mrs. Mott was a
daughter of H. P. Jones, of New Haven, Connecticut, who was proprietor of a
hotel in that city but afterward came to the middle west, settling at Cedar
Falls, Iowa, where he occupied the position of principal of the schools. Mrs.
Mott returned to Cedar Falls and there Delos Wells Mott was born October 18,
1868. The only daughter of the family died in infancy. Mrs. Mott was a
remarkable woman, possessing may splendid traits of character, her good
qualities of heart and mind endearing her to all with whom she was brought in
contact. She died on the 12th of July, 1893, and in 1895 Mr. Mott wedded
Harriet Ankeny, of Polk county, who survives.
Delos Wells Mott, the only son of Delos W.
Mott, Sr., is one of the extensive landowners of Franklin county, his holdings
embracing two thousand acres. He resides in Hampton and from that point
superintends his investments and farming interests. Iowa numbers him among her
native sons and classes him with those citizens of whom she has every reason
to be proud. He was born in Cedar Falls on the 18th of October, 1868. He
entered the public schools at the usual age and therein pursued his education
until 1886, when, at the age of seventeen years, he became a student in Ames
College, which he attended for one term. The greater part of his training,
however, was of the practical character, received under the direction of his
father, whom he always assisted in the work and management of the farm until
the father retired from active business life. Delos Wells Mott married about
that time and took charge of the farm of forty-two hundred acres. He is now
the owner of two thousand acres of valuable land in Franklin county-land which
returns to him a most gratifying annual income. He purchased the fine home of
Senator Harriman and is now most pleasantly located in Hampton, his attention
being given to the supervision of his invested interests.
On the 26th of November, 1899, Mr. Mott was
united in marriage to Miss Mary Kelly, a native of Scotland, and unto them has
been born a son, Delos, who is the pride and life of the household. The
parents hold membership in the Congregational church, and theirs is a
hospitable home, whose good cheer is largely enjoyed by their many friends.
Mr. Mott belongs to the Knights of Pythias fraternity and has many friends in
that organization as well as in other relations of life. He is a native son of
Iowa, possessing the enterprising spirit characteristic of the middle west,
and in all of his business affairs he brooks no obstacles that can be overcome
by earnest, persistent and honorable effort.
David Muir is a retired farmer now living in Hampton. Activity and
enterprise in business brought him the success which enables him to enjoy the comforts of
life without further recourse to labor. He was born in Waukesha county, Wisconsin, April
7, 1844, a son of John and Margaret (Watt) Muir, both of whom were natives of Scotland.
They came to America in 1842, settling in Wisconsin, where they remained until called to
the home beyond, the father following the occupation of farming in order to provide for
his family of nine children, three of whom are yet living. He died in the year, 1856 and
his wife, long surviving him, passed away in 1875.
David Muir was the fifth in order of birth in the family. He was reared
upon the old homestead farm until he reached the age of fourteen years and in 1872 he came
to West Fork township, Franklin county, Iowa, then a young man of twenty-eight years. He
had been educated in the public schools and had received ample training in all farm work.
Following his arrival here he purchased eighty acres of land, which he still owns. He has,
however, increased his holdings from time to time until his landed possessions now
aggregate six hundred and forty acres of rich and productive prairie land in this county.
In 1895 he retired from the farm and removed to Hampton, purchasing a fine home and five
acres of land on Bridge street , where he now resides.
In 1868 Mr. Muir was united in marriage to Miss Martha Botsford, a
native of Wisconsin, in which state the wedding was celebrated. To them were born four
children; but David, William and John are all now deceased. The only surviving child is a
daughter, Myrtle, now the wife of F. A.. Proctor, living on the old home place. The wife
and mother passed away on the 27th of August, 19I3. Her death was sincerely mourned
throughout the community. She was born in Waukesha county, Wisconsin, December 29, 1847,
and since 1872 had lived, in this county, she and her husband settling on a farm in West
Fork township, where they resided for many years before taking up their abode in Hampton.
Mrs. Muir was greatly respected by all who knew her. Her sunny disposition and unselfish
devotion to the interests of others were always in evidence, and her life was fraught with
many good deeds.
Mr. Muir is a member of the Congregational church and his, too, has
been an upright, honorable life. For five years he has served on the school board, being
its president for three years, taking an active and helpful part in all that pertains to
the cause of education here. He is one of. the pioneer settlers of the county, having
lived here for forty-one years, during which time many changes have occurred, while many
improvements have been wrought. He has ever borne his part in the work of general
advancement and is a public-spirited, progressive citizen.
Isaac
Wenger Myers

No tribute high enough can be
paid to Isaac Wenger Myers, pioneer of Franklin county and one of its foremost
citizens. A patriotic American and a true Christian gentleman, Mr. Myers has led
a life that may well be called exemplary. His efforts have resulted in
prosperity, and he has contributed toward progress and advancement in various
walks of endeavor. Not only has he given much attention to the dairying
industry, but he has been one of the foremost teachers of youth, has contributed
toward the growth of Hampton by building operations and has done valuable and
uplifting work in the spread of Christianity.
Isaac Wenger Myers, familiarly
known as "I. W.," was born in Waterloo county, Ontario, Canada,
November 20, 1839. His parents were Pennsylvanians. His father's genealogy, as
given in the old German family Bible, begins with Christian Meyer, of
Springfield township, York county, Pennsylvania, who was born December 10, 1708,
and died in 1779. He lies buried in the family cemetery on his own estate. His
wife was Elizabeth Kauffman. The sketch given below is gleaned from the Myers
family history, compiled by the Rev. A. J. Fretz., of Milton, New Jersey.
"Christian Meyer was a
minister of the Gospel in the German Baptist Brethren church. Two of his sons,
John and Andrew, became ministers of the same church, Andrew attaining to the
office of bishop. Both were born on their father's estate, John in 1748, and
Andrew in 1753. John was married to Barbara Kauffman and Andrew to Magdalena
Keller. Each became owner of half the father’s estate and both were buried in
the family cemetery. The patent to John's part of the estate was made by the
commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1811. His name in that indenture was given as
John Myers. From this time on, three forms of spelling the family name were
used., viz., Meyer, Myers and Meyers. John's son, born on the estate in 1778,
was John Myers, second. He married Barbara Negley. The oldest son of this union
was John Myers, third, father of I. W. Myers. He was born August 21, 1808, on
the same estate. He left his father's home at the age of twenty-one and found
work grading the railroad bed, then building from Baltimore to Ellicott's mill,
the first railroad built in the United States. His next move was to Waterloo
county, Ontario, Canada, arriving there in April, 1832. Here he was married to
Mary Wenger, of Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, who had preceded him to the
province with her widowed mother. In 1834, he purchased the north half of lot
No. 27 (one hundred and eighty acres) of the German Company. tract in the
township of Woolwich. Four years later he moved into the log house of this
forest-hidden home (which became the birthplace of "I. W."), one mile
east of Heidelburg. He had been one of Her Majesty's magistrates for several
years, when, in 1841, he was elected a member of the council of the district of
Wellington. He represented Woolwich township and the entire "Queen's
Bush" territory to Lake Huron. Later, when county authority was
established, he represented Woolwich in the county council till 1863. He had six
sons and seven daughters. At his death, which occurred in 1883, his estate was
valued at $43,000. The stone residence which he built on his homestead, remains
a monument to his rugged industry.
"On the mother's side of his
ancestry, I. W. Myers appears, according to a history compiled by J. G. Wenger,
of Rittman, Ohio, as one of the fifth generation of the descendants of Christian
Wenger, who, when a young man, landed at Philadelphia in the ship Molley, on
September 30, 1727, and located in Lancaster county, Pennsylvania. He married
Eve Grabiel. Their son, John Wenger, born in 1731, who married Anna Sherk, was
I. W. Myers' great-grandfather, and John's son, Joseph Wenger, born in 1769, who
married Elizabeth Zimmerman, was his grandfather. Joseph's daughter, Mary
Wenger, born in 1814, was Mr. Myers' mother.
"Christian was a descendant
of the Wengers who occupied the scenic 'Wenger Alps' in Switzerland, and who
moved from there to the Palatinate, then to Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, the
cause of each move being religious persecution."
I. W. Myers lived with his
parents until eighteen years of age, working on the father's farm in the summer
and attending district school during the winter. Early recognizing the value of
an education, he began at the-age of fourteen, a system of self culture as an
evening pastime. Among the books used were Smith's Illustrated Astronomy,
Kirkham's Grammar, Davie's Algebra and the Sacred Melodeon, which contributed
largely to the beginning of his education. Mr. Myers organized and taught in his
father's home evening classes, composed of his brothers and sisters and the
youth of :the neighborhood. Twice his father permitted him to attend for a term
the Galt Collegiate Institute, to prepare himself for the position of a
common-school teacher. This career began at the age of eighteen in his home
district, where he spent two years. He then became principal of the St. Jacobs
(Ontario) school. At the close of a three-year term he went to Lena, Jo Daviess
county, Illinois, arriving there in January, 1864. In the fall of that year
President Lincoln issued a call for three hundred thousand more volunteers and
in many cases men of families enlisted to avoid the draft. It was at this time
that I. W. Myers showed his true spirit by tearing up the papers which he
brought from Canada and which proved him to be a British subject and hence would
have exempted him from the draft. He enlisted from Jo Daviess county for one
year, serving to the end of the war, as a private in Company G, One Hundred and
Forty-seventh Illinois Volunteer Infantry, First Brigade, Second Division, the
Army of the Cumberland, under General Thomas. The chief work of the regiment was
to clear northern Georgia of its guerrilla bands.
At the close of the Civil war Mr.
Myers was taken sick with typhoid fever. He was treated in the Brigade Hospital,
in the brick courthouse, at Calhoun, Georgia, and in a series of hospitals until
he reached the United States Marine Hospital, at Chicago, from which he was
honorably discharged, on August 3, 1865. His service entitled him to immediate
citizenship.
During the following year he
taught school where Stockton, Illinois, is now located, and the next year was
principal of the Lena school, and in the following year, of the Davis (Illinois)
school. While teaching at Lena he was married on October 28, 1866, to Miss Alice
Francisco, a daughter of the late Charles Francisco, of McHenry county,
Illinois.
It was in the fall of 1868 that
Mr. Myers moved to Franklin county, Iowa, purchasing and locating on the east
half of section 24, in Hamilton township. He broke the tract and farmed it
successfully for ten years, teaching school during the winter months. At various
times he held the office of assessor, township clerk and justice of the peace.
He was also elected county superintendent of schools, serving a two-year term in
that office while living on his farm. Later he was again chosen to the office
and moved to Hampton, where he has ever since made his home. At the close. of
his term, January 1, 1880, he began, the development of the creamery interests
of the county. He built and operated the Hampton Creamery and at the urgent
request of a leading Sheffield merchant, he built one in that town. Under
similar conditions he built a creamery at Latimer, and later another at Geneva.
The scarcity of milk and cream often created hardships in the business. However,
on the whole, his enterprises proved successful and returns were satisfactory.
When milk became more plentiful, the wave of cooperative creameries swept over
the country and with it were swept away Mr. Myers' establishments, his health
and his prosperity. He was then fifty-six. years of age. In the hope of
regaining his health and beginning life over again, he spent part of his time
for many years as traveling agent for W. B. Lunn's Sons, of New York city, and
during this period he built the Myers block in 1901, and to this he added the
corner building in 1912, so that the entire building now constitutes the corner
block, occupying the entire front of lot 8, block 9, on North Reeve street,
Hampton.
As soon as his health permitted,
Mr. Myers returned to his favorite occupation. At the age of sixty-five he
passed an examination and obtained a first-grade teacher's certificate, taking
over a school in his old township. The following year he taught in Bradford and
in the fall of 1908 was elected principal of the school at Earling, Iowa. After
teaching for three years there the state granted him a life certificate, good
anywhere in the state.
Mr. Myers is the possessor of the
World's Fair medal, a diploma earned at the Chicago Columbian Exposition in 1893
by his exhibits of dairy products. He keeps in touch with his comrades who
participated in the great struggle for the preservation of the Union as a member
of the Grand Army, and is now adjutant and past commander of J. W. McKenzie
Post, No. 81, department of Iowa. He is also an ex-staff officer of the
department. He is a member of the Methodist Episcopal church at Hampton and
takes a deep interest in all church affairs. Politically, he has ever been a
republican but when the party rent itself in twain he followed the Roosevelt
wing.
Alice (Francisco) Myers, the wife
of I. W. Myers, was born July 30, 1845, at Woodstock, Illinois. Through her
mother, Helen M. (Clark) Francisco, who was a great-granddaughter of Beaumont
Clark, a soldier of the Revolutionary war, she is eligible to membership in the
D. A. R. Society. She is active in the Woman's Relief Corps work, in church and
missionary work and in other equally laudable efforts. She has been a life-long
Sunday-school teacher. In early life she taught school and was so engaged at
Lena and Davis, Illinois, with her husband, and also in Franklin county during
the pioneer days.
Mr. and Mrs. Myers had seven
children, all of whom are graduates of the Hampton high school, except Garfield,
who died in infancy. Some are graduates of higher institutions. Alice Inez Myers
was born August 28, 1868, at Warren, Illinois. She was married August 16, 1900,
to Edwin Henry Bither, of Estherville, Iowa. Their son and only child is Harold
Edwin Bither, born October 3, 1903. Orson Francisco Myers was born March 28,
1870, at Hampton, Iowa. He married August 3, 1898, Miss Helen L. Hickman, and
their children are: Alice Virginia, born August 6, 1903; Irving Willis, born May
29, 1905; and Orson Frank, born September 24, 1912. John Percival Myers was born
at Hampton, on July 23, 1872. He was married August 23, 1900, to Miss Lulu S.
Krag. Irving Aaron Myers was born October 11, 1874, at Hampton. He was married
March 23, 1910, at Bovey, Minnesota, to Miss Rosabelle May Carlson. Their
children are Allen Percival and Earl Franklin, twins, born January 1, 1911; and
Harry Irving, born September 25, 1912. Helen Marie Myers was born August 14,
1876, at Hampton. She was married on July 26, 1905, to Dr. Walter Smith Kyes.
Their children are: Marjorie Vivian, born May 31, 1908, at Parker, South Dakota;
and Frank Myers, born May 13, 1909, at the same place. Garfield Myers, born July
22, 1881, died July 21, 1882. Ruth Marian Myers, born September 24, 1883, at
Hampton, Iowa, was married July 10, 1907, in this city, to Arthur H. Peterson,
cashier of the State Savings Bank, at Mandan, North Dakota. Their children are:
Margaret Ruth Peterson, born July 19, 1908; and Arthur H. Peterson, born
November 18, 1912.
Mr. Myers has devoted practically
his whole life to the education of the young, being still engaged in teaching at
the age of seventy-four, and his efforts have been of great value to the
district in which he has resided. His whole life has been one of devotion to his
country. He has ever interested himself in the higher things of life and has
aided in those efforts which make for a higher moral and intellectual plane.
Along material lines he has contributed toward the establishment of that great
industry—dairying--which is now the source of so much wealth in the middle
west. In the Myers block he has given to Hampton one of its business structures
which stamp it a modern and progressive city, In times of war he fought for the
preservation of the Union and in times of peace he has helped to make the Union
that American domicile of freedom which was the ideal of Washington when he tore
loose from British oppression. Although born in Canada, Mr. Myers is a thorough
American, for he has in this country found appreciation and that field of labor
in which he could be of greatest usefulness. His record is not one of gathering
material wealth but one of riches in the hearts of his countrymen who appreciate
in him a noble-minded, unselfish citizen. Both he and his wife are venerated by
all who know them, and their monument of honor is the love which they receive on
all sides. True contentment lies in a life well spent and such contentment must
be Mr. and Mrs. Myers'.